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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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Cincinnati muralist William Rankins Jr. is losing his work to redevelopment.
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World champion ice carver Aaron Costic found his passion creating with ice. More than 100 sculptures by him and his team are on view this weekend at the annual Medina Ice Festival in Northeast Ohio.
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Events surrounding the solar eclipse, International Women's Day and several anniversaries will fill the museum this year.
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Classical 101A new recording, American Counterpoints, sets two undercelebrated African American composers in counterpoint and brings to light a long-obscured musical masterpiece in its first commercial recording.
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Two decades after the completion of the flood wall, Franklinton is seeing explosive development. Now gentrification threatens to displace the neighborhood's families.
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Of the 15 acts for consideration this year, 10 are on the ballot for the first time. The final list of inductees will be released in April.
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Getting a tattoo is one of the most permanent decisions you can make; it stays with you until you die. But one Ohio company is changing that: preserving tattoos as tributes to last beyond death.
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The Columbus Symphony Orchestra is banking on state grants and private donations to help fund the costly facility.
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The Columbus Symphony Orchestra submitted a preliminary site plan to build a Center of Music Innovation and Education on the Scioto Peninsula just south of COSI at West Bank Park.
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The contract is scheduled to take effect on Feb. 5 and will go through June 30, 2026.
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The Columbus Museum of Art has announced it was laying off 39 employees and slashing their budget due to money lost during coronavirus. It’s the latest…
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Roughly 40,000 Regal employees in the U.S. now face a work furlough. The company opted to shut down operations after the James Bond franchise's No Time to Die was shelved until 2021.
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The new Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences requirements are part of a larger effort to promote inclusion in an industry that has faced criticism for its lack of diversity.
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The Department of Homeland Security announced the changes last week, which will take effect in early October.
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Independent music venues continue to be among the businesses hardest hit by the global pandemic. The corporate behemoths of concert promotion, however, can weather the storm.
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The state has released a reopening plan for the performing arts which takes into account the many variables that come with live theater and music, such...
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Performing Arts studies at the University of Akron took a major hit last month because of massive job cuts campus-wide. With the fall semester about the start, there are some changes afoot.
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Host Ari Shapiro talks with Linda Diaz, the winner of this year's NPR Music Tiny Desk Contest. Her entry, "Green Tea Ice Cream" is a dreamy R&B song anchored by her skilled and soulful voice.
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Researchers are still digging into the question and sharing their findings decades after the Nazis sacked the homes of Jews during World War II.
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Each year, the Tiny Desk Contest receives entries from all 50 states, thanks to help from NPR Member stations across the country. Here are some of the 2020 entries that Member stations love.