A plague of zombies, started by a burger tainted with mad-cow disease, has wiped out civilization. Only a few humans remain, those who have the survival skills to keep one step ahead of the zombies.
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Elizabeth Edwards is scheduled to appear on today's episode of the UNC-TV series North Carolina Bookwatch to discuss her book Resilience. On the episode, which will be shown at 5 p.m., she will discuss the hardships she has had to overcome, including the death of a son in a car accident, her battle with cancer and the scandal surrounding her husband, politician John Edwards.
Water from the Abbotts Creek river basin that was tested after a recent sewage spill does not contain a dangerous amount of bacteria, according to the state.
A donation of land will allow Davidson County Community College to more than double its size.
Mary-Louise Parker is a long shot to win an Emmy award Sunday, according to
A few networks started some of their fall shows this week, and more shows are coming next week.
The sluggish economy hasn't caused a drop in attendance at any air shows that Dan McClung has performed at this year.
If nine is your lucky number, you'll be on cloud nine Wednesday morning.
Want to see a UNC School of the Arts alumnus take on a killer shark? Tune in at 9 p.m. Sunday on SyFy, formerly known as the Sci Fi Channel (channel 42 on Time Warner Cable), for Mega Shark Vs. Giant Octopus, with Cooper Harris in a supporting role.
Another Triad resident is up for a Relly Award.
The Davidson County Jail Committee yesterday crossed two contenders off its list of possible sites for a new jail in Lexington, narrowing the number of possible sites to four.
The rap group 336 Boyz, from High Point, will be featured Thursday night on the BET series 106 & Park. They will be competing for a $5,000 prize. This weekend, they are throwing a party to raise money for their trip to New York, where the show is produced.
The acclaimed play The Sty of the Blind Pig by Phillip Hayes Dean was cited by Time magazine as one of the 10 best plays of 1971.
Poet Kwame Dawes provided the words for HOPE & Wisteria, two back-to-back performance pieces that explore different aspects of the black experience. But his contribution, vital as it is, is only one part of the puzzle. Each production is a multimedia piece using music, images and Dawes' poetry.
Jeff Varner, a Greensboro native, will be Regis for a day on today's Live With Regis and Kelly (9 a.m. on WXII).
For the past 18 years, John Amos has been bringing John Henry Halley to life in his one-man play, Halley's Comet.
More than 400 years after it was first performed, William Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark remains one of the most enduring plays ever written. And in Revenge of the King, it gets a hip-hop makeover by the Black Theatre Troupe from Phoenix, Az.
Various jungle animals scheme to get their hands -- er, paws and claws -- on some delicious fruit in the spritely, kid-friendly play Before the People Came.
Some people might balk at going to a two-hour class on a sunny Saturday afternoon. But no one seemed to be complaining yesterday at Foothills Brewing's Beer School.
Television-show creators are taking an unusual tactic in continuing -- or, at least, wrapping up -- their canceled shows. They're bringing them back in comic-book form.
Images, music and the words of poet Kwame Dawes will be featured in two multimedia productions being shown together as part of this year's National Black Theatre Festival.
Two Wake Forest scientists will appear next week in a program that looks at ways that technology can be used to extend life.
They're On the Moon, Walking Around.
Thousands of Harry Potter fans descended on movie theaters in Winston-Salem on Tuesday night to get their first glimpse of the latest film in the series, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.
The Big Lebowski will be the first film shown in Movies at the Greenspot, a series of free outdoor screenings in downtown Winston-Salem that will start Sunday.
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