Splash Studio, Milwaukee's original painting bar, reopens in its new home, The New Fashioned in the Deer District.
writes the Smithsonian’s senior historian David Ward, who loves poetry
IT’S 1142. THIS WEEKEND, YOU CAN EXPLORE MILWAUKEES THIRD WARD AT ITS WINTER GALLERY NIGHT. JOINING ME NOW IS JORDAN, WITH THE HISTORIC THIRD WARD ASSOCIATION. ALWAYS GREAT TO SEE YOU.
"In a way, there is no 'Major League' without Bob Uecker," Director David S. Ward told me in a phone call. The world became a sadder and much less funny place on Thursday when it was announced that Bob Uecker passed away at the age of 90.
Milwaukee fans could listen to Uecker broadcast ... “He made Harry Doyle the character it was," David S. Ward, the movie's director, said Thursday night. "In a way, he was kind of a narrator ...
The free gallery night is Friday and Saturday in businesses near Broadway and Buffalo St. Barry Stein had ignored symptoms that started appearing in 1995, until he was diagnosed with stage four colorectal cancer. Find out how it can benefit your health both in the short term and long term.
For more than a year, Wisconsin law has required Milwaukee Public Schools to reinstate at least 25 school resource officers by 2025.But we're now more than three weeks into the new
He lived through the 1968 riots and documented his experiences on News4 as part of the station's 40th anniversary coverage. Ward attended HD Woodson High School and the University of Maryland.
The late Bob Uecker's reach extends well beyond Milwaukee Brewers radio broadcasts. Let's run down his pop-culture appearances and famous one-liners.
You'll get access to an ad-free website with a faster photo browser, the chance to claim free tickets to a host of events (including everything from Summerfest to the Milwaukee Film Festival), access to members-only tours, and a host of other benefits.
Bob Uecker, who died Jan. 16, was not only a baseball player, but a comedic actor in roles including the movie "Major League."
Two of Bob Uecker’s claims to fame — baseball and acting — came together brilliantly in one famous line: “Juuuust a bit outside!” Milwaukee fans could listen to Uecker broadcast Brewers games for over a half-century,