The Bay Bridged | Nov 21, 2009
Listen to The Bay Bridged interview with Alex and Lindsay of the San Francisco seven-piece country-rock band Or, the Whale.
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Gallery Crawl | Nov 20, 2009
Sparrow Lane -- November 2009, Pt. 1
View the Gallery Crawl interview with photographer Holly Andres. Her Sparrow Lane series, on view at SF's Robert Koch Gallery through December 24, depicts a mysterious narrative about the transitional space between girlhood and womanhood.
Pop Culture | Nov 19, 2009
Video of the Week: Clean It Up
Every Thursday, the KQED Arts blog features a new Video of the Week to help you forget that it isn't Friday yet. Chicago-based street artist Goons uses paper and stop-motion to create a one minute clip for all the clean-freaks and germaphobes out there. By Emmanuel Hapsis
The Writers' Block | Nov 19, 2009
Beautiful
Amy Reed reads a passage from her debut novel, Beautiful, about a young girl who trades her good-girl existence for a swift downward spiral tinged with drugs and abuse. By Amy Reed
Art Review | Nov 18, 2009
Maxwell's Megarealms
Maxwell Loren Holyoke-Hirsch wants you to see his studio. But since it's weird to invite strangers into one's personal space, he has set up a condensed version of it inside Fecal Face Dot Gallery and called it Megarealms. By Kristin Farr
Art Review | Nov 17, 2009
The Road to Afterlife
Afterlife continues an international tradition of making art out of everyday objects, including the stuff most of us routinely kick to the curb. By Ben Marks
Art Review | Nov 16, 2009
Tara Foley: Either in a Million Years or Until the Bitter End
There is something familiar about Tara Foley's work, the way a Grimm's fairy tale can feel familiar and yet unexplored. By Molly Samuel
The Bay Bridged | Nov 15, 2009
Still Flyin'
Listen to The Bay Bridged interview with five members of San Francisco band Still Flyin'.
Festival Report | Nov 14, 2009
Gay Rights and New Italian Cinema
Different From Whom? and Sea Purple address gay rights in Italy from widely divergent perspectives. By Jeffrey Edalatpour
Film Review | Nov 13, 2009
Roland Emmerich blows up the world real good. Again.
As disaster movies go, 2012 is an over-the-top blast of pedal-to-the-metal, 100 percent unadulterated hokum. It works on the nervous system, the retinas and the gut, largely avoiding the cerebral cortex and, thankfully, the tear ducts. By Michael Fox
Pop Culture | Nov 12, 2009
Video of the Week: Ready, Able
Every Thursday, the KQED Arts blog features a new Video of the Week to help you forget that it isn't Friday yet. Artist Allison Schulnik uses stop-motion claymation to make the most amazingly bizarre Grizzly Bear music video to date. By Emmanuel Hapsis
Event | Nov 12, 2009
IN YOUR FACE: Contemporary Brazilian Art at YBCA
The tables have turned: instead of telling you what we think about art shows, we're hitting the streets to find out what the beautiful people think. This month, we headed to the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts to revel in the Brazilian spirit of their latest exhibition, When Lives Become Form. By Emmanuel Hapsis
Event | Nov 11, 2009
The San Francisco International Animation Festival
It's PR-speak but it's also true that this little festival "celebrates San Francisco's prominence as a hub for one of the most creative cinematic forms." By Jonathan Kiefer
NPR Topics: Arts & Life
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A Child's Doctor Turns To Iraq War's Youngest Victims
Dr. Chris Coppola was a pediatrician in the U.S. before he shipped off to Iraq. As a military surgeon, he expected to treat soldiers, but he found himself helping war-ravaged Iraqi children as well. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Dr. Coppola about his memoir, Coppola: A Pediatric Surgeon in Iraq.
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Growing Up With Orson Welles As Her Father
The name Orson Welles has the power to jog millions of memories. His radio work sent the nation into a panic. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Chris Welles Feder about her new book, In My Father's Shadow, an account of her life growing up as the daughter of Orson Welles.
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Berry Bad: Threat To Trees Lurks On Holiday Tables
Its alluring crimson fruit makes it an enduring star of the Thanksgiving centerpiece, but Asiatic bittersweet is strangling trees across New England. In many states, it's illegal to collect or move the invasive vine.
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'The Vibrator Play': Why Yes, It Is About Exactly That
Any short list of important young American playwrights would have to include Sarah Ruhl, who at age 35 has had work performed at major theaters around the country. She made her Broadway debut Nov. 19, with a period drama called In the Next Room, or The Vibrator Play. But as Jeff Lunden reports, it's as much about intimacy and honesty as about sexuality.










