PAMM Offers Free Admission to Bicyclists Throughout May

As traffic gets progressively worse, Miamians are (finally) starting to get serious about alternative transportation. The city just announced plans for six new rail lines. And since May is National Bike Month, the celebration is bringing citywide attention to two-wheeled travel.  In order to commemorate and show support for cycling, Pérez…

Tale of Tales Dares to Bite Into the Tangential Madness of Fairy Stories

Fairy tales were meant to be oral stories. Translating the tangents of old women in far-flung villages (whose chips on their shoulders about, say, their brother’s failed shipping business might inspire long asides about the shipping industry) into written texts doesn’t always make for the most linear, easy read. In…

Ten Ways to Be a Tourist in Miami

In 2014, Miami-Dade County made an estimated $23.8 billion in tourist money. That’s an almost astronomical figure. It’s 317,333 times more than Justin Bieber blew at King of Diamonds that same year. It’s enough to rent a room at the Versace mansion every day for the rest of your life…

The 11 Best Things to Do in Miami This Week

Thursday, April 28 It’s time for anyone who wants a heavy dose of queer cinema to get excited: The MiFo LGBT Film Festival hits town this month. Formerly the Miami Gay & Lesbian Film Festival (MGLFF), the fest is now split into two editions — one in Miami (“Mi”) and…

Though Viva Finds Beauty in Cuba, Its Characters Seem Adrift

The lure of everything Cuba is strong. It’s in the news, on top of everyone’s travel list and in our movie theaters. But the recent films about Cuba aren’t exports from the still-embargoed country. Most come from visiting filmmakers. Irish director Paddy Breathnach captures a gorgeous portrait of Cuba with…

Poet John Giorno Delivers a Beat During O, Miami 2016

When John Giorno steps onstage dressed in head-to-toe black, he doesn’t just read his poems — he performs them like a standup routine. He grimaces and grins while his eyebrows rise and fall. He bellows and sings, inflecting syllables, drawing out vowels, and blending octaves high and low. He repeats…

Which Miami Neighborhood Will Be the Next Wynwood?

The low-rise warehouse district on East 45th Street in Hialeah is filled with noisy clutter from auto mechanics’ shops and cafeterias during the day. But on a recent Saturday night, the humid air was glued to the concrete. It was quiet. At 11th Avenue, the faint vibrations of hip-hop bass…

A Punk Band Faces Murderous Skinheads in the Harrowing Green Room

Jeremy Saulnier’s Green Room is an impeccably crafted cinematic torture machine — in the best possible way. The premise will make some cringe, while making others giddy: A punk band, trapped in a club in the middle of nowhere, have to fight off a bunch of murderous skinheads to get…

Miami Zine Fair Brings Makers to the Table, Concludes O, Miami 2016

The Riso EZ 220 printer looks like any ordinary piece of office equipment: A gray hulk of plastic. The risograph machine is long favored by boutique print shops and zine-makers for its rich colors and ink textures. And Leila Leder Kremer and Juana Meneses, founders of the publishing operation Portable Editions,…

As It Saves the Sitcom Once Again, Amazon’s Catastrophe Is Anything But

The second season of Amazon’s Catastrophe might do for the #TGIF-style family sitcom of the late ‘80s and ‘90s what the first did for the ailing rom-com: open-mouthed resuscitation on the operating table after one too many Garry Marshall–fueled heart attacks like Valentine’s Day. (Or New Year’s Eve? It doesn’t…