Swift paints teenage love struggles in ‘Red’
Oh, Taylor.
163 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Oh, Taylor.
Jake Owen, Eli Young play Pepsi Grandstand
The sounds slowly grew.
Just beside the bright fuchsia Euroslide, and beyond the tall, shining Ferris wheel, the Pepsi Grandstand flashed red, white and blue lights across a crowd clutching oversized stuffed teddy bears and sticks of pink cotton candy.
A room full of professionals, dressed in button-downs and pencil skirts, held two fingers above their heads, snipping through the air with “scissors.” Dean Charles Bierbauer stretched a long, invisible ribbon across the front of the new Literacy Lab to Director Kim Jeffcoat, and Cocky snapped his beak at the center of the illusion.
Country singer brings rowdy show to Garnet Way
Children stand at his feet, holding queso-dipped tortilla chips and half-filled cups of Coke. There’s a look of wide-eyed amazement — they’ve found magic in the Vista.
Toes tapped under cafe tables as students sipped chocolate-drizzled frappuccinos and slurped Marble Slab ice cream from the bottom of waffle cones. There were no ice-cold glasses of beer or stray baskets of peanuts, but instead marinara-dunked breadsticks and Carolina Dining cups half-filled with orange Fanta.
It’s hit that time in the semester, when classes become real commitments. There are tests and papers and group projects, and really only one thing to beat the stress: a good concert. Between the capital city and Charlotte (just an hour-and-a-half-long drive), there is an impressive sampling of artists lined up for the next month. Whether country’s your thing, or you’re looking for a sweet serenade from Miss Fiona Apple, there’s a show suited for your school work escape.
Matchbox Twenty hasn’t left the parade — they’re mid-strut, confetti and beads in-hand, rallying around their first freshly recorded album in 10 years.
Rows of cookies — Carolina baseball hats, watermelons and hot pink bones — fill display cases through the shop.
There's always a list of songs that define the summer. Some are overplayed, and some are undiscovered, but each adds a melody and memory to the three months of sun, sand and afternoon naps. We've been asked to call Carly Rae Jepsen, maybe. And Adam Levine is still fresh out of quarters. But aside from the radio favorites, what albums defined this summer's discography? Here are a few.
One Belgian waffle covers a plate, with the ironed-on grid standing as the only hope to tackling the giant-sized breakfast.
They're going for rock 'n' roll. Leather jackets and dark wash jeans offset lace-up boots and oversized belt buckles.
It rings through the background of up-tempo pop hits and laces through smooth jazz rhythms as nothing more than an instrument in the line of percussion.
They've officially been in the game for 18 years — three middle-aged men grappling with real, rooted, feel-good talent in an industry pushing even the most established musical groups into a new, ill-fitting sound.
Bright and bold colored trees swoop and swirl on twisted trunks and lush, rolling green hills span the whimsical windings of the Jungle of Nool.
Red Hot Chili Peppers — April 7, Colonial Life Arena
It’s really a revelation: That moment when you stumble upon — or tumble upon — one of your favorite tracks, with a fresh, new voice behind the mic. A few weeks ago, The Mix took a look at some of the most listen-worthy covers on the Web, and today we’re back with a whole new crop of well-done takes on everything from ‘90s classics to that indie song you assumed was still undiscovered.