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  • Private, isolating thoughts have always been central in Sophie Allison's songs, but Sometimes, Forever breaks new ground, using the studio to blow those feelings up to arresting scale.
  • TCM Classic Film Festival holds its second Home Edition of the pandemic. Craig Barron and Ben Burtt are Oscar-winning artists who regularly host a panel exploring the special effects of old Hollywood movies. This year their panel goes online.
  • The bipartisan Kids Online Safety Act comes amid mounting frustration in Washington that apps like Instagram and YouTube aren't doing enough to protect their youngest users.
  • Hear a funky set from guitarist Cory Wong and the Wongnotes from the main stage of the Newport Jazz Festival, plus stories from Cory about his past, process and the evolution of the Minneapolis Sound.
  • On Thursday, TCM Classic Film Festival kicks off its second home edition of the pandemic. Charles Tabesh, senior vice president in charge of programming at Turner Classic Movies and a programmer for the festival previews the event.
  • Founder Alex Jones, who's repeatedly called the 2012 shooting at a Connecticut elementary school a hoax, has been sued several times by the victims' families for defamation and emotional distress.
  • San Diego has a goal of ending all traffic deaths and serious injuries by 2025. But progress has been slow on this “vision zero” plan, and many bike and pedestrian safety projects have yet to be built. Meanwhile, San Diego Unified announced plans to diversify its teachers and administrators. Plus, the 48 Hour Film Project and the San Diego International Film Festival have been partnering for years to highlight short films made by local filmmakers. This Friday the best of the pandemic short films will be available in a virtual Shorts Fest.
  • Female recruits went through Marine boot camp in San Diego for the first time this spring. As they are set to graduate, these new Marines and their instructors say the time has come for them to keep training on the West Coast.
  • San Diego county supervisors last month ended a controversial program that had survived criticism and court challenges for more than two decades. Project 100-percent was the county’s effort to detect public assistance fraud through a process of unannounced home inspections. County workers could examine at will, the condition and contents of a recipient’s home and determine unilaterally, whether public assistance was valid. It was the only welfare fraud program with such broad powers in the country.
  • Dr. James Daichendt discusses the significance street art and the controversy surrounding OG Slick's "Three Slick Pigs."
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