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  • Cando Hardware is not your typical hardware store. Located in Gravette, Arkansas, the shop brings a unique flair to the with unique themes and merchandise. Sophia Nourani speaks with staff member Micheal Kelly about Cando and their eccentric shopping experience.
  • Musician Eric Spahn recently came into the Firmin-Garner Performance Studio to discuss the Writer’s Guild at Meteor Guitar Gallery in Springdale. This is an excerpt of that interview, along with Spahn's performance of his song "Nightcrawler".
  • You might be starting to panic that you haven’t started working on your costume. Have no fear. The folks at Two Men and a Truck have you covered.
  • On today's show, the team at Ozarks at Large has brought a collection of stories to help you prepare for Halloween.
  • The Arkansas Country Blues and String Band Festival is today through Sunday in Springdale.
  • For most of the year, Kimberly Hutcheson runs a quiet business. She owns and operates Experience Escape Rooms in Cave Springs, but during the month of October, her business expands to the structure next door: The Asylum.
  • For University of Arkansas alum Tevin Wooten, tracking weather and climate is a passion. Wooten, a meteorologist, works for NBC Boston and spent four years in front of the camera at The Weather Channel.
  • The Bentonville Public Library is preparing to show off its multi-million dollar expansion. After being closed for weeks, Monday the library will welcome patrons again for a soft opening and there will be an official ribbon cutting Wednesday.
  • April Wallace of the "Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette" joins Ozarks at Large's Kyle Kellams to suggest local happenings this weekend, like themed movie nights at Puritan Coffee and Walton Arts Center, the "Goblin Crawl" at Ozark Beer Company, a pet costume contest at Magnolia Place in Rogers and more.
  • Researchers at the University of Missouri - Columbia have documented historical evidence of widespread and recurring wildfires in the Ozarks by examining pine stumps and snags, some over 500 years old. The findings have been assembled into a multimedia presentation titled, “Fire in the Ozarks: Burning by humans has shaped the landscape,” published by the Oak Woodlands & Forests Fire Consortium and hosted by ArcGIS StoryMaps.
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