It s called The 24 Hour Plays: Viral Monologues where writers and actors work together to write, rehearse and record their projects in just 24 hours. With the COVID-19 Pandemic shutting down theaters across the country many of these writers and performers were wanting to try and figure out a way to still reach their audience with out physically having people present in the theater. Hence, The 24 hour plays!
Renegade Theater Company jumped on board with this concept for the kick off to their 2021 season using a host of their talented writers and actors. Beginning Monday January 11 at 6pm the actors shared a brief video with the writers to let them get to know them a little better. By 7pm the actors and writers meet and by 10 am the following day the actors will receive their monologue and must complete filming by Tuesday January 12 at 6pm. The finished monologues were then published every 15 minutes on YouTube, Facebook and Instagram
Exercised
It s the first of the year, that time when we all make resolutions about the way we want to change our lives and one of the most common resolutions involves getting more exercise. So despite all of those gaood intentions, why is it that gym memberships start to go unused a few months down the road, or a bunch of home exercise equipment suddenly starts showing up on KSL.com? If we know exercise is good for us, and can prolong our lives, why is it so dang hard to actually
do it?
In his new book
Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved to Do Is Healthy and Rewarding, Harvard University evolutionary biologist Dr. Daniel Lieberman explores this phenomenon by beginning with the realization that we re hard-wired as a species to avoid unnecessary exertion. In an interview with
Many of you are probably addicted to "house porn" and love to look at properties for sale online because the annual report keeps data about this topic. Here are some nuggets of information from the most recent report that might surprise you:
Johnson artist
Harlan Mack has sited three of his earlier works along the trail. Bear Suit, crafted from bike parts, won the 2016 Upcycle Art Bike Competition grand prize from
Catamount Arts and Kingdom Trails. The other two, Giraffe and Granilla, are among the first sculptures Mack made, in 2006. Welded scrap-metal creations, they appear remarkably animated; the latter, a gorilla, reaches out a friendly hand from his perch on a preexisting fieldstone. Rusted metal parts come together in a graceful abstraction, titled Celestial, by Underhill sculptor
Thomas Douglas, used stainless steel for Aloft, an evocation of industrial machinery and speed in the spare form of a paper airplane angled into the sky.