This month, B.B. King will play Carnegie of Homestead Music Hall.
Here are the 10 best things to do in Pittsburgh this month.
Blonde Redhead, David Bazan and Rat Pack impersonators are among those making stops in Pittsburgh this month.
A collection of essays celebrates 20 years of Creative Nonfiction.
Who's up for a Yinzerita? These Shadyside and Carson Street Mexican joints are welcoming and appetizing.
Likely Oscar nominee "Foxcatcher," shot in Sewickley Heights more than two years ago, will hit theaters Nov. 14.
A major retrospective at Carnegie Museum of Art follows the life of McKeesport native Duane Michals,
a renowned photographer and storyteller.
The Larimer native writes about life’s struggles without letting them drag him down and joins the list of world-class local rappers.
The Walnut Street stalwart is a Shady haven built for people-watching.
This month, the theater is turning its Wednesday-night retro film series over to the spooky stuff.
For the past year, the ScareHouse’s resident sociologist has been traveling the world with two goals: to be scared and to write about it.
The one-night-only concert brings legendary musicians to Oakland to perform alongside unseen Warhol films.
The 29-year-old Pittsburgh International LGBT Film Festival
brings little-seen, world-class independent films to downtown’s Harris Theater.
The stalwart Lawrenceville anchor may be the proudest Pittsburgh bar of them all.
A brewpub in Lawrenceville and a tap room in Emsworth are both great places to fill your growler.
Your 10 best bets for October.
The casino's popular sports bar gets a long-overdue review.
The Starz series documents the filming of two versions of the same movie script.
While he can walk largely unrecognized in his hometown, comic-book artist Ed Piskor of Munhall continues to win critical acclaim and international fame with “Hip Hop Family Tree,” a series of graphic novels telling the story of hip-hop music.
Ditch the coffee shop Wi-Fi routine and get a few things done with a drink in hand and a snack nearby.
Forty years after its inception, City Theatre remains committed to contemporary American plays.
Charlie Wilmoth is a jovial and insightful companion who suffers with the rest of Bucco Nation as the failures multiply.
This work of poetry "is an hallucinatory origin myth that pokes and prods at the subversiveness of a language."
In only its second year, the Bakery Square event hosted by Thrill Mill is becoming a cultural force.