Live music on television shows this week include:
Live music on television shows this week include:
v Kings of Leon: Tonight on “Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon” (NBC)
v Ledisi: Wednesday on “Late Show with David Letterman” (CBS)
v 5 Seconds of Summer: Wednesday on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” (ABC)
v Taylor Swift: Thursday on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” (NBC)
v Black Keys: Friday on “Late Show with David Letterman” (CBS)
“The War Comes Home” (9 P.M., cnn): “The War Comes Home” is a moving special that follows two young veterans as they enter a new program to deal with the anguish of post-traumatic stress disorder and other personal hardships. Soledad O’Brien reports.
“Idiotest,” 9 p.m., GSN: The title of this show is a portmanteau. If you don’t know what that is, see the title of this show.
“The singles project” (10 p.m., BRAVO): “The Singles Project” claims to be America’s first “real-time” interactive dating show. It gives viewers a chance to weigh in on — and possibly affect — the action as a group of New York hotties seek love and romance.
“Below Deck” (10 p.m., Bravo): Season 2 begins.
“4th and Loud” (10 p.m., TNT): Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons of the legendary rock band KISS buy an Arena Football League team and run it in this new reality series.
ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
Bible stories told in dinner theater
COLUMBIANA
Dinner-theater performances of the play “Jehovah’s Traveling Trunk Show,” a humorous tour through the great stories of the Bible, will be Wednesday through Friday at Dutch Village Inn, 150 E. state Route 14. It is presented by Ted & Co. productions.
Zeus, a homeless man (played by Ted Swartz), meets piano-playing angel Gabriel (Jeff Raught), who has brought onstage a trunk full of props, costumes and God’s stories. The two characters bring biblical stories to life on stage, using original music.
For information on show times and tickets, go to dasdutchvillage.com/theater or call 330-482-5050, ext. 310. Group rates and overnight packages are available.
History program on Rayen School
YOUNGSTOWN
A free program on the history of the Rayen School will be Saturday from noon to 3 p.m. at the Tyler Mahoning Valley History Center, 325 W. Federal St., downtown.
It will include a viewing of the mural painted by former Rayen High art teacher John Benninger in 1958, which was installed in the school auditorium hallway. The Rayen School was razed in 2007.
A lecture on the contruction of the first Rayen School on Wick Avenue, and the second one, on Benita Avenue, presented by Vincent Shivers, will be in the first-floor gallery at 1:30 p.m.
Harry Mays, president of the Rayen Class of 1958, will discuss the school’s tradition of academic achievement, and Benninger’s project to create the mural, for which the Class of ’58 raised money.
For more information, contact the Mahoning Valley Historical Society at 330-743-2589 or go to mahoninghistory.org.
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