Staff Pick
-
On this episode of Flyover Culture, Eisner Award-winning comic artist and writer @DanielWarrenJohnson1 (TRANSFORMERS, BETA RAY BILL, DO A POWERBOMB!) joins Payton to talk comics, the creative process and why pro wrestling just might be the perfect icebreaker.
Why I love it: A must-watch for any creative or comic book lover, this interview provides insight into the process of making such beloved works.
- Anjuli J., Digital Operations Coordinator
-
They are the latest cuts in public media nationally after state and federal governments ended funding.
-
An IU student reflects on his journey from the classroom to hands-on production at WTIU, sharing how real-world experience shaped his passion for storytelling and prepared him for a career in media.
-
Shipwrecks are more than just museums of the past. They also create living underwater environments worth protecting.
-
Looking at the universe, our sun might be considered "just another star". While it might be special to us, there are a few other characteristics that makes it stand out.
There’s a print fest coming up in Bloomington.
-
About 150 years ago, Indiana nearly bankrupted itself building a statewide canal system. Now, a new archaeological project seeks to learn more about this maligned period of Indiana history.
-
Indiana's new capital had been established in 1825 without a fire brigade; not until a year and a half later was a volunteer company organized in Indianapolis.
-
Mary Dezember reads her poems "This Isn't Your Dream" and "2000 Women" from her book Earth-Marked Like You.
-
Lena Horne (1917–2010) had close working relationships with composers like Harold Arlen and Billy Strayhorn.
-
This hour on Harmonia, we’re continuing our series on music in and about the Americas during the first centuries of European colonization. Join us as we explore the myriad musical traditions of New England and the mid Atlantic between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries.
-
In the 1940s a young jazz singer with a four-octave range and bebop chops burst onto the big-band scene with Earl Hines and Billy Eckstine before going on to establish herself as a solo star.
More
-
Indiana University is restoring access to several biology labs that were locked down due to a USDA inspection into the lab of professor Roger Innes. But offices, equipment and freezers used by other researchers are still off limits.
-
Two all-terrain trackchairs — intended to help disabled Hoosiers enjoy public lands — have been stolen from Fort Harrison State Park in Indianapolis.
-
The appropriately named elephant bird was the largest bird to ever live. Learn more about this impressive creature with A Moment of Science!
-
Trump administration visitor calls practice a ‘moral wrong.’
-
Investigation finds not all spending went toward approved uses amid lack of guidance, oversight from state officials
-
The Nationwide Consumer and Fuel Retailer Choice Act had bipartisan support in a 218-203 vote.
-
All types of marigolds last well as cut flowers, and they are excellent plants for children to grow when they begin gardening.
-
The City of Bloomington is awarding $30,000 to neighborhood improvement projects throughout the city.
-
In a partnership with Airstream, the music retailer is taking audio recording on the road this summer with a Dolby Atmos recording studio built inside of a trailer.
-
A Republican state senator targeted over his opposition to last year’s failed redistricting effort appears to have narrowly defeated a primary challenger endorsed by President Donald Trump.