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  • Learn how to mix up drinks like the pros with this hour long, hands-on introduction to cocktail basics. Attendees will learn how to measure, shake, stir and pour drinks. Each attendee will have the opportunity to make and enjoy two cocktails, all while learning a brief history of the drinks being made. Taught by our very own staff. Tools and ingredients will be provided. Attendees must be 21 years of age. Cocktails rotate monthly! Attendees of the class are offered $10 off any one bottle purchase. Follow on social media! Facebook + Instagram
  • Premieres Monday, Feb. 6, 2023 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App. A co-production with Black Public Media, "Outta the Muck" wades into the rich soil of Pahokee, a rural Florida town. Beyond sending over a dozen players to the NFL, Pahokee, a rural town on the banks of Lake Okeechobe, possesses a legacy of resilience and achievement in the face of great storms and personal trauma.
  • The blockbuster $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit is set to go to trial next month in a Delaware court.
  • NPR's Leila Fadel speaks to Grammy-nominated artist 6LACK about his newest album: Since I Have a Lover.
  • Thursday, March 9, 2023 at 10:30 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Watch now on Vimeo. This Academy Award-nominated film features compelling first person accounts which reveal the physical, legal, and emotional consequences during the era when abortion was a criminal act. Remembrances include those of women who experienced illegal abortions, doctors who risked imprisonment and loss of their licenses for providing illegal abortions, and individuals who broke the law by helping women find safe abortions.
  • Hate crimes are on the rise in San Diego, but without evidence proving motive, such crimes are hard to prosecute. That's why the county is teaching 911 dispatchers the role they can play in gathering key evidence. Also, San Diego’s already bleak childcare landscape could get even worse as provider’s struggle to make money. Plus, San Diego public transit is getting an influx of federal money thanks to the return of congressional earmarks.
  • A trio of lawsuits allege that JP Morgan Chase and Deutsche Bank actively enabled Jeffrey Epstein to run a sex-trafficking ring for underage girls. A judge partially denied a motion to dismiss.
  • Patricia Velázquez spent her whole life listening to reggaeton. But when she was questioned about sexism in the songs, she began an investigation that would lead her to create something new.
  • Tuesdays, Aug. 13 - Sept. 17, 2024 at 9 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Stream the series now with KPBS Passport! Historian Dr. Onyeka Nubia examines Victorian Britain from the perspective of different regions throughout the nation. This week: Travel through Edinburgh, exploring the city's Old Town and the first medical school in the country. Discover how overcrowding in Victorian Edinburgh led to disease, fires and building collapse, leading to the establishment of the New Town.
  • Mexican officials say delays in policy changes and poor communication have created unnecessary problems. Meanwhile, Chula Vista took steps this week to create policy to protect the privacy of its residents. Also, novelist Don Winslow announces he’s retiring from writing.
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