Print Edition
In This Issue:
Residents seek control of city-owned properties in the suddenly valuable Fruit Belt.
St. Patrick’s Friary, near Seymour and Emslie streets, is all that remains of Buffalo’s first Irish Catholic church complex. Here, in 1853, Bishop John Timon directed the construction of the Church of St.
The Canalside free Thursday concert series has consistently been one of the most popular summer events in Buffalo each year.
Photographer David Moog’s portrait of the photographer and educator.
Superb ink and ink wash drawings of Buffalo heritage architectural sites at Spot’s downtown flagship.
Stay in the Loop with this week’s LGBT happenings in Western New York presented by Loop Magazine!
How much have 10-hour TV shows spoiled us for cinema thrillers?
Is now the time to resuscitate one of the founding texts of popular culture’s white triumphalism?
“Scrap Iron” (1929) by Charles Burchfield, part of “Blistering Vision: Charles E. Burchfield’s Sublime American Landscapes”, opening July 8 at the Burchfield Penney Art Center.
A piece from photographer Sarah Barry’s portrait exhibit titled Double Exposure, which opens on Friday at Grindhaus Cafe.
This year’s festival featured a rich blend of rising stars (and veterans) like Grace Potter, Fritz and the Tantrums, and Judith Hill.
The story of Tab Hunter, the leading man whose closeted sexuality made Hollywood’s fakery intolerable for him.
In 2012, the battle over the legalization of food trucks in the City of Buffalo was joined, and an uproar from average citizens h