Playlist: Celebrate with pride
By Caleb Bozard and Amelia Farrell | Oct. 6, 2022Celebrate pridefully with a curated collection of LGBTQIA+ approved songs from local drag performers.
Celebrate pridefully with a curated collection of LGBTQIA+ approved songs from local drag performers.
South Carolina Black Pride is an organization that provides people of color in the LGBTQ+ community with a place to feel welcomed and liberated.
The new album "5SOS5" from Australian band 5 Seconds of Summer features a visceral theme and explores the nature relationships, upholding friendships and navigating a life of fame. The album features a large scale of tracks with pop hits such as "Blender" and "Bloodhound," as well as more reflective songs such as "Older" and "TEARS!".
In "Three Thousand Years of Longing," George Miller tells the tale of an academic and a djinn. Through maximalist storytelling and a deep emotional center, he tells a new, imaginative love story.
A new art installation at The Mills apartment complex brings attention to the hardships textile workers faced in cotton mills in the early 1900s.
S.C. State Fair's "College Day" allows student to get a taste of South Carolina culture with food, rides, agriculture and more on Monday, Oct. 17.
Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½ is hosting a ceramics exhibit, Socially Engaged Ceramics, at the McMaster Gallery. Artists Julie Schnell-Madden and Lydia C. Thompson both use ceramics to describe and express their feelings about current social issues in the US
A long day of lectures calls for a serene sunset. Match the moment with a playlist full of mellow, colorful music.
The Great DuBois, a duo of electric circus performers featured in "The Greatest Showman," showcased their talents in the Russell House Ballroom on Monday night. Michael DuBois and Viktoria Grimmy have five generations of circus experience between them, dazzling audiences with feats of balance and coordination.
The annual ColaJazz Fest highlights jazz by inviting local and well known artists to perform in Columbia. Supported by the ColaJazz Foundation, artists such as Carl Allen, Aimee Nolte and Rodney Foster Jr. will perform this year at the two day event.
The Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½ Symphony Orchestra will open its Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½ Thursday with a rendition of Gustav Holst's "The Planet." The concert will feature visuals from NASA's James Webb Telescope and explore this Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½'s theme of "Power and Empower."
The Squonk music group will be arriving at the Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½ campus to perform their "Hand to Hand" number, featuring instrumental music and house-sized purple hands. The interactive performance will be the premiering show for the new outdoor Koger Center Plaza Stage.
16-time Emmy award-winning director Ken Burns' newest documentary premiered early on campus. The documentary explores the role of America in Jewish liberation and World War II.
Columbia's Greek Festival began Thursday with live music, Greek art and folk dancing. The festival will also feature traditional Greek food and more cultural fare throughout its run until it ends on Sept. 18.
Black alternative music covers a variety of musical avenues by an equally large number of artists. This playlist is a taste of what that genre could look like.
The final Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½ of "Game of Thrones" left many fans underwhelmed. "House of the Dragon" seeks to revitalize the franchise.
Dachshunds of Columbia is a local organization that started this year in order to bring Dachshund lovers together. Big groups of dachshunds meet up on Â鶹Сòòò½´«Ã½'s Horseshoe to walk around Columbia.