There are no cooties at this comedy show.
UCLA’s comedy club Shenanigans is once again hosting its “Men Aren’t Funny” show, kicking off their first performance of the year Friday.
As the season’s palette transitions from vibrant greens to soft reds and yellows, television harvests a bountiful lineup for autumn.
With cozy weather and cool winds approaching, the fall’s fresh releases will surely offer a familiar experience for viewers.
With the film series Queer Rhapsody, there’s no competition – just community.
Organized by the UCLA Film & Television Archive, the series is showcasing over 50 queer-centered feature films, documentaries and short films through Sunday.
This post was updated July 7 at 6:57 p.m.
In the newest season of “The Bear,” almost every second counts.
The third season of FX’s Emmy-winning comedy-drama, which premiered Wednesday, cooks up another round of character studies served alongside the show’s pressure cooker theme of striving for perfection.
The UC Board of Regents Health Services Committee met June 12 to discuss the UC medical system and access to health care.
The meeting came hours after the regents heard public comment and appointed Julio Frenk as the next permanent chancellor of UCLA.
This post was updated June 12 at 9:25 a.m.
27 pro-Palestine protesters were arrested outside Dodd Hall after multiple students and law enforcement officers sustained injuries during Monday protests commemorating Palestinians killed in the Israel-Hamas war.
Roan Pearl is mixing together music, donuts and Cambodian culture in her thesis film.
The fourth-year film and television studentis the writer and director of her short film “Maple Bacon Bar,” which she said tells the story of Sovanna – the daughter of a Cambodian American refugee family that owns a donut shop in Long Beach, California – who struggles to connect with her parents and pursue her artistic ambitions following her older sister’s death.
This post was updated June 1 at 11:36 p.m.
Correction: The original version of this article incorrectly stated that 13 acts and the comedy troupe Company were meant to participate in Spring Sing.
Filled with magic and Mexican culture, “DayDreamer” burns bright.
The musical, which will be performed as a stage reading at Macgowan Hall from May 24 through May 26, delivers a Mexican-inspired fantasy that tells the story of a teenage protagonist with fire powers who ventures on a quest to find her missing mother and defeat an ancient evil who has stolen the sun.
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