Fitz and The Tantrums whips the Sylvee into a frenzy
Crowds swarmed The Sylvee on Friday, Feb. 3, where indie-pop darlings Fitz and The Tantrums performed for a sold-out house.
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Crowds swarmed The Sylvee on Friday, Feb. 3, where indie-pop darlings Fitz and The Tantrums performed for a sold-out house.
The Black Cultural Center (BCC) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison planned a month-long program to celebrate and commemorate Black History Month this February, entitled “Black Arts: Multiple Mediums, One Story.”
On Scottrade Center’s concrete doormat, just a slapshot away from the churning Mississippi River in St. Louis, a chapped-eared vendor calls into the crystalized January night: “Programs for tonight’s game! Programs!”
The Black Woman’s Affinity Group (BWAG) opened a new art exhibition titled “Protecting the Black Woman” at Madison College’s Truax Campus on Feb. 2, highlighting the experiences of Black women using different mediums.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Multicultural Student Center (MSC) kicked off the year with their annual Comeback Carnival event held at the Red Gym, home to the university’s various student identity centers, on Jan. 27.
The concept of artificial intelligence first punctured my juvenile mind on a brisk fall morning five years ago. At the time I was an arrogant ninth grader, enveloped with a façade of self-importance and completely disinterested in the slow crawl of societal advancement.
After an arduous campaign season, the nominees for the 95th Academy Awards were finally announced by Academy Award winner Riz Ahmed and actress Allison Williams via livestream early Tuesday morning from the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.
MILWAUKEE, Wis. — City and county officials gathered at the Dr. Benjamin Carson Academy of Science on Milwaukee's north side on Martin Luther King Jr. Day to restate their commitment to acts of service within the community.
I went through films released this year, found spurious connections between them and pitted them against each other. Let’s go.
The Persian Student Society (PSS), a growing social and cultural student organization at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, held Yalda Night — or Shabe Yalda — last Friday night in Memorial Union’s Tripp Hall to celebrate the winter solstice.
Sheldon Epps has been a prominent face in the American theater for decades. He conceived and directed the Tony-nominated musicals “Play On!” and “Blues in the Night.” Additionally, he directed episodes of classic shows like “Friends,” “Frasier” and “Sister, Sister” all while working as the artistic director of the Pasadena Playhouse, occupying the role from 1997 to 2017.
A nomadic Twitter user only knows the most accurate American political pundit by his username — @Cityafreaks — or by the dime-sized profile picture that accompanies his written thoughts and, contrary to popular belief, is not Tony Soprano.
"Peter and the Starcatcher" opened with a mystifying preview Thursday Nov. 17 at the Ronald E. Mitchell Theatre and audiences were enchanted by the performer’s childlike sense of play.
On Friday and Saturday, the No. 2 Wisconsin Badgers took on Bemidji State for the second time this season.
The sequel to “Knives Out” (2019) is another masterful mystery from writer and director Rian Johnson. Once again starring Daniel Craig as detective Benoit Blanc, “Glass Onion” delights with exciting mystery, charming characters and social commentary that is somehow both timely and timeless — vaulting the tale into instant classic territory.
As a student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, there are a few reliable constants. One, that rusty bike with a missing wheel still chained to a bike rack near the Subway on West Dayton St. Two, people trying to steal plastic flamingos from campus property. Three, emails from Jon Eckhardt.
We’re all just people who do bad things.
In 1978, Detective Ron Stallworth of the Colorado Springs Police Department noticed an advertisement in the local newspaper seeking members to start a new chapter of the Ku Klux Klan. He responded with interest.
The Backseat Lovers released their sophomore studio album “Waiting to Spill” at midnight on Oct. 28. This album is fiercely vulnerable in comparison to their debut album, “When We Were Friends.”
During his first term, Gov. Tony Evers vetoed over 120 bills coming from the Republican-controlled Legislature. There wasn’t much legislative consensus between the two parties.