Matt and Tt break down the Red Dead Redemption bundle, Telltale Games closing their doors, and a recent protest on eSports.
Reaching the halfway point of the fall season, Ball State athletic teams are entering conference competition in hopes to claim a MAC title. Here’s what's going on this weekend in the the world of Cardinals sports.
After being remiss from Muncie’s landscape for more than 50 years, the statue of Charlie Willard has finally returned to Muncie by Delaware County’s very own “Indiana Jones.”
These past few weeks I hadn’t realized September was Hispanic Heritage Month. I felt awful, having forgotten this month was the month to celebrate my culture.
Senior leadership helps Cardinals' season success.
Delta center overcomes cerebral palsy as he leads his team through his final season.
When musicians sit down to play, it’s not uncommon for a metronome to help set a pace for the performance. But the metronomes of today are often housed in digital apps.
Ball State Football came out of its first non-conference game with confidence through the roof. The Cardinals had floored Central Connecticut State, set a handful of school records and were ready to face a highly ranked Notre Dame squad in South Bend.
Weather Forecaster Hannah Stutler has your update on a beautiful weekend.
From old hunting grounds to lost female pilots, a lot of Muncie’s history has been forgotten over the decades.
When Suzanne Petro got the call, she was on her Labor Day weekend vacation, but she immediately turned around and came back to Muncie. The cause of the reversal? One of the three Muncie Dairy Queens she oversees was engulfed in flames.
It’s almost the end of the work day, and a small pop-up clinic in Ecuador is almost filled to their capacity limit, but another patient who can barely walk is escorted in by her son.
Weather forecaster Natalie Fitzpatrick has your update on cool weather and rain chances next week.
The record may say 1-3, but Ball State Football is approaching the first week of Mid-American Conference play like it’s a new season.
Three grants from the National Park Service totaling more than $150,000 were awarded to Ball State over the summer in order to allow archaeology students to continue to uncover the past.