Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Wonderfront Music & Arts Festival took over downtown San Diego in 2019 to rave reviews. Taking over the waterfront parks and piers it turned into a city-wide celebration. After three years, the festival is coming back to bring you a better experience! Get ready to experience the beautiful waterfront parks, piers, ships and yacht parties play host. More than 250 downtown bars, restaurants, breweries and hotels all within steps. Ferries between stages or to the beautiful beaches of Coronado Island. After-parties in the Gaslamp Quarter and Little Italy. Sunset cruises, ocean activities and jet boat rides. America’s craft beer capital, and one of the top culinary cities. All imagined into one festival destination. Pop in and out of the festival grounds at any time with your RFID wristband, as we take over the town! Wonderfront Music & Arts festival starts Friday, November 18 and runs through Sunday, November 20, taking place at Broadway Port Pier. The Festival hours each day are: • Friday, November 18, 2:30 p.m. – 10 p.m. Broadway Port Pier remains open until midnight • Saturday, November 19, 12 p.m. – 10 p.m. Broadway Port Pier remains open until midnight • Sunday, November 20, 12 p.m. – 10 p.m. Get tickets here! General Admission, 3-day weekend pass: $359 General Admission, 3-day military pass: $335 VIP Exclusive, 3-day pass: $1,399 Click here to see full artist lineup. For more information, please visit wonderfrontfestival.com.
  • More than one in five California birthing hospitals closed in recent years, and the preterm birth rate is inching up.
  • More than three weeks have passed since San Diego State University released its scathing report about the county’s COVID-19 hotel program, and county officials refuse to talk about it.
  • The strangely addictive Japanese series is set in a small, all-night joint, run by a chef whose dishes helps strangers tap into something deep and universal.
  • Come see Indigo Girls perform with special guest Becky Warren on Wednesday, June 22 at Humphreys Concerts by the Bay. Contemporary folk icons Indigo Girls have had a long tenure as torchbearers of a modern approach to folk music that incorporates elements of alternative rock, punk, and country into the genre's traditional foundation. Each taking the stage with a guitar and a distinct voice, Emily Saliers and Amy Ray find the right balance of tension and harmony at their live shows, thrilling fans with marathon sets of mainstream hits and cult classics from their extensive catalog. In anticipation of a return to the studio in late 2014 for their 14th album, the Girls are pulling out all the stops on tour, performing alongside some of the country's best symphony orchestras at select dates around the country. The will be joined by special guest Becky Warren. She has gathered acclaim for her songs about other people—veterans on her debut album, War Surplus, and entrepreneurs experiencing homelessness on her second album, Undesirable. For the first time, on The Sick Season (out 10/23/20), Warren turns her focus inward, delivering a deeply personal set of songs propelled by the same catchy, guitar-driven rock that made her earlier albums critical successes.
  • Medicare and Medicaid are mandatory spending programs and that keeps them relatively safe in the early days of the shutdown, but 42% of the Department of Health's staff will be furloughed.
  • Michael Heizer began work on his massive installation in the Nevada desert more than 50 years ago. One of the largest artworks in the world, it cost $40 million (so far) and is now open to the public.
  • A lot can happen in 95 years. Ahead of the Academy Awards on Sunday, we take a look back at the surprises, the scandals, the slap and — yes — even the streaker.
  • The project to transform San Diego’s Central Embarcadero went before Port Commissioners and the public on Thursday.
  • Five years after of one of America's worst wildfires, slow and expensive recovery continues in Paradise, Calif., which could be a portent for what's ahead on fire-stricken Maui.
712 of 4,093