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  • The four-day film festival kicks off Sept. 7 in Balboa Park and will celebrate and uplift the broad spectrum of the LGBTQ+ community through movies at a time of growing anti-LGBTQ+ legislation across the U.S.
  • This ambitious thriller comes across as an empty stunt — a democracy dystopia that sidesteps the politics of the present moment. But Kirsten Dunst is excellent as a battle scarred photojournalist.
  • Artificial wombs could someday save babies born very prematurely. Even though the experimental technology is still in animal tests, there are mounting questions about its eventual use with humans.
  • Simpson died on Wednesday after a battle with cancer, his family said. His celebrity turned to infamy three decades ago when he was accused and then acquitted of killing his ex-wife and her friend.
  • Doxxing campaigns have been used to "name and shame" people who have expressed opinions about the Israel-Hamas war.
  • South Korea's liberal opposition wins nearly two-thirds of the seats in parliamentary elections, blowing a crushing defeat to President Yoon Suk Yeol.
  • The decision comes just months after California lawmakers outlawed the use of the disproven medical theory as a cause of death.
  • Customers at Freshly Faded Barber + Shop in North Park aren't just leaving with dope haircuts and fades; they're also getting their blood pressure checked.
  • The Coronado Historical Association invites you to join us for a behind-the-scenes look at the pioneering legacy of Henry G. Fenton, told by local historian Dr. Sandra Bonura. Sandee is the award-winning author of multiple published works. Between writing two of her best-known works on the Del and Spreckels family, a new fascinating story emerged. She began penning the biography of Fenton and came away amazed that it is virtually impossible to go anywhere in Coronado without seeing something connected to this forgotten pioneer. Fenton was a formidable visionary, and his industrial and agricultural enterprises ultimately transformed San Diego and Coronado. Despite the fact that he created much of San Diego’s early-twentieth-century infrastructure, his name is unknown to many contemporary San Diegans. Learn how the concrete “eyesore” on the beach in front of the Del came to be. Learn why, after Fenton built the Zuniga Jetty, the rip-rap sea wall on Ocean Boulevard was necessary, and more. We will even hear how Fenton survived being caught between the feuding of Coronado’s founding fathers, none other than Elisha Babcock and John D. Spreckels.
  • Crowds and clouds didn't stop people from gathering across the path of totality. Viewers craned their necks and clapped as skies briefly darkened, a sight the U.S. won't see again until 2044.
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