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This weekend and next week in Indian Country, there is an array of events for the community to enjoy.
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We asked and you answered: Who would you want to see play Native Barbie? Native Barbie can be anyone or anything. She is a water protector, model, leader, artist, dancer, teacher, and so much more. All Indigenous women are sacred and beautiful inside and out. 

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The New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA) has recently opened a new exhibit “Fashioning America: Grit to Glamour” that features over 100 designers including Indigenous, Black, immigrant, and women designers. 

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Sinéad O’Connor, Irish singer-songwriter who was known for her iconic shaved head and outspokenness both on and off-stage, died on Wednesday, July 26, at age 56. 

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This past week, the blockbuster movie Barbie was released in theaters, breaking the opening weekend record for 2023 and the first-weekend record for a film directed by a woman, with $337 million in global ticket sales as of Monday. 
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deadCenter Film, Oklahoma’s largest and only Oscar-qualifying film festival in the state, announced last week that its current Features Programmer, Sunrise Tippeconnie (Navajo and Comanche), will take over the role as Director of Programming starting Aug. 1. 

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Summer camps are an iconic tradition that many kids in America get to experience. According to the American Camp Association, nearly 20 million kids go to summer camp each year, and for good reason.
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Los Angeles-based Native American Media Alliance (NAMA) has announced a call for applications for the 3rd annual Native American Unscripted Workshop, which takes place October 16-20, 2023. 

Jen Ferguson
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Soon to be released this coming September is the sequel to Jen Ferguson’s first teen novel The Summer of Bitter and Sweet. In Those Pink Mountain Nights, Ferguson explores the events that take place over the course of a week in a small-town pizzeria. She addresses the endemic violence perpetrated against Native women as well as issues of mental health and sexuality through a teen coming of age story.

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PHOENIX—The Native American Basketball Invitational (NABI) kicked off its 20th year last week with 140 teams from the United States, Canada and New Zealand registered to compete. Each year, more than 1,300 high school student athletes come to compete in the NABI to play more than 400 games in five days throughout the Phoenix Valley.