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Food fest, pop-up markets: 31 things to do in Charlotte this weekend

Food fest, pop-up markets: 31 things to do in Charlotte this weekend

Axios06-06-2025
We're spending money on two things this weekend: food at Taste of Charlotte in Uptown and items from local small businesses staging some pop-up markets.
Friday, June 6
🥃 Enjoy a selection of whiskeys paired with a tasting menu at The Ballantyne. | $105 | 6:30pm | Details
🤣 Hear a storytelling stand-up comedy showcase at Tip Top Daily Market. | Free | 8pm | Details
🥍 Catch a Premier Lacrosse League game at American Legion Memorial Stadium. | $32+ | 6pm | Details
🎤 Vibe to music from Dispatch with John Butler as they make their tour stop at Skyla Credit Union Amphitheatre. | $30+ | 6pm | Details
🏟️ Take the family to see the Savannah Bananas play the Savannah Party Animals at Bank of America Stadium. | $107+ | 7pm | Details
⚾️ Watch the Charlotte Knights take on the Lehigh Valley Iron Pigs at Truist Field while you sip on a beer and enjoy concessions. | $32 | 7:04pm | Details
🍽️ Take the family to get a taste of Charlotte in Uptown along North Tryon Street by sampling 100 menu items from the city's most popular restaurants plus enjoy live music and entertainment. | 11am-6pm | Runs through Sunday | Details
🎨 Visit a list of South End art galleries for the First Friday Gallery Crawl and wrap up the evening by grabbing dinner at a nearby restaurant. | Free | 5-8:30pm | Details
🎹 See the world-renowned jazz pianist Alex Bugnon at Middle C Jazz. | $37.25+ | Times vary | Details
🍿 Bring a blanket and a friend to watch an outdoor screening of "The Greatest Showman" at Fourth Ward Park. | Free | 8-10:30pm | Details
🎵 Listen to live music at Whitewater Center after an evening of outdoor adventures. | Free. $12 parking. | 7pm | Details
🎨 Paint with Black Moth Bars in Camp North End while you sip on cocktails over music from a DJ. | Free | 6-9pm | Details
Saturday, June 7
🌭 Challenge your appetite to a hot dog eating contest at Goldie's and stick around for games, live music and more. | Free | 1pm | Details
🍾 Make friends over a brunch with Dishcourse and follow up the meal by dancing to Y2K music at SupperClub. | $20 | 11am | Details
🎶 Vibe to live music over a glass of wine at Frenchy's Sip and Shop in South End. | Free | 7pm | Details
🤣 Laugh the night away to a comedy show at Carolina Beer Temple. | Free | 7pm | Details
🛍️ Shop from The Bowl at Ballantyne's street market to see 25 vendors including local bakers, makers and boutiques. | Free | 10am | Details
🍫 Learn how to make a s'mores cake at Sweet Spot Studios. | $90 | 10:30am | Details
🌈 Head to downtown Belmont for a Pride crawl and end an eventful day at by checking out the market at Primal. | Free | 3pm | Details
🏓 Learn how to play pickleball at Rally in LoSo in a beginner-friendly session. | $5 | 3pm | Details
🎤 See the Beach Boys with John Stamos live in concert at The Amp Ballantyne. | $226+ | 7pm | Details
🤑 Shop from a pop-up shop at Seoul Food Meat Co. in South End. Dogs are welcome on the patio and can be off-leash in the bark park. | Free | 12-5pm | Details
🛍️ Find some handcrafted goods from local vendors at Sycamore Brewing's Saturday Social pop-up market.| Free | 12-5pm | Details
👨‍💼 Hear from local leaders and innovators at UNC Charlotte Center City as they discuss local and regional sustainability efforts. | $20-$30 | 8:30am-3pm | Details
🏓 Grab a group of friends to meet at Tipsy Pickle in Camp North End for Chilly Coffee Club 's summer kick-off party featuring house DJs, plunges, saunas, pickleball and a dunk tank. | $25+ | 10am-1pm | Details
Sunday, June 8
🛍️ Shop from Birkdale Village's market featuring 25+ vendors with everything from art to homemade goods. | Free | 11am | Details
🎊 Vibe to house music at Blinders' new Sunday day party series featuring a rotating list of DJs and drink features. | Free | 12pm | Details
🤣 Laugh your heart out to a comedy showcase at Monarch Market and stick around to grab a meal from one of their food stalls. | Free | 2pm | Details
⚽️ Cheer on Carolina Ascent FC in the USL Super League Semifinal against Ft. Lauderdale United FC at American Legion Memorial Stadium. | $16-$110 | 7pm | Details
🍻 Stop by Triple C Brewing Company for a colon cancer charity event. | Free | 1-4pm | Details
👖 Pick up some vintage clothes from Thrift Pony's vintage market in front of the Ford Building at Camp North End. | Free | 11am-5pm | Details
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The Afropop Girls Making This Summer Sexy
The Afropop Girls Making This Summer Sexy

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The Afropop Girls Making This Summer Sexy

On Friday, July 26, the day of the week new music drops regularly, three of the hottest pop stars out of Africa doled out the steamiest trifecta of releases this year. Nigerian singer Ayra Starr's latest song is literally about being hot. South African star Tyla came with a four-pack EP called WWP, short for We Wanna Party. And Ghanaian-American shapeshifter Amaarae broke barriers with her new single 'Girlie-Pop!' and its steamy, queer-coded music video. It was a day that crystallized a pattern that had been forming all year: the women of Afropop are bringing sexy back. Much of their movement, like others across media right now, is Y2K-indebted. Skirts and tops have gotten microscopic, bottoms are being slung below the waist again, and lots of producers seem to be doing their best impressions of early Pharrell. But that time also came with some trends in how women's sexuality was marketed and received that we now find disturbing, to say the least. We can see that Britney Spears, the queen of Y2K, was someone whose personhood and sexuality was often devoured and exploited as she explored both as a young girl (her iconic and controversial 1999 Rolling Stone cover is an emblem of how complicated it is to make a teenager a sex symbol). We now know Janet Jackson was unfairly shamed and punished after Justin Timberlake exposed her pasty-covered breast during their 2004 Super Bowl performance. Today, while some of the cultural relics of that time have rolled back around, many young women may have more agency about why, when, and how they want to participate. More from Rolling Stone Tyla Summer Kicks Off With 'WWP' Mixtape Justin Bieber, Blackpink, Tyla, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week Tyla Asks 'Is It' Wrong for a New Romance to Feel So Right on Latest Single It feels like that agency is what we're witnessing in Afropop. Ayra Starr — who emerged in 2021 as a cunning 19-year-old surrounded by cartoon butterflies and broken hearts — has grown more edgy in her dress and performance as she's gotten older. In May, she inched towards summer with the fiery 'Gimme Dat,' video featuring Wizkid, and last week, she finally released her much-anticipated new single 'Hot Body.' 'Body be dancing/Slow wine/Summer body/So fine,' she sings on the strip tease of a song. As she breadcrumbed the track on social media over the past few weeks, she could be seen hitting a seductive, TikTok ready dance to it with her girlfriends, and it truly looks like she's having a blast. Just a few days ago, on July 27, she giddily celebrated performing the song with Coldplay, who she's touring with as an opening act this summer. Before she took the stage, Chris Martin, who eagerly accompanied her on acoustic guitar, told the crowd, 'Ok, everybody, listen. We will do something special because this is Ayra Starr from Nigeria. She is going to be the world's biggest pop star soon and she has a new song called 'Hot Body' which I think is amazing. So please indulge us and join us for a big dance party.' Dancing, of course, has been Tyla's thing since she captivated the mainstream with 'Water' in 2023. (Cute Y2K fashion has become a bit of a calling card for her, as it has for Starr. They've been friendly collaborators, both 23 years old.) The rollout and name of Tyla's new EP, WWP, takes cues from the popular nightlife chant '[Insert name of DJ or performer leading the crowd here], we wanna party!' That makes perfect sense for a girl who's always been about partying so hard you're soaked, whether with sweat or the contents of your plastic bottle. Tyla's WWP features 'Bliss,' a track whose music video spawned an excellent meme about being sexy and sad at once. It takes the quick cut between a scene of the singer fighting tears and another of her grinding against a silver sculpture in desert sand. 'Idk if we're supposed to shake ass or cry' one YouTube commenter wrote to the tune of 15,000 likes. The full WWP EP includes two songs that debuted this month, one being 'Dynamite,' an energizing collaboration with Wizkid (it's the pair's first and feels reminiscent of Ayra Starr hopping on Star Boy's '2 Sugar' earlier in her rise). The song that really cements the sexy, though, is 'Mr. Media.' While the track lambasts the voyeuristic sensationalism she's faced in the public eye, she uses the second verse to remind herself why she shouldn't care: 'Bad bitch, I ain't always got time to talk/Too bad, yeah, I know I'm difficult/You'd be too if you had my visuals/You'd be too if you had material.' Amaarae seems to be channeling a similar devil-may-care confidence as she gears up to release Black Star, her third studio album set to drop August 8. On Friday, she shared the second single, 'Girlie-Pop!' following the erotic 'S.M.O.' (for 'Slut Me Out'). 'Girlie-Pop!' ushers in this new era of Amaarae's powerfully, honing a familiar balance of softness, urgency, and cleverly sensual songwriting with a righteously queer arc. Using music as an extended allegory, she coos, 'I want you to take me from the top/Kiss me 'til I tell you, 'Make it soft'/One of us gotta bring this to a stop/Flip positions, switching genres 'til you make it pop.' In the moody video, Amaarae nearly sings into the mouth of another woman, the camera lingering on their lips. In other moments, their heads swirl around each other's face and neck. When that's not happening, the woman is DJing, potentially another bit of innuendo. Amaarae's imagery and music has sometimes teetered towards homoerotic (in the 'S.M.O.' video, for example, one might say she's literally waxing a beautiful woman's ass) but 'Girlie-Pop!' marks a bold embrace of queerness for a Ghanaian artist of her magnitude. For years, Ghanaian lawmakers have notoriously been pushing virulent anti-LGBTQ legislation and now they have a president reportedly committed to passing them. Amaarae declaring that the video was shot in Ghana 'with loveeeeee' is a radical act. 'My real mission is for us to not think about sexuality, or to subvert it so much to the point where it subconsciously takes people away from that,' she told Galore about her last album, Fountain Baby, in 2023. 'I wanted to make the music so sexy and captivating that you kind of wouldn't think about what pronouns I was using, no matter if you are straight, gay, pansexual, whatever. That was my way of trying to slowly break that boundary that things have to be in boxes and confined and defined.' So much of this Summer of Sexy has actually been brewing since 2024. Moliy's 'Shake It to the Max (Fly)' is currently one of the biggest songs in the world, and the Ghanaian singer first teased it back in October with a short snippet on TikTok. Today there have been 4.5 million videos made with a remix featuring dancehall stars Skillibeng and Shenseea on the app. In fact, there's been five remixes total, including versions with Sean Paul and Major Lazer. Though Moliy is African, 'Shake It to the Max' has always been a dancehall song, produced by Silent Addy and Disco Neal of the DJ duo Bashment Sound. On July 29, Billboard announced that the song had hit Number One on their Rhythmic Airplay chart, meaning it's a certified smash on American radio. It's also been sitting at Number One on the U.S. Afrobeats Song chart for 12 consecutive weeks, too. 'Shake It to the Max' has reached these heights as a viral anthem for baddies to let loose and whine their waists. Make sure you get out there and heed Moliy's call over the next month. Loosies: More music to move to summer Rema's 'Kelebu' and Theodora's 'Kongolese Sous BBL': So, in honor of the Summer of Sexy, I'm writing about these two at once, as Francophone singer Theodora's burgeoning hit is, in a way, an energetic ancestor to 'Kelebu,' Rema's excellent new party-starter. 'Kelebu' seems inspired by Bouyon, a high-octane dance music from Dominica, as well as Makossa from Cameroon and Coupé-décalé from Côte d'Ivoire (Theodora was born in Switzerland to Congolese parents and has lived all over the world). These are all threads Theodora has been pulling from the past few years, with the excellent 'Kongolese Sous BBL' becoming her biggest hit with well over 47 million streams on Spotify. Rema's closest collaborator, the producer London, also worked with Theodora on her song 'Massoko Na Mabele' from this past May. Darkoo, 'Right Now' featuring Rvssian and Davido: Intuitively, Nigerian hitmaker Darkoo titled her June EP $exy Girl $ummer. 'A lot of the top people in the game who are making music aren't making music for girls,' she told Apple Music. 'They are making music that women like, but it's not about them, and that's what I'm doing. I want them to feel like the sexiest women in the world.' This song definitely does it as the openly queer Darkoo and enthusiastic Davido promise to give some fortunate ladies the world. The song samples Gyptian's Jamaican hit 'Whine Slow,' which Rvssian himself produced. Daddy Lumba, 'Se Sumye Kasa A': This last Loosie is a tribute to Ghanaian legend Daddy Lumba, who died at age 60 on July 26. While he's known as a highlife maven, his music had diverse influences, from gospel to hip-hop, like you can hear on 2002's 'Se Sumye Kasa A.' 'Daddy Lumba really is a risk taker of his time,' Amaarae said in 2023, part of an interview she re-shared in memoriam of Lumba. 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Millennials Reveal The Bizarre Childhood Fears We All Shared
Millennials Reveal The Bizarre Childhood Fears We All Shared

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Millennials Reveal The Bizarre Childhood Fears We All Shared

Each generation grows up with fears that stem from the current world they live in. For millennials, some of the things they were afraid of ended up being less of a threat than they thought they would be. For example, many people grew up fearing getting stuck in quicksand, thinking they'd find themselves in that situation quite often. Other millennials feared Y2K and the end of the Mayan calendar in 2012. DueEntertainer0 on Reddit started a dialogue about millennial fears when they asked, "Can we talk about some of the random things that we were afraid of in the '90s and early 2000s?" Here are some of the responses, and as a Gen Z, are you millennials okay? Ya'll really thought the world was ending, huh? "Driving behind a log truck, thanks to Final Destination." —CandidateNo2731 "The 2012 Mayan apocalypse definitely was something my neighbors brought up often." —cocovacado "The Bermuda Triangle. I was convinced my family was gonna disappear if we ever flew through it." —kenyafeelme "I thought I was going to be dodging quicksand all of the time." —jgasbarro "Eating razor blades in my Halloween candy." —funky_colors "Spontaneous human combustion." —hunky_dorie "Swallowing gum and not digesting it for seven years." —Devious_Bastard "Being offered drugs on a daily basis." —4browntown "Swimming less than 30 minutes after eating." —HPHambino "'Don't meet strangers off the internet.' Cut to my late-20s when we are now encouraged to do the exact opposite via dating sites." —andisteezy " drop, and roll. I asked my kid about this the other day, and he looked at me like I was silly." —superminingbros "The idea that sitting too close to the TV will make you go blind." —Little_Bird333 "The dreaded white van with the promise of candy inside." —Correct-Body9590 "Spiders, piranhas, and clowns in storm drains." —ShigoIAjumma "Every plastic bag was out to suffocate me." —SureElephant89 "Y2K." —b1llb3rt "Bloody Mary. I was absolutely TERRIFIED to go into the bathroom at night because of the mirror….and I never even said her damn name!!" —JennieDarko "Acid Rain. Remember that sh*t? And we all just stopped talking about it." —Tortellini_Isekai "I remember microwaving water being a thing. In Home Ec, they told us to never use microwaved water because the microwaves made it toxic or something." —TheOriginalBigDave "Rabid raccoons jumping out of random places and attacking my face." —Sevennolater "Killer bees. They made it seem like we'd get attacked by them at any time." —bigkatze "Honestly, I'm still afraid that one day I'm going to lift my toilet seat and be greeted by a snake or an alligator." —80s_angel "Random needles in the pay phone change thing." —vcabalda "Similar to quicksand: whirlpools. They seemed so prevalent in cartoons. Like the ocean is just littered with these evil water funnels that suck people in, never to be seen again. Terrifying." —xilefelix "People under the stairs." —Striking_Ad_8883 "I forget the movie, but swimming under a pool cover." —Palmspringsflorida "My hair getting eaten by that Cabbage Patch Kid that ate the crinkle-cut fries and carrot sticks." —earmufffs "Going down escalators. My mom told me a kid's toe was ripped off on an escalator because his shoe was untied and the shoelace got caught." —triponsynth "I was afraid of getting abducted by aliens." —Thee-lorax "That only I can stop forest fires. Saving all of California is a lot to put on a person." —mtnshadow83 "Getting letters in the mail that could be lined with undetected drugs that would kill you the moment you opened the envelope and released them into the air." —According-Pen-9774 "Lava. Like quicksand. There was that scene from that movie where the guy just slowly melts into the lava." —Dazzling_Side8036 "Driving with the interior lights on." —ewsurnme And lastly, "Anthrax!" —potato_couch_ If you're a millennial, is there something you were afraid of that wasn't included? Let us know in the comments!

Sofia Carson Embraces Classic Glamour in Richard Quinn Dress at ‘My Oxford Year' Premiere
Sofia Carson Embraces Classic Glamour in Richard Quinn Dress at ‘My Oxford Year' Premiere

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Sofia Carson Embraces Classic Glamour in Richard Quinn Dress at ‘My Oxford Year' Premiere

Sofia Carson embraced classic glamour in a Richard Quinn black and white gown for the red carpet premiere of her Netflix film 'My Oxford Year' in Los Angeles on Thursday. Carson's dress was wholly evocative of style elements and trends reminiscent of the 1950s. The dress, from Richard Quinn's spring 2025 ready-to-wear collection, featured a strapless silhouette with a square neckline and two distinct hemlines. More from WWD Supermodel Iman's Best Beauty Moments on the Runway From 1981 to 1989 'Freaky Friday' Beauty Moments That Defined Y2K: From Calico Hair to Chipped Nails Jessica Simpson Brings Grunge Y2K-inspired Glam Back The external layer of the gown featured a black satin material, which flowed to the floor. Beneath the black layer was a white midi dress with allover embroidered floral elements throughout. The dress featured a cinched waist for added silhouette definition. Carson also added a pair of black opera gloves to her look. Carson's hair was coiffed in a blunt bob with a side part. Several celebrities have adopted the bob hairstyle over the past few months, including Leslie Bibb, Halle Berry and Jenny Slate, among others. Her makeup included bold brows, lined eyes and a dark lip. Carson's 'My Oxford Year' premiere dress made its debut as part of London Fashion Week in September 2024. As a designer, Quinn operates with a direct line to his clients, often curating special orders and bridal. The eponymous designer's spring 2025 ready-to-wear collection was curated 'with the most meaningful moments of our lives in mind,' per Miles Socha's WWD review of the collection. 'The collection did not veer far from recent ones, riffing on familiar eveningwear archetypes — regal columns, debutante fit-and-flare ballgowns, fishtail numbers and minidresses — all frosted with dense floral embroideries, neat little satin bows and dramatic frills at the necks and wrist,' Socha wrote of the collection. Elements of old Hollywood glamour made a comeback on the red carpet. More recently, Pamela Anderson channeled timeless elegance with her custom Rodarte gown for 'The Naked Gun' premiere in London on Tuesday. In December 2024, WWD reported formalwear designers took inspiration from Old Hollywood for their respective pre-fall 2025 collections, including Markarian, Georgina Chapman and Lela Rose, among others. 'My Oxford Year' follows American Rhodes Scholar Anna, played by Carson, who falls for an ailing teach assistant, played by Corey Mylchreest, during her year at Oxford University. The film hits Netflix Aug. 1. Richard Quinn Spring 2025 Ready-To-Wear Collection View Gallery Launch Gallery: Richard Quinn Spring 2025 Ready-To-Wear Collection Best of WWD Amanda Anisimova's On-court Tennis Style Through the Years: From Teen Phenom to Wimbledon Finalist A Look Back at Fourth of July Celebrations at the White House Princess Diana's Birthday Looks Through the Years: Her Sleek Black Jacques Azagury Dress, Vibrant Colors and More Solve the daily Crossword

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