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  • California is in a state of emergency as a brutal heat wave brings the threat of power outages and wildfires.
  • While some officers have yet to be trained, there is hope it has sparked the beginning of a culture change.
  • A must-see! Russian Ballet Theatre’s new production of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s timeless classic! Choreographer Nadezhda Kalinina (Mariinsky Theatre, Teatro Lirico, Omsk State Music Theatre) lovingly retouches the oldest St. Petersburg version of the ballet and adds her vision and something more, that undoubtedly will leave audiences flushed with emotion. RBT's dancers bring her choreography to life along with the new exquisite hand-painted sets and 150 new hand-sewn costumes. Designed by the young, accomplished Sergei Novikov (Mariinsky Theatre, Omsk State Music Theatre, St. Petersburg State Music Hall), these are in the century-old tradition of the great theatrical masters. SFX makeup by Award-winning Irina Strukova (Crazy Rich Asians, Netflix, HBO) completes the already perfect glittering fantasy that is Swan Lake! Date | Saturday, April 9 at 7:30 p.m. Location | San Diego Civic Theatre Get tickets here! Ticket prices ranging from $39 to $125. For more information, please visit sandiegotheatres.org/event/russian-ballet-theatre-presents-swan-lake or call (619) 615-4000.
  • President Xi Jinping was appointed to a third 5-year term at the Communist Party Congress. He also elevated several allies to leadership positions.
  • Best Practice gallery in the Bread and Salt complex will open two new solo exhibitions by Mexican artists Andrew Roberts and Mauricio Muñoz. The works will be on view from Jan. 8 through Feb. 12, 2022. Read the KPBS feature here: Two Mexican artists unveil new work at Best Practice Opening reception: Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022 5-8 p.m. From the gallery: "A house on fire is a ghost, a factory on fire is a specter" is a computer-generated installation by Mexico City-based artist Andrew Roberts. Through exploring his family history and its close connection with the arms industry, the artist focuses on both of his grandfathers - an American fighter pilot and a Mexican assembly line worker, or a soldier and an engineer - as two parallel figures within the military-industrial complex narrative. Through the employment of video game design and development software, Roberts recreates two long-lost sites that belonged to his family, equally lost to fire: a house in California, property of his paternal grandfather, and a maquila in Tijuana, owned by his maternal grandfather. As a way to understand generational trauma, the work featured in this exhibition dismantles and critically analyzes the industrial interdependence between Mexico and the United States reconstructed by a personal story in a web of affective relationships, mental health policies, cross-border labor, and war technologies. "A thirst for misery," is an exhibition of paintings by Mexico City-based artist Mauricio Muñoz. Through this new body of work, the artist finds in the early 2000s media portrayal of celebrity misery the roots of today's pleasure for disaster, an obsession fueling contemporary digital voyeurism and self-righteous social media patrolling. So vain it had to be on a canvas. So superficial, just like the bidimensionality of a painting. So banal, and therefore a sudden urgency to make a lot of them. Stars having a melt down, just like acrylic paint melting into a gooey plaster. A theater of cruelty molded by the tabloids and sensationalist blogs we´ve been reading since our teen days. A thirst for misery: the climax of a series of unfortunate events that we´ve been eager to consume and enjoy. About the artists: Andrew Roberts Mauricio Muñoz Related links: Best Practice on Instagram Best Practice
  • A malfunctioning South Korean ballistic missile blew up as it plowed into the ground Wednesday during a live-fire drill, panicking and confusing residents of the coastal city of Gangneung.
  • ˆFrom San Diego Dance Theater: With the many changes in the performing arts this past year, San Diego Dance Theater has fought to survive and to continue to provide excellent dance experiences for everyone throughout the pandemic. To conclude 2021, Executive Artistic Director Terry Wilson has designed an evening of dance that journeys into the heart and soul. Capturing Balance: Dances of Live, Love, and Loss includes choreography by Terry Wilson, former Artistic Director Jean Isaacs, and Guest Choreographer Khamla Somphanh. When: Friday, Nov. 12, 2021 at 7:30pm Saturday, Nov. 13, 2021 at 7:30pm Sunday, Nov. 14, 2021 at 2:30pm Where: Light Box Theater General Admission, $30. Senior/Military Admission, $20. Student Admission, $15. Tickets can be purchased at the Ticketleap link below, or by calling 619-225-1803. For more information and ticket purchases please visit HERE!
  • DeSantis has made the culture wars central to his political identity — and intends to run that way in the GOP primary for president.
  • One man died and 30 people were injured after a flight from London to Singapore experienced severe turbulence. Here's what to know about how to keep yourself safe and why turbulence happens.
  • Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has slowed restorations of voting rights for the formerly incarcerated while failing to specify what criteria he's using, sparking a federal lawsuit.
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