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16 May 2013
From Kendrick to Youngblood Hawke, get to know the artists on the Sun God lineup.
With the help of social media, a classic novel and a smattering of San Diegans, a 19th-century author is shaking up 21st-century entertainment.
With a new director comes an Iron Man ready to start off the summer movie season.
LA-based band comes running indeed with a complementary contrast in lyrics and music.
British synthpop musician’s high-tech instruments create songs that will be stuck on repeat.
They say “a man’s gotta have a code,” and to a certain extent that is true, even if the man who says it is a criminal who robs drug dealers for a living on the universally acclaimed series “The Wire.” It’s also true of another HBO series, “Game of Thrones,” which has managed to become a spiritual successor to “The Wire,” in a wilder and more explosive package.
San Diego’s New Play Cafe brings you some of the city’s brightest work, served up with coffee and, yes, hot fudge sundaes.
McConaughey inspires love and adventure in a sweet “Huckleberry Finn” tale.
Indie singer-songwriter’s follow-up album flies solo but follows a tried and true route.
If hip-hop is a religion, then Tupac Shakur is the quintessential Jesus. Ever since the Las Vegas shooting that cost him his life in 1996, the rapper has been immortalized like a spiritual figure, with vendors selling etchings of his face on city streets alongside images of Christ and Mary, as if he’s one of the most sacred humans to ever have lived.
Sci-fi thriller “Oblivion” succeeds in wowing audiences, supported by director Joseph Kosinski and Tom Cruise’s discussion about the film’s origins and atmosphere.
