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Tuesday, May 7, 2024

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Tagged with: Environment

Corporate propaganda has cost 90 percent of US residents $47 trillion. Here’s why

Eminent science historian Naomi Oreskes talks about business, government, and her groundbreaking new book, 'The Big Myth.'

Arts Forecast: SF Electronic Music Fest plugs into ‘ecosystems of sound’

Plus: Dengue Fever, El Güegüense XI, Detroit Love, Faetooth, The Worst Drag Show Ever, more to do this weekend

Bernal Heights Outdoor Cinema celebrates 20 years of awe beneath the stars

Hyperlocal film festival 'builds vibrant community and connects us to our shared humanity,' say cofounders

Lies, damn lies, and the new ‘report’ on San Francisco government

Ignore the realities of SF politics. Ignore a wide-ranging corruption scandal. Just go after district elections. That's what the Rose Institute, funded by Michael Moritz, is doing.

‘Desire for fullness’ leads Megan Lowe to explore dance through biracial identity

Choreographer's 'Gathering Pieces of Peace' foregrounds stories of fractured selves and longing.

Screen Grabs: UFOs, time travel, pod babies… just another weekend at the movies

New sci-fi films tackle contemporary problems. Plus: 'The Unknown Country' and a Pema Tseden tribute

Score a beer with Tim Redmond!

Help us meet $30K in matching funds, and even score a 1-on-1 with our founder and editor extraordinaire

At Berlin & Beyond, a rare vision of Oscars’ sleeper favorite on big screen

'All Quiet on the Western Front' joins a lineup of German-language gems.

The city’s climate plan will cost money; will Breed support progressive taxes to pay for it?

Plus: A long-awaited hearing on the city's reparations plan—and a debate over more money for the cops. That's The Agenda for March 12-19

The tragic toxic legacy of the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard

Aided by a USC fellowship, reporter Tom Molanphy and 48hills dug into the overwhelming history of data concerning the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, which...