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  • This week's Northwest Arkansas Business Journal Report includes a conversation with Jeff Clapper, the president and CEO of 8th and Walton, about the company's certification as a B Corporation.
  • Becca Martin Brown, the features editor with the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, tries really hard to stick to her self-imposed limit of suggesting five things to do before Monday.
  • We wrap up some of the week's news: crypto provides problems for many, another big bike designation for Bentonville, get those flu shots and Arkansas swimming is ranked.
  • Michael Tilley, with our partner Talk Business and Politics, comes to out studio for his last visit of 2022. He said more goods are moving on the Arkansas River, construction is still robust in the River Valley and a first-in-a-long-time raise made the news.
  • Courtney Lanning said she thought the first Avatar movies was...OK. She said the new sequel, out today, is...much, much better than OK.
  • The duo Brick Fields plays almost every Wednesday night at Morano's in Fayetteville with their band Blues Therapy. On Wednesday Dec. 21, they take their 10th anniversary Blues Therapy concert to the Fayetteville Public Library.
  • KUAF's "The Lunch Hour" celebrates a first birthday tomorrow with another free musical performance in our lobby. We asked Jasper Logan, the creator/director of The Lunch Hour to think about the previous 12 shows and offer us a preview of tomorrow's event.
  • Brenda Blagg, who expertly reported on government and other matters for years, died yesterday.
  • Today's show includes a review of the week's news in Arkansas. Plus, the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians names a delegate to congress. Also, a report on construction activity and river traffic, local art, an upcoming exhibition at the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts and more.
  • On today's show, the Pryor Center Profile highlights the Cate Brothers, and Middle-earth interpretation of a 1,000-year-old poem. Also, Teresa Turk, a Fayetteville City Council member, proposed an amendment to the city's graffiti code. Plus, hours after the committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack made four criminal referrals against former President Donald Trump, the Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney spoke at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.
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