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  • If you collected Pokemon cards as a kid, here's hoping you held onto them. The Japanese franchise has been popular for decades, but it's become the latest speculative boom.
  • Kids & Teens Saturday Painting Classes! Saturdays: March 14 to May 2 | 12:30 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Explore color, materials, & the creative process. Experiment with different tools, paints, and techniques through small projects designed for young artists, building toward a final artwork that’s uniquely your own. The class welcomes students who are new to painting as well as those with prior experience, introducing interesting materials and techniques that invite new discoveries and allow plenty of space for creative freedom. Ages 9+ 8 Classes No experience needed All materials provided Classes are hosted at Blossom & Bloom Creative Arts, and led by Noel Art Studio instructors Location: Blossom & Bloom Creative Arts: 7400 El Cajon Blvd. #101, La Mesa, CA Visit: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeQqGATvgRJmEYSzPj5PBRUD-VmGE1-jtICtYQ2BOzw48HtOA/viewform Noel Art Studio on Instagram and Facebook
  • Utah's Great Salt Lake has been labeled an "environmental nuclear bomb" and it has the attention of the president of the United States.
  • A pencil, a vintage stove, even Chekov's gun. In theater, every object tells a story. Longtime prop supervisor Deb Hatch takes us behind the scenes at La Jolla Playhouse to reveal how props shape performances, define characters and bring new works to life.
  • Stream with KPBS+ / Premieres Tuesday, March 17, 2026 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV. In 1970, activist Bella Abzug stormed Congress, taking on Nixon and the patriarchy to fight for women’s rights, civil rights, and LGBTQ+ equality.
  • On Earth Day, we take a look back at the rocky history of "tree-huggers." The term originated in the 1970s in the Himalayas and was later co-opted by American politics in the 1990s. Now, environmentalists are reclaiming the word.
  • In orbit, power is free. But everything else is expensive.
  • Commencement speakers who bring up the sweeping changes that artificial intelligence is driving are facing boos from the Class of 2026.
  • For decades, economists gave short shrift to the idea of monopsony — a power employers can have to suppress wages. Now a wave of research suggests it's everywhere, and a new book argues it's key to understanding today's inequality.
  • Concert tickets have skyrocketed since the pandemic, and live music venues and artists are beholden to booking agents and ticketing platforms calling the shots. Even amid antitrust suits against Live Nation and Ticketmaster, fans can take steps to hang on to affordable shows.
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