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Domingo Hindoyan to become music director of LA Opera for 2026-27 season

Domingo Hindoyan to become music director of LA Opera for 2026-27 season

NEW YORK (AP) — Domingo Hindoyan will succeed James Conlon as music director of the LA Opera and start a five-year contract on July 1, 2026.
The appointment of the 45-year-old Venezuelan-Armenian, the husband of soprano Sonya Yoncheva, was announced Friday night. Conlon has been music director since 2006-07 and said in March 2024 that he will retire after after the 2025-26 season.
'LA is a city that is known by innovation, taking risks in productions and musically,' Hindoyan said in New York, where his wife is currently singing at the Metropolitan Opera. 'The idea is to do new pieces, commissions and modern pieces, something to really have a balance between what is classic and go further as much as we can.'
Hindoyan will conduct two productions in 2026-27 and three in each of the following four seasons, LA Opera President Christopher Koelsch said. Koelsch hopes Hindoyan can lead works with Yoncheva, who has not sung a staged production at the LA Opera.
Like other companies, the LA Opera has struggled with increased costs following the pandemic and scrapped a planned pair of world premieres over finances. Tenor and conductor Plácido Domingo was a key figure in fundraising for the company as general director from 2003-19.
'Part of my job as a music director and the job of any musician is to really take care of the art form as much as we can,' Hindoyan said, 'not only on stage, not only studying at home (but also) the connection with the community and the connection to the donors.'
Hindoyan was born in Caracas, played violin and is a product of El Sistema, the Venezuelan music education system that was instrumental in the careers of Gustavo Dudamel and Rafael Payare. He was an assistant to Daniel Barenboim at Berlin's Staatsoper unter den Linden.
'Given Barenboim's extremely exacting standards, I was impressed that he had that job and held onto that job,' Koelsch said. 'And then I saw a performance of 'Tosca' and was kind of immediately struck by the elegance of the baton technique and just the sort of the absolute clarity of what he was conveying.'
Hindoyan has been chief conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic since the 2021-22 season. He first conducted the LA Opera last November in Gounod's 'Roméo et Juliette.'
'There's a kind of a natural warmth and charisma to him. In my experience, he almost always coaxes the best out of people,' Koelsch said. 'The 'Roméo' run for me was kind of a test run of how those qualities resonated inside our building, how it worked with the orchestra and the chorus and the administration and the audiences.'
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Parents Who've Snooped Through Their Kids' Stuff Are Sharing The Weirdest Things They Found, And I Wasn't Ready For Some Of These
Parents Who've Snooped Through Their Kids' Stuff Are Sharing The Weirdest Things They Found, And I Wasn't Ready For Some Of These

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Parents Who've Snooped Through Their Kids' Stuff Are Sharing The Weirdest Things They Found, And I Wasn't Ready For Some Of These

Sometimes, parents just can't help but get in their kids' business. But when you go snooping, you might find things you were never meant to see, from the perplexing to the downright horrifying. This was the topic of discussion in an AskReddit thread, where u/SensitiveCorner2379 asked, "Parents who've snooped through their teenagers' stuff, what's the weirdest thing you've ever come across?" Here's what all the nosy parents and their kids had to say: 1."I went to my 10-year-old daughter's school for parent-teacher conferences and opened her locker to take a look inside. There wasn't much in it, but lying at the bottom was a book from our local library about how to plan a wedding. Not a fun one with pictures of wedding dresses and stuff. It was called Wedding Rites: A Complete Guide to Traditional Vows, Music, Ceremonies, Blessings and Interfaith Services. I was baffled, and her teachers and I had a good laugh about it. When I got home and asked her about it, she explained she and her bestie were trying to marry their dogs to each other." —u/ghostguessed 2."My mom was going through my sister's room after she returned from a trip to Berlin. Nothing wild, just getting her laundry together. She found a small baggie of white dust and rocks. She tasted it to see if she could recognize the drug, and when she couldn't, she confronted my sister. It was small pieces of the Berlin Wall that my sister had chipped off as a keepsake. My mother ate the Berlin Wall." —u/briesneeze 3."An entire dresser drawer of dirty dishes and silverware." —u/Hour_Mathematician83 4."I don't snoop, but I do clean and organize from time to time. My teen knows this, and also knows that unless I find some really illegal shit, I'm not really worried. Having said that, I found a suit of armor he had made out of watermelon rinds that he forgot to toss out. Whole new ecosystem growing on it all." —u/OddLeeEnough 5."For my youngest, the worst thing we've found is a fart bag where she and her bestie were trying to save up farts. They had one at her bestie's house too — her mom made them throw it out, saying it was 'unsanitary.' I just howled and left it alone. A fart bag. Hilarious, why didn't I ever try that as a kid?!" —u/wimwood 6."My son was 15 at the time. I went into his room and tried to get him to clean it, because it was a damn disaster area. I was ranting at him, 'Look at all the garbage all over the floor! Look at the dirty dishes!' Then I spotted a drinking glass, like a pint glass, on the floor. I said, 'You have GLASS on the FLOOR where you could step on it and slice your foot wide open!' I leaned down and picked it up. It had stuff in it. I took a closer look. He had stuffed it with a couple of socks at the bottom and taped a nitrile glove over the top. The glass was slippery in my hand. I stood there looking at it with dawning horror as I realized that I'd found his homemade Fleshlight. I just set it down on the floor and walked out. We've never spoken of it since." —u/edgarpickle 7."I was the teenager getting snooped on. I had undiagnosed schizophrenia at the time, and I was building a time machine from old PC parts that I got from people's trash. Thankfully, my mom found it because the way I'd designed it, I was going to electrocute myself to send myself back in time. Unfortunately, when I found my time machine was gone, I thought the government was onto me and basically kicked myself out of the house so they wouldn't find me. I was 14 or 15 at the time. I'm medicated now and doing much better these days." —u/konoha37 8."A full human turd inside of an empty face wipe container. No toilet paper. I was more concerned than if I'd found a baggie of pot." —u/MooseMaster6000 9."'Science' experiments. Like the insides of stress balls emptied out. Hair gel mixed with glue. Glue mixed with stress ball goop. Pencils with layers of glue, like they'd been dipped. Glued fuzzy sticks — 'art,' apparently." —u/MsPennyP 10."My mom would snoop when I was a teenager. I got a diary and hid it. When she found it and opened it, all she found was, 'THOUGHT YOU FOUND SOMETHING GOOD, HUH?' in big writing. She laughed about it for the next 20-plus years. I miss her." —u/22grey 11."When I was a teen, my dad found homemade dildos I made out of pencils taped together, a sock, more tape, and Saran Wrap. He knew what it was and was mad. I wish he'd left it alone, but he confronted me, and I was adamant it was actually an art project. So, I painted them and left them on display to dry for weeks to try to prove my point." —u/salmontoothpaste 12."I once found the Subway wrapper to my sub that he 'helped me look for' five months prior — when I was eight months pregnant — under his bed. I was looking forward to that sub so badly. It had tomatoes and banana peppers on it, and when I saw he had taken them all off, it sent me into a rage. It just disappeared, and he helped me look for it in the refrigerator. It's been over seven years, he's 17 now, and I still bring it up." —u/Jaylamarie333 13."A rusted train nail. Not snooping. She folded it up in a sweatshirt to keep it safe, and I was putting away laundry. She thought it was an artifact. Couldn't believe something could be that rusty without being 100 years old." —u/SideBackground6932 14."When I was 19, I came home from a night out with my girlfriends to my mother, hysterical and crying, dramatically asking, 'How could you do this to me?!' She had found a sandwich bag with an unknown substance in it and somehow came to the conclusion that it was heroin, and I had secretly turned into a person addicted to drugs. It was small, bacon-flavored dog treats for our chihuahua, which I had portioned out so they wouldn't get stale. Pretty obvious that my mother had no idea what heroin looked like." —u/forestfairygremlin 15."Searching the kids' internet histories. Kid one: porn. So much porn. Kid two: 'How tall is the tallest bridge?' 'What layers can you see in the Grand Canyon?' 'Happy goat videos.' Kids, man." —u/AltrusiticChickadee 16."I was like 13, living in a rural area, and my best friend at the time was always up to something. For some reason, we got it in our heads that we could secretly raise chickens in the forest behind my house, so we bought an entire chicken starter kit, complete with feed, lights, and a book on how to do it right. We attempted to shoplift a few baby chicks in her sweater from the farm supply store, but got caught on the way out. The plan never materialized because no one would sell us baby chicks. Later, my mother found the starter stuff in my closet. It was a weird conversation. She was expecting to find drugs. She was mainly mad that the store didn't call her when we got caught attempting to shoplift baby chicks." —u/ingracioth 17."I found a notebook labeled 'Top Secret Plans.' Inside was a full blueprint for how they'd fake sick to skip school, complete with fake cough sound effects and backup crying strategy if I didn't buy it. I was half impressed, half offended. They even wrote: 'Mom might pretend to be mad, but she'll secretly respect the hustle.' They were right." —u/DeadBoneMusic 18."My dad was moving my car in the driveway, yelling out the car window about how it smelled like pot. He reached into the center console and pulled out a pack of cigarettes, 'And what about these?? I thought you didn't smoke cigarettes!' 'I don't, they're crayons.' Sure enough, the cigarette box was full of crayons. I was a stoner, not a cigarette smoker." —u/wildjabali 19."After he moved out, I found a huge pencil case with every single pen he had used throughout high school, like 90+ pens, all completely out of ink. I messaged him about it, and he's like, 'yeah, that's my pen graveyard,' like it was the most normal thing ever. It's not a homemade Fleshlight, but it definitely made me pause and wonder what kind of hoarder I'd created." —u/SternFern 20."A bucket full of snapping turtle eggs. My kid and their friend saw the turtle nesting, robbed the nest, and stashed the eggs near the heater, hoping to hatch babies. I wasn't really snooping, just trying to recover some missing dishes." —u/WakingOwl1 21."When my oldest daughter moved out, she thought she took her whole knife collection with her. Wrong. We found seven more knives over the course of the next year as we slowly cleaned the room out. Knives that she didn't even remember she had. It wasn't creepy like something was wrong with her, it was just like, 'how in the world do you amass this many collectible knives by the age of 18?'" —u/wimwood 22."At least eight glasses of water, like it was goddamn Signs. Literal piles of trash under her covers that she definitely slept with. Random half-eaten bags of various chocolates…so many. Just gobs of boogers on the headboards. Unopened Capri-Sun pouches that, based on flavor, are artifacts. Clustered used pimple patches on her dresser, in her dresser, on the walls — just so many. This child is an honors student, by the way." —u/donnerpartyintheusa 23."I found a pile of trimmed pubic hair under my high school-aged son's bed. I was just like 'Well, I guess someone's been shaving,' and threw it away in the trash and moved on with my day. Never said anything to him about it." —u/Ordinary_Ice_796 24."A YouTube watch history full of NJM insurance commercials. She's on the spectrum and was obsessed with insurance commercials for a minute." —u/pantsparty1322 25."I found a rolling machine in my teenage son's bedroom. I was horrified. He was only 13. I couldn't find any trace of weed in the machine, and it looked clean. I took a photo and sent it to my husband. He wrote back that it was a magic trick used to make banknotes disappear. LOL." —u/Evieveevee lastly, "I found while cleaning: a Costco-sized bag of grated Parmesan cheese with a spoon in it, sitting next to his bed." —u/donnahotterthnasauna Have you ever found any surprises hiding in your kids' rooms? Let me know in the comments! Note: Responses have been edited for length/clarity. Solve the daily Crossword

Kelsey Plum clarifies crack about Caitlin Clark's team at WNBA All-Star Game: 'I made a bad joke'
Kelsey Plum clarifies crack about Caitlin Clark's team at WNBA All-Star Game: 'I made a bad joke'

Yahoo

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Kelsey Plum clarifies crack about Caitlin Clark's team at WNBA All-Star Game: 'I made a bad joke'

The WNBA All-Star Game made headlines last month when every player donned a "Pay Us What You Owe Us" T-shirt before the game in a show of solidarity as CBA negotiations drag on. Then Kelsey Plum generated a little controversy after the game. Speaking to reporters in the wake of a 151-131 win for her Team Collier side, Plum mentioned that "Zero members of Team Clark were very present" for the meeting. She treated it as a joke, laughing with teammate Sabrina Ionescu who sardonically added "That really needed to be mentioned." That comment, however, took on enough of a life of its own that the Los Angeles Sparks star addressed the matter during an appearance on Sue Bird's "Bird's Eye View" podcast published Friday. Bird brought up the matter by describing the comment as a "joke" that "just got twisted," to which Plum agreed. She then conceded it might not have been the best-timed joke given the gravity of the situation, lamenting the backlash's effect on the conversation: "I made a bad joke. I made a really bad joke ... And I should have — like, hindsight's 20/20, because of the shirts, because of the fans — I should have known it was a way more serious moment than a typical All-Star Game, because I went into that press conference very, like, happy-go-lucky we won, you know? Had a great weekend, my family's here, it was just a great time. "The questions came in, and it was like, 'CBA, this, this, this.' Honestly. Birdie, it was like, 'Hey, Team Clark, they didn't make it to the meeting either.' Just making a joke that they were hungover, trying to make the room lighter ... I was making a joke that they were hungover, even though our team nickname was 'hungover.' So I was like, 'At least we made it.' "Obviously, we're all on the same page. We all wore the shirts. Like, we're all unified. I think, if anything, I was just more discouraged because I felt like it took away from the moment of what we were trying to do. You don't even get to respond and if you do, you seem defensive." Plum is among the leaders of the Women's National Basketball Players Association as its first vice president, with only president Nneka Ogwumike ranking ahead of her on the players' side. The union and league are only a few months away from the expiration of the current CBA on Oct. 31. If they can't figure out a new agreement by then, they will be facing a work stoppage that could threaten the 2026 season. Even before breaking out the shirts, the players were openly unhappy with the state of the negotiations, especially with the league about to start bringing in $200 million in annual television money with its new deals. A two-time WNBA champion with the Las Vegas Aces, Plum is in her first season with the Sparks and currently ranks in the top 5 of the league in points, assists and 3-pointers made per game.

Young cadets graduate from Upper Providence Emergency Services Academy in Pennsylvania after hands-on training
Young cadets graduate from Upper Providence Emergency Services Academy in Pennsylvania after hands-on training

CBS News

time13 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Young cadets graduate from Upper Providence Emergency Services Academy in Pennsylvania after hands-on training

It was a day filled with pride and emotion in Upper Providence Township, Montgomery County. Cadets from the second annual Upper Providence Township Emergency Services Academy graduated on Friday after a week of intense, hands-on training. The summer camp offered kids ages 10 to 15 a rare opportunity to step into the shoes of first responders. Among them was 15-year-old Emerson Boyer, who got to experience what their jobs are really like. "I think all the police, EMS, firefighters, they all work together, which is pretty cool and I don't think I ever realized that," she said. The cadets sat inside a medical helicopter, practiced administering first aid, and participated in a simulated rescue along the Schuylkill River. "You learned how to use a fire extinguisher and put out fire," 10-year-old Leonel Torres from Collegeville said. Emerson Boyer said she formed a special bond with her mentor, Officer Ashley Gaeta from the Upper Providence Township Police Department. "I asked her a lot of questions about her work, and I really enjoy what she does and appreciate what she does," she said. Officer Gaeta said she noticed a change in Emerson Boyer mid-week. "She came up to me and said, 'You know, can girls be on SWAT?' And I said absolutely!" said Gaeta. For many parents, the graduation ceremony offered a glimpse into who their kids are becoming. Emerson's father, Travis Boyer, said the camp gave his daughter a new sense of confidence. "We just had an incident last night at our church where someone fell, and she was also able to help them out," Travis Boyer said. The township created the academy in response to a national shortage of police officers, firefighters and EMTs, and to inspire young people to consider those careers. "The opportunity to take 20 young adults and show them what fire, police and EMS does on a daily basis is so important for us," Mike Risell, chief of Fire and Emergency Services for Upper Providence Township, said. For Emerson, the experience was more than just a summer camp. It was life changing. "I want to be a SWAT medic," Emerson Boyer said. "So I'll probably end up here sometime in the future, hopefully." Organizers said they're already planning next year's camp and hope it continues to grow.

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