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  • Premieres Wednesdays, June 25 - July 30, 2025 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS app + Encores Sundays, June 29 - Aug. 6 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV + Stream Season 1. Earth has never experienced anything like us: a single species dominating and transforming the planet. Biologist Shane Campbell-Staton travels the globe to explore our Human Footprint and to discover how the things we do reveal who we truly are.
  • This weekend in the arts in San Diego: "Infinite Rivers" in San Ysidro; Jean Lowe and Rancholo at Best Practice; Scandinavian artists at Madison Gallery; "Access" in Bonita; "Beethoven by the Bay"; a Rachmaninoff festival; plus film, dance and live music picks.
  • As the United States celebrates its 249th birthday, parades, fireworks shows and celebrations of all (stars and) stripes will take place throughout San Diego County.
  • "Mosquito" buzzes into the micro cinema for a Bonkers Half-Assed Midnight on Saturday and iVIE Awards highlight student work on Sunday.
  • Join us at OMA on June 6 for Street Level x Art Walk! Discover musicians, artists, and craftspeople from across your street to all across Southern California. This month we are featuring Celeste Barbier, a singer and sound healer with a voice that blends vintage charm and modern elegance. Her background in classical music, jazz, and contemporary favorites allows her to create an atmosphere of warmth, and sophistication. We will also have an artist tour of Mary Jhun’s Exhibition, "In Losing Sleep I Painted," at 6 p.m. and local artists and craftspeople selling their work on our terrace and in the OMA store. Bring your family, meet new friends, or roll in with your crew to create your O’riginal experience with artists, innovators, and entrepreneurs at OMA’s biggest social events of the summer. Street Level is open to all ages and admission is FREE for all guests in partnership with Oceanside Art Walk. Drink tickets are an additional fee. Adults 21+ who would like to purchase alcoholic beverages must show ID. Reserved Tables are available for sale to accommodate our music lovers. Reserve yours now! ($100 to reserve table for 4) Oceanside Museum of Art on Facebook / Instagram
  • The Photographer’s Eye Gallery will host an exhibit featuring works by three artists, William Bay, Stefan Frutiger and Terri Warpinski, whose focus is our environment. The show will open on July 12 at 11 a.m., with a talk at 4 p.m. by the photographers, and will close on Aug. 2. The artists and works featured in this exhibit are: • William Bay and “Parts Per Million,” which explores the severe pollution in the Tijuana River, where untreated sewage from Mexico flows freely into the Pacific Ocean. • Stefan Frutiger and “Forgotten Waters, which examines environmental injustice and water scarcity across the American Southwest. • Terri Warpinski and “Ground / Water,” part of a larger work, “Restless Earth,” which explores the intersections of natural, cultural and personal histories. William Bay grew up in Imperial Beach, a city on the U.S.-Mexico border, where he developed a deep appreciation for the cultural interplay between the two countries. However, there was a dark side, as untreated sewage flows freely from Mexico into the Pacific Ocean through the Tijuana River, where tests have revealed contaminants in the water that make it unhealthy to swim, and sometimes even breathe. Bay began shooting and printing his photographs in high school and has never looked back. His work focuses on border and environmental issues, as well as life in Baja California, capturing both the challenges and quiet beauty of the region. Bay characterizes “Parts Per Million” as an attempt to combine art, science and activism to bring about change. His black and white ocean images are each named for one of the contaminants found in the river. “Arsenic,” for example, is named for an element present in the water at 72 times above healthy levels, “a juxtaposition of beauty and disease,” Bay says. “The goal is to bring awareness, to expose this so the public knows what’s in our water, and to say that the current population has completely outgrown the capacity of the border treatment plant that was built in the ’90s,” Bay says, adding that only cooperation between two national governments can solve the problem, and building public awareness is a key to that solution. Stefan Frutiger was born in Switzerland but has made San Diego his home. He is drawn to the vast, arid American Southwest, where he creates his images. “I have a deep passion for the environment,” Frutiger says, describing himself as an outdoor person. He combines his love of the environment and the desert landscape with photography, to reveal to others what he sees. “In the American West, I encountered landscapes bearing the unhealed scars of resource extraction and environmental racism,” he says. “This contrast motivated me to document these enduring impacts.” Frutiger’s mixed-media images examine the damage done by uranium mining on the Navajo Nation. Aerial images illustrate the Southwest’s diminishing water supply, showing agricultural aqueducts full of water running alongside the Colorado River’s natural trickle. “Beautiful composition draws viewers in, but the content reveals harsh realities,” he says. Terri Warpinski explores the complex relationship between personal, cultural and natural histories through images that are large in concept, size and impact. Warpinski spent 32 years teaching at the University of Oregon and is now a professor emerita dedicated to a full-time practice as a studio artist, curator and art activist. She has returned to her native northeastern Wisconsin, where her multifaceted art examines land preserves and conservation areas as they undergo a process of re-wilding and ecological recovery. This is the inspiration for “Restless Earth.” Her “Ground / Water” images are part of this exploration, and include works printed on mulberry silk habotai that are seven feet high. These shimmering nature scenes spill from the wall onto real rocks and toward the viewer, like a waterfall. “I am particularly interested in unfolding the complex and messy patterns of our species’ impacts on the environment, and our ongoing renegotiation of its value to all forms of life,” Warpinski says. Her works are neither framed nor mounted, just like nature. “What I’m trying to do with the work … in scale, materiality and presence, is to bring it into the realm of the viewer, so that it’s rolling forward to meet you the way that your feet meet the ground when you’re out in the world, as opposed to being a distant observer of a classical landscape from afar.” The Photographer’s Eye is a nonprofit collective of photographers who strive to enrich the community by conducting shows, classes and workshops, by providing a meeting space, and by offering a rental darkroom. Facebook / Instagram
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  • Premieres Sundays, June 15 – Aug. 3, 2025 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS app. Alphy has found a home in Grantchester and a best friend in Geordie, but love eludes him until a new case sparks an unexpected romance. Meanwhile, Geordie wrestles with expectations for his son, and Cathy takes steps to advance her career.
  • Join OMA's Artist Alliance at Sparks Gallery for the reception of "Elemental" on Sunday, May 25, from 5 p.m. – 8 p.m. OMA's artist alliance is thrilled to present 38 artworks in their third exhibition at Sparks Gallery in San Diego’s historic Gaslamp Quarter downtown. Selected by juror Sonya Sparks, many of the artworks are loosely themed to the title, "Elemental," work that explores the vibrancy and vitality of the core elements—earth, air, fire, and water—that shape the world around us. The exhibition aims to evoke the raw, powerful essence of these elements, revealing their interconnectedness with life and the environment. The Elemental theme highlights how these fundamental components permeate our daily existence, inspire creativity, and foster growth, yet also have the capacity for destruction and transformation. Visit: https://sparksgallery.com/product-category/gallery-exhibitions/elemental-oceanside-museum-of-art-artist-alliance?_gl=1 Sparks Gallery on Instagram and Facebook
  • Don't miss the San Diego Padres vs. Tampa Bay Rays on Friday, April 25 - 27, 2025 at at Petco Park! Friday, April 25 at 6:40 p.m. Promotions: Party in the Park: BeerFest: Calling all beer lovers! Join us at BeerFest, presented by Southwest Airlines, to enjoy live music and a pregame happy hour... More Info >> Saturday, April 26 at 5:40 p.m. Promotions: Fireworks Show After the game, enjoy a spectacular postgame fireworks show, presented by SeatGeek, set to some of your favorite music! Sunday, April 27 at 1:10 p.m. KidsFest: Families are encouraged to arrive when gates open for KidsFest, presented by SDG&E, to enjoy bounce houses and other... More Info >> View the full Padres Schedule San Diego Padres on Facebook / Instagram / X / TikTok
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