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Arts & Culture APRIL 22, 2025

16 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: April 24–27

Take a tasting tour of La Mesa Village, admire springtime flora at Art Alive, and enjoy a full day of live music at Adams Avenue Unplugged

16 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: April 24–27
Courtesy of La Jolla Concours d’Élégance 

Spring is in full swing, the sun is shining bright, and several of San Diego’s biggest events are back for another year—all the necessary ingredients for a perfect weekend. Catch iconic happenings like WOW Festival, Art Alive, the La Jolla Concours d’Élégance, and Adams Avenue Unplugged, or celebrate another facet of San Diego history: Fans of the Top Gun franchise can see both films for free at the historic Brooks Theater. 

Food & Drink | Concerts & Festivals | Theater & Art Exhibits | More Fun Things to Do

Fun Things to do in San Diego this weekend April 24-27, 2025 featuring  the 2025 San Diego Spring Sake Festival at the Japanese Friendship Garden & Museum
Courtesy of Eventbrite

Food & Drink Events in San Diego This Weekend

Taste of La Mesa Village 

April 24

Enjoy unlimited food and drinks at the inaugural Taste of La Mesa Village. This Thursday from 5 to 8 p.m., the La Mesa Village Association’s event will feature several restaurants, cafés, and bars, plus a number of “sip stops” for alcoholic and non-alcoholic libations in Downtown La Mesa. There will also be local artists at work and live music performances to check out. Tickets range from $35 to $45 and have already sold out, but you can still join the waitlist in case there are any openings. 

La Mesa Boulevard between Grant Avenue & Acacia Avenue, La Mesa

New San Diego pizza restaurant Bianchi opening at the Bahia Resort Hotel in Mission Beach

Wine in the Pines and Celebrate the Craft

April 26–27

North Torrey Pines Road hosts a pair of food- and drink-focused events this weekend. On Saturday at 4 p.m., the Wine in the Pines party returns to the Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve with a ’50s rockabilly theme, light bites, wine and beer, a live auction, and more. Tickets are $125, with all proceeds supporting Torrey Pines Conservancy’s preservation efforts. About three miles down the road, Celebrate the Craft takes place on Sunday from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at The Lodge at Torrey Pines with a menu of locally sourced food and wine. Tickets are $307 for Celebrate the Craft.

12600 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla | 11480 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla

San Diego Spring Sake Festival

April 27

Grab a glass and say “kanpai” (cheers) to the San Diego Spring Sake Festival. This 21-plus event from the San Diego Sake Club will include international sake selections, live entertainment, and the chance to learn the secrets of sake making from local brewers and sommeliers at the Japanese Friendship Garden & Museum. Tickets are $93 and come with admission to the museum, plus unlimited tasting of sake and Japanese beers and a festival tasting cup.

2215 Pan American Road East, Balboa Park

Fun Things to do in San Diego this weekend April 24-27, 2025 featuring  the Without Walls Festival (WOW Festival) of arts on UC San Diego's campus in La jolla
Courtesy of La Jolla Playhouse

Concerts & Festivals in San Diego This Weekend

WOW Festival

April 24–27

See more than 20 new, out-of-the-box productions (some of them free) at the La Jolla Playhouse’s annual WOW Festival. Taking place at both traditional and unconventional venues across the UC San Diego campus, the lineup from Thursday to Sunday includes a host of unique shows, including a sex ed tour of the US, a puppet procession, and a casino experience where you gamble for a shot at the American Dream. Create your own schedule and enjoy the creativity of artists who are pushing the envelope. 

La Jolla 

San Diego live music bar The Casbah featuring a local band performing on stage

Art Scene West Film Festival 

April 25–26

Independent filmmakers hailing from around the country will screen 10 short films (25 minutes or less) at the first-ever Art Scene West Film Festival, happening Friday and Saturday at Seaport Village. Attendees can enjoy live music and activities each night, followed by outdoor screenings in the Lighthouse District beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $13 per night; a portion of the festival proceeds will help fund ArtReach’s equitable art education programs around San Diego County.

803 West Harbor Drive, Embarcadero

Linda Vista Multicultural Fair & Parade 

April 26

Explore cultural exhibits, artistic performances, and carnival rides at the free Linda Vista Multicultural Fair & Parade, taking place Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Attendees can enjoy live performances from singers and instrumentalists on the main stage, plus martial arts demonstrations, dance troupe shows, and more on the World Arts Village Stage. Plus, there will be fun activities for the whole family, with inflatable bounce houses, magicians, and face painting for children. 

6900 Linda Vista Road between Comstock Street & Ulric Street, Linda Vista

Adams Avenue Unplugged

April 26

Get amped up for Adams Avenue Unplugged, an all-day live music extravaganza on Adams Avenue, stretching from University Heights to Kensington. Roam the neighborhood for 80 performances at 24 venues, including restaurants, cafés, and Normal Heights United Church, from noon to midnight. Entry is free, but $25 VIP beer and food tickets, which come with three craft beers courtesy of Mission Brewing and a taco combo plate from Ponce’s Mexican Restaurant to enjoy by the main stage, are currently on sale.

Adams Avenue from University Heights to Kensington 

Encinitas Spring Street Fair 

April 26–27

Encinitas 101 MainStreet Association’s twice-a-year block party is back for the springtime with a plethora of San Diego businesses, artisans, and musicians spread out across several blocks of Highway 10. The two-day Encinitas Spring Street Fair features vendors selling creative handmade items, a packed live music and entertainment schedule on five stages, and more than 450 local businesses with booths and pop-up storefronts on the festival grounds. Best of all, entry is free.

South Coast Highway 101 between D & J Streets, Encinitas 

Fun Things to do in San Diego this weekend April 24-27, 2025 featuring  the Art Alive fundraiser at Balboa Park's San Diego Museum of Art
Courtesy of San Diego Museum of Art

Theater & Art Exhibits in San Diego This Weekend

Art Alive at the San Diego Museum of Art

April 24–27

This year’s Art Alive, the San Diego Museum of Art’s flower-full fundraiser and celebration, starts with the black-tie Premiere Dinner Thursday, but it truly gets going with Friday night’s Bloom Bash from 7 p.m. to midnight, with highlights like signature cocktails, art installations, and a massive ferris wheel. Admission to Art Alive is $40 for adults, $5 for youth ages 7 to 17, and free for kids ages 6 and under; separate tickets are required for Bloom Bash ($250 for members, $350 for nonmembers) and the Premiere Dinner ($3,500+). 

1450 El Prado, Balboa Park

Things to do in San Diego this month, April 2025 featuring La Jolla Concours d’Elegance Car Show classic car show

La Traviata at Civic Theatre

April 25–27

With a live score by the San Diego Symphony Orchestra, the San Diego Opera will perform Guiseppe Verdi’s three-act opera, La Traviata. There will be a pre-opera talk 50 minutes prior to each performance and post-opera talk-back 10 minutes after Saturday and Sunday’s performances with members of the cast. La Traviata will be sung in Italian, with English and Spanish subtitles projected above the stage. Tickets start at $141 for this opera production, with performances Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Civic Theatre.

1100 Third Avenue, Gaslamp 

Mission Fed ArtWalk

April 26 & 27

Peruse unique fine art finds Saturday (11 a.m. to 6 p.m.) and Sunday (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.) when the Mission Fed ArtWalk returns to India Street. Over 250 local, national, and international visual artists will have work on display and available for purchase during the event. Attendees can also enjoy four live music stages, street food, and family-friendly art activities at the KidsWalk.

India Street, Little Italy

Because You’re Mine at Brooks Theater

April 27

Because You’re Mine at the Oceanside Theatre Company’s Brooks Theater celebrates the love and hits of country music’s favorite power couple: Johnny Cash (played by Charles Evans Jr.) and June Carter (Caitie Grady). Tickets start at $35 for Because You’re Mine, with this matinee performance beginning Sunday at 2 p.m. 

217 North Coast Highway, Oceanside 

Fun Things to do in San Diego this weekend April 24-27, 2025 featuring  the San Diego Book Crawl at Verbatim Book sin North Park
Courtesy of Verbatim Books

More Fun Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend

Jess Cramp: “The Untold Story of Sharks” at the Conrad Prebys Performing Arts Center

April 24

As apex predators who have roamed the oceans for an estimated 200 million years, sharks are essential to the health of the world’s marine ecosystems. But there’s a lot that people don’t know about these sharp-tooth creatures outside of Jaws and “Baby Shark.” This Thursday at 7:30 p.m., certified shark aficionado Dr. Jess Cramp will pull from National Geographic’s archives, including significant findings made by women researchers in the 1900s, to share “The Untold Story of Sharks.” Tickets range from $31 to $53 for this presentation. 

7600 Fay Avenue, La Jolla 

Interior of San Diego Independent local bookstore Verbatim Books in North Park

Top Gun and Top Gun: Maverick at the Brooks Theater

April 25 & 26

Grab your aviator shades and enter the danger zone with the Oceanside Theatre Company’s free Top Gun marathon at the Brooks Theater. The programming will begin with a Friday night showing of Tony Scott’s 1985 classic (8 p.m.) followed by three Saturday screenings of its 2022 sequel Top Gun: Maverick (noon, 4 p.m., and 8 p.m.). With sky-high action sequences, infamous beach volleyball games, and a local connection to the real-life Top Gun naval air station in Miramar, these movies are a treat to see on the big screen. 

217 North Coast Highway, Oceanside

La Jolla Concours d’Élégance 

April 25–27

The La Jolla Concours d’Élégance is made for motorheads, with a weekend of car activities to get your engines humming. It all begins with Friday night’s VIP soiree—a classy evening featuring cocktails, bites, and vintage cars—followed by Porsches on Prospect Saturday night, a free procession of hot rods rolling down Prospect Street. But the crème de la crème is undoubtedly Sunday’s showcase at La Jolla Cove, where over 170 automobiles will be on display overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Tickets range from $39 children’s (11–17) general admission tickets to the $829 VIP weekend package. 

1100 Coast Boulevard, La Jolla

San Diego Book Crawl

April 26–28

Keep adding to that TBR pile and support 14 independent bookstores across the city throughout the three-day San Diego Book Crawl. Beginning Saturday, visitors to participating locations can make a purchase of $10 or more to receive a prize (while supplies last) and kick off their crawl adventure. From there, choose your own route (or take a suggested path) to continue filling out the spots on your Book Crawl Passport. More info about the available prizes can be found on the book crawl Instagram.

Citywide

Ryan Hardison is a freelance arts and entertainment writer and recent graduate of San Diego State. When he's not staring at his laptop, he's likely eating an adobada burrito or getting sunburnt at the beach.

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Arts & Culture JUNE 30, 2026

16 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: June 30-July 5

Dance to the American Rhythm, shop after-hours at the Summer Sera, and catch the Big Bay Boom fireworks show

16 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: June 30-July 5
Courtesy of Lakehouse Resort

Before, during, and after the Fourth of July, San Diegans can commemorate America’s 250th anniversary with an abundance of stars, stripes and local celebrations. America The Beautiful: 250 at The Rady Shell and Lamb’s Players Theatre’s revival of American Rhythm will look back at the many songs which define our country. Liberty Station’s Anchored in Freedom celebration and the Independence Day Carnival offer community-centered fun and loads of family-friendly activities. And who can possibly forget the Big Bay Boom, which will resume its reign over San Diego Bay as the state’s biggest fireworks show. Outside of the holiday festivities, this week brings the yearly return of Little Italy’s Summer Sera and the Athenaeum Summer Festival, as well as a slate of championship matches for All Elite Wrestling.  

Food & Drink | Concerts & Festivals | Theater & Art Exhibits | More Fun Things to Do

Courtesy of Margaritaville Hotels & Resorts

Food & Drink Events in San Diego This Weekend

Sunset & Spritz at 5 O’Clock Somewhere Bar 

July 3

Sip on refreshing beverages and savor a panoramic rooftop view this Friday from 6-8 p.m. during the 21-plus Sunset & Spritz at Margaritaville Hotel San Diego Gaslamp Quarter’s 5 O’Clock Somewhere Bar. There will be a live DJ (until 9 p.m.), appetizers, pool and cabana access, a photo booth, and a cash bar (until 11 p.m.). To accentuate the summer theme, guests are invited to dress in white, pink, and orange attire. Tickets are $29 and come with a welcome aperol spritz. 

616 J Street, Gaslamp

The 250 Grand Tasting Menu at Amaya

July 3 & 4

Bring a patriotic palette to the Fairmont Grand Del Mar for The 250 Grand Tasting Menu at Amaya this Friday and Saturday from 5-8:30 p.m. Patrons will be treated to a five-course tasting menu, curated to exhibit a selection of standout regional flavors and culinary concepts that have shaped our country’s distinct food heritage. The meal will also include beverage pairings with each course, such as wine, cocktails, and artisanal drinks. Reservations are $330 per person (with tax and 20% gratuity) on OpenTable

5300 Grand Del Mar Court, Del Mar

Concerts & Festivals in San Diego This Weekend

Don Toliver at Pechanga Arena

June 30

Don Toliver thrives at being the life of the party (and the “After Party”). His fifth album Octane, released in February, is indicative of his thrill-seeking nature. As with his earlier releases, Octane sees Toliver operating in the space between hip-hop and R&B, with warbling vocals and blaring beats that are best heard at a high volume. This Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., Toliver will play at Pechanga Arena, with rappers SoFaygo, Chase B and SahBabii—who had a guest verse on Octane standout “K9”—as special guests. Tickets start at $156 for this concert. 

3500 Sports Arena Boulevard, Midway

Blockbuster Broadway! at The Rady Shell

July 3

What makes musicals like Wicked, Cats, Chicago, and Jersey Boys so timeless is the legion of excellent songs that makes fans out of those who’ve never even watched the show. This Friday at 7:30 p.m. during Blockbuster Broadway! at The Rady Shell, conductor Evan Roider, the San Diego Symphony Orchestra, and veteran vocalists Alex Getlin, Jessica Hendy, Scott Coulter, and John Boswell (also on piano) will perform an all-star theater soundtrack. In addition to the shows named above, audiences can expect songs from A Chorus Line, The Phantom of the Opera, Annie, and more. Tickets range from $57 to $129 for this concert.

222 Marina Park Way, Embarcadero

America The Beautiful: 250 at The Rady Shell

July 4

One night after recognizing the brilliance of Broadway, The Rady Shell will ring in the United States’ landmark anniversary with America The Beautiful: 250 this Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Conductor Byron Stripling, joined by a five-performer ensemble and the San Diego Symphony Orchestra, will lead a night of ballads that best resemble the red, white, and blue, including songs sourced from the Great American Songbook. After the show, concertgoers are invited to watch the nearby Big Bay Boom from their seats. Tickets range from $71 to $139 for this concert. 

222 Marina Park Way, Embarcadero

Athenaeum Summer Festival at Athenaeum Music & Arts Library

Sundays from July 5-26

Ryan Hardison is a freelance arts and entertainment writer and recent graduate of San Diego State. When he's not staring at his laptop, he's likely eating an adobada burrito or getting sunburnt at the beach.

Arts & Culture JUNE 29, 2026

The Best Things to Do in San Diego: July 2026

See Rosalía in concert, stroll through Little Italy for Summer Sera, and dress up for Comic-Con

The Best Things to Do in San Diego: July 2026
Courtesy of Little Italy San Diego

Summer has officially kicked off, and San Diego is celebrating the sunny season with a myriad of fun events. From San Diego Pride week and a fairytale performance at Civic Theatre to a Santigold concert and Comic-Con, there are dozens of opportunities to make memories worth adding to your scrapbook. Here are all the best things to do in San Diego this July:

Concerts & Festivals | Theater & Art Exhibits | More Fun Things to Do

Concerts & Festivals in San Diego This Month

3

Divine inspirations, operatic ballads, and symphonic pop production elevate Rosalía’s Lux to heavenly levels. Hear angelic vocals ascend—in up to 13 languages—during her performance at Pechanga Arena.

15

Enjoy a night of feel-good indie rock and sing-along anthems at the Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre courtesy of Young the Giant and special guest Cold War Kids.

29

Santigold collects genres like gold stars: musical accouterments that brighten her uniquely alternative sound. See her live in concert with dancehall producer Troy Baker Sound at Humphreys Concerts by the Bay.

Photo Credit: Matthew Murphy

Theater & Art Exhibits in San Diego This Month

7–12

Be the Civic Theatre’s guest for “Beauty and the Beast” and discover that a fairytale love sometimes lies beneath the surface.

10–12

Two male government workers pursue a secret romance amid the Lavender Scare in the San Diego Opera’s production of “Fellow Travelers” at the Balboa Theatre.

7/11–8/1

The deep blue sea is home to countless ecological treasures, including the remarkable marine organisms documented by Oriana Poindexter. Study her educational and experimental imagery at The Photographer’s Eye via Field Notes.

7/11–1/10/27

Audrey Hepburn. Marlon Brando. Salvador Dalí. What do these icons have in common? Each was the enigmatic focus of a Cecil Beaton portrait. Step inside Cecil Beaton’s Fashionable World, an alluring showcase of 20th-century style at San Diego Museum of Art.

Courtesy of San Diego Pride

More Fun Things to Do in San Diego This Month

1

The Little Italy Mercato will trade morning rays for golden-hour glow through its free Summer Sera, an expansion of the neighborhood’s farmers market with live music, artisanal finds, and a fetching amount of pet activities.

11–19

San Diego Pride week starts with a Dyke March and ends with the two-day “Pride Shines On” festival. The days in between? Run a 5K, march in the parade, visit the rainbow-lit St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, and more.

19

Dress up for a Mediterranean-themed tea time at the Estancia La Jolla, a laid-back yet refined afternoon planned for the resort’s monthly Tea in the Garden series.

23–26

Nerd culture’s biggest gathering returns to the Convention Center. San Diego Comic-Con welcomes fans of everything from comic book cinema to ultra-rare collectibles for panels, exhibits, sneak peeks, and much more.

Ryan Hardison is a freelance arts and entertainment writer and recent graduate of San Diego State. When he's not staring at his laptop, he's likely eating an adobada burrito or getting sunburnt at the beach.

Arts & Culture JUNE 26, 2026

Who Makes San Diego, San Diego?

That's the question at the center of a new collaborative arts initiative launching this September, celebrating the artists, performers, designers, and makers shaping the region

Who Makes San Diego, San Diego?
Courtesy of Downtown San Diego Partnership

You may not know his name, but if you were one of the millions of people who traveled in and out of Terminal 2 at San Diego International Airport in 2024, you’ve seen his work. David Mont Virgen was born and raised in Tijuana. He earned a degree in international business and studied interior design in Madrid. In early 2020 during the global pandemic, he made one of life’s impactful pivots and decided to pursue art full time. 

David works between San Diego and Tijuana, in the cross-border corridor that is, depending on who you ask, either one of the most complicated places to build a life or one of the most generative creative regions in the country. He makes minimalist work—paintings, sculpture, objects. To do minimalism well, you have to be very good, because there is nowhere to hide. That airport piece? It’s officially entered the permanent collection of the San Diego Museum of Art. David is very good.

While his work was gaining real traction in San Diego, his marriage ended. When that relationship dissolved, the legal and physical ground beneath his feet shook: The future of his citizenship was now in limbo. David looked at his options and chose yet another life pivot.  

An accomplished working artist with a piece in a museum’s permanent collection enlisted in the U.S. Army, at a time when this country is at war. David describes this period of his life with grace, as “…an opportunity to choose myself and move forward with greater clarity and intention. For the love of self.” 

That phrase, “For the Love of Self,” became the title of his show, which opened at the Guild Hotel in January 2026 with support from Oram Hotels and the Consulate General of Mexico in San Diego. Jennifer Findley of JFin Collective led the curation. Within weeks of the show’s debut, David shipped off to train with the army. It would be easy to read his enlistment as purely practical, and citizenship was part of his calculus, but he is precise about his reasons: He wants to continue building a future in this country and building a future for this country. Because service, he says, feels connected to art. “Both are rooted in the belief that we are responsible for contributing something larger than ourselves.”

David is one creator out of many whose story hasn’t yet been told, but whose path reflects the world we live in. The truth he represents is that the artists in this city are creating under increasingly challenging constraints even as their work actively shapes the world we move through—the places we gather, the neighborhoods we love and live in—whether we know their names or not. 

It’s time their stories are told.

This fall, we’ll be publishing an ambitious arts and culture issue made possible by the support of two organizations who are underwriting an expanded freelance budget with one question at its center: Who makes San Diego, San Diego? 

The Art & Design District—a Prebys-supported initiative to develop and shape a dedicated area of the city for creative work, led by Jonathan Glus—has joined as co-publisher of our September issue. SDFC Playmakers led by Sebastian Morúa, the MLS team’s program dedicated to showcasing San Diego’s creative community, has also joined as digital co-publisher for the next six months. 

With their support, our freelance budget has tripled. In the spirit of radical transparency, and because our readers deserve to know how our work is funded, our typical monthly print freelance budget is about $6,000. That supports writing, photography, and design across more than 100 pages. Our monthly digital budget is $2,500. 

With the support of our co-publishers, we’ve brought on Aaryn Belfer, one of San Diego’s most respected editorial voices, as the issue’s special editor. Alongside Troy Johnson, content chief; and Emma Veidt, editor; she is helping shape the editorial vision of the issue.

With an expanded team, we’ll soon bring on a digital producer and an additional art designer. We’ll produce an expansive portrait of the artists, makers, performers, and institutions defining this region’s creative life, commission original photography, and create a comprehensive fall arts and culture calendar. The issue will anchor a six-month editorial program that will extend across digital, social media, video, podcast, and newsletters through early next year.

We have been doing this for 78 years, and we have learned how to do it well with limited resources. But the conversation happening in San Diego right now—about the role arts and culture play in shaping a city and the role a city plays in shaping arts and culture—is one that demands more than what our standard monthly budget can produce. Until now. 

This partnership model is new to us but the challenges that precede it are not new to media, particularly on the local level. And yet, this collaboration serves as real proof that civic organizations and local media can work together to document and preserve the story of a place and the people who make it, for the record.

David told me that San Diego gave him a sense of belonging. That he felt supported and encouraged to keep growing. Not because life got easier, but because he learned to trust himself through uncertainty.

Today, he’s somewhere in basic training. But he is still an artist and he will keep making work. The artists in this city are almost never just one thing. They are painters and soldiers, sculptors and teachers, dancers and mathematicians. David is a minimalist artist and a U.S. Army recruit. He is Tijuana and San Diego. He is, in the most literal sense, still becoming.

A great city knows its makers. I want San Diego to be that city. 

September is on newsstands soon.

Studio S JULY 1, 2026

Get Your Home Ready for (San Diego) Summer

Tips from the trusted experts at Mauzy Cooling, Heating, Plumbing, and Electrical

Get Your Home Ready for (San Diego) Summer
Courtesy of Mauzy Heating and Air

San Diego summers can be brutal. But since the hottest period is typically late summer into early fall, San Diegans still have time to prepare. The pros at Mauzy Cooling, Heating, Plumbing, and Electrical are standing by to help homeowners fortify their homes against the elements and ensure their air conditioning is as frosty as the penguins that serve as the company’s mascots. 

Many homeowners underestimate the load their AC system faces, especially in the inland valleys where temperatures regularly top 100 degrees. San Diego regularly sees multi-day heatwaves each summer, and a system that struggles on the first day will likely fail by the third. Longer run times, unusual sounds or smells, and uneven cooling from room to room are all signs that your system may not survive the next hot spell.  

Systems typically last 12 to 17 years, but there are exceptions. If a system is approaching that, or is already there, a professional evaluation is recommended before summer really heats up. A good rule of thumb: If you can’t remember when your system was last serviced, it’s due. 

“As technology changes, systems become smarter and smarter,” says Sean O’Connor, an install manager at Mauzy with 42 years of experience. “There are a lot of people out there who will say a system’s only good for 10 years. I don’t buy that—these systems are built to last as long as they’re taken care of.” 

There are also a few steps homeowners can take between services to extend the life of their system. Regularly changing a dirty filter—especially if you have kids or pets—and keeping an outdoor unit clean can help head off problems in the future, says O’Connor. 

Also, be realistic about whether it’s time to replace a unit. O’Connor likens pouring money into salvaging a faulty unit with patchwork repairs and replacement parts to “tripping over a dollar to pick up a dime.” When one part fails, others are sure to follow, and newer parts may not be compatible with older units. Mauzy recommends homeowners use the 50% rule: If a repair costs more than 50% of the system’s replacement value, and the equipment is over 10 years old, replacement is usually the better long-term value. And don’t forget the ducting. An older house that was built with heat and later had air conditioning added may not have sufficient airflow, regardless of how good the system is. 

Last but not least, homeowners should know who to trust when it comes to their homes. Built on three generations of professional integrity, Mauzy has grown into not just a leader for cooling, heating, plumbing, and electrical services, but a leader in the community known for supporting local nonprofits across an array of causes. To ensure complete peace of mind, Mauzy stands behind a comprehensive 12-point guarantee that outlines its commitment to outstanding service, quality equipment, expert technicians who understand how the local microclimates affect HVAC performance, and no upsells or surprises on the bill. 

“We go the extra mile. That’s what sets us apart,” O’Connor says. To get a free quote today, visit mauzy.com.

Courtesy of Mauzy Heating and Air
Partner Content
Arts & Culture JUNE 16, 2026

18 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: June 16-21

Dine at The Freedom Table, see Bob Dylan in concert, and explore local and national history through America 250

18 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: June 16-21
Courtesy of SD Melanin

As summertime inches closer to the shores of San Diego, there are plenty of reasons to be ecstatic. For one thing, there’s the impending arrival of the summer solstice (Sunday), and three days before that, Del Mar’s own Summer Solstice will return for its yearly golden hour. There are also plenty of local Juneteenth events, such as Kinfolk Fest, the Cooper Family Foundation’s Juneteenth Celebration, and The Freedom Table, a new, food-centered event from the originators of Juneteenth San Marcos. We’re also less than three weeks away from America’s 250th anniversary, and the celebrations range from the San Diego History Center’s America 250: San Diego 1776-2026 to NASCAR’s weekend of racing at Naval Base Coronado. 

Food & Drink | Concerts & Festivals | Theater & Art Exhibits | More Fun Things to Do

Courtesy of Del Mar Village

Food & Drink Events in San Diego This Weekend

1-Year Anniversary Week at Cbar

Through June 20

Cbar has planned a week’s worth of festivities to mark its first birthday, and everyone can get in on the fun. The 1-Year Anniversary Week celebrations continue with a special edition of the Sips & Shells craft series ($50) on Tuesday from 6-8:30 p.m., half-off pastries with any purchase of a barista drink (plus an anniversary summer wine flight) on Wednesday and a five-course winemaker dinner on Thursday from 6-9 p.m. ($130). Finally, the birthday bash will conclude with live music on Friday (Will Fedak) and Saturday (Cappo Kelley) from 6-9 p.m.

2917 State Street, Carlsbad

Taste of Little Italy

June 16 & 17

Little Italy’s annual food crawl has so many options that it warrants splitting into two evenings, each boasting a diverse lineup of 20 neighborhood vendors. During the Taste of Little Italy, taking place Tuesday and Wednesday from 4-8 p.m., attendees can make their way from the Piazza della Famiglia to nearby dining destinations for bites like esquites, sausage rolls, hot chicken tenders, and forkfuls of handmade pasta. Each night will also include live music and stops for drinks, desserts, and vegetarian items. Tickets are $71 per day.  

Little Italy

Del Mar’s Summer Solstice at Powerhouse Park

June 18

As spring makes its golden transition into summer, welcome the new season with open arms and a big appetite during Del Mar Village’s marquee tasting event this Thursday from 5-8 p.m. With the Summer Solstice celebrating its 20th anniversary, this year’s iteration will include dozens of food and drink offerings from Del Mar Village vendors, soulful tunes from Christian Jules Taylor, live art by Sarah O’Connor, and wave-crashing views at Powerhouse Park. General admission (21+) is $157 and comes with unlimited tastings as well as a commemorative tasting glass, while VIP tickets are sold out; proceeds support the Del Mar Village Association. 

1658 Coast Boulevard, Del Mar

The Freedom Table at TERI Campus of Life

June 19

After hosting the first-ever Juneteenth San Marcos festival in 2025, Lionel and Natalie Saulsberry have upped the ante with The Freedom Table, an elevated observance of community, culture, and the culinary arts. This Friday from 4-9 p.m. at TERI Campus of Life, guests can enjoy storytelling, art installations, live music, curated cocktails, and a chef-led dining experience, all in recognition of Juneteenth’s lasting importance. Ticket options include general admission ($261), plus two charitable ticket options: supporter ($313) and impact ($417), with a portion of sales going towards the youth nonprofit Achievement in Motion. 

555 Deer Springs Road, San Marcos

Talladega Nights Father’s Day Brunch at ARLO

June 21

In honor of NASCAR’s Coronado debut and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, ARLO is throwing a Father’s Day brunch for the dads who want to go fast. This Sunday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., patrons can order from ARLO’s regular brunch menu, as well as a trio of holiday specials: the Dad’s Day Steak and Fries ($64), the Fit For a King Muffuletta Sandwich ($29), and the Big Daddy Brookie ($14). This shake and bake-approved meal will also include a DJ, cigar rollings, whiskey tastings and a Ricky Bobby costume contest. Reservations can be made online.

500 Hotel Circle North, Mission Valley

Concerts & Festivals in San Diego This Weekend

All the Feelings Tour with Metric, Broken Social Scene, and Stars

June 19

Ryan Hardison is a freelance arts and entertainment writer and recent graduate of San Diego State. When he's not staring at his laptop, he's likely eating an adobada burrito or getting sunburnt at the beach.

Arts & Culture JUNE 15, 2026

Art Plus Story Equals Culture

Announcing a partnership between Art & Design District, SDFC Playmakers, and San Diego Magazine

Art Plus Story Equals Culture
Photo Credit: Richard Barnes

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SAN DIEGO, CA — [June 15th, 2026] — Art plus story equals culture. Today, three local groups deeply invested in advancing San Diego arts and cultureSan Diego FC Playmakers, Art & Design District, and San Diego Magazine—have joined forces to tell its stories.

The initial project will be a landmark September edition of San Diego Magazine—fully dedicated to the people, ideas, and identities of the city’s creative community. After its release, those stories and more will extend across six months of integrated digital, social, and multi-platform coverage. Art & Design District and SDFC Playmakers will serve as co-publishers of the expanded editorial vision.

The Art & Design District is evolving into San Diego’s first home for the performing arts at iconic downtown venues like the Civic Theatre and Jacobs Music Center alongside research and development programs focused on artist live/work spaces, galleries, studios, and New School of Architecture & Design.

“[The Art & Design District initiative] is a long-term investment in San Diego’s creative life and the creative workforce that powers our cultural experiences and creative industries here at home and across the world,” says Jonathan Glus, Prebys Senior Fellow for Art & Design in Residence at Downtown San Diego Partnership. “But infrastructure alone is not enough. The public needs to see, understand, and participate in what’s being built and why. Joining as co-publisher of this issue means helping ensure that the story of San Diego’s creative community—its artists, its institutions, its future—gets told at the level of ambition the moment requires.”

San Diego has entered a defining chapter in how the region invests in its creative community, with civic and philanthropic leaders working alongside artists, brands, institutions, and people to chart a new model of public-private support for arts and culture.

As digital co-publishers of San Diego Magazine‘s arts and culture coverage, SDFC’s Playmakers partnership will include a six-month integrated collaboration designed to sustain the visibility of San Diego’s creative community well beyond a single issue.

“The Playmakers program was built on the belief that the creative community is essential to what makes San Diego, San Diego,” says Sebastian, San Diego FC’s SVP of Brand and Innovation. “Investing in local media that tells those stories—and reaches the audiences who need to hear them—is one of the most direct ways we can support the artists, organizations, and cultural leaders shaping this city’s future. We’re proud to step in as digital co-publishers of San Diego Magazine‘s arts and culture coverage and the founding partner of this new editorial program.”

Under the partnerships:

  • The Art & Design District joins as Co-Publisher of the September 2026 Arts & Culture Issue, undwriting San Diego Magazine‘s most ambitious editorial event of the year. 
  • SDFC Playmakers joins as Digital Co-Publisher of San Diego Magazine‘s arts and culture coverage, founding a six-month integrated partnership that includes co-publisher presence in the September issue. 

The partnership represents a new model for regional media: civic and cultural institutions providing the resources required for sustained, ambitious, local editorial media focused on the neighborhoods it serves. 

“For 78 years, the magazine has told the story of arts and culture here,” says Claire Johnson, CEO of San Diego Magazine. “But the fragmentation of traditional media has made it harder than ever to cover this community at the depth and scale it deserves. SDFC Playmakers and the Art & Design District have recognized something critical: Media is not separate from the civic conversation, it’s the stage for the conversation.”

San Diego Magazine retains full editorial control over all reporting, features, and original content produced under both partnerships.

“Our role in this ecosystem is to tell the story of San Diego’s culture and provide context for our readers.” says Johnson. “These partnerships give us the resources to do justice to that responsibility—and to extend that commitment well beyond a single issue. Our readers also deserve to know exactly how this work was funded. I’m grateful to our partners, and to the arts and culture community in San Diego for letting us tell this story.”

The September Arts & Culture Issue will be released early September 2026, with digital, social, video, and podcast coverage rolling out through early 2027.


ABOUT SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE For 78 years, San Diego Magazine has been the region’s leading lifestyle and culture publication, reaching approximately 6 million readers monthly across print, digital, newsletter, and social platforms. Owned and operated locally, the magazine has been the connective tissue of San Diego’s cultural conversation since 1948.

ABOUT SDFC PLAYMAKERS The Playmakers program is an ongoing initiative that seeks to identify and showcase the talent of San Diego creatives who are contributing to the culture, substance, and flow of our community. We want to bring the San Diego community together by marrying football and creativity to provide a platform for these Playmakers who are positively impacting our culture by pushing the boundaries through innovative ideas. The goal is to create a program that consistently provides growth and exposure opportunities for San Diego creatives, while shaping an authentic direction for San Diego FC’s brand and community-building process. Through this program we hope to contribute to the creative fabric of our city by providing paid jobs, projects, collaborations, as well as networking opportunities for Playmakers.

ABOUT THE ART & DESIGN DISTRICT The Art & Design District is a Downtown San Diego Partnership initiative, supported by the Prebys Foundation, working to shape a connected, vibrant arts and design district in downtown San Diego. Led by Art and Culture Expert Fellow Jonathan Glus, the initiative convenes artists, cultural leaders, civic stakeholders, and residents in service of a downtown that reflects the creativity, identity, and diversity of the region. Learn more at downtownsandiego.org.

Partner Content OCTOBER 15, 2025

National Philanthropy Day, presented by PNC Bank, Celebrates the Best of Philanthropy in San Diego

The 53rd Annual National Philanthropy Day Takes Place on November 21. Join us from 11:00 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. at the new Gaylord Pacific Resort & Convention Center!

National Philanthropy Day, presented by PNC Bank, Celebrates the Best of Philanthropy in San Diego

Once yearly, AFP San Diego joins with others worldwide to celebrate National Philanthropy Day (NPD), a special day set aside to recognize the great contributions of donors and nonprofits that enrich of our community and the world. San Diego’s NPD is one of the largest and most successful in the U.S., attracting nearly 900 participants, including philanthropists, nonprofit leaders, CEOs, board members, development professionals, and business, community, and civic leaders.

Sponsorship proceeds from National Philanthropy Day are reinvested in education, training, scholarships, career development, and the advancement of fundraising professionals throughout San Diego. These resources and training provide fundraising professionals with the tools necessary to support our region’s diverse array of nonprofit organizations, which rely on charitable giving for close to half of their annual revenues.

The National Philanthropy Day Honorees are selected by the NPD Honorary Committee, a group of highly respected, diverse nonprofit and business leaders. Our 2025 Honorees include:

  • Outstanding Development Emerging Leader – Taylor Thompson
    Self-Nominated
  • Outstanding Development Professional – Sharyn Goodson
    Nominated by: AJ Steinberg & Jeanne Schmelzer
  • Outstanding Organization for IDEA – Accessity
    Self-Nominated
  • Outstanding Philanthropic Institution – Life Science Cares San Diego
    Nominated by: Blair Search Partners
  • Outstanding Philanthropist – Dan & Phyllis Epstein
    Nominated by: CSU San Marcos & KPBS
  • Outstanding Student Volunteer – Camden Hall
    Nominated by: Curebound
  • Outstanding Volunteer – Mateo Magaña
    Nominated by: Chicano Federation

National Philanthropy Day San Diego provides an opportunity to reflect on the meaning of giving and to celebrate the selfless contributions of individuals and organizations across the region. We look forward to celebrating with you!

Sponsorship opportunities and individual tickets are available. Please visit www.afpsd.org for more information.

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