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Commentary: They Asked For Red For Ed

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Commentary: They Asked For Red For Ed

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – In a few days, thousands of educators, parents, and students will flock to the Statehouse.

That has self-appointed education reform advocates all in a tizzy.

The occasion is Red for Ed Day on Nov. 19. That’s when teachers, administrators, parents and students from all around the state plan to show up at the Statehouse to lobby for more money for the state’s schools. So many teachers and students are planning to attend that some schools plan to close on that day.

Some members of the education reform crowd think this is just horrible.

Even though they’ve applauded students and educators from charter schools or private schools accepting vouchers who went to the Statehouse to lobby, they say, somehow, that it’s wrong for public-school teachers, parents and students to do the same.

This is an argument for more civics education in all schools – and maybe remedial training for adults, too.

Last time I checked, the First Amendment’s guarantee of the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances didn’t have an asterisk by it. It doesn’t say that self-proclaimed education reformer were the only ones who got to go to the Statehouse to ask for more money.

But that smokescreen is not what has the education reformers so upset about Red for Ed Day.

No, what has them worried is that people have begun to figure out that none of their so-called reforms have worked.

Worse – from the point of view of the “reformers,” that is – people also have begun to realize who to hold accountable for these failures.

Once upon a time, “accountability” was a word the education reform crowd loved. The reformers said they wanted to hold schools and educators accountable. It was the state’s responsibility to make sure that every child had a quality education and, thus, it was the state’s responsibility to hold every – every! – school accountable for delivering that education.

Another word they used almost like punctuation was “empowerment.” They said they wanted to “empower” parents. “Empower” students. “Empower” citizens who cared about education.

These days, they don’t use those words as often.

That’s because it’s now clear that they didn’t mean what they said.

If they had meant it, they wouldn’t have removed charter and voucher schools and students from the accountability measures imposed on traditional public schools. Any time anyone casts an inquiring eye on how charter schools are performing or whether the students receiving vouchers are doing better in private schools than public, the reformers pull another curtain closed or throw up another barricade.

Accountability, it seems, is for other people.

Not for them.

Their definition of “empowerment” is similarly selective.

They love it when parents take an active role in their children’s educations – unless, that is, that active role contradicts some of their cherished but largely ineffective notions of how schools should be run.

A few years ago, for example, parents around the state were so upset about the state of Indiana schools that they elected a traditional public-school educator, Glenda Ritz, to be the state superintendent of public instruction.

The reformers were so thrilled to hear the parents’ voices in that election that they stripped parents of the right to choose the state’s schools chief.

Then, when the person they recruited to defeat Ritz, current Superintendent Jennifer McCormick, began to say that the reformers’ plans to improve Indiana schools belonged in the science fiction section of the bookstore and also said she wouldn’t run again, they accelerated the plan to make her job appointed rather than elected.

That’s some parental empowerment, isn’t it?

There’s a cliché that says that some people play checkers while others, those who think farther ahead, play chess. These education reformers seem to be confused by tic-tac-toe.

The reason so many students, parents, and teachers are coming to the Statehouse on Nov. 19 is that the reformers gave them no place else to go.

Every move the reformers have made has funneled all the anger and frustration surrounding the state’s schools right back at them.

They might as well have sent an invitation.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is the director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Award-Winning Hollywood Actress Rutina Wesley To Discuss Career

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The University of Southern Indiana Performing Arts Department and the College of Liberal Arts will welcome award-winning actress Rutina Wesley back to the city of Evansville for the 2019 Community of Scholars Lecture at 7p.m. Monday, December 2, in the USI Performance Center on campus. A conversation with Wesley about her acting career will be followed with a question and answer session. This event is free and open to the public.

Wesley was born and raised in Las Vegas, Nevada, and followed in the footsteps of her parents, who were also performers. She studied dance at Simba Studios and the West Las Vegas Arts Center before attending the University of Evansville (UE), where she earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre Performance in 2001. Following UE, Wesley attended Julliard School in New York City. She spent a summer at London’s Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where she played the titular role in Romeo and Juliet before graduating Julliard in 2005.

Since then, Wesley has appeared in numerous stage, television, and film roles including David Hare’s Broadway play The Vertical Hour, The Public Theater production of In Darfur, starring roles in the film How She Move and the television series True Blood, and recurring roles in the shows Hannibal and Arrow. In 2009, Wesley was among the winners of the Satellite Award for “Best Cast” for the series True Blood.

Currently, Wesley stars in the Oprah Winfrey Network drama series Queen Sugar which premiered in 2016 and began its fourth season in 2019. The series follows the lives and loves of three siblings in rural Louisiana after the death of their father leaves them with a failing, 800-acre sugarcane farm. Hailed for being the first television series to have women direct every episode of the series, Queen Sugar has storylines that tackle contemporary issues of culture, class, and gender and, more specifically, concerns of the African American community. Wesley has been nominated for three awards and won the 2017 Black Reel Award for “Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series” for her role in Queen Sugar.

For more information about this year’s Community of Scholars event, contact Eric Altheide, Associate Professor of Theatre, at eaaltheide@usi.edu or 812-464-1750.

OUR BEST ENTERTAINMENT By Jim Redwine

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OUR BEST ENTERTAINMENT

by Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

www.jamesmredwine.com

Many of you have read JUDGE LYNCH!, the historical novel Peg and I wrote about the lynchings of four Black men on the campus of the Posey County, Indiana courthouse in 1878. And several of you even participated in the making of our short movie about the murders. That was our first effort at movie making and probably yours too.

To those of you who volunteered to endure the cold, rain and tedium of my directorial debut, thank you! Please do not forget the compensation you received; wasn’t Shawnna Rigsby’s bar-b-cue good? You might be interested in some of the behind scenes manipulation I engaged in to get my friends to commit suicide, get shot, get chased by night riders on horseback and to even get lynched.

For example, early on I called our sons’ one-time boxing teammate and our good friend, Danny Thomas, and said, “Danny, I need some Black men to shoot and lynch on camera. Would you, your family and friends care to do that?” Danny did not hesitate. Then there was our neighbor, Chuck Minnette, who was minding his own business when I told him he surely must feel depressed and possibly even suicidal. Chuck thought I was kidding until we filmed his suicide scene. The scene involved Chuck firing a pistol with a blank cartridge near his head while my wife, Peg, laid on her back on the floor puffing on a cigar and blowing the smoke up toward Chuck’s face.

Chris Greathouse was called upon to have his neck broken by Danny Thomas and several “soiled doves” played their parts with such enthusiasm I will leave them unnamed. Jerry King generously offered his amazing Pioneer Village for several scenes and Jerry and his wife, Marsha, even donned their costumes of General and Mrs. Hovey. Dan Funk, whose father was a minister, played his preacher part convincingly. Dr. Bill Etherton and his wife, Judy, attended Dan’s frontier church and Dr. Bill along with Nurse Bonnie Minnette attended to “injured” patients.  Through it all the only person who actually knew anything about video cameras, Rodney Fetcher, managed to get the whole nineteen-minute movie filmed and, along with Peg, edited. My eldest brother, C.E. Redwine, is a professional musician and he wrote and performed a marvelous score for the film. There were numerous other budding Academy Award winners who contributed time, talent, tips, and immense patience; I appreciate you all!

Now, Gentle Reader, you may have noticed that I had little to do with the finished product. But let me suggest the same is often true in other movies where those who get the acclaim may not be those who do the real work. In my defense, I just wish to state, “Hey, I wrote the book!”

Anyway, our little movie does tell the horrific story of murdered African Americans by the powerful white community of Posey County, Indiana in 1878 and brings to light the long hidden tragedy. I am proud of our effort and will always treasure the experience. However, it is not JUDGE LYNCH! that is impetuous for this week’s column but Peg’s and my attempt to research the making of a full-length movie about the infamous Osage Reign of Terror that occurred in Osage County, Oklahoma where I was born.

Author David Grann has written an excellent exposé of the murders of numerous Native Americans of the Osage tribe in Osage County, Oklahoma in the 1920s and ’30s. Peg and I were at our cabin in Osage County when the casting call came out for extras for the Martin Scorsese directed film that will star Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro. While growing up in Pawhuska, the county seat, I often heard whispered rumors of these crimes. Kudos to Grann, Scorsese, DiCaprio and De Niro for having the courage to lift the veil from this great evil.

In preparation for this column, Peg and I did go to the Osage County Fairgrounds on Sunday, November 10, 2019, for the advertised casting call for movie extras. Our purpose was to gain information about the making of the movie that we could include in this column. We were met by several extremely polite and pleasant people who were not authorized to answer our questions but they did suggest we might want to experience the casting call process from the inside by filling out applications ourselves. We did so and had an interesting and fun time. Of course, the staff at the door, the numerous tables, and chairs, the clear directional signs and the four enclaves of people photographing, taking prospective extras’ measurements and interviewing the hundreds of hopeful locals were just a little different than the process I used for getting actors for JUDGE LYNCH!. My method was pretty much, “You are my friend. I need you to lynch someone (or be lynched), shoot someone (or be shot) or stand out in the cold rain and try to fathom my directions.”

In my opinion, Peg is a possible Barbara Stanwyck double and after a beer or two, I can find a remarkable resemblance between myself and Robert Redford. Of course, we both have movie experience. Therefore, we are excited and waiting for the phone to be discovered. Hey, it happened to Norma Jeane Mortenson didn’t it? And while you may not know it, before Gone With The Wind, Clark Gable worked as an oilfield roustabout in Barnsdall, Osage County, Oklahoma which is the nearest town to our cabin. Can you say kismet? Further, since I am an experienced fellow director, maybe Marty will want another perspective for a scene or two. Next week we may dig a little deeper into the film noir that has Osage County, Oklahoma buzzing.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

Or “Like” us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting

10 Local Individuals Will Be Presented With Bicentennial Medals By IU At A Ceremony

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 Mayor Winnecke has proclaimed Sunday, November 17 “IU Day” in Evansville in honor of Indiana University’s bicentennial celebration.  In conjunction with an opening at the Evansville Museum of an IU Faculty Art Show, 10 local individuals will be presented with Bicentennial Medals by IU at a ceremony to be held at the Museum at 2:00 p.m.  The medal recipients are:

Gayle Begley, B.A., 1950

Mark Browning, M.D., 1977

Joan Finch, M.S., 1965

Kevin Koch, M.B.A., 1996

Carolyn McClintock, B.S., 1974

Mattie Miller, M.S., 1965

Ira Neal, M.S., 1964

Lee Veazey, M.M., 2006; J.D., 2008

Charles Whobrey, A.G.S., 1980

James Wittman, B.S., 1988

 

Evansville Rescue Mission to Host Eighth Annual Drumstick Dash Today To Benefit Its 97th Annual Gobbler Gathering

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Evansville Rescue Mission to Host Eighth Annual Drumstick Dash to Benefit its 97th Annual Gobbler Gathering

The Evansville Rescue Mission’s seventh annual Drumstick Dash presented by TWO MEN AND A TRUCK and TOWNSQUARE MEDIA will kick off Saturday, November 16, 2019 at 8 a.m. It will consist of either an 8K or a 5K mile run/walk.

The Evansville Rescue Mission is tremendously excited to have its eighth annual Drumstick Dash to start and finish at the C.K. Newsome Community Center (100 East Walnut Street, Evansville, IN 47713).  Runners and walkers will have the opportunity to run around historic Bosse Field, Garvin Park for the Drumstick Dash’s 8K and 5K routes, with 8K participants being able to briefly run or walk on the Pigeon Creek Greenway.

The Rescue Mission is expecting to field nearly 1,000 runners and walkers for the eighth annual Drumstick Dash where participants will have a chance to win a free frozen turkey and a commemorative Drumstick Dash medal and to choose from a variety of food court options.

Proceeds of the Drumstick Dash will offset the Rescue Mission’s annual Gobbler Gathering, which will be held ten days later on Tuesday, November 26th at the Old National Events Plaza (715 E. Locust St., Evansville, IN 47708) where more than 2,300 Tri-State families will be able to receive a Thanksgiving food basket filled with enough food to last through Thanksgiving.

The Drumstick Dash is extremely grateful for the following sponsors who have entrusted the Evansville Rescue Mission to feed literally thousands of Tri-State families through the Gobbler Gathering: TWO MEN AND A TRUCK, Old National Events Plaza, Atlas World Group, TRH Mortgage, Phil Stoll Construction,  Packaging Corporation of America The Hills Church, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, FC Tucker-Briscoe, Berry Global, Deaconess Hospital, Head’s Construction, Solarbron, Old National Bank, Shoe Carnival, Saint Vincent Evansville, 517 Fitness Brewer Direct, Inc., and Zycor Pest Control.

For additional information on the Evansville Rescue Mission’s eighth annual Drumstick Dash, please contact Kevin Cagle at (812)647-7905 or kevin.cagle@ermstaff.org.

 

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Customer Services Representative- Work from home
Conduent 2.8/5 rating   4,570 reviews  – United States
To apply, please send your resume to dilip.gunasekaran@conduent.com. Whether it’s digital payments, claims processing, benefit administration, automated tolling…
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RECEPTIONIST
Berry Global, Inc 3.4/5 rating   1,243 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Associate degree in business administration or related field is preferred. Berry Global Berry Global, headquartered in Evansville, Indiana, is committed to its…
Nov 12
Academic Counselor, University Division/Student Support Services – A19043A1
University of Southern Indiana 4.3/5 rating   107 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$39,030 a year
Excellent oral and written communication skills and effective listening skills, suitable to working one-and-one with or in small groups of various individuals,…
Nov 6
Census Field Manager, AD-0301-00, Census-EXT-YR
US Department of Commerce 4.1/5 rating   974 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$19 an hour
0301 Miscellaneous Administration And Program. Eligibility for benefits depends on the type of position you hold and whether your position is full-time, part…
Nov 7
Utilization Management Nurse Consultant
AETNA 3.7/5 rating   4,844 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Utilizes clinical experience and skills in a collaborative process to assess, plan, implement, coordinate, monitor and evaluate options to facilitate…
Nov 7
CASA Volunteer Coordinator
CASA of Midwest Kentucky, Inc. – Henderson, KY
This position requires a minimum of a Bachelor’s Degree in Human Services or related field, with prior experience in the administration of volunteers, non…
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Nov 12
Program Manager, Community Development
Economic Development Coalition of Southwest Indiana – Evansville, IN
CDBG grant administration experience preferred but not required. 2+ years of experience in grant writing, project development, project management, business…
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Nov 8
Credentialing Supervisor
The US Oncology Network 3.3/5 rating   130 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
Contract Administration, Credentialing, Explanation of Benefits (EOB). We extend an extremely competitive offering of benefits to employees, including Medical…
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Nov 12
HR Manager, Support Services
Professional Transportation, Inc. 2.5/5 rating   524 reviews  – Evansville, IN
PTI dispatchers match up drivers with these trips and the drivers safely transport the crews to their destinations….
Nov 11
Project Coordinator
MetroNet 3.3/5 rating   88 reviews  – Evansville, IN
401(k) company match and 100% vested from the day you are eligible to begin contributing to the plan. MetroNet has an immediate opening for an energetic and…
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Nov 6
HUMAN RESOURCES GENERALIST – Evansville Operations
Berry Global, Inc 3.4/5 rating   1,243 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Bachelor’s degree in Human Resources, Business Administration, or related field. Employee relations, onboarding, policy implementation, recruitment, affirmative…
Nov 9
Customer Specialist – Home Medical Equipment
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   443 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Customer Specialist position at Home Medical Administration office. DHS · Home Medical Equipment – MT. Job duties include accurate follow up to patient accounts…
Nov 7
Assistant or Associate Professor of Public Relations, College of Liberal Arts – F19038F1
University of Southern Indiana 4.3/5 rating   107 reviews  – Evansville, IN
The University of Southern Indiana invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant or Associate Professor to teach and engage in scholarship in the area of…
Nov 12
Practice Manager – Rheumatology, Weight Loss, and Float Pool
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   443 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Knowledge of health care administration as well as organizational policies and procedures sufficient to manage, plan, direct and coordinate operation of a…
Nov 7
BUSINESS ANALYTICS MANAGER
Berry Global, Inc 3.4/5 rating   1,243 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Bachelors Degree in business administration or related field. Berry Global Berry Global, headquartered in Evansville, Indiana, is committed to its mission of …
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Substance Abuse Program Director
Henderson County Detention Center 3.1/5 rating   18 reviews  – Henderson, KY
Promote communications and the proper flow of relevant information between administration, staff and prisoner/ client….
Nov 10
Developer (IT), II – ITS Paramount – Full Time – Days
ProMedica 3.7/5 rating   367 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Experience with enterprise web development, web security, and web site administration. The organization has more than 56,000 employees, 13 hospitals, 2,100+…
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Assistant Manager – Req# GHAM19-011
Easterseals Rehabilitation Center Evansville 4.7/5 rating   3 reviews  – Mount Vernon, IN
This position consist of working with adults with disabilities in a group home setting with personal care, medication administration, and medical procedures….
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Nov 8
Systems Administrator, Information Technology – A19044A1
University of Southern Indiana 4.3/5 rating   107 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Virtualized server platform administration. Storage Area Networks (SANs) administration. Microsoft Windows Server or Linux servers administration….
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Spectrum Business Account Executives Manager
Spectrum 3.5/5 rating   13,391 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Coaches Account Executives on how to train referral agents to make the best use of the referral program. The SpectrumBusiness Account Executives Manager is…
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Credentialing and Contraction Specialist
HSC Medical Billing & Consulting LLC – Evansville, IN
2 to 4 years of accounts receivable and/or office clerical administrationexperience. HSC Medical Billing & Consulting LLC is currently seeking a Credentialing…
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Special Procedures Rad Tech
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   443 reviews  – Newburgh, IN
IV administration of contrast is required. We are looking for compassionate, caring people to join our great staff of health care providers….
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Property Manager
Confidential – Evansville, IN
$45,000 – $50,000 a year
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Eagles advance to GLVC Tournament Championship Game Etienne sets USI record for shutouts

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer advances to the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championship game after posting a 3-0 shutout of Rockhurst University Friday morning at Woehrle Athletics Complex in Jeffersonville, Indiana. The seventh-seeded Screaming Eagles go to 12-6-1 overall, while third-seeded Rockhurst bows out of the league tournament at 14-5-0.

The Eagles will be playing in the GLVC Tournament championship game for the first time program history at 11 a.m. (CST) Sunday in Jeffersonville. USI will play the winner of top-seeded McKendree University (14-3-2) and fifth-seeded Bellarmine University (12-4-3). The full GLVC Tournament information can be found on GLVCsports.com.

USI got on the scoreboard early when junior forward Maggie Winter put the Eagles up 1-0 on a goal at 17:48. The goal was Winter’s seventh of the season, tying her for the team lead with sophomore forward Katlyn Andres, and was assisted on by senior defender Loryn Willis.

The 1-0 lead would hold through the intermission before Andres made the score 2-0 with her eighth goal of the season to regain the team lead at 67:11 of the second half. Junior forward Audrey Andrzejewski completed the scoring with the third goal of the game at 73:08 off a cross by Andres.

USI freshman goalkeeper Maya Etienne made the three goals stand up as she posted her single-season record 10th shutout of the season. She breaks the record held by Angie Gries (9) that has stood since the 1998 season. Etienne finished the match by recording nine saves against the 18 total shots. .

NICKELODEON’S JOJO SIWA D.R.E.A.M. THE TOUR WILL COME TO FORD CENTER APRIL 25

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NICKELODEON’S JOJO SIWA D.R.E.A.M. THE TOUR ADDS 50 NEW DATES IN 2020!

FORD CENTER – APRIL 25
JoJo’s D.R.E.A.M. Concert Special to Premiere Friday, Nov. 22, at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT) Tickets On Sale to General Public Friday, Nov. 22, at 12:00 p.m. Local Time Nickelodeon’s JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour Produced by AEG Presents

Nickelodeon star, YouTube sensation and 2019’s hottest breakthrough pop artist JoJo Siwa is adding 50 new dates across North America to her wildly popular concert: Nickelodeon’s JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour, bringing the total number of shows to 148. 

A special Siwanatorz pre-sale goes live on Monday, Nov. 18, at 12 p.m. local time, followed by an American Express pre-sale on Tuesday, Nov. 19, at 12 p.m. local time. A limited number of exclusive VIP Packages will be available. These exclusive offers ca 

include an amazing selection of tickets, Meet & Greets with JoJo Siwa, autographed memorabilia, custom merchandise and much more. General public on-sale begins Friday, Nov. 22, at 12 p.m. local time. Tickets will be available at JoJoDreamTour.com, Ford Center Ticket Office and Ticketmaster.com. 

Siwa will donate $1 for every ticket sold to Dancers Against Cancer (DAC). The foundation strives to create an alliance in the dance community by providing financial support and inspiration to dance educators, choreographers, dancers and their family members who have been impacted by cancer. For more information on Dancers Against Cancer (DAC) go to imadanceragainstcancer.org. 

On Friday, Nov. 22, at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT), Nickelodeon premieres JoJo’s D.R.E.A.M. Concert television special where fans at home can see live concert performances from the D.R.E.A.M. Tour, fan interviews, candid moments of Siwa talking about her favorite parts of the tour and the inspirations behind some of her favorite songs. 

Along the tour route, Siwa will take the stage at Nickelodeon SlimeFest, a two-day family-friendly music festival, on Saturday, March 21, and Sunday, March 22, at the Forum in Inglewood, Calif. The event will also feature performances by Why Don’t We, French Montana and Blanco Brown, along with one-of-a-kind experiences for the entire family featuring Nickelodeon’s signature green slime. Additional activations will include: Slime Central, where 20 people can get slimed simultaneously; a giant slime pit in front of the stage; a silent Slime Disco and more. 

JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour is produced by Nickelodeon and AEG Presents and sponsored by Hairdorables®. Nickelodeon’s JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour remains one of the hottest tickets of the year. Siwa’s inaugural run ranked at #5 on the Hot Tours Chart as reported by Billboard, with 80 of the 96 dates sold out as the tour touched down in seven countries on three continents. 

Nickelodeon’s JoJo Siwa D.R.E.A.M. The Tour is a part of the Viacom Live Experiential portfolio. With 25 events and growing, Viacom Live delivers experiences that drive culture and conversation, allowing fans to connect with the most influential brands globally. 

Nickelodeon superstar JoJoSiwa is a YouTube sensation, pop star, dancer, entrepreneur, social media influencer and The New York Times bestselling author. Siwa connects with her fans through many channels: via social media she has over 10.4 million subscribers with over 2.6 billion views on YouTube, she has over 8.9 million followers on Instagram, over 439,000 Twitter 

followers, over 17.3 million followers on TikTok(formerly Musical.ly), and over 596,000 followers on Facebook; through her SIWANATORZ club, which stands against negativity and bullying; through her global reach of consumer products including her signature bows, accessories, apparel, arts and crafts, cosmetics, home goods and party supplies; and with her hugely popular singles, “Boomerang,” which has been viewed over 782 million times and RIAA certified platinum, “Kid in a Candy Store,” which is RIAA certified gold, “Hold The Drama”, and “D.R.E.A.M”. 

Siwa recently won her third Kids’ Choice Award for “Favorite Social Music Star.” Her previous Choice Awards include “Favorite Viral Music Artist” in 2017 and “Favorite Musical YouTube Creator” in 2018. She also performed at Kids’ Choice Mexico 2018. In November 2018, Siwa released her first EP, D.R.E.A.M. The Music, featuring four new songs: “D.R.E.A.M,” “My Story,” “Everyday Popstars” and “Only Getting Better.” The music video for “D.R.E.A.M.” was released on Siwa’s YouTube channel and to date has garnered over 76 million views. Due to the success of D.R.E.A.M. The Music, Siwa released a second EP, Celebrate, in April featuring an additional four new songs: “It’s Time To Celebrate,” “#1U,” “Worldwide Party,” and “Bop!” The accompanying music videos for “Bop!” and “It’s Time To Celebrate” have accumulated over 12 million views and 7.7 million views respectively on her YouTube channel. 

In 2016, Nickelodeon and Siwa entered an exclusive licensing partnership to develop a line of consumer products inspired by Siwa. Categories span toys, apparel, accessories, consumer electronics, Halloween costumes and more. To date, over 50 million 

JoJo Bows have been sold. Siwa’s consumer products are available internationally, including the UK, Canada, Australia and Mexico. 

Siwa launched her first animated shorts series, The JoJo & BowBow Show Show starring Siwa and her furry best friend BowBow. She also worked alongside Nick Cannon in Nickelodeon’s hit competition series Lip Sync Battle Shorties. She has also appeared on various Nickelodeon live-action series including School of Rock and The Thundermans. Siwa performed a medley of hits at Nickelodeon’s 2018 Kids’ Choice Awards, including her platinum smash “Boomerang.” 

ADOPT A PET

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Diamond is an 11-year-old female Chihuahua mix. Her owner passed away and no family members could take her, so now she finds herself in a shelter in need of a new home. November is Adopt a Senior Pet Month, and so many older pets like Diamond need homes without all that “puppy drama!” Her adoption fee is $130, or free to any senior citizen over the age of 70 who would like a companion. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

ADOPT A PET

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Velveteen is a female Dutch rabbit. She was dropped off as a stray at the end of October, and never reclaimed. She is estimated to be about a year old. Her caregivers say that once she’s used to you, she is very easy to pick up and hold! Velveteen’s adoption fee is $50 and includes her spay & microchip. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!