Category Archives: Local Entertainment

WKTV sports coverage team begins extensive Golden Gloves coverage March 14

WKTV sports crew airs the annual Golden Gloves tournament each year. (WKTV)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

It’s Golden Gloves Boxing time!

WKTV has been covering the Golden Gloves Boxing Tournament for more than 25 years. Again this year, we will be at the Grand Rapids DeltaPlex Saturday, March 14, for the West Michigan Preliminaries, with replays of the bouts on our cable channels the next day as well as on select days and times, and they will also be available on-demand at WKTVlive.org.

We will continue coverage through the State Finals in April.

The Deltaplex Arena is located at 2500 Turner Ave NW, Grand Rapids.

The tentative coverage days/times and replay plan includes: West Michigan Preliminaries, Saturday, March 14; West Michigan Semi-Finals, Saturday, March 21; West Michigan Finals, Saturday, March 28; the State Semi-Finals, Friday, April 17; and the State Finals, Saturday, April 18.

WKTV Comcast Channel 25 and AT&T U-verse 99 will show with tape-delayed airings of each evening’s bouts on the following day. For future broadcast schedule, check out our On-air Schedule.

The Grand Rapids Public Museum presents LaughFest Game Night



By Christie Bender
cbender@grpm.org


The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) announced today that it is partnering with LaughFest, City Built Brewing Company and Blue Bridge Games to bring the popular Game Night back to the Museum on Friday, March 13 – with a LaughFest Twist. LaughFest Game Night will feature two special comedy showcases at 7 and 9 p.m., held in the GRPM’s Meijer Theater. Ticket price includes entry to one of the comedy shows.

LaughFest Game Night visitors will have exclusive access to the Museum to play games at their leisure, enjoy a craft beer or wine, participate in tournaments, explore the GRPM’s TOYS! exhibit and ride the 1928 Spillman Carousel. Gather your close friends and spend an evening playing games for fun, while experiencing local comedic talent.

“LaughFest was designed 10 years ago to be a community event that celebrates laughter in all its forms,” said Wendy Wigger, President of Gilda’s Club and Gilda’s LaughFest. “LaughFest Game Night at the Grand Rapids Public Museum is a perfect example of how the community and Gilda’s Club can come together to engage West Michigan during LaughFest, share laughter with others, all while having a seriously good time.”

Award winning board games, card games as well as oversized lawn games and interactives from the TOYS! exhibit, including 1980s quarter operated arcade, will be available for visitors to play throughout the evening. As part of leisure game play, Blue Bridge Games will be featuring Game of the Year winning board games and will be available to teach visitors how to play. These include Letter Jam, Wingspan, Medium, Codenames, Forbidden Island and Camel Up. City Built will also provide games from their weekly Game Night including Klask, Dagz, Katon and Bags (cornhole).

A tournament of Euchre will add friendly competition to the evening. Prizes will be awarded to the top two teams in the tournament, and are donated by the Museum, City Built Brewing Company and Blue Bridge Games. Registration for tournaments will be open from 6 to 9 p.m., with games kicking off at 7 p.m. No experience is necessary to participate.

LaughFest Game Night begins at 6 p.m. on Friday, March 13. The event is open to visitors ages 21 and older. Cash bars will be available serving City Built Brewing Company beers. Tickets are $15 for Museum members and $20 for the general public and can be purchased at grpm.org, by calling 616-929-1700 or on the LaughFest website at laughfestgr.org/event/laughfest-game-night/

Stella Royce, the person and the patron, honored at St. Cecilia’s Helen DeVos Legacy Award Gala

Chuck and Stella Royce. (St. Cecilia Music Center)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

The term “patron of the arts” is name-dropped often, but there are few people who it more aptly applies to than the late Stella Royce. With her late husband, Chuck, Stella spent decades generously advocating for and directly supporting arts and culture in West Michigan.

One of those arts organizations to benefit from the couple’s patronage was St. Cecilia Music Center — as evidenced by the beautiful renovated Royce Auditorium at the center, to name only the most obvious contribution.

So it is appropriate that St. Cecilia’s 2020 Helen DeVos Legacy Award will honor Stella at its 2nd annual gala, a sold-out event to be held at the music center Saturday, March 7, during Women’s History Month — also appropriate as St. Cecilia came into being in 1883 under the leadership of several local women.

Chuck and Stella Royce. (St. Cecilia Music Center)

“Stella was a vital force in the leadership and vision of St. Cecilia Music Center for over 60 years, and she and her husband, Chuck Royce, consistently promoted and supported St. Cecilia Music Center,” Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive director, said in announcing the award. “Stella and Chuck Royce also generously supported other arts organizations including the Grand Rapids Symphony, Opera Grand Rapids, Grand Rapids Ballet, as well as many others. … Stella was truly one of the great patron saints of St. Cecilia Music Center and led a life of service to the arts.”

St. Cecilia held the first annual Helen DeVos Legacy Award Gala in 2019, honoring the first recipient and namesake of the award, the late Helen DeVos. The award is now presented each year during Women’s History Month “to a woman who has helped expand the cultural life of our community and has shown exemplary service to the arts.”

Hearing stories of Stella, both from Holbrook and Charlie Royce, one of several relatives of Chuck and Stella who will be in attendance at the gala, it is clear the woman appreciated the arts and enjoyed life.

“I believe that Stella immediately fell in love with St Cecilia from the first day she visited,” Charlie Royce said to WKTV. “Since she passed away, I have spent a lot of time discovering how Stella became an artist in the first place. Because of her childhood I do not believe music or art was even an option for her. Only in high school did she become exposed to music through singing in the choir at Greenville High School.

“I tend to think this opportunity was perhaps her first place to escape to from a turbulent past into something beautiful. By the time she got to St. Cecilia, she knew that music could provide this same beauty to others that maybe struggled like she did. Thus all the programs for children and support for anyone that wanted to pursue their talent. And to have the means to provide it at a place like SCMC made for a perfect match.”

Royces’ long history with St. Cecilia

Chuck’s history with St. Cecilia actually predates Stella’s.

“Chuck’s mother and grandmother had been involved at SCMC since 1913,” Holbrook said to WKTV. “Chuck grew up roaming the halls of the building while his mother and grandmother performed, went to committee meetings and helped organize various events. So, you could say that SCMC was in Chuck’s blood.

Chuck and Stella Royce, with Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive director, and visiting musician Frederica von Stade. (St. Cecilia Music Center)

“When Stella met Chuck, her own love of music naturally drew her to the organization that his family had been so involved in for so many years and she took up the cause as wholeheartedly as his mother and grandmother had done. Chuck and Stella were at all events and concerts (at St. Cecilia). In fact, as their health declined and they were not attending events at SCMC regularly any longer, it definitely felt like something was ‘missing’. … We all wished that she could be here to receive it herself but, both Charlie and Maria are musicians themselves and recognize the impact that their parents had on this organization.”

And Chuck and Stella’s “impact” on St. Cecilia goes far behind the perfect acoustics of the renovated auditorium.

“During the renovation in the (19)70’s, the decision was made to make the auditorium handicap accessible,” Charlie said. “My folks turned this into an opportunity by suggesting the Great Artist Series. The series featured world renowned artists and opened with Izsak Perlman, who was at the time the most recognized violinist in the world who also happened to be handicapped.

“Also, after my folks retired and moved to downtown, they became a kind of welcoming committee of two for whomever just moved to Grand Rapids to head a corporation or take over as a president of a bank or college,” he said. “Through casual conversation my folks would learn of their interests, be it in architecture, the arts, cultural history, education … (and) every tour involved a stop at St Cecilia … Chuck and Stella totally recognized the importance of connecting people with something they could participate in and since they were new in town, St. Cecilia became the first place they connected with”

Proceeds from the Helen DeVos Award Gala honoring Stella Royce will help support St. Cecilia Music Center’s artistic performances, its varied music education programs for youth and adults, as well as preservation of the center’s historical building.

St. Cecilia Music Center is the oldest performing arts organization in West Michigan, according to supplied material, began in 1883. Nine women, led be Ella Matthews Pierce, gathered that year to form a society to promote the study and appreciation of music in all of its branches, and to encourage the development of music within the community. They chose to name the new organization after Saint Cecilia, the patron saint of music.


In the late 1880’s the members began planning for a building of their own, designed by prominent Chicago architect Henry Ives Cobb, who was a protégé of Carnegie Hall’s architect, William Burnet Tuthill. The building, which currently stands at 24 Ransom Ave., in downtown Grand Rapids, opened to the public in 1894, and is the only building in the United States built by women and has operated solely for the purpose of music.

For more information about St. Cecilia Music Center visit scmc-online.org.

Jazzy singer, sax player join Robin Connell Trio’s Listening Room series on March 7

Laurie Sears. (Courtesy of the artist)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

The Listening Room’s jazz series featuring the Robin Connell Trio with guests will continue Saturday, March 7, with singer Mary Rademacher and saxophonist Laurie Sears as guest performers.

The venue is located at Studio Park at 123 Ionia Ave SW. The jazz nights start at 7:30 p.m., with doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets are $12, with open seating, drinks available for purchase, and a parking garage attached.

Pianist and singer Connell’s “house trio” will usually have with Rob Hartman on bass and Keith Hall on the drums. For a video of “Taking a Chance on Love” from last month’s gig, with Hartman on bass and Ethan Bouwsma on drums, visit here.

Robin Connell

“If you’re from west Michigan you know Mary,” Connell said in supplied material. “I know she’s looking forward to performing in an intimate setting without all the talk and clatter, where she is able to connect with listeners and perform tunes she doesn’t often get to sing.”


 
But audiences “might not know the fabulous Laurie Sears. She makes her home in Traverse City but travels all over for performances, often at DeVos concert hall when touring artists perform there and hire top pros to back them up,’ Connell said. “Laurie and I have played together for several years, mostly up north.”

For more information on the jazz series and all concerts at Listening Room, visit listeningroomGR.com or call 616-900-9500.

For more information on Robin Connell, visit robinconnell.com. Next month playing with Robin Connell Trio at Listening Room is Carl Cafagna, on April 1.

Online ticket sales are available but with a handling fee. The movie box office downstairs has tickets for all shows, available in advance. Parking is available in attached garage and is free if patrons purchase drink or food in the restaurant downstairs before or after the show.

WKTV’s girls basketball district coverage begins at East Kentwood, moves to South Christian

East Kentwood High School girls basketball in January 2020 District action. (WKTV)

By WKTV Sports Staff
ken@wktv.org

With the local high school girls basketball regular season completed, WKTV has jumped into our prep March Madness featured game coverage this week as the state playoffs begin with girls District tournaments across the state.

WKTV’s Featured Game crew will be following the Division 2 District tournament at South Christian High School starting Wednesday, March 4, and continuing with that districts final on Friday, March 6. To read about the Monday game at South Christian featuring the Sailors, see Mike Moll’s story here.

But the best Monday, March 2, opening-round game involving area teams was the Division 1 clash with Byron Center at East Kentwood, so WKTV was there.

Byron Center entered the game at 19-1 overall and 12-0 in OK-conference Green with a title in hand. East Kentwood was 17-3, 11-1 in OK Red with a shared title with Hudsonville, and on a 10-game winning streak. The two teams met to open the season; EK won on the road 48-43.

In the Monday game between the two, the Falcons (now 18-3) won by almost the same score — this time winning 50-43 — as three East Kentwood players scored in double figures: sophomore Deyonce Thompson led with 15 points including three 3-pointers, while juniors Alexis McCully and Kabriana Hallman each added 12.

“That was one of the better high school basketball games we’ve seen in a long time,” WKTV Featured Game announcers Ron Schultz said after the game. “These teams … match up really well and the played really well. … Kentwood dropped some threes when they had to have them.”

The East Kentwood game will be available on WKTV Community Television Channel 26 (for complete schedules of programs on WKTV channels, see our Weekly On-air Schedule) and on-demand at WKTVlive.org.

WKTV also has a special video discussion on local teams playing in District tournaments with WKTV Sports Director Mike Moll and WKTV sports announcer Cory Dalton on the inaugural WKTVJournal Sports Connection program. See the YouTube video here.

As East Kentwood game will now travel to Caledonia for the District semifinals, starting March 4, the WKTV Featured Game crew will move to cover a doubleheader at South Christian.

In one game at South Christian, Wayland (13-8, 5-7 OK Gold and the winner of Monday’s game Hopkins) will play Kelloggsville (16-4, 10-2 and a shared title in OK Silver).

In the other game at South Christian, the Sailors (11-10, 7-5 OK Gold and the winner of a Monday game against Kentwood Grand River will play West Michigan Aviation (7-13, 1-6 Alliance).

Other local teams playing in District tournaments

In Division 1, Wyoming (7-14, 3-9 OK Gold) won a Monday opening round game against tournament host Caledonia and now will challenge the tournament top seed, East Grand Rapids (19-1, 12-0 and a title in OK Gold), on Wednesday.

In another Division 2 tournament involving local teams, Godwin Heights (10-11, 4-8 in OK Silver) played Monday at the Forest Hills Eastern District tournament but lost to Grand Rapids Christian (18-3, 9-3 in OK Gold) to end the Wolverines season. On the other side of the same tournament bracket, Wyoming Lee (0-19, 0-12 OK Silver) will open play on Wednesday against Catholic Central (7-14, 4-8 in OK Blue) and the winner of a Monday game with Wellsprings Prep.

In a Division 4 tournament hosted by Wyoming Tri-unity Christian, Wednesday games will have Tri-unity (6-14, 2-5 in Alliance) playing Martin (19-1, 9-1 and a title in Southwestern Athletic Conference Lakeshore), and Wyoming Potter’s House Christian (8-12, 5-2 Alliance) against Byron Center Zion Christian (9-11, 3-4 Alliance). The winners will play for the district title Friday at Tri-unity.

WKTV broadcasts on Wyoming and Kentwood cable channels. On Comcast cable, Channel 25 is the Community Channel, where sports events and other community events are shown; Channel 26 is the Government Channel, where local government meetings and events are shown. The games can also be seen on AT&T U-verse 99.

For a complete schedule of all local high school sports action each week, any changes to the WKTV feature sports schedule, and feature stories on local sports, visit wktvjournal.org/sports/.

Grand Rapids Public Museum opens new ‘Toys that Move’ display this weekend

Vintage Fischer Price Kitty Bell Toy (Supplied)

By Christie Bender
Grand Rapids Public Museum


The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) announced today that a new display will open on Saturday, Feb. 29 highlighting its newly acquired collection of toys that move. This display, located just outside the popular TOYS! special exhibition, features the magic of motion in toys.

From the ancient Chinese and Greek automatons to the clockwork marvels of the Renaissance, inventors have always searched for ways to make their creations change and move. In modern times, many German and Japanese companies specialized in making a huge variety of affordable wind-up toys. In the twentieth century, the American firm Fisher-Price became well known for its high quality wooden, and eventually plastic, pull toys, many of which are seen in this new display.

The toys featured in this collection are new to the GRPM’s permanent Collection that contains over 250,000 artifacts and specimens.They come from collector Beth Schwartz, who began toy collecting in the early 1990s when she was traveling the country as an actress/singer working in touring Broadway shows. She loved searching out new pieces for her collection, especially Fisher-Price pull toys and antique wind-ups. 

1960s Roly Poly Chime Ball (Supplied)

“We are so grateful to the family of Beth Schwartz for donating her amazing toy collection to the Museum. Although Beth passed away in 2011, her collection will continue to delight and inspire children of all ages who visit,” said Alex Forist, the GRPM’s Chief Curator.

‘Toys that Move’ is on display on the second floor of the Grand Rapids Public Museum, and will be part of the general admission experience. The exhibit is presented in both English and Spanish. 

Author Shanika Carter, library inclusion conversation, at KDL Kentwood on March 5

Shanika Carter’ will discuss her new book “To Lead or Not to Lead” and will sign books Thursday, March 5, at the Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch Kent District Library. (Supplied by the Author)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

Author Shanika Carter’s new book “To Lead or Not to Lead” has the appropriate subtitle of “Breaking the Glass Ceiling Using Lessons from Your Past Experiences”.

In the book — which she will be speaking on and signing copies of at the Kentwood KDL Branch Library March 5 — Carter makes the case that while people can be helped on their personal and career journeys by other people, the best help may well be understanding and learning from one’s own positive and negative experiences.

Shanika Carter. (Supplied)

“I share not only my experiences, but those of others who have emphasized a lack of mentorship and encouragement to move up the ladder in their fields,” Carter said to WKTV. “For me, though, although I did experience a lack of the mentorship along the way, I learned quite a bit about myself and how to overcome obstacles I encountered.”

Carter’s discussion and book signing will take place Thursday, March 5, starting at 5:30 p.m., at the Kentwood (Richard L. Root) Branch Kent District Library, 4950 Breton SE, Kentwood. The event is free and open to the public.

Carter’s talk, and book signing with snacks, will be followed at 6:30 p.m. by a library equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) community conversation. And while the author will not be directly involved in the discussion, she strongly supports the inclusion efforts.

“I plan to support and participate in (the EDI conversation) on the 5th,” Carter said. “When I lived in Grand Rapids, before starting my writing/editing business … and getting back into teaching, I was employed part time in KDL’s circulation pool, rotating to the various locations to assist.

“That was over five years ago, so my relationship with KDL began then, and continued as I got my writing up off the ground, having participated as a guest speaker for one of KDL’s annual writing conferences … I appreciate everything that they have done with me on this journey.”

Carter’s journey includes graduating from Muskegon Heights High School, earning her Bachelor of Arts degree in advertising from Michigan State University and her Master of Science degree in communications from Grand Valley State University.

Carter has worked as an adjunct instructor at ITT Technical Institute and Jackson College’s Prison Education Initiative program. She currently works in the writing center at Muskegon Community College, also teaching for the Communications and College Success Center departments, and is also an adjunct instructor at Montcalm Community College, where she teaches interpersonal communications and speech.

Carter is also a big supporter of the need for all persons — students, reformed prisoners, everybody — have the ability to communicate to be successful in life and careers.

“It is highly important to be able to communicate both verbally and in written form, particularly in a time where we, and so many of our youth, are in a social media world where even the communication is so different,” Carter said. “I’ve heard from teachers (and) parents over the years about how basic handwriting was no longer a requirement, like it was when I was growing up. Also, with social media, we find more people communicating in other ways outside of face-to-face contact and even using a more condensed language to exchange messages.

“As an instructor at this level of education, I am amazed at how many students I do encounter who do have difficulties with basic writing and grammar, let alone social and interpersonal skills. With the combination of losing some of the basic writing and communication requirements that were available in the past, and then dealing with those who allow their social media interactions to lapse over into their regular, face-to-face or written communications, the importance of communications and writing is just as relevant and important to continue in education.”

For more information on Shanika P. Carter’s book “To Lead or Not to Lead: Breaking the Glass Ceiling Using Lessons from Your past Experiences”, visit here. For more information on her The Write Flow and Vibe project, visit here.

For more information on the KDL Kentwood event, visit here. Follow the Kent District Library on various social media platforms — Facebook: facebook.com/KentDistrictLibrary and Instagram: @kentdistrictlibrary and Twitter: @KDLNews.

Meijer Gardens to open annual Butterflies Are Blooming exhibition on March 1

Kids of all ages and butterflies mix at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park’s annual Fred & Dorothy Fichter Butterflies Are Blooming exhibition. (WKTV)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park’s annual Fred & Dorothy Fichter Butterflies Are Blooming exhibition — reportedly the largest temporary tropical butterfly exhibition in the nation — will bring more than 7,000 tropical butterflies to West Michigan beginning Sunday, March 1.

This year’s exhibition highlights Nathaniel Ward and the invention of the Wardian Case.

In 1827, Ward accidentally invented terrariums while studying caterpillars and moths by placing them in jars. He noticed that plants were flourishing in these sealed jars and discovered that plants and insects better survived the harsh conditions in London, a city known for heavy pollution at the time, if they were enclosed in sealed containers. This discovery led to horticulturists being able to transport items around the globe and these early “fern cases” paved the way for modern terrariums, greenhouses and conservatories.

“Step Into the glass house during this year’s Fred & Dorothy Fichter Butterflies Are Blooming exhibition and discover how the invention of the Wardian case changed the world,” Lisa Roo, project manager, said in supplied material. “This year’s theme offers our community a sense of wonder with magical glass houses from four feet tall to our iconic fifty-foot-tall Lena Meijer Tropical Conservatory.

“We offer our guests the unique experience of stepping into glass houses to see butterflies soaring, caterpillars munching, and learn how the Wardian case paved the way for modern terrariums and greenhouses.”

A new Wardian case will be located in the adjacent Earl and Donnalee Holton Victorian Garden Parlor.

Approximately 60 colorful species of butterflies and moths journey from butterfly-rich regions of Costa Rica, Ecuador, the Philippines and Kenya to fly freely in the five-story tall, 15,000 square-foot Lena Meijer Tropical Conservatory. At 85 degrees and 70 percent humidity, this balmy environment mimics the tropical regions that the butterflies call home.

Butterflies and flowers will be on display at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park’s annual Fred & Dorothy Fichter Butterflies Are Blooming exhibition. (Supplied/Meijer Gardens)

Species of butterflies expected to arrive include the blue common morpho, whose iridescence impresses in flight, as well as brushfoot varieties such as the Clearwing, Lacewing and Zebra Mosaic. Likewise, the longwings captivate with distinctive wing patterns as seen on the Small Blue Grecian, Doris, Postman and Tiger butterflies. Gliders like the Emperor, Ruby-Spotted and Orchard Swallowtails will also add to the diverse assortment.

More than 1,000 pupae arrive at Meijer Gardens weekly from around the world. Guests can watch as delicate chrysalides and cocoons are placed in the Observation Station, where these unique and fascinating creatures then transform and spread their wings for the first time.

The Caterpillar Room, located within the Grace Jarecki Seasonal Display Greenhouse, features monarch caterpillars. (Supplied/Meijer Gardens)

The Caterpillar Room, located within the Grace Jarecki Seasonal Display Greenhouse, features monarch caterpillars. Here guests will have the opportunity to learn more about how plants, butterflies and moths live in and under glass. Caterpillars hungrily feed on milkweed host plants mixed in with the flowering spring plantings and ferns that encompass the perimeter of the seasonal display greenhouse.

A docent will be present to help guide guests and enhance the experience. Volunteers are also “Wanted. Needed. Appreciated.” with various jobs and shifts. Contact Valerie Maciejewski at vmaciejewski@meijergardens.org or 616-974-5221.

There will be extended hours during Spring Break (Monday to Friday, April 6-10, 9 a.m. top 9 p.m.) and There are several special exhibition activities also set for the show. For more information visit meijergardens.org.

Taste of Kentwood — a community celebration — returns to Activities Center on March 12

The crowd at the 2019 Taste of Kentwood. (Supplied/City of Kentwood)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

The City of Kentwood invites residents and all West Michiganders of all ages to a celebration of food, fun and local business at a community-celebration event, Taste of Kentwood, on Thursday, March 12.

Now in its 19th year, Taste of Kentwood will be held at the Kentwood Activities Center, 355 48th St. SE. The event will feature a variety of local restaurants offering samples of appetizers, entrées, sides and desserts during two sessions: 4:30-6 p.m. and 6:30-8 p.m.

One of the eateries at the 2019 Taste of Kentwood. (Supplied/City of Kentwood)

“Kentwood is known for its incredible diversity which is demonstrated in our ranging dining options,” Val Romeo, Kentwood Parks and Recreation director, said in supplied material. “From ethnic to American, high-end to casual, Taste of Kentwood is the ideal opportunity to try new foods, meet neighbors and make the most of what the city has to offer, all in one spot.”

In addition to tasting the local cuisine, there will be live music from the band Just Cuz, an acoustic duo that performs an eclectic mix of cover tunes from an array of genres.

The restaurants and food venders elected to be present include old favorites as well as eateries new to the city, including: Broad Leaf Beer, Café Boba, City Barbeque, Dave & Buster’s, Jet’s Pizza, Peppino’s Sports Grille & Pizzeria, PJ’s Pizza, Coffee & Ice Cream, Red Robin, Tim Hortons, Uccello’s Ristorante, Underground Cookie Club, YoChef’s Catering Company and Zason Latino.

For more information and for tickets for either session, visit here. Tickets are $10 in advance or $12 on the day of the event. Children, 5 and younger, are free.

Downtown Market hosts exclusive ‘Bottles & Bites’ wine tasting event

The Grand Rapids Downtown Market is partnering with Aperitivo and Art of the Table to invite guests to experience an evening of wine and small bites from around the world. The event takes place March 6 from 5 – 9 p.m. in the Market’s greenhouse and banquet room.

Featuring more than 95 wines from around the world, a curated assortment of appetizers, and entertainment, guests will spend the night sipping regional and international wines and munching on light snacks. Guests will also learn about wine origins, flavor profiles, food pairings and more!

Tickets include admission to the event, special wine samples, curated bites, and the chance to walk away with event-specific discounted wine from Aperitivo.

Tickets are limited for this intimate evening of wine tasting. Purchase in advance at www.eventbrite.com/e/bottles-bites-international-wine-event-tickets-87992171955

Volunteer to pour wine for this event at downtownmarketgr.wufoo.com/forms/bottles-bites-volunteer-application/

‘First four’ Meijer Gardens summer concerts includes series usual spectrum of music

The Australian Pink Floyd Show (supplied/Ben Donoghue)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

Ah, another sign of spring coming — Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park giving us a little taste of the 2020 Fifth Third Bank Summer Concerts series line-up, with the first four acts announced recently.

Meijer Gardens’ annual concert series features “an eclectic mix of alternative, indie, blues and classic rock,” according to the announcement, and the first four cover that spectrum: Gregory Alan Isakov on June 7, Squeeze on July 9, Michael Franti & Spearhead on Aug. 16 and The Australian Pink Floyd Show on Aug. 30.

The complete lineup will be announced in mid-April.

Members of Meijer Gardens will have the first opportunity to purchase discounted tickets during an exclusive members-only pre-sale, April 25 through May 8. During the pre-sale, members receive a $5 discount per ticket.

To become a member or renew a membership before April 25, visit MeijerGardens.org/Membership.

Tickets will go on sale to the general public on May 9. More information on prices and purchasing options will be available following the release of the full lineup in mid-April.

Michael Franti & Spearhead. (Supplied)

Brief, supplied information on the four concerts is as follows:

Gregory Alan Isakov was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, and now calls Colorado home. He is a horticulturist-turned-musician and “has cast an impressive presence on the indie-rock and folk worlds.” Isakov has toured internationally with his band and has performed with several symphony orchestras across the United States. He also manages a small farm which provides produce to over a dozen local restaurants.For more information on Gregory Alan Isakov, visit gregoryalanisakov.com.

Squeeze first formed in 1973, shortly after Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook had begun their songwriting partnership, brought together by an ad in a sweetshop window. By 1977 they had made their recording debut and enjoyed a string of hits which lasted until 1982 on the back of New Wave. Over the years there have been solo careers and occasional separations, but the Ivor Novello Award-winning songwriting duo reunited in 2007 to relaunch Squeeze and have been touring, writing and recording together since.For more information on Squeeze, visit squeezeofficial.com.

Leading Michael Franti & Spearhead, Franti is a musician, humanitarian, filmmaker, and activist who is recognized as a pioneering force in the music industry. He believes that there is a great battle taking place in the world today between cynicism and optimism, so he made his most recent album, Stay Human Vol. II, to remind himself — and anyone who’s listening — that there is still good in the world and that is worth fighting for.For more information on Michael Franti & Spearhead, visit michaelfranti.com.

The Australian Pink Floyd Show performs the music of Pink Floyd “with note for note perfection” and “this critically acclaimed show has been astonishing audiences worldwide for more than three decades.” Always striving to reproduce the complete Pink Floyd experience and bring the music to new audiences, the show continues to include a stunning light and laser show, video animations, state of the art, high resolution LED screen technology and other special effects. In addition, and in true Pink Floyd fashion, there are several huge inflatables including a giant pig and their own unique Pink Kangaroo.For more information on The Australian Pink Floyd Show, visit aussiefloyd.com.

Snapshots: Three fun things to do this weekend, inside and out

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

Quote of the Day

“Time flies whether you are having fun or not. Your choice.”

Anonymous

(Supplied/Grand Rapids Symphony)

Inside in GR, with a wizard

The Harry Potter Film Concerts Series returns to DeVos Performance Hall with “Harry Potter and Half-Blood Prince” on Friday and Saturday, Feb. 21-22, with the Grand Rapids Symphony performing the live score while the entire film plays in high-definition on a 40-foot screen. Go here for the story.



The start of the 2019 Freeze Fest disc golf event. (Supplied/City of Kentwood)

Inside and outside in Kentwood

The City of Kentwood will have two community events this Saturday, including the Annual Freeze Fest Disc Golf Tournament, and a Hawaiian Luau-Themed Family Dance, both on Feb. 22. Go here for the story.



Outside in Grand Haven

On Saturday, Feb. 22, from 2 to 4 p.m., downtown Grand Haven businesses  will be showcasing their favorite Nursery Rhymes during the tenth annual Frozen in Time. Frozen in Time is a window display competition, complete with live mannequins and an Oscar-style awards ceremony. Go here for the story.



Fun fact:

It will not be -13 (we hope)

That record low temperature in Grand Rapids was set in 1966 with a low of -13 degrees, which we tied Feb. 19, 2015.

Review: Rosanne Cash and John Leventhal at St. Cecilia Feb. 19

Rosanne Cash and John Leventhal, she of the quintessential country voice and he of the acoustic guitar mastery, on stage at a unknown venue. (Courtesy of the artist)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

60-second Review

The St. Cecilia Music Center’s Acoustic Cafe folk series, and the acoustics of the Royce Auditorium, was made for nights like the Feb. 19 visit by Rosanne Cash and John Leventhal, she of the quintessential country voice and he of the acoustic guitar mastery.

Cash, accompanied only by Leventhal — her husband, guitarist extraordinaire, surprisingly subtle pianist, and talented writer/producer — offered up a nearly 2-hour, 18-song set that almost equally left the sell-out audience in blissful silence and had them springing to their feet in appreciation, some before the song actually finished.

The pair’s set fittingly relied heavily on songs from her most recent release, 2018’s She Remembers Everything, co-written by Cash and Leventhal, who also co-produced the songs with Tucker Martine (The Decembrists, My Morning Jacket, Mavis Staples; to name just a few).

Some of the newer songs hint, if not actually shout, about the current sad state of affairs of an America tribalized by politics, reeling from societal conflicts, and grappling with religious and family transitions. Leading off the night with “The Only Thing Worth Fighting For” — “Work me like a battlefield/Locked inside a holy war/Your love and my due diligence/The only thing worth fighting for” — was no accident.

And the album’s title song itself, and Cash’s introduction of “She Remembers Everything”, offered stark commentary on the status of women in the home, the workplace and the modern world.

Rosanne Cash. (Supplied)

But other songs on the new recording harken back to the everlasting focus of all great country/folk/Americana music: the relationships between lovers and life partners that fail as often as they succeed. “Crossing to Jerusalem”, she explained, is a beautiful commentary on Rosanne and John’s 25-year journey in marriage, and a shared love of music. — “This is our deal with the sinners and saints/The law and up above/We’ll be crossing to Jerusalem/With nothing but our love”.

But Cash did not forget her past in the set list, picking selectively and effectively from her very early years (1981’s “Seven Year Ache”); her 2009 release The List, an album based on a list of 100 greatest country and American songs that father Johnny Cash gave her when she was 18 (incuding covers of “Long Black Veil” and “Ode to Billy Joe”); and her Grammy winning 2015 release The River & the Thread (“A Feather is Not a Bird”).

The duo’s two-song encore was a direct homage to country/folk musics past. First with a cover of Johnny Cash’s “Tennessee Flat Top Box” — one of the many songs on which Leventhal and his guitar work shined — and well as the classic “500 Miles Away from Home.”

Cash and Leventhal sent everybody home, like a good country meal, well satisfied.

May I have more, please?

Never heard of Johnny Cash’s list of 100 must-listen “essential” country/folk songs?

The list includes, at least as recounted and recorded by Rosanne, the expected —  “Motherless Children”, the southern gospel traditional popularized by the Carter Family, and “Take These Chains From My Heart”, the last song Hank Williams recorded. But also some you might not expect, including “Girls from the North Country” by Bob Dylan.

Rosanne’s complete list from her father is apparently still unknown, and she is not taking at this point. See one of many stories here.

For information and tickets on remaining St. Cecilia Music Center 2019-20 season concerts visit scmc-online.org.

Grammy nominated singer-songwriter Midón brings genre-blurring sound to St. Cecilia folk series

Raul Midón brings stunning guitar work and hypnotic vocals to his music, but he politely declines to step into any musical-genre box. (Courtesy of the artist)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

Raul Midón, according to no-less a critic than the New York Times, is “a one-man band who turns a guitar into an orchestra and his voice into a chorus.” So while stunning guitar work and hypnotic vocals are the focal point of the singer-songwriter’s music, he politely declines to step into any musical-genre box.

So, he just happens to be scheduled as part of the St. Cecilia Music Center’s Acoustic Café folk series of concerts, with a debut appearance scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 27. Tickets are still available.

Raul Midón. (Courtesy of the artist)

“My only link to the folk genre is acoustic guitar,” Midón said to WKTV in a recent email conversation. “I’m a jazz trained singer songwriter guitarist with a black and Latin heritage. But I write and sing songs accompanied by acoustic guitar.”

His unclassifiable versatility is evidenced by his having released 10 studio albums as a solo artist, being dubbed “an eclectic adventurist” by People magazine, having collaborated with the likes of Herbie Hancock, Stevie Wonder, Bill Withers, Queen Latifah and Snoop Dogg, and contributed to the soundtrack to Spike Lee’s film “She Hate Me.”


And now, on his latest album, If You Really Want, released in September 2019 and arranged by Vince Mendoza, Midón’s voice and guitar blend with an actual orchestra — the equally diverse Metropole Orkest, a multiple Grammy winning ensemble orchestra based in the Netherlands often called a “hybrid orchestra” due to its ability to float between jazz, big band and symphony orchestra music.

But, Midón said to WKTV about the recording — and re-recording — of If You Really Want, the artist is a bit of a musical perfectionist and tinkerer.

“Once the ensemble parts were tracked, I took the recordings home, taking my time to re-cut the vocals and guitar so that they were as nuanced as possible,” he said in supplied material.

“In today’s climate, time is money, more than ever, unless it’s in the comfort of your own home studio,” Midón said to WKTV. “The budget did not allow for me to sing with the orchestra in the studio. But it’s a nice compromise, plus I have the skills to achieve that.”

Musical talent, musical editing skills and musical confidence, are clearly in abundance with Midón, despite the fact that he is blind — evidenced by the title of Midón’s 2017 release: Bad Ass and Blind.

And that blindness also does not stop him from being at home with a live audience, feeding off the unseen audience, in fact.

“Energy isn’t visible, so what would blindness matter,” he said to WKTV. “I’ve been doing this for 20 years or so, I can read an audience in my own way. Applause is just one way. But if you are in Japan, silence and attentiveness would be another.”

For more information on Raul Midón — and his new album, The Mirror, due out March 13 — visit his website at raulmidon.com.

Two other St. Cecilia Acoustic Café concerts remain for this season, both with tickets available, include Grammy-award winning folk/Americana singer and songwriter Marc Cohn — he of “Walking in Memphis” but so much more — returns to St. Cecilia on March 19.

Then Shawn Colvin returns for her second appearance at St. Cecilia, on May 19, performing her newly released album Steady On Acoustic in its entirety. Her original 1989 album Steady On became her first Grammy Award winning album.

Tickets for Raul Midón on Feb. 27 are $40 and $45 and can be purchased by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224 or visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE. Tickets can also be purchased online at scmc-online.org.  A post-concert “Meet-the-artist” party with a cash bar will be offered to all ticket-holders giving the audience the opportunity to possibly meet Midón and obtain signed autographs of his CDs.

Adventures in Michigan: Lights. Camera. Freeze

By The West Michigan Tourist Association

Grand Haven Main Street will host its Frozen in Time event Feb. 22. (Supplied)

By West Michigan Tourist Association

On Saturday, Feb. 22, from 2 to 4 p.m., the businesses of Grand Haven Main Street will be showcasing their favorite Nursery Rhymes during the tenth annual Frozen in Time. Frozen in Time is a window display competition, complete with live mannequins and an Oscar-style awards ceremony.

Many Main Street businesses will be participating, and each one will feature live, “frozen” mannequins depicting a scene from a favorite nursery rhyme. Three honorary judges will be choosing a “Jurors’ Choice” Award, and the public is invited to wander throughout the district, matching the nursery rhymes with the corresponding storefront on a special scorecard, and cast their vote for the “People’s Choice” Award.

The official Frozen in Time zone encompasses businesses along Washington Avenue from Harbor Drive to Beacon Blvd and 7th Street between Washington and Madison. Scorecards are available at all participating businesses.

Frozen in Time will end promptly at 4 p.m., followed by a special awards ceremony at 4:30 p.m. at the Tri-Cities Historical Museum, 200 Washington Avenue. The Jurors’ Choice and People’s Choice awards will be announced. The public is invited to come and meet the live mannequins and bring their completed scorecards to be entered into a drawing for cash and door prizes donated by sponsoring Main Street businesses. (You must be present to win.)

For more information about this event, visit downtownGH.com or follow us on Facebook at Grand Haven Main Street.

Woodland Mall, New Hope Baptist Church partner for Black History Month ‘Live Museum’

African-American legends will “appear” at Woodland Mall during Black History Month thanks to reinactors from New Hope Baptist Church. (Supplied/Woodland Mall)

By Woodland Mall

African-American legends will “appear” at Woodland Mall during Black History Month thanks to reinactors from New Hope Baptist Church. (Supplied/Woodland Mall)

Jay Z, Tina Turner,  Coco Gauff and Congressman John Lewis will be among the African-American legends “appearing” at Woodland Mall during Black History Month — thanks to a special partnership with New Hope Baptist Church.


 
Woodland Mall and New Hope Baptist Church are partnering to bring a “live museum” to the mall on Saturday, Feb. 29, from 2 to 5 p.m.  The one-day only exhibit will feature actors portraying notable and important African-American figures in politics, sports, science, arts, entertainment and other areas.


 
Ranging in age from 10 to 72, the actors are all volunteers from New Hope Baptist Church in Grand Rapids.


 
“We are proud to partner with New Hope Baptist Church for the eighth year of this great event,” said Cecily McCabe, marketing director for the Woodland Mall. “The live museum gives our guests the opportunity to learn through personal connections. We look forward to the talents of the volunteers who work so hard to create a memorable event.”


 
During the live museum, actors and volunteers will portray African-American figures in history and current culture. The performers bring their persona to life by adopting mannerisms and speaking from a script. Interaction will be limited to the script so performers can fully immerse themselves as the people they are portraying.


 
“The performers work hard for the weeks leading up to the event each year,” said Rev. Dr. Howard Earle, Jr., senior pastor at New Hope Baptist Church and visionary of the African-American live museum. “The community looks forward to this event as an opportunity to help educate our community and to share the wonderful talents of our volunteers.”


 
The event, Earle said, impacts everyone in the community, generating a sense of pride that spans generations.

 
 
“Events like the live museum demonstrate the importance of diversity in our country,” Earle explained. “African-Americans are an integral part of all professions and have made significant contributions to our cultural identity – from science to politics to entertainment. We’re confident everyone will not only learn something at this event, but enjoy it as well.”


 
The live museum is free inside the Woodland Mall, and everyone is welcome to attend. Throughout the history of the event, no figures have been repeated, with one exception. Former President Barack Obama was first seen early in his administration and again in 2017 as he exited office.

For more information visit shopwoodlandmall.com.

WKTV has Wyoming, Kentwood high school sports schedules, featured game coverage

WKTV offers on-demand viewing of the Wyoming and Kentwood high school sports, community events, and government meetings. (WKTV)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

WKTV has your weekly high school sports schedule, and our coverage crew will be out twice the week.

The Featured Game coverage schedule for the remainder of February includes the following:

Tuesday, Feb. 18 — Boys Basketball Hopkins @ Wyoming Lee

Friday, Feb. 21 — Girls/Boys Basketball West Michigan Aviation @ Potter’s House

Tuesday, Feb. 25 — Girls/Boys Basketball Tri-unity Christian @ Grand River Prep

Friday, Feb. 28 — Girls/Boys Basketball Tri-unity Christian @ Potter’s House

Where and when to see the game

Featured games are broadcast the night of the contest and then at least once later in the week.

WKTV broadcasts on Wyoming and Kentwood cable channels. On Comcast cable, Channel 25 is the Community Channel, where sports events and other community events are shown; Channel 26 is the Government Channel, where local government meetings and events are shown. The games can also be seen on AT&T U-verse 99.

For complete schedules of programs on WKTV channels, see our Weekly On-air Schedule.

All Featured Games, as well as other high school sports and community events covered by WKTV, are available on-demand within a week of play at wktvlive.org.


 
For a complete schedule of all local high school sports action each week, any changes to the WKTV feature sports schedule, and feature stories on local sports, visit wktvjournal.org/sports/.


 
Following is this week’s schedule:

Monday, Feb. 17
Boys/Girls Bowling

South Christian @ FH Eastern
Wyoming @ East Grand Rapids
Kelloggsville @ Wellsprings Prep
Girls Cheer
Wyoming @ Comstock Park
Kelloggsville @ Comstock Park

Tuesday, Feb. 18
Boys Basketball

Tri-Unity Christian @ Fennville
Algoma Christian @ West Michigan Lutheran
West Michigan Aviation @ Zion Christian
Grand River Prep @ Fruitport Calvary Christian
Muskegon Catholic Central @ Potter’s House
Hopkins @ Wyoming Lee — WKTV Featured Event
Godwin Heights @ NorthPointe Christian
South Christian @ Middleville T-K
Wyoming @ Hudsonville
Kelloggsville @ Belding
Rockford @ East Kentwood
Girls Basketball
Tri-Unity Christian @ Fennville
Algoma Christian @ West Michigan Lutheran
West Michigan Aviation @ Zion Christian
Grand River Prep @ Fruitport Calvary Christian
Potter’s House @ Muskegon Catholic Central
Wyoming Lee @ Hopkins
NorthPointe Christian @ Godwin Heights
Middleville T-K @ South Christian
Hudsonville @ Wyoming
Belding @ Kelloggsville
Rockford @ East Kentwood
Girls Cheer
East Kentwood @ Comstock Park

Wednesday, Feb. 19
Boys/Girls Bowling

Wayland @ South Christian
Byron Center @ Wyoming
East Kentwood @ Grand Haven
Boys Wrestling
East Kentwood – MHSAA Team Regionals

Thursday, Feb. 20
Boys/Girls Bowling

Grand River Prep @ Tri-Unity Christian
East Kentwood @ Caledonia
Boys Basketball
West Michigan Lutheran @ Kalamazoo Phoenix
West Michigan Aviation @ Barry County Christian
Girls Basketball
Barry County Christian @ Grand River Prep
Boys Swimming
South Christian @ Ottawa Hills

Friday, Feb. 21
Boys Basketball

Tri-Unity Christian @ Holland Black River
West Michigan Aviation @ Potter’s House — WKTV Featured Event
Holland Calvary @ Grand River Prep
Zion Christian @ Calhoun Christian
Wyoming Lee @ Belding
South Christian @ Wayland
Wyoming @ East Grand Rapids
Kelloggsville @ Calvin Christian
Grandville @ East Kentwood
Girls Basketball
Tri-Unity Christian @ Holland Black River
West Michigan Aviation @ Potter’s House — WKTV Featured Event
Zion Christian @ Calhoun Christian
Wyoming Lee @ Belding
South Christian @ Wayland
Wyoming @ East Grand Rapids
Kelloggsville @ Calvin Christian
Grandville @ East Kentwood
Boys/Girls Bowling
Godwin Heights @ TBA — O-K Silver Post Season Tourney
Boys Hockey
South Christian @ Christian
Girls Cheer
Wyoming – TBA – MHSAA State Districts

Saturday, Feb. 22
Boys/Girls Bowling

Wyoming Lee @ NorthPointe Christian
Godwin Heights @ NorthPointe Christian
South Christian – OK Green-Gold Tournament @ Park Center Lanes
Wyoming @ Christian
East Kentwood – Post Season Conference Tournament
Girls Cheer
Wyoming Lee @ Comstock Park – Districts
@ East Kentwood – MHSAA Districts
Boys Hockey
Catholic Central @ South Christian
Boys Wrestling
East Kentwood – MHSAA Individual Regionals

Monday, Feb. 24
Girls Basketball

Wellsprings Prep @ West Michigan Aviation
Boys Basketball
Wellsprings Prep @ West Michigan Aviation
Boys/Girls Bowling
Wyoming Lee @ Potter’s House

Grand Rapids Boat Show runs Feb. 19-23 at Grand Rapids’ DeVos Place

A sea of boats will be on display at the Grand Rapids Boat Show. (Supplied)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

The Grand Rapids Boat Show not only turns 75 this year but is also Michigan’s longest running show. And it will return to DeVos Place in Grand Rapids this week, running Wednesday, Feb. 19, through Sunday, Feb. 23.

The Grand Rapids Boat Show started in 1946 as the West Michigan Sportland Boat Show in the Welsh Auditorium, with less than 25,000 square feet of space, according to supplied material. It is now 250,000 square feet (5.74 acres) of display space throughout the main exhibition halls, Steelcase Ballroom, Grand Gallery and Grand River Overlook where more than 400 boats from over 100 manufacturers and 35 dealers are displayed side-by-side.

Classic and antique boats are also part of the Grand Rapids Boat Show. (Supplied)

“The boaters of the Great Lakes State have embraced this grand tradition every winter for 75 years and this year they’ll find everything from aluminum fishing boats and personal watercrafts, to pro style ski and bass boats, luxury pontoon boats, runabouts, deck boats and big boats like yachts and cruisers … including the 42’ Regal Grande Coupe, recognized as this year’s ‘Queen of the Show’,” event promotional material states.


Other special features at the boat show include:

Twiggy, the Water Skiing Squirrel, performing daily.

Appearances by Pro Wakeboarders & Wakesurfers.

Vintage & wooden boats from Water Wonderland Chapter of Antique & Classic Boat Society.

The pop-up Lake Life Boutique featuring specialized food, drinks, live music and kids’ activities.

An opportunity to suit up and try out the SCUBA Dive Tank presented by Great Lakes Dive Locker.

A Boater Safety Certification (Saturday only) presented by the Kent County Sheriff’s Department Marine Division.

Gizmo D. Robot as he strolls the show, visiting with kids of all ages.

 
DeVos Place is located at 303 Monroe St. NE, Grand Rapids. Ticket are $12 adults, $5 children aged 6 to 14. Kids 5 and under are admitted free.

There is close-by parking beneath DeVos Place, across the street and connected by skywalk. There is also a complimentary trolley available; park in the Dash Lot Area 9 on Seward ($2 total) and hop aboard the trolley which will be making runs on an 8-minute loop for an hour before the show opens to an hour after the show closes each day.

For more information visit here.

Maritime Lecture Series featuring St. Joseph North Pier Lighthouses

St. Joseph North Pier Lighthouses. (Public Domain)

By West Michigan Tourist Association

The Michigan Maritime Museum’s Maritime Lecture Series, Shipwrecks & Lighthouses will feature Kate Heckner Ulrey, Community Engagement Coordinator and St. Joseph North Pier Lighthouses Tour Manager for the Heritage Museum and Cultural Center. Her presentation, “Altruistic Edifices: St. Joseph North Pier Lights” is scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 19, from 6:30 pm-7:30 pm at the Michigan Maritime Museum in South Haven.

The St. Joseph North Pier Lighthouses are a symbol of community, but did you know that the St. Joseph harbor has had a light since 1832? It is the second oldest site for a light on Lake Michigan. Learn how St. Joe went from the first lighthouse on the bluff to the two lighthouses that stand there today. Ulrey will examine the many phases of the lighthouses and the importance of maritime history in the development of the St. Joseph/Benton Harbor community. Over 7,000 people visited the St. Joseph lighthouses this summer and you can too through this engaging presentation featuring photos and discussion.

Ulrey is a former English teacher who enjoys the local history and has an appreciation for the lighthouse and those who kept the light. “Sharing the St. Joseph Lighthouses, their history and their importance has been a wonderful experience. A lighthouse is such a powerful visual of people caring for one another and respecting nature,” says Ulrey. Ulrey began volunteering for The Heritage Museum and Cultural Center in 2015 when she was asked to be a guide on the Haunted St. Joseph tour. In 2016 the lighthouse opened to the public and she began volunteering there. In 2019 she was asked to manage tours as part of the museum’s staff. In addition to Ulrey, the lighthouse is run by a dedicated staff of volunteers who welcomed thousands of visitors last summer.

Admission is $8, $7 for seniors. There is no admission fee for Museum members. Museum doors will at 6:00 pm the evening of the lecture. The Museum is open regularly from Thursday-Saturday the month of February. See the Museum website for hours. For more information, contact the Museum at 269-637-8078 or visit michiganmaritimemuseum.org.

GR’s Listening Room’s intimate sound space attracting talent local and national

The Listening Room is attracting artists, plugged-in and unplugged, to Grand Rapids. (Supplied/Listening Room)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

Its almost universal: music fans, and artists, love an intimate sound space, one where the audience truly becomes part of the music and the artist can make a visceral connection with the audience. Listening Room, one of Grand Rapids newest music houses, is rapidly becoming known as one of those music venues.

Listening Room, which opened late last year and is located at Studio Park at 123 Ionia Ave SW, has already build a reputation with local audiences as a “jazz club” in the classic style, a folk stage where an un-amplified guitar and voice can be heard and appreciated, a place where up-and-coming bands can fill the house as they hone their sonic skills.

The “Room” is also getting known by national touring acts as a place to unwind if not unplug from the impersonal stadium and festival stages, and get back in contact with the audience — Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Los Lobos and Loudon Wainwright III are only three scheduled examples.

The reasons for the venue’s buzz — with national acts and local audiences — are several fold, according to Quinn Mathews, general manager and talent buyer for the Listening Room.

Los Lobos an their acoustic tour line-up. (Supplied)

“We’re lucky to not only be situated between the cities of Detroit and Chicago, but situated between very well known venues on the east side of Michigan and in Chicago, for instance The Ark in Ann Arbor and City Winery in Chicago,” Mathews said to WKTV about his booking national acts.

“The artists agencies in Nashville, New York, Los Angeles have been sending talent around here for years. … Grand Rapids, as a city, is really growing and making national news. People are here, music fans are here, the artists and agents know it.”

While having national acts stopping by is great, Matthews is just as happy with the steady bookings of local acts … such as The Crane Wives on Feb. 28 and Mid Life Crisis on March 23, to name only two.

The Crane Wives (Facebook)

“This was extremely important to me, to have local, regional, national, and international talent. To have music 4 to 5 if not 6 to 7 nights a week,” he said. “Some nights are free or $5 or $10, some nights have international touring acts with tickets $40-$50. I wanted everyone to feel welcome, not to just book one style for one type of audience.

 

“There was a weekend a few weeks ago where Friday night was Hip Hop, Saturday night was Jazz, and Sunday night was local songwriters. … It was so great to see the place packed out each night with different people in our community.”

And, after all, a 200-seat venue known for as a music “listening room” is clearly focused on the audience experience.

“I think we’re in an interesting time with music in so many ways,” Matthews said. “The industry really changed in the early 2000’s, music became so easily accessible.  Everyone listens to music all the time, it’s easy. You can listen for free within seconds. I always laugh in the grocery store walking around, there will be a kid, 12-years-old, with earbuds in listening to music on one aisle. The next aisle, a 85-year-old with earbuds in.

“Everyone is listening. The trick is do they attend concerts? Many more people are downloading and streaming music, but does that translate to ticket sales for live music?  Sure Elton John and Bruce Springsteen sell out arenas, but who attends concerts in rock clubs, coffee shops, breweries, etc?

“I think whether I agree with it or not there seems to need to be another factor for folks to attend a concert. … We wanted to build a place that was comfortable, seated, nice atmosphere, like the old jazz clubs, servers bringing you bourbon, etc., a place that feels really great even before the music starts.”

For more information on all concerts at Listening Room, visit listeningroomGR.com or call 616-900-9500.

Winter Meijer State Games registration still open for local weekend events beginning Friday

The Meijer State Game of Michigan will have local events this weekend; snow will be involved and registration is still available. (Supplied/Meijer State Game of Michigan)

WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

The main weekend of the Meijer State Games of Michigan’s Winter Games will take place this weekend, Feb. 14-16, with local sports including indoor archery, ninja, fencing, cross country skiing (freestyle and nordic), karate, disc golf, shooting sports and wrestling.

Online registration as well as onsite registration is still available for some main weekend sports, according to supplied material. For more information about onsite registration, times, locations and entry fees for events, please visit stategamesofmichigan.com. Registration information is located on each sport’s page.

The main weekend will begin with an athlete celebration hosted by the Grand Rapids Griffins on Friday, Feb. 14, at the Van Andel Arena. A special in-game recognition of all Meijer State Games athletes will take place during the first period.

Prior to the Griffins game, the Meijer State Games will present the 2019 Athletes of the Year awards, including to Catherine Vandergriff of Spring Lake (speed skating), Noah Zomberg of Grand Rapids (rugby) and Anastasia Schutte of Holland (archery 3D).

The Meijer State Games of Michigan held the first sporting event of the Winter Games, fatbike, on Feb. 1. Results for all the Winter Games sporting events are now available here.

The Meijer State Games of Michigan, according to supplied material, is an Olympic-style, multi-sport event(s) that welcomes athletes regardless of age or ability level. “The games embody the values of participation, sportsmanship, and healthy living among the residents of Michigan.”

Since 2010, Meijer State Games of Michigan has hosted more than 65,000 athletes. The Meijer State Games of Michigan has also contributed over $25 million in estimated economic impact to cities throughout Michigan, according to supplied material.

The Choir of St. John’s College Cambridge comes to GR



By School Bosscher
West Michigan Tourist Association


On Wednesday March 25, The Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge, UK will perform the inaugural concert of the Andrew Larson Memorial Concert Series. This biennial series will benefit the music and ministry of the Grand Rapids Choir of Men and Boys.

Through the Andy Larson Memorial Fund, the Grand Rapids Choir of Men and Boys will collaborate with some of the world’s finest sacred artists. These special biennial programs will honor the life of Andy Larson, a former GRCMB Head Chorister who died in 2018, in a car accident at the age of 14.

Founded in the 1670s, the Choir of St John’s College is one of the finest collegiate choirs in the world, known for its rich, warm and distinctive sound; expressive interpretations; and ability to sing in a variety of styles. Directed by Andrew Nethsingha, the Choir will bring its trademark ‘St John’s Sound’ to audiences across the Atlantic, performing in Atlanta, Chicago, Grand Rapids, Seattle and San Francisco. This will be the Choir’s first visit to the USA since 2016.

• Tickets: www.grcmb.org
• Location: Basilica of St. Adalbert 654 Davis Ave. NW, Grand Rapids 49504
• Date & Time: Wednesday, March 25 7 p.m.
• Seating: Open seating within three reserved tiers: $20 – $35 – $50
• Additional Information
• Email receipt must be presented at the door – printed or digital NOTE: you should receive your email tickets immediately after purchase – please check your spam or junk mail folders if you do not see them. They are sent from the email address hello@givelively.org
• Arrive early for best seating within each section
• Concert programming will be listed on the Grand Rapids Choir of Men and Boys website as soon as it is available. www.grcmb.org
• Free Parking is available
• Barrier-free and wheelchair accessible
• Ticket proceeds benefit the Grand Rapids Choir of Men and Boys

Adventures in Michigan: Polish Exhibit opening at Ramsdell Regional Center for the Arts

From “100 Years of Polish Independence: Zakopane 1918.” (University of Michigan)

By The West Michigan Tourist Association

The Ramsdell Regional Center for the Arts (RRCA) is pleased to present an exhibition and lecture on Zakopane, Poland. “100 Years of Polish Independence: Zakopane 1918”is an exhibition of photographs from the archives of the Tatra Museum in Zakopane. It tells the unique story of the short-lived Republic of Zakopane, which was established in the concluding weeks of the First World War. The exhibit will run from Feb. 10 – March 27 with an opening reception and lecture on Saturday, Feb. 15, from 1 – 5 p.m. The University of Michigan lecturer and assistant director of undergraduate studies at the University of Michigan history department, Dr. Kate Wroblewski, will present a lecture at 2 p.m.

Situated in the scenic Tatra Mountains, in the 19th century, Zakopane attracted artists, writers, and intellectuals from Poland’s four corners. Together with the local inhabitants, they created a diverse and distinctive community that flourishes today. This exhibit will feature stunning archival photographs revealing the beauty, originality, and diversity of the mountain resort town and its inhabitants.

The University of Michigan Alumni Club of  Greater Manistee-Ludington is providing support for the reception and in assisting with the transportation of the exhibit. “We are thrilled to introduce Zakopane to Manistee! We appreciate the support from the University of Michigan Alumni Club of Greater Manistee-Ludington in making this a reality,” said Xavier Verna, Executive Director of the RRCA. “We are working together to curate this photography exhibit with food, music, and the Polish community in our region. Two Slices will prepare Polish-inspired food, and music will be furnished by Virgil Baker and the Just for Fund Band.“

The lecture and exhibit are free and open to the public. Reserve your spot for the lecture at RamsdellTheatre.org/art-exhibits. The exhibit is open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday from 10:00 am – 5:00 pm. Enter through 1st Street to view it. The opening reception will be held on Saturday, February 15 from 1 – 5 p.m.

CCPS has curated the exhibit and organized public lectures in collaboration with the Tatra Museum, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute in Warsaw, and Culture.pl as part of POLSKA 100, an international cultural program commemorating the centenary of Poland regaining Independence. It is financed by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland as part of the multi-year program NIEPODLEGŁA 2017-22.

Local World Affairs Council’s 2020 Great Decisions discussion series begins Feb. 10-11

Marisa O. Ensor, center, has worked in in countries around the world and will talk on “Green Peacebuilding: Justice in the face of Climate Change”. (Courtesy)

WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

The World Affairs Council of Western Michigan’s 2020 Great Decisions series of local discussions will again tackle this year’s “issues of national an international importance” — the India and Pakistan powder keg, China’s power in the Americas, the present and future of American immigration policy, and the human impact of climate change, to name just a few.

The line-up of discussions, to be held Monday evenings at Aquinas College and Tuesday noontimes at Calvin University, will begin Feb. 10-11 with a discussion titled “Kashmir: Flashpoint between India and Pakistan” and will continue through the week of March 30.

All discussions are open to the public, with a $10 admission fee for non-Council members and collegiate partners, but free parking on each campus. No reservations are needed, and discounted series passes are available.

With the 2020 Great Decisions series, the World Affairs Council “continues its mission to empower the people and organizations of West Michigan to engage thoughtfully with the world,” according to supplied material. “Our largest community event, which we have been hosting since the mid-1950s. Diplomats, policy makers and practitioners, think tank specialists and journalists lead the conversation on some of the most pressing global issues of our time.”

The Monday lectures will run from 6 to 7:15 p.m., at the Aquinas College Performing Arts Center. The Tuesday lectures will run from Noon to 1 p.m., at the Recital Hall in the Covenant Fine Arts Center at Calvin University.

Raza Ahmad Rumi (Supplied)

The opening lecture, “Kashmir: Flashpoint between India and Pakistan” will be led by Raza Ahmad Rumi, Director of the Park Center for Independent Media at Ithaca (N.Y.) College. Rumi has been living in the United States since 2014, and is editor of Daily Times and founder of the Nayadaur Media digital platform. He is also a visiting faculty at Cornell Institute for Public Affairs.

Drawing on his deep background as a journalist and policy analyst, Rumi will “contextualize the factors that play into India and Pakistan’s actions and the U.S. response to these countries,” according to supplied material. Asking and discussing the questions “How do we de-escalate conflict between these two nuclear powers? India and Pakistan have a long history of conflict. How has escalation within the Kashmir region changed the stakes for the U.S. and the world?”

The other lecture dates, titles and speakers are:

February 17-18, “Mirror to the World: The Philippines under Duterte”, with Julie McCarthy, international correspondent with Manila Bureau of NPR.

February 24-25, “Regional Security in the Red Sea”, with Steve Dalzell, senior defense policy researcher at RAND Corporation.

March 2-3, “Green Peacebuilding: Justice in the face of Climate Change”, with Marisa O. Ensor, Justice and Peace Studies Program & Institute for the Study of International Migration, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University.

March 9-10, “Human Trafficking: Global and Local Perspectives”, a panel discussion moderated by Rachel VerWys, co-creator of Solutions to End Exploitation (SEE).

March 16-17, “The Future is Now: Artificial Intelligence and National Security”, with Lindsey Sheppard, fellow at the Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS).

March 23-24, “China’s Road into Latin America”, with Margaret Myers, director of Asia & Latin America at Inter-American Dialogue.

March 30-31, “Central American Immigration and U.S. Foreign Policy”, with Sonia Nazario, Pulitzer-winning journalist and author of “Enrique’s Journey”.

Of particular interest, for many, will be Ensor’s discussion on world justice in time of climate change. She describes herself, on her website, as “a gender and youth specialist with a background in forced displacement, environmental peacebuilding, humanitarian intervention, and post-conflict justice.”

Marisa Ensor (Courtesy)
Marisa O. Ensor (Courtesy)

She holds a PhD in Anthropology from the University of Florida, a Master’s in Law in International Human Rights Law from the University of Essex (UK), and a certificate in Forced Migration Studies from the University of Oxford (UK). She has over a decade of international experience in “the design and implementation of gender- and youth-inclusive projects in conflict-affected and fragile states, and those confronting forced migration and environmental insecurity” in 19 countries so far in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region and Europe.

In her discussion, Ensor “maps the relationship between climate change, conflict and fragile states and the lessons we can learn from those fighting for human rights and peace within their communities,” according to supplied material. Specifically she will discuss “What can young activists teach us about peace and climate change? … Climate change has become one of the defining issues of our time.”

For more information on the Great Decisions 2020 series visit here.

Kelloggsville boys basketball hosts Comstock Park in non-conference WKTV Featured Game

WKTV offers on-demand viewing of the Wyoming and Kentwood high school sports, community events, and government meetings. (WKTV)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

The Kelloggsville High School boys basketball team will take a break from its OK-Conference Silver schedule to host Comstock Park out of the OK Blue Tuesday, Feb. 4, as both teams look to get back in the win column.

The Kelloggsville Rockets (4-6 overall, 2-4 in league) are coming off a road loss to OK Silver foe Godwin Heights on Jan. 31. Comstock Park (2-8 and 1-5) will be out to break a six-game skid including a home loss to Central Catholic also on Jan. 31.

The WKTV Sports Featured Game will be available on cable television and on-demand at WKTVlive.org.

WKTV broadcasts on Wyoming and Kentwood cable channels. On Comcast cable, Channel 25 is the Community Channel, where sports events and other community events are shown; On AT&T cable throughout the Grand Rapids area, viewers go to Channel 99, and then are given the choice to watch Wyoming (or Kentwood) Community (Channel 25) or Government (Channel 26) channels.

For complete schedules of programs on WKTV channels, see our Weekly On-air Schedule.

Two West Michigan theaters host showings of the 2020 Oscar-nominated shorts



By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org


The 2020 Oscars are quickly approaching but you do not have to wait to see some of the nominated films.

Starting Feb. 7, the Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts will be hosting the “Oscar Shorts 2020: Animated” and “Oscar Shorts 2020: Live Action” and on Feb. 21, will hosts Oscar Shorts 2020: Documentary A and Oscar Shorts 2020: Documentary B.


Or if you would like to take a little road trip on Feb. 9 — the day of the Oscars show — the Tibbits Classic Film Series will once again showcase the 2020 Academy Award nominees for best animated and live action short films on at Tibbits Opera House.

A short film is any motion picture that has a running time of 40 minutes or less, including all credits, per guidelines set forth by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. In the past, short films generally relied on exhibitions at festivals to reach an audience. This is still the case for the most part, with the short films being shown at Sundance and Cannes, the biggest festivals.

Animation really took advantage of the short film format when Warner Brothers and Disney began putting short cartoons before all of the studios’ feature length films. This is a tradition that Pixar has carried over to the present day by screening a short along with each of its feature films during its initial theatrical run since 1995.

Showtimes for UICA, located at 2 W. Fulton St., vary. Tickets are $10 general admission and $5 for UICA members. Visit uica.org for more information on the Oscar nominated shorts film series, other film series, exhibitions and events.

The Tibbits Opera House, located at 14 S. Hancheet St., Coldwater, will be Feb. 9 at 2 p.m. the cost is $8. Tibbets Classic Film Series showcases Hollywood classics from such genres as sci-fi, film noir, musicals, comedies, and mysteries. All other showing to the Classic Film Series are free. For more information or to purchase tickets, please visit Tibbits.org or call 517-278-6029.

After sellout opening, jazzy Robin Connell Trio and guest returns to Listening Room on Feb. 6

Jazz night at the Listening Room with members of the Robin Connell Trio, from January 2020. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

After an opening-night sellout of local jazz with the Robin Connell Trio at the Listening Room, one of Grand Rapids newest music venues, Quinn Mathews, general manager of the venue, reportedly said “It looks like the Listening Room will be booking more jazz.”

Sweet music to local jazz fans, indeed.
 

The next date with the Robin Connell Trio — this time with guest multi-instrumentalist Ivan Akansiima — at Listening Room, a 200-seat venue located at Studio Park at 123 Ionia Ave SW, will be Thursday, Feb. 6.

“I’ve enjoyed all the opportunities I’ve had to play music with this marvelous person/musician,” Connell said of Akansiima, in supplied material. The “night of music that will include original tunes, jazz standards, Stevie Wonder, John Lennon, and African gems such as ‘Pata Pata’.”

Multi-instrumentalist Ivan Akansiima. (Supplied by the artist)

Akansiima, according to his website, is a mutt-instrumentalist, Christian faith worship leader, jazz musician, composer, arranger, producer, instructor, and researcher from Uganda East Africa. He holds a bachelors degree in music from Hope College and a masters degree in jazz studies from Western Michigan University. He has performed professionally for more than 15 years in 40 countries, but continues to actively play and participate in the local Michigan music scene.

My “music is rooted in Ugandan folk music traditions, Jazz, Gospel, classical, Caribbean, Afro fusion music, etc.,” he says in his website.

The jazz nights start at 7:30 p.m., with doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets are $12, with open seating, drinks available for purchase, and a parking garage attached — “So no outdoor hassle (park on 2nd floor to walk right in),” we are told.

We are also told the January jazz night turned away people at the door, so buy your tickets early or at-least arrive early.

Connell’s “house trio” will usually include Rob Hartman on bass and Keith Hall on the drums. Future guest artists include vocalist Mary Rademacher on March 7, Carl Cafagna on woodwinds on April 1, and the Paul Brewer septet on May 31.

For more information on the jazz series and all concerts at The Listening Room, visit listeningroomGR.com or call 616-900-9500. For more information on the show, visit here. For more info on Ivan Akansiima, visit ivanskansiima.com. For more information on Robin Connell, visit robinconnell.com.

Local musician Roger MacNaughton performs in Lowell

Roger MacNaughton is the next performer for the Gallery Concert Series. He is set to perform Feb. 9.
Roger MacNaughton performs Feb. 9.

Local musician Roger MacNaughton and friends will performed Sunday, Feb. 9, at 4 p.m. at the LowellArts, 223 W. Main St.

The group will perform songs from MacNaughton’s “Songs & Memories from Mackinaw Island,” which was composed by MacNaughton during an artist-in-residence in the summer of 2019.

Patrons  can  expect  to  see  some  familiar  performers  and  at  least  one  new musical friend. According to MacNaughton, “I’m essentially augmenting our instrumental trio called MacRaven & Mora (Susan Mora on violin; Steve VanRavenswaay, on cello, and MacNaughton on keyboard) by adding Charlie Hoats on fretless 6-string bass, and Tami Hjelm on vocals. I’m also excited to welcome Kyle Rasche, an extremely gifted singer/songwriter, who will sing ‘Mackinac, I’ve Come Home.’” Besides the residency pieces, the ensemble will also perform popular soft-rock selections specially arranged for the concert.

While listening to the music, patrons will have the opportunity to view the gallery’s current exhibit “The Art of Change,” an exhibition of art that raises awareness of current global issues of our time in an effort to provoke positive change.

Tickets for the perform are $16 at the door and $14 in advance. The Gallery Concert Series features 11 local and regional music groups and runs January through April. For more information, visit lowellartsmi.org.

WKTV will be busy in February with local high school sports schedules, featured game coverage

WKTV offers on-demand viewing of the Wyoming and Kentwood high school sports, community events, and government meetings. (WKTV)

By Mike Moll, WKTV Volunteer Sports Director
sports@wktv.org

February already brings the final full month of the high school winter sports schedules to the area. The opening rounds of MHSAA State tournaments are near the end of the month in several sports and others, such as girls’ basketball, close out the regular season to begin their state tournament to open up March.

With the change in basketball districts this year having the teams be seeded and matchups announced fifteen days before the opening games, updated schedules will be posted here as they are announced.

Once again, WKTV and its crews will be at two events each week throughout the month but show your support in person to your local schools whenever you can and then join the rebroadcast or watch on-line within a few days of the event.

The Featured Game coverage schedule for the last week of February includes the following:

Tuesday, Feb. 4 — Boys Basketball Comstock Park at Kelloggsville

Saturday, Feb. 8 — Boys Hockey Lowell/Caledonia at East Kentwood/West Michigan Aviation

Tuesday, Feb. 11 — Girls Basketball East Grand Rapids at South Christian

Friday, Feb. 14 — Girls/Boys Basketball Christian @ Wyoming

Tuesday, Feb. 18 — Boys Basketball Hopkins @ Wyoming Lee

Friday, Feb. 21 — Girls/Boys Basketball West Michigan Aviation @ Potter’s House

Tuesday, Feb. 25 — Girls/Boys Basketball Tri-unity Christian @ Grand River Prep

Friday, Feb. 28 — Girls/Boys Basketball Tri-unity Christian @ Potter’s House

Want to be a television sports announcer?

If anyone has ever thought about trying to announce a sporting event, WKTV has a great chance for you to do exactly that! We are always looking for additional announcers, especially for the spring games. If you would like to try it or have any questions, please email Mike at sportswktv@gmail.com.


 
Where and when to see the game

Featured games are broadcast the night of the contest and then at least once later in the week.

WKTV broadcasts on Wyoming and Kentwood cable channels. On Comcast cable, Channel 25 is the Community Channel, where sports events and other community events are shown; Channel 26 is the Government Channel, where local government meetings and events are shown. The games can also be seen on AT&T U-verse 99.

For complete schedules of programs on WKTV channels, see our Weekly On-air Schedule.

All Featured Games, as well as other high school sports and community events covered by WKTV, are available on-demand within a week of play at wktvlive.org.


For a complete schedule of all local high school sports action each week, any changes to the WKTV feature sports schedule, and feature stories on local sports, visit wktvjournal.org/sports/.


 
Following is this week’s schedule:

Monday, Feb. 3
Boys/Girls Bowling

Calvin Christian @ Tri-Unity Christian – Boys
NorthPointe Christian @ Wyoming Lee
Hopkins @ Godwin Heights
Byron Center @ South Christian
Wyoming @ Middleville T-K
Kelloggsville @ Hilcrest Lanes
Grand Haven @ East Kentwood
Girls Basketball
Lansing Christian @ Tri-Unity Christian

Tuesday, Feb. 4
Girls Basketball

West Michigan Lutheran @ Hudsonville Libertas Christian
Holland Black River @ West Michigan Aviation
Grand River Prep @ Potter’s House
Muskegon Catholic Central @ Zion Christian
Benton Harbor @ Godwin Heights
Hudsonville @ South Christian
Boys Basketball
West Michigan Lutheran @ Hudsonville Libertas Christian
Holland Black River @ West Michigan Aviation
Grand River Prep @ Potter’s House
Potter’s House @ Tri-County
South Christian @ Calvin Christian
FH Central @ Wyoming
Comstock Park @ Kelloggsville — WKTV Featured Event
Northview @ East Kentwood

Wednesday, Feb. 5
Boys/Girls Bowling

Calvin Christian @ Wyoming Lee
Belding @ Godwin Heights
South Christian @ Wyoming
Kelloggsville @ Hopkins
East Kentwood @ Hudsonville
Girls Cheer
Wyoming Lee @ Hopkins
Kelloggsville @ Hopkins
Wyoming @ Wayland
Boys Wrestling
Muskegon Catholic Central @ Godwin Heights

Thursday, Feb. 6
Boys/Girls Bowling

Tri-Unity Christian @ West Catholic – Boys
Boys Swimming
Grand Haven @ East Kentwood

Friday, Feb. 7
Boys Basketball

West Michigan Aviation @ Tri-Unity Christian
Wellsprings Prep @ West Michigan Lutheran
Kalamazoo Heritage Christian @ Grand River Prep
Creative Tech @ Zion Christian
Wyoming Lee @ Kelloggsville
Hopkins @ Godwin Heights
Wyoming @ South Christian
Girls Basketball
West Michigan Aviation @ Tri-Unity Christian
Wellsprings Prep @ West Michigan Lutheran
Creative Tech @ Zion Christian
Wyoming Lee @ Kelloggsville
Hopkins @ Godwin Heights
Wyoming @ South Christian
Boys Hockey
South Christian vs Plymouth
Boys Swimming
South Christian @ Hudsonville
Boys Wrestling
Wyoming @ FH Eastern
East Kentwood @ Rockford
Girls Cheer
East Kentwood @ Hudsonville

Saturday, Feb. 8
Boys Hockey

Lowell/Caledonia @ East Kentwood/West Michigan Aviation — WKTV Featured Event
South Christian vs Powers Catholic
Boys/Girls Bowling
Wyoming Lee @ Hudsonville
Godwin Heights @ Muskegon Mona Shores
Wyoming @ Muskegon Mona Shores
East Kentwood @ Hudsonville
Boys Wrestling
Wyoming Lee @ NorthPointe Christian
Godwin Heights @ Belding
Kelloggsville @ Belding
Girls Cheer
Wyoming Lee @ FH Northern
Wyoming @ FH Northern
Boys Swimming
South Christian @ Hudsonville

Monday, Feb. 10
Girls Basketball

Tri-Unity Christian @ Wellsprings Prep
West Michigan Aviation @ Wyoming Lee
Boys/Girls Bowling
Wyoming Lee @ Belding
Godwin Heights @ NorthPointe Christian
Zeeland East/Zeeland West @ South Christian
Wyoming @ Unity Christian
Rockford @ East Kentwood

Whitney — Forever Turned Around — brings sweet sounds, set list to acoustic Heaven of Fountain Street Church

Julien Ehrlich and Max Kakacek, the heart and soul of Whitney, in support of their late 2019 release Forever Turned Around, will visit Grand Rapids’ Fountain Street Church’s sanctuary for a concert Sunday, Feb. 16. (Supplied/Olivia Bee)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

You have to appreciate musicians who understand the power of falsetto, the right blend of songs to create and to cover, and the perfection of a venue with superb acoustics.

So there will be a lot to appreciate when Whitney, busy on the road in support of their late 2019 release Forever Turned Around, visit Grand Rapids’ Fountain Street Church’s sanctuary for a concert Sunday, Feb. 16, at 7 p.m., with CHAI opening.

At the end of the busy tour schedule to end 2019 and begin 2020, bouncing from their Chicago home to the United Kingdom, and then from Miami to Montreal, the duo to could not have picked a more perfect place to end their current sojourn that the renown acoustic setting of Fountain Street.

The cover of Whitney’s late 2019 release Forever Turned Around.

Restlessness, in fact, is “at the heart of Whitney’s resonant and stunning sophomore album Forever Turned Around,” according to supplied material. “As Julien Ehrlich and Max Kakacek realized over the past three years, life can change drastically. Priorities shift, relationships evolve, home can become far away, and even when luck momentarily works out, there’s still that underlying search for something better.”

Following the success of their 2016 debut release, Light Upon The Lake, the pair have relied on their partnership as they hit the road for what, at times, seems like an endless tours across the world.

“Our friendship has kept us going even though so much has happened in the years since we started the band,” Ehrlich said in supplied material.

Whitney has long been a full-fledged band with keyboardist Malcolm Brown, rhythm guitarist Ziyad Asrar, guitarist Print Choteau, bassist Josiah Marshall, and trumpeter Will Miller backing them live.

But Ehrlich and Kakacek are the heart and soul of Whitney.


Julien Ehrlich and Max Kakacek, the heart and soul of Whitney, in support of their late 2019 release Forever Turned Around, will visit Grand Rapids’ Fountain Street Church’s sanctuary for a concert Sunday, Feb. 16. (Supplied/Olivia Bee)

Both in their mid-twenties, living through the usual life’s ups and downs, “they’ve found home through themselves, their romantic relationships, and their friends, (but) there’s an uneasiness that comes from stability — as evidenced by Ehrlich’s vocals on “Valleys (My Love)”: “There’s fire burning in the trees / Maybe life is the way it seems”.

In its 10 songs, Forever Turned Around allows Ehrlich and Kakacek to “skeptically yet masterfully navigate questions of mortality, doubt, love, and friendship in a grander scope than they’ve attempted before. It’s an album about partnership — romantic, familial and communal, but most importantly a love in friendship: the bonds between two best friends and creative partners and the joy and stress that comes with it.”

On “Used To Be Lonely”, Ehrlich sings: ‘Well it made no sense at all / Until you came along.”

Forever Turned Around came together over several sessions across the country and the world tour, with its earliest material written during tour dates in Lisbon, Portugal. Though Ehrlich is Whitney’s lead singing drummer while Kakacek is the lead guitarist, when writing, both transcend their roles to piece together each offering lyrically and compositionally, they state.

“The way it ends up working is one of us comes up with a basic idea for a song and the other person serves as the foil to complicate that idea. We ask, ‘What can we change to make it more interesting?’,” says Kakacek. “A big thing for us is our ability to take criticism. We’re always open to new ideas.”

After a session with producers Bradley Cook (Bon Iver, Hand Habits) and Jonathan Rado (Weyes Blood, Father John Misty) helped color in the arrangements, the album came together when they reunited with original rhythm guitarist Asrar in his basement Chicago studio — the same place where they hashed out much of Light Upon The Lake. With Asrar’s help, songs like “Song For Ty” and “Forever Turned Around” effortlessly came together. There, the band enlisted Chicago musicians Lia Kohl and OHMME’s Macie Stewart to provide strings throughout the record.

While you and I can make our own judgement on the band’s sound and soundness, the New York Times rather appropriately says of the music on Forever Turned Around: “In writing and arranging, they favor natural imagery and sun-dappled brass; their frontman, Julien Ehrlich, applies his weightless falsetto to musings on human connection, often sounding melancholy but never morose.”

You, as I did, can make our own connection by viewing and hearing their music online: A sweet (visually and audibly) video of “Used To Be Lonely”, from the latest release, is available here. A sound only version of the cover of “Far, Far Away” is available on YouTube here.

But seeing them, hearing them, at Fountain Street Church will undoubtedly exceed all expectations.

Tickets are $30 ($35 at the door on the night of the concert). For more information on the show, produced in partnership with WYCE and The Pyramid Scheme, visit here.

Artist deadline approaching for award-winning Lakeshore Art Festival

By Carla Flanders
Lakeshore Art Festival Director


Time is running out to enter the award-winning Lakeshore Art Festival. The deadline for fine art and craft exhibitors to apply is midnight Feb. 4. The Lakeshore Art Festival is taking place Friday, July 3 and Saturday, July 4. Applications can be found online at lakeshoreartfestival.org.

Lakeshore Art Festival has a “blind jury process.” Every year, a group of industry professionals, artists and crafters review each entry, not knowing who the applicant is (i.e. blind jury). Jurors rely solely on the images and body of work provided by the applicants and score each applicant based on standards of quality, uniqueness and handcrafted appeal.

Lakeshore Art Festival continues to rank in the Top 200 Best by the Sunshine Artist Magazine and as one of the Best Art Fairs in America by ArtFairCalendar.com. The Lakeshore Art Festival has also been recognized by the Grand Haven Tribune as People’s Choice Award: #1 Art Festival in West Michigan.

Sponsorship opportunities are available. Businesses interested in promoting their brand while supporting this locally and nationally recognized festival can contact Carla Flanders at artfest@muskegon.org. See what other sponsors are saying.

Joe Grimm, Sales Director at Betten Baker Honda commented, “This is one of our favorite local events to support! Year-after-year we continue to see a return on our investment in the way that customer exposure translates to sales.”

Fine artist and crafter exhibitors that would like more information or want to apply for the 2020 Lakeshore Art Festival can visit lakeshoreartfestival.org.

The Lakeshore Art Festival is a Muskegon Lakeshore Chamber of Commerce Event

The Lakeshore Art Festival is always the first Friday and Saturday in July. The Lakeshore Art Festival features a unique blend of 350+ fine art and craft exhibitors, street performers, specialty food booths, interactive art stations, children’s activities and so much more in beautiful Downtown Muskegon, Michigan. For more information visit lakeshoreartfestival.org

Wyoming Wolves to ‘Howl for Hollern’ at Coaches vs. Cancer night Friday, Jan. 31

The Wyoming High School Wolves boys basketball team, from an early season game. (Curtis Holt)

By WKTV Staff
ken@wktv.org

Wyoming and Forest Hills Eastern high schools are friendly rivals, and one of the reasons is that Wolves athletic director Ted Hollern’s brother Tim is the assistant principal at Forest Hills Eastern.

And when Wyoming hosts its annual Coaches vs. Cancer Community Basketball night on Friday, Jan. 31, with the girls game first at 6 p.m, the night’s cancer awareness events and celebration of cancer survivors will also have a “Hollern” connection.

Set to be called the “Wolf Pack Howl for the Hollern Night”, one of the cancer survivors will be Tim Hollern.

“My brother Tim Hollern has colon cancer,” Ted Hollern said to WKTV. “So we are celebrating him along with all survivors.”

The community basketball night will have some great basketball played — the Wolves boys team (4-1 and 9-1 overall) will be fighting to stay with the leaders of the OK-Conference Gold as they host the Hawks (3-2 and 8-3) at 7:45 p.m. The girls game will have the Wolves (1-4 and 4-8) hosting the Hawks (1-4 and 2-10).

But there will be so much more than just basketball.

There will be an American Cancer Society table set up for information.

The members of the boys varsity squads will be autographing items during the first quarter of the girls game. And the girls team players will be autographing at the end of the girls game. And there will be “Howl for Hollern” t-shirts available for fund-raising, which will be perfect for autographs.

Game-time activities will include all elementary, intermediate and junior high principals, and their students, being honored at the halftime of the boys game. The Wolves Dance team, Pep Band and Honored Choir will also be honored.

There will also be a free raffle, souvenirs, free Wyoming Wolves water bottles, and other door prizes.

Finally, elementary, intermediate and junior high students will gain free entry to the game when accompanied by an adult.

For more information, visit the Wyoming Wolves Facebook page.

Coffin Problem set to perform at GRPM’s Concerts Under the Stars Series

The Coffin Problem performs Feb. 6 at the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Concerts Under the Stars. (Supplied)

By Christie BenderPrepare for a fully immersive experience during the Concerts Under the Stars series at the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM), featuring a night of electrifying rock music performed by Coffin Problem Thursday, Feb. 6. Sit back and experience the wonders of the cosmos alongside mesmerizing music! 

Coffin Problem is a rock band whose music resembles an abrasive, yet familiar sound to the genre. The group consists of four talented musicians including Sean Stearns, songwriter; Billy Bartholomew, bass guitarist; Trevor Goldner, guitarist and Ben Weissenborn, drummer. The group’s songs intrigue audiences with a sound that is bruising and bright, yet cavernous and cathartic. 

“There’s a lot of great vibes through the music scene,” said band member Goldner in a Local Spins article. “There’s a lot of collaboration … It’s been getting better and better year by year. There’s a lot of great folks in the music community in general that make it just fun to be a part of.”

Coffin Problem will be accompanied by a live light show on the planetarium dome by visual artist Sean Kenny. Sean is a psychologist and experimental filmmaker who founded the Picke Fort Film Collective, a Montessori-style cinema lab that specializes in hand-made 16mm film loops of improvised sound performances. Sean’s work has been shown in festivals around the world including the Ann Arbor Film Festival.

Concerts Under the Stars begins at 7:30 p.m., with Museum doors opening at 6:30 p.m. At each concert, performers will play two sets with a short intermission in between. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase. Tickets are $17, with reduced pricing of $12 for GRPM members. Tickets are available at grpm.org/planetarium, by calling 616.929.1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

The 2020 Concerts Under the Stars series will continue on Feb. 27 with the smooth sounds of Indie rock from Seth Beck and will conclude on Mar. 19 with a unique mix of surf, pop rock by Hollywood Makeout. 

Innovation, old and new, at heart of this weekend’s 2020 Michigan International Auto Show

Sports cars, along with SUVs and trucks, are expected to be the big draw at the 2020 Michigan International Auto Show , as they were last year in this photo. (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris
ken@wktv.org

People attend the annual Michigan International Auto Show, running this week at the DeVos Place in downtown Grand Rapids, for many reasons, including to find their next new car or just to get a glimpse of the muscle car or luxury car they’ve always dreamed about.

Many people, however, go to see what’s next in automobile technology or innovation — from space-age rear-view camera systems, to self-driving and self-parking features that almost make the driver a passenger.

But when it comes to innovation and new technology, it could be argued that one must understand, and appreciate, the past to fully embrace the future.

And so it is only logical that the Gilmore Car Museum will be on-hand with a display called “The History of Station Wagons”, which showcases vehicles which may be out of vogue today but were often considered innovative if not technological marvels of their time.

The Gilmore Car Museum’s 1950 Skyline Deluxe Station Wagon at the Michigan International Auto Show. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

“I always think it is very important for people to appreciate the new but also to look back and go ‘Mmmm? How did we get here?’,” Jay Follis, Gilmore Car Museum marketing director, said to WKTV on Jan. 29 at a media preview. “Today we have SUVs and crossovers. We do not think of station wagons. The auto industry has actually said ‘We are not going to produce sedans any more.’ So we decided we are going to bring station wagons to the auto show to tell people where we have been and how we got here.

The Gilmore Car Museum’s Jay Follis, marketing director. (WLTV/K.D. Norris)

“We’ve got a 1919, one of the first station wagons. It was nothing more than to pick you up at the train station. … all the way up to a muscle car that is actually a station wagon (and an Indy 500 pace car). … A lot of the cars we have on display here, and a lot more at the museum, have their own unique innovations.”

The presence of the Gilmore Care Museum is nothing new for the auto show, too.

“We come down to the car show every year, 15 years now,” Follis said. “Our mission is to evoke memories and tell great stories … We are only 50 miles south of Grand Rapids and we are North America’s largest auto museum. So this is a perfect place to introduce people to auto history and the car museum.”

The new cars on display by the Grand Rapids New Car Dealers Association will include spectrum of sedans, vans, hybrids and sports cars, but the field will be dominated by Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs) and trucks, the two biggest sellers, according to the association.

One of the Million Dollar Motorway cars on display at the 2020 Michigan International Auto Show. (WKTV/K.D. Norris)

Among the highlights of this year’s auto show is the latest in automotive technology by Gentex, a Michigan based company which develops and manufactures “custom high-tech electronic products for the automotive, aerospace, and commercial fire protection industries.” Also returning, and always worth drooling over, is the Million Dollar Motorway, featuring luxury brand cars this year valued at $4.5 million collectively.

And, as shown during the media preview, some of the new technologies — and all the luxury brand cars — are nothing short of amazing.

The 22nd Annual Michigan International Auto Show will open to the pubic Thursday, Jan. 30 and run through Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 2 — 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday (to be over in time for the big game, of course).

Thursday, Jan. 30 is also a special First Responders Day, with free admission for active EMS, fire, police, public safety, U.S. Coast Guard and other active military and retired veterans who can show valid I.D., badge or other verification.

Admission is $12 for adults and $5 for children 6-14. Kids 5 and under are admitted free.

There is parking beneath DeVos Place, across the street and nearby but connected by the skywalk. Be aware, though, of “Hamilton: An American Musical” also playing at DeVos. For more information on parking and directions visit here. You can also take the complimentary trolley by parking in the Dash Lot Area 9 (on Seward Avenue) for $2 and hop aboard the Trolley which will be making runs on an 8-minute loop for an hour before the show opens to an hour after the show closes each day.

For more information about the 22nd Annual Michigan International Auto Show visit here.

Knight to perform at 2020 Tulip Time Festival

Gladys Knight is set to perform at the 2020 Tulip Time Festival on May 8. (Supplied)

By WKTV Staff
joanne@wktv.org


Seven-time Grammy Award-winner and Motown sensation Gladys Knight will perform at this year’s Tulip time Festival.

Knight is set to perform May 8 at 7 p.m. at the Central Wesleyan Auditorium, 446 W. 40th St., Holland. Tickets are $90 per person for premium seating and $75 per person for general seating.

Knight has had several number one hits in Pop, Gospel, R&B, and Adult Contemporary including “I Heard It Through the Grapevine,” “If I Were Your Woman,” “Neither One of Us (Wants to be the First to Say Goodbye),” “Best Thing to Ever Happen to Me,” and the number one hit “Midnight Train to Georgia.” In 1995, Knight earned her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and the next year, Gladys Knight and The Pips were inducted into the Rock ’N’ Roll Hall of Fame. Gladys Knight and The Pips were presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame in 1998 and in 2004, Knight received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the annual BET Awards ceremony.

For more information or tickets about the Knight concert or any of the other Tulip Time Festival performances and activities, visit www.tuliptime.com.