Arizona Reacts to South Florida Shooting on Twitter
There has been yet another school shooting this year. Here’s what Arizona politicians are saying about it.
There has been yet another school shooting this year. Here’s what Arizona politicians are saying about it.
Oliver Schwab, who’s worked for the Arizona congressman since 2011, is accused of double dipping.
And it was wonderful.
Nothing but love.
Representative Bob Thorpe has repeatedly tried — and failed — to prevent college students from voting in his district.
Call it the Year of the Noodle.
It’s a twisty-turny crime drama complete with stolen money, vengeful mob bosses, and all sorts of strange coincidences and random dialogue digressions
Complicated times call for cheese and crunch.
The film has three sections, and each part seems to assume a different set of genre conventions, a different set of emotional cues.
With Young Mothers, Planned Parenthood, and Anwar Newton.
Here’s what we know so far.
For starters, it’s this weekend.
Spoiler alert: It’s hilarious.
The latest film, the long-delayed The Death Cure, opens with a train heist that suggests, at once, the Mad Max films, the Fast & Furious franchise, and The Wild Bunch by way of Young Guns by way of a Gap ad
When these performers get the chance to exchange dialogue, to react to each other rather than declaim the movie’s themes, Film Stars Don’t Die in Liverpool rouses to life.
Tom Steyer-funded group touts health benefits of measure that would require the state’s utilities to use clean energy to generate 50 percent of electricity needs.
Robert Askin’s comic gem continues Phoenix Theatre’s savvy courting of younger, hipper audiences.
The pitmaster has won awards on the competitive barbecue circuit.
For some reason, Arizona specializes in strange Adopt a Highway sponsorships.
Catching up with the breakthrough country artist.
Phoenix gets another legit soul food joint.