New Orleans
While everyone is familiar with Clover Grill, the 24/7 diner that uses hubcaps to cook the hamburgers, there’s certainly more to the late-night eats scene than that. Here are a few of the spots night owls can get their grub on in the Crescent City regardless of neighborhood or craving.
Kay pulls MiMi’s strings as she paints French Quarter landscapes, street performers, self-portraits, and anything else that she finds interesting.
The two-day barbecue and music event is a celebration of the year-round efforts made by more than 90 competing teams. Those teams raise financial aid for families whose children are being treated for pediatric brain cancer.
In the bright light of Mardi Gras mornings, the dancing and colorful beads and feathers from Montana’s suits are so vivid and saturated they leave an afterimage on the retinas. Accompanied by the shaking and thumping tambourine, and the singing and yelling of the traditional chants, the boisterous scene leaves a memory etched on the mind long after.
Nearly 200 years later, New Orleans’ neutral grounds are no longer the battleground the original Canal Street was. Now they play host to the battle for Mardi Gras throws instead.
Two couples compete to win the best cheap date, but with a catch: they can spend all their fifty dollars at one location, and all the other activities must be free!
Local New Orleans eats, levee tours and Cajun and African drum dancing on two cheap dates in New Orleans.
Amber Robinson was furloughed from her airline job during the peak of the pandemic. At 51 years old, she hopes Kinga will help inspire her in a new direction. The sky’s the limit!
Local comedy duos debate the best po’ boys in the city, get fit and flexible, discover vintage threads and more on two cheap “dates” in New Orleans.
French settlers made plans to turn the piece of land on the banks of the Mississippi River into a sprawling community, but they didn’t have the manpower or skills to do it themselves. So they turned to African slaves.