growing up

Missed out on PechaKucha? We've got the recap!

Locally blogger and influencer Hilary Elrod talks about Charleston, blogging and more.

Originally from Sumter, South Carolina, Lewis Brice is now in Nashville creating a name for himself. This weekend, he's headlining Wrenn Stock Music Festival.

Grab your friends, loved ones and get ready to dig in to the food of Chile in Charleston!

Local musician, Emily Curtis launches her newest EP, Hindsight.

2 Trevors. One Music Farm.

Charleston local Landon Sanford will soon be releasing a travel app called Rayka. Here's a close look into the origin of the app and what it hopes to achieve as the future of wanderlust.

Your weekly breakdown of the most dramatic season ever.

Country music legend Dolly Parton brought her Pure & Simple Tour to the North Charleston Coliseum and proved why, even at 70, she's a force to be reckoned with.

Anjali Naik's music reflects her own self-care.

Editor Hooper Schultz sits down with one of the organizers of We Are Family's Spirit Day, being held this Friday, October 21, at The Southern Gallery from 6:30pm-9pm.

This is a show that you are not going to want to miss. “Our country roots run deep, but I would say that we’re a honky-tonk band, we’re upbeat.” Edwards recommends checking out “Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” off of Goodbye Normal Street if you’re on the fence. Don’t worry we’ve got a live version here for you to check out. The show is $15 in advance, $17 at the door. Doors are at 8:00 pm. Get out to The Pour House and show the Turnpike Troubadours some Lowcountry love.

I was recently speaking with a friend about our fathers. Like most conversations worth a damn, it was early in the morning and fueled by a couple pints of beer. My friend brought up a really solid point about my father that I’ve been thinking about ever since.

So far this has been a really exciting year for many reasons. One of them for me is the fact that UNC has been playing basketball at a high rate.

For its third anniversary, The Alley did what it does best: invite the town out to a big, sexy party dressed out in the finest fashions history and budgets could afford. All we had to do in return was allow a portion of our ticket to be donated to the Be a Mentor Program, and enjoy the show.

Five Five Studio is built on the traditional practices of weaving and quilting curated with her modern eye.

How, in a city that is heavily stratified by race, income, and history, can one man remain in power so long and remain so beloved? We say thank you to Mayor Joe Riley for forty years of service.

The perfect festive appetizer for all of those upcoming Halloween parties!

As an African Studies enthusiast, I learned a long time ago that the overwhelming majority of enslaved people brought from Africa during the Trans Atlantic Slave trade ended up in Hispanic colonies throughout the Caribbean and South America. So for me, Hispanic Heritage Month represents another opportunity to celebrate and uplift black history on a national scale, similarly to how it’s done in February for African American History.

Eddie Hogan, one of Lowcountry music's biggest supporters, passed away late last year. This Saturday at The Windjammer friends, family and musicians will gather for a day that celebrates Hogan's life.