Cornel West: My Ridiculous Situation at Harvard chronicle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chronicle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
| 04 June 2021
Tightrope Media Systems is expanding its Screenweave mobile and OTT apps to bring community media organisations’ live channels and on-demand programs to a wider range of viewing platforms.
Complementing existing Roku and Apple TV support, a new Screenweave app brings content from Tightrope’s Cablecast Community Media platform to Amazon Fire TV devices. Screenweave apps for Android TV devices as well as Android and iOS smartphones and tablets will follow in the coming months.
Screenweave apps work with Cablecast broadcast automation servers and the Cablecast Reflect cloud-based streaming service to make public access, education and government (PEG) channels available through OTT media players and mobile devices in HD quality. Viewers can browse categorised collections of VOD clips, search the station’s VOD library for topics of interest, and switch easily between the station’s live feeds.
5 things to know about Play With the Changes by Rochelle Jordan vancouversun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vancouversun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Try refreshing your browser. Andrews album is a sonic journey well worth the voyage Back to video
This is the third release by guitarist/composer/bandleader Dan Pitt. For this recording, Pitt is working with his trio members Alex Fournier (bass) and Nick Fraser (drums), and has augmented the sound with the talents of Naomi McCarroll-Butler (bass clarinet & alto sax) and Patrick Smith (tenor & soprano saxophones).
Hunter’s Dream begins with the mournful sound of the bowed bass, before the dark complement of bass clarinet and the rest of the musicians join in. It is compelling from start to finish.
By Imogen Watson-01 April 2021 00:01am
Sour Patch is calling on fans to channel their inner child and get mischievous
For the first time in its history, April Fools’ Day in 2020 was a sombre affair. People were most certainly not in the mood. Good news for pranksters, brands are back to have the last laugh this year, from edible slippers to hedgehog influencers, cheesy skincare to pricey bottled sea air.
As people came to terms with the pandemic in 2020, April Fools’ Day couldn t have fallen at the worst moment. Due to the gravity of the situation that was taking hold, most brands felt it would be more sensitive to skip the pranks altogether.