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A new coffee, skate, and streetwear shop opens inside My Sister’s Room in Midtown

Open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. during the week and 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. on weekends, Schaf Shop turns over the space in just 20 minutes, converting My Sister’s Room’s massive dance floor into a cozy hangout with booths, high-tops, and a glass skateboard case.
Artist Blair Hobbs celebrates Flannery O’Connor centennial with new show, Birthday Cake for Flannery

Artist Blair Hobbs celebrates Flannery O’Connor’s centennial with a new show at Spalding Nix Fine Art

Works from multidisciplinary artist Blair Hobbs will be on view at Spalding Nix Fine Art from March 14 to May 9 in Birthday Cake for Flannery—curated as part of the gallery’s ECHOES exhibition—in honor of the Georgia-born Southern Gothic writer’s 100th birthday. Viewers familiar with O’Connor’s singular body of work will recognize images, allusions and characters from some of her most well-known stories—Wise Blood, “A Good Man is Hard to Find,” “Good Country People,” "Parker’s Back.”
A llama dressed in St. Patrick's Day green with a tie

Paint Atlanta Green: The 141-year history of the city’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade

For one weekend this month, Atlanta, like Chicago, will flood with green. But lacking a river as we do, it’s Peachtree Street that will run emerald when the Irish and their friends march in celebration of St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. This year marks the 141st St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Atlanta, making it one of the longest continuously running parades in the city.
Beale Street

Must-Do South: Memphis, Tennessee

Memphis, the unofficial capital city of the Mississippi Delta, is widely renowned for two things: blues and barbecue. The two Memphis institutions are tightly connected—each a result of the Great Migration of the early 20th century.
National Memorial for Peace and Justice

Must-Do South: Montgomery, Alabama

As a destination, Montgomery is a journey in contrasts. The Alabama capital is both a proud epicenter of the mid-20th-century civil rights movement and a landscape curiously steeped in Confederate memory. Here, history isn’t merely preserved; it is powerfully experienced.
Bourbon Street

Must-Do South: New Orleans, Louisiana

Five years ago, New Orleans was turned upside down by Covid. Last year, however, confirmed a postpandemic renaissance and a tourism boom—a return for New Orleans as a prime destination location. The city had record or near-record attendance for Mardi Gras and the Jazz Fest, among other events, as if the entire world were crawling out of a dark cave and sought New Orleans as a place to bask in the glow of sunshine again.
John Rock

Must-Do South: Asheville, North Carolina

When Hurricane Helene carved a path across the Southeast last September, it left what may be its deepest marks in western North Carolina. Here, tourism is king, pouring billions into the region’s economy, and Asheville’s unrealized fall season saw an estimated $584 million washed away. But today, six months removed from the devastation, Asheville and western North Carolina are welcoming visitors.
James B. Beam Distilling Co.

Must-Do South: The Kentucky Bourbon Trail

The Kentucky Bourbon Trail is a group of 56 northern Kentucky distilleries that offers tours, tastings, and other educational opportunities and exhibits. But since you can’t see them all in one day or even one weekend, we’ve plotted an itinerary of highlights.
Beaufot

Must-Do South: The Original Gullah Festival

Every year over Memorial Day weekend, against the backdrop of the bucolic Beaufort River and under the shade of swaying palmetto trees, the Beaufort waterfront comes alive with the colors, sounds, and tastes of West Africa. You can almost feel the music before you hear it—the pounding percussion of complex African American beats as history comes to life with The Original Gullah Festival at the Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park.

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