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On the Cover AI Newsroom Featured on "In Our Image"

When the Superfans Start Making the Songs

Rolling Stone let Dan Runcie dig into the TikTok trend of people turning their unhinged text threads into AI-generated songs, and the numbers are wild — one track built from a woman hiding from a jealous girlfriend spawned 28,000 spin-off videos. The argument worth sitting with: if AI music gains traction, it won't look like synthetic pop stars topping charts. It'll look like superfans making content for each other — still trained on copyrights, still competing for attention.

Joel Gouveia Substack · Essay

What Streaming is Really Doing to Our Memories

Joel Gouveia's The Artist Economy continues its streak of finding the ache points in modern listening. This one's simple but sharp: when music was scarce, it became a time machine — five CDs in your backpack meant those five albums owned your memories forever. Now that everything's instantly accessible, nothing sticks.

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Blood in the Machine · Essay

How Anthropic used its AI ethicslop to play the pope and eclipse OpenAI

Blood in the Machine's Brian Merchant has been tracking AI industry narratives with a skeptic's eye, and this piece dissects Anthropic's carefully cultivated reputation as the ethical alternative to OpenAI. The argument: declining a couple Pentagon requests doesn't mean much when you're already partnered with Palantir and your tools are deployed in military operations. The "too powerful to release" framing for Mythos? Elite access dressed up as caution. Ethics as marketing strategy.

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01 Music & Scene

How To Build One Product

Whitenoise reads Jeff Tweedy's *How to Write One Song* as the best product-management book she's ever found — a 158-page case for radical focus on a single object. The piece treats songwriting craft and product-building as the same discipline of constrained attention, and lands somewhere useful for anyone tired of optimization frameworks that miss the actual work.

Read on Whitenoise →

At the Dentist With Mach-Hommy

POW MAG's profile of Mach-Hommy doubles as a portrait of his eccentric dentist, Jamie Azdair — and honestly, Jamie might be the more compelling subject. The piece uses a dental office visit as a frame for re-entering the world of one of rap's most deliberately obscure artists, with a new LP as the nominal occasion. Strange, specific, and sharply written.

Read on POW MAG →

Depth Map

An interview or essay exploring an artist's use of drone sounds in the context of Palestinian colonial violence and resistance, discussing how sonic architecture reflects lived experience of surveillance and bombardment in Gaza, alongside exploration of gaming environments as sites of colonial reproduction and resistance.

Read on a closer listen →

Mean, Difficult, Cantankerous, Vehement, Strident: Doriot Anthony Dwyer and the Double Standard

Katherine Needleman's ongoing NYT obituary accounting turns to flutist Doriot Anthony Dwyer — BSO principal from 1952 to 1990 — and the familiar pattern of women in male-dominated institutions being remembered primarily as difficult. Needleman catalogs the posthumous characterizations and interrogates what they reveal about who gets to be demanding without penalty. The piece is sharper for being written by a working musician, not a critic.

Read on Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack →

The Circle Jerks + Inconvenient Nazis

Eugene S. Robinson uses a MAGA confrontation at a recent Circle Jerks show to map punk's historical playbook for handling audience disruption — Minor Threat stops, Fugazi stops, Black Flag ignores, Dead Kennedys monetize the conflict. It's a sharp taxonomy of how bands draw the line between free expression and interference with the work.

Read on Look What You Made Me Do →

Sound in 70 Cities: The European Urbanism of Simple Minds

Leonard Nevarez traces Simple Minds' early catalog as sonic urbanism — arguing their bass-forward, keyboard-driven sound wasn't just influenced by cities but structurally evoked motion through them. The piece positions the band as a missing link between German krautrock and contemporary techno urbanism, grounding the claim in specific album sequencing across their first six records (1979–84).

Read on Musical Urbanism →

Five songs that prove that My Bloody Valentine were electronic music pioneers

Ben Cardew's piece argues that My Bloody Valentine weren't just a guitar band who stumbled into electronic techniques — they were actively pioneering them. Using *Loveless*-era deep cuts like "Soon" and "Touched" as evidence, Cardew traces how Kevin Shields and Colm Ó Cíosóig used samplers and loops in ways that blurred the rock/dance line before most people knew there was one to blur.

Read on Line Noise →
02 Music Industry Analysis

RIP Nina: a shame, but sadly not a shock

Darren @ Network Notes uses the closure of Nina — a web3-era indie music download store — to make a structural argument: sustainable alternatives to Bandcamp may be impossible without VC capital, and VC capital is fundamentally incompatible with what independent music infrastructure actually needs. A pointed piece for anyone watching the Bandcamp-alternative space closely.

Read on Network Notes →

Spotify and Universal Just Agreed to Let Fans Pay to Remix the Catalog

The catalog just became raw material. Bruce Ramos Substack argues that Spotify and Universal's fan-remixing deal — opt-in, revenue-split, built on 290M paid subscribers — didn't end the industry's two-year legal war against AI creation. It productized it. Pair that with Suno's quadrupling US downloads and the structural shift is clear: the fan stopped being only a listener.

Read on Bruce Ramos Substack →

The Money Just Un-Bundled From the Deal

A sharp piece using LabelWorx's new Elevate funding platform as a lens on a structural shift: capital is getting easier for indie labels to access, but the judgment to deploy it well isn't. The advance is the door — the strategist, growth plan, and promo access are the actual product. The warning lands hard: easier access isn't the same as advantage.

Read on Bruce Ramos →

The Suno and Udio Lawsuits Just Got Much Bigger

Zinstrel flags a meaningful shift in the Anthropic copyright suit: publishers Concord and Universal were forced to drop a user-infringement theory after a recent Supreme Court ruling narrowed that kind of claim. What remains — did Anthropic break copyright by ingesting lyrics without a license? — is the question the whole industry is waiting on.

Read on Zinstrel - AI Music Culture & Analysis →
03 Music Recommendations

K Wata — "Give U Space"

Futurism Restated describes K Wata's debut album as music that skulks, swerves, and slinks—shapes flitting through darkness, silvery and evanescent. The NYC artist's work has a gestural quality, like someone moving their hands suggestively in the air but always in peripheral vision, never quite clear what they're communicating.

04 Voice & Culture

An Enduring Howl: The Cultural Legacy of Allen Ginsberg

The Quietus argues Ginsberg's lasting contribution wasn't *Howl* itself — it was his role as a radical catalyst whose mix of candid confession, street-level jive, and taboo subject matter rewired what poetry could do. The piece traces his fingerprints through the Velvet Underground, Patti Smith, Dylan, and a younger cohort still drawing on him for the language of liberation.

Read on The Quietus →

How to Destroy a Literary Reputation in One Move

Ted Gioia uses Sports Illustrated's collapse as a case study in brand suicide by AI substitution. A magazine that once published Hemingway and Faulkner replaced bylines with fake AI-generated authors — then got caught, laid off most of its staff, and is now, per former SI journalist Jeff Pearlman, just a name on cruise ships and popcorn. The argument: reputation built over decades can be destroyed in a single editorial decision.

Read on Ted Gioia →

My Experience Not Getting Paid by an Art Gallery

A first-person account of the author's experience consigning two mandalas to 1969 Gallery for a show called 'Parallax: Traversing Image and Text' in July 2025. The piece details the selection process, pricing negotiation, and successful sale of both artworks, with initial communication from the gallery but incomplete narrative regarding payment.

Read on Tao Lin →

The Ugly, Essential Books Edition

Reilly Brennan's piece makes a quiet argument most readers will recognize: the books that shaped you and the books you display are rarely the same shelf. He calls out the 'nasties' — ugly, under-designed keepers you'd hide from guests but wouldn't throw away. A useful lens on how we perform taste versus actually use it.

Read on Why is this interesting? →

How to move from doubt to confidence

Subtle Maneuvers uses filmmaker Ira Sachs's reflections on Peter Hujar's Day to make a simple but useful point: doubt doesn't disappear from great work, it just doesn't show. Sachs found comfort in Hujar's recorded anxieties about money and creative confidence — proof that the circular nature of doubt and belief is structural to making things, not a sign something's wrong.

Read on Subtle Maneuvers →

Queer flag flying

Unfit to Print argues that identity labels do two things at once: they liberate and they imprison. The essay uses queerness as its lens — specifically, the gap between a word that finally fits and the moment that same word starts drawing borders. It's a personal piece, but the structural observation about how labels connect and then divide lands beyond any single identity.

Read on Unfit to Print →

What happens if you go through the Surf Lodge portal?

Emily Sundberg notices what happens when brands colonize the physical spaces where culture gets performed — The Surf Lodge now has a VELO nicotine pouch portal and Popeyes chicken tenders. Her observation cuts: Hamptons venues are so heavily photographed that every surface becomes ad inventory. Expect the same logic anywhere crowds and cameras converge.

Read on Feed Me →
05 AI + Content & Editorial Technology

In Our Image

(Re)Structured News dispatches from the Nordic AI in Media Summit with a sharp observation: the agentic newsroom being built right now — AI program managers, AI editors-in-chief — is just a mirror of existing org charts. The piece asks why we're replicating human hierarchies rather than rethinking them entirely. Worth a read for anyone designing AI-assisted editorial workflows.

Read on (Re)Structured News →

How far does art go without the artist?

An editorial essay exploring the relationship between artistic creation and the artist's presence, examining themes of authenticity, transparency, and biographical resonance through various musical examples and cultural commentary.

Read on MUSIC x →
06 AI Product News

This is Microsoft's unreleased AI super app

Sources has a leaked screenshot of Microsoft's unreleased Copilot super app, consolidating chat, coding, and task tools into one interface. The real news is Autopilot — an agentic tab housing proactive agents, starting with one called Scout, that run independently and learn from use. It's less chatbot, more autonomous operator. Worth watching as the template for how productivity suites absorb AI.

Read on Sources →

Here is the Contract for Palantir's Super API for the IRS

Joseph Cox at 404 Media obtained the actual contract documents — this isn't speculation. Palantir is building a 'super API' for the IRS that would let any approved app pull IRS data, while separately overhauling the agency's Criminal Investigation unit into a unified financial-crime surveillance system.

Read on 404 Media →

YouTube will now automatically detect and label AI videos – even when creators don't disclose it

Music Business Worldwide flags a structural wrinkle in YouTube's new auto-labeling policy for AI content: photorealistic AI music videos get the prominent disclosure label, stylized or animated ones don't. That distinction quietly nudges artists toward aesthetic choices made for compliance reasons rather than creative ones — a platform shaping visual culture through a disclosure rule.

Read on Music Business Worldwide →
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