Now coronavirus has cancelled culture, this is how reporters have worked around the social distancing bubble
All culture journalists can do, at least for now, is look back. Truthfully, however, that’s what we’re crying out for at the moment, writes Adam White
There is an argument to be made that culture journalism is, and has been for a long while, fixated on the past. Retrospectives, nostalgia, “the fascinating drama behind the most popular album of 1986”. Because of the world’s current circumstances, however, it’s suddenly all there is.
In the grand scheme of things, the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the production of culture content is minimal. The actual livelihoods of artists, freelancers and those working at or operating arts venues or live events companies are under infinitely greater threat than those of us lucky enough to be permanently employed and writing from home. But it’s undeniably strange.
The past week has seen effectively everything in the immediate pipeline postponed or cancelled. The films we were meant to be reporting on, the festivals we were due to review and provide coverage for, the publicity cycles we were gearing up to participate in. Press junkets, where an array of journalists are shepherded into hotel rooms for 20-or-so minutes of face-time with immaculately dressed stars, are now, if they happen at all, likely to be conducted on literal FaceTime. With everyone dressed in sweats.
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