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  • NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with author Margaret Atwood about her new short story collection, Old Babes in the Wood.
  • Evidence in Dominion Voting System's $1.6 billion defamation suit against Fox News has cast the network, its stars and its executives in a harsh light. Ex-Fox journalists say they're not surprised.
  • China has put the finishing touches on a sweeping leadership reshuffle that has been years in the making and puts trusted allies of leader Xi Jinping in key spots throughout the administration.
  • As the Marine Corps investigate extremist ties to the reservist son of a former local GOP leader, there are questions regarding the effectiveness of new policies aimed at rooting out white supremacy. Meanwhile, treatments are now available for immunocompromised to ease back into a new normal. Plus, local farmers confront food inequality and climate change through the creation of a “Farm Hub” in City Heights.
  • Join us for a live performance of Disney's "Encanto" film! Encanto: The Sing Along Film Concert at North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre on July 24th Follow Disney Concerts on social media! Facebook + Instagram
  • Comedians Tom Papa & Ryan Hamilton will perform live at Humphreys Concerts by the Bay on Friday July 1 at 7:30 p.m. Follow them on Social Media! Tom Papa: Facebook + Instagram Ryan Hamilton: Facebook + Instagram
  • Pink Martini featuring China Forbes, vocalist Stuart Chafetz, conductor San Diego Symphony Orchestra Drawing inspiration from music from all over the world – crossing genres of classical, jazz and old-fashioned pop – Pink Martini’s diverse repertoire is a blend influenced by Cole Porter and Duke Ellington, Tito Puente and Xavier Cugat, as well as Argentine tango, Brazilian samba, Italian folk, Asian and romantic Hollywood musicals of the 1940s and ’50s. According to bandleader/pianist Thomas Lauderdale, “If the United Nations had a house band in 1962, Pink Martini would be that band.” Follow on social media! Pink Martini: Facebook + Instagram San Diego Symphony: Facebook + Instagram
  • Join Fleet Foxes with special guest Tim Bernardes! The indie folk band from Seattle will perform July 6th at 8 P.M. in Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre at SDSU! Follow them on social media! Fleet Foxes: Facebook + Instagram Tim Bernades: Facebook + Instagram
  • Gary Mullen & The Works perform One Night of Queen, a spectacular live concert, recreating the look, sound, pomp and showmanship of one of the greatest rock bands of all time. In 2000, Gary Mullen won “Stars In Their Eyes” Live Grand Final, as Freddie Mercury, with the most votes ever cast in the shows history. Since 2002 Gary Mullen & The Works have played to sellout crowds in the UK, USA, Europe and New Zealand. This show will ROCK you! Come watch them on Tuesday, July 26 at 8 P.M. at Humphreys Concerts by the Bay! Follow them on social media! Facebook + Instagram
  • Join us for an evening of art and wine! Back by popular demand, this lecture and wine tasting by world renown wine expert Rod Phillips will focus on wine and art in America and Europe in the age of temperance – a period that includes Prohibition in America. From the Ancient world (Egypt, Greece, and Rome) to the early 1900s, artists had depicted the pleasant and less pleasant results of drinking wine. Consumed responsibly, wine was considered a healthy and sometimes God-given beverage, and artists showed people drinking and celebrating in small groups and at banquets. At the same time, physicians and others warned that excessive drinking was harmful to the individual and to society. Artists depicted this message, too, with images of sickness, poverty, and criminality. When temperance and prohibition became organized movements in the 1800s, and drinking became a political issue, this ambivalence was expressed in art even more sharply. There were still images that showed wine in a positive light, but some representations of wine-drinking were decidedly negative, and we can see art in the service of a social movement. The images illustrating this talk will include fine and popular art and other media produced in America and Europe. About the Speaker: Rod Phillips Rod Phillips is a professor of history at Carleton University, in Ottawa, Canada. He is the author of many books and articles on the history of wine, including Wine: A Social and Cultural History of the Drink that Changed our Lives (paperback, 2018), French Wine: A History (paperback, 2020), and Alcohol: A History (paperback, 2019). He is also an international wine judge, wine critic, and wine writer, and contributes to The World of Fine Wine (UK) and guildsomm.com (US).
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