This Weekend: Jazz, Abba, Romantic Music, Spanish Zombies, Bill Maher, Olympics, The Super Bowl
There are many things to see and do this weekend, besides the Super Bowl…but there is also the Super Bowl
There are many things to see and do this weekend, besides the Super Bowl…but there is also the Super Bowl
Friday February 4, STAY HOME Hulu dropped the first three episodes of an eight-part series on Tuesday, but you were busy then, right?
This Weekend: Friday January 28 Stay Home Nor’Easter. In Bucks County they are predicting only 5 to 8 inches of snow overnight and
January 21 Friday Stay Home HBO/HBOMax Bill Maher is back, after a two-month break, during which a few things happened. Off year elections.
January 13 Thursday Stay Home and Stream anytime. The new series “Peacemaker” begins on HBOmax. It’s based on DC comics. There was a
January 7 Friday Stay Home HBOMax. Teenage Euthanasia. Stop reading when you’ve heard too much. That might be about now: “crotch beetles.” Still
December 30 Thursday Stay Home – Do you speak Mandalorian? You are about to speak Boba Fett. Disney+ has been secretive about the
Dec. 23 Thursday Stay home. Haven’t you heard? “The Matrix Ressurections” is on HBO (as well as in theaters) so gather around. Think
Because the CDC says that indoor activity and gathering in crowds “could be risky” now for fully vaccinated people and is “extremely dangerous”
University of North Georgia’s Matthew Boedy spoke to the Bucks County Beacon about his new book, “The Seven Mountains Mandate,” and how Kirk was part of this movement seeking right-wing Christian dominion over government and society.
On this Democracy Day, I want us to remember: democracy isn’t just something we inherit, it’s something we build — one election, one conversation, one act of civic engagement at a time, writes Bob Harvie.
Because authoritarianism is most visible in hindsight, people often don’t recognize it until it’s too late.
When the truth is unthinkable, we lie to ourselves and one another, writes historian Dr. William Horne.
“These communities in Bucks County were built for working-class people, and for decades it stayed that way. But since 2017, rent has gone up in our region by 50 percent,” said Prokopiak.