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KiRby
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Critics are taking buyouts right and left, with the The Star-Ledger parting ways with two longtime writers who reviewed for more than a decade in their pages. The financial climate for new productions is one reason for cutbacks, but there's just not much need for a critic when bloggers have the attention of the industry. "Most people can't tell the difference between Wayman Wong [a blogger] and Ben Brantley. And, frankly, I'd rather read Wayman," a producer tells Riedel.
It's not just the cutbacks, it's the brutal humiliation they've suffered in having to do the job:
"We were all misled," says [Star-Ledger critic Michael] Sommers. "I thought I was going to be George Sanders. Then I found out we don't get invited to the parties. There's no glamour anymore. During the stagehands strike, my editors had me standing on the sidewalk at 2 a.m. getting quotes. ... I ran into [veteran producer] Liz McCann and said: 'Well, I've been taking stock of myself. I'm middle-aged, I don't get all the new technology, I really don't get the young generation, and I don't have any money. There's nothing left for me to do but become a Broadway producer. She laughed and hit me with her cane."
Maybe he could try a wax museum. Can the NYT start sending Thomas Friedman to new musicals to distract him from writing op-eds?
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