Aaron is joined by Carrboro Film Festival organizer Nic Beery – and Monique Velasquez, who’s running the festival’s make-a-movie-in-two-days marathon, the “C-47 Filmmaking Frenzy.”
We’re increasingly aware of sexual assault and sexual harassment – what does this mean for mental-health professionals? And what social reforms are needed? Aaron speaks with Dr. Khalil Tamas, incoming president of the Durham-Orange County Medical Society.
After a couple down years, UNC women’s basketball is back on the rise for 2018-19. Aaron chats with the team’s new play-by-play announcer, Matt Krause, ahead of our first broadcast (Sunday at 3:00!).
PlayMakers Repertory Company’s next mainstage show, the holiday musical “She Loves Me,” is on stage now through Sunday, December 9. Aaron got a chance to chat with the show’s stars, Jenny Latimer and Michael Maliakel.
Specializing in “gifts that give twice,” the United Church of Chapel Hill is holding its annual Alternative Gift Market this Friday and Saturday, November 16-17 (5-8 pm Friday and 9-3 Saturday), with a concert Friday evening to benefit the Peacemaking Scholarship Fund.
Tuesday, November 13, is RSVVP Day – the day when nearly a hundred area restaurants give 10 percent of their proceeds to the Inter-Faith Council for Social Service. Aaron spoke with IFC executive director Jackie Jenks and Anthony Carey of Chapel Hill’s Il Palio restaurant.
NC Comicon is in Durham! Aaron interviews co-founder Tommy Lee Edwards as well as one of the convention’s featured guests, graphic novelist/rock star Gerard Way.
The NC Child Fatality Task Force releases a report on child death rates for 2017: some lingering concerns, but generally good news as the fatality rate declined after four years of stagnation.
UNC’s Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History marks its 30th anniversary with a retrospective art exhibition. (There’s a reception Thursday, November 8.) Aaron speaks with Stone Center director Joseph Jordan.