Geometry bingo
Geometry Dash
2014.02.02 03:26 Darnoc703 Geometry Dash
The longest-running community for Geometry Dash, a rhythm-platformer game by Swedish developer Robert Topala. We're available on Steam, Android, and iOS platforms. Post your videos, levels, clips, or ask questions about the game here!
2024.05.13 22:00 DiscoverDurham Things to do in Durham this week!
If you’d like to add an event to our calendar,
submit an event here. Please check with the event organizers to see if events change due to weather. Have a great week!
See the
full weekly calendar on our website.
Noteworthy Events
The Lion King at
DPAC - Winner of six Tony Awards®, including Best Musical, this landmark musical event brings together one of the most imaginative creative teams on Broadway.
- Wed, May 15 - Sun, June 9
- $29.50+
Adult Recess at
CCB Plaza - Let your inner child shine as you play games, make crafts, and enjoy the fresh air during your lunch break!
- Wed, May 15
- 12-2 p.m.
- Free admission
Duke Baseball vs UNC at
Jack Coombs Field - Thu, May 16 - Sat, May 18
Bimbé Celebration at
Rock Quarry Park - This family-oriented event is a celebration of African and African American history, culture, arts, and traditions. This year's headliner: Monica!
- Sat, May 18
- 1-7 p.m.
- Free admission
Peter Pan at
The Carolina Theatre - This adventure begins at the London home of the Darling family, a typical evening in 1912, as the weary parents try to settle their children down for bed while the young ones insist on staying up late. Little do Wendy, John, and Michael know that a fantastic journey awaits them that night.
- Sat, May 18
- 3 p.m. and 6 p.m.
- $32+
DPW Limit Break at
Durham Convention Center - Wrestlers from all over the world will gather in one place for a night you won't forget.
- Sun, May 19
- 7 p.m.
- $25+
Multi-Day Events
The NGIN Cityscapes Summit at
Durham Convention Center - Hosted by national nonprofit, New Growth Innovation Network, prepare to connect with like-minded professionals and engage with purpose-driven organizations. Immerse yourself in workshops and captivating keynotes from renowned speakers, featuring three tracks of insightful sessions: Inclusive Capital, Community Wealth Building, and Reimagining Systems.
- Wed, May 15 - Fri, May 17
- Registration fees vary
Durham Greek Festival at
St. Barbara Greek Orthodox Church - Enjoy fabulous Greek food, desserts, wine and beer in a festive outdoor atmosphere. Continuous Greek music and scheduled folk dance performances.
- Sat, May 18, 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. and Sun, May 19, 11 a.m. - 7 p.m.
- Free admission
Historic Buildings Open House at
West Point on the Eno Park - Enjoy a look inside the historic McCown-Mangum House, Photography Museum, and Mill.
- Sat, May 18 and Sun, May 19
- 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Free admission
Movies at
The Carolina Theatre Monday, May 13
2 p.m. Board Game Night at
The Glass Jug in Downtown Durham 5 p.m. Arts & Drafts at
Fullsteam Brewery 6 p.m. Disc Golf Putting League at
The Glass Jug in RTP 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Tuesday, May 14
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 5:30 p.m. Boxyard Run Club at
Boxyard RTP 6 p.m. In Other Words at
Arcana Duke Baseball vs College of Charleston at
Jack Coombs Field Bring Your Own Vinyl with Jaffar at
Rubies on Five Points Women on the Wall at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 6:30 p.m. Trivia at
Durham Food Hall Pony Ride at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Trivia at
Beer Study Durham Not Rocket Science Trivia at
DSSOLVR Durham Tuesday Blues Jam at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. Comedy Night at
Bull City Ciderworks Jeremy 'Bean' Clemons Trio at
Kingfisher Enter Shikari at
Motorco Music Hall Vision Video + Tears For The Dying at
The Pinhook Wednesday, May 15
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 9 a.m. Senior Short Game Clinic at
Hillandale Golf Course 10:30 a.m. Storytime on the Roof with Durham County Library at
The Durham Hotel 12 p.m. Adult Recess at
CCB Plaza 3 p.m. Durham Farmers’ Market at
Durham Central Park 4 p.m. Whiskey Wednesdays at
Alley Twenty Six 5 p.m. Free Wednesday Wine Tasting at
Beer Study Durham 5:30 p.m. Ride of Silence at
CCB Plaza 6 p.m. Queer Craft Night and Tarot with Joy at
Arcana Bimbe Community Block Party at
Holton Career & Resource Center Come Take a Flight With Us: A Bright Black Workshop at
Proximity Brewing Company Free RTP Business Rockstar Connect Networking Event at
Sheraton Imperial Hotel Sweet Social: Auntie's African Ice Cream at
The Durham Hotel 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Pickle at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 7 p.m. Bottle Swap: Homebrew Club at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Skip The Small Talk: Speed Friending Event at
Fullsteam Brewery Hammered Trivia at
Hi-Wire Brewing Karaoke Night at
Mavericks Smokehouse Music Bingo at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 3rd Wednesday Jazz Jam Session at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen Brett Chambers Open Mic at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. Air Hockey Tournament at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia Night at
Bull McCabe's Karaoke at
Moon Dog Meadery The Weeks at
Motorco Music Hall Blends With Friends at
The Pinhook Thursday, May 16
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company 8:30 a.m. Harnessing the Power of AI to Ensure Equitable HR Practices at
RTI Holden Building 9:30 a.m. Guide Supported Canoeing, Kayaking, and Standup Paddleboarding at
Eno River 12:15 p.m. Midday Meander: A Strolling Conversation at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 3 p.m. Guided Museum Tour at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5 p.m. Thirsty Thursdays at
Dashi Righteous Roots Reggae Show at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 5:30 p.m. Walking Club with Bull City Strollers at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Queer Trivia at
Arcana Vinyl Night with DJ Deckades at
Gizmo Brew Works 6:15 p.m. Pony Run at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. AfterHours: Science of Beer at
Museum of Life and Science Line Dance Classes at
Mystic Farm and Distillery Space Code Youth Open Mic at
NorthStar Church of the Arts Boulders & Brews Meetup at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 7 p.m. Trivia Night at
Beer Tooth Taproom Bimbé Cypher at
CCB Plaza Bring Your Own Vinyl Night at
Congress Social Bar Duke Baseball vs UNC at
Jack Coombs Field Summer Jazz Jam (Curated by Al Strong) at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Al Strong Presents Jazz on the Roof at
The Durham Hotel 7:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Big Slow Tom at
Clouds Brewing Brightleaf Square Reverend Billy C. Wirtz / Armand Lenchek & Carter Minor at
The Blue Note Grill Pillow Talk: Speed Dating and Conversations About Sex / Sexuality at
The Pinhook 8 p.m. Weekly Single Mingle at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia at
Fullsteam Brewery Danny Lopriore at
Motorco Music Hall 9 p.m. DJ Halo Presents: No Requests at
Rubies on Five Points 9:30 p.m. Karaoke Night at
The Tavern Friday, May 17
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
The Blue Note Grill 10 a.m. Tasting at Ten at
Counter Culture Coffee 12 p.m. Co-Working Social at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 4 p.m. Late Spring Tree Ramble at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 5 p.m. Guided Museum Tours at
21c Museum Hotels Durham Food Truck Friday at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 5:30 p.m. LOJO: Log Off, Jam On at
Boxyard RTP 6 p.m. Aly J & Kevin Clark and Tarot with Kathleen at
Arcana Third Friday Art Walk at
Downtown Durham Friday Night Makes at
Durham Arts Council May Third Friday at
Durham Arts Council Counterpoints Exhibition Reception at
Durham Bottling Co. Third Friday at
Golden Belt Arts Duke Baseball vs UNC at
Jack Coombs Field Screenprint Roundup at
The Fruit The Patio Dance Parties : Clueless Fridays at
Unscripted Durham 6:30 p.m. Kayla Waters (Hosted by Marcus Anderson) at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. Live Vinyl Spinning by PhDJ at
Beer Study Durham Early Show: John Howie Jr. / Ramona and The Holy Smokes at
The Pinhook 7:30 p.m. Evening Eno Exploration Paddle at
Eno River Evan Ringel & Ariel Pocock at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. Pass the Aux at
Boricua Soul Stereo Reveries at
DSSOLVR Durham Karaoke! at
Fullsteam Brewery Cheekface at
Motorco Music Hall Dance Blues Friday at
Studio 5 9 p.m. Kayla Waters (Hosted by Marcus Anderson) at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 10 p.m. The Floor: Special Guest THEYDYLIKE at
Rubies on Five Points Saturday, May 18
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP 11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. -
Will & Well: Grand Opening Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Distillery Tours and Tastings at
Liberty & Plenty - Every Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. and 11-11:30 a.m.
Events at
Mettlesome Events at
The Fruit Events at
The Pinhook Guided Walking Tours with
Triangle Adventures - 2 p.m. - Downtown Durham Walking Tour
- 4 p.m. - Durham African American History Tour
- 6 p.m. - Downtown Durham True Crime Tour
7 a.m. Lookin For A Cure at
Bull City Running Company-South 8 a.m. Durham Farmers' Market at
Durham Central Park parkrun Durham at
Southern Boundaries Park 9 a.m. South Durham Farmers' Market at
Greenwood Commons Shopping Center 9:30 a.m. Guide Supported Canoeing, Kayaking, and Standup Paddleboarding at
Eno River 10 a.m. Pop Up Record Show at
Beer Durham Durham's Home Goods Market at
Black Wall St Gardens Bear Awareness Week at
Museum of Life and Science 10:30 a.m. Mother's Day Brunch at
The Durham Hotel 11 a.m. Battle of the Blades 2024 at
Historic Durham Athletic Park 12 p.m. Springtime Outdoor Market at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Crafternoons at
Gizmo Brew Works Preservation Durham Annual Home Tour: The Rambling Ranch at
Orchard Park Picnic Shelter 1 p.m. Duke Baseball vs UNC at
Jack Coombs Field Say It With Glass Workshop - Sam Nguyen at
Moon Dog Meadery Bimbé Celebration at
Rock Quarry Park 2 p.m. Closing Reception — Dan Gottlieb: Figure Ground at
Craven Allen Gallery Durham "Bullpen" Treasure Hunt - Walking Team Scavenger Hunt! at
Fullsteam Brewery 3 p.m. A Beautiful Noise Spring Concert by the Common Woman Chorus at
Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Peter Pan at
The Carolina Theatre 4 p.m. Family Fun Saturday: May Flowers at
Guglhupf Restaurant 5 p.m. Rooftops and Alleyways Community Canvas Wall Brawl at
Dashi Durham Blues & Brews Festival at
Durham Central Park Hops & Blues at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6 p.m. The Moon Unit and Tarot with Emily at
Arcana Peter Pan at
The Carolina Theatre 6:30 p.m. Kayla Waters (Hosted by Marcus Anderson) at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. A Beautiful Noise Spring Concert by the Common Woman Chorus at
Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Crones of Anarchy: Blues, Rock, Americana at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 7:30 p.m. Jim Ketch Swingtet at
Sharp 9 Gallery Big Birthday Dance Party: Combo Platter with 2 Sides at
The Blue Note Grill 8:15 p.m. BBYMUTHA: Sleep Paralysis Tour 2024 at
Motorco Music Hall 9 p.m. Kayla Waters (Hosted by Marcus Anderson) at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 10 p.m. Fortune Factory Presents: Taurus Dance Party at
Rubies on Five Points Sunday, May 19
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company 10 a.m. Jazz Brunch at
Lula & Sadie's 10:30 a.m. Al Strong Presents Jazz Brunch at Alley Twenty Six 12 p.m. Preservation Durham Annual Home Tour: The Rambling Ranch at
Orchard Park Picnic Shelter Sunday Dollar Bin Sale for Charity at
Rumors Durham Supernatural Sunday - Psychic Affair + Healers Market at
Weldon Mills Distillery Farmers Market at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12:15 p.m. Public Tour at
Duke Chapel 2 p.m. Hillandale Golf Beginner Clinic at
Hillandale Golf Course 3:30 p.m. Davis Dance Company Spring Recital 2024 at
The Carolina Theatre 4 p.m. Showings at Scripps: Miguel Gutierrez at
ADF's Samuel H. Scripps Studios Carmina Burana at
Baldwin Auditorium Día de las Madres Kermes at
El Futuro’s Therapeutic Green Space String Break at
Fullsteam Brewery 6 p.m. Emma Jane's EP Release Show and Tarot with Joy at
Arcana Davis Dance Company Spring Recital 2024 at
The Carolina Theatre 6:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 7 p.m. DPW Limit Break at
Durham Convention Center Running Art Exhibit
Hometown (Inherited): Ten Year Retrospective at
The Fruit - This project examines the changing landscape of our city through a series of forty mixed media pieces the artist has created since 2014.
- Third Friday openings on Apr 19 and May 17, 6-9 p.m.
- Drop-in by appointment and Wednesdays 4-7 p.m.
- Free admission
Dan Gottlieb: Figure Ground at
Craven Allen Gallery - Each piece begins as a photograph, which is then printed on acrylic and worked with a variety of paints and compounds to create a unique surface.
- Sat, May 4 - Sat, May 18
- Free admission
Constellations: 40 Years of Explorations within Sacred Geometry by Steven Ferlauto at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends - Sacred Geometry is an ancient field of physics whose equations are expressed through shape. Shape is a way to explore the universal fabric of our existence.
- Sat, May 4 - Sat, June 1
- Free admission
It Ain’t All Black And White at
DAG Truist Gallery - It Ain’t All Black and White is a photography exhibition that encourages us to consider emotions such as serenity, apprehension, yearning, and more.
- Captured by 11 dynamic photographers dedicated to documenting the fullness and complexity of Black life, this exhibition offers each of us an opportunity to see ourselves with renewed attention.
- Thu, Apr 25 - Sun, June 2
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold at
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University - María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is a monographic exhibition of a visionary voice in photography, immersive installation, painting and performance.
- Thu, Feb 15 - Sun, Jun 9
- Every week, Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Counterpoints at
Durham Bottling Co. - Counterpoints is a curated showcase of local AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander) artists, delving into the convergence of AAPI identity and mental health. Inspired by the intricate layers of musical counterpoint, its purpose is to weave together diverse narratives and confront the stigma surrounding mental health within our communities.
- Wed, May 1 - Sun, June 16
- Mon - Fri, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Cameron Elyse's Divine Nine Legacy Memoir Exhibition at
Hayti Heritage Center - The Divine Nine Legacy Memoir delves deep into the history of the National Panhellenic Council (NPHC) or "Divine Nine," a collective of nine Greek Letter organizations founded on May 10th, 1930.
- These organizations were born out of the necessity to provide a voice for Black American students within the collegiate space. United by principles of service, community, brotherhood, and sisterhood, the Divine Nine work collectively to uplift society through acts of service to underserved areas across the nation.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, June 1
- Free admission
submitted by
DiscoverDurham to
bullcity [link] [comments]
2024.05.06 22:41 DiscoverDurham Things to do in Durham this week!
If you’d like to add an event to our calendar,
submit an event here. Please check with the event organizers to see if events change due to weather. Have a great week!
See the
full weekly calendar on our website.
Noteworthy Events
Beats N Bars Festival 2024 at
American Tobacco Campus - Get ready to vibe to the scene of hip hop culture and enjoy food while mingling with fellow music lovers. Don't miss out on this epic event that promises to be a music festival & conference to remember.
- Fri, May 10 at 6 p.m.
- Sat, May 11 at 12 p.m.
- $150 for both days
Duke Graduation at
Wallace Wade Stadium - The Duke community is excited to celebrate the Class of 2024 with a commencement ceremony held in Wallace Wade on Sun, May 12 2024.
- Comedian Jerry Seinfeld will be the commencement speaker.
- Fri, May 10 - Sun, May 12
Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park - Tue, May 7 - Sun, May 12
- $10+
Kids Night Out at
Museum of Life and Science - Drop your little ones off for a kids-only evening of hands-on fun. They’ll eat pizza, play games, explore exhibits, and work together on science experiments.
- Fri, May 10
- 5:30-8:30 p.m.
- $40+
KEM at
DPAC - Internationally renowned R&B singesongwriter KEM brings his tour to DPAC. Capable of connecting romantic joy with spiritual renewal, KEM has a unique place in musical culture. Five albums and three million sales later, he has established himself as a prominent voice articulating critical matters of the heart and soul.
- Fri, May 10
- 8 p.m.
- $59.50+
Multi-Day Events
ACC Softball Tournament at
Duke Softball Stadium - Wed, May 8 - Sat, May 11
- All Day
Moms & Mimosas at
Urban Axes - Celebrate Mother’s Day this year in the most relaxing way possible: by enjoying drinks and throwing axes! Your booking includes 1 drink per-person and 1-on-1 coaching to get everyone throwing safety and comfortably.
- Fri, May 10 - Sun, May 12
Graduation Weekend at
The Durham Hotel - To toast the grads, the Restaurant will feature special dinner and brunch menus during Graduation Weekend. Enjoy a three-course prix fixed dinner.
- Fri, May 10 - Sun, May 12
- $45+
Historic Buildings Open House at
West Point on the Eno Park - Enjoy a look inside the historic McCown-Mangum House, Photography Museum, and Mill.
- Sat, May 11 and Sun, May 12
- 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Free admission
Jewish Food Week at
Jewish for Good at the Levin JCC - This mouthwatering event promises to tantalize taste buds while supporting a meaningful cause, with all proceeds benefiting Jewish for Good's Food Pantry.
- Mon, May 6 - Sun, May 12
- $5+
Movies at
The Carolina Theatre Monday, May 6
5 p.m. Arts & Drafts at
Fullsteam Brewery 6 p.m. Disc Golf Putting League at
The Glass Jug in RTP 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Singles Night at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 8 p.m. Blondshell at
Motorco Music Hall (sold out) All Black Masquerade Party at
Rubies on Five Points Tuesday, May 7
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Events at
Rubies on Five Points 11:05 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 12 p.m. Native Plant Solutions: Clay Soils (Online) at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 5:45 p.m. Community Fitness Classes with YMCA at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Queer Bachata at
Arcana Women on the Wall at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 6:30 p.m. Trivia at
Durham Food Hall 7 p.m. Trivia at
Beer Study Durham Live Piano Karaoke at
Congress Social Bar Not Rocket Science Trivia at
DSSOLVR Durham TBS 1st Tuesday Blues Jam at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Sip & Strum Ukulele Class at
Bull City Solera and Taproom 8 p.m. Jeremy 'Bean' Clemons Trio at
Kingfisher Psychedelic Porn Crumpets at
Motorco Music Hall Tommy Emmanuel, CGP at
The Carolina Theatre Open Stage at
The Pinhook Wednesday, May 8
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 3 p.m. Durham Farmers’ Market at
Durham Central Park 4 p.m. Whiskey Wednesdays at
Alley Twenty Six 5 p.m. Free Wednesday Wine Tasting at
Beer Study Durham 5:30 p.m. Wined Down Wednesday: Alcohol Ink Coasters at
Guglhupf 6 p.m. Figure Drawing and Tarot with Devon at
Arcana Witches Brew at
Fullsteam Brewery 6:30 p.m. Eric Hirsh Solo Piano at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Trivia Night with Pickle at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Universus TCG: Local Championship at
Atomic Empire Hammered Trivia at
Hi-Wire Brewing Karaoke Night at
Mavericks Smokehouse Music Bingo at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company Brett Chambers Open Mic at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Stand-Up with Rhizome Comedy at
The Durham Hotel 8 p.m. Air Hockey Tournament at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia Night at
Bull McCabe's Karaoke at
Moon Dog Meadery Pachyman / Combo Chimbita at
Motorco Music Hall Cindy Lee / Freak Heat Waves at
The Pinhook (sold out) Thursday, May 9
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company 12 p.m. Taking Back Thursday: Mysti Mayhem at
Boxyard RTP 1 p.m. Meet the Keepers at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 3 p.m. Guided Museum Tour at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5 p.m. Thirsty Thursdays at
Dashi 5:30 p.m. Walking Club with Bull City Strollers at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Keegan Heron and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana Vinyl Night with DJ Deckades at
Gizmo Brew Works 6:15 p.m. Pony Run at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. Colorful Flower Arranging Class at
DSSOLVR Line Dance Classes at
Mystic Farm and Distillery Boulders & Brews Meetup at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Trivia Night at
Beer Tooth Taproom Bring Your Own Vinyl Night at
Congress Social Bar Candlelight: A Tribute to Whitney Houston at
Hayti Heritage Center Summer Jazz Jam (Curated by Al Strong) at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Jazz Jam Sessions at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 7:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Big Slow Tom at
Clouds Brewing Brightleaf Square The DPAC Rising Star Awards at
DPAC Katie Basden with Emily Musolino at
The Blue Note Grill Praying in Bronze: A Handbell Concert at
Trinity United Methodist Church 8 p.m. Weekly Single Mingle at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia at
Fullsteam Brewery Ben Beal w/ Delivery Boys at
The Pinhook 9:30 p.m. Karaoke Night at
The Tavern Friday, May 10
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 8 a.m. Forest Bathing Walk at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 10 a.m. Tasting at Ten at
Counter Culture Coffee 12 p.m. Co-Working Social at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 5:30 p.m. Friday Night Live: Bull Dirtys at
Boxyard RTP Kids Night Out at
Museum of Life and Science 6 p.m. DJ Marrs and Tarot with Joy at
Arcana Friday Night Makes at
Durham Arts Council The Duke Street Dogs at
The Blue Note Grill Cocktails & Cheeseperience Design at
The Blue Ridge Room inside Frontier RTP 6:30 p.m. Keyon Harrold Presents "Foreverland" Presented by WUNC Music at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room SUB: Terranean at
The Fruit 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Magic: Standard Showdown at
Atomic Empire Live Vinyl Spinning by PhDJ at
Beer Study Durham Freedom Friday w/ DJ Mayor at
Congress Social Bar 7:30 p.m. Film Screening: Shorts Night at
Shadowbox Studio Jake Hart & John Hart Trio at
Sharp 9 Gallery Leonid & Friends – A Tribute to the Music of Chicago at
The Carolina Theatre 8 p.m. KEM at
DPAC Stereo Reveries at
DSSOLVR Durham 9 p.m. Keyon Harrold Presents "Foreverland" Presented by WUNC Music at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Mk.Gee at
Motorco Music Hall (sold out) ¡Tumbao! / Cinematheque / Ancestor Piratas at
The Pinhook Saturday, May 11
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Distillery Tours and Tastings at
Liberty & Plenty - Every Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. and 11-11:30 a.m.
Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
Rubies on Five Points Events at
The Carolina Theatre Guided Walking Tours with
Triangle Adventures - 2 p.m. - Downtown Durham Walking Tour
- 4 p.m. - Durham African American History Tour
- 6 p.m. - Downtown Durham True Crime Tour
8 a.m. Durham Farmers' Market at
Durham Central Park parkrun Durham at
Southern Boundaries Park 9 a.m. South Durham Farmers' Market at
Greenwood Commons Shopping Center 9:30 a.m. Guide Supported Canoeing, Kayaking, and Standup Paddleboarding at
Eno River 10 a.m. Dig into Compost at
Museum of Life and Science Roots and Soul: Walking with Pauli Murray at
Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice 10:30 a.m. Mother's Day Brunch at
The Durham Hotel 12 p.m. Crafternoons at
Gizmo Brew Works Sylvan Esso 10 year Anniversary Release at
Psychic Hotline Pop-up 1 p.m. Documentary Screening: Puerto Rican Hibiscus at
The Fruit 2 p.m. Mother Daughter Self Defense seminar Women Empowered at
Gracie Durham 6 p.m. Trio Factual Jazz and Tarot with Kathleen at
Arcana 6:30 p.m. Keyon Harrold Presents "Foreverland" Presented by WUNC Music at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Weymouth / North By North / Plastic Giants at
The Pinhook 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. ADF Showings at Scripps: Tony C. Johnson at
ADF's Samuel H. Scripps Studios Prints-4-Prince Art Show at
PS37 Dexter Moses Trio with Lillian Park at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 7:30 p.m. Ghost Town Blues Band at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. The Decemberists at
DPAC 8:15 p.m. Let's Chat About the Stars Paddle at
Falls Lake Durham 9 p.m. Keyon Harrold Presents "Foreverland" Presented by WUNC Music at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Sunday, May 12
9:30 a.m. Women's Kayaking 101 at
Falls Lake 10 a.m. Jazz Brunch at
Lula & Sadie's 10:30 a.m. Al Strong Presents Jazz Brunch at Alley Twenty Six Yoga on Tap at
Fullsteam Brewery Mother's Day Brunch at
The Durham Hotel 11:30 a.m. Pokémon TCG: Twilight Masquerade Prerelease Tournament at
Atomic Empire 12 p.m. Sunday Dollar Bin Sale for Charity at
Rumors Durham Farmers Market at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12:15 p.m. Public Tour at
Duke Chapel 1:05 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Nashville at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 2 p.m. Hammered Trivia with Casey at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Hillandale Golf Beginner Clinic at
Hillandale Golf Course Feel Good, Do Good: FREE Circl Mobility Group Exercise Class at
Jewish for Good Mother's Day Flower Arranging Class at
Weldon Mills Distillery 3 p.m. Lore, Yore, and the In Between at
The Carolina Theatre 6 p.m. DJ Parkside and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana 6:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 7:30 p.m. Somesurprises at
The Pinhook 8:30 p.m. Cloud Nothings at
Motorco Music Hall Running Art Exhibits
Jenny Blazing: Scapes - 5 Points Gallery Featured Artist Exhibition at
5 Points Gallery - Jenny’s acrylic and collage paintings are her response to the diverse landscapes surrounding us. Each stroke of color, each layer of texture, is a tribute to the breathtaking natural panorama of our state—from our rolling hills and sundrenched fields to our skies bursting with drama.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, May 11
- Fri, 5-9 p.m. and Sat, 1-9 p.m.
- Free admission
Hometown (Inherited): Ten Year Retrospective at
The Fruit - This project examines the changing landscape of our city through a series of forty mixed media pieces the artist has created since 2014.
- Third Friday openings on Apr 19 and May 17, 6-9 p.m.
- Drop-in by appointment and Wednesdays 4-7 p.m.
- Free admission
Dan Gottlieb: Figure Ground at
Craven Allen Gallery - Each piece begins as a photograph, which is then printed on acrylic and worked with a variety of paints and compounds to create a unique surface.
- Sat, May 4 - Sat, May 18
- Free admission
Constellations: 40 Years of Explorations within Sacred Geometry by Steven Ferlauto at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends - Sacred Geometry is an ancient field of physics whose equations are expressed through shape. Shape is a way to explore the universal fabric of our existence.
- Sat, May 4 - Sat, June 1
- Free admission
It Ain’t All Black And White at
DAG Truist Gallery - It Ain’t All Black and White is a photography exhibition that encourages us to consider emotions such as serenity, apprehension, yearning, and more.
- Captured by 11 dynamic photographers dedicated to documenting the fullness and complexity of Black life, this exhibition offers each of us an opportunity to see ourselves with renewed attention.
- Thu, Apr 25 - Sun, June 2
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold at
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University - María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is a monographic exhibition of a visionary voice in photography, immersive installation, painting and performance.
- Thu, Feb 15 - Sun, Jun 9
- Every week, Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Counterpoints at
Durham Bottling Co. - Counterpoints is a curated showcase of local AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander) artists, delving into the convergence of AAPI identity and mental health. Inspired by the intricate layers of musical counterpoint, its purpose is to weave together diverse narratives and confront the stigma surrounding mental health within our communities.
- Wed, May 1 - Sun, June 16
- Mon - Fri, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Cameron Elyse's Divine Nine Legacy Memoir Exhibition at
Hayti Heritage Center - The Divine Nine Legacy Memoir delves deep into the history of the National Panhellenic Council (NPHC) or "Divine Nine," a collective of nine Greek Letter organizations founded on May 10th, 1930.
- These organizations were born out of the necessity to provide a voice for Black American students within the collegiate space. United by principles of service, community, brotherhood, and sisterhood, the Divine Nine work collectively to uplift society through acts of service to underserved areas across the nation.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, June 1
- Free admission
submitted by
DiscoverDurham to
bullcity [link] [comments]
2024.05.05 19:33 Agreeable-Wonder-184 You get a sneak peak the P6 ost of you catch a bingo
2024.05.01 07:44 buiola Sfida di lettura! Maggio 2024: edilizia! ;-)
Cari architetti della
generazione di fenomeni, eccoci giunti al mese dei megalavori edili che vedranno impegnati il capomastro Ronzi, il muratore Veichi e il manovale Donchi nella costruzione di muretti più o meno stabili, quindi il tema del mese sarà uno solo:
Poco importa che sia una rilettura, la ripresa di un laterizio abbandonato o la scelta di un bella mattonella nuova di zecca, valgono anche quelle al caffè ricoperte di cacao per gestire il fisiologico calo di zuccheri delle lunghe sessioni di lettura... ma bando alle ciance: facciamo qualcosa di almeno 600 pagine? Se poi volete affrontare volumi di 800 o 1000, fate pure!
Quali che siano i titoli che sceglierete, buon divertimento senza fretta, l'importante dopotutto è avviare il cantiere, poi che completiate i lavori entro fine mese o fine anno non tocca a noi deciderlo e comunque dubito che la polizia edile venga a cercare i lettori lenti, già è difficile trovare dei lettori secondo quei fetenti di via Balbo... ;-)
Se vi serve qualche spunto per mattoni di "autori italiani" (sempre whatever that means), rubo a man bassa da
una vecchia intervista del Post una lista di quelli più corposi con tanto di pagine e peso:
- Giacomo Casanova, Storia della mia vita, Mondadori, 1964, 7 volumi, 5591 pagine – scritte però in francese nella versione originale
- Giacomo Leopardi, Zibaldone di pensieri, Oscar Mondadori, 4615 pagine, 2 Kg
- Edoardo Albinati, La scuola cattolica, Rizzoli, 1294 pagine, 1,3 kg
- Stefano D’Arrigo, Horcynus Orca, Rizzoli, 1125 pagine 907 g
- Antonio Moresco, Canti del caos, Oscar Mondadori, 1074 pagine, 699 g
- Ippolito Nievo, Le confessioni d’un italiano, Marsilio, 1022 pagine, 662 g
- Antonio Moresco, Gli increati, Scrittori Mondadori, 1013 pagine, 1,3 Kg
- Oriana Fallaci, Insciallah, Rizzoli, 865 pagine, 939 g
Comunque, per venire incontro anche a chi non sopporta i geometri, ecco qualche altro spunto dagli eventi BookTube "maggiosi":
- HorrorMAYhem (confermato, dopotutto non c'è due senza tre! Qui troverete le schede bingo e gli spunti settimanali)
- Misery May (evento giunto alla sua seconda edizione: come lettura deprimente del mese, Gemma e Scott hanno scelto Bodies of Light di Jennifer Down)
- May The TBR Be With You (così i fan di Guerre Stellari - ok ok, Star Wars per i non-boomer - non potranno accusarci di discriminazioni il prossimo mese quando ci godremo i libri del franchise concorrente, ogni riferimento al glorioso
e, cof cof, superiore BookTrek è puramente casuale :p - Mental Health May
Infine, qualche titolo preso dagli scaffali degli ebook a euro zero:
Rubrica Canto straniero: *
Machen, Arthur - The Three Impostors (Roger's Cheap Book Club) *
Marsh, Richard - The Beetle: A Mystery (Roger's Cheap Book Club) *
Melville, Herman - Moby Dick (inglese) *
Hugo, Victor - Les Misérables (francese) *
Tolstoï, Léon - La Guerre et la Paix (francese) *
Tolstoy, Leo - War and Peace (inglese) *
Tolstoi, Leo N. - Krieg und Frieden (tedesco) *
Dostoevsky, Fyodor - The Brothers Karamazov *
Dickens, Charles - David Copperfield (inglese)
Rubrica Canto libero: *
Natoli, Luigi - I Beati Paoli (un favoloso feuilleton de' noantri che non ha nulla da invidiare a quelli del cugino d'oltralpe rispondente al nome di Dumas) *
De Cervantes, Miguel - Don Chisciotte della Mancia (sia in versione vetusta che BUR 2007, lo so, mattone già consigliato, ma che volete farci: Ronzi è un vanitoso che non perde mai occasione di farsi pubblicità e, quale sponsor di questa trasmissione, lasciamolo fare ;-)) *
Sienkiewicz, Henryk - Quo Vadis *
Nievo, Ippolito - Le confessioni di un italiano *
Melville, Herman - Moby Dick *
Hugo, Victor- I miserabili *
Tolstoj, Lev - Guerra e pace *
Autori vari - Le mille e una notte *
Dostoevskij, Fëdor - I Fratelli Karamazov *
Dickens, Charles - David Copperfield Buone letture a tutti!
Link utili:
FAQ ufficiale,
calendario (sola lettura),
mappa,
scomparsa degli asciugamani,
dichiarazione di guerra,
Picowrimo submitted by
buiola to
Libri [link] [comments]
2024.04.29 17:31 DiscoverDurham Things to do in Durham this week!
If you’d like to add an event to our calendar,
submit an event here. Please check with the event organizers to see if events change due to weather. Have a great week!
See the
full weekly calendar on our website.
Noteworthy Events
PLAYlist Concert Series: John Brown & the Groove Shop Band at
Durham Central Park - Firmly grounded in the heart of funk and rhythm and blues, this band is a truly a powerhouse ensemble.
- A full 13-piece band featuring a horn section, rhythm section and singers, the group’s repertoire includes the music of the 70s and 80s from artists like Earth Wind and Fire, Stevie Wonder, KC & the Sunshine Band, The Gap Band, Michael Jackson, Parliament Funkadelic, James Brown, Tower of Power and other music of that genre.
- Fri, May 3
- 7:30 p.m.
- Free admission
NCCU Graduation at
NCCU - North Carolina Central University’s (NCCU) 143rd Commencement Exercises will be held in McDougald-McLendon Arena.
- Sat, May 4
- Graduate and Professional at 9 a.m.
- Baccalaureate at 2 p.m.
19th Annual Strawberry Festival at
Old North Durham Park - This is a child-centered, family run, community fun-focused event for the entire Durham Community hosted by Central Park School for Children.
- Sat, May 4
- 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
- Free admission
Durham Craft Market Spring Fling at
Durham Central Park - This is a free outdoor market featuring over 50 local artisans and makers to shop from! With members of the Durham Craft Market collective as well as selected guest artists for this event.
- Sun, May 5
- 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
- Free admission
Cinco de Mayo Latin Day Party! at
The Velvet Hippo Bar & Lounge - Celebrate Cinco de Mayo on the rooftop! Enjoy outdoor beats by DJ Synko (our incredible First Fridays DJ) and end the weekend on a high note with Latin vibes, tasty cocktails, and dancing on the deck.
- Sun, May 5
- 2-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Multi-Day Events
NCCU Jazz Festival at
NCCU - NCCU's 33rd Annual Jazz Festival kicks off with a two-day event in partnership with the Monterrey Jazz Festival and continues with seven days of events with NCCU’s Jazz Studies program and special musical guests.
- Mon, Apr 29 - Tue, Apr 30
Sandlot Revival at
Historic Durham Athletic Park - Sandlot Revival is a weekend of games between “sandlot” teams from across the country. The teams are made of folks who just like getting together and playing baseball.
- Sat, Apr 27 - Mon, Apr 29
- Free admission
Popup Arts and Crafts Market at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Vendors will vary, but may include potters, jewelers, book people, printmakers, flower folks, small scale sculptors, photography, boudoir portraitists, woodcarvers, clothes makers, candle makers, and sweets.
- Tue, Apr 30 - Sat, May 4
- 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
RetroNoir Film Series at
The Carolina Theatre - Film noir is a cinematic term used primarily to describe stylish crime dramas, particularly those that emphasize cynical attitudes and sexual motivations.
- Fri, Apr 26 - Thu, May 2
- $12
Historic Buildings Open House at
West Point on the Eno Park - Enjoy a look inside the historic McCown-Mangum House, Photography Museum, and Mill.
- Sat, May 4 and Sun, May 5
- 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Free admission
Jewish Food Week at
Jewish for Good at the Levin JCC - This mouthwatering event promises to tantalize taste buds while supporting a meaningful cause, with all proceeds benefiting Jewish for Good's Food Pantry.
- Fri, May 3 - Sun, May 12
- $5+
Movies at
The Carolina Theatre Monday, Apr 29
12:30 p.m. Pop-Up Birds of Prey Tour at
Piedmont Wildlife Center 2 p.m. Board Game Night at
The Glass Jug in Downtown Durham 5 p.m. Arts & Drafts at
Fullsteam Brewery 6 p.m. Queer Death Cafe at
Arcana Conquest: Night with the Sorcerer Kings at
Atomic Empire Disc Golf Putting League at
The Glass Jug in RTP 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 8 p.m. Matteo Bocelli at
The Carolina Theatre Tuesday, Apr 30
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6 p.m. Erotic Fan Fiction at
Arcana Trivia at
Durham Food Hall Bring Your Own Vinyl with Jaffar at
Rubies on Five Points Women on the Wall at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 6:30 p.m. Cowboys With Big Hearts at
Atomic Empire 7 p.m. Trivia at
Beer Study Durham Not Rocket Science Trivia at
DSSOLVR Durham Tuesday Blues Jam at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Eloquent Soul - Open Mic Night hosted by Dasan Ahanu at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Durham Tech Sings at
Motorco Music Hall North Carolina Jazz Repertory Orchestra at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. Jeremy 'Bean' Clemons Trio at
Kingfisher Wednesday, May 1
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 3 p.m. Durham Farmers’ Market at
Durham Central Park 5 p.m. Free Wednesday Wine Tasting at
Beer Study Durham 6 p.m. Triangle Area Pagan Alliance Meet Up and Tarot with Heiltje at
Arcana Hike at
Horton Grove Preserve 7 p.m. Astronomy on Tap at
Fullsteam Brewery Hammered Trivia at
Hi-Wire Brewing Karaoke Night at
Mavericks Smokehouse Benefit Jam For Congo Flood Relief at
Motorco Music Hall Music Bingo at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company Brett Chambers Open Mic at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Ally J on the Roof at
The Durham Hotel 8 p.m. Air Hockey Tournament at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia Night at
Bull McCabe's Karaoke at
Moon Dog Meadery Blends With Friends at
The Pinhook Thursday, May 2
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company 11 a.m. Walk on the Wild Side: Native Shrubs at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 3 p.m. Guided Museum Tour at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5 p.m. Thirsty Thursdays at
Dashi Spring Grilling on the Roof: Moonbelly Meat Co. at
The Durham Hotel 6 p.m. Jonathan Groger and Carter Hodge and Tarot with Rene at
Arcana Game Designers of North Carolina Meetup at
Atomic Empire Vinyl Night with DJ Deckades at
Gizmo Brew Works 6:15 p.m. Pony Run at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. Resin Pour Charcuterie Board at
DSSOLVR Line Dance Classes at
Mystic Farm and Distillery Boulders & Brews Meetup at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham Magick of Tarot Workshop at
Weldon Mills Distillery 7 p.m. Trivia Night at
Beer Tooth Taproom Bring Your Own Vinyl Night at
Congress Social Bar Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Comedy Improv with Stolen Identity & Friends at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen Celebration of NC Songwriting: Jonathan Byrd, Abigail Dowd, Nancy Middleton & Kirk Ridge at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Big Slow Tom at
Clouds Brewing Brightleaf Square Adriel and the Force at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. Weekly Single Mingle at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia at
Fullsteam Brewery Catwolf / Miss Lonely / Pageant / Housewife at
The Pinhook 9:30 p.m. Karaoke Night at
The Tavern Friday, May 3
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
The Blue Note Grill 9 a.m. F is for First Responders at
Museum of Durham History 10 a.m. Tasting at Ten at
Counter Culture Coffee 5:30 p.m. LOJO: Log Off, Jam On at
Boxyard RTP 6 p.m. Andrew Kasab and Tarot with Rene at
Arcana Friday Night Makes at
Durham Arts Council 6:30 p.m. Rebecca Kleinmann Quintet at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. Live Vinyl Spinning by PhDJ at
Beer Study Durham Diggin in the Crates at
Boricua Soul Stand Up Comedy at
Mystic Farm and Distillery American Muse: Music and the Paranormal with Matt Marble at
Online 7:30 p.m. PLAYlist Concert Series: John Brown & the Groove Shop Band at
Durham Central Park Uri Gurvich/Rodolfo Zuniga Quartet at
Sharp 9 Gallery Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular at
The Carolina Theatre 8 p.m. Latin Dance at
Arthur Murray Durham Get the Led Out at
DPAC Stereo Reveries at
DSSOLVR Durham Music by Jives at
Pioneers Alexa Vélez & Daniel Levin + David Menestres at
Shadowbox Studio 9 p.m. Rebecca Kleinmann Quintet at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Rock En Español: The Latin Rock Invasion at
Motorco Music Hall 90's Karaoke at
The Pinhook Latin Nights at
The Velvet Hippo Bar & Lounge 10 p.m. Moodboard at
Rubies on Five Points Saturday, May 4
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Distillery Tours and Tastings at
Liberty & Plenty - Every Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. and 11-11:30 a.m.
Events at
Mettlesome Guided Walking Tours with
Triangle Adventures - 2 p.m. - Downtown Durham Walking Tour
- 4 p.m. - Durham African American History Tour
- 6 p.m. - Downtown Durham True Crime Tour
8 a.m. Cars and Coffee at
5425 Page Rd Durham Farmers' Market at
Durham Central Park parkrun Durham at
Southern Boundaries Park 9 a.m. South Durham Farmers' Market at
Greenwood Commons Shopping Center 40th Anniversary Festival at
Kiefer Nursery NCCU Graduation at
NCCU Naturally Wild presents Birding for QTBIPOC at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 9:30 a.m. Pollinator Garden Volunteer Day at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 10 a.m. Free Comic Book Day at
Atomic Empire Annual Spring Celebration & Plant Sale at
Briggs Ave Community Garden Hayti and Haiti: Free Soil Havens Walking Tour at
Hayti Heritage Center 11 a.m. 19th Annual Strawberry Festival at
Old North Durham Park Durham Garden Tour at
Various Locations 12 p.m. May The 4th Party at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Crafternoons at
Gizmo Brew Works 1 p.m. Wild Kratts at
DPAC 2 p.m. Durham "Bullpen" Treasure Bullpen at
Fullsteam Brewery NCCU Graduation at
NCCU 3 p.m. Cinco de Mayo Bar Crawl at
Downtown Durham Derby Day Party at
Lula and Sadie's Pops in the Park at
Piney Wood Park 5 p.m. Wild Kratts at
DPAC 6 p.m. DanceGruv Radio presents WAV 002 at
21C Museum Hotel Bardo Bloom and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana Emily K Center’s Mother’s Day Ball at
Washington Duke Inn & Golf Club 6:30 p.m. BeMyFiasco at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. West Virginia Dance Company at
ADF's Samuel H. Scripps Studios 7:30 p.m. Private Event: Shop Closed at
Moon Dog Meadery Kevin Beardsley Quartet at
Sharp 9 Gallery The DJam at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen The Howard Levy 4 at
The Blue Note Grill 9 p.m. BeMyFiasco at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Gimme Gimme Disco at
Motorco Music Hall Punk & Drag For May The 4th Be With You at
The Pinhook 10 p.m. Gay Agenda Presents: Galactical Boogie at
Rubies on Five Points Sunday, May 5
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company 10 a.m. Durham Craft Market Spring Fling at
Durham Central Park Jazz Brunch at
Lula & Sadie's 12 p.m. Cinco De Mayo at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Community Celebration at
Nasher Museum of Art Sunday Dollar Bin Sale for Charity at
Rumors Durham Bike Month Kick-Off: Bike to Connections Ride at
West Durham Farmers Market at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12:15 p.m. Public Tour at
Duke Chapel 1 p.m. Black Farmers' Market at
Durham Tech Duke Baseball vs Longwood at
Jack Coombs Stadium (Doubleheader) 2 p.m. Hillandale Golf Beginner Clinic at
Hillandale Golf Course Cinco de Mayo Latin Day Party! at
The Velvet Hippo Bar & Lounge 3 p.m. United in Song: Music of the American Experience at
Baldwin Auditorium 4 p.m. Gardening Classes at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Nathan Hockett & Jonathan Yandel and Tarot with Emily at
Arcana 6:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 7:30 p.m. Dr. Jordan B Peterson at
DPAC 8 p.m. Kathy Griffin: My Life on the PTSD-List at
The Carolina Theatre Running Art Exhibits
Constellations: 40 Years of Explorations within Sacred Geometry at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Sacred Geometry is an ancient field of physics whose equations are expressed through shape. Shape is a way to explore the universal fabric of our existence.
- Sat, Mar 30 - Tue, Apr 30
- Free admission
Jenny Blazing: Scapes - 5 Points Gallery Featured Artist Exhibition at
5 Points Gallery - Jenny’s acrylic and collage paintings are her response to the diverse landscapes surrounding us. Each stroke of color, each layer of texture, is a tribute to the breathtaking natural panorama of our state—from our rolling hills and sundrenched fields to our skies bursting with drama.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, May 11
- Fri, 5-9 p.m. and Sat, 1-9 p.m.
- Free admission
Hometown (Inherited): Ten Year Retrospective at
The Fruit - This project examines the changing landscape of our city through a series of forty mixed media pieces the artist has created since 2014.
- Third Friday openings on Apr 19 and May 17, 6-9 p.m.
- Drop-in by appointment and Wednesdays 4-7 p.m.
- Free admission
It Ain’t All Black And White at
DAG Truist Gallery - It Ain’t All Black and White is a photography exhibition that encourages us to consider emotions such as serenity, apprehension, yearning, and more.
- Captured by 11 dynamic photographers dedicated to documenting the fullness and complexity of Black life, this exhibition offers each of us an opportunity to see ourselves with renewed attention.
- Thu, Apr 25 - Sun, June 2
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold at
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University - María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is a monographic exhibition of a visionary voice in photography, immersive installation, painting and performance.
- Thu, Feb 15 - Sun, Jun 9
- Every week, Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Counterpoints at
Durham Bottling Co. - Counterpoints is a curated showcase of local AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander) artists, delving into the convergence of AAPI identity and mental health. Inspired by the intricate layers of musical counterpoint, its purpose is to weave together diverse narratives and confront the stigma surrounding mental health within our communities.
- Wed, May 1 - Sun, June 16
- Mon - Fri, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Cameron Elyse's Divine Nine Legacy Memoir Exhibition at
Hayti Heritage Center - The Divine Nine Legacy Memoir delves deep into the history of the National Panhellenic Council (NPHC) or "Divine Nine," a collective of nine Greek Letter organizations founded on May 10th, 1930.
- These organizations were born out of the necessity to provide a voice for Black American students within the collegiate space. United by principles of service, community, brotherhood, and sisterhood, the Divine Nine work collectively to uplift society through acts of service to underserved areas across the nation.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, June 22
- Free admission
submitted by
DiscoverDurham to
bullcity [link] [comments]
2024.04.22 19:29 DiscoverDurham Things to do in Durham this week!
If you’d like to add an event to our calendar,
submit an event here. Please check with the event organizers to see if events change due to weather. Have a great week!
See the
full weekly calendar on our website.
Noteworthy Events
Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park - Tue, Apr 23 - Sun, Apr 28
- Tue: Education Da
- Wed: Winning Wednesday
- Thu: Dollar Dogs
- Fri: Fireworks
- Sat: Star Wars Night
- Sun: Kids Run The Bases
- $10+
Beats n Bars Festival Block Party at
American Tobacco Campus - Building Stronger Communities through the influence of Urban Culture and Music.
- Sat, Apr 27
- 4-9 p.m.
- Free admission
Durham Underground Market at
Durham Central Park - Enjoy this monthly series featuring new bands every month from Oak City Music Collective, 45+ local vendors, food trucks, workshops by Joy Worthy Co, beewine/bubbly from The Glass Jug and more!
- Sun, Apr 28
- 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
- Free admission
CarolinaWaves x Renaissance Brunch Presents: The Hive Hoedown at
Motorco Music Hall - Grab your cowboy boots and join us as we celebrate Beyonce's new album, “Cowboy Carter” and your favorites off the iconic “Renaissance” album.
- There will be line-dancing, Beyonce bingo, games, prizes, food, and vibes that'll keep you two-stepping all night long.
- Sun, Apr 28
- 2 p.m.
- $10+
Multi-Day Events
Bluey's Big Play at
DPAC - When Dad feels like a little bit of Sunday afternoon time out, Bluey and Bingo have other plans! Join them as they pull out all of the games and cleverness at their disposal to get Dad off that bean bag.
- Fri, Apr 26 - Sun, Apr 28
- $29.50+
Beauty and the Beast at
Jordan High School - Be captivated by the timeless tale of love, bravery, and magic as our talented students bring this classic story to life on stage.
- Tickets are available for purchase at the school office or online.
- Thu, Apr 25 - Sat, Apr 27 at 6:30 p.m.
- $15, $7 for students
Explore Mental Wellness with The Art Wellness Exchange at
Museum of Life and Science - A groundbreaking initiative aimed at promoting mental health awareness and strengthening community bonds through art and storytelling.
- Thu, Apr 25 - Sat, Apr 27
- Free admission
NCCU Jazz Festival at
NCCU - NCCU's 33rd Annual Jazz Festival kicks off with a two-day event in partnership with the Monterrey Jazz Festival and continues with seven days of events with NCCU’s Jazz Studies program and special musical guests.
- Thu, Apr 18 - Tue, Apr 30
North Carolina Youth Tap Ensemble: Regeneration at
The Carolina Theatre - Produced by its senior members, “Regeneration” explores the past, present and future of this historic company and the dancers personal experiences told through the art of tap dance.
- Sat, Apr 27 at 7:30 p.m. and Sun, Apr 28 at 3 p.m.
- $18+
RetroNoir Film Series at
The Carolina Theatre - Film noir is a cinematic term used primarily to describe stylish crime dramas, particularly those that emphasize cynical attitudes and sexual motivations.
- Fri, Apr 26 - Thu, May 2
- $12
Sandlot Revival at
Historic Durham Athletic Park - Sandlot Revival is a weekend of games between “sandlot” teams from across the country. The teams are made of folks who just like getting together and playing baseball.
- Sat, Apr 27 - Mon, Apr 29
- Free admission
Historic Buildings Open House at
West Point on the Eno Park - Enjoy a look inside the historic McCown-Mangum House, Photography Museum, and Mill.
- Sat, Apr 27 and Sun, Apr 28
- 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Free admission
Movies at
The Carolina Theatre Monday, Apr 22
Events at
The Glass Jug in Downtown Durham 4:30 p.m. Earth Day Pop-Up at
Edison Johnson Recreation Center 5 p.m. Arts & Drafts at
Fullsteam Brewery 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Bike Durham Meet Up at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery OnlyUs Media Presents: The Bank at
Rubies on Five Points Tuesday, Apr 23
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 11:05 a.m. Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 12 p.m. Our Community Stories: Grant Street at
Online 4 p.m. Duke Softball vs Gardner-Webb at
Duke Softball Stadium 5:30 p.m. Boxyard Run Club at
Boxyard RTP 6 p.m. Queer Craft Night and Tarot with Rene at
Arcana Trivia at
Durham Food Hall Bring Your Own Vinyl with Jaffar at
Rubies on Five Points Women on the Wall at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 7 p.m. Trivia at
Beer Study Durham Not Rocket Science Trivia at
DSSOLVR Durham Tuesday Blues Jam at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 8 p.m. Jeremy 'Bean' Clemons Trio at
Kingfisher An Indie Show at
Moon Dog Meadery Nervous Surface / Zealotrous / Old Suns at
The Pinhook Wednesday, Apr 24
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 3 p.m. Durham Farmers’ Market at
Durham Central Park 4 p.m. Whiskey Wednesdays at
Alley Twenty Six Duke Softball vs Longwood at
Duke Softball Stadium 4:30 p.m. Staff Meal Omakase at
Dashi 5 p.m. Free Wednesday Wine Tasting at
Beer Study Durham 5:30 p.m. Primavera: A Spring-inspired Wine Dinner in 5 Courses at
Copa 6 p.m. Figure Drawing and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana Valentine's Mini Market at
The Durham Hotel 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Team Trivia with Pickle at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Still Skating Adult Inline and Roller Skating Class at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Hammered Trivia at
Hi-Wire Brewing Karaoke Night at
Mavericks Smokehouse Music Bingo at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company Brett Chambers Open Mic at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Old Havana Nights featuring Brevan Hampden at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 8 p.m. Trivia Night at
Bull McCabe's Karaoke at
Moon Dog Meadery Lou Turner + Little Mazarn w/ Special Guest Nathan Bowles at
The Pinhook Thursday, Apr 25
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Events at
Mettlesome 12 p.m. Taking Back Thursday: XOXOK at
Boxyard RTP 1 p.m. Meet the Keepers at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 3 p.m. Guided Museum Tour at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5 p.m. Durham Night Market at
American Tobacco Campus Thirsty Thursdays at
Dashi Funguys Brewing Tap Takeover at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 5:30 p.m. Walking Club with Bull City Strollers at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Dyke Night and Tarot with Emily at
Arcana Vinyl Night with DJ Deckades at
Gizmo Brew Works A Return to Play at
The Rickhouse 6:15 p.m. Pony Run at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. Line Dance Classes at
Mystic Farm and Distillery Boulders & Brews Meetup at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Trivia Night at
Beer Tooth Taproom Bring Your Own Vinyl Night at
Congress Social Bar Jazzmeia Horn at
Hayti Heritage Center Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Beaux Mondes at
The Blue Note Grill Gabe Lee at
The Carolina Theatre DIY Tiramisu Class at
Weldon Mills Distillery 7:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Big Slow Tom at
Clouds Brewing Brightleaf Square 8 p.m. Weekly Single Mingle at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia at
Fullsteam Brewery Laurel Hells Ramblers / Three Top Serenaders / Kevin Coleman at
The Pinhook 9:30 p.m. Karaoke Night at
The Tavern Friday, Apr 26
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Rubies on Five Points Events at
The Blue Note Grill Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP Events at
The Pinhook 10 a.m. Tasting at Ten at
Counter Culture Coffee 12 p.m. April Japanese Tea Gathering: Children’s Day at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens Co-Working & Networking Social at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 4:30 p.m. Wheels Roller Skate Party at
Durham Central Park 5 p.m. Guided Museum Tours at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5:30 p.m. Tea Cup Gin at
Boxyard RTP 6 p.m. Ben Lassiter Gypsy Jazz and Tarot with Kathleen at
Arcana Friday Night Makes at
Durham Arts Council Duke Baseball vs Florida State at
Jack Coombs Stadium 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Live Vinyl Spinning by PhDJ at
Beer Study Durham NCCU Vocal Jazz Ensemble and Jazz Ensemble at
B.N. Duke Annex New Band Room at NCCU 7:30 p.m. Eric Williams Quintet at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. Doric String Quartet at
Baldwin Auditorium Stereo Reveries at
DSSOLVR Durham Karaoke at
Fullsteam Brewery A Rock Show at
Moon Dog Meadery Three Dog Night at
The Carolina Theatre 9 p.m. Planet Drag Show at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Taylor's Version: A Swiftie Dance Party at
Motorco Music Hall Afrobeats Night at
Unscripted Durham 10 p.m. Gorgon City at
The Fruit Saturday, Apr 27
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Distillery Tours and Tastings at
Liberty & Plenty - Every Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. and 11-11:30 a.m.
Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
The Pinhook Guided Walking Tours with
Triangle Adventures - 2 p.m. - Downtown Durham Walking Tour
- 4 p.m. - Durham African American History Tour
- 6 p.m. - Downtown Durham True Crime Tour
8 a.m. Angels Among Us 5k and Walk of HOPE at
Duke University Durham Farmers' Market at
Durham Central Park parkrun Durham at
Southern Boundaries Park 9 a.m. South Durham Farmers' Market at
Greenwood Commons Shopping Center Bull City Madness at
Recity Network 9:30 a.m. Guide Supported Canoeing, Kayaking, and Standup Paddleboarding at
Falls Lake FinFit Life 5K Challenge at
Frontier Campus RTP 10 a.m. 159th Anniversary Surrender Commemoration at
Bennett Place State Historic Site 11 a.m. Kayaking 101 at
Falls Lake Art Walk at
Old North Durham 12 p.m. Crafternoons at
Gizmo Brew Works April Japanese Tea Gathering: Children’s Day at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 2:15 p.m. April Japanese Tea Gathering: Children’s Day at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 4 p.m. Beats n Bars Festival Block Party at
American Tobacco Campus Duke Baseball vs Florida State at
Jack Coombs Stadium 6 p.m. Tarot with Rene at
Arcana Durham Center for Senior Life 75th Anniversary Gala at
Durham Center for Senior Life 6:30 p.m. Tall Glass and Sara Jean Kelley at
Huron Stage Music Venue 6:35 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 7 p.m. Jasmine Powell & Anthony Otto Nelson, Jr. at
ADF's Samuel H. Scripps Studios “The Day Had Come” Emancipation & Bennett Place at
Bennett Place State Historic Site JZM Brazilian Jazz Trio at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 7:30 p.m. Eagles Nest Jam featuring NCCU Jazz at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Angela Bingham Trio at
Sharp 9 Gallery Waynard & Rainbow Full of Sound at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. Andrew Cushin at
Motorco Music Hall 9 p.m. Blind Tigers: Live Karaoke! at
Rubies on Five Points Paradox: The Essence of Early Rave at
The Fruit SUNDAY, APR 28
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
The Pinhook 10 a.m. Jazz Brunch at
Lula & Sadie's 11 a.m. Durham Underground Market at
Durham Central Park 12 p.m. Sunday Dollar Bin Sale for Charity at
Rumors Durham A Fruit Fundraiser and Audio/Visual Marketplace at
The Fruit Farmers Market at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12:15 p.m. Public Tour at
Duke Chapel 1 p.m. Spring Craft Market at
Crafts & Drafts Sip and Solder Stained Glass Workshop at
Hi-Wire Brewing Duke Baseball vs Florida State at
Jack Coombs Stadium Trinity Park Garden Tour: Celebrating Nature in City Gardens & Landscapes at
Trinity Park Gazebo 1:05 p.m. Durham Bulls vs Scranton/WB at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park 2 p.m. Soul Sunday w/ DJ Soul at
Congress Social Bar Back to the Future Fashion Show at
Durham Armory CarolinaWaves x Renaissance Brunch Presents: The Hive Hoedown at
Motorco Music Hall 4 p.m. Big Red Dance Project at
ADF's Samuel H. Scripps Studios Sip & Shop Market at
Corpse Reviver Bar & Lounge Evensong Singers at
Duke University Chapel Seed Theory Permaculture Mini-Series: Part Two at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 5 p.m. J. Samuel Hammond Carillon Recital Series: Jonathan Lehrer at
Duke Chapel Quad 6 p.m. Clover + Burn the Breeze and Tarot with Heiltje at
Arcana 6:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Running Art Exhibits
Constellations: 40 Years of Explorations within Sacred Geometry at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Sacred Geometry is an ancient field of physics whose equations are expressed through shape. Shape is a way to explore the universal fabric of our existence.
- Sat, Mar 30 - Tue, Apr 30
- Free admission
Jenny Blazing: Scapes - 5 Points Gallery Featured Artist Exhibition at
5 Points Gallery - Jenny’s acrylic and collage paintings are her response to the diverse landscapes surrounding us. Each stroke of color, each layer of texture, is a tribute to the breathtaking natural panorama of our state—from our rolling hills and sundrenched fields to our skies bursting with drama.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, May 11
- Fri, 5-9 p.m. and Sat, 1-9 p.m.
- Free admission
Hometown (Inherited): Ten Year Retrospective at
The Fruit - This project examines the changing landscape of our city through a series of forty mixed media pieces the artist has created since 2014.
- Third Friday openings on Apr 19 and May 17, 6-9 p.m.
- Drop-in by appointment and Wednesdays 4-7 p.m.
- Free admission
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold at
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University - María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is a monographic exhibition of a visionary voice in photography, immersive installation, painting and performance.
- Thu, Feb 15 - Sun, Jun 9
- Every week, Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Cameron Elyse's Divine Nine Legacy Memoir Exhibition at
Hayti Heritage Center - The Divine Nine Legacy Memoir delves deep into the history of the National Panhellenic Council (NPHC) or "Divine Nine," a collective of nine Greek Letter organizations founded on May 10th, 1930.
- These organizations were born out of the necessity to provide a voice for Black American students within the collegiate space. United by principles of service, community, brotherhood, and sisterhood, the Divine Nine work collectively to uplift society through acts of service to underserved areas across the nation.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, June 22
- Free admission
submitted by
DiscoverDurham to
bullcity [link] [comments]
2024.04.15 21:25 DiscoverDurham Things to do in Durham this Week!
If you’d like to add an event to our calendar,
submit an event here. Please check with the event organizers to see if events change due to weather. Have a great week!
See the
full weekly calendar on our website.
Noteworthy Events
Adult Recess at
CCB Plaza - Let your inner child shine as you play games, make crafts, and enjoy the fresh air during your lunch break!
- Wed, Apr 17
- 12-2 p.m.
- Free admission
10th Anniversary Confronting Change Exhibit Celebration and Reception at
The Carolina Theatre - The exhibit is dedicated to the Civil Rights Movement in Durham and the protestors who advocated for the desegregation of the Carolina Theatre. The event will feature a short documentary screening, a reception, and a panel discussion by several of the original protestors.
- Standby tickets may be available on the day of the event.
- Wed, Apr 17
- 7 p.m.
Cameron Elyse's Divine Nine Legacy Memoir Exhibition at
Hayti Heritage Center - The Divine Nine Legacy Memoir delves deep into the history of the National Panhellenic Council (NPHC) or "Divine Nine," a collective of nine Greek Letter organizations founded on May 10th, 1930.
- These organizations were born out of the necessity to provide a voice for Black American students within the collegiate space. United by principles of service, community, brotherhood, and sisterhood, the Divine Nine work collectively to uplift society through acts of service to underserved areas across the nation.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, June 22
- Free admission
Earth Day Celebration at
Durham Central Park - Enjoy a day filled with earth-friendly activities, educational resources, a host of vendors, good music, and even better food!
- Sun, Apr 21
- 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Multi-Day Events
Little River Community Fair at
Durham County Stadium - Fair rides, food vendors, games
- Fri, Apr 12 - Sun, Apr 21
- Mon-Fri, 5-10 p.m. and Sat-Sun, 1-11 p.m.
- Free admission
Beauty and the Beast at
Jordan High School - Be captivated by the timeless tale of love, bravery, and magic as our talented students bring this classic story to life on stage.
- Tickets are available for purchase at the school office or online.
- Thu, Apr 18 - Sat, Apr 20 and Thu, Apr 25 - Sat, Apr 27 at 6:30 p.m.
- $15, $7 for students
Fame the Musical at
NCCU Theatre - Presented by North Carolina Central University Theatre.
- Thu, Apr 18 - Sat, Apr 20 at 8 p.m. and Sun, Apr 21 at 3 p.m.
- $20, $10 for students
FantaSci at
DoubleTree RDU - FantaSci is a convention by the fans for the fans that is dedicated to raising the awareness of, and appreciation for, science fiction and fantasy in all its forms with a primary focus on allowing guests and fans to interact in a relaxed atmosphere.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sun, Apr 21
- $70+
Historic Buildings Open House at
West Point on the Eno Park - Enjoy a look inside the historic McCown-Mangum House, Photography Museum, and Mill.
- Sat, Apr 20 and Sun, Apr 21
- 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Free admission
Movies at
The Carolina Theatre Monday, Apr 15
2 p.m. Board Game Night at
The Glass Jug in Downtown Durham 5 p.m. Arts & Drafts at
Fullsteam Brewery 6 p.m. Music Trivia With Meg at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. Star Wars: Unlimited Draft at
Atomic Empire Trivia Night at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Traditions of Spoken Word: A Discussion Panel at
NorthStar Church of the Arts 8 p.m. Kill Alters / Murderpact at
The Pinhook Tuesday, Apr 16
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 5:30 p.m. Thomas Taylor's 3rd Tuesday Jam: Music of Duke Ellington at
Sharp 9 Gallery 6 p.m. Queer Speed Dating at
Arcana Trivia at
Durham Food Hall Duke Baseball vs Gardner-Webb at
Jack Coombs Field Bring Your Own Vinyl with Jaffar at
Rubies on Five Points The Glass Jog Run Club at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP Women on the Wall at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 7 p.m. Trivia at
Beer Study Durham Not Rocket Science Trivia at
DSSOLVR Durham Bull City Beer Runners Run Club at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Dance Lab at
Moon Dog Meadery Tuesday Blues Jam at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Eloquent Soul - Open Mic Night hosted by Dasan Ahanu at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Arm's Length at
Motorco Music Hall 8 p.m. Jeremy 'Bean' Clemons Trio at
Kingfisher Wednesday, Apr 17
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12 p.m. Adult Recess at
CCB Plaza 3 p.m. Durham Farmers’ Market at
Durham Central Park 4 p.m. Whiskey Wednesdays at
Alley Twenty Six 5 p.m. Free Wednesday Wine Tasting at
Beer Study Durham 6 p.m. In Other Words Literary Reading and Tarot with Devon at
Arcana Drinks With The Author! John deBary at
Kingfisher Free RTP Business Rockstar Connect Networking Event at
Sheraton Imperial Hotel 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Team Trivia with Pickle at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 7 p.m. Bottle Swap: Homebrew Club at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Skip The Small Talk: Speed Friending Event at
Fullsteam Brewery Hammered Trivia at
Hi-Wire Brewing Karaoke Night at
Mavericks Smokehouse Music Bingo at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company Jazz Jam Session at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen Brett Chambers Open Mic at
The Blue Note Grill 10th Anniversary Confronting Change Exhibit Celebration and Reception at
The Carolina Theatre 7:30 p.m. Out To Lunch: Live Improv Comedy at
Rubies on Five Points 8 p.m. Air Hockey Tournament at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia Night at
Bull McCabe's Karaoke at
Moon Dog Meadery Blends With Friends at
The Pinhook Thursday, Apr 18
9 a.m. Fly-Thru: A Drive-Through Wildlife Experience at
Piedmont Wildlife Center 12 p.m. Taking Back Thursday: XOXOK at
Boxyard RTP 3 p.m. Guided Museum Tour at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5 p.m. Thirsty Thursdays at
Dashi 5:30 p.m. Walking Club with Bull City Strollers at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Queer Trivia and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana Vinyl Night with DJ Deckades at
Gizmo Brew Works 6:15 p.m. Pony Run at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. Line Dance Classes at
Mystic Farm and Distillery Space Code Youth Open Mic at
NorthStar Church of the Arts Boulders & Brews Meetup at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 7 p.m. Trivia Night at
Beer Tooth Taproom Bring Your Own Vinyl Night at
Congress Social Bar Thursday Trivia with Nick at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Eagles Nest Jam featuring NCCU Jazz at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Al Strong Presents Jazz on the Roof at
The Durham Hotel 7:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Big Slow Tom at
Clouds Brewing Brightleaf Square Young Dubliners / Dylan Walshe at
The Blue Note Grill An Evening with Phil Rosenthal of Somebody Feed Phil at
The Carolina Theatre 8 p.m. Weekly Single Mingle at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia at
Fullsteam Brewery Fastball at
Motorco Music Hall Sweet Pill / Equipment / Have A Good Season at
The Pinhook (sold out) 9:30 p.m. Karaoke Night at
The Tavern 11 p.m. Miss B Haven Presents: Como La Flor at
Rubies on Five Points Friday, Apr 19
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Duke University Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
Rubies on Five Points Events at
The Fruit 10 a.m. Tasting at Ten at
Counter Culture Coffee 12 p.m. Co-Working & Networking Social at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 1 p.m. NCCU Men's Tennis vs Shaw at
Dr. James W. Younge Tennis Courts 5 p.m. Guided Museum Tours at
21c Museum Hotels Durham Food Truck Friday! at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6 p.m. Jenny Blazing: Scapes - Third Friday Opening Reception at
5 Points Gallery Ally J & Kevin Clark and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana Third Friday Art Walk at
Downtown Durham Friday Night Makes at
Durham Arts Council Third Friday at
Golden Belt Arts The Duke Street Dogs at
The Blue Note Grill 6:30 p.m. September: A Tribute To Earth, Wind & Fire at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. Live Vinyl Spinning by PhDJ at
Beer Study Durham Corey Ward Live! at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade 7:30 p.m. UNC-CH Faculty Jazz w/ José Aponte at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. Pass the Aux at
Boricua Soul Stereo Reveries at
DSSOLVR Durham The John Brown Big Band Featuring Nnenna Freelon at
Reynolds Industries Theater Dance Blues Friday at
Studio 5 Preservation Hall Jazz Band at
The Carolina Theatre 9 p.m. September: A Tribute To Earth, Wind & Fire at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Emo Night Brooklyn at
Motorco Music Hall Emo Karaoke Night at
The Pinhook Saturday, Apr 20
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Fullsteam Brewery Distillery Tours and Tastings at
Liberty & Plenty - Every Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. and 11-11:30 a.m.
Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Motorco Music Hall Events at
The Carolina Theatre Guided Walking Tours with
Triangle Adventures - 2 p.m. - Downtown Durham Walking Tour
- 4 p.m. - Durham African American History Tour
- 6 p.m. - Downtown Durham True Crime Tour
8 a.m. Durham Farmers' Market at
Durham Central Park parkrun Durham at
Southern Boundaries Park 9 a.m. South Durham Farmers' Market at
Greenwood Commons Shopping Center 9:30 a.m. Guide Supported Canoeing, Kayaking, and Standup Paddleboarding at
Eno River 10 a.m. Home Goods Market at
Black Wall St Gardens Kayaking 101 at
Falls Lake 11 a.m. Earth Day at
Bennett Place State Historic Site 12 p.m. 4/20 Festival at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Petals & Play: a Celebration of Neurodiversity at
Forest View Elementary Lawn Crafternoons at
Gizmo Brew Works 1 p.m. Duke Softball vs Virginia at
Duke Softball Stadium 2 p.m. Mallarme Family Concert: Scintillating Saxes at
Durham County Library 3 p.m. Cosmic Jam at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6 p.m. Tyler Monroe Trio and Tarot with Emily at
Arcana Jess Klein and Jodi Jones at
Huron Stage Music Venue 6:15 p.m. Evening Eno Exploration Paddle at
Eno River 6:30 p.m. Rebirth Brass Band presented by andmoreagain at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Sip and Solder Stained Glass Workshop at
Weldon Mills Distillery 7 p.m. Invent the Night Gala at
Museum of Life and Science Taylor Eigsti and Rebecca Kleinmann at
Sharp 9 Gallery Crones of Anarchy at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 7:30 p.m. 8-Track Minds at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. The Price is Right Live! at
DPAC Comedy at Broad at
Moon Dog Meadery Joshua Redman Group Featuring Gabrielle Cavassa "Where Are We" Tour at
Page Auditorium 9 p.m. DanceGruv Radio Presents Transmissions at
Duke Coffeehouse Rebirth Brass Band presented by andmoreagain at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room The Conjure's 7th Anniversary Party! at
The Pinhook 10 p.m. Fortune Factory Presents: Club 420 at
Rubies on Five Points Sunday, Apr 21
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
The Pinhook 10 a.m. Jazz Brunch at
Lula & Sadie's ¡Celebremos Las Ciencias! at
Museum of Life and Science 11 a.m. Lower Eno River Discovery Paddle at
Eno River 12 p.m. Pokémon League Challenge at
Atomic Empire Duke Softball vs Virginia at
Duke Softball Stadium Earth Day Celebration at
Durham Central Park Sunday Dollar Bin Sale for Charity at
Rumors Durham Farmers Market at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12:15 p.m. Public Tour at
Duke Chapel 1 p.m. Centennial in the Gardens: A Musical Celebration at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 2 p.m. Hillandale Golf Beginner Clinic at
Hillandale Golf Course Spring Cocktail Class at
Mystic Farm and Distillery 4 p.m. Seed Theory Permaculture Mini-Series: Part One at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 5 p.m. Hillai Govreen Quartet at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 6 p.m. House Music Meet Up and Tarot with Emily at
Arcana 6:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 7 p.m. Kobie Watkins Quartet at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. The Dixie Dregs with Special Guests: Steve Morse Band at
The Carolina Theatre Running Art Exhibits
Constellations: The Geometry of the Roman Alphabet at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Delve into Steven Ferlauto's four-decade-long exploration of Sacred Geometry.
- Sat, Mar 9 - Mon, Apr 15
- Free admission
Eno Women/Part One/Hidden in Plain Sight at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Featuring the work of 17 artists, including "Sideways"
- Sat, Mar 9 - Mon, Apr 15
- Free admission
Constellations: 40 Years of Explorations within Sacred Geometry at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Sacred Geometry is an ancient field of physics whose equations are expressed through shape. Shape is a way to explore the universal fabric of our existence.
- Sat, Mar 30 - Tue, Apr 30
- Free admission
Jenny Blazing: Scapes - 5 Points Gallery Featured Artist Exhibition at
5 Points Gallery - Jenny’s acrylic and collage paintings are her response to the diverse landscapes surrounding us. Each stroke of color, each layer of texture, is a tribute to the breathtaking natural panorama of our state—from our rolling hills and sundrenched fields to our skies bursting with drama.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, May 11
- Fri, 5-9 p.m. and Sat, 1-9 p.m.
- Free admission
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold at
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University - María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is a monographic exhibition of a visionary voice in photography, immersive installation, painting and performance.
- Thu, Feb 15 - Sun, Jun 9
- Every week, Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
Cameron Elyse's Divine Nine Legacy Memoir Exhibition at the
Hayti Heritage Center - The Divine Nine Legacy Memoir delves deep into the history of the National Panhellenic Council (NPHC) or "Divine Nine," a collective of nine Greek Letter organizations founded on May 10th, 1930.
- These organizations were born out of the necessity to provide a voice for Black American students within the collegiate space. United by principles of service, community, brotherhood, and sisterhood, the Divine Nine work collectively to uplift society through acts of service to underserved areas across the nation.
- Fri, Apr 19 - Sat, June 22
- Free admission
submitted by
DiscoverDurham to
bullcity [link] [comments]
2024.04.08 17:19 DiscoverDurham Things to do this week in Durham! (April 8-14)
If you’d like to add an event to our calendar,
submit an event here. Please check with the event organizers to see if events change due to weather. Have a great week!
See the
full weekly calendar on our website.
Noteworthy Events
Savannah Bananas at
Durham Bulls Athletic Park (sold out - some tickets might be available in the secondary market) - Played by Banana Ball rules.
- Part of their 2023 Banana Ball World Tour.
- Fri, Apr 12 - Sun, Apr 14
Spring Food Truck Rodeo at
Durham Central Park - April 14th will feature exciting activities to celebrate the Lao Solar New Year! String ceremony, flower crown making with the Scrap Exchange, face painting, Bull City Inflatables, DJ and dancers, and more will be on the lawn!
- Sun, Apr 14
- 12-4 p.m.
Emerging Women in Sports Leadership Summit at
Durham Convention Center - The Emerging Women in Sports Leadership Summit will be a high-energy, high-impact event that will bring together women who are passionate about sports and business.
- Thu, Apr 11
- 1-6:30 p.m.
- $75+
Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo 50th Anniversary Season at
The Carolina Theatre - Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, the world’s foremost all-male comic ballet company, brings its internationally beloved troupe of dancers to the Carolina Theatre of Durham as part of its landmark 50th anniversary season featuring gems from across the company’s groundbreaking repertoire.
- Thu, Apr 11
- 8 p.m.
- $45+
Multi-Day Events
Bull City Pickleball Classic at
Bethesda Park - Join in for the inaugural Bull City Pickleball Classic Charity Tournament.
- This is a round-robin style, weekend long tournament open to all ages and skill levels and guaranteed to provide some fun competition and more!
- Fri, Apr 12 - Sun, Apr 14
- $60
Little River Community Fair at
Durham County Stadium - Fair rides, food vendors, games
- Fri, Apr 12 - Sun, Apr 21
- Mon-Fri, 5-10 p.m. and Sat-Sun, 1-11 p.m.
- Free admission
Eurydice at
Sheafer Lab Theater - Presented by Duke Theater Studies.
- Perhaps known to some through the Broadway musical of Hadestown, the mythical love story of Orpheus and Eurydice begins (in some versions) after Orpheus bests the Sirens with his musical skills, saving Jason’s Argonauts from their snare.
- Thu, Apr 11 - Sat, Apr 13
- 8 p.m.
- Free admission
Jewish Book Festival at
Jewish For Good - This year they’ve got a mix of in-person and virtual events planned for you to hear authors read excerpts from their books, answer your questions, and share their inspiration and challenges in writing these words.
- Mon, Apr 8 - Sun, Apr 14
- Free admission
11th Organ II at
Rubenstein Arts Center - 11th Organ II is an immersive situation centered around the premise to temporarily envisioning ourselves inhabiting a shared imaginary space.
- Thu, Apr 11 at 7:30 p.m. and Fri, Apr 12 at 8 p.m.
- Free admission, RSVP required
Historic Buildings Open House at
West Point on the Eno Park - Enjoy a look inside the historic McCown-Mangum House, Photography Museum, and Mill.
- Sat, Apr 13 - Sun, Apr 14
- 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
- Free admission
Movies at
The Carolina Theatre Monday, Apr 8
2 p.m. Monarch Solar Event at
Museum of Life and Science Board Game Night at
The Glass Jug in Downtown Durham 5 p.m. Arts & Drafts at
Fullsteam Brewery 6:30 p.m. Trivia Night at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Community Board Game Night at
Moon Dog Meadery Tuesday, Apr 9
Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Duke University Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 6 p.m. Trivia at
Durham Food Hall Bring Your Own Vinyl with Jaffar at
Rubies on Five Points State of the City Address at
The Carolina Theatre Women on the Wall at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 6:30 p.m. Pony Ride at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 7 p.m. Trivia at
Beer Study Durham Not Rocket Science Trivia at
DSSOLVR Durham Bull City Beer Runners Run Club at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company SMALLPOOLS / GRAYSCALE at
Motorco Music Hall Tuesday Blues Jam at
The Blue Note Grill 7:30 p.m. Eloquent Soul - Open Mic Night hosted by Dasan Ahanu at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 8 p.m. Jeremy 'Bean' Clemons Trio at
Kingfisher Metal Show: Trash Signal, Evil Eye, + 1 TBA at
Moon Dog Meadery Wednesday, Apr 10
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 8:30 a.m. Try This, Not That: Spring Bulbs at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 4 p.m. Whiskey Wednesdays at
Alley Twenty Six 5 p.m. Free Wednesday Wine Tasting at
Beer Study Durham 6 p.m. Figure Drawing and Tarot with Heiltje at
Arcana Duke Softball vs Campbell at
Duke Softball Stadium South Durham Rockstar Connect Networking Event at
Namu 6:30 p.m. Witches Brew at
Fullsteam Brewery Eric Hirsh Solo Piano at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Trivia Night at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Team Trivia with Pickle at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 7 p.m. Hammered Trivia at
Hi-Wire Brewing Karaoke Night at
Mavericks Smokehouse Music Bingo at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company Brett Chambers Open Mic at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. Air Hockey Tournament at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia Night at
Bull McCabe's Karaoke at
Moon Dog Meadery The Psychology of Serial Killers at
The Carolina Theatre Queer Country Night w/ Line Dancing + Karaoke at
The Pinhook Thursday, Apr 11
ALL DAY Duke Track & Field Invitational at
Morris Williams Track & Field Stadium 12 p.m. Taking Back Thursday: XOXOK at
Boxyard RTP 1 p.m. Emerging Women in Sports Leadership Summit at
Durham Convention Center Meet the Keepers at
Sarah P. Duke Gardens 3 p.m. Guided Museum Tour at
21c Museum Hotels Durham 5 p.m. Thirsty Thursdays at
Dashi 5:30 p.m. Walking Club with Bull City Strollers at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 6 p.m. Jonathan Yandel and Tarot with Rene at
Arcana Vinyl Night with DJ Deckades at
Gizmo Brew Works 6:15 p.m. Pony Run at
Ponysaurus Brewing Company 6:30 p.m. Living, Thinking, Being & Sensing Otherwise at
Durham County Main Library AfterHours: Mystery at the Museum at
Museum of Life + Science Line Dance Classes at
Mystic Farm and Distillery Boulders & Brews Meetup at
Triangle Rock Club - Durham 7 p.m. Trivia Night at
Beer Tooth Taproom Open Mic Night at
Common Market Bring Your Own Vinyl Night at
Congress Social Bar Thursday Trivia with Nick at
Durty Bull Brewing Brewing Company Eagles Nest Jam featuring NCCU Jazz at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Library Event at
Moon Dog Meadery Periodic Tables: Honest Data Visualization at
Motorco Music Hall 2nd Thursday Jazz Jam Sessions at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 7:30 p.m. Trivia Night with Big Slow Tom at
Clouds Brewing Brightleaf Square Clint Black at
DPAC David Quick's Mr. Wonderful at
The Blue Note Grill 8 p.m. Weekly Single Mingle at
Boxcar Bar + Arcade Trivia at
Fullsteam Brewery Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo 50th Anniversary Season at
The Carolina Theatre 9:30 p.m. Karaoke Night at
The Tavern Friday, Apr 12
Events at
Duke University Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
Fullsteam Brewery Events at
Mettlesome Events at
The Blue Note Grill Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham Events at
Moon Dog Meadery 10 a.m. Tasting at Ten at
Counter Culture Coffee 2 p.m. NCCU Women's Tennis vs South Carolina State at
Dr. James W. Younge Tennis Courts 5 p.m. Food Truck Friday! at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 5:30 p.m. Friday Night Live: Tea Cup Gin at
Boxyard RTP 6 p.m. Daniel DeLorenzo Trio and Tarot with Virginia at
Arcana Friday Night Makes at
Durham Arts Council You Can Vote 10th Anniversary Party at
Durham Arts Council 6:30 p.m. Magic: Outlaws of Thunder Junction Prerelease at
Atomic Empire Gastón Reggio Group at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. Live Vinyl Spinning by PhDJ at
Beer Study Durham Freedom Friday w/ DJ Mayor at
Congress Social Bar River & Rail at
Huron Stage Music Venue Twerk n' Paint at
The Link Center 7:30 p.m. Nancy Kelly at
Sharp 9 Gallery 8 p.m. Adam Ant at
DPAC Stereo Reveries at
DSSOLVR Durham Land of Talk at
Motorco Music Hall The Monti GrandSLAM at
The Carolina Theatre 9 p.m. Gastón Reggio Group at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room Josh Teed: Taking It All In at
The Fruit Ballads And Bangers Karaoke at
The Pinhook 10 p.m. Future Residents at
Rubies on Five Points Saturday, Apr 13
Events at
Atomic Empire Events at
Boxyard RTP Events at
Duke University Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Distillery Tours and Tastings at
Liberty & Plenty - Every Saturday, 10-10:30 a.m. and 11-11:30 a.m.
Events at
Mettlesome Events at
Moon Dog Meadery Events at
Rubies on Five Points Events at
The Fruit Guided Walking Tours with
Triangle Adventures - 2 p.m. - Downtown Durham Walking Tour
- 4 p.m. - Durham African American History Tour
- 6 p.m. - Downtown Durham True Crime Tour
8 a.m. Fandango de Durham at
Avila Retreat Center Durham Farmers' Market at
Durham Central Park Women's Health Awareness 2024 at
Hillside High School parkrun Durham at
Southern Boundaries Park 9 a.m. South Durham Farmers' Market at
Greenwood Commons Shopping Center Tea Cup Gin at
Succotash Southern & Creole Kitchen 10 a.m. Experience the Magic of Storytelling Through Quilting at Library Fest! at
Durham County Main Library Basement Finds: Triangle Pop-Up X Inkfinity at
Fullsteam Brewery Roots and Soul: Walking with Pauli Murray at
Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice 11 a.m. 2nd Annual Dings + Dents Sale at
Bright Black. NCCU Men's Tennis vs South Carolina State at
Dr. James W. Younge Tennis Courts Every Day is Earth Day at
Lakewood Shopping Center Thrift-A-Bull Market's Block Party at
Rigsbee Ave and Corporation St 11:30 a.m. Tie Dye Shirt Making at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in Downtown Durham 12 p.m. Crafternoons at
Gizmo Brew Works City Box Durham Pop-up at
SDM storefront on Main North Durham Farmers' Market at
Soul Sanctuary 1 p.m. Grace Community Farmers Market at
Grace Community Farmers Market MAAME, Inc. Black Maternal Health Fair 2024 at
WG Pearson Center 2 p.m. First Nations Film & Video Festival at
Rubenstein Arts Center 3 p.m. Nancy Kelly at
Sharp 9 Gallery 3:30 p.m. River & Rail at
Huron Stage Music Venue Kick Off Party with Shuffle at
The Wine Feed 6 p.m. The River Otters and Tarot with Heiltje at
Arcana Elodie Farm Dinner at
Elodie Farms 6:30 p.m. D'Shawn & Special Guest at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 7 p.m. Lightning Strikes ProAm Kickboxing & Muay Thai Event at
Durham Armory 7:30 p.m. Mel Melton & the Wicked Mojos at
The Blue Note Grill The Fab Four - The Ultimate Tribute at
The Carolina Theatre 8 p.m. Gilberto Santa Rosa at
DPAC 9 p.m. D'Shawn & Special Guest at
Missy Lane's Assembly Room 10 p.m. Bless Your Heart: A Drag Show For Fiercely Departed at
The Pinhook Sunday, Apr 14
Events at
Durty Bull Brewing Company Events at
The Glass Jug Beer Lab in RTP 10 a.m. Jazz Brunch at
Lula & Sadie's 10:30 a.m. Yoga On Tap at
Fullsteam Brewery 12 p.m. Magic: Outlaws of Thunder Junction Prerelease at
Atomic Empire Spring Food Truck Rodeo at
Durham Central Park Sunday Dollar Bin Sale for Charity at
Rumors Durham Farmers Market at
ZincHouse Winery & Brewery 12:15 p.m. Public Tour at
Duke Chapel 1 p.m. Family Day: This is Our Earth at
Nasher Museum of Art 2 p.m. Disney Princess - The Concert at
DPAC Duke Men's Lacrosse vs Virginia at
Koskinen Stadium 4 p.m. Our First Lady of Jazz: Celebrating Mary Lou Williams at
Duke University Chapel 6 p.m. Queer Tango and Tarot with Rene at
Arcana 6:30 p.m. Open Mic Night at
Moon Dog Meadery 7 p.m. DPW No Pressure at
Durham Armory Sheryl Bailey 3 at
Sharp 9 Gallery Running Art Exhibits
Imagine at
5 Points Gallery - A showcase highlighting Jim McKeon's large-scale oil paintings that seamlessly blend figurative realism with whimsical, dreamy landscapes.
- Thu, Mar 14 - Sat, Apr 13
- Thursdays and Fridays 5-9 m. and Saturdays 1-9 p.m.
- Free admission
Constellations: The Geometry of the Roman Alphabet at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Delve into Steven Ferlauto's four-decade-long exploration of Sacred Geometry.
- Sat, Mar 9 - Mon, Apr 15
- Free admission
Eno Women/Part One/Hidden in Plain Sight at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Featuring the work of 17 artists, including "Sideways," a painting by u/marticagriffin.
- Sat, Mar 9 - Mon, Apr 15
- Free admission
Constellations: 40 Years of Explorations within Sacred Geometry at
Horse & Buggy Press and Friends Gallery - Sacred Geometry is an ancient field of physics whose equations are expressed through shape. Shape is a way to explore the universal fabric of our existence.
- Sat, Mar 30 - Tue, Apr 30
- Free admission
María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold at
Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University - María Magdalena Campos-Pons: Behold is a monographic exhibition of a visionary voice in photography, immersive installation, painting and performance.
- Thu, Feb 15 - Sun, Jun 9
- Every week, Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun 12-5 p.m.
- Free admission
submitted by
DiscoverDurham to
bullcity [link] [comments]
2024.03.30 11:25 GooeyBabyButthole I Made A Geometry Dash 2024 Bingo Card
submitted by GooeyBabyButthole to geometrydash [link] [comments]
2024.03.30 09:11 Notfinjar3 BIngo! In geometry dash recent tab
2024.03.02 20:35 GammaPhonic PVM re-capping
| My good old PVM-20M2E has been playing up. It’s had these droopy corners (technical term) for the first couple of minutes after turning g it on. I decided it was time to replace the capacitors. After an entire day hunched of a hot soldering iron, bingo! It looks great straight from power on now. I’ve had to redo the geometry, as I think the old caps were throwing it off. Well worth the effort :) submitted by GammaPhonic to crtgaming [link] [comments] |
2024.02.29 13:28 wenlee01 Early Math Skills:5 Fun Activities to Introduce Numbers and Shapes
| https://preview.redd.it/3vksmxhvpilc1.jpg?width=1024&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=532385178c251133fa3ae3a813ad179806f452e3 We at The Growing Patch Preschool know how important it is to start building strong math skills early on. It’s no secret that a Pre Learning School is very important to a kid’s academic journey. Through fun games, this blog will look at interesting methods to teach preschoolers about numbers and shapes. Why Learning Math Early is Important? It’s important to know why early math skills are so important before we start doing the work. In the future, these skills will help your kid understand more complicated math ideas. They also help with cognitive growth, critical thinking, and solving problems. That’s why we make math fun and interesting for young kids at The Growing Patch Preschool. 5 Fun Activities to Teach Numbers and Shapes Activity 1: Use everyday objects to count. Materials: Different everyday things, like pens, blocks, or buttons. - Put together a group of everyday things and show them to your child.
- Start by adding them up all at once. Say to your kid, “Let’s count the crayons.” Say “One, Two, Three”
- You can also put the things into sets and count each set individually.
- This game helps kids understand what numbers and quantities mean.
Activity 2: Look for shapes Materials: A small basket and cardboard forms (circle, triangle, square, etc.). - Place cardboard shapes in secret places in the house or school.
- Tell your kid to look through the basket for the secret shapes.
- Ask to name each shape as they find it.
- This activity helps kids learn to spot and tell the difference between shapes.
Activity 3: Make things out of play dough Materials: Playdough in different colors and shape cutters - Give your kid play dough in a variety of colors.
- Show them how to make different shapes with shape cutters.
- Get them to keep track of how many shapes they make.
- This practice improves fine motor skills and teaches geometry at the same time.
Activity 4: Shape and Number Bingo Materials: Bingo cards made at home with numbers and shapes, as well as small markers. - Make bingo cards that have both numbers and shapes on them.
- If you say a number or a shape, your child can put a marking on the spot that goes with it.
- “Bingo!” is the shout by the first person to finish a row.
- This game is a fun and involved way to learn numbers and shapes.
Activity 5: Using math to cook Materials: Simple recipes, materials, measuring cups, and spoons are what you will need. - Pick a simple recipe, like muffins or cookies, to make together.
- Use cups and spoons to help your child measure out items.
- Talk about how the sizes of the tools and the forms of the food are related.
- In a tasty way, this game combines math and real-life skills.
Your child will love math and shapes for a long time if you include these fun tasks in their daily life. As we start this educational journey together, come join us at The Growing Patch Preschool. When you look for a “ Children’s Learning Center Near Me,” remember that The Growing Patch Preschool is here to give your child the best start in school. Let’s learn and grow together. submitted by wenlee01 to u/wenlee01 [link] [comments] |
2024.02.21 19:10 MG_Morgan16 I made a bingo card for thumbnails of the 'Daily Dose of Geometry Dash' channel
2024.02.17 05:07 AffectionateMonth53 More Stickers
| The top two stickers were from a school event at lunch (they had stickers, cookies and coloring sheets available in the Career Center), the starfish was for getting bingo in Geometry Bingo, and the knight helmet is for an award I won for good performance in biology class. submitted by AffectionateMonth53 to EliteEden [link] [comments] |
2024.02.16 05:59 Cheese2009 How many of these have been made
2024.02.09 06:50 gabeio64 rate my recommended
2023.12.31 14:31 kdxsj Title
2023.12.29 20:42 Mattplayzreddit Geometry Dash Lobotomy Levels are so weird that I decided to make a Bingo Card
2023.12.26 21:46 uclaclaudio Might Filipinos be the Missing Link in the Sumerian Creation Mythos (The Eridu Genesis)? The Philippines’ Influence on the Dawn of Human Civilization: A Discussion
Might Filipinos be the Missing Link in the Sumerian Creation Mythos (The Eridu Genesis)? The Philippines’ Influence on the Dawn of Human Civilization: A Discussion When we learn about Mesopotamia, The Fertile Crescent, and the life-bringing Tigris and Euphrates rivers, we are taught that the Sumerians inhabiting these lands were the first to develop written language, agriculture, irrigation, and the first known metropolises. That is, for the most part, the end-all of what is taught in school pertaining to the Sumerians. We learn that history begins in Sumer (with the development of written language) and that all following civilizations branch off, in structure, from this one particular society as a springboard model of civilization. For reasons likely attributed to the FGC’s interference of disseminated information (we will expand on this later), few students are ever taught the Sumerian fables depicting their own story of the origins of civilization. Below, a brief quote detailing the “god” Oannes, whom they attributed with teaching humans the necessary wisdom to build civilization,
“Oannes, in Mesopotamian mythology, an amphibious being who taught mankind wisdom. Oannes, as described by the Babylonian priest Berosus, had the form of a fish but with the head of a man under his fish’s head and under his fish’s tail the feet of a man. In the daytime he came up to the seashore of the Persian Gulf and instructed mankind in writing, the arts, and the sciences.“
- With this in mind, it’s important to note that a significant portion of the tales taught in Abrahamic religions (Bible, Torah, Quaran) were initially derived from Sumerian mythology, eg. The Great Flood, The Garden of Eden, The Tower of Babel, etc. These tales were passed down spanning hundreds to thousands of years between the fall of Sumerian society and the development of modern day Abrahamic religions. As a result, these stories were entrenched into the popular mythos of humanity and ultimately incorporated and retold as stories in the Abrahamic texts.
Through the contributions of the “deity”Sumerians called “Oannes,” humankind learned the single-most important tool to enable and drive the development of civilization, WRITTEN LANGUAGE. The ability to write down and store humanity’s knowledge for future generations to read and develop/build upon proved to be an essential key to enabling humanity’s advancement into modern civilization. Prior to written language, the passing down of oral history was the only option available to transfer information beyond a single generation. This comes with a litany of problems that significantly hinder the development of civilization. At a minimum, traditions of oral history are intrinsically affected by a proverbial “game of telephone.” On the other end of severity, an entire lineage of knowledge could be wiped off the face of the earth through war, plagues, famine, or even simply failing to bare enough children that successfully survive into adulthood. Now consider the increased prevalence and likelihood of facing such calamities in 3500 B.C.E. and the magnitude of information lost, time-and-time again with each instance. Under these circumstances, civilization is not provided adequate opportunity to develop, stuck in limbo, humanity remains captive to an indefinite loop of cultural resets.
Now that we’ve established a historical foundation, let’s zoom out and look at this from a broader perspective.
- We know that the Great Flood of Sumerian mythology is the same Great Flood mentioned in all three of the major Abrahamic religions
- With this we can confer that Sumerian influence didn’t just die with the collapse of Mesopotamia, it is still very much intertwined in our daily lives on a worldwide scale
- Guess where the origin of the 10 Commandments comes from (bingo!).
- Now take another guess as to how much influence the 10 commandments held on the founding fathers (U.S.) while they were drafting the U.S. constitution (bingo!)
- Sumerian concepts, formed 5000 years ago, from a civilization that hasn’t existed for 2500 years, yet still remain an influence, on an everyday level among humanity. Just as the stories of The Great Flood and The Tower of Babel intertwined so cohesively into our folkloric understanding of history that they were reworked into all three major Abrahamic texts, fragments of Sumerian influence still pervade today, likely in ways so microscopic we would never even notice.
- Now that we’re all up to speed, remember that the Sumerians do not credit themselves with developing written language, but rather a half man/half fish that came from the sea that they worshiped as a deity. They also credit this “deity” with instructing mankind on the arts and the sciences.
- We all know that the Polynesian people were masters of nautical navigation, developing a comprehensive understanding of astronomy to navigate Oceania. Indispensable to their survival amid open ocean voyages, the Polynesian seafarers transmuted this knowledge into utility - A pragmatic example of science in application amid a period of time classified as pre-historic (pre-written language).
- This is important because although we’re all familiar with Polynesian nautical mastery, you may not know that experts in the field have recently identified The Philippines as the true ancestral home of the Polynesians (quote below)
“Research into the origins and dispersal of Polynesian chickens has helped scientists reconstruct the early migrations of the Polynesians and the animals they carried with them. The results revealed that the Philippines is the most likely ancestral homeland of the Polynesians, whose forebears colonized the Pacific about 3,200 years ago.”
- so we know that the first population navigationally advanced enough to become what we now know as the Polynesians dates back to the Philippines roughly 3,200 years ago… but to reach the level of nautical prowess needed to successfully become the titans of seafaring we think of when referencing Polynesians, they must have already had a few practice hours under their belt, right?
Well… yes, in fact, at least 60,000 years says Dr. Gorostiza Arenas in a paper published to Nature titled, “The Early Peopling of the Philippines based on mtDNA”
“We found that the colonization of the Philippines occurred more than 60,000 years ago, with long-distance dispersal and from both north and south migration routes. Our results also suggest an environmental scenario especially optimal for humans, with large carrying capacity and population growth, in comparison to other regions of Asia. In all, our study suggests a rapid expansion of modern humans towards the Philippines that could be associated with the establishment of maritime technologies and favorable environmental conditions.”
(Arenas, M., Gorostiza, A., Baquero, J.M. et al. The Early Peopling of the Philippines based on mtDNA. Sci Rep 10, 4901 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-61793-7)
- So you’re saying there was a sea faring society that had tens of thousands of years to further dial in their knowledge of nautical navigation, that also lived through the same period that the Great Flood mentioned in Sumerian mythology, Hindu mythology, Greek mythology, as well as The Cheyenne Tribe of the North American Great Plains’ oral history, who’s islands are currently considered “one of the most vulnerable (countries) to sea level rise,” that had the skills to easily navigate the open oceans without a compass (a task that is comparatively far more challenging then traversing along the coastline of India) in seek of refuge from displacement might’ve come into contact with early settlers of the Fertile Crescent and teach them a little thing or two? Yeah, pretty much.
- Their level of navigating is more than just looking up at the sky - knowledge of: planetary bodies, rotations, seasonal patterns and the corresponding locations of celestial bodies over wide swaths of global positions and perspectives, and a HIGHLY overlooked point, the ability to triangulate position - which requires an understanding of Euclidean geometry at a minimum and in more advanced calculations, it’s more complex counter-part - trigonometry.
Here’s something interesting….
Researchers recently deciphered a Babylonian stone tablet revealing that Mesopotamians had developed trigonometry more than 1000 years before the Greeks… and not only that, but that the Babylonian model was found to be more accurate than our current model. In fact, it’s an absolute model, while our model of trigonometry still relies on some level of approximation.
Here’s the kicker. guess the determined age of said tablet…
lining up quite closely with the determined time frame researchers have established as the most likely date for the first migratory departure of a Filipino group that would become today’s Polynesians.
“If the new interpretation is right, P322 would not only contain the earliest evidence of trigonometry, but it would also represent an exact form of the mathematical discipline, rather than the approximations that estimated numerical values for sines and cosines provide, notes Mathieu Ossendrijver, a historian of ancient science at Humboldt University in Berlin. The table, he says, contains exact values of the sides for a range of right triangles. That means that—as for modern trigonometric tables—someone using the known ratio of two sides can use information in the tablet to find the ratios of the two other sides.”
Is my long-winded breakdown on Mesopotamian history starting to seem a little more relevant now? Note The “deity” Oannes was not credited for agricultural contributions (also important to civilization building), but rather, for giving the Sumerians the wisdom of WRITING, SCIENCE, and ART. On the topic of art - some of the oldest cave paintings on earth are found in the Philippines with fossil evidence at the cave site that suggests the paintings were likely made by a newly discovered (2019) hominid lineage named Homo luzonensis. Thus far, fossil records of this hominid have only been located in The Philippines.
So what's up with Filipinos?
From this historical analysis of civilization’s genesis, we can begin to extrapolate some of the necessary pieces of this puzzle to make sense of all the moving parts of the Filipino World Order (FWO) - aptly nicknamed “The Island Puzzle Dilemma”among dark academia.
First things first, let’s breakdown some etymological evidence to help pull back the curtain on the Filipino Global Cabal (FGC) and reveal just how deeply burrowed and pervasive the FGC has embedded itself into every nook and cranny of human existence:
- Goyim - Hebrew word for non-Jews
- Migoy - “goyim spelled in reverse”
- Flip the “g” and trade its place with the “M”
- Pimoy - oddly similar to Pinoy… hmm… surely just a coincidence… right?
Well turns out…Not quite…
When you look into both the history of The Philippines and their secret ancient holy sites of worship, the dots begin to connect in a way that cannot be ignored.
Evidence is currently mounting that strongly suggests that Filipinos might be the original Jewish People. This secret is held tightly under wraps via a joint effort between the Vatican and the Greater Filipino Cabal. This alliance has a long standing, by some reports ancient in origin, and its influence can be seen in broad daylight when looking into their operations with a keen lens. Consider this quote below (Source: Wikipedia)
“His visit to the Philippines in January 2015 included the largest papal event in history with around 6–7 million attendees in his final Mass at Manila, surpassing the then-largest papal event at World Youth Day 1995 in the same venue twenty years earlier.”
Interesting… this must be a coincidence as well… right? WRONG.
The Filipino Deep-State has mastered the art of psycho-manipulation and discreet mental distortion. Many scholars of the subject share the belief that the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal) developed this technique via a mixture of modern improvements in advanced Filipino and Filipina sciences in combination with archaic dark arts passed down millennia through the Golden Pinoy Bloodline (GPB). Their reach transcends into nearly all social, political, and theological dogma currently in existence on planet Earth. Archaeological evidence suggests that global FGC influence is not a recent development, but rather, ancient in origin - likely predating written history as we know it. The phrase, “as we know it” is an important and intentional choice of syntax here. It is likely that the Filipino people (specifically the ancient descendants of the GPB) had developed a system of writing well before the “dawn of civilization” we are taught in school.
The FGC and GPB were early masters of both the hard sciences as well as reports of arcane abilities in those with higher percentages of genetic marker signatures associated with the GPB bloodline. Few have been studied as those firmly within the Golden Pinoy Bloodline are sequestered away from the public at a young age, exclusively residing among the highest echelon of Filipino society for the duration of their lives. It has been frequently reported that many go on to take lengthy stays in the Vatican upon reaching adulthood and are rarely ever witnessed by the public eye. Furthermore, it is still unknown as to why, but individuals that have been positively identified as members of the GPB are seen only being driven in Jeep Cherokees. So far, experts in the field have determined that this rule does not apply to non-GPB members of the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal). There has been a handful of celebrity sightings (mostly American) leaving certain GPB/FGC private events and parties, most notably Kathy McCrank, Kyle Wilson, Charles Partners Jr. and Tasha CarMichael.
The current understanding of the past role of the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal) and their current goals are largely speculated upon, but researchers do know a few things for certain:
- The public facing government of The Philippines is “all show” and under the total control of the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal) shadow government
- Their history as a pioneer society with civilization-birthing co-factors (writing, sciences, art) has been used for thousands of years to seed other civilizations on Earth (as well as destroy), with the intent of planting subversive and intentionally destructive ideologies/information/incomplete sciences, etc. mixed in along with valid/true information.
- This strategy is the main focus of the FGC as a means of controlling society by being gatekeepers of solutions to problems of their own creation. They seed these civilizations to exploit them down the line as they become more developed and profitable.
- For foreign nations under FGC influence, the level of said country’s permitted stage of development is closely controlled and monitored by the Filipino Global Cabal and permitted to advance only when beneficial for FGC and GPC members.
- There is growing speculation that Israel may be completely under total FGC control at the moment and has possibly been under FGC control since the brief political power vacuum they experienced after the infamous global catastrophe we now all remember as the 2011 Tanzanite Shortage Crisis. (That was an incredibly difficult time for everyone and frankly, I’m just grateful we’re out of it)
There's a lot more speculation floating around regarding the FGC’s current and past activities, but as someone who believes in the importance of maintaining factual integrity in these types of discussions, I’d rather not prop-up unverified claims without more evidence coming to the table.
Many people on popular intellectually focused forums such as EbaumsWorld, Newgrounds, T-Nation Forum, and the Maplestory chat function, among other similar forums that focus primarily on the discussion of lesser known historical topics have reported that their was an internal leak of a 2022 Hubspot Pitch Deck registered to an account located within The Philippines. The leaked pitch deck presents a 24 page Microsoft PowerPoint pitch running a cost/benefit analysis of a shadow government using Israel to initiate a war in 2023 with the goal of attempting to bring on a prophetical biblical Armageddon. It appears they are looking for new investors after the FGC’s falling out with Hasbro, and consequently, Guga Foods.
-FINAL WORDS-
If you’re still reading this you’re a trooper lmao. First half of this is actual legitimate discussion, that I spent multiple hours researching and writing… but then after looking at how much I wrote I thought about how funny it would be to just implode all of my efforts for the sake of the bit. Got too much of a chuckle thinking about someone reading this in good faith and actually engaging with it, spending their time getting through all of this dense Sumerian anthropological stuff and then realizing it’s slowly devolving into the ramblings of an absolutely unhinged Reddit guy peddling a completely novel conspiracy theory in a tone that insinuates in his mind “everyone’s probably already familiar with this on a cursory level”
submitted by
uclaclaudio to
conspiracy [link] [comments]
2023.12.26 21:27 uclaclaudio Might Filipinos be the Missing Link in the Sumerian Creation Mythos (The Eridu Genesis)? The Philippines’ Influence on the Dawn of Human Civilization: A Discussion
Might Filipinos be the Missing Link in the Sumerian Creation Mythos (The Eridu Genesis)? The Philippines’ Influence on the Dawn of Human Civilization: A Discussion When we learn about Mesopotamia, The Fertile Crescent, and the life-bringing Tigris and Euphrates rivers, we are taught that the Sumerians inhabiting these lands were the first to develop written language, agriculture, irrigation, and the first known metropolises. That is, for the most part, the end-all of what is taught in school pertaining to the Sumerians. We learn that history begins in Sumer (with the development of written language) and that all following civilizations branch off, in structure, from this one particular society as a springboard model of civilization. For reasons likely attributed to the FGC’s interference of disseminated information (we will expand on this later), few students are ever taught the Sumerian fables depicting their own story of the origins of civilization. Below, a brief quote detailing the “god” Oannes, whom they attributed with teaching humans the necessary wisdom to build civilization,
“Oannes, in Mesopotamian mythology, an amphibious being who taught mankind wisdom. Oannes, as described by the Babylonian priest Berosus, had the form of a fish but with the head of a man under his fish’s head and under his fish’s tail the feet of a man. In the daytime he came up to the seashore of the Persian Gulf and instructed mankind in writing, the arts, and the sciences.“
- With this in mind, it’s important to note that a significant portion of the tales taught in Abrahamic religions (Bible, Torah, Quaran) were initially derived from Sumerian mythology, eg. The Great Flood, The Garden of Eden, The Tower of Babel, etc. These tales were passed down spanning hundreds to thousands of years between the fall of Sumerian society and the development of modern day Abrahamic religions. As a result, these stories were entrenched into the popular mythos of humanity and ultimately incorporated and retold as stories in the Abrahamic texts.
Through the contributions of the “deity”Sumerians called “Oannes,” humankind learned the single-most important tool to enable and drive the development of civilization, WRITTEN LANGUAGE. The ability to write down and store humanity’s knowledge for future generations to read and develop/build upon proved to be an essential key to enabling humanity’s advancement into modern civilization. Prior to written language, the passing down of oral history was the only option available to transfer information beyond a single generation. This comes with a litany of problems that significantly hinder the development of civilization. At a minimum, traditions of oral history are intrinsically affected by a proverbial “game of telephone.” On the other end of severity, an entire lineage of knowledge could be wiped off the face of the earth through war, plagues, famine, or even simply failing to bare enough children that successfully survive into adulthood. Now consider the increased prevalence and likelihood of facing such calamities in 3500 B.C.E. and the magnitude of information lost, time-and-time again with each instance. Under these circumstances, civilization is not provided adequate opportunity to develop, stuck in limbo, humanity remains captive to an indefinite loop of cultural resets.
Now that we’ve established a historical foundation, let’s zoom out and look at this from a broader perspective.
- We know that the Great Flood of Sumerian mythology is the same Great Flood mentioned in all three of the major Abrahamic religions
- With this we can confer that Sumerian influence didn’t just die with the collapse of Mesopotamia, it is still very much intertwined in our daily lives on a worldwide scale
- Guess where the origin of the 10 Commandments comes from (bingo!).
- Now take another guess as to how much influence the 10 commandments held on the founding fathers (U.S.) while they were drafting the U.S. constitution (bingo!)
- Sumerian concepts, formed 5000 years ago, from a civilization that hasn’t existed for 2500 years, yet still remain an influence, on an everyday level among humanity. Just as the stories of The Great Flood and The Tower of Babel intertwined so cohesively into our folkloric understanding of history that they were reworked into all three major Abrahamic texts, fragments of Sumerian influence still pervade today, likely in ways so microscopic we would never even notice.
- Now that we’re all up to speed, remember that the Sumerians do not credit themselves with developing written language, but rather a half man/half fish that came from the sea that they worshiped as a deity. They also credit this “deity” with instructing mankind on the arts and the sciences.
- We all know that the Polynesian people were masters of nautical navigation, developing a comprehensive understanding of astronomy to navigate Oceania. Indispensable to their survival amid open ocean voyages, the Polynesian seafarers transmuted this knowledge into utility - A pragmatic example of science in application amid a period of time classified as pre-historic (pre-written language).
- This is important because although we’re all familiar with Polynesian nautical mastery, you may not know that experts in the field have recently identified The Philippines as the true ancestral home of the Polynesians (quote below)
“Research into the origins and dispersal of Polynesian chickens has helped scientists reconstruct the early migrations of the Polynesians and the animals they carried with them. The results revealed that the Philippines is the most likely ancestral homeland of the Polynesians, whose forebears colonized the Pacific about 3,200 years ago.”
- so we know that the first population navigationally advanced enough to become what we now know as the Polynesians dates back to the Philippines roughly 3,200 years ago… but to reach the level of nautical prowess needed to successfully become the titans of seafaring we think of when referencing Polynesians, they must have already had a few practice hours under their belt, right?
Well… yes, in fact, at least 60,000 years says Dr. Gorostiza Arenas in a paper published to Nature titled, “The Early Peopling of the Philippines based on mtDNA”
“We found that the colonization of the Philippines occurred more than 60,000 years ago, with long-distance dispersal and from both north and south migration routes. Our results also suggest an environmental scenario especially optimal for humans, with large carrying capacity and population growth, in comparison to other regions of Asia. In all, our study suggests a rapid expansion of modern humans towards the Philippines that could be associated with the establishment of maritime technologies and favorable environmental conditions.”
(Arenas, M., Gorostiza, A., Baquero, J.M. et al. The Early Peopling of the Philippines based on mtDNA. Sci Rep 10, 4901 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-61793-7)
- So you’re saying there was a sea faring society that had tens of thousands of years to further dial in their knowledge of nautical navigation, that also lived through the same period that the Great Flood mentioned in Sumerian mythology, Hindu mythology, Greek mythology, as well as The Cheyenne Tribe of the North American Great Plains’ oral history, who’s islands are currently considered “one of the most vulnerable (countries) to sea level rise,” that had the skills to easily navigate the open oceans without a compass (a task that is comparatively far more challenging then traversing along the coastline of India) in seek of refuge from displacement might’ve come into contact with early settlers of the Fertile Crescent and teach them a little thing or two? Yeah, pretty much.
- Their level of navigating is more than just looking up at the sky - knowledge of: planetary bodies, rotations, seasonal patterns and the corresponding locations of celestial bodies over wide swaths of global positions and perspectives, and a HIGHLY overlooked point, the ability to triangulate position - which requires an understanding of Euclidean geometry at a minimum and in more advanced calculations, it’s more complex counter-part - trigonometry.
Here’s something interesting….
Researchers recently deciphered a Babylonian stone tablet revealing that Mesopotamians had developed trigonometry more than 1000 years before the Greeks… and not only that, but that the Babylonian model was found to be more accurate than our current model. In fact, it’s an absolute model, while our model of trigonometry still relies on some level of approximation.
Here’s the kicker. guess the determined age of said tablet…
lining up quite closely with the determined time frame researchers have established as the most likely date for the first migratory departure of a Filipino group that would become today’s Polynesians.
“If the new interpretation is right, P322 would not only contain the earliest evidence of trigonometry, but it would also represent an exact form of the mathematical discipline, rather than the approximations that estimated numerical values for sines and cosines provide, notes Mathieu Ossendrijver, a historian of ancient science at Humboldt University in Berlin. The table, he says, contains exact values of the sides for a range of right triangles. That means that—as for modern trigonometric tables—someone using the known ratio of two sides can use information in the tablet to find the ratios of the two other sides.”
Is my long-winded breakdown on Mesopotamian history starting to seem a little more relevant now? Note The “deity” Oannes was not credited for agricultural contributions (also important to civilization building), but rather, for giving the Sumerians the wisdom of WRITING, SCIENCE, and ART. On the topic of art - some of the oldest cave paintings on earth are found in the Philippines with fossil evidence at the cave site that suggests the paintings were likely made by a newly discovered (2019) hominid lineage named Homo luzonensis. Thus far, fossil records of this hominid have only been located in The Philippines.
So what's up with Filipinos?
From this historical analysis of civilization’s genesis, we can begin to extrapolate some of the necessary pieces of this puzzle to make sense of all the moving parts of the Filipino World Order (FWO) - aptly nicknamed “The Island Puzzle Dilemma”among dark academia.
First things first, let’s breakdown some etymological evidence to help pull back the curtain on the Filipino Global Cabal (FGC) and reveal just how deeply burrowed and pervasive the FGC has embedded itself into every nook and cranny of human existence:
- Goyim - Hebrew word for non-Jews
- Migoy - “goyim spelled in reverse”
- Flip the “g” and trade its place with the “M”
- Pimoy - oddly similar to Pinoy… hmm… surely just a coincidence… right?
Well turns out…Not quite…
When you look into both the history of The Philippines and their secret ancient holy sites of worship, the dots begin to connect in a way that cannot be ignored.
Evidence is currently mounting that strongly suggests that Filipinos might be the original Jewish People. This secret is held tightly under wraps via a joint effort between the Vatican and the Greater Filipino Cabal. This alliance has a long standing, by some reports ancient in origin, and its influence can be seen in broad daylight when looking into their operations with a keen lens. Consider this quote below (Source: Wikipedia)
“His visit to the Philippines in January 2015 included the largest papal event in history with around 6–7 million attendees in his final Mass at Manila, surpassing the then-largest papal event at World Youth Day 1995 in the same venue twenty years earlier.”
Interesting… this must be a coincidence as well… right? WRONG.
The Filipino Deep-State has mastered the art of psycho-manipulation and discreet mental distortion. Many scholars of the subject share the belief that the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal) developed this technique via a mixture of modern improvements in advanced Filipino and Filipina sciences in combination with archaic dark arts passed down millennia through the Golden Pinoy Bloodline (GPB). Their reach transcends into nearly all social, political, and theological dogma currently in existence on planet Earth. Archaeological evidence suggests that global FGC influence is not a recent development, but rather, ancient in origin - likely predating written history as we know it. The phrase, “as we know it” is an important and intentional choice of syntax here. It is likely that the Filipino people (specifically the ancient descendants of the GPB) had developed a system of writing well before the “dawn of civilization” we are taught in school.
The FGC and GPB were early masters of both the hard sciences as well as reports of arcane abilities in those with higher percentages of genetic marker signatures associated with the GPB bloodline. Few have been studied as those firmly within the Golden Pinoy Bloodline are sequestered away from the public at a young age, exclusively residing among the highest echelon of Filipino society for the duration of their lives. It has been frequently reported that many go on to take lengthy stays in the Vatican upon reaching adulthood and are rarely ever witnessed by the public eye. Furthermore, it is still unknown as to why, but individuals that have been positively identified as members of the GPB are seen only being driven in Jeep Cherokees. So far, experts in the field have determined that this rule does not apply to non-GPB members of the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal). There has been a handful of celebrity sightings (mostly American) leaving certain GPB/FGC private events and parties, most notably Kathy McCrank, Kyle Wilson, Charles Partners Jr. and Tasha CarMichael.
The current understanding of the past role of the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal) and their current goals are largely speculated upon, but researchers do know a few things for certain:
- The public facing government of The Philippines is “all show” and under the total control of the FGC (Filipino Global Cabal) shadow government
- Their history as a pioneer society with civilization-birthing co-factors (writing, sciences, art) has been used for thousands of years to seed other civilizations on Earth (as well as destroy), with the intent of planting subversive and intentionally destructive ideologies/information/incomplete sciences, etc. mixed in along with valid/true information.
- This strategy is the main focus of the FGC as a means of controlling society by being gatekeepers of solutions to problems of their own creation. They seed these civilizations to exploit them down the line as they become more developed and profitable.
- For foreign nations under FGC influence, the level of said country’s permitted stage of development is closely controlled and monitored by the Filipino Global Cabal and permitted to advance only when beneficial for FGC and GPC members.
- There is growing speculation that Israel may be completely under total FGC control at the moment and has possibly been under FGC control since the brief political power vacuum they experienced after the infamous global catastrophe we now all remember as the 2011 Tanzanite Shortage Crisis. (That was an incredibly difficult time for everyone and frankly, I’m just grateful we’re out of it)
There's a lot more speculation floating around regarding the FGC’s current and past activities, but as someone who believes in the importance of maintaining factual integrity in these types of discussions, I’d rather not prop-up unverified claims without more evidence coming to the table.
Many people on popular intellectually focused forums such as EbaumsWorld, Newgrounds, T-Nation Forum, and the Maplestory chat function, among other similar forums that focus primarily on the discussion of lesser known historical topics have reported that their was an internal leak of a 2022 Hubspot Pitch Deck registered to an account located within The Philippines. The leaked pitch deck presents a 24 page Microsoft PowerPoint pitch running a cost/benefit analysis of a shadow government using Israel to initiate a war in 2023 with the goal of attempting to bring on a prophetical biblical Armageddon. It appears they are looking for new investors after the FGC’s falling out with Hasbro, and consequently, Guga Foods.
-FINAL WORDS-
If you’re still reading this you’re a trooper lmao. First half of this is actual legitimate discussion, that I spent multiple hours researching and writing… but then after looking at how much I wrote I thought about how funny it would be to just implode all of my efforts for the sake of the bit. Got too much of a chuckle thinking about someone reading this in good faith and actually engaging with it, spending their time getting through all of this dense Sumerian anthropological stuff and then realizing it’s slowly devolving into the ramblings of an absolutely unhinged Reddit guy peddling a completely novel conspiracy theory in a tone that insinuates in his mind “everyone’s probably already familiar with this on a cursory level”
submitted by
uclaclaudio to
HighStrangeness [link] [comments]
2023.11.29 15:49 lost_chayote 2023 Bingo Challenge Stats & Reviews
| If you don't know what the Bingo Challenge is, see here for details. In short it's a set of 25 prompts to challenge you to add variety to your reading. The challenge runs from April 1 to March 31 each year and a "bingo" (completed row or column) is all that's required to complete the challenge. Overachievers blackout the board to earn a "Reading Champion" username flair. I think this might be the shortest round of Bingo for me yet personally, with a heavy focus on reading new releases, either through ARCs or actually reading books I had preordered. I had an average rating of 4.36 stars, up just a smidge from last year’s 4.3 average. I like to think that means I’m getting better at knowing what will appeal to me, but really this year was a lot of swings between 5 star perfect-for-me reads and very average 3 star reads. Here’s the completed board with covers Shaded cells indicate a Hard Mode eligible read. Stars indicate a five-star read. Complete Bingo Card Some stats about my bingo reading - On average, it took me 13.4 days to finish a book.
- The books I read for bingo averaged 361 pages in length.
- I read a total of 7,582 pages for bingo.
- I listened to a total of 53 hours for bingo.
- From starting the first book to finishing the last book, it took me 237 days.
Short reviews for each book - Row 1
- Title With A Title Godkiller by Hannah Kaner This book was great and had a lot of the archetypes and elements I tend to love. A godkiller gets roped into protecting a young girl who is somehow bound to a god. Great character dynamics and a journey with adventurous bumps in the road.
- Superheroes Hench by Natalie Zina Walschotts A disillusioned but mostly lighthearted story examining the collateral damage of “heroism”. An intelligent and compelling main character who is determined and refuses to be silenced.
- Bottom of the TBR Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne A classic of the sci-fi genre. The adventure bits and the small glimpses we get of Nemo's life are very interesting and fun; Aronnax and his buddy listing fish and their full scientific designations for pages on end is not. This is a book where I'd fully support an abridged version.
- Magical Realism or Literary Fantasy The Swallowed Man by Edward Carey A Pinocchio retelling from Gepetto’s POV, written from inside the fish that swallowed him. An interesting look at consuming guilt and a touch of madness.
- Young Adult To Shape A Dragon’s Breath by Moniquill Blackgoose An interesting, almost fantasy-of-manners setup with dragon school and magic. Mostly quite well-done, except the part where we spent entire chapters being taught elementary chemistry in a fantasy hat. Full review here.
- Row 2
- Mundane Jobs A Slice of Mars by Guerric Haché An optimistic slice-of-life on Mars, in which a cast of characters try to open a pizza shop in a world dominated by dumplings. Cozy and empathetic, the worldbuilding takes a real look at what utopia might look like, and who might still fall through the cracks of the system.
- Published in the ‘00s Ship of Fools by Richard Paul Russo A sci-fi horror following a ship that’s been wandering so long its passengers have somewhat lost sight of their mission, followed by mysterious and ominous first contact. Ship politics onboard complicate the first contact, and the result is an engaging horror-mystery.
- Angels and Demons Witch King by Martha Wells A story of politics and betrayal, love and family, told in a past and present timeline and unraveled so fantastically. This is a fairly character-driven one, and I know some bounced off it due to the narrative not stopping to inform the reader of worldbuilding details, but I absolutely loved the organic feel of it.
- Five Short Stories Geometries of Belonging by R.B. Lemberg A collection of short stories, poems, and novelettes taking place in the Birdverse. My favorites were those that tied into either The Four Profound Weaves or The Unbalancing. A bit disappointing as I'd hoped to find a new corner of Birdverse, but Lemberg's writing never really disappoints much, so it was still a good time.
- Horror Orpheus Builds A Girl by Heather Parry A story of obsession and the desire to possess and control, this is dark, disturbing, and will fill you with rage. Told from two perspectives who argue over the events around a girl's death and the subsequent care of her body.
- Row 3
- Self-Published or Indie Press Guild of Magic by Jon Auerbach The second in the Guild of Tokens series, in which the main character must deal with the consequences of her actions in book 1. Full review here.
- Set in the Middle East The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty Adventurous and fantastical tale of piracy and family and found family. I had an absolute blast with this book and its characters.
- Published in 2023 Walking Practice by Dolki Min, translated by Victoria Caudle Very much a “what the fuck am I reading?” sort of book, this story follows an alien who crash-lands on Earth and finds the only thing they can eat here is humans. We proceed to follow them disguising themself as a human to hunt food. Weird, wacky, strangely hilarious, thoroughly enjoyable but also made me question myself a bit for enjoying.
- Multiverses The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin A strange and beautifully written story of a man who can change the world in his dreams. Fantastic and empathetic and just overall lovely.
- POC Author The Deep Sky by Yume Kitasei A somewhat odd story of expedition into the stars to settle humanity on an Earth-like planet as assurance against climate disaster on Earth. A locked-room murder mystery on the spaceship in present day is interwoven with a past timeline showing the school and training our cast underwent as kids. Full review here.
- Row 4
- Book Club or Readalong The Last Dragoners of Bowbazar by Indra Das Indra Das’s writing is so perfectly atmospheric and in this strange tale of a realm-hopping family of dragoners hiding out undercover on Earth, we get a beautiful story of culture, integration, and the ways we don’t belong.
- Novella Stone and Steel by Eboni Dunbar A short sapphic tale with magic and battle. Fast-paced but not something that stuck with me long-term, and I recall having some issues with it.
- Mythical Beasts The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez The layering of narratives and framing devices was like catnip to me. Add to that some lovely writing and a folktale feel, and this is a new favorite.
- Elemental Magic The Daughters of Izdihar by Hadeer Elsbai A somewhat underwhelming fantasy world with a fairly typical societal setup, sparks of revolution, and young (rather unwise) revolutionaries.
- Retelling Unwieldy Creatures by Addie Tsai A Frankenstein retelling dealing with reproductive science, queerness, family trauma, and found family. I really liked this one and found it imaginative and well-written.
- Row 5
- Queernorm Setting Perhaps the Stars by Ada Palmer The intricate, fantastic, exhausting conclusion to the Terra Ignota series, which I am far too uneducated to fully grasp. This series is brilliant and twisty, the evolution of the narrative voice over the course is masterful and I have no doubt there are a million other things I’m not qualified enough to praise it for.
- Coastal Setting Deep As the Sky, Red As the Sea by Rita Chang-Eppig An historical pirate story with a light dash of magical realism, strong women, and the trials of a life at sea. Full review here.
- Druids The Surviving Sky by Kritika H. Rao An interesting fantasy world built around plant magic and floating cities. A fantastic premise, I wanted to love this but between characters who couldn’t have a single productive conversation and a magic system that felt far too effortful, this one fell a bit flat for me.
- Robots A Closed and Common Orbit by Becky Chambers The second book in the Wayfarers series, following a ship’s AI who was put into a bodykit and a tech who grew up raised by a ship’s AI. As usual for Chambers, a story that is deeply empathetic and kind.
- Sequel Lords of Uncreation by Adrian Tchaikovsky The finale to The Final Architecture trilogy, a fast-paced conclusion to the space opera full of political factions, infighting, rebels, and one big Other that threatens everything. I loved it.
And some graphs, as always The usual demographics and publishing details My sci-fi reading continued to increase after last year's bingo got me started again, so that's nice that it stuck. I still have a serious bias toward new releases, though honestly that was somewhat intentional this year as I needed to prioritize ARCs I'd received. Year Published And I'm pretty happy with the degree to which I'm using the library and subscriptions I have when looking at the Source data, and I still managed to prioritize a bit from my owned shelves too. Original Source And finally, the Days to Read graph, which always reveals which books I forgot I was reading or took breaks from. Days to Read I don't know that I noticed a lot of changes to my reading with this year's card. Superheroes and Druids were the squares I had to make the most concerted effort to find, as well as lots of indecision around the Published in the '00s and Magical Realism or Literary Fantasy squares. Ultimately what I slotted in those squares felt very aligned with my usual fare though. Overall another good bingo season for me, and a short one. submitted by lost_chayote to Fantasy [link] [comments] |
2023.10.19 21:35 Fun-Cow7494 I had a math assignment for geometry to create a city...so I made a city out of Bingo. Meet Bingo Donk City
| If you can't read it the streets are Bandit Heeler Dr. Coco St. Mackenzie Border St. Jack Russel Ave. Judo St. Bucky Dunstan Bridge And Long Dog Island. The establishments are Rusty's Cricket Stadium Currimundi Beach Dougie's School for the Hearing Impared Muffin's Mechanics Smoochy Kiss Diner Octopus Hospital Doggy Market Turtle Park Dog Church The Doodad Petrol Station submitted by Fun-Cow7494 to bluey [link] [comments] |
http://activeproperty.pl/