Radiotheatre's rotating series featured "The Call of Cthulhu" and "The Horror at the Museum" at last night's show.
Read More »Editor Picks
Marines, WFP Fight Hunger in Haiti
The U.S. Marines are teaming with the UN World Food Programme (WFP) to bring emergency relief to Haiti.
Read More »NCAA Fact or Fanatic: Week Six Trash, Week Seven Picks
Yes, we're nervous about our picks. Who wouldn't be? In a year that's been wild since week one, we know anything can happen.
Read More »American Bard: Bob Dylan Wins the Nobel Prize for Literature
Anyone who has listened to Dylan’s songs has known that they are pure poetry.
Read More »PC Game Review: ‘Thumper’ from Drool
Thumper is a terrific game blending rhythm, action, breakneck speeds and wild visuals, a must-play game on or off Virtual Reality.
Read More »Theater Review (San Antonio): Stephen Sondheim’s ‘Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street’
The Woodlawn Theatre offers up a bloody Halloween treat with an absolutely superb production of Sondheim's deliciously dark musical.
Read More »Book Review: ‘The Stranger’ by Anna del Mar
This was a fabulous fast-paced read, simply addictive.
Read More »Music Review: Holly Bowling – ‘Better Left Unsung’ (Solo Piano Tribute to the Grateful Dead)
On the surface, you might think that limiting the songs of a band that thrived on the interplay between various parts – most importantly the lead and rhythm guitars of Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir – wouldn't work, but you’d be mistaken. There is power and subtlety in these reinterpretations that I think Garcia would have admired, as his own personal tastes seemed to range to the more subdued and authentic soul of acoustic performances.
Read More »Theatre Review (Philadelphia): ‘Grounded’ by George Brant Delves into Drone Warfare and PTSD
Instead of being deployed half a world away, a drone pilot can drive home to her family every night – until war and home jumble and the separation between the two is erased.
Read More »Theater Review (San Antonio): ‘Marriage Play’ by Edward Albee
Even minor Albee is still Albee — a voice, now silenced, that will be much missed in American theater.
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