Category: Products
Photo by Richard Hurd
FOX47 and ESA&Company to virtually host “REAL. LOCAL. RESULTS.” on April 20
Through this exclusive arrangement we bring to you a compelling marketing session filled with strategies to help you grow your business 10-30%, often without any additional spending, brought to you live and directly from Adam Armbruster, Senior Partner with ESA&Company (Eckstein, Summers, Armbruster & Co.)!
ESA’s Services are provided to over 80 media markets and are sponsored by FOX47 here in Madison.
ESA’s retail strategy services are always provided at no charge to local Madison area businesses.
Individual business owner sessions are available by request.
We hope you will join us!
You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: Apr 20, 2021 12:00 PM Central Time (US and Canada)
Please register in advance for this meeting:
https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwpfu-ppj0iE9Qu8a1oTHAwVXSiAxgli5QI
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Photo by Richard Hurd
Savant Wealth Management Releases Evidence-Based Investing Learning Center
Savant Wealth Management, a nationally recognized, fee-only wealth management firm headquartered in Rockford, IL, with locations also in Madison and Park Falls, announced it has developed a suite of multi-media education tools on the concept of Evidence-Based Investing (EBI) to help investors become more educated on the topic.
Given the rise in internet and video consumption this past year, Savant is launching this initiative to reach and help more people through virtual connections. The e-learning content features an academic white paper, blogs, and videos about the importance of using evidence and research for investments.
“In our new socially distanced world, there is still opportunity for connection by embracing technology to give people the tools they need to be more savvy investors,” said Phil Huber, Savant’s chief investment officer. “We believe EBI is a well-organized investment approach that uses historical data, research, and our collective knowledge of risk and return.”
This EBI platform helps explain why consumers should apply evidence to investing over approaches like timing the market and active stock-picking. The content is divided into bite-sized pieces, and Huber is the author of the blogs and main speaker featured in the videos, which average in length from four to eight minutes each.
To access the EBI Learning Center, visit savantwealth.com/evidence-based-investing
About Savant Wealth Management
Savant Wealth Management, formerly known as Savant Capital Management, is a leading independent, fee-only firm serving clients for 30 years with $10 billion in assets under management. Savant Wealth Management offers investment management, financial planning, retirement plan, and family office services to financially established individuals and institutions. Savant also offers corporate accounting, tax preparation, payroll and consulting through its affiliate, Savant Tax & Consulting.
Savant is headquartered in Rockford, IL, with locations in Bloomington, Chicago, Downers Grove, Freeport, Hoffman Estates, Lincolnshire, Naperville, Peoria, St. Charles, Sterling, and Wilmette, IL; Phoenix, AZ; Santa Fe, NM; Madison and Park Falls, WI; and McLean, VA. Please see Important Disclosures at savantwealth.com.
Savant Wealth Management (“Savant”) is an SEC registered investment adviser headquartered in Rockford, Illinois. Past performance may not be indicative of future results. Different types of investments involve varying degrees of risk. Please see Important Disclosures at savantwealth.com.
Photo by Richard Hurd
School of Madison Ballet reopens for in-person classes as of April 5
Over a year after COVID-19 closed their studios, the School of Madison Ballet is open for in-person classes as of April 5th, 2021. The phased reopening begins with the school’s most advanced Trainee level students, followed by School Division levels, with new groups being added each week through the end of the academic year. Children’s Division and adult Drop-In classes will begin in-person instruction in Summer 2021.
“We are deeply committed to keeping our students, families, and staff as healthy as possible,” says Rachelle Fochs, Director of the School of Madison Ballet, “so our team has created a reopening plan that allows students who want in-person instruction to return to our studios with policies that minimize the risks. Because every family has unique needs, we’ll continue to offer both in-person and virtual instruction throughout the summer.”
As part of the reopening, class sizes are strictly limited to ensure adequate physical distancing. Additional COVID-19 protocols are based on recommendations from the CDC, state and local agencies, and best-practices specific to the field of dance.

Registration Information
To register, visit the School of Madison Ballet enrollment portal or madisonballet.org/enroll.
For nearly 40 years, Madison Ballet has been an integral part of the vibrant Dane County arts community. Full scale productions of inspiring traditional ballets, innovative contemporary performances, and the timeless holiday tradition of “The Nutcracker” reach more than 13,000 people each year. The School of Madison Ballet empowers students of all ages and skill levels with the poise, confidence, discipline, and fundamental life skills intrinsic to the study of dance. Outreach programming, presented in partnership with dozens of local school and community groups, enriches thousands of young people’s lives by introducing them to the joy of dance.
Contact: Gretchen Bourg, Managing Director
Phone: (608) 571-7670
Email: gretchen@madisonballet.org
Photo by Richard Hurd
Wisconsin Union: Student-Led Organizations Will Host Free, Virtual Discussion With Critically Acclaimed Rapper and Poet Noname
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 26, 2021
Contact Information:
Shauna Breneman, Communications Director
Email: sbreneman@wisc.edu
STUDENT-LED ORGANIZATIONS WILL HOST FREE, VIRTUAL DISCUSSION WITH CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED RAPPER AND POET NONAME
Noname to discuss artistic expression in music and poetry, BIPOC and female empowerment during free event open to University of Wisconsin–Madison students, staff and faculty
MADISON – Rapper and poet Noname will discuss art and poetry, music, and the empowerment of BIPOC communities and women during a free, virtual, live event called “Music, Art & Poetry: A Conversation with Noname” on April 7 at 7 p.m. CDT.
All interested UW–Madison students, staff, and faculty are invited to register for this free event. Those interested in attending can register online here to receive the event livestream link in an email the day of the event.
Noname’s lyrical stylings have earned her wide acclaim as a rapper. A Chicago native, she got her start in poetry and music through frequenting open mic nights and slam poetry events, which allowed her to meet and learn from other artists, like Chance the Rapper and Mick Jenkins.
After collaborating with numerous music artists, Noname released her mixtape “Telefone” in 2016 to critical acclaim by Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, and more. Two years later, she released her debut album “Room 25,” which National Public Radio said offers “sharp commentary on race, identity, sex and politics.”
This event is organized and hosted by the Wisconsin Union Directorate (WUD) Publications Committee, the WUD Distinguished Lecture Series (DLS) Committee, the WUD Music Committee, the WUD Performing Arts Committee, The Black Voice, and the UW–Madison Division of the Arts.
Noname’s lecture is a part of a series of events making up the WUD Publications Committee’s Lit Fest, an annual week-long event. The event celebrates culture in literary work and storytelling. This week will include a compilation of workshops put together by the Committee’s five magazines and other speakers.
These workshops will invite the campus community to experience what happens behind the scenes and will invite attendees to explore the relationship between storytelling and creating content. This year’s theme is activism in the literary arts. Those interested in learning more about Lit Fest can find more information on those events here.
Those interested in attending this upcoming lecture can register here.
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[Note: Click here to download a photo of Noname. Photo by Mark Peaced. Photo provided by Creative Artists Agency.]
To read this release online, visit union.wisc.edu/news/noname.
Photo by Richard Hurd
Wisconsin Union Theater: ‘Primer for an Impossible Conversation’ Performances Will Explore the Topic of Race Through Dialogue, Dance on April 8, 9
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 18, 2021
Contact Information:
Shauna Breneman, Communications Director
Email: sbreneman@wisc.edu
‘PRIMER FOR AN IMPOSSIBLE CONVERSATION’ PERFORMANCES WILL EXPLORE THE TOPIC OF RACE THROUGH DIALOGUE, DANCE ON APRIL 8, 9
Wisconsin Union Theater hosts streaming of new piece from artists David Neumann, Marcella Murray and Tei Blow
MADISON – The Wisconsin Union Theater will host two virtual streaming performances of “Primer for an Impossible Conversation,” an interdisciplinary arts work centering on dialogue about race, followed by a moderated conversation with theater artists and co-creators Marcella Murray, David Neumann and Tei Blow on April 8 and 9 at 7:30 p.m. CDT.
The idea for the piece began when Murray, a Black woman, and Neumann, a white man, began talking about racism after an incident on their campus. This sparked an ongoing conversation that ultimately led to the creation of “Primer for an Impossible Conversation.” Continuing to unpack their years-long conversation around race, in this piece, Murray, Neumann and Blow interweave imagery, short bursts of dance, and the digitized distance.
The creators aimed for the piece to serve as a step-by-step non-instruction manual that reveals the efforts needed for two people to actually be in the same place at the same time. It emerged from the creators’ feeling the need to continue their conversation about race as a creative act, adapting and responding to Obie Award-winning “Distances Smaller Than This Are Not Confirmed,” a piece made for the stage by Murray and Neumann, which premiered in January 2020.
In “Primer for an Impossible Conversation,” Murray and Neumann hurtle through space as they face not only the challenge of having a conversation from their experiences but also with the difficulties inherent in connecting over online platforms while quarantined from in-person exchanges during COVID-19.
“‘Primer for an Impossible Conversation’ depicts the undeniable complexity and importance of having conversations about race. David and Marcella are sincere in their desire to understand each other through the lenses of their racial identities, and their mutual respect for each other keeps the conversation going rather than shutting it down,” Wisconsin Union Theater Director Elizabeth Snodgrass said. “The piece is also an incredible marker of this historic time, not just around conversations on race but also our warped sense of time, like we’re floating through space, and us working so hard to stay connected to each other.”
The Wisconsin Union Theater team invites patrons to pay what they can when they register for tickets here.
This presentation is part of the Wisconsin Union Theater team’s commitment to taking action against racial inequities, which includes making space in its budget and programming schedule to support and present events that highlight BIPOC’s stories. Click here for a full statement on the Theater’s stance.
“Primer for an Impossible Conversation” is co-commissioned by the Wisconsin Union Theater and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago.
“So much of what the Wisconsin Union Theater has presented this year was taking what was planned to be in-person and modifying it for the virtual season,” Snodgrass said. “I wanted to present something that was designed specifically for the virtual space and shows the life we’re living right here, right now.”
The Wisconsin Union Theater presents these events, in part, with the help of financial support from the Marcia Légère Distinguished Playwright Residency Fund, Wisconsin Arts Board funding from the State of Wisconsin, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Wisconsin Union Theater team strives for all of its spaces to be accessible. The Theater will offer live captioning at both performances. Those that need accommodations can reach out to the Theater team at wisconsinuniontheater@union.wisc.edu.
Click here for more information about the Theater’s presentation of “Primer for an Impossible Conversation.”
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About the Wisconsin Union Theater
For more than 75 years, the Wisconsin Union Theater has served as a center for cultural activity in the heart of the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus. The Theater hosts performances in multiple locations, including Memorial Union, and has an expansive history of remarkable performances. The Wisconsin Union Theater is part of the Wisconsin Union, a membership organization that blends study and leisure to create unique out-of-classroom opportunities. Learn more: union.wisc.edu/wisconsin-union-theater.
[Click here for access to a folder of downloadable photos of the performance and its creators.]
To read this release online, visit union.wisc.edu/about/news/impossible-conversation