Follow the Money on the Kennedy Center Renovation
Every grand public renovation comes with the same sales pitch: culture, stewardship, and a ribbon-cutting so polished you can see your own reflection in…
Every grand public renovation comes with the same sales pitch: culture, stewardship, and a ribbon-cutting so polished you can see your own reflection in it. Then the invoice shows up, and suddenly the whole room is asking who signed what, who got access, and why the paperwork sounds like it spent the afternoon at a private club.
The Kennedy Center fight has that familiar donor-class escape room energy: follow the money, watch the contracts, and keep an eye on who’s standing nearest the nice chairs. Public money is supposed to buy public value, not a quiet upgrade for the people already close enough to hear the stapler. If nobody can answer “who approved this?” without clearing their throat, Phil McCracken says the only honest branding is public service, private invoice.