MUSIC

The Deadbeat Club S1E5 – Cherry Peel – Of Montreal

This week, The Deadbeat Club grabs their favorite vinyls and sits down in the lounge with their lo-fi album of choice: Cherry Peel by Of Montreal. We breakdown song by song, and look into the Beach Boy-esque aesthetic of this album from barbershop quartet feels to A+ instrumentation in B- songs. A lyrically complicated piece, sit down a listen as we fight for meaning on this episode of The Deadbeat Club podcast.













Doudou Gueye sits next to his teammates during practice for Ball State's men's basketball on Feb. 24 in Worthen Arena.  Gueye came to America to play basketball and get an education. Emma Rogers // DN
BASKETBALL

A greater role: Gueye's game

In August 2012, Ball State men’s basketball center DouDou Gueye came to the United States for the first time. He assumed that the entire country resembled New York City, but that was far from the truth when he first stepped outside of the car and took a glimpse around at his new home of Scottsbluff, Nebraska






NEWS

First weekend of Spring Break forecast

With Spring Break just one day away for students here at Ball State University, how will the forecast play out for those sticking around the state? Weather Forecaster Balint Szalavari has the full forecast here!





ENTERTAINMENT

YouTube TV subscription service revealed, launching this Spring

Amidst the seemingly endless supply of subscription-based television options, YouTube has decided to throw its hat into the ring with the announcement of YouTube TV. Priced at $35 a month, the service – which will launch this Spring – will offer subscribers a number of channels from the four major networks: Fox, ABC, CBS, and NBC. The base package will include three dozen different channels. YouTube TV will offer other benefits to subscribers as well, even with the basic package. These include a cloud-based DVR with unlimited storage, a recommendation system backed by Google AI, and the promise of a reliable and adaptable streaming experience. The service, which will be provided through its own app, is being billed as a “mobile first” service, which means that it will be tailored to users who enjoy watching content on their phones. However, users will still be able to watch TV on their laptops, computers, or on traditional televisions via Chromecast devices. With so many options available for streaming television content, I’m curious whether YouTube’s offering will catch on or get lost in the crowd. We will have to wait to find out when the service launches in the Spring.

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