Indianapolis, IN
What to know about Indianapolis Royal Rumble, WWE's 3rd-largest event
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — The Circle City will host its first-ever Royal Rumble, the third largest event WWE puts on.
Lauren Sparkman is the co-chair of the local organizing committee for Indiana Sports Corp and WWE.
“There will be a men’s rumble and a women’s rumble,” Sparkman said. “Thirty men and 30 women in each rumble, and, every 90 seconds, another superstar enters the ring and you never know who it’s going to be. It could be a returning superstar, it could be a celebrity, it could be a legend who hasn’t been in the ring in a while.”
Indiana Sports Corp will make sure all visitors have plenty to do leading up to the rumble.
“We have the title belt behind us. The Children’s Museum was excited to partner and put the title belt on their dinos,” Sparkman said. “We have Chreece Hip Hop Festival programming, an incredible Top Rope Tailgate downtown on Saturday before the Royal Rumble, and even things that you might not expect like Dr. Andy Finely at IU Indy who wanted to host a conversation about wrestling as an art form.”
Artists have also jumped in and created WWE-inspired pieces. “Most of the activations we’ve built are the product of our community partners and artists in the community raising their hand with ideas of how they wanted to activate,” Sparkman said. “So whether it’s our visual artist activations, both artists Kyng Rhodes and JD Bills are lifelong wrestling fans who wanted to create pieces to support this event.”
Kyng Rhodes designed a piece called “The Circle City Enters the Rumble” for the Indianapolis International Airport.
JD Bills did a mural in Fountain Square called “Ringmasters.” It is installed on the the Murphy Arts
Center at 1043 Virginia Ave.
This is the start of what’s being touted a first-of-its-kind partnership between WWE and Indiana Sports Corp. “WWE has never partnered with a city or a sports commission in this way so it’s going to be a really exciting partnership,” Sparkman said. “(It) is going to bring the WWE universe, which has fans from all over the world, to Indianapolis over the course of the next several years.”
The Royal Rumble will start at 6 p.m. Saturday in Lucas Oil Stadium. Remaining tickets start at $150 each, according to Ticketmaster.
Indianapolis, IN
New UIndy degree program hopes to address Indiana’s shortage of school psychologists
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — The need for school psychologists is growing across Indiana, fitting a trend school districts are seeing nationwide.
The National Association of School Psychologists recommends a ratio of one psychologist to 500 students. According to its data for the 2024-25 school year, Indiana had one psychologist per every 1,869 students.
This fall, the University of Indianapolis is launching a new school psychology program, specifically targeting people already working in schools.
It’s a three-year Education Specialist Master’s Degree. Candidates would complete evening classes and other asynchronous work for two years, and work in schools for another year.
Interim Director Aerin Welch says they’re hoping to fill the gap of School Psychologists in Indiana.
“One of our goals is to work with districts,” Dr. Aerin Welch, the program’s interim director, said. “[They may] have people within their districts who…want to stay within their school communities, but also want a change of pace and to try a new position.“
The shortage is a problem that preschool psychologist Melissa Duvall sees firsthand at the Wanamaker Early Learning Center, part of Franklin Township Community Schools.
“We are probably the busiest building — It seems like,” Duvall said.
On average, she says the school evaluates about 200 students a year. The closing months of the school year prove to be even busier, as they have to reevaluate students ahead of their transition to kindergarten.
Duvall knows how important her work is to the district.
“My job is to just kind of work with students to figure out how they best learn,” Duvall said. “So that we can work with the rest of the staff, so that they can continue to fill their toolbox with things that make sense to that child.”
It’s a sentiment Franklin Township Superintendent and UIndy alum Dr. Chase Huotari echoes.
He says he’d like to have one school psychologist at every building in the district.
“If you look at the school psychologists we have, it goes way beyond just them doing the work with the kids,” Huotari said. “They’re a key part of the entire school community.”
Duvall didn’t originally intend to become a school psychologist. She’s hopeful UIndy’s new program can open doors for others like her.
“It’s just one of those things that you don’t really realize is out there,” Duvall said. “I’m so glad that I was able to find it.”
Applications for UIndy’s new school psychology degree program are now open. Welch says the university hopes to send out acceptance letters this summer.
Indianapolis, IN
Residents demand alternatives to 2-year closure of critical Indianapolis bridge
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — A community meeting took place on Indy’s westside over what’s threatening to be more than a traffic nightmare.
The planned full closure of the 16th Street bridge could put livelihoods and lives at risk, community advocate Aaron Williams with the Keep the Bridge Open Coalition said.
“And not to mention the countless number of businesses, we’ve calculated over 125 million dollars within a quarter mile of this bridge that generate revenue that are going to be directly impacted,” Williams said.
The aging bridge is scheduled for a full replacement this summer. But in order to do it, the city’s department of public works says it will have to be fully closed to traffic in both directions, for two years. The closure recommendation was first mentioned in a scoping report dating back to 2016.
“It’s been pretty consistent that the recommendation has been a full closure based off of what that first scoping report said,” Kyle Bloyd with the Indianapolis Department of Public Works told News 8.
But residents want to know why the critical span that connects downtown to the city’s Haughville neighborhood can’t be reduced to one lane while the reconstruction takes place, allowing some traffic to get through, instead of none at all.
“We’ve seen time and time again, Lafayette Road, West Kessler Boulecard. We’ve seen where a bridge has been open with one lane in each direction,” Williams said.
It’s a question the owner of Longs Bakery, a longtime Indianapolis favorite, has.
The bakery is walking distance to the bridge, and could see a staggering revenue loss tied to even one day of the bridge being closed, let alone two years.
“We really rely on foot traffic and 500 to 1000 customers a day that are impacted by a bridge they can’t get around or a 10th street bottleneck, that’s our biggest concern,” Carl Long, owner of Longs Bakery said.
The bridge opened in the late 1940s. The Indiana Department of Public Works says there’s no record of any significant rehab effort on the bridge since that time.
Indianapolis, IN
IMPD asks for help to find missing 26-year-old man
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Indianapolis police on Tuesday asked for the public’s help to find a missing 26-year-old man with autism.
Tyrese Pepper was described as being 5 feet, 8 inches tall and weighing 150 pounds. He was wearing a dark-colored jacket with a Colts logo and navy jogger pants.
He was last seen riding a navy-and-white bicycle eastbound on East 21st Street, according to the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
IMPD says Pepper is nonverbal and autistic.
If located, please call 911 immediately.
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