Friday, September 02, 2016

Rebels with a Cause: Why are movie stars paid more than firefighters?

The artist's duty is to reflect the times... a blend of soul jazz, classical and blues. Nina Simone: You only have to hear her once. No one sounds like her except her

The Call LA Times  Ever wonder what it would be like to be framed?
This six-part series tells all ... memories of the bear pit ;-)

Showcasing creativity programming and presenting first nations performing arts

 “Astoundingly, though, more than a quarter of all ticket buyers still decide what film to see only after showing up…” (NYT)

The more some people go, to movies the more other people want go too. It is something to share and talk about.  Movies as a shared experience: From the latest JPE

Yellow Skies presented by Bakers Dozen Theatre Company

MElbournefringe.com.au (Everyone is Face Swapping with Gabriella Imrichova)

 

Why are movie stars paid more than firefighters?

Via Marginal Velvet Revolution ...
Here’s an excellent letter from Don Boudreaux. I admit he had me at the title, Thinking At the Margin: It’s Revolutionary:
…I agree that most people are troubled that the likes of Tom Brady and Jennifer Lawrence earn far higher pay than does any firefighter or school teacher.  But this reality reflects not people’s correct understanding of a failing economy but people’s incorrect understanding of a successful economy.  It reflects also a failure of economists to better teach basic economics to the general public.  So let me ask: would you prefer to live in a world in which the number of people who can skillfully fight fires and teach children is large but the number of people who can skillfully play sports and act is very tiny, or in a world in which the number of people who can skillfully fight fires and teach children is very tiny but the number of people who can skillfully play sports and act is large?
I’m sure that you’d much prefer to live in a world in which skills at fighting fires and teaching children are more abundant than are skills at playing sports and acting.  Precisely because saving lives and teaching children are indeed far more important on the whole than is entertainment, we are extraordinarily fortunate that the numbers of our fellow human beings who possess the skills and willingness to save lives and to teach children are much greater than are the numbers who can skillfully play sports and act.
The lower pay of fire fighters and school teachers simply reflects the happy reality that we’re blessed with a much larger supply of superb first-responders and educators than we are of superb jocks and thespians.  Were it the other way around, then while we’d be better entertained with more top-flight sporting events and movies, all but the richest amongst us would suffer significantly greater risks of being unable to educate our children and of dying in house fires and from other mishaps.