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  • The nation's first Native American poet laureate has a new memoir in which she tells her own story — as well as the story of her sixth-generation grandfather, who was forced from his ancestral land.
  • A new drama series on Netflix is about one of the country's most notorious serial killers. It has NPR's Scott Simon thinking maybe it's the names of his many victims we should remember.
  • Forget what F. Scott Fitzgerald said about American lives and second acts, Gibbs is on his third or fourth. $$$ is a rewarding listen that sometimes labors under the weight of a forced progression.
  • The auto industry is undergoing a once-in-a-century transformation and not just blue-collar workers are feeling the impact. Some white-collar jobs are now at risk.
  • Exhibits, Sales & Make 'n Take Workshops for Collectors, Artists & DIY Crafters of Dollhouse Sized Miniatures It's not just Victorian Dollhouses! It's farmhouse chic and midcentury; it's laser cuts, 3D prints and LEDs along with handcrafted wonders! Exhibits included with ticket price - enjoy small scale to 1:12 displays. You'll be inspired by the imagination of San Diego Miniature Crafters. Just for our youngest shoppers under 12 - The Kids' Table will be full of items priced just right to get young miniaturists making and collecting! Dates: Saturday/Sunday February 5th and 6th from 10 a.m. - 4p.m. Location: San Diego Marriott Del Mar Cost: $5-$10 FREE Sunday with Paid Saturday - Tickets also available at the door For more information on this event and ticket purchases please visit HERE!
  • The Hausmann Quartet and Maritime Museum of San Diego are excited to partner to present the seventh season of Haydn Voyages: Music at the Maritime, a quarterly concert series performed aboard one of the Museum’s historic world-class vessels, the 1898 steam ferryboat Berkeley that operated for 60 years on San Francisco Bay. Four compositional giants meet on this concert program: Haydn, Beethoven, John Cage and Caroline Shaw. The dialogue among them is sometimes direct, and at other times less obvious, but Caroline Shaw sums it up best in her program note to her 2016 work, Blueprint: “Chamber music is ultimately about conversation without words. We talk to each other with our dynamics and articulations, and we try to give voice to the composers whose music has inspired us to gather in the same room and play music. Blueprint is also a conversation — with Beethoven, with Haydn (his teacher and the "father" of the string quartet), and with the joys and malinconia of his Op. 18 No. 6.” All concerts are Sundays at 2:30, and include an intermission for a total length of under two hours. Each creative program will also include informative and entertaining commentary between selections from noted UC Santa Barbara musicologist Derek Katz. Masks will be required for all performers and audience members until further notice.
  • Stream now or tune in Saturday, July 10, 2021 at 4 p.m. on KPBS 2
  • Stream now with the PBS app / Watch Wednesday, July 30, 2025 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV - The ancient Maya built large complex cities with towering pyramids and temples that served as centers for a thriving civilization. Follow archaeologists exploring new evidence into the mystery of why after hundreds of years the cities were abandoned.
  • During a global pandemic in Orocué, Colombia, dance and adversity brought a group together.
  • Bjork's Fossora peers down into the soil, in a love letter to fungi. "Bubbly and fun" is how she describes her new album.
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