In a New Book, Denise Montgomery Recalls Learning About Racism Through the State Fair
Gray clouds covered the sky as raindrops fell outside of Denise Montgomery’s front door window. It was the second Monday of October in 1965.
Gray clouds covered the sky as raindrops fell outside of Denise Montgomery’s front door window. It was the second Monday of October in 1965.
Last year, a house on East Dallas’ M Street made headlines worldwide for its gory Halloween decorations.
Rejoining the world after spending time in prison is tough. We can’t say we’ve been there, but those scenes in The Shawshank Redemption are forever stitched into our minds.
The Taming at WaterTower Theater This may not sound like a Halloween season show, but think about it. What’s scarier than politics these days?
There will always be teachers, kids and comedy, Joe Dombrowski says. The evergreen nature and reliability of those three things are how the elementary school teacher found a new life through stand-up comedy.
Unless you live under a rock, there’s no way you haven’t heard of the immersive Van Gogh exhibition currently showing in Dallas.
James Bond is back in theaters this week with No Time To Die, after its production was notoriously pushed back several times.
It’s “good movie” season again! If you’re tired of bloated blockbusters, junky comedies and never-ending horror franchises, this fall hopes to deliver the elevated fare that will contend for the Academy Awards next year.
Every October, as the weather begins to change, baseball fans eagerly await the start of the MLB postseason.
If you’ve ever smoked enough weed or eaten too much of a THC-infused edible and thought you were hallucinating, well, you probably were
It’s festival season again. After a jam-packed summer of blockbuster films such as F9, Black Widow and A Quiet Place: Part II, the coming months promise an exciting slate of high-profile award contenders.
Every Wednesday in October, Angelika Film Center Dallas and Plano will screen a classic Alfred Hitchcock film as part of its annual event, Hitchcocktober, celebrating the horror filmmaker.
Halloween is just around the corner, which means we’ll get our regular dosage of costumes both wildly inventive and horribly unoriginal.
There is a house for sale in Oak Cliff that looks like a typical, midcentury modern, brick home – at least from the outside.
Now that we’re past those summer night hookups, or not, Dallasites are gearing up for cuffing season and looking for a cuddle buddy to bring home for the holidays.
There are so many amazing things you can do with LEGOs besides watching the faces people make when they step on them with bare feet.
One of the world’s leading anime gatherings is headed our way this holiday season, giving us a break from the seemingly constant local gatherings of conservatives.
The great thing about Halloween is that it isn’t a day as much as it is a season. You don’t actually have to do something super cool on Oct. 31st, or even dress up.
On Sept. 25, Dallas’ Crow Museum of Asian Art premiered the U.S. opening of the 2017 exhibition Critical Dictionary of Southeast Asia, a moving image installation by Ho Tzu Nyen that questions widespread (mis)conceptions viewers may have about Southeast Asia.
Comic book fans, especially the more ardent Marvel Comics’ mob, are already reeling over the way the company is trying to keep some of its most popular creations out of the hands of its creators.
If you can stomach the traffic, the parking fees and being around hundreds of other people, the State Fair of Texas is a fun place to snap photos near Big Tex and eat your feelings in corn dogs and funnel cakes.
One local TikTok star is earning massive internet fame – and without having to join in on the app’s dangerous #MilkCrate challenge or by committing felonies by vandalizing school property.