Alice Cooper Announces Fall 2021 Tour With Ace Frehley loudwire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from loudwire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Last year, the travel industry plummeted as the world struggled with the onset of a global pandemic, one that battered the economy and prompted uncertainty for businesses reliant on tourism dollars.
But with state parks, zoos, museums and other venues modifying COVID-19 safety restrictions and Gov. Mike DeWine announcing the ending of state health orders on June 2, there s a rising sense of optimism for national and state travel.
Based on research fielded by Longwoods International on April 28, a Columbus-based market research consultancy that specializes in travel and tourism, found that 86% of American travelers plan to take a trip within the next six months.
Los Lobos Debut Beach Boys, Thee Midnighters Covers From L.A.-Themed Native Sons Album (Track Premiere)
Los Lobos Debut Beach Boys, Thee Midnighters Covers From L.A.-Themed Native Sons Album (Track Premiere)
Variety has the premiere of their covers of Sail on Sailor and Love Special Delivery. Cesar Rosas tells how they came to record tracks by Jackson Browne, Little Feat, Willie Bobo and others.
Chris Willman, provided by
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No music artist is more intrinsically identified with Los Angeles than Los Lobos unless, say, we’re talking the Beach Boys, Thee Midnighters, Jackson Browne, Little Feat, Buffalo Springfield or the Blasters, to name a few of the fellow homegrown musicians that the group proudly covers on “Native Sons,” their debut for the New West label.
Cincinnati Magazine
March 12, 2021
Bob Castellini called it a “mud pit” and “dust bin.” Mark Mallory called it a “bunch of nothingness” and “pile of dirt.” The Cincinnati Reds owner and the former mayor were describing what downtown Cincinnati’s riverfront was like about 15 years ago. Two expensive new stadiums had been erected, with the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center situated between, but surrounding them was a lot of dirt and acres of parking lots.
In the 1990s, what we know as The Banks was mostly home to parking lots and warehouses.
Photograph courtesy of Kenton County Public Library
Today, of course, nothing less than an utter transformation of the riverfront has taken place, as the mud pit became The Banks a $2 billion-plus 200-acre playground of pro sports, restaurants, bars, green space, walking paths, a carousel, and (sometimes) a giant Ferris wheel. It’s the most ambitious civic project ever undertaken here, requiring unprecedented tea