The words “themed hotel room” used to evoke images of afternoon affairs, bulletproof glass lobbies, and coin-operated beds. But as you may have seen on
Minerva Gutiérrez doesn’t suffer fools lightly. Yet every day she encounters them at the ice cream stand she works at. The customers, the coworkers, and,
Curls of shaved wood litter the ground, and the air is rich with the scent of steamed lumber. Evan Cree leans over a piece of
Stories can embody many forms. There are those we pass down, the ones we know by heart, and those we identify through the specificity of
In May of 1971—more than fifty years ago—the Rochester Gay Liberation Front organized its first official gay pride event, a well-attended (300 guests) picnic in
In the beginning, it was Ian Wilson and an idea. For him it was simple, he wanted to bring the types of murals he had
The funny thing about living through a pandemic is watching waves of people responding to unprecedented stress at the same time. In the beginning, a
Rochester Police Officer Kevin Yandow was cruising patiently in his patrol car along Genesee Street, heading north from Genesee Valley Park toward Bull’s Head, windshield
“Is it weird to have a meal of just shrimp?” I ask my tablemates. They are pleasantly unfazed by my question. “Not at all,” replies