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  • Kacky Walton spoke with Brooke Jerome, Artistic Director and Choreographer of Hot Foot Honeys—the Mid-South’s only professional tap dance company.
  • Kacky Walton spoke with Rick Bartl of Friends of George’s and Irene Crist, the director of the company’s latest production, "Dragged Thru Time: Goldie & BeBe’s Extravagant Adventure."
  • Tennessee Shakespeare Company (TSC) closes its season with George Bernard Shaw's masterpiece "Saint Joan," presented on the Tabor Stage from Friday, April 4, through Saturday, April 19.
  • In a court filing Monday, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement pointed to an "administrative error" for why it deported a man to a prison in El Salvador, even though he has protected legal status in the U.S. We speak with Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, who is a lawyer for the man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia.
  • At the end of April, Ballet Memphis will conclude its 38th season at the Germantown Performing Arts Center (GPAC) with a mix of traditional and modern ballet.
  • Featured: A celebration of a Memphian and fashion icon, and a unique blend of Memphis perspectives on display.
  • A special education leader under George W. Bush says the dismantling of the Department of Education will impact students with disabilities. Stephanie Smith Lee talks about what's at stake for the federal law that helped people with disabilities go from institutionalization to institutions of higher education.
  • The money spent on the Wisconsin Supreme Court election is likely to reach $100 million by the end of Election Day on Tuesday, which would make it the most expensive judicial race in American history. We check in on what's at stake with WUWM's Chuck Quirmbach.
  • Can tariffs be an effective economic tool? Former U.S. Trade Rep. Katherine Tai says yes, when used strategically. Tai explains what President Trump's sweeping new tariffs mean for American consumers.
  • April is National Fair Housing Month for a reason: it honors Martin Luther King, Jr.'s advocacy for decent housing. Just days after his death in 1968, Congress passed the Fair Housing Act, outlawing housing discrimination based on factors like race.
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