The Best Things to Do in Miami This Weekend

The best time of the week is finally here — the weekend. The next three days are filled with music, art, and boozy beverages galore. From Coral Gables to Little Havana to South Beach, these are the best places to be until the sun comes up Monday morning. Friday South…

Halloween 2016: Nine Fancy Miami Galas to Work That Costume

Halloween doesn’t have to be all tricks. You can treat yourself to a fancy Halloween party and still get your spook on — all while giving back to the community — at any one of these philanthropic fall events. 1. 30th-Annual Sundowner at Vizcaya For its 30th year celebrating Halloween,…

American Crime Story Season 3 Will Focus on Gianni Versace’s Murder

If any city deserves the Ryan Murphy treatment, it’s Miami. The screenwriter, director, and producer behind Glee and American Horror Story has a fetish for camp, crime, and color. So it’s no wonder that American Crime Story, the Murphy-led TV series that recounted the O.J. Simpson murder investigation and trial…

Bob Dylan’s Nobel Prize for Literature Is Wrong: An Analysis

When I saw that Bob Dylan had won the Nobel Prize last Friday, I fired off a quick, emotional tweet: “Without qualifications, Bob Dylan winning a Nobel for literature is dumb.” Dylan’s literary award was last Friday’s black-and-blue dress, and if you don’t immediately pick a side, are you really…

The Best Things to Do in Miami This Week

Thursday South Beach Seafood Week is back with its annual four-day, action-packed extravaganza celebrating Miami’s famous stone crab season. The fest launched last week with Cooking & Cocktails, a six-course tapas meal paired with specialty cocktails. This Thursday, it continues with An Evening at Joe’s (11 Washington Ave., Miami Beach),…

Being Téchiné: Five Decades Into a Great Career, the Auteur Opens Up

In André Téchiné’s vibrant new film Being 17, two teens wrestle with desire and hostility in a mountainous corner of France. The subject matter is not new for Téchiné, who has for more than 40 years explored sexual self-awakening, alienation and family strife in films notable for their consistency and…

On the Screen, American Pastoral Loses Its Rich Sweep

“How could a big man like you fuck up like this?” That’s the question that Nathan Zuckerman fears being asked — in Philip Roth’s Pulitzer-winning American Pastoral (1997) — if he were to show the book he’s written about the tragic life of his old Newark classmate Seymour “Swede” Levov…

With Cameraperson, Kirsten Johnson Interrogates Documentary Itself

“These are the images that have marked me and leave me wondering still.” That’s how Kirsten Johnson prefaces Cameraperson, made up of footage she has collected over 25 years of working as a camera operator, cinematographer and director on dozens of different documentaries — films like Laura Poitras’ The Oath…

Miami City Ballet Premieres With Classic, Romantic Giselle

Grisi, the legendary ballerina who originated the role of Giselle in 19th-century Paris, must be smiling down on Lauren Fadeley from dance Heaven. Portraying the titular heroine of Giselle, the most celebrated French ballet, can well be considered the zenith of any career. And not only did Fadeley get to…

Keeping Up with the Joneses Has Every Reason to Be Jealous

Even those of us with a soft spot for dumb, high-concept Hollywood comedies might be outraged by the limp, unfunny nothingburger that is Keeping Up with the Joneses. A wan attempt to mix the comedy of domestic anxiety with the comedy of inept espionage — think Neighbors meets Central Intelligence…

The Miami Foundation Wants to Hear Your Miami Story

If you’re a Miami local, chances are you have a strong opinion about life in the 305. Like working out or waking up early, Miami is one of those polarizing topics that people either love or hate. No matter which camp you’re in, The Miami Foundation wants you to share…