-
Twenty years ago, pianist Peggy Stern created a jazz festival to celebrate female band leaders. After two decades, a location change, and a name change, the mission of the fest remains the same.
-
John L. Hanson Jr. interviews the author of The Queen of Sugar Hill, a novel illustrating the life of the first Black person to win an Academy award ever.
-
Months after demolition on the Erwin Center started, the exterior walls are coming down. We asked for your best memories of concerts, graduations, wrestling, circuses, Disney on Ice and everything else — and you sent us more than a thousand responses.
-
Torch Literary Arts — founded by Texas' 2024 Poet Laureate, Amanda Johnston, works to amplify and celebrate Black women writers.
-
Head to Zilker Park on Sunday to see hundreds of kites fill the sky. The festival runs from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
-
The president and CEO of one of nation's only minority-owned carriers that delivers data-focused insurance solutions to marginalized communities.
-
For The Way of Water: Onion Creek, Forklift Danceworks partners with Austin's Watershed Protection department.
-
Poet KB Brookins is circulating a petition to add a city program that would promote literacy and the arts in Austin.
-
John L. Hanson Jr. sat down with Williams, the president and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, in the latest installment of In Black America.
-
Through its various programs and advocacy efforts, Texas Cultural Trust works to advance and support the arts and artists in Texas.
-
Theater students at East View High School in Georgetown will be the first group to perform Cursed Child in the state of Texas. They were awarded the rights to put on the play after submitting a video detailing the "magic" of their program.
-
The lack of financial literacy is one of the biggest obstacles to racial wealth equity. John L. Hanson Jr. spoke to Washington Jr., CEO of Stone Hill Wealth Management, for more details.