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  • **What: Live Jazz! **When: Every Thursday starting around 4 for 2 hours or so (subject to weather) **Where: Outside at 5626 Bloch St. San Diego (University City) 92122 **Seating is outside around the neighborhood or in your parked car. Bring your own chairs or a blanket. Picnicking and wine tasting are popular. Perfect for a jazzy happy hour. Dogs on leash are always welcome. Masks and other Covid protocols are at the audience’s discretion. **FREE for all ages; kids to seniors. **Who: Here’s the expanded collective of scoundrels (a.k.a. The Front Porch Pandemic Jazz Band): Saxophones - Greg Pardue Keyboards - Jack Hoffman, Chris Penny, Biz Nguyen or Max Zape Bass - Roy Jenkins, Mark Phelps, Mark Delin or Gedeon Deak Guitar - Alex Lopez Drums - Larry Friedman, Jack Hoffman, Mike Masessa or Gary Chun Trumpet & Flugelhorn - Jim Napier Vocals – Mark Phelps or Gary Chun (Plus additional guest musicians and vocalists) The music we play is classic jazz, standards, swing & blues from the Great American Songbook along with Latin & island styles like Bossa Nova, Samba, Calypso and Reggae plus we've even been known to funk it up. Most of the songs are classics by musicians & composers such as Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Charlie Parker, Stan Getz, Louis Armstrong, Sonny Rollins, Thelonious Monk, the Beatles, Nora Jones, Sting, Grover Washington Jr. and many more. We know (or can fake) 100’s of songs and we’re always expanding the song list so you never know what we might pull out of our hat. We happily take requests if we know the song or have a chart. Songs are called out on the spot, arrangements can be on the fly and it’s never the same song list from week to week. Even the lineup of musicians changes slightly from week to week. It’s loose, it’s flexible & most of all it’s fun. Come join us and tell your friends! HISTORY of the FRONT PORCH PANDEMIC JAZZ JAM (2020-2025): "Back in April 2020, 3 long time professional San Diego musicians found themselves without any gigs or opportunities to play with other musicians because of the new Covid 19 Pandemic. Having gigged together in various bands for many years, on April 30, 2020 (UNESCO International Jazz Day); Greg Pardue (saxophones), Jack Hoffman (piano) and Roy Jenkins (bass) decided to try jamming outdoors on Greg's front porch where there was plenty of fresh air, a light breeze and room to observe the new concept of "social distancing". They had so much fun and the neighbors were delighted, so they decided to make it a weekly jam and invited a few friends to check it out because, being outside in San Diego with mild weather, it was relatively safe for an audience and the musicians even in the throes of the pandemic. Word got out about great live jazz every Thursday afternoon when public live music performances were almost non-existent. Several local TV stations checked them out and even interviewed Greg and the event garnered local and even a little international media coverage. During the first couple of years the band grew from 3 to 6 musicians in any given week and the audience grew to 30-50 people from all corners of San Diego county. There's also been other musicians and audience members from all around the US and Europe stop by to check it out while visiting San Diego. Word has really gotten out and it proves Jazz is truly an international music. Because the musicians are having so much fun, it has become a rotating collective of around 20 musicians from all over San Diego county and southern CA. And as the world has started to get a handle on Covid, the audience has also been having more and more fun. It's now become a regular "All Ages Jazz Happy Hour". Audience members bring picnics, have wine tastings and some bring their kids, dogs and bicycles. A weekly local running club now has the event on it's route. Another nice surprise has been on the academic side. USD Music professor, Dr. Angela Yeung, has made the Front Porch Pandemic Jazz Jam a class field trip every year since 2022. Thankfully the neighbors and the University City community have enthusiastically supported the weekly event since the beginning. Now April 30, 2025 marks the 5th Anniversary of the Front Porch Pandemic Jazz Jam and the musicians and audience are still having so much fun each week it shows no signs of stopping any time soon. In keeping with the regular Thursday afternoon schedule, their anniversary will be celebrated on May 1 (weather permitting). THE BASICS: San Diego Reader Best of 2021 – Winner - Best Local Band San Diego Reader Best of 2022/2023/2024 – Finalist - Best Local Band San Diego Reader Best of 2021/2022/2023/2024 – Finalist – Best Cover Band San Diego Reader Best of 2021/2022/2023 – Finalist – Best Neighborhood Event San Diego Reader Best of 2024 - Finalist - Best Place to See Live Music Outside
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has temporarily blocked a lower court ruling that found Texas' 2026 congressional redistricting plan pushed by President Trump likely discriminates on the basis of race.
  • Preview Night April 23: $17 "The Book Club Play" MiraCosta College Theatre By Karen Zacarias Directed by Eric Bishop When a devoted book club becomes the subject of a legendary documentarian, their cozy gatherings take a hilarious turn. Everything spirals out of control when a provocative new member joins, bringing eyebrow-raising book selections and throwing the group dynamics into chaos. This side-splitting comedy follows Ana and her fellow book lovers as they navigate friendship, literature, and the absurd situations that unfold when cameras start rolling. A playful testament to the power of books to bring people together, you'll feel like part of the group yourself! “A delightful, fresh comedy.” – Talkin’ Broadway Note: Children under the age of 5 are not admitted to the Theatre. MiraCosta College Theatre on Facebook / Instagram
  • Marcus Brown toiled for 10 years before stumbling into indie stardom. On his thrilling new album, he hears music in every hour worked — day jobs included.
  • The Republican-controlled Senate and House have so far taken a "hands-off" approach to oversight of the second Trump administration but legal concerns around boat strikes could change things.
  • Lisa Cook is challenging the president's attempt to remove her from office based on what she says is "an unsubstantiated allegation" of mortgage fraud prior to her Senate confirmation as governor.
  • Mary Klein had just moved to a new city when she got lost. A couple stopped to help and guided her home. They returned the next day with Christmas dinner.
  • This year's Miss Universe competition, held in Bangkok, was marred by a series of dramatic incidents, from a contestant's livestreamed walkout to a now former judge's allegations of rigging.
  • The Photographer’s Eye Gallery in Escondido will present “Susan Ressler: A Life in Photography,” featuring an informal talk by Ressler on Oct. 11 at 4 p.m., followed by a reception from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Gallery hours are Fridays and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and the show will close on Nov. 1. Her recently published book, "Susan Ressler Photographs: 50 Years, No End in Sight," earned third place in this year’s International Photography Awards’ competition, in the Professional Book/Monograph category. In addition, Ressler’s photo of an Algonquian family, shot in Quebec, Canada, in 1973, won a prestigious Best of Show in the same competition. Images from Ressler’s new book and the award-winning photographs will be on view at The Photographer’s Eye, a nonprofit, this October. Ressler lived among the Algonquian shortly after graduating from college. An anthropologist and documentary filmmaker from the University of Montreal arranged for her to stay on a First Nation reserve north of Montreal, where she spent three months documenting their life and ways. She was “adopted” by three families who spoke a French dialect that Ressler didn’t understand, so they communicated nonverbally. “We became very close and they let me into their lives, and that led to my first body of work,” Ressler says. Conditions on the reserve were harsh and the people were poor, and her black and white photos do not hesitate to reflect that. “All of my work deals with issues around social justice,” she says. “This is really why I became a photographer. It was that experience.” Her life among the Algonquian taught her about the imbalance between documentary photographers and their subjects, an imbalance that she has strived never to exploit. She was not yet 25 years old, and the experience had a profound effect on her. She had found her calling, and she never looked back. She was walking in the footsteps of Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, and W. Eugene Smith, all of whose work influenced hers. After her Canada experience she was admitted to the University of New Mexico Master of Fine Arts program, and began photographing Western themes, like cattle auctions. But one day she walked into a bank and saw it differently from the way she had seen it before. “I realized I came from an upper middle-class background, and I wanted to flip the script for documentary photography and photograph the wealthy,” she says. “That’s what really propelled my career, was that realization and that change.” She also felt she needed to go to California, where she became the only woman photographer, out of eight total, participating in the Los Angeles Documentary Project in 1979, which was funded by a National Endowment for the Arts grant for the city’s bicentennial. Her emphasis: Fortune 500 companies, which eventually led to her book, "Executive Order," which features photographs and portraits in L.A. boardrooms and executive offices. These photos, also in black and white, will share a room in The Photographer’s Eye with her photos of the Algonquian. The contrast is stark. California, particularly Southern California, has remained the relentless target of Ressler’s lens, resulting in her book "Dreaming California," which journals the glorious color and raging excess that epitomizes this part of the country, juxtaposed with the people who strove and often failed to catch the rising wave of wealth. Her retrospective book includes images from all these bodies of work. Ressler’s work has been shown and collected extensively, including at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and she is the recipient of many awards, nationally and internationally. She is a professor emerita at Purdue University, and resides in Taos, New Mexico. What: Susan Ressler: A Life in Photography Where: The Photographer’s Eye Gallery, 326 E. Grand Ave., Escondido, 92025 When: Oct. 11 through Nov. 1, with an artist’s talk at 4 p.m. and reception from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Hours: Fridays and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and by appointment by contacting donna@thephotographerseyecollective.com, or by calling 760-522-2170 Free: Admission to the gallery is free and donations are welcome; parking is available in front of and behind the gallery. The Photographer’s Eye on Facebook / Instagram
  • As accusations of genocide in Gaza mount against Israel, NPR looks at how the term is defined legally and why previously reticent scholars have changed their minds.
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