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  • Black Viiolet's Nicole Laurenne joins Haley Solomon live on WUTC ahead of Tuesday's night's concert of neosoul jazz triphop pop in Chattanooga at The Woodshop in St. Elmo.
  • Jarrod Walker, singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, talks with WUTC's Clark Gibson about "Nighthawk," his upcoming debut solo album - and the Chattanooga launch of his tour - both set for May.
  • Last week, we saw glimpses of what the Franklin-Roberts Future Ready Center in downtown Chattanooga will look like as design renderings were released for the new career and technical education hub.
  • (Aired Tues 4/21/26) In our latest conversation, UTC's Chancellor Dr. Lori Mann Bruce discusses quantum, AI, nanoengineering, community connections, library social work, a trip to New York City with UTC’s Wind Ensemble - and more.
  • Stand-up comedian and actor Mark Normand, whose latest special is now streaming on Netflix, performs tonight at The Walker Theatre in downtown Chattanooga. He spoke with WUTC's Haley Solomon.
  • (Aired Mon 4/21/26) The last weekend in April, the town of South Pittsburg, TN - thirty miles west of Chattanooga in Marion County - hosts the National Cornbread Festival. Beth Duggar is the Festival’s president.
  • "Diamond Dogs: A David Bowie Tribute" is a Chattanooga band's own salute to their musical hero - and Richard Winham's. Enjoy the band's session - hosted by Richard and recorded live downtown in the Chattanooga Public Library.
  • (Aired 4/13/2024) For the first half of this week’s "Open Book," my guests are the local playwrights, actors and producers Jason Tinney and Holly Morse-Ellington. In the second half of the show, my guest is novelist Melodie Edwards.
  • (Aired 5/11/24) In this "Open Book," my guest is a practicing psychiatrist who writes under the name James Champion. He decided to use a different name when writing his first novel to protect the patients he writes about in his account of the two years he spent in medical school as a clinical resident.
  • (Aired 5/18/24) For this "Open Book," my first guest is Stephen Eoannou, author of "Yesteryear" - followed by singer-songwriter Pi Jacobs.
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