Fifty years ago, amid the turmoil of 1968, there was Arthur Ashe, an athlete who parlayed his fame as the first black man to win the US Open tennis championship into a lifetime devoted to fighting injustice.
Wicked, the enchanting, magical, musical currently playing at the Gershwin Theater on Broadway, in New York City, presents an adaption of the Wizard of Oz, taking audiences back to witch's academy, when friendships were made and severed.
Wood and Water, the newest film from Director Jonas Bak, tells the story of a middle-aged woman, adjusting to retirement, and her reawakening as she travels from Germany to Hong Kong to help her son.
Don't Read This on a Plane, from Gravitas Ventures, presents a mix of global, carefree, travel visiting seven exotic European destinations, as a very liberal author who writes a risqué tell-all begins a publicity book tour.
The record abstention that marked the regional and departmental electoral event raises questions about the reasons that push citizens to flee the ballot boxes. From now on, it is necessary to identify the causes and the necessary solutions to be proposed.
National Geographic's Tigers Forever Saving the World's Most Endangered Big Cat, by Steve Winter highlights the global plight of these majestic and regal animals as their numbers dwindle due to territorial boundaries, poachers, hunters, and famine.