The 21 Best Things to Do in Miami This Week

Thursday: We may know him as the hurricane expert who guided South Florida through one of the worst storms in its history, but Bryan Norcross has continued to have a prestigious career as a hurricane specialist, covering the devastating Hurricane Sandy and routinely scrutinizing government response to natural disasters. In…

Ankara Miami Brings African Fashion to Diversify Swim Week

Evelyn Onyejuruwa is the founder of Ankara Miami, an events company that focuses on fashion from Africa and the African diaspora. After four years of growing African Fashion Week, Ankara hosted its first Ankara Swim Week last year. The summer event is a truncated version of its winter counterpart, with a focus on swimwear and resort wear.

Dunkirk Is the Movie Christopher Nolan Was Born to Make

The nerve-racking war thriller Dunkirk is the movie Christopher Nolan’s entire career has been building up to, in ways that even he may not have realized. He’s taken the British Expeditionary Force’s 1940 evacuation from France, early in World War II — a moment of heroism-in-defeat that has become an…

Miami Curves Week: A Swim Week Runway Show for the Rest of Us

As a child, I wasn’t really the bathing suit type of person. I didn’t have that confidence.” Creative director and fashion stylist Sarah Williams grew up in the spring break capital of Fort Lauderdale. But she felt self-conscious about baring her body on the beach alongside the tourists. And confidence…

Jodorowsky’s Endless Poetry Continues a Phantasmagorical Coming of Age

At 88 years young, the rebel-shaman filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky has led an eclectic life and enjoyed a provocative career not easily encapsulated. His 1970 acid western, El Topo, crowned him godfather of the midnight-movie craze. His phantasmagoric 1973 masterpiece, The Holy Mountain, was ripped off by Kanye West for the…

The Best Free Events in Miami This Week

Nothing makes you feel quite as broke as sharing space with fashionistas and supermodels. And while there are plenty of before and after photos to show you that beauty is in the hand of the richest bitch, you can still feel fabulous during Swim Week with just a couple of…

Sisterhood Is Powerful — and Pugnacious — in Girls Trip

Truth in advertising: Girls trip hard during their New Orleans getaway in Girls Trip, which maybe doesn’t need that possessive apostrophe after all. Malcolm D. Lee’s comedy, written by Kenya Barris and Tracy Oliver — the same creative team behind last year’s uneven Barbershop: The Next Cut — pops with…

The Best Things to Do in Miami This Weekend

It’s Friday, it’s July, and you just want to get the hell out of work and start your weekend. We feel you. Go ahead and pull your work email up in another tab so you’ll be able to switch to it quickly and avoid getting caught planning your weekend during work hours. Your boss doesn’t need to know you’re going to a ganja festival in Wynwood or taking your dog to the movies in Coconut Grove.

Rape Choreography Makes Films Safer, but Still Takes a Toll on Cast and Crew

From Game of Thrones to The Handmaid’s Tale, narratives of sexual assault have become particularly common in film and TV lately. But rarely do we think about the filmmakers, actors and crew who make on-screen rapes happen. How do they feel? Are they tired of rape scenes? Or could portraying rape could actually be a positive thing?

Eyes on Miami: MLB All-Stars, J.Lo, Jamie Foxx, and Others

It’s not easy having eyes all over the scene, being around to take in all the wild visuals at all the worthwhile places in the city. There are, however, those parties and gallery openings where a fortunate photographer can point and shoot. Every week, in collaboration with WorldRedEye, New Times…

Urban Geographer Stephanie Wakefield on Climate Change: “This Could Be Our Opportunity”

If you’re a Miamian, chances are you’ve embraced climate change as fact (or live in an ideological bubble). The evidence is all around, and it forecasts rising sea levels, warming temperatures, changing wildlife patterns, and increasingly volatile storm seasons. While the majority of Florida voters seem content to elect officials who deny this now-obvious science in favor of short-term profit, many Dade County denizens live with the effects of climate change every day.