A Pittsburgh premiere by David Mamet puts ethnic tension in the foreground.
From ZZ Top to wienies, wine and baseball, we've got you covered this weekend.
We've got something for you (yes, you) to do this weekend, especially if you're a canine-loving '90s pop nostalgist with a thing for bocce.
Plus six films open in town and the Pittsburgh Irish & Classical Theatre Gets 'Earnest.'
With six films opening this weekend, how does one decide on what to see? Easy: What are you drinking?
This weekend, chow down on the best pub grub in the city or let off some steam at the Three Rivers Paintball Festival.
Our reformed vegetarian repents with a list of the best bar food in the city (with special guest commentary from Ron Swanson).
This weekend, you can feel good about partying down at Rivertowne and embrace your inner child at the Steel City Con.
This week, slip the big-box theater retailers and see a labor of love at a boutique production company.
Local director's throwback science-fiction shorts find a home on SyFy.com.
Butler County, the birthplace of the Jeep, gears up to celebrate an American icon.
Pittsburgh has been overtaken by the cast and crew of The Dark Knight Rises.
Immerse yourself in the noir style, a renegade worldview filled with suspicion, crime and some excellent reading material.
The local comedian has taken an unlikely route to stand-up and screen success.
Go for a ride through the park’s past inside the office of Andy Quinn.
McDain's made national headlines for banning kids under six, but is the food any good?
Pretend you're in the Great Hall at Hogwart's, gulp down a firewhisky or just stash a bunch of treats in your cloak before heading to the theater.
That's it, really - no gimmicks, just three great watering holes.
See 'Batman Begins' and 'The Dark Knight' at the Oaks Theater for just $10.
Go inside the lair of the craziest tag team on morning radio, the KISS Freak Show.
Saturday Light Brigade, one of the nation’s longest-running radio shows, kicks off its third summer-concert series this month.
This summer, Anthony Jeselnik returns to his hometown as comedy’s hottest young talent.
With his film and stage career on the rise, actor Joshua Elijah Reese finds piecing together an impressive acting resume in his native Pittsburgh to be rewarding—yet he is chomping at the bit for an even sweeter fate.
Boyz II Men, Kid Rock, Sheryl Crow, Sublime and even Bootsy Collins roll their tour buses into town.