The Dayton Daily News features multiple columnists from our Lifestyles department, and weâve introduced some new standing features recently. They include contributing columnist Pamela Chandlerâs âGem City Livingâ column about things to do with your family and staff reporter Russell Florence Jr.âs âOn Stage,â which takes a look at news in the arts and culture space. And our newest columnist, Devin Meister, is a local outdoors enthusiast and writes âAverage Guy Outdoors.â In todayâs Morning Briefing, we take an in-depth look at these columns and more. If you have thoughts or feedback on this newsletter or other news tips, please let me know at Greg.Lynch@coxinc.com. Want to read the digital version of the newspaper? Click here for our daily ePaper. The newsletter should take about 3 minutes, 19 seconds to read. âAverage Guy Outdoorsâ by Devin Meister focuses on outdoorsman information for Southwest Ohio ââââââââââââââââââââââââ Housing crisis hits Ohio wildlife If you think our housing costs are high and great options scarce, you should try a day as a Bobwhite quail. Many of our favorite wildlife characters are facing challenges finding accommodations. Habitat is the defining factor in their existence, from food to shelter to reproduction. Like our housing, habitat is at a premium and wildlife faces less-than-optimal options. âGem City Familyâ by Pam Chandler for family things to do in the Dayton region ââââââââââââââââââââââââ Ideas for teaching financial literacy to kids Itâs never too early to start teaching your children financial literacy. This is a perfect time to jump in feet first as many Americans are setting their budgets for the new year. Money management is a lesson we have been working on this year as part of our Homeschool journey, and I thought I would share some of the tips that have worked for us to teach our child how to handle money. âOn Stageâ by Russell Florence explores art and culture news ââââââââââââââââââââââââ Arts news: Dayton Liveâs Childrenâs Theatre Series, Levitt Pavilion Dayton UpClose concert and more Dayton Liveâs 2025 Childrenâs Theatre Series launched over the weekend at the Victoria Theatre with the charming, Tony Award-nominated musical âA Year with Frog and Toad.â Sponsored by Dayton Childrenâs, the series will continue with âThe Gruffaloâs Childâ (Saturday-Sunday), âGoodnight Moon and the Runaway Bunnyâ (March 29-30) and âActÃvate with 123 Andrésâ (May 3). The entire series will be held at the Victoria Theatre, 138 N. Main St., Dayton. âSave Pointâ by Alex Cutler focuses on gaming and entertainment ââââââââââââââââââââââââ DK Effect craft beer arcade blends drinks with games of old As someone in his 20s, I am quite aware of the fact that I missed the âgolden ageâ of arcades. Modern arcades, while a lot of fun, are usually focused on claw machines, bowling, mini-golf or other forms of entertainment. If classic games are featured at all, itâs clear they are not the main appeal of these venues. So that leaves me wondering what a modern arcade filled with classic, beloved arcade games would look like. As it turns out, one that fits that description can be found right here in Dayton: DK Effect. âLocal Music Sceneâ by Brandon Berry covers the Dayton and Southwest Ohio music and art scene. ââââââââââââââââââââââââ It Takes a Village: inside the Dayton recording studio, creativity hub Blanch Robinson, a Dayton rapper and producer, took me past the Spaghetti Warehouse on Fifth Street to an unassuming storefront. On its window was a semi-faded decal of the old Dayton Barber College. Holding a stray XLR cable in one hand, Blanch unlocked the storefrontâs gate and revealed a door. Inside, unassuming still, we headed through another door; thatâs when the space started to unfold. Blanch and I stepped into It Takes a Village Studios, a multi-faceted, multimedia hub for musicians, artists and creators. |