Movies have been around for well over a century, bringing families together and making memories. In Wisconsin, the Marcus family is behind one of the nation's largest movie chains.90 years ...
Ricochet's free and premium game offerings include foosball, table tennis, shuffleboard, billiards, bumper pool and steel-tip darts. Ricochet will open this month at Grand Place, a $105 million ...
Taste of Greece is this Saturday, Feb. 14 and Sunday, Feb. 15.Follow the smells and the sounds of 'OPA' right to the cultural center by Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in ...
Improve your Ping-Pong skills with Robo Pong at Sameh Awadalla Table Tennis Academy, offering over 60 drills for all skill ...
Engineers developed a ping-pong-playing robot that quickly estimates the speed and trajectory of an incoming ball and precisely hits it to a desired location on the table. MIT engineers are getting in ...
Oakland A's catcher Jhonny Pereda is one of many pro athletes who plays ping-pong. Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Justine Willard / Athletics / Getty Images This story is part of Peak, The ...
There were no idle hands at Sharpa's CES booth. The company's humanoid may have been the busiest bot at show, autonomously playing ping-pong, dealing blackjack games and taking selfies with passersby.
Timothée Chalamet stars in Marty Supreme—a sports drama set in 1950s New York City that follows Marty Mauser, a pompous hustler on a mission to pursue his ping-pong dreams by any means necessary. The ...
Safdie goes deep on his terror of table tennis matches and how he pulled them off through choreography, CGI, and Timothée Chalamet's training. “I had ADD, so I ...
Following every dizzying spin of Chalamet’s table tennis hustler, Josh Safdie’s whip-crack comedy serves sensational shots – and a smart return by Gwyneth Paltrow This new film from Josh Safdie has ...
In a conversation with The Hollywood Reporter, the film's ping-pong consultant, Diego Schaaf, says he hopes the actor's wild press run "gives the sport the breakthrough it’s deserved." By Lexi Carson ...
In the 1940s and '50s, New York City table tennis was a gritty subculture full of misfits, gamblers, doctors, actors, students and more. They competed, bet on the game or both at all-night spots like ...