
Stacy Nick
Reporter, Arts and CultureStacy was KUNC's arts and culture reporter from 2015 to 2021.
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Colorado’s top public health officials say the state is in the midst of a third wave of the novel coronavirus. A growing number of counties across the state are entering more restrictive safer-at-home levels.
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In May 1920, while the country and the world were still recovering from the 1918 flu pandemic, the Rialto Theater was built in downtown Loveland. A century later, another pandemic has thwarted anniversary plans and forced budget cuts for the historic venue. But one group has found a way to make the theater's ghosts live on.
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The day Stephen Brackett was to be announced as Colorado’s new Music Ambassador back in March, the state’s stay-at-home order went into effect, and the event was postponed. On Thursday, the Flobots emcee was finally, formally, named to the role.
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Officials say small groups, social distancing and masks will be key to avoiding COVID-19 outbreaks over the holiday.
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It's well-documented that music can be medicinal, improving brain function and lowering stress. But when you're an essential worker during a pandemic, taking time out for music can be tough. KUNC's Stacy Nick met up with a unique orchestra that’s just beginning to find its way back to the stage.
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On Sunday, 5,700 fans will pour into Empower Field at Mile High to watch the Denver Broncos play the Tampa Bay Buccaneers — the largest sanctioned event in Colorado since the pandemic began in early March. Some are wondering why certain organizations get a pass for large gatherings and not others.
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Back in February, KUNC arts reporter Stacy Nick began working on a story on nude fine art models. Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. She’s since returned to the story to see how an industry that thrives on sketching from live models is handling going virtual.
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The 115-year old event is postponed for only the second time in its history.
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Most performing arts venues and theater companies should be starting their fall seasons right now, but things are complicated with COVID-19. Some have gone virtual or outdoors. Others are stepping back onto their regular stages with live shows. But whatever they’re doing, the pandemic is changing the process.
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Author Ibram X. Kendi’s “How To Be An Antiracist” was a pretty obvious choice for this year’s One Book Steamboat selection, said Jennie Lay, adult programs coordinator at Steamboat’s Bud Werner Memorial Library. One look at the library’s checkout list and it was clear that racism, and particularly antiracism, was a big topic on peoples’ minds.