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  • This weekend in the arts: a Project [BLANK] group show; "Arrested Motion" at Thumbprint; "Ain't Too Proud: The Life and Times of the Temptations" at the Civic Theatre; experimental music and literature at Witches' Tower in Presidio Park; Schubert's "Winterreise" at Le Salon de Musiques; and the soundON festival at the Athenaeum.
  • Gator By The Bay, the largest, most-authentic Louisiana-themed music and food festival this side of the bayou is held each year around Mothers’ Day weekend, the 2nd weekend in May. Presented by San Diego’s Bon Temps Social Club, this "Mardi Gras in May" features four days of live music with over 100 musical acts and special performances on seven stages, southern cuisine including 10,000 pounds of crawfish trucked from Louisiana, non-stop live music, dancing and family fun at Spanish Landing Park on beautiful San Diego Bay across from the airport.
  • In a 3-1 vote, California's transportation regulator allows self-driving car companies to expand their programs in the state — despite opposition from police and fire departments.
  • The Fossil Fuel Free Pledge launch event will be taking place on Thursday, August 11 at 10:30 a.m. in Mission Bay - that's right, IN the bay, showing parts of our community will be underwater due to the climate crisis. Please meet at 1258 E Mission Bay Dr, San Diego, CA 92109 (Fiesta Island parking lot adjacent to the event location) and there will be directional signage which will lead you to the event. We hope to see you there! For more information, please visit: www.fossilfuelfreepledge.org/
  • Updated versions of the mRNA vaccines roll out this week. Experts say they offer good protection against current COVID variants. Who should get them, and when's the best time to roll up your sleeve?
  • The Food and Drug Administration convened an expert panel to review the latest data on phenylephrine. That's found in over-the-counter versions of Sudafed, Dayquil and other cold medicines.
  • Campland on the Bay invites you to a 4th of July holiday weekend filled with family-friendly activities and entertainment available to RV guests and the public alike! Celebrate the full holiday experience at San Diego’s beloved RV travel destination on Mission Bay with a weekend full of activities including a Giant Water Slide, watersports, live music, patriotically decorated RVs and campsites, and a waterfront view of SeaWorld’s Independence Day Fireworks Spectacular from 8:50-9:05 p.m. on Monday, July 4. Campland Rocks live music | 7 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays Family-Friendly Activities | Daily, see schedule for details Watersports | 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday-Thursday SeaWorld’s Independence Day Fireworks Spectacular: Monday, July 4, 8:50-9:05 p.m. Visit http://campland.com/ or call (858) 581-4260 Campland on the Bay on Facebook / Instagram
  • ALO
    “ALO is a lot of things. Simply put, it’s a rock band, a family, an artistic outlet, a community and a business. But that only scratches the surface of this 30-year musical vision quest,” says Zach Gill, keys player for the beloved funk n’ roll outfit that began in 1989 when Gill, Dan “Lebo” Lebowitz, and Steve Adams teamed up in their Bay Area hometown at the ripe old age of 13 to play music. “We’ve all been through so much together, there’s a lot of trust,” adds Lebo. “This long term relationship of ours is a beautiful thing.” Before their senior year of high school the three had already recorded an album, and in keeping with their shared vision and rock n’ roll dreams, they relocated as a band to Santa Barbara for college. After nine studio releases and nearly a couple decades of worldwide touring, ALO continues to defy the odds as they prepare to embark on their 14th Annual Tour "d’Amour", and unleash "Creatures Vol. 2: Weave, the second in a series of EPs". With the release of "Creatures Vol. 1: Spark" in July 2019, ALO unveiled a fresh sound and a new lineup with the addition of friend and drummer Ezra Lipp (Phil Lesh & Friends, Stu Allen & Mars Hotel, Magic In The Other), who stepped in for longtime bandmate Dave Brogan. The decision to make a series of EPs worked well for the band, whose members live in different places, and whose schedules required quicker recording sessions. “We love the full-length album process, but these days there are so many different ways to get your music out there,” Adams explains. “For us, the decision to make EPs was like, ‘Why not try it? We like new things.’ Just four songs to focus on each round in the studio. As it went, it was manageable and fun.” It’s that innovative spirit that keeps ALO’s fires of inspiration burning, along with their individual side projects and collaborations. Multi-instrumentalist Gill nurtures a solo career and records and tours with Jack Johnson, who the band befriended in college and who signed ALO to his label, Brushfire Records, in 2005. Bassist Adams has toured with many groups over the years including Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers and Brett Dennen, and stays active in the Bay Area music scene. And along with solo and band-led work, guitarist Lebo performs with the Grateful Dead’s Phil Lesh, Rock Collection, Doobie Decibel System, and more. When these lifelong friends come together to create, however, is when the magic happens, born from familiarity and experience, of all-night drives to gigs in vans, of shared destinies and inside jokes. And the evidence is in the lyrical, head-bobbing introspection of Spark, and in the smoldering, dance-worthy grooves of Weave. Both efforts encompass the band’s multiple facets. Both translate beautifully for the band’s legendary live performances. And both are primed for those mystical, mysterious jams. “The idea is to inspire people,” Lebo explains. “As a music listener, that’s the music I tend to be drawn to, when I hear something that inspires me and gets me excited about life. That’s what we’re trying to do. As well as inspire ourselves as a band. If we can get ourselves there, then we can translate that to our audience.” That idea has been more like a mission for ALO, to approach the music with a sense of freedom, and create a liberating space for their listeners. “We want people to feel free at our shows - to participate and join along, or just step into our world for a night and enjoy the ride,” says Adams. In February, the band will continue to set eager audiences free on their highly-anticipated 14th Annual Tour "D’Amour", which traditionally benefits music programs in public schools, a cause close to each of their hearts. “In our school, in our town, we were able to be in choir, and play in a jazz band, and play in the jazz choir. There were bands and orchestras, by senior year I think I was in three music classes a day,” recalls Lebo. “A lot of schools have had to cut their music programs because they don’t have funding. Those music programs were so beneficial to us. That’s the age when you get turned on to so much. We feel like supporting music programs is a way we can give back.” “We often reflect on how important music education was in high school and how inspiring it was for us,” adds Adams. “It gave us something to build on, and helped make that connection between education and career. It gave us something to invest in and believe in. It still amazes me to see that childhood dream still playing itself out.” “When the four of us are all in a zone together, it’s really special,” Lebo says of the ALO live experience. “I feel like that’s what we’re always shooting for at a show or in the studio, or even if we’re all just hanging out in the van on the way to gigs.” And that’s what this band is, a collective whose sum is more powerful than its parts, and one that has proven that it can stand the test of time. “It feels old and new, classic and fresh,” Gill concludes. “It holds tension and dreams and possibility in its folds. It’s love and freedom collected, catalogued, then released back into the wilds from whence it came. It hopes to unveil something magical, something unheard of, something the world needs.” Social Media Facebook & Instagram
  • The confirmed death toll from the weekend flooding did not include Derna, which was inaccessible, and many of the thousands missing there were believed carried away by waters after two dams burst.
  • Vaccines for a fall immunization drive against COVID-19 just got the green light from the Food and Drug Administration.
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