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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

August 09th, 2010 | Legal News | Add your comment

Tweet chat at 9pm tonight on Donald Rosenberg v. PD and Cleveland Orchestra

Janice Harayda has arranged and agreed to moderate a twitter chat on the Donald Rosenberg lawsuit against the Plain Dealer and the Cleveland Orchestra tonight at 9 p.m. EDT. I will be fortunate enough to be participating with Tim Smith, the classical music critic for the Baltimore Sun. The hashtag for the chat will be #DonR.

Addendum: Rosenberg’s claims against the Plain Dealer are grounded in an article he wrote for the newspaper on August 25, 2004, an article which, he claimed, provoked a concerted campaign on behalf of the Cleveland Orchestra to have the Plain Dealer assign someone else to review their concerts. Four years later, in 2008, the Plain Dealer reassigned him. For informational purposes, the relevant portions of the 2004 article are set forth below:

Welser-Möst speaks out

Some of Welser-Möst’s comments in current Swiss magazines have raised eyebrows.

In Weltwoche, under the headline, “Many Rich Widows,” he discusses private funding for culture in the United States, deeming it necessary to find “rich widows” and that “charm certainly is no disadvantage when you want the ladies to understand you well.”

Welser-Möst refers to the Friday-matinee audiences in Cleveland that are filled with “ ‘Blue Hair Ladies’ because of the coloring of their hair” and states that these “so-called ‘Blue Hair Audiences’ ” largely comprise retirees who are too tired to attend performances at night.

Asked what the ladies must donate to meet Welser-Möst personally, he answers: “For $500, you don’t get a handshake from the music director.”

And for $5,000? “No, it has to be a little more than that. A few years ago, an enthusiastic middle-age fan, in this case a man, moved a check across the table for $10 million. With such a person, of course, you go to dinner.”

How do you like Cleveland? “Cleveland is an island. Here we have a world-class orchestra in what I call an inflated farmer’s village. For me, who loves the country, it is wonderful to live there among the green. Recently in the street in front of my home, I found a huge turtle. It had not escaped from the zoo. It was just walking in the street.”