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Friday, November 22, 2024

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Tagged with: Internet

Bleep, bloop, apocalypse: ‘Rossum’s Universal Robots’ looks back to the future

Cutting Ball's latest searches for ghosts in the machine of a 1920 text, amid our 2023 tech overload

A view of ‘Bay Area Now 9’: Triennial makes case for SF’s enduring creative community

Look to Janet Delaney and Lenore Chinn's pieces for proof of longstanding, vital role of local artists.

Screen Grabs: 3rd i Fest takes on Indian politics, TikTok obsession, Bangla Surf Girls

Plus: UN Film Fest on the dying press and nuclear testing, charming classic Chinese musicals, Birthday Party doc

‘Nollywood Dreams’ sends up a fly-by-night film industry with knowing delight

Jocelyn Bioh comedy-drama at SF Playhouse lovingly skewers a ripe target with sharp wit and a plum cast.

Letter to the editor: Feinstein, the drug warrior

She opposed legalizing even medical cannabis, supported War on Drugs prison sentences, and even fought against federal marijuana research.

Arts Forecast: A refuge for refugee art in the Mission

Refugee Eye opens eyes. Plus: Shipwreck Week, Kafana Balkan, Hard French, Recombinant Fest, CounterPulse Fest, more to do!

Dance floor to ‘First Floor’: Shawn Reynaldo grapples with electronic music’s slippery culture

The longtime journalist's popular newsletter—and now book—captures the fine-grain details of a mercurial scene

Boxing with parenthood and prejudice, plus puppet, in ‘Wolf Play’

In a perfect world, the ability to choose one’s own family would be on par with the acknowledgement of your biological kin. The excuse...

Something rotten: Nazi-occupied Denmark through young eyes in Richard Kluger’s latest novel

Seasoned journalist explores a country's moral quandry via historical fiction of 'Hamlet's Children.'

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.'