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    Lincoln Memorial art exhibit in Massachusetts celebrates monument’s 100th anniversary

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    A new art exhibit in Massachusetts is showing the world a collection of works that feature the Lincoln Memorial.

    The exhibit can be found at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass. — a two-hour drive west of Boston. 

    FABRIC FROM DRESS ALLEGEDLY WORN WHEN PRESIDENT LINCOLN WAS ASSASSINATED UP FOR SALE

    The museum has named the multimedia display the Lincoln Memorial Centennial Exhibition: The Lincoln Memorial Illustrated.

    It will run through Sept. 4, 2022, according to the exhibit’s website.

    • The Lincoln Memorial is located in Washington, D.C. (iStock)

    • In this file photo, visitors walk into the Norman Rockwell Museum. The museum has opened an art exhibition celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Lincoln Memorial. (AP Photo/Chitose Suzuki)

    About 50 “historical and contemporary artworks” are being put on display, including illustrations, cartoons, archival photographs, sculptural elements, artifacts and ephemera, the museum announced online.

    Henry Bacon and Daniel Chester French’s architectural and sculptural contributions to the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., are highlighted throughout the exhibit. 

    PRESIDENTS DAY: GREAT ADVICE FROM GREAT US PRESIDENTS FOR MODERN-DAY AMERICA

    Other featured works include patriotic paintings from singer Tony Bennett and sketches from comic book artist Mark McKenna.

    The art exhibit made its debut on Saturday ahead of the Lincoln Memorial’s 100th anniversary, which is set to take place on May 30, 2022. 

    The world-famous American monument was completed 57 years after President Abraham Lincoln’s assassination.

    American illustrator and painter Norman Rockwell reportedly admired Lincoln, the museum’s CEO Laurie Norton Moffatt told the Associated Press.

    “He thought of him as just a towering American and admired his ability to bring the country together at such a challenging time, and he incorporated him into a number of his paintings,” Moffatt said.

    WHAT ABRAHAM LINCOLN WOULD TELL AMERICA’S KIDS TODAY   

    The Norman Rockwell Museum partnered with Chesterwood, the historic art studio that belonged to French in the 20th century, to bring this exhibit together.

    Free admission is available for Massachusetts residents with ID. 

    Tickets range from $10 to $20 per person. 

    Reservations can be made online at nrm.org.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    The museum is open Monday and Tuesday, plus Thursday and Friday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. EST — and Saturday to Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST.

    15 of the wildest, wackiest college classes taught in America today

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    So this is what all those hefty tuition payments are covering these days. 

    While a typical college education may consist of sitting in long lectures that start at 8 a.m., some universities have put a fresh spin on such time-worn traditions.

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest college courses offered across America.

    Many now offer classes about pop culture icons, the importance of learning how to fail and when to “clap for credit.” 

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest courses offered today or recently at U.S. institutions across our country. 

    Course descriptions are based on publicly available information on school websites. 

    1. Introduction to Surfing

    A surfer rides a high wave at The Wedge on Sept. 1, 2011, in Newport Beach, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

    Students at Pepperdine University can take an introduction to surfing class right on the beach in Malibu, California.  

    The one-credit course conveys a general understanding of surfing and ocean safety. “Classes fill almost instantly when registration begins!” reads a course description. Also, students are told to “bring a towel and warm clothing.”

    Just another perk, it seems, of attending college on the coast of sunny California. 

    RUSH LIMBAUGH, TIGER WOODS AMONG THE MOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE DROPOUTS OF OUR TIME

    2. Nature of Society: Beyoncé and Intersectionality

    Beyoncé accepts the award for best R&B performance for “Black Parade” at the 63rd annual Grammy Awards at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Sunday, March 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) 

    Any class mentioning Beyoncé is bound to be a hit among today’s college kids. 

    For three credits, students at Texas Christian University are taught the characteristics of the Houston-born pop queen. 

    Open discussions in class also cover such bold topics as racism, classism and sexism. 

    3. Tree Climbing

    This course taught at Cornell University in upstate New York is for the kid at heart — maybe even Tarzan himself.

    The Outdoor Education Department at the Ithaca-based university offers this one-credit course. 

    It covers how to get up into any tree, how to move around — even how to climb to another tree. 

    4. Arguing with Judge Judy: Popular ‘Logic’ on TV Judge Shows

    Episodic coverage of “Judge Judy” for the CBS special, which aired April 14, 2014. (Photo by Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty Images)

    First-year students at the University of California, Berkeley, take a deep dive into TV “judge” shows in this one-credit course. 

    Students specifically examine “Judge Judy” and “The People’s Court” — and discuss why certain practices in the courtroom are common. “Are these shows presenting a perversion of our legal system or a look into that system?” says a course description, in part. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ …”

    “A fascinating aspect of TV judge shows from a rhetorical point of view is the number of arguments made by litigants that are utterly illogical, or are perversions of standard logic, and yet are used over and over again,” the description also says. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ … and offers a perverted form of the logical strategy called an ‘a fortiori’ argument …”

    COLLEGE STUDENTS WEIGH IN ON THE STUDENT LOAN CRISIS AS BIDEN AGAIN EXTENDS PAYMENT PAUSE

    5. Nip, Tuck, Perm, Pierce, Tattoo, Embalm: Adventures with Embodied Cultures

    People can alter their bodies in more ways than one — and the inclination to do so may well be culturally influenced. 

    This eight-credit class taught at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y., discusses how different cultures across the globe influence appearance changes, no matter how extreme those changes may be. 

    6. Harry Potter: Understanding Good & Evil

    Emma Watson as Hermione Granger, Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter and Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley in the “Harry Potter” franchise. (Warner Bros.)

    This first-year 4-credit seminar course taught at High Point University in High Point, N.C., examines the fine line between good and evil among historic figures — but with a swish-and-flick twist.

    Through the lens of J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World of Harry Potter, students at High Point University are challenged in this class with defining the discrepancy between the two forces.

    7. Going Viral

    Ever wonder how to go viral on the internet? This three-credit class for communications and media majors at Montclair State in Montclair, N.J., will explain exactly how. 

    “Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    “In this course we will explore media concepts and theories and contemporary viral phenomena,” the course description explains. “We will investigate the evolution of different media and the impact of emerging media on society. Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    HARVARD CRIMSON STUDENT NEWSPAPER SLAMMED FOR ‘JOURNALISTIC MALPRACTICE’ AFTER ISRAEL EDITORIAL

    8. Dealing Tactfully with Difficult People

    This extension seminar at UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) teaches the critical skills needed to handle people who don’t make life easy for the rest of us. 

    A class offered at the UCLA Extension program instructs students on dealing with such behaviors as “verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation” and more.

    The management course discusses ways to build trust, recognize patterns of behavior and foster self-esteem in times of doubt.

    The course description declares, “Participants learn specific strategies for dealing with behaviors such as verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation, attention-seeking, excessive talking, withdrawal, rule-breaking, excuses and feigned helplessness.”

    9. Cow to Cone

    A pistachio and black raspberry ice cream cone is served at Garside’s Ice Cream in Saco, Maine, on Wednesday, July 7, 2010. (Photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)

    Learn the ins and outs of ice cream manufacturing at Penn State University. This one-of-a-kind lecture is a 129-year tradition at the university. 

    As the university’s College of Agricultural Science program explains, “There’s more than meets the eye, or the mouth for that matter. Every cone of ‘Peachy Paterno’ or cup of ‘Death by Chocolate’ begins with the cream provided by the cows at Penn State’s dairy barns only a short mile north of the Creamery Store.”

    It adds, “Creamery Ice Cream represents the university’s agricultural roots, and remains today a symbol of Penn State pride. From the Cow to the Cone!”

    10. Clap for Credit (aka Music 113)

    A round of applause for this one! 

    The one-credit class — officially known as Music 113: Music in Performance — is offered at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Students can take the class as many as three times. 

    “Usually students in the music department would use the captive audience to practice performing.”

    It asks this of enrolled students: Show up to one 50-minute lecture each week, listen to a musical performance for each class — then clap when those performances conclude.

    “Usually students in the music department use the captive audience to practice performing,” said a recent graduate of the university who took the course. 

    11. Failure 

    Purple and white flags fly outside of NYU in New York City, NY. (iStock)

    Trying for a career in the arts often means learning how to fail.

    A course called Topics: Failure — taught at the Clive Davis Institute at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts — explores major failures among artists, as well as “memorable” pop culture moments.

    It includes case studies on Britney Spears’ 2000s meltdown, Kanye West’s award-show speeches and William Hung’s “American Idol” 2004 audition (after which Simon Cowell famously commented, “You can’t sing, you can’t dance, so what do you want me to say?”). 

    “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure?”

    For two credits, students in this course consider “failure as it relates to the contemporary popular arts,” notes the description. “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure? And more to the point, what does our amplified 21st century interest and obsession with failure say about us?”  

    12. Lady Gaga and the Sociology of the Fame 

    As music star Lady Gaga once said, “Doin’ it for the fame!”

    Lady Gaga attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2019 in New York City. (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)

    University of South Carolina students have the opportunity to explore the sociology of pop culture through the rise of music icon Lady Gaga.

    The course aims to relate the roles of business, law, media, sexuality and fandom to the making of a modern superstar.

    13. Introduction to World Puppetry

    As part of the University of Connecticut’s plethora of puppet art courses, this class introduces students to puppetry production around the world.

    Global puppet performances are studied for the visual artistry they offer — plus the performances’ social, political and religious contexts.

    14. How ‘The Simpsons’ Saved American Literature

    “The Simpsons” was named the best sitcom of all time by Rolling Stone. (FOX)

    The longest-running scripted primetime series in American TV history has gotten its own three-credit college course.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    At Long Island’s Hofstra University, students can study how the cartoon series “The Simpsons” has parodied classic literature for 33 seasons. Common themes such as family values, heroes and role models and American ingenuity are also examined.

    15. Serial Murder

    In this 1977 photo, serial killer Ted Bundy is escorted out of court in Pitkin County, Colo. (Glenwood Springs Post Independent via AP)

    Why is the public so infatuated with serial murderers? High Point University — in High Point, N.C. — gives first-year students the upper hand in answering this question. 

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER 

    For four credits, students at this university study the origin of serial killers — including people such as Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy — and exactly what makes their gruesome acts so fascinating.

    15 of the wildest, wackiest college classes taught in America today

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    So this is what all those hefty tuition payments are covering these days. 

    While a typical college education may consist of sitting in long lectures that start at 8 a.m., some universities have put a fresh spin on such time-worn traditions.

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest college courses offered across America.

    Many now offer classes about pop culture icons, the importance of learning how to fail and when to “clap for credit.” 

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest courses offered today or recently at U.S. institutions across our country. 

    Course descriptions are based on publicly available information on school websites. 

    1. Introduction to Surfing

    A surfer rides a high wave at The Wedge on Sept. 1, 2011, in Newport Beach, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

    Students at Pepperdine University can take an introduction to surfing class right on the beach in Malibu, California.  

    The one-credit course conveys a general understanding of surfing and ocean safety. “Classes fill almost instantly when registration begins!” reads a course description. Also, students are told to “bring a towel and warm clothing.”

    Just another perk, it seems, of attending college on the coast of sunny California. 

    RUSH LIMBAUGH, TIGER WOODS AMONG THE MOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE DROPOUTS OF OUR TIME

    2. Nature of Society: Beyoncé and Intersectionality

    Beyoncé accepts the award for best R&B performance for “Black Parade” at the 63rd annual Grammy Awards at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Sunday, March 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) 

    Any class mentioning Beyoncé is bound to be a hit among today’s college kids. 

    For three credits, students at Texas Christian University are taught the characteristics of the Houston-born pop queen. 

    Open discussions in class also cover such bold topics as racism, classism and sexism. 

    3. Tree Climbing

    This course taught at Cornell University in upstate New York is for the kid at heart — maybe even Tarzan himself.

    The Outdoor Education Department at the Ithaca-based university offers this one-credit course. 

    It covers how to get up into any tree, how to move around — even how to climb to another tree. 

    4. Arguing with Judge Judy: Popular ‘Logic’ on TV Judge Shows

    Episodic coverage of “Judge Judy” for the CBS special, which aired April 14, 2014. (Photo by Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty Images)

    First-year students at the University of California, Berkeley, take a deep dive into TV “judge” shows in this one-credit course. 

    Students specifically examine “Judge Judy” and “The People’s Court” — and discuss why certain practices in the courtroom are common. “Are these shows presenting a perversion of our legal system or a look into that system?” says a course description, in part. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ …”

    “A fascinating aspect of TV judge shows from a rhetorical point of view is the number of arguments made by litigants that are utterly illogical, or are perversions of standard logic, and yet are used over and over again,” the description also says. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ … and offers a perverted form of the logical strategy called an ‘a fortiori’ argument …”

    COLLEGE STUDENTS WEIGH IN ON THE STUDENT LOAN CRISIS AS BIDEN AGAIN EXTENDS PAYMENT PAUSE

    5. Nip, Tuck, Perm, Pierce, Tattoo, Embalm: Adventures with Embodied Cultures

    People can alter their bodies in more ways than one — and the inclination to do so may well be culturally influenced. 

    This eight-credit class taught at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y., discusses how different cultures across the globe influence appearance changes, no matter how extreme those changes may be. 

    6. Harry Potter: Understanding Good & Evil

    Emma Watson as Hermione Granger, Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter and Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley in the “Harry Potter” franchise. (Warner Bros.)

    This first-year 4-credit seminar course taught at High Point University in High Point, N.C., examines the fine line between good and evil among historic figures — but with a swish-and-flick twist.

    Through the lens of J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World of Harry Potter, students at High Point University are challenged in this class with defining the discrepancy between the two forces.

    7. Going Viral

    Ever wonder how to go viral on the internet? This three-credit class for communications and media majors at Montclair State in Montclair, N.J., will explain exactly how. 

    “Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    “In this course we will explore media concepts and theories and contemporary viral phenomena,” the course description explains. “We will investigate the evolution of different media and the impact of emerging media on society. Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    HARVARD CRIMSON STUDENT NEWSPAPER SLAMMED FOR ‘JOURNALISTIC MALPRACTICE’ AFTER ISRAEL EDITORIAL

    8. Dealing Tactfully with Difficult People

    This extension seminar at UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) teaches the critical skills needed to handle people who don’t make life easy for the rest of us. 

    A class offered at the UCLA Extension program instructs students on dealing with such behaviors as “verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation” and more.

    The management course discusses ways to build trust, recognize patterns of behavior and foster self-esteem in times of doubt.

    The course description declares, “Participants learn specific strategies for dealing with behaviors such as verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation, attention-seeking, excessive talking, withdrawal, rule-breaking, excuses and feigned helplessness.”

    9. Cow to Cone

    A pistachio and black raspberry ice cream cone is served at Garside’s Ice Cream in Saco, Maine, on Wednesday, July 7, 2010. (Photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)

    Learn the ins and outs of ice cream manufacturing at Penn State University. This one-of-a-kind lecture is a 129-year tradition at the university. 

    As the university’s College of Agricultural Science program explains, “There’s more than meets the eye, or the mouth for that matter. Every cone of ‘Peachy Paterno’ or cup of ‘Death by Chocolate’ begins with the cream provided by the cows at Penn State’s dairy barns only a short mile north of the Creamery Store.”

    It adds, “Creamery Ice Cream represents the university’s agricultural roots, and remains today a symbol of Penn State pride. From the Cow to the Cone!”

    10. Clap for Credit (aka Music 113)

    A round of applause for this one! 

    The one-credit class — officially known as Music 113: Music in Performance — is offered at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Students can take the class as many as three times. 

    “Usually students in the music department would use the captive audience to practice performing.”

    It asks this of enrolled students: Show up to one 50-minute lecture each week, listen to a musical performance for each class — then clap when those performances conclude.

    “Usually students in the music department use the captive audience to practice performing,” said a recent graduate of the university who took the course. 

    11. Failure 

    Purple and white flags fly outside of NYU in New York City, NY. (iStock)

    Trying for a career in the arts often means learning how to fail.

    A course called Topics: Failure — taught at the Clive Davis Institute at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts — explores major failures among artists, as well as “memorable” pop culture moments.

    It includes case studies on Britney Spears’ 2000s meltdown, Kanye West’s award-show speeches and William Hung’s “American Idol” 2004 audition (after which Simon Cowell famously commented, “You can’t sing, you can’t dance, so what do you want me to say?”). 

    “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure?”

    For two credits, students in this course consider “failure as it relates to the contemporary popular arts,” notes the description. “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure? And more to the point, what does our amplified 21st century interest and obsession with failure say about us?”  

    12. Lady Gaga and the Sociology of the Fame 

    As music star Lady Gaga once said, “Doin’ it for the fame!”

    Lady Gaga attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2019 in New York City. (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)

    University of South Carolina students have the opportunity to explore the sociology of pop culture through the rise of music icon Lady Gaga.

    The course aims to relate the roles of business, law, media, sexuality and fandom to the making of a modern superstar.

    13. Introduction to World Puppetry

    As part of the University of Connecticut’s plethora of puppet art courses, this class introduces students to puppetry production around the world.

    Global puppet performances are studied for the visual artistry they offer — plus the performances’ social, political and religious contexts.

    14. How ‘The Simpsons’ Saved American Literature

    “The Simpsons” was named the best sitcom of all time by Rolling Stone. (FOX)

    The longest-running scripted primetime series in American TV history has gotten its own three-credit college course.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    At Long Island’s Hofstra University, students can study how the cartoon series “The Simpsons” has parodied classic literature for 33 seasons. Common themes such as family values, heroes and role models and American ingenuity are also examined.

    15. Serial Murder

    In this 1977 photo, serial killer Ted Bundy is escorted out of court in Pitkin County, Colo. (Glenwood Springs Post Independent via AP)

    Why is the public so infatuated with serial murderers? High Point University — in High Point, N.C. — gives first-year students the upper hand in answering this question. 

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER 

    For four credits, students at this university study the origin of serial killers — including people such as Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy — and exactly what makes their gruesome acts so fascinating.

    15 of the wildest, wackiest college classes taught in America today

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    So this is what all those hefty tuition payments are covering these days. 

    While a typical college education may consist of sitting in long lectures that start at 8 a.m., some universities have put a fresh spin on such time-worn traditions.

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest college courses offered across America.

    Many now offer classes about pop culture icons, the importance of learning how to fail and when to “clap for credit.” 

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest courses offered today or recently at U.S. institutions across our country. 

    Course descriptions are based on publicly available information on school websites. 

    1. Introduction to Surfing

    A surfer rides a high wave at The Wedge on Sept. 1, 2011, in Newport Beach, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

    Students at Pepperdine University can take an introduction to surfing class right on the beach in Malibu, California.  

    The one-credit course conveys a general understanding of surfing and ocean safety. “Classes fill almost instantly when registration begins!” reads a course description. Also, students are told to “bring a towel and warm clothing.”

    Just another perk, it seems, of attending college on the coast of sunny California. 

    RUSH LIMBAUGH, TIGER WOODS AMONG THE MOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE DROPOUTS OF OUR TIME

    2. Nature of Society: Beyoncé and Intersectionality

    Beyoncé accepts the award for best R&B performance for “Black Parade” at the 63rd annual Grammy Awards at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Sunday, March 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) 

    Any class mentioning Beyoncé is bound to be a hit among today’s college kids. 

    For three credits, students at Texas Christian University are taught the characteristics of the Houston-born pop queen. 

    Open discussions in class also cover such bold topics as racism, classism and sexism. 

    3. Tree Climbing

    This course taught at Cornell University in upstate New York is for the kid at heart — maybe even Tarzan himself.

    The Outdoor Education Department at the Ithaca-based university offers this one-credit course. 

    It covers how to get up into any tree, how to move around — even how to climb to another tree. 

    4. Arguing with Judge Judy: Popular ‘Logic’ on TV Judge Shows

    Episodic coverage of “Judge Judy” for the CBS special, which aired April 14, 2014. (Photo by Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty Images)

    First-year students at the University of California, Berkeley, take a deep dive into TV “judge” shows in this one-credit course. 

    Students specifically examine “Judge Judy” and “The People’s Court” — and discuss why certain practices in the courtroom are common. “Are these shows presenting a perversion of our legal system or a look into that system?” says a course description, in part. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ …”

    “A fascinating aspect of TV judge shows from a rhetorical point of view is the number of arguments made by litigants that are utterly illogical, or are perversions of standard logic, and yet are used over and over again,” the description also says. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ … and offers a perverted form of the logical strategy called an ‘a fortiori’ argument …”

    COLLEGE STUDENTS WEIGH IN ON THE STUDENT LOAN CRISIS AS BIDEN AGAIN EXTENDS PAYMENT PAUSE

    5. Nip, Tuck, Perm, Pierce, Tattoo, Embalm: Adventures with Embodied Cultures

    People can alter their bodies in more ways than one — and the inclination to do so may well be culturally influenced. 

    This eight-credit class taught at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y., discusses how different cultures across the globe influence appearance changes, no matter how extreme those changes may be. 

    6. Harry Potter: Understanding Good & Evil

    Emma Watson as Hermione Granger, Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter and Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley in the “Harry Potter” franchise. (Warner Bros.)

    This first-year 4-credit seminar course taught at High Point University in High Point, N.C., examines the fine line between good and evil among historic figures — but with a swish-and-flick twist.

    Through the lens of J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World of Harry Potter, students at High Point University are challenged in this class with defining the discrepancy between the two forces.

    7. Going Viral

    Ever wonder how to go viral on the internet? This three-credit class for communications and media majors at Montclair State in Montclair, N.J., will explain exactly how. 

    “Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    “In this course we will explore media concepts and theories and contemporary viral phenomena,” the course description explains. “We will investigate the evolution of different media and the impact of emerging media on society. Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    HARVARD CRIMSON STUDENT NEWSPAPER SLAMMED FOR ‘JOURNALISTIC MALPRACTICE’ AFTER ISRAEL EDITORIAL

    8. Dealing Tactfully with Difficult People

    This extension seminar at UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) teaches the critical skills needed to handle people who don’t make life easy for the rest of us. 

    A class offered at the UCLA Extension program instructs students on dealing with such behaviors as “verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation” and more.

    The management course discusses ways to build trust, recognize patterns of behavior and foster self-esteem in times of doubt.

    The course description declares, “Participants learn specific strategies for dealing with behaviors such as verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation, attention-seeking, excessive talking, withdrawal, rule-breaking, excuses and feigned helplessness.”

    9. Cow to Cone

    A pistachio and black raspberry ice cream cone is served at Garside’s Ice Cream in Saco, Maine, on Wednesday, July 7, 2010. (Photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)

    Learn the ins and outs of ice cream manufacturing at Penn State University. This one-of-a-kind lecture is a 129-year tradition at the university. 

    As the university’s College of Agricultural Science program explains, “There’s more than meets the eye, or the mouth for that matter. Every cone of ‘Peachy Paterno’ or cup of ‘Death by Chocolate’ begins with the cream provided by the cows at Penn State’s dairy barns only a short mile north of the Creamery Store.”

    It adds, “Creamery Ice Cream represents the university’s agricultural roots, and remains today a symbol of Penn State pride. From the Cow to the Cone!”

    10. Clap for Credit (aka Music 113)

    A round of applause for this one! 

    The one-credit class — officially known as Music 113: Music in Performance — is offered at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Students can take the class as many as three times. 

    “Usually students in the music department would use the captive audience to practice performing.”

    It asks this of enrolled students: Show up to one 50-minute lecture each week, listen to a musical performance for each class — then clap when those performances conclude.

    “Usually students in the music department use the captive audience to practice performing,” said a recent graduate of the university who took the course. 

    11. Failure 

    Purple and white flags fly outside of NYU in New York City, NY. (iStock)

    Trying for a career in the arts often means learning how to fail.

    A course called Topics: Failure — taught at the Clive Davis Institute at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts — explores major failures among artists, as well as “memorable” pop culture moments.

    It includes case studies on Britney Spears’ 2000s meltdown, Kanye West’s award-show speeches and William Hung’s “American Idol” 2004 audition (after which Simon Cowell famously commented, “You can’t sing, you can’t dance, so what do you want me to say?”). 

    “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure?”

    For two credits, students in this course consider “failure as it relates to the contemporary popular arts,” notes the description. “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure? And more to the point, what does our amplified 21st century interest and obsession with failure say about us?”  

    12. Lady Gaga and the Sociology of the Fame 

    As music star Lady Gaga once said, “Doin’ it for the fame!”

    Lady Gaga attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2019 in New York City. (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)

    University of South Carolina students have the opportunity to explore the sociology of pop culture through the rise of music icon Lady Gaga.

    The course aims to relate the roles of business, law, media, sexuality and fandom to the making of a modern superstar.

    13. Introduction to World Puppetry

    As part of the University of Connecticut’s plethora of puppet art courses, this class introduces students to puppetry production around the world.

    Global puppet performances are studied for the visual artistry they offer — plus the performances’ social, political and religious contexts.

    14. How ‘The Simpsons’ Saved American Literature

    “The Simpsons” was named the best sitcom of all time by Rolling Stone. (FOX)

    The longest-running scripted primetime series in American TV history has gotten its own three-credit college course.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    At Long Island’s Hofstra University, students can study how the cartoon series “The Simpsons” has parodied classic literature for 33 seasons. Common themes such as family values, heroes and role models and American ingenuity are also examined.

    15. Serial Murder

    In this 1977 photo, serial killer Ted Bundy is escorted out of court in Pitkin County, Colo. (Glenwood Springs Post Independent via AP)

    Why is the public so infatuated with serial murderers? High Point University — in High Point, N.C. — gives first-year students the upper hand in answering this question. 

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER 

    For four credits, students at this university study the origin of serial killers — including people such as Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy — and exactly what makes their gruesome acts so fascinating.

    15 of the wildest, wackiest college classes taught in America today

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    So this is what all those hefty tuition payments are covering these days. 

    While a typical college education may consist of sitting in long lectures that start at 8 a.m., some universities have put a fresh spin on such time-worn traditions.

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest college courses offered across America.

    Many now offer classes about pop culture icons, the importance of learning how to fail and when to “clap for credit.” 

    Here are some of the wildest and wackiest courses offered today or recently at U.S. institutions across our country. 

    Course descriptions are based on publicly available information on school websites. 

    1. Introduction to Surfing

    A surfer rides a high wave at The Wedge on Sept. 1, 2011, in Newport Beach, California. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)

    Students at Pepperdine University can take an introduction to surfing class right on the beach in Malibu, California.  

    The one-credit course conveys a general understanding of surfing and ocean safety. “Classes fill almost instantly when registration begins!” reads a course description. Also, students are told to “bring a towel and warm clothing.”

    Just another perk, it seems, of attending college on the coast of sunny California. 

    RUSH LIMBAUGH, TIGER WOODS AMONG THE MOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE DROPOUTS OF OUR TIME

    2. Nature of Society: Beyoncé and Intersectionality

    Beyoncé accepts the award for best R&B performance for “Black Parade” at the 63rd annual Grammy Awards at the Los Angeles Convention Center on Sunday, March 14, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello) 

    Any class mentioning Beyoncé is bound to be a hit among today’s college kids. 

    For three credits, students at Texas Christian University are taught the characteristics of the Houston-born pop queen. 

    Open discussions in class also cover such bold topics as racism, classism and sexism. 

    3. Tree Climbing

    This course taught at Cornell University in upstate New York is for the kid at heart — maybe even Tarzan himself.

    The Outdoor Education Department at the Ithaca-based university offers this one-credit course. 

    It covers how to get up into any tree, how to move around — even how to climb to another tree. 

    4. Arguing with Judge Judy: Popular ‘Logic’ on TV Judge Shows

    Episodic coverage of “Judge Judy” for the CBS special, which aired April 14, 2014. (Photo by Sonja Flemming/CBS via Getty Images)

    First-year students at the University of California, Berkeley, take a deep dive into TV “judge” shows in this one-credit course. 

    Students specifically examine “Judge Judy” and “The People’s Court” — and discuss why certain practices in the courtroom are common. “Are these shows presenting a perversion of our legal system or a look into that system?” says a course description, in part. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ …”

    “A fascinating aspect of TV judge shows from a rhetorical point of view is the number of arguments made by litigants that are utterly illogical, or are perversions of standard logic, and yet are used over and over again,” the description also says. 

    “For example, when asked ‘Did you hit the plaintiff?’ respondents often say, ‘If I woulda hit him, he woulda been dead!’ This reply avoids answering ‘yes’ or ‘no’ … and offers a perverted form of the logical strategy called an ‘a fortiori’ argument …”

    COLLEGE STUDENTS WEIGH IN ON THE STUDENT LOAN CRISIS AS BIDEN AGAIN EXTENDS PAYMENT PAUSE

    5. Nip, Tuck, Perm, Pierce, Tattoo, Embalm: Adventures with Embodied Cultures

    People can alter their bodies in more ways than one — and the inclination to do so may well be culturally influenced. 

    This eight-credit class taught at Alfred University in Alfred, N.Y., discusses how different cultures across the globe influence appearance changes, no matter how extreme those changes may be. 

    6. Harry Potter: Understanding Good & Evil

    Emma Watson as Hermione Granger, Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter and Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley in the “Harry Potter” franchise. (Warner Bros.)

    This first-year 4-credit seminar course taught at High Point University in High Point, N.C., examines the fine line between good and evil among historic figures — but with a swish-and-flick twist.

    Through the lens of J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World of Harry Potter, students at High Point University are challenged in this class with defining the discrepancy between the two forces.

    7. Going Viral

    Ever wonder how to go viral on the internet? This three-credit class for communications and media majors at Montclair State in Montclair, N.J., will explain exactly how. 

    “Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    “In this course we will explore media concepts and theories and contemporary viral phenomena,” the course description explains. “We will investigate the evolution of different media and the impact of emerging media on society. Our focus will be on the contemporary scene of technological innovations and how social media are transforming the way we do business, politics, entertainment and activism.”

    HARVARD CRIMSON STUDENT NEWSPAPER SLAMMED FOR ‘JOURNALISTIC MALPRACTICE’ AFTER ISRAEL EDITORIAL

    8. Dealing Tactfully with Difficult People

    This extension seminar at UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) teaches the critical skills needed to handle people who don’t make life easy for the rest of us. 

    A class offered at the UCLA Extension program instructs students on dealing with such behaviors as “verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation” and more.

    The management course discusses ways to build trust, recognize patterns of behavior and foster self-esteem in times of doubt.

    The course description declares, “Participants learn specific strategies for dealing with behaviors such as verbal attacks and put-downs, complaining, thoughtlessness, manipulation, attention-seeking, excessive talking, withdrawal, rule-breaking, excuses and feigned helplessness.”

    9. Cow to Cone

    A pistachio and black raspberry ice cream cone is served at Garside’s Ice Cream in Saco, Maine, on Wednesday, July 7, 2010. (Photo by Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)

    Learn the ins and outs of ice cream manufacturing at Penn State University. This one-of-a-kind lecture is a 129-year tradition at the university. 

    As the university’s College of Agricultural Science program explains, “There’s more than meets the eye, or the mouth for that matter. Every cone of ‘Peachy Paterno’ or cup of ‘Death by Chocolate’ begins with the cream provided by the cows at Penn State’s dairy barns only a short mile north of the Creamery Store.”

    It adds, “Creamery Ice Cream represents the university’s agricultural roots, and remains today a symbol of Penn State pride. From the Cow to the Cone!”

    10. Clap for Credit (aka Music 113)

    A round of applause for this one! 

    The one-credit class — officially known as Music 113: Music in Performance — is offered at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Students can take the class as many as three times. 

    “Usually students in the music department would use the captive audience to practice performing.”

    It asks this of enrolled students: Show up to one 50-minute lecture each week, listen to a musical performance for each class — then clap when those performances conclude.

    “Usually students in the music department use the captive audience to practice performing,” said a recent graduate of the university who took the course. 

    11. Failure 

    Purple and white flags fly outside of NYU in New York City, NY. (iStock)

    Trying for a career in the arts often means learning how to fail.

    A course called Topics: Failure — taught at the Clive Davis Institute at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts — explores major failures among artists, as well as “memorable” pop culture moments.

    It includes case studies on Britney Spears’ 2000s meltdown, Kanye West’s award-show speeches and William Hung’s “American Idol” 2004 audition (after which Simon Cowell famously commented, “You can’t sing, you can’t dance, so what do you want me to say?”). 

    “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure?”

    For two credits, students in this course consider “failure as it relates to the contemporary popular arts,” notes the description. “What is it exactly that we think we can learn from failure? And more to the point, what does our amplified 21st century interest and obsession with failure say about us?”  

    12. Lady Gaga and the Sociology of the Fame 

    As music star Lady Gaga once said, “Doin’ it for the fame!”

    Lady Gaga attends The 2019 Met Gala Celebrating Camp: Notes on Fashion at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2019 in New York City. (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)

    University of South Carolina students have the opportunity to explore the sociology of pop culture through the rise of music icon Lady Gaga.

    The course aims to relate the roles of business, law, media, sexuality and fandom to the making of a modern superstar.

    13. Introduction to World Puppetry

    As part of the University of Connecticut’s plethora of puppet art courses, this class introduces students to puppetry production around the world.

    Global puppet performances are studied for the visual artistry they offer — plus the performances’ social, political and religious contexts.

    14. How ‘The Simpsons’ Saved American Literature

    “The Simpsons” was named the best sitcom of all time by Rolling Stone. (FOX)

    The longest-running scripted primetime series in American TV history has gotten its own three-credit college course.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    At Long Island’s Hofstra University, students can study how the cartoon series “The Simpsons” has parodied classic literature for 33 seasons. Common themes such as family values, heroes and role models and American ingenuity are also examined.

    15. Serial Murder

    In this 1977 photo, serial killer Ted Bundy is escorted out of court in Pitkin County, Colo. (Glenwood Springs Post Independent via AP)

    Why is the public so infatuated with serial murderers? High Point University — in High Point, N.C. — gives first-year students the upper hand in answering this question. 

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER 

    For four credits, students at this university study the origin of serial killers — including people such as Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy — and exactly what makes their gruesome acts so fascinating.

    Piers Morgan debates Met Gala propriety, fashion with Melissa Rivers

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    On the latest episode of “Piers Morgan Uncensored“, simulcast on Fox Nation, host Piers Morgan discussed the recent Metropolitan Museum of Art Gala with fashion expert and actress Melissa Rivers.

    Morgan noted that Rivers, daughter of the late Joan Rivers, famously co-starred with him in the 2009 season of “The Apprentice” hosted by President Donald Trump.

    The host added that he believed the Met Gala was an unnecessary, over-the-top affair that allowed the wealthiest Americans to self-aggrandize while regular folks are dealing with inflation, COVID and the war in Ukraine.

    “Let them eat cake – that was the clear message,” he said, dubbing socialite Kim Kardashian a “billionaire irritant” who had no place wearing Marilyn Monroe’s $5 million dress made famous in 1962 when the late actress sang “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” to JFK.

    Morgan.

    MORGAN: MUSK IS RIGHT ABOUT THE ‘WOKE MIND VIRUS’

    “Ms. Kardashian said that she cried when she realized she didn’t fit into the dress. Yeah. Maybe cry about something a bit more worthwhile in the world,” Morgan said of Kardashian.

    Rivers, however, later somewhat defended the gala’s pomp, saying the fashion industry was “decimated” by the pandemic and finally had a night to show off.

    “It’s not just about the designers. It’s about the people that make the dresses and make the fabric and the mills and the people who build them. So there’s a whole other part of the industry that people don’t see,” Rivers said.

    PIERS MORGAN’S HEATED TRUMP INTERVIEW

    Melissa Rivers (Sean Black)

    Morgan responded by reiterating his distaste for the gala, calling it “utterly ridiculous” that Kardashian’s sister Kylie Jenner reportedly wore a “wedding dress and baseball cap [and] had eight people pack her into it.”

    Later, Rivers replied that she wasn’t saying all aspects of the night were good, and that she also did not understand Jenner’s outfit.

    CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    In closing, Morgan remarked that he still opposed some of what went on at the event, remarking:

    “When you’ve got a bunch of Kardashians, Emily Ratajkowski finally keeping some clothes on, one of the Beckham kids — who’s only famous because his dad kicked a football – it all looked very low rent.”

    Famous painting, ‘Washington Crossing the Delaware,’ could fetch $20M at auction

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    A painting that hung in the White House from the 1970s to 2014 is now going up for auction in May 2022 — and it is estimated it might fetch $20 million.

    That’s according to a source at Christie’s and as reported by Reuters.

    The 1851 oil painting is one of three versions that Emanuel Leutze painted of George Washington — who became the first U.S. president — leading troops during a pivotal development during the American Revolution. 

    George Washington is shown in this digitally generated portrait.  (iStock)

    Only two of Leutze’s three paintings of this iconic event survive.

    The first version was destroyed during a World War II air raid in Germany, American Art specialist Paige Kestenman at Christie’s New York told Reuters.

    “The second is the monumental work that is the centerpiece of the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s American Wing, and the third is this work right here,” said Kestenman.

    The work depicts Washington leading soldiers across the Delaware River to surprise the infantry hiding on the other side on Christmas night of 1776.

    The version at the Met, Reuters noted, measures 12.4 ft x 21.25 ft (3.78 m x 6.48 m). The painting up for sale on May 12 is smaller than that — about 3 ft (0.9 m) by 6 ft (1.83 m). For decades it hung in the White House, mainly in the West Wing reception room.

    The work depicts Washington leading soldiers across the Delaware River to surprise the infantry hiding on the other side on Christmas night of 1776, Kestenman said.

    “A German-born American immigrant, Leutze was also a staunch abolitionist and in ‘Washington crossing the Delaware’ he deliberately included a variety of the figures that make up the melting pot that formed the American nation,” said Kestenman.

    ‘Wasn’t just to get to the other side’

    So why were Washington and members of his Continental Army trying to cross an ice-choked Delaware River on a cold winter’s night, anyway? 

    “It wasn’t just to get to the other side,” as noted by MountVernon.org. 

    General George Washington, portrayed by Bob Gerenser, 43, of New Hope, Pa. (second from right) crosses the Delaware River with his troops to Trenton, N.J., from the Washington Crossing Historic Park in Pennsylvania, on December 25, in a reenactment in 2021.  

    “Washington’s aim was to conduct a surprise attack upon a Hessian garrison of roughly 1,400 soldiers located in and around Trenton, New Jersey. Washington hoped that a quick victory at Trenton would bolster sagging morale in his army and encourage more men to join the ranks of the Continentals come the new year,” the site also explained.

    “After several councils of war, General George Washington set the date for the river crossing for Christmas night 1776.”

    For all those wanting more details, a Fox Nation special, “Washington’s Christmas Crossing,” hosted by Pete Hegseth of Fox News Channel, shares the fascinating back story of that evening and the reenactment of it that takes place every year.

    “It was desperate. They were definitely losing the war, and this was a last-ditch, bold stroke to try and turn the thing around.”

    The December 2021 reenactment marked the 241st anniversary of Washington’s famous trip across the Delaware River, as Fox News Digital previously reported.

    The crossing — which turned the tide of the Revolutionary War — is the highlight of the annual event that draws thousands of people to the banks of the river in Washington Crossing, Pa., and Titusville, N.J.

    “It was desperate. They were definitely losing the war, and this was a last-ditch, bold stroke to try and turn the thing around,” a Fox Nation contributor told Hegseth. 

    HOW THE CONTINTENTAL ARMY SPENT AMERICA’S FIRST CHRISTMAS

    The effort to get nearly 2,000 of Washington’s soldiers across the Delaware River was led by Colonel John Glover and his unit of “Marbleheaders.”

    The full episode of Pete Hegseth’s “Washington’s Christmas Crossing” is available on Fox Nation.

    Painter Emanuel Leutze was born in Württemberg, Germany, and was brought to the U.S. as a child in 1825, according to the Grove Encyclopedia of Art.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    The artist’s parents settled first in Fredericksburg, Va., then in Philadelphia.

    Amy Nelson of Fox News Digital contributed to this report.

    ‘GOD BLESS ABORTIONS’ banner hung on Christ of the Ozarks statue in Arkansas by activist art group

    Indecline, a two-decade-old activist art collective, hung a 44-foot banner that reads “GOD BLESS ABORTIONS” on a massive monument of Jesus in northwestern Arkansas Thursday night. 

    “The project, entitled ‘God Bless Abortions,’ is in direct response to the dramatic attempts being made in Arkansas and throughout the South, to ban abortion services to women in need,” the art collective said Friday. 

    An activist art group called Indecline hung this banner at the Christ of the Ozarks statue in Eureka Springs, Arkansas on Thursday night. 
    (Indecline)

    The banner was draped between the outstretched arms of the 67-foot Christ of the Ozarks statue in Eureka Springs on Thursday night. 

    UNIVERSITY OVERTURNS STUDENT BAN ON ANTI-ABORTION GROUP, SAYS IT WOULD VIOLATE 1ST AMENDMENT

    Members of Indecline disguised themselves as a construction crew to sneak onto the property, then used pulleys and other climbing gear to hang the banner. 

    “In Arkansas, there is only one 65-foot statue of Jesus. There is also only one abortion clinic,” Indecline wrote in an Instagram caption explaining the project. “We just think abortion is a go***** miracle worth celebrating. It saves lives, but those lives are usually female.”

    The group disguised themselves as construction workers to sneak onto the property. 
    (Indecline)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    Originally built in 1966, the Christ of the Ozarks statue weighs 2 million pounds and is made of 24 layers of white mortar, according to The Great Passion Play, which is performed nearby.

    This is not the group’s first project surrounding abortion. In March, they vandalized a Christian billboard in Missippi to read, “Worried? Planned Parenthood offers abortions,” instead of, “Worried? Jesus offers security.”

    A public information officer for the Eureka Springs Police Department could not be reached Friday. 

    André Leon Talley says Anna Wintour’s Vogue memo ‘came out of the space of white privilege’

    Vogue’s former editor-at-large André Leon Talley threw shade at fashion doyenne Anna Wintour who apologized in an internal email for “mistakes” made in her 32-year tenure in not doing enough to elevate black voices on her staff and publishing images and stories that have been racially and culturally “hurtful or intolerant.”

    Talley said on SiriusXM’s Sandyland on Thursday, “The statement that she made, you know, the world of white privilege is complicated.”

    “The statement came out of the space of white privilege,” Talley continued. “I wanna say one thing, Dame Anna Wintour is a colonial broad, she’s a colonial dame. She comes from British, she’s part of an environment of colonialism.”

    CLICK HERE FOR COMPLETE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    The magazine’s editor in chief, who is also Conde Nast’s artistic director and global content adviser, wrote in the June 4 email: “I take full responsibility for those mistakes.”

    In her email, Wintour referenced the country’s “historic and heartbreaking moment” after the killing of George Floyd and other black people at the hands of police, events that sparked rage and grief in protests playing out for more than two weeks around the world.

    “I want to start by acknowledging your feelings and expressing my empathy towards what so many of you are going through: sadness, hurt, and anger too. I want to say this especially to the Black members of our team — I can only imagine what these days have been like. But I also know that the hurt, and violence, and injustice we’re seeing and talking about have been around for a long time. Recognizing it and doing something about it is overdue,” Wintour told her staff.

    She called for the tumult to be a “time of listening, reflection, and humility for those of us in positions of privilege and authority. It should also be a time of action and commitments.”

    Wintour didn’t specify what content she was referring to as offensive or what steps will be taken to rectify hiring and bring on a new creative approach. She pledged, “On a corporate level, work is being done to support organizations in a real way. These actions will be announced as soon as possible.”

    CORONAVIRUS: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

    Talley said Wintour’s mea culpa paralleled NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell who said the league was wrong for not listening to players fighting for racial equality and encouraged them to peacefully protest.

    “I do not think she will ever let anything get in the way of her white privilege,” Talley continued. “That announcement was like the man who made the announcement for the NFL.

    “He did not name Colin Kaepernick, he did not name Colin Kaepernick,” Talley said of Goodell’s statement. “If you’re going to make a statement, name what your mistakes were, own up to it, dear. No apologies necessary, all we want is respect.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    Coronavirus prompts cancellation of Burning Man festival in Nevada, event will be ‘virtual,’ organizers say

    Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox.  Sign up here.  

    The Burning Man 2020 festival has been canceled — the latest large-scale event to fall victim to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Organizers of the Burning Man Project, the group that brings the annual arts and music festival to northern Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, made the announcement on its website and social media accounts.

    The week-long event was scheduled for Aug. 30 through Sept. 7.  It will now move online only, organizers said.

    BURNING MAN 2017: PHOTOS FROM THE FESTIVAL

    “After much listening, discussion, and careful consideration, we have made the difficult decision not to build Black Rock City in 2020,” the statement reads. “Given the painful reality of COVID-19, one of the greatest global challenges of our lifetimes, we believe this is the right thing to do.”

    The statement shares that the organizers are “heartbroken.”

    “We know you are too,” the statement continues. “In 2020 we need human connection and Immediacy more than ever. But public health and the well-being of our participants, staff and neighbors in Nevada are our highest priorities.”

    CORONAVIRUS PROMPTS COACHELLA, STAGECOACH MUSIC FESTIVALS TO BE RESCHEDULED AMID GROWING CONCERN

    The festival, which moved from San Francisco’s Baker Beach in 1990, celebrates creativity and free expression, with drum circles, decorated art cars, guerrilla theatrics and colorful theme camps. Clothing is optional.

    The theme of this year’s event was “The Multiverse” and despite it not physically taking place, the Burning Man Project announced the show will go on virtually, to keep in line with its theme.

    “That’s the theme for 2020 so we’re going to lean into it. Who’d have believed it would come true? We look forward to welcoming you to Virtual Black Rock City 2020,” the statement reads. “We’re not sure how it’s going to come out; it will likely be messy and awkward with mistakes. It will also likely be engaging, connective, and fun.”

    HOW DANGEROUS IS CORONAVIRUS?

    The Burning Man body announced that it will offer refunds to those who need them, but remains committed to keeping Burning Man culture “alive and thriving,” the release says.

    Burning Man Project CEO Marian Goodell reiterated the organization’s commitment in a video on its official website.

    Goodell reminds Black Rock City goers that the Nevada festival is just one small part of what the organization brings to the world year-round.

    BURNING MAN ORGANIZERS AWAIT US DECISION ON FESTIVAL-CHANGING MEASURES: ‘IT TAKES COURAGE TO LET US FLOURISH’

    Burning Man Project CEO Marian Goodell updated Burning Man 2020 ticket holders on how the festival will go on virtually.
    (Burningman.org/Marian Goodell)

    “I am not here to tell you we are cancelling Burning Man. No,” says Goodell. “Burning Man is a culture, it’s a movement. We are not defined by one aspect of Burning Man. We are defined by what we bring to Burning Man. Burning Man is 100 affiliated events around the world on six continents. I am here to tell you that we will not be collaborating on Black Rock City in the desert this summer.”

    “I am going to tell you that we look forward to inviting you to come to the virtual Burning Man. This is not an easy time for us,” Goodell continues. “For those of you who are compelled by what we’re doing and you can afford the gift, we would appreciate being able to do our work for Burning Man. We need your support. We are scaling back so we can make it to 2021 but we need your help. Please do what you can to help support us.”

    A participant takes part in a fire ceremony as approximately 70,000 people from all over the world gathered for the annual Burning Man arts and music festival in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada in 2017. 
    (REUTERS/Jim Urquhart)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    The CEO vowed she will continue to provide video updates on the Burning Man Project website to answer any questions festival-goers may have.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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