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  • Join OMA’s Free First Sundays for Art for All! Each month, OMA welcomes friends and neighbors on Free First Sundays to join in Art for All, our fun hands-on art-making experience led by artists and cultural partners from our community. Whether you’re new to art or have your own creative flow, Art for All is the time to let your imagination soar. Visit our current exhibitions to spark your creativity! Explore different art-making materials through creative projects at each session while learning from local and regional artists. Check back each month to see what we’re up to next! These informal drop-in workshops are open to all ages. Children under the age of 16 must be accompanied by an adult. All materials are provided free of charge, while supplies last. All levels welcome! Ticket Prices: Free Oceanside Museum of Art on Facebook / Instagram
  • San Diego's biggest R&B party goes old school, playing the music you were made to love until today! Now That’s R&B is the ultimate R&B party for real music lovers. And we’re bringing nothing but good energy, nostalgic vibes, and bangers all night. Whether you're in your "In My Feelings" era or just want to body roll with your crew, this is the night you’ve been waiting for. What to expect: All R&B. All Night.(no filler) A high-vibe, sexy crowd Live DJ sets mixing the best of R&B of all times Full bar + drink specials Dance floor open all night Follow us on Instagram @nowthatsrnb and @sdmelanin for playlist drops and event updates. 21+
  • Senior year of high school brings lots of expensive milestones, from prom and grad night to senior photos and yearbooks. Here's how one family works together to afford them.
  • NPR's Ayesha Rascoe plays the puzzle with WUNC listener Andrew Patton and Weekend Edition Puzzlemaster Will Shortz
  • 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
  • With the high prices of both new and used cars these days, you might be considering keeping your old set of wheels, but at what cost?
  • The approach being studied at Scripps is for larger knee injuries, where the damage to the cartilage and underlying bone are larger than 2 square centimeters.
  • First, we look back at local ties to NASA’s space program as Artemis II splashes down off the coast of San Diego. Then, we take a look at the impact of the war on local military families. Also, we take a look into why the San Diego Velodrome has begun hosting races that exclude transgender women. And plans for a local battery project in Escondido have now fallen through. SeaWorld is moving past fireworks and onto drones. Plus, some weekend events for you and yours to enjoy.
  • San Diego expanded free parking for city residents in Balboa Park, but arts and cultural organizations say the policy is still hurting attendance, access and revenue.
  • The thousands of unseen farmworkers who make our daily meals possible are the subject of an exhibit of work by artist Jimmy Dorantes, to be presented by The Photographer’s Eye in Escondido. "The Hands That Feed Us" will open on May 9 at the nonprofit gallery, with an artist’s visit and reception on opening day from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., and will close on June 6. Dorantes has been photographing along the U.S.-Mexico border from a very young age, as his mother gave him his first camera at the age of three. His childhood home was on First Street in Calexico, directly across from the border fence, giving him a front-row seat on an ongoing social issue. Dorantes remembers border-crossers sleeping on the roof of his family home and hiding in a backyard tree to evade the Border Patrol. Dorantes is a visual storyteller who spent 25 years as a contract photojournalist for TIME magazine when it served as a major source for international news. "The Hands That Feed Us" is a personal homage to his roots, as Dorantes counted friends, neighbors and relatives among laborers working the fields. His mother’s family harvested crops in the Imperial Valley and traveled north during the Dust Bowl to find work. “It’s a very personal subject,” Dorantes said. “What I’ll be showing are pictures of migrant life, migrant workers sweating out in the fields like my mom would talk about. When I photograph the migrant workers, I’m kind of reliving the stories my mother shared with me.” One of Dorantes’ earliest portraits is of a 93-year-old farm worker he shot in 1974, when Dorantes was a 14-year-old high school student. “My friend, my high school buddy, said, ‘You have to take a picture of my grandfather. You’re not going to believe what he looks like,’” Dorantes recalled. The black and white image, "Mr. Nogales," shows nearly a century of field work in the man’s weathered face. Dorantes’ work has been shown at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the California Museum of Photography in Riverside, and the Museum of Photographic Arts (MoPA) in San Diego. His book, “The Observant Eye,” received an honorable mention in the documentary books category in the 2025 International Photography Awards. The Photographer’s Eye Collective on Facebook / Instagram
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