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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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The focus on environmental films takes place a year after the disaster spilled 39 million gallons of toxic chemicals.
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A new painting of Ohio’s big names in space exploration—including John Glenn, Neil Armstrong, Jim Lovell, and Judith Resnik—was mounted just off the Statehouse rotunda.
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Did you know the famous Henny Penny chicken fryer used in restaurants like McDonald's, KFC, and Chick-fil-a was invented just north of Cincinnati in Preble County? The local historical society is on a mission to tell the county's story.
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Classical 101The documentary Symphony of the Holocaust chronicles Hungarian violin prodigy Shony Alex Braun’s musical journey through the Holocaust, the composition of his Symphony of the Holocaust after the war’s end, and the efforts to bring the beauty of music to a place that saw some of the world’s deepest darkness.
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The piece of art will be unveiled Wednesday and then hung Thursday, and is the first large-scale painting commissioned for the halls of the Ohio legislature in 66 years.
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The song is a lush ballad with a rocking piano line that builds with soaring strings. It sounds a lot like many other hits by the Grammy Award-winning, 74-year-old singer-songwriter.
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Classical 101Columbus artist April Sunami believes great art happens in communities. Now, in an exhibition of new work at Worthington’s McConnell Arts Center, Sunami is giving thanks to the family, friends and fellow artists who helped her along the way.
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Cleveland Scene music writer Jeff Niesel shares his advice on how to discover more local music in the new year.
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Dayton-area artist, educator and community servant Willis ‘Bing’ Davis has spent a lifetime supporting local arts. He shares tips on how you can get involved in a cause you care about.
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Ohio poet laureate Kari Gunter Seymour gives her advice on how to integrate literature from local authors into your life.
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Romero was known for graphic horror films like Night of the Living Dead, which showed corpses rising up to feast on the living. He spoke to Fresh Air in 1988.
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After a one-year absence, Cleveland is again rolling out the red carpet for the Alternative Press Music Awards . The fourth annual ceremony is the brain...
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The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum opened its doors in 1995 along the Cleveland lakeshore. While the Rock Hall's I.M. Pei building is iconic and recognized around the world it's been a challenging exhibition space, according to president and C.E.O Greg Harris. "Architecturally I think the I.M. Pei building is one of the finest buildings in our country. It's a real statement, it's a strong building. But to function as a museum, it's a giant, glass tent sitting on the edge of a big lake," Harris admits.
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Sony says it's meeting new demand from young people who buy records they've heard on streaming services. The company stopped pressing vinyl in 1989.
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Recently, the New York Times published an essay defending cultural appropriation as necessary engagement. But that's a simplistic, misguided way of looking at appropriation, which causes real harm.
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This weekend the musical spotlight is on jazz as the 38th annual Tri-C JazzFest gets underway in Playhouse Square. But what is the state of jazz in Northeast Ohio during the other 51 weeks of the year? “The state of jazz in Cleveland isn’t much different than the state of jazz nationally. I think jazz is hurting. There has definitely been a decline in jazz interest and appreciation, probably over the last thirty years,” said longtime jazz broadcaster Jim Szabo.
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Northeast Ohio native Michael Comet liked to doodle during school and now his doodling takes place at Pixar Animation Studios where he's worked on hit animated films like Up, Brave and The Good Dinosaur. Pixar's latest production, Cars 3, is on screens now across the country. As a characters supervisor, Comet's department takes what comes out of Pixar's art department and recreates the art in the computer digitally.
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Playwright Greg Vovos knows the title, “How to Be a Respectable Junkie,” leaves some people wondering what kind of play he created. He is hoping that intrigue brings people to Dobama Theatre for the one-man show, which offers a window into what life is like for a man addicted to heroin. The main character, Brian, is considering suicide and decides to make a how-to video before taking his own life. The instructional video is intended to show drug users how to improve their behavior as addicts.
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The Pulitzer Prize-winning poet says she plans to use her new role to meet people who don't read poetry ... yet, anyway. She believes poetry can be a resource for people in fraught or isolating times.
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Hollywood's long history of not putting interracial romance on-screen goes all the way back to the Hays Code, which prohibited the depiction of "sex relationships between the white and black races."