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  • PLNU Concert Choir, Chorale, and Extol vocal ensembles' popular annual Christmas show for the entire family!
  • Samuel Adams Brewing the American Dream (BTAD) and Accessity are joining forces to host Crafted for Success, a one-day conference that supports food and beverage entrepreneurs as they start, grow, and scale their businesses. The free event will be held on Tuesday, October 21, 2025, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in San Diego’s Mission Bay. It will bring together small business owners, industry leaders, and partner organizations for a day of education, networking, and inspiration. The conference is designed to address the challenges faced by food and beverage entrepreneurs, from navigating marketing trends and distribution to building brand awareness and securing financing. Attendees will hear from Maya Madsen, owner of Maya’s Cookies, who is celebrating 10 years in business, during an inspiring fireside chat. The day will also feature breakout sessions on marketing, sales, and growth strategies and practical insights from industry experts and local small business owners. Beyond educational programming, participants can network with partner organizations, mentors, and fellow entrepreneurs throughout the day, including during meals, breaks, and a closing happy hour with bites and hosted beverages from Samuel Adams. “With Brewing the American Dream, we’ve seen firsthand how access to the right resources, mentorship, and community can transform a small business,” said Jennifer Glanville Love, brewer and director of partnerships at Boston Beer. “Crafted for Success is about bringing entrepreneurs together in one room to garner invaluable insight from experts, connect with peers, and leave inspired with the tools and confidence to take their businesses to the next level.” Registration for Crafted for Success is free, though space is limited. Entrepreneurs and community members interested in attending can sign up through the official event page here. You must be 21+ to attend. “Small food and beverage businesses are the heart of our communities, yet their journey is often filled with barriers,” said Accessity CEO Mar Diteos. “Through Crafted for Success, we aim to give entrepreneurs the tools and knowledge they need and the confidence and connections to take the next step forward.” Since 2013, Accessity and Samuel Adams Brewing the American Dream have partnered to provide resources, education, and funding opportunities to food and beverage entrepreneurs across Southern California. The organizations have hosted numerous events over the past decade, including the popular Speed Coaching event that has connected hundreds of small business owners with industry experts for one-on-one guidance. The Crafted for Success conference builds on this history of collaboration, expanding the reach and depth of support available to entrepreneurs in the region. About Samuel Adams Brewing the American Dream Since 2008, Samuel Adams has supported its nonprofit lending partners in providing over 4,500 loans totaling over $115 million to food and beverage entrepreneurs across the country. Just as important, the program has provided business coaching and advising to more than 16,000 people. The businesses supported by this program have created or retained over 12,000 jobs in their local communities. About Accessity Accessity is an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit Community Development Financial Institution that provides economic opportunity to entrepreneurs through small business loans from $300 to $150,000 and a community of support and resources in Southern California. Accessity’s mission is to open doors of financial opportunity to those with historically less access to capital and business support: entrepreneurs of color, women, immigrants, and low- to moderate-income entrepreneurs. Since 1994, the organization has provided $100 million in loans to small business owners, helping them start, expand, and build self-sufficiency while supporting local employment and economies. For more information, visit accessity.org. Accessity on Facebook / Instagram
  • Now in its fourth year, the hugely popular Wu Tsai QRT.yrd Concert Series welcomes new audiences to The Conrad with free programming, shining a spotlight on local artists. No tickets are required; free reservations are requested in order to keep a head count, at www.theconrad.org. Fall 2025 Courtyard Concert Series: Peter Sprague Trio Friday, October 17, 2025 • 4:30 PM Multi-award-winning musicians Peter Sprague and Danny Green return to The Conrad with one of their frequent collaborators, Mackenzie Leighton. Described by San Diego Troubadour as “world-class,” Sprague and his ensemble of jazz greats will perform a lively program of head-bopping grooves, improvisations, ballads, and more. David Spitzfaden Band Tuesday, November 11, 2025 • 4:30 PM Three-time San Diego Music Awards nominee David Spitzfaden is bringing his high-energy band to The Conrad. Praised by San Diego Troubadour for his artistry, this noted musician and his dynamic ensemble will perform a genre-spanning set—from blues rock and R&B to funk and jazz fusion. Steph Johnson Quartet Friday, November 21, 2025 • 4:30 PM Steph Johnson is an award-winning artist whose music blends jazz, soul, funk and blues, a regular performer throughout Southern California and the Western United States. When she’s not working on music, she directs her creative energy towards Voices of Our City Choir—a group she co-founded and the focus of the 2018 award-winning documentary “The Homeless Chorus Speaks,” which aired on PBS. The Wu Tsai QRT.yrd Concert Series will return with more exciting performances in the spring. La Jolla Music Society on Facebook / Instagram
  • The Vienna Boys Choir, an illustrious ensemble of young musicians, has delighted music lovers around the globe for six centuries with its purity of tone, distinctive charm, and popular repertoire. This enormously popular chorus is composed of four touring choirs representing dozens of nations and together presents more than 300 concerts each year worldwide. Please note: The San Diego Symphony Orchestra does not appear on this concert. San Diego Symphony on Facebook / Instagram
  • 07. Halloween Decorations in Plein Air Kevin Inman Saturday, 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. October 25 (1 day, 3 total hours of instruction) On location (either Kensington, Mission Hills or Loma Portal) $90/$110 Back by popular demand! Join Halloween-obsessive Kevin Inman for a pumpkin-spiced painting session in the streets of San Diego. We will paint in San Diego’s top Halloween décor spot of 2025 (if you know, you know) after extensive research by our intrepid teacher. Costumes strongly encouraged; candy provided. Painting outdoors gives the artist the opportunity to experiment with light, color, and atmosphere. Work with San Diego landscape painter Kevin Inman to learn how to paint spontaneously, appreciate nature, and enjoy the moment. Topics include color mixing, design, and letting go of your inner critic. Materials: Recommended oil or acrylic colors (Gamblin and Rembrandt paints): Limited palette: Alizarin Crimson Permanent, Cadmium Yellow Medium, Ultramarine Blue, Titanium White. This palette saves money but limits your options in advanced painting techniques. Basic palette: Cadmium Yellow Medium (or Hue), Cadmium Yellow Deep (or Hue), Cadmium Red Medium (or Hue), Alizarin Crimson Permanent, Ultramarine Blue, Cerulean Blue Hue, Titanium White, Burnt Umber, or preferred alternatives. Recommended but optional palette: Ivory Black, Burnt Sienna, Yellow Ochre. Brushes: a range of brushes from #2 on up. (I prefer hog bristle flats and filberts.) Other: cup or jar for solvent; paper towels; palette or paper palette pad; Gamsol or Turpenoid; linseed oil or Gamblin Solvent-free Gel; sketchbook; pencil; vine charcoal; palette knife; gloves; travel easel or pochade box; hat and sunscreen. Supports: Stack of inexpensive materials for quick studies and exercises, such as a five-pack of Blick canvas boards, size 8” x 10” or 11” x 14”, an Arches oil paper pad, or a canvas pad. Two larger canvas boards or stretched canvases, size 11” x 14” to 16” x 20” for longer projects. Max students: 12 Athenaeum Music & Arts Library on Facebook / Instagram
  • Drinks infused with cannabis' buzzy compound THC are wildly popular and available in many states. But a year from now, the hemp-based products could be banned under a newly approved federal law.
  • Monday, October 27, 7:30 – 9:30 p.m. The singers and players of the Popular Music Ensemble will cover a mix of hits from the ‘60s to today. Students are placed in small ensembles that focus on covering songs from various eras. Come rock out with us! Directed by Justin Joyce. Event Contact Phone: 760-795-6815 MiraCosta College on Facebook / Instagram
  • Fifty of the 303 schoolchildren abducted from a Catholic school in Nigeria's Niger state have escaped and are now with their families.
  • Opens at MCASD Nov 20, 2025 – May 24, 2026 A Campbell’s soup can, a Phillips 66 sign and even a light bulb are easily recognizable images of a mid-century art movement called Pop that challenged the traditions of fine art by using imagery from popular and mass culture. "A Decade of Pop Prints and Multiples, 1962–1972: The Frank Mitzel Collection" marks the public debut of Southern California-based collector Frank Mitzel’s gift of more than sixty Pop Art prints to the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. Assembled by Mitzel over the course of three decades, this vibrant collection offers an impressive and valuable survey of Pop’s growth across the United States, England, and Europe during an era of rapid transformation. Pop Art emerged in London and New York in the mid-to late 1950s in response to the simultaneous exuberance and unease of the postwar period. “Pop artists were among the first to embrace printmaking specifically as a democratic medium, one that enabled them to reach broad audiences—and thus was truly popular—while courting associations with the commercial culture that inspired the work,” explained Senior Curator Jill Dawsey. Pop artists then turned to advertising and mass media, embracing bright hues, flat graphics, and rapid legibility. “In our own moment of heightened spectacle and media saturation, Pop’s commercial imagery may evoke nostalgia for the products of years past; Coca-Cola, Marlboro, Phillips 66 gasoline, and Campbell’s soup all appear in the Mitzel Collection,” added Dawsey. The Mitzel Collection bolsters MCASD’s existing holdings of artworks by Richard Artschwager, Christo, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauschenberg, and Niki de Saint Phalle. It also introduces several new figures—especially from the heyday of British Pop, such as Peter Blake, Richard Hamilton, Gerald Laing, and Joe Tilson—not to mention the Icelandic-born, Paris-based Erró. The focused compendium of prints and multiples that Mitzel assembled tells a fuller and more nuanced story of Pop Art, and with it, of an eventful era. “In spite of its focus on a single art movement and a single decade, the Mitzel Collection is remarkably wide-ranging, reminding us that Pop Art itself was multifaceted, like the culture that inspired it,” Dawsey added. Mitzel, a future landscape designer, was born in Detroit in 1958 and began collecting Pop Art in 1990, around the time his husband, Bob Babboni (d. 2016), retired and the couple moved to San Diego. Living in proximity to Los Angeles and its galleries, and traveling frequently with Babboni, Mitzel developed a keen interest in Pop. He launched an informal but rigorous self-education, reading extensively and befriending a Los Angeles art dealer who shared guidance and insight. Drawn to Pop’s visual language—derived from comic strips, television, and consumer goods—Mitzel recognized echoes of his youth. “I’m a boomer,” he says with a laugh. Mitzel was also primed to appreciate Pop through his exposure to mid-century U.S. literature, particularly that of the Beat generation. A colorful catalog for the exhibition, produced by MCASD, is available at the Shop@MCASD and includes an insightful essay by MCASD Senior Curator Jill Dawsey entitled, "Fast Cars and Open Roads: The Frank Mitzel Collection," which introduces the exhibition. VISIT: MCASD La Jolla, 700 Prospect St, La Jolla, 92037 / www.mcasd.org
  • San Diego’s biggest outdoor vegan market. Presented by Viridian Productions and A Way Home For Dogs on the 2nd Saturday of every month. Live DJ | Family-Friendly | Dogs Welcome Enjoy an incredible selection of food and drinks, with over 60 vendors including Pizza, Burgers, Sushi, Donuts, Chick’n Sandwiches, Dumplings, Loaded Fries, Gyros, Tamales, Wings, Noodles, Churros and so much more. The North Park Vegan Market is located next to the North Park Mini Park, a great place to meet up with your favorite people to enjoy a day of food and fun. This spacious plaza features seating, gardens and a playground. Vendors are set up on 29th St and both sides of North Park Way between 30th St and Granada Ave. Stop by the A Way Home For Dogs booth to meet adoptable dogs and to learn about fostering and other volunteer opportunities. This is a rain or shine event. Parking: There is a 6-story parking garage on 29th St and North Park Way. Additionally, there is free street parking nearby. Vegan Food Popup Events by Viridian Productions are FREE monthly markets that showcase the best sustainable food, products and services in SoCal, featuring a rotating lineup of diverse vendors. Learn more: https://www.viridianproductions.com Viridian Productions on Facebook / Instagram
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