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Olentangy Liberty High school freshman Benjamin Kurian's documentary looks at how artificial intelligence can make roads safer for drivers. The film debuts on C-Span on Saturday.
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Shakedown Circus: Revamp features a cast of mostly non-professional performers off all shapes and sizes. Audience members will see some skin.
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Educators and students from across the state are celebrating the classics in Columbus at the 102nd Ohio Classical Conference with a focus on making the ancient world more accessible.
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Documentary film "Beyond the Bridge" looks at how metropolitan areas responding to homelessness, and have found some tactics that are producing real change.
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The festival happening Saturday will show off five new murals painted along East Main Street and will include food, music and vendors.
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A new exhibit at Wilmington College is hoping to teach students how to use art as activism.
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Business & EconomyThe nearly 60-year-old Bier Stube, along with other businesses on the block of 9th Ave. and High Street, will close to make way for a 13-story apartment tower.
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Classical 101Remi Wörtmeyer has big dreams for BalletMet and for Columbus. In his first on-camera interview as BalletMet's artistic director, Wörtmeyer talks about his vision for Columbus' premiere dance company.
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As e-book use has exploded since the pandemic, libraries nationwide have been feeling the effects of a marketplace with uneven pricing.
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Classical 101Boston-based percussionist Matt Sharrock performs Time-Lapse, a concert of new music for solo vibraphone and electronics that explore in sound what it means for one person to speak – literally or figuratively – in a world that may or may not be listening.
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Ohio has become a big part of Gen Alpha slang. Now, the derogatory meaning has spread all over the world.
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A floating circus is making its way down the Ohio River, bringing acrobatics, puppets and fiddle-filled music to Ohio River towns.
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The 2020 inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame will be announced Jan. 15. Systemic issues — in the industry and the nominating process — have maintained a severe imbalance.
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Starting Jan. 3, Billboard is changing the way it calculates the top albums of the week. NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Slate writer and critic Chris Molanphy about what the rule changes mean.
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This story was originally published on May 3, 2019. Pinball is surging in popularity across the country. Here in Northeast Ohio, casual players are...
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As church choruses sing holiday hymns and the strains of Wham!’s "Last Christmas" play over the radio, one Columbus band is offering some musical…
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Classical 101Enjoy MUSIC + YOGA at the Columbus Museum of Art. Start the year on a high note with yoga for everyday life. Treat Yourself or give a ticket for an…
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Parasite, Knives Out, Avengers: Endgame, Little Womenand Marriage Storyare among the year-end list of 20 films that NPR critics loved the most.
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Released in 1994, this modern Christmas classic tapped out at No. 3 last season. This year, the Queen of Christmas claims her No. 1 crown.
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It’s common this time of year for musicians to perform Christmas carols, often visiting people who could use some holiday cheer. A pair of instrumentalists did just that on a recent afternoon at Joseph's Home, which provides housing and medical care for men in downtown Cleveland. But the visit was about more than familiar tunes. In the lower level of Joseph’s Home, a cellist and violinist set up music stands in front of a coat rack and a handful of men gathered in a small, multipurpose room taking seats nearby.
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We listened, voted and argued our way from more than 250 nominated albums down to just 25. And there was a clear No. 1.
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The Golden Globe nominations are always odd, but this year they may be even odder than usual, particularly on the TV side. But it must be said: The Globes love a star, and now they love Netflix.