The Best Things To Do in Dallas, April 12-18
Comedians Nacho Redondo, Bill Bellamy, Samuel J. Comroe and Bill Dawes, along with live versions of Tootsie and Harvey highlight the upcoming events in Dallas.
Comedians Nacho Redondo, Bill Bellamy, Samuel J. Comroe and Bill Dawes, along with live versions of Tootsie and Harvey highlight the upcoming events in Dallas.
Women working full-time make about 83 cents for every dollar a man is paid, but the gap grows wider for single mothers and varies widely from place to place.
Now that Disney Animation is getting the immersive treatment, here are some other ideas worth projecting on the walls, from Grand Theft Auto to The Simpsons.
What used to be {neighborhood} is now the Lone Gallery in the Design District. It’s just as friendly, though.
Dallas Dollhaus/Dreamhaus owner Rachel Page’s studio spaces in Arlington and Fort Worth are visions in pink that draw Instagrammers and photographers who value their intricate, over-the-top designs.
What happens when you take the mugs of people like Jerry Jones, Ken Paxton and Ted Cruz and run it through Mattel’s Barbie Selfie Generator? We did just that and here’s what it produced.
Once again, the Texas legislature is in session to hash out another budget and two curious amendments popped up that aim to bring one entire department down to zero. Six amendments filed between Sunday afternoon and Monday morning call for either the elimination or reappropriation funding and grant money for the Texas Commission on the Arts, according to legislative records.
Crispin Glover has nothing on Dr. Chrystal Clark, whose art is inspired by old anatomy manuals.
On our cover this week: Dallas artists celebrate the art of graffiti at Trigger Fingers.
Everyone has a little bit of mystery in their past, otherwise we wouldn’t have online ancestry sites. But Anya in touring Broadway musical Anastasia, doesn’t have a laptop in the 1920s as she navigates from Russia to the stunning world of Paris.
No professional sport is safe from the antics of its players happening off the field, and of the kind of backlash that only Twitter can deliver. Apparently, that hard fact also includes professional soccer.
Literary arts events can sound gatekept, snobbish and, to some, boring. But The Writer’s Garret plans to challenge this narrative with its five-day literary festival Dallas Is Lit!
Eggs are part of Easter because of their symbolic representation of life and birth. Why does a giant bunny hide them for children to find? Who the hell knows? It’s a fever dream that even a mountain of cocaine couldn’t reproduce.
Skip Ikea and give your home some personality (and maybe cool ghosts from haunted mirrors). Here are 10 thrift hacks that will help you save some money to put toward your utility bills this Texas summer.
The Dallas carnivorous plant gallery has closed its doors after its founder says the rent just got too high.
Enchanting, otherworldly and vibrant, Dan Lam’s sculptures look like they were dropped on Earth from another planet. Demi Lovato, Gigi Hadid and 2 Chainz are fans, along with a growing number of galleries and museums.
March might go out like a lamb, but there are a lot of dogs in the mix this week: Get doggie photos with the Easter Bunny or check out a Dog Days Fashion Show, among other human events.
If you’re not sure where to find the cool art, clothes and vintage items in North Texas, sample some of these upcoming pop-ups for your favorite finds.
Larry McMurtry, right, was a Pulitzer and Oscar winner and iconic Texas author. Before Chip and Joanna cover his former bookstore in burlap, you can buy some of his personal belongings.
Thirty years ago, the first Super Mario Bros. movie based on Nintendo’s iconic sidescrolling game made it into theaters and it b-bombed. According to Box Office Mojo, the film cost $48 million to make but it only made over $8.5 million in its opening weekend. It still hasn’t made back even half of its budget.
Writer Brianna Holt explains the nuances of being a young Black woman in a “post-racial” America in anticipated In Our Shoes book.
Americans probably hear or use the word “freedom” at least once a day. Have you ever stopped to think about the concept or even the definition of freedom? How do you define it even when it clearly has limitations?