The production is nothing less than Broadway caliber – but in an intimate theater setting.
Read More »Culture and Society
FEEcon 2019: So, What’s this Writing Thing About?
Four different perspectives on what it means, and what it takes, to be a writer were provided at the FEEcon Writers Panel presented by the Foundation for Economic Education.
Read More »FEEcon 2019: Making a Career Out of Video
There are many paths to careers in video. Here are four success stories.
Read More »FEEcon 2019: How Does Paris Get Fed?
If you had to feed a major city like Paris, where would you start? Find out how to keep people from starving.
Read More »FEEcon 2019: John Stossel’s Journey from Twenty-Twenty to 2019
Stossel became well known as a consumer advocate on ABC, spending 29 years exposing corrupt businesses, winning 19 Emmy awards along the way.
Read More »Nickelodeon Brings Spongebob Squarepants’ Bikini Bottom to Life at Comic-Con International: San Diego July 18-21, 2019
Headquartered at its 1,800 square-foot booth (#4113) on the convention floor, Nickelodeon will pay tribute to incurably optimistic SpongeBob SquarePants and his undersea friends.
Read More »Father’s Day – Why a Good Dad Is More Important Than Ever
Every third Sunday in June we celebrate Father’s Day, and it is worth noting that men who get called “Dad,” “Papa,” “Pop” or whatever other way it can be said deserve their special day.
Read More »75th Anniversary of D-Day – The Lost Must Never Be Forgotten
As world leaders gathered in England and France to solemnly mark the 75th anniversary of the D-Day invasion of France on June 6, 1944, it is necessary and compelling to remember those lost.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Madame Lynch’
Though colorful and energetic, this collage-like look at Eliza Lynch, the real-life "Queen of Paraguay," falls mostly flat.
Read More »Theater Review (NYC): ‘Unmaking Toulouse-Lautrec’ from Bated Breath Theatre Company
Through the magic of theater, 'Unmaking Toulouse-Lautrec' will bring you into an intimate space where the mind of a great but troubled artist can live on for a new generation.
Read More »