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On the Cover Featured on "FAILURE: What The Music Business Is Best At"

Inside the High-Stakes Job of DJing the World Cup, Olympics, NBA and NFL

Billboard's Kristin Robinson profiles Grayson Repp, the DJ who soundtracks FIFA World Cups, the Olympics and major league games — a gig most people don't know exists. The piece traces his path from competitive swimmer to Berlin DJ to stadium curator, but the real hook is the craft: how do you score a penalty kick in real time for a global audience? With the 2026 World Cup kicking off this month, it's a timely look at music's invisible infrastructure in sports.

Pitchfork · Essay

On AI in Hip-Hop

Alphonse Pierre's Off the Dome column at Pitchfork usually covers the full sweep of rap culture, but this week he's stuck on a single AI-generated music video from Detroit scam rapper Kasher Quon — and the moral ground it destabilized under his feet. The piece isn't about whether AI visuals are good or bad. It's about what happens when you find one that actually works, and the questions that rattles loose.

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Simon's Substack · Essay

FAILURE: What The Music Business Is Best At

Simon's Substack digs into the music industry's core function: manufacturing failure at industrial scale. The mythology still sells destiny and champagne corks, but the math was always brutal — one act in ten covering the losses of the other nine. What's sharp here is the framing of pre-streaming A&R as an expensive finishing school: bands got advances, studio time, and an education in human nature before the inevitable call came. The business lost money but minted competent adults.

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01 Music & Scene

Your favourite DJ is a psyop

A podcast episode examining how popular DJs and artists are engineered through algorithmic virality, discussing the role of video content, vlogs, and low-figure promotional spending in creating the appearance of organic popularity. The episode also covers Boards of Canada and the Mis-Teeq reunion.

Read on No Tags →

Music For Tombak & Synth

A Closer Listen reviews Cinna Peyghamy's album built around a deceptively simple pairing: Persian tombak and modular synthesis. What makes the record land is that Peyghamy refuses the 'tradition vs. technology' frame entirely — the two systems become a shared vocabulary for thinking through exile and inherited memory. His father reciting Ahmad Shamlo poetry on one track says it plainly.

Read on a closer listen →
02 Music Industry Analysis

Now the Labels Are Targets in the AI Music Wars

The labels spent two years positioning themselves as AI's victims — now they're defendants. Zinstrel reports that the American Federation of Musicians has sued UMG and Warner, alleging the majors pocketed licensing revenue and settlement money from Suno and Udio deals without passing any of it to the musicians whose recordings created that value. A significant new front in the AI copyright wars.

Read on Zinstrel: AI Music Culture & Analysis →

After K-pop, Chinese pop music will come to the world next.'

Music Business Worldwide interviews Universal Music Greater China's Timothy Xu, who makes the case that C-pop is positioned to follow K-pop's global breakout. China just overtook Germany as the world's fourth-largest recorded music market, and Xu lays out UMG's 'Glocal' strategy for scaling that momentum outward. Worth reading for anyone tracking which markets the majors are betting on next.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →

Behind Every Copyright Is a Human Being. It's Time the Industry Acted Like It.

Hypebot runs an op-ed arguing that music publishing's asset-and-catalog language creates the distance that breaks songwriter relationships. The piece reframes publishing as trust management, not rights management — and grounds it in the genuinely uncomfortable moments: the stalled writer, the honest-but-deflating conversation. Earnest rather than analytical, but it names a real structural tension.

Read on Hypebot →

AI Content Licensing Deals: June 2026 Update

Rob Kelly has been tracking AI content licensing deals since 2023, and his 91-deal dataset shows the market accelerating, not plateauing — 0 deals in 2022 to a projected 36 in 2026. OpenAI leads with 24 public agreements, nearly double its closest rivals. The more striking claim: for every public deal, there may be 50–100 private ones.

Read on Media & the Machine →
03 Music Recommendations

Steve Lacy — "The Feeling"

Self-written and self-produced, this single is constructed entirely around emotional self-awareness—Lacy understands how pathetic he sounds and cranks the emotions higher anyway. The verse stammers through embarrassment while catching himself in the act of emotional processing: writing songs to stop thinking about someone, then making them about that person anyway.

04 Voice & Culture

On the National Symphony Orchestra

A personal essay navigating the tension between criticizing an institution and still believing it deserves to exist. The National Symphony Orchestra's management history, a deleted post, a GoFundMe against the writer, and a snubbed obituary tribute all surface here — messy, specific, and worth a read if you follow classical labor disputes.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

What the Robot Cannot Make

A Different Lens uses a hospital vigil and a robotic coffee installation to argue that automation can replicate the visual grammar of human services without any of their soul. The machine had the footprint of a small business and the flexibility of a vending machine — no double espresso, no honey, no accommodation.

Read on A Different Lens →

An Interview with Marjane Satrapi

Marjane Satrapi, in this 2006 interview shared by The Believer in her memory, argues that empathy — not politics — is the real subject of her comics. The exchange is sharp on why small personal anecdotes carry more explanatory power than headlines, and why cultural exchange (Iranians discovering punk before midwesterners did) undoes the assumptions people don't realize they're holding.

Read on The Believer Magazine →

Working Alone

David by Design uses Robert Putnam's *Bowling Alone* — the 1995 finding that Americans kept bowling but quit the leagues — as a lens on how solo work has quietly replaced collective professional life. The article traces how the institutional scaffolding around work eroded the same way civic membership did: not through rejection, but through gradual opt-out.

Read on David by Design →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

Our Faustian Pact With AI, an Interview with Benjamín Labatut

Jasmine Sun's newsletter surfaces a conversation with novelist Benjamín Labatut that reframes the AI anxiety question: not what we think about it, but whether we'll trust what we feel. Labatut frames Demis Hassabis as a symbol of culture's Faustian pact — the thirst for knowledge that wisdom always said to leave to the gods. Worth the read for anyone trying to articulate what's actually at stake.

Read on Jasmine Sun →

Change Agent

Tow-Knight Center's (Re)Structured News argues that the real crisis in AI-era media isn't the technology — it's that most newsrooms lack a coherent theory of change for navigating it. The piece uses the Nordic AI in Media Summit as a jumping-off point to make the case that strategic clarity, not tool adoption, is the scarce resource right now.

Read on (Re)Structured News | Tow-Knight Center at CUNY →

Local news, AI, and the fight for accountability

The Media Copilot podcast takes on the question of what AI can realistically do for accountability journalism — the kind that's hardest to scale and easiest to defund. The conversation centers on Rick Hirsch, who spent four decades at the Miami Herald and now runs the Collier Prize for State Government Accountability. Worth a listen for the honest accounting of where AI helps and where it doesn't.

Read on The Media Copilot →
06 AI Product News

Google is bad but DuckDuckGo is not an anti-AI hero.

D. F. Lovett's piece punctures the reflex to treat DuckDuckGo as a principled alternative to Google's AI search push. The argument is that praising DuckDuckGo as an anti-AI hero misreads what the company actually is — a useful corrective to a lazy consensus that forms inside tech-critical bubbles.

Read on Edit History →

Mythos and the Adolescence of AI Policy

AI policy has entered a new phase, and Anthropic's unreleased Mythos model is the clearest sign of it. The model cracked every major OS and browser during testing — then Anthropic turned it into a defensive tool, with 150 organizations across 15 countries now using it to find critical security flaws. The newsletter frames this as a structural shift in how capability and governance interact.

Read on Luiza Jarovsky, PhD →

AI Is Weakening Moats Built on Friction Alone

The Founders Corner makes a point worth sitting with: competitive advantages built on switching costs and integration pain are eroding fast. AI can now replicate proprietary workflows that once locked customers in. What holds is scarcer — unique data, infrastructure, deeply embedded context. For streaming platforms and labels whose moats are mostly friction, that's a structural vulnerability, not a temporary one.

Read on The Founders Corner →
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