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The long-awaited film showcasing bands like of Montreal, The Apples in Stereo, and Neutral Milk Hotel comes to Cincinnati's Esquire Theatre for a one-night-only special event
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‘You wear the bathing suit you want to. You show up in the body that you have.’
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Cincinnati's TQL Stadium will once again host the U.S. Men's National Soccer Team. The USA takes on Canada Sunday in the Concacaf Gold Cup.
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City Council passed a resolution Monday declaring support for healthcare professionals who provide gender-affirming care in the city, and for anyone who seeks that healthcare here.
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The U.S. News and World Report 2023-2024 Best Children's Hospitals ranking puts Cincinnati Children's number one in the nation based on patient outcomes and safety, diversity training and other factors.
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The company says teens ages 13-17 will have their own accounts and be able to request their own rides, however, their accounts must be connected to an adult's.
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A food and beverage market opening Wednesday at TQL Stadium uses Amazon's Just Walk Out technology to allow customers to quickly grab items without having to pay a cashier.
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The ads from a Democratic-backed group oppose a vote in August to make it harder to amend the Ohio constitution. They also push back at ads by a political action committee funded by a Republican megadonor from Illinois.
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The host of the "worst show in TV history" said he had "a great life, it's a life of no regrets."
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Throughout the 27 seasons of his legendary talk show, there was a side of Jerry, the liberal Democrat, who was determined to keep a foot in the world of politics.
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The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration is proposing a $1.9 million penalty on a Cincinnati meat processing plant, accusing it of ignoring worker safety standards. The processing plant has had a history of safety violations, and in 2017 OSHA added the company to its severe violator enforcement program.
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Artists experiment with all kinds of materials like metal, glass, and wood. So how about soil, living things, or whole ecosystems? Cincinnati curator Sue Spaid has been at the forefront of the Eco-Art movement for over 20 years. Producer Susan Byrnes meets with her in Cincinnati’s Madisonville neighborhood to learn more about the art form.