Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • This Black History Month brings a new festival to Chattanooga. On Saturday, the East Lake Community Center hosts the Black History Festival, from 11 AM to 4 PM.
  • Here’s a description for a play: “No rehearsals. No director. No set. A different actor reads the script cold for the first time at each performance.” That’s what you’ll see in “White Rabbit Red Rabbit” - premiering at Barking Legs Theater in Chattanooga on Friday, February 24th.
  • The place for small-scale development in Chattanooga. “Territorial: The Land and Us,” an exhibition at Stove Works. So, you want to be a podcaster? Ask Michael Crosa. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • What can a Sun Belt city learn from a Rust Belt city about developing vacant spaces? Start small. Scale incrementally. Neighborhoods - and the people in them - first. Those are some of the values that Bernice Radle has applied in Buffalo, New York.
  • A group exhibition coming to Stove Works here in Chattanooga examines our relationship with land - and with each other - through art. “Territorial: The Land and Us” - curated by Haley Clouser of Lincoln, Massachusetts - premieres on Friday, February 24th.
  • Michael Crosa is a podcaster here in Chattanooga. He’s the director of “Jollyville Radio” - and his new podcast is “My Part of Town Chattanooga.” On Tuesday, February 21st, starting at 6 PM, he’ll teach an Introduction to Podcasting class at The Chattery.
  • Hamilton County’s Karen Guinn on homeless health care. “A Sense of Place” at the Hunter Museum in Chattanooga. The Likht Ensemble tells the story of “The Shoah Songbook.” These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • Karen Guinn is a registered nurse who started her career with the Hamilton County Health Department nearly forty years ago. Today, she is director of the county’s homeless health care center - and we recently spoke about her elevated role.
  • On Thursday, the Hunter Museum of American Art will present a program inspired by the current exhibition on Nellie Mae Rowe. Charlie Newton is an artist, educator, activist and longtime resident of Chattanooga’s Westside. Adera Causey is the Hunter’s curator of education.
  • Rarely performed music composed by Jewish artists during the Holocaust will be heard in Chattanooga this week. The Likht Ensemble will perform “The Shoah Songbook” on Thursday here at UTC and on Friday at The Chattanooga Public Library.
444 of 19,873