82°F
weather icon Clear
TV

‘#VegasStrong’ TV special offers resources for Route 91 shooting survivors

Survivors of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting may have a harder time coping with Oct. 1 this year as a result of feeling alone during the pandemic.

That’s the idea behind the Vegas PBS special “#VegasStrong: Connecting During COVID-19.”

Premiering at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, the episode will highlight the Vegas Strong Resiliency Center and the resources it makes available to survivors.

“We know that there are many families, victims and survivors who are suffering from feelings of isolation compounded by past trauma from the Route 91 tragedy,” Tennille Pereira, the center’s director, said in a statement. “We want them to know, wherever they are, they are not alone or forgotten.”

The special also features a visit to the Las Vegas Community Healing Garden as well as guidance from mental health professionals and social workers and a spotlight on virtual resources.

“#VegasStrong: Connecting During COVID-19” also can be seen at vegaspbs.org. Additional resources will be available at vegaspbs.org/vegasstrong.

Contact Christopher Lawrence at clawrence@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4567. Follow @life_onthecouch on Twitter.

THE LATEST
New ‘The Office’ spinoff takes place at a Midwestern newspaper

“The Office,” a mockumentary that detailed the endearing mundanity of life at Dunder Mifflin, ran from 2005 to 2013. It’s one of those comfort-food series some fans revisit again and again. In 2024 it seems like a time capsule, the last days of 9-to-5 culture before work-from-home upended it all.

Jerry Seinfeld says ‘extreme left and PC crap’ are hurting TV comedy

Ahead of his stint at the Hollywood Bowl and the release of his Netflix comedy about Pop-Tarts’ origin this week, Jerry Seinfeld reflected on the “Seinfeld” storylines that wouldn’t be aired today and other ways “the extreme left” is influencing comedy.