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  • This weekend try a little cultural and biodiversity by sampling events from Centro Cultural De La Raza, Little Italy and the San Diego Natural History Museum.
  • The annual music awards show also featured controversial appearances by Travis Scott and Morgan Wallen.
  • It was supposed to open last year, but then the pandemic hit. Now, the San Diego Symphony is preparing to open its spectacular new waterfront venue, The Shell.
  • Bey has spent more than 40 years documenting Black Americans, from Harlem to Louisiana. The first museum retrospective of his work is now touring the country.
  • Premieres Monday, Aug. 30, 2021 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV / On Demand
  • For Black History Month we are celebrating playwright August Wilson. His "Jitney" is currently on stage at the Old Globe Theatre (through Feb. 23). KPBS arts reporter Beth Accomando spoke with the play's director Ruben Santiago-Hudson about Wilson's legacy and about adapting him to film.
  • May is Asian-American Pacific Islander Heritage Month in the United States. Asian-owned businesses and organizations in San Diego hope this month can help educate people about this diverse community.
  • The statue is valued at 100,000 euros and was stolen from an archaeological site near the outskirts of Rome.
  • livestock in Colombia are raised on vast, open ranges. Overseeing the herds requires the special skills of Colombian cowboys who are known as llaneros — Spanish for "plainsmen."
  • The Black Took Collective is a performance group composed of three award-winning LGBTQ Black poet-performers: Duriel Harris, Dawn Lundy Martin, and Ronaldo V. Wilson. This event will consist of live writing, poetry, music, dance, drawing, film, and critical race theory presented in an engaging and lively format designed to encourage reconsideration of identity, language, and embodiment and enlist audience participation and conversation. Date | December 9 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location | Online event The Black Took are queer post-theorists who embody intersectionality, perform and write in hybrid experimental forms, and embrace radical poetics and cutting-edge critical theory about race, gender, and sexuality, all while inviting audiences to participate and engage in the same. The Black Took Collective challenges both popular conceptions of racial identity as well as conventional artistic practices. Their performance events are unforgettable. Get your free tickets here! CSUSM Students: Free Community: Optional donation Faculty/Staff/Alumni: Optional donation  Co-sponsors: CHABSS Dean’s Office, Ethnic Studies Research Collaboratory, FMST, LTWR, WGSS For more information, please visit csusm.edu/al or email gjones@csusm.edu.
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