PM dining critic Hal B. Klein was Heather Abraham's co-host on Thursday's edition of KDKA's Pittsburgh Today Live. Watch Hal reminisce on his time as an actor, reveal a personal secret and whip up a dish in the studio kitchen.
Attention all boaters! The locks on the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers will open most summer weekends, allowing you to visit sights you couldn’t get to before.
Follow Brood VIII, which is expected to have three species of periodical cicadas emerging from the soil as early as this month, on the Cicada Safari App.
Pittsburgh Magazine HOME editor Jessica Sinichak appeared on KDKA's Pittsburgh Today Live to discuss our Summer issue, including amazing outdoor spaces, a stunning Downtown bachelor pad and the magazine's new look.
Former PM columnist Virginia Montanez's recent Twitter comments about surviving a Pittsburgh spring should brighten your day as we all wait for the sun to come out.
The model and author is taking her activism to a new level in partnership with AHN Women and the health care system’s Alexis Joy D’Achille Center for Perinatal Mental Health, founded after a local mother committed suicide due to postpartum depression.
In its annual report, the Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership also says more than two dozen new restaurants and bars have opened Downtown in the past year.
PM associate editor Sean Collier appeared on KDKA's Pittsburgh Today Live to discuss our May issue features: What Pittsburgh's sports teams could have been called, the new sculpture garden at Hartwood Acres and the annual Best Doctors list.
VisitPITTSBURGH unveils its new national marketing campaign designed to capture the welcoming spirit of Pittsburghers. Pull up a chair and take a look.
The City of Pittsburgh has announced its street paving plan for 2019. You’re one click away from finding out if your street or route to work is on the list.
PM associate editor and dining critic Hal B. Klein appeared on KDKA's Pittsburgh Today Live to discuss recent Pittsburgh restaurant openings that have him excited for the future.
Women’s History Month may have ended when March did, but Pittsburgh’s theater programs continue to celebrate women all season long with these unique performances by, about or focusing on women.