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Michael Oher to Deliver Keynote at Kansas City Prayer Breakfast

On March 2, Baltimore Ravens offensive lineman Michael Oher, subject of the film "The Blind Side," will deliver the keynote address at the Greater Kansas City Area Mayors' Prayer Breakfast.

More at the Kansas City Star.

Movie on Poe Starring John Cusack Gets Distribution Deal

"The Raven," star John Cusack and director James McTeigue's fictional account of Baltimore's own Edgar Allan Poe, is one step closer to release with a new distribution deal announced last week.

Here's the story.

Duff Goldman Talks Move to LA

As "Ace of Cakes" comes to an end, Duff Goldman sat down to chat about what's next for him and Charm City Bakery.

Here's the story.

Baltimore Mag Names its "Best Places to Work"

Baltimore Magazine has released its annual list of the "Best Places to Work" in and around Baltimore.

Here's the list.

Center for Home Movies Co-Founder Launches New Exhibit

It's not often that home movies receive the recognition they deserve, but the co-founder of the Baltimore-based Center for Home Movies has launched a new exhibition for amateur filmmakers.

Here's the story.

Dru Hill's Nokio Takes a Trip Down Memory Lane

Nokio, founder of late-90's chart-topping hip-hop group Dru Hill, reminisces about making the group's second album.

Here's the interview.

Say it Ain't So! Baltimore Tapped as One of America's Rudest Cities.

Our nickname may be "Charm City" but according to Travel + Leisure Magazine, a recent survey ranks the city No. 7 among the nation's rudest cities.

Here's the story.

Local Chef John Shields Expounds on the Virtues of Crabs

No one needs to explain to us why Maryland blue crabs are great, but it's always interesting to hear someone else's take. This time it's Chef John Shields, owner of Gertrude's, who shares his wisdom.

Here's an excerpt:

"So what sorts of foods does a chef personally like to eat? Shields answers that he's a big fan of seafood stews, packed with shrimp, muscles, clams and crabs. And if you ask him if he has any other favorites, he'll add (and energetically at that), 'Crabcakes!'"

Here's the story.

HBO Filming Louis-Dreyfus "Veep" Pilot in Baltimore

Get your "Seinfeld" memorabilia ready: Julia-Louis Dreyfus will be shooting her HBO series "Veep" in Baltimore. The city will stand-in for Washington, D.C.

Here's an excerpt:

"The pilot will star Julia-Louis Dreyfus, who will play a former senator-turned-vice president. The comedy will center on Dreyfus's character finding out that "being vice president of the United States is nothing like she expected and everything everyone warned her about."

Here's the article.

Wham City Founder Dan Deacon to Score Coppola Film

We're not sure who's getting the better part of this collaboration. Dan Deacon, who's been tapped to score the next Francis Ford Coppola film, or Coppola himself.

Here's an excerpt:

"Dan Deacon will be scoring Francis Ford Coppola's next movie, Twixt Now and Sunrise, due out this year and starring Val Kilmer, Bruce Dern, Ben Chaplin, and Elle Fanning."

Here's the item.

Poe No-Show Keeps Them Guessing

The Associated Press ran a story Monday about Baltimore's mysterious "Poe toaster," who last year failed to show for the first time in decades. Will he be back this year, or is the tradition done for good?

From the story:

"Cynthia Pelayo traveled from Chicago to Baltimore to stand overnight in the shivering cold at the gates of a cemetery, waiting for someone who never showed up.

This year, she's willing to do it again.

It's a plot twist Edgar Allan Poe himself would no doubt find rather amusing. The mysterious visitor who left three roses and a half-empty bottle of cognac on Poe's grave on the anniversary of the writer's Jan. 19 birth failed to make his annual visit last year, breaking a ritual that began some six decades ago.

End of story? Hardly. If anything, it only deepened the mystery, attracting more curiosity to a puzzling tradition with tantalizing clues but no real rhyme or reason."

Read the rest here.

Hopkins Starts 2011 With $30M Gift for Engineering School

Johns Hopkins University's engineering department started the New Year with a big bang, accepting a $30 million gift from John C. Malone, chairman of Liberty Media and a Hopkins alum, to build a new research building.

Here's an excerpt:

"The gift will finance construction of a 56,000-square-foot building for studying social and industrial systems and individualized health-care treatment, the university, in Baltimore, said in a statement on its website today. The building will be named after Malone."

Read the story.

Kiplinger Ranks College Park in Top 5 Best Public College Values

University of Maryland College Park offers students a good bang for their buck according to Kiplinger's latest list of the 100 Best Values in Public Colleges. The flagship of Maryland's university system climbed three spots up the list, taking the no. 5 ranking in 2011. Joining College Park in the ranking are St. Mary's College of Maryland, Salisbury University, Towson University, and the University of Maryland Baltimore County.

Here's an excerpt:

"Virtually all of the schools we list raised their price in 2010-11, but the University of Maryland, which maintained a tuition freeze for four straight years, kept this year's total cost increase to less than $600. The first-class flagship continues its march up our rankings, moving from number eight last year to number five in 2010-11."

Read the article.

ABC News Taps Sen. Mikulski as Person of the Week

As Sen. Barbara Mikulski takes her place in the 112th Congress and becomes the longest-serving female Senator in U.S. history, ABC World News honors her achievement by making her its "Person of the Week."

Watch the video:

Baltimore Architecture Firm to Design China's Largest Mall

Design Development Group (DDG), a Baltimore-based architecture firm, has been tapped to design China's largest shopping mall.

According to this Baltimore Sun report:

"Development Design Group, or DDG, is responsible for designing a seven-story, 4 million-square-foot retail and entertainment center that will be the centerpiece of a 9 million-square-foot commercial and cultural district in Tianjin City, which has a population of 22 million.

The retail project is several times larger than the average regional shopping mall in the United States, which contains about 1 million square feet of space. Other elements of the Tianjin City project, to be designed by other architects, include a theater and opera house, a library and three museums."
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