The trees are budding and there is a definite change in the air. This change in season only goes to show that a lot of people busy in the studios and at many projects. Of course this is your source to see what is new.

New, on the Game Show Network, (GSN) is a revival of an old game show "I've Got a Secret". This all gay panes featuring, Frank DeCaro from Sirius Satellite Radio, Suzanne Westenhoefer, lesbian, comedian, Jermaine Taylor, comedian and pro dancer and out former pro baseball Billy Bean the questions of the secret panelists are hilarious! The shows host is Bil Dwyer a Chicago native.

The gist of the show is for each game, the special guest whispers their secret to Dwyer while it is also shown to the studio and at-home audience. Each panelist puts the guest through the ringer for 40 seconds, asking a series of questions in order to figure out their secret. If they are unsuccessful, the next panelist gets their shot at cross-examining. This is truly the best game show I have seen in years!

ANDY WARHOL/SUPERNOVA at the Museum of Contemporary Art
In the age of mass media, American culture has displayed an unequaled fascination with both celebrities and disasters. Andy Warhol was one of the first American artists to investigate this cultural obsession, in a body of silkscreen paintings created in the mid-1960s that drew their source materials from the magazines, films, and newspapers of American postwar consumer culture..

Organized by the Walker Art Center and curated by Douglas Fogle, ANDY WARHOL/ SUPERNOVA will bring together more than 25 examples of the artist's early silkscreen paintings, juxtaposing his iconic serial images of such figures as Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, and Elvis Presley with the artist's evocative and at times disturbing appropriations of newspaper images of car crashes, electric chairs, and other horrifying manifestations of disaster. Focusing exclusively on the period between 1962 and 1964, the exhibition takes as its starting point the moment in Warhol's career when he shifted his practice from the hand painted to the mechanical reproduction of the photo silkscreen process. The exhibition is accompanied by Warhol's "Screen Tests," source materials, films of Warhol's "superstars," the film "Elvis at Ferus," documenting his show at the Ferus Gallery, and a fully illustrated catalogue.

On the musical front, Seroya, the musical moniker of Sally Manidi, has released her second album entitled "Eat the Flowers". This CD features a raw and hard edged expression of her musical sensibilities, reflecting on her personal experiences surviving the Iran/Iraq war and adjusting to a new culture upon immigrating to the USA.

With the production collaboration of Don Bosse, the two formed an alliance on this release, giving way to a humanistic yet abstract approach to sonic treatments, playing with various effects and time warping manipulations. The result is a hypnotic, subliminally dark, moody and sensual presentation of well crafted electronica.