On Christmas morning, after coffee and monkey bread with my wife Kristen and friend Ryan Blaske, we bundled up, grabbed a couple of film cameras, and set out for a snowy stroll down Prairie Avenue.
Read MoreLast night, South Bend City Church released a new film called A South Bend Christmas Eve. The 38-minute film intends to offer a sense of communal participation on Christmas Eve since the church has not gathered indoors since March.
Read MoreSouth Bend should control its own narrative. If we don’t tell a story, we are living in someone else’s. In Midwest Futures, author Phil Christman sketches a history of our region, its frontiers and utopias, in the hopes that we can settle the coming decades just a bit better.
Read MoreAround 4:00 in the afternoon on the day we filmed Ms. Adeline—two hours after the shop was supposed to close—things slowed down enough for us to ask Ms. Adeline some questions about her life, faith, and business.
Read MoreToday, we’re releasing a selection of behind the scenes photographs from our short film Ms. Adeline, and for West.SB members, 28 Minutes with Ms. Adeline, an extended interview with a wealth of memories and wisdom, as well as some of the film's most memorable quotes.
Read MoreSouth Bend lost 50,000 people in 50 years and lived to tell the story. Today, we’re a city of 100,000 people, including many who chose to stay and new immigrants who moved here. How?
Read MoreNimoy Vaidya is a b-boy, originally from Kathmandu, Nepal, who moved to the U.S. in 2015. He breakdances as an avenue for personal growth and a way to help kids in South Bend.
Read MoreWhile many Americans spend this pandemic at home, crews of essential workers continue to set their alarms and take care of South Bend's parks and public spaces. Today, Jessica Spoor takes us around town to meet a few on the job.
Read MoreMs. Adeline Wigfall-Jones has been cutting hair at 1131 West Washington Street in South Bend since 1976. She is 91 years old. We spent a typical Saturday, from 6:57 am to 4:49 pm, at the barbershop with Ms. Adeline and asked: “when are you going to stop?”
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