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Features APRIL 20, 2018

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

The kids are out of school and you've got three months of predictably good weather. Don't let the season slip by with a been-there, done-that attitude; here's our insider's guide for Memorial Day through Labor Day.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List
Photo by John Bahu

#1

Watch an All-Star Game MVP play in a Padres uniform

Hopes are high this season thanks to an eight-year, $144 million deal to sign first baseman Eric Hosmer, who formerly helped the Kansas City Royals win the World Series. In addition to Hosmer, the Padres have signed a slate of top-notch talent like closer Brad Hand and Kazuhisa Makita, a relief pitcher with a side-handed pitch you have to see to believe. In between innings, nosh on food from Lucha Libre Taco Shop, Baked Bear, and, new this season, Buona Forchetta. It all goes down at Petco Park, what USA Today calls the “undisputed best ballpark in baseball.”

Insider Tip: Buona Forchetta at Petco is the only location serving thicker Roman-style street slices. Order up in section 104—first level behind home plate.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

#2

Spy world-class thoroughbreds during their morning workout

We’ve all worn the hat on opening day at the races, but we secretly prefer the quiet of the early morning weekend workouts. Up to one thousand horses post up to exercise throughout the 7:30–9:30 a.m. session each Saturday and Sunday. Watch from the Clubhouse Terrace, where there’s breakfast food for purchase, plus face painting and magic for the kids. Not a morning person? New this racing season (July 18–September 3), taco-themed Wednesdays spotlight favorite local taquerias, with specials on Mexican beers. August 4 marks the first Michelada Fest. There are concerts every Friday and, this year, every Saturday except during the August 18 Pacific Classic; concert tickets are free with track admission.

Insider Tip: Donut Days are July 28 and August 11 from 8 to 10 a.m. and include free donuts, coffee, and juice.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Willows Hotel at Viejas Casino

#3

Stay at a casino without going all the way to Vegas

When’s the last time you visited one of San Diego County’s casinos? We thought so. At Harrah’s Resort Southern California, you can splash around in their Dive pool, known for its 400-foot lazy river and SoCal’s only swim-up bar. Or, take an easy gamble on Viejas Casino’s newest addition: Their luxury Willows Hotel features 159 adults-only suites and a full salon and spa. Enjoy the A/C indoors at the card table and slot machines, then head outside to float in the saltwater pool or book a massage in one of the spa’s poolside cabanas.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

#4

Celebrate love with 200,000 of your closest friends at Pride

Since 1974, San Diego’s most prominent LGBTQ organization has been waving that rainbow flag through community programs, volunteer outreach, and its annual Pride weekend. This year’s festivities (July 14–15) put ’90s nostalgia in full force, thanks to music headliner TLC and more than 90 other acts gracing four stages in Balboa Park. The theme for 2018, “Persist with Pride,” encourages revelers to channel their energies into speaking against discrimination, volunteering in meaningful ways, and voting so their voices are heard.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

#5

Get to know the fun, drinky side of orchestral music

If you’ve never been to San Diego Symphony’s Bayside Summer Nights at Embarcadero Marina Park South, you can’t know that it’s largely about friends, wine, and a great sunset. (And music, of course!) This year’s lineup includes Patti LaBelle, Roger Daltrey with members of The Who, Megan Hilty, and live orchestral accompaniment to screenings of West Side Story and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. It ends with the 1812 Tchaikovsky Spectacular concert, complete with cannons and fireworks.

Hey, Sports Fans!

 

A.S. Roma vs. Tottenham Hotspur F.C.

Catch an international football match—what we in the U.S. call soccer—when one of England’s best goes up against Italy’s beloved Roma.

July 25, SDCCU Stadium

Over the Line Tournament

The ironically named world championship of this local beach bat-and-ball game is a two-weekend event with a strict no babies, bad attitudes, or battles policy, where you can bring your own alcohol.

July 14–15 & 21–22, Fiesta Island

Imperial Beach Surf Dog Competition

See Spot shred in this beloved beach ritual. Solo dog surf, dog and human surf, and stand-up paddleboarding heats are all on the agenda.

July 29, Imperial Beach Pier

World Bodysurfing Championships

As many as 400 bodysurfers from around the globe gather for the 42nd annual showdown. Gain a whole new respect for the sport, the ocean, and these competitors who use nothing more than a pair of fins.

August 18–19, Oceanside Pier

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by John Bahu

#6

Find the speakeasy at this year’s fair

Ask around among San Diego County Fair employees for the secret location of the Cocoa Cabana. In line with the 2018 theme, “How Sweet It Is,” the tropical oasis will be serving candy-infused cocktails. An exhibit called Sweet: A Tasty Journey will educate, fascinate, and maybe even nauseate—beware of the flavors at the Jelly Belly BeanBoozled Challenge. Vendors are all in on unicorn foods, from rainbow-colored grilled cheese sandwiches to unicorn cotton candy ice cream sandwiches. Also new this year: a “cashless” midway means no ride tickets, just reloadable cards. June 1–July 4

Insider Tip: Don’t like crowds? Opening weekend is the least busy. Unlike opening day at the racetrack, the fair is best experienced early in the run. The gardens are fresh and the Fun Zone lines are shorter.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by Sean & Joice Curry

#7

For the first time, see the sand sculptures after dark

This year, the U.S. Sand Sculpting Challenge is getting lit. After 300 tons of sand is transported to Broadway Pier and the Labor Day weekend event gets underway, the competition will continue into the evening, with the sculptures illuminated from top to bottom. Pick up bites from food trucks and drinks from the wine and beer garden while the kids play in a massive sandbox. And when you’ve washed all the sand off your feet, vote for the People’s Choice Award winner.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by Chris Calderon

#8

Cross one of our iconic summer season finish lines

Embrace the season, the city, and your health goals by signing up for any one of San Diego’s races, bikes, or swims. Top-billing events include the Synchrony Rock ’n’ Roll Marathon on June 3, Carlsbad Triathlon on June 10, Solana Beach Triathlon & Duathlon on July 29, America’s Finest City Half Marathon on August 19, and on August 26, Bike the Bay provides the unique opportunity to bike across the Coronado Bridge.

Insider Tip: Check out the Triathlon Club of San Diego for group swims and training rides, plus some group runs. Or join San Diego Track Club, which has specific training programs for Rock ‘n’ Roll.

#9

Watch a play under the stars

Get swept away in Shakespeare’s “tragicomedy,” The Tempest, performed June 17–July 22 at the outdoor Lowell Davies Festival Theatre in Balboa Park. Evenings in San Diego can get a little chilly, so rent a blanket before curtain call for only $2 (or opt for the Donald and Darlene Shiley indoor stage for Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax, July 2–August 12). At Moonlight Amphitheatre in Vista, hum along to your favorite songs at Mamma Mia! (June 13–30) or Disney’s Newsies (July 18–August 4). BYO sleeping bag.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

#10

Gather friends and family for an outdoor movie

Nothing says “summer night” like twinkly lights, a blanket in the grass (or sand), and a film alfresco. Thankfully, you can’t go far in San Diego without finding an outdoor movie series. Check out Waterfront Park, Kensington’s Ward Canyon Park, Carlsbad Village, the patio of the Athenaeum in La Jolla, and, new this year, the UK-based Rooftop Cinema Club lands at the Manchester Grand Hyatt. The San Diego Museum of Art hosts flicks on their Botanical Lawn that complement their exhibits, while Street Food Cinema brings food trucks to viewing parties in locations across the city. To combine a couple summertime pleasures at once, settle in on the sand for Hotel del Coronado’s Movies on the Beach series.

Insider Tip: No time to pack a picnic? Have Paradise Pizza deliver a pie to your seat at Carlsbad’s Flicks at the Fountain.

Calling All Foodies

Ocean Beach Street Fair & Chili Cook-Off Festival

Thirty-nine years of food, art, and entertainment has earned this tradition a cult-like following. If you’ve had your fill of chili, sign up for the Hodad’s Burger-Eating Competition. Beach body, what?

June 23, Ocean Beach

The CADO

San Diego produces 40 percent of the state’s avocados, so of course our city is the best place to debut The CADO, a museum dedicated to our patron fruit, housed in shipping containers with educational exhibits on the growing process and cultivation, tips on how to pick the best, and plenty of Insta-worthy moments. Yes, there will be avocado snacks, too!

Opening late summer

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by John Bahu

#11

Ditch the lawn chair—view the Big Bay Boom from a balcony

Guaranteeing yourself a seat for San Diego’s favorite July 4 fireworks show doesn’t have to be a schlep. Book a room at one of the surrounding hotels, like the Hilton San Diego Bayfront or Wyndham San Diego Bayside. Not feeling the staycation? Take public transportation—ride the trolley, or take the ferry to Coronado—to avoid the dreaded traffic after the sparks fly.

Insider Tip: Enjoy the fireworks from the Hilton’s ballroom facing the bay during its July 4 bash—no room reservation required!

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by Jay Reilly

#12

Root for SD’s professional rugby team

San Diego Legion’s inaugural Major League Rugby season has begun! Watch the city’s newest professional sports team play at USD’s Torero Stadium through June 23, plus the MLR Championship Game, hosted here in San Diego on July 7. Each match features teams of 15 players running, passing, and tackling for a fast-paced, nonstop 90 minutes. It’s sure to be a ruckus.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

#13

Party with an icon for The Del’s 130th summer

One of San Diego’s most iconic landmarks celebrates its 130th anniversary this year with a slate of outdoor fun, including their California Clambake Series (June 16, July 28, August 18) and Father’s Day Concert & BBQ (June 17) with Gary Sinise & the Lt. Dan Band. And nothing says sunny San Diego like a spin class on the beach, followed by bottomless bloody marys in the Crown Room and a nap in the hotel’s chic beach cabana.

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

#14

Upgrade your summer pool party with jazz

Listen to top talent from Southern California on the rooftop of The Westgate Hotel downtown during their Sunset Poolside Jazz Series, including Erika Davies on June 14, soul jazz vocalist Steph Johnson on August 9, and jazz trumpeter Gilbert Castellanos on August 30. This year’s series kicks off on June 7 and for the first time extends past Labor Day to September 13. Tables are first come, first served, with a $25 food and beverage minimum. Craft beer, cocktails, and gourmet appetizers under a sunset? That’s music to our ears.

#15

Get rowdy at a tennis match

Top-notch talent meets loose spectator rules at World TeamTennis, a professional league combining male and female players. (We finished second in 2017!) Representing the San Diego Aviators this year are Great Britain’s Naomi Broady and Marcus Willis, Poland’s Marcin Matkowski, and Germany’s Anna-Lena Groenefeld. Throw back a cocktail, dance to the DJ, and cheer as loud as you want. July 15–August 2, Omni La Costa Resort & Spa

Insider Tip: For young fans, there’s a meet-and-greet with the athletes and an interactive kid zone.

Raise a Glass to Summer

 

Adult Coloring with Beer

Pair your craft beer with crayons during Iron Pig Ale House’s Adult Coloring Nights every Wednesday of the summer in Pacific Beach.

 

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by Paul Body

Best of San Diego Party

Yes, we throw this bash in partnership with Valley View Casino & Hotel, but this isn’t just a shameless plug—it’s a personal invitation to party with us and 2,000 of our closest friends. Come experience the 11th annual shindig, where San Diego’s top restaurants, breweries, and businesses will be serving small plates, sips, and swag.

August 17, NTC Liberty Station

 

Tiki Oasis

Tropical drinks, island culture, and music come together at this festival hosted in various locations August 8–12, featuring mixology classes, over 100 vendors, and nightly bands and DJs. Bottoms up!

Your 2018 San Diego Summer Bucket List

Photo by John Bahu

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Everything SD JULY 1, 2026

Editor’s Note, July 2026: Hello Again

New editor Emma Veidt gives an introduction and her ode to the once-sleepy, now slept-on North County

Editor’s Note, July 2026: Hello Again
Courtesy of Visit Oceanside

I am fairly sure they don’t let you graduate from Carlsbad High School without a W-2 from Legoland. Being a Legoland MC (Model Citizen, the employee’s moniker) is a rite of passage for all of us who grew up in North County. If you spent a day at the theme park in the 2010s, I probably pointed you toward the Granny Apple Fries or measured your height at a ride entrance.

And now we meet again. I can still point you to quality fries.

This is my first full issue as the new print editor for San Diego Magazine. But it’s not my first time here: I was an editorial intern for these pages back in 2018 (see photo). To be a part of a constant study of the city, its people, its culture, then finding the most compelling stories and bringing them to life—it was incredibly impactful and solidified my decision to pursue all of this (local, print magazine journalism) as a career. Since my internship, I’ve gotten my bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the Missouri School of Journalism and worked for nearly five years at Backpacker magazine. And I’m back at San Diego Magazine, baby. There’s a real magic to narrating the lives lived and dreams dreamt in the place that built me. I am excited to be a part of building the culture of where I’m from. And, born in Tri-City Medical Center and raised in Carlsbad, I can’t think of any other place than our North County issue for me to make my grand entrance as an editor.

Editor Emma Veidt at San Diego Magazine in 2018

To me, North County isn’t just where I’m from; it’s home. Throughout the years, I have run thousands of miles (I did the math) up and down the 101 between Oceanside and Cardiff. I’ve spent thousands of dollars (an estimation, too painful to do the actual math) on BRCs—beans, rice, and cheese burritos—from Lola’s, Juanita’s, and the late, great Pollos Maria.

The stretch of land between Camp Pendleton and the 56 is easy to love. We’re quieter and a little more zenned out than our lower-latitude neighbors, sure, but we’re neither sleepy nor boring.

Do you think Scrojo, the Belly Up’s punked-out poster artist featured on page 68, could last a day somewhere boring?

What I’ve always loved about North County is that the culture shifts every couple of miles as you reach a new town. For years, the media seemed to cast the realm above the merge as a two-toned monolith: sleepy surf towns to the west, suburbs and country living to the east. The nuance of each section seemed flattened or clumped. I think you’ll see the vastly different cultures of North County in this issue—but all distinctly San Diego. Which is to say a little mellower, fewer airs, come as you are.

It’s hard to imagine that the dusty trails and vibrant, muraled alleyways of Escondido are just miles from the barefoot surfers roaming Leucadia. Even though the SDM editorial staff is made up of two lifelong locals and other longtime residents, we don’t pretend to be the experts on every street. What a good city media company does is find the people who are experts, who have a unique hyper-local perspective—and give them the stage.

So we picked six North County neighborhoods—Oceanside, Vista, San Marcos, Leucadia, Rancho Santa Fe, and Escondido—and reached out to artists, community leaders, business owners, anyone making their neighborhood brighter, and we had them describe their perfect day out and favorite things that give their neighborhoods meaning and culture. These itinerary curators included San Marcos’ Patricia Prado-Olmos, Leucadia’s Jeff Schade, Oceanside’s Aaron Crossland, Escondido’s Suzanne Nicolaisen, Rancho Santa Fe’s Charo Garcia-Acevedo, and Vista’s Steve Glaudini. If there’s anyone who lives and breathes North County, it’s them. Check out their recommendations in our feature on page 56.

This month, we’re also going back in time almost 15 years to the Big Bay Boom. Yes, that meme-ified Fourth of July fireworks show where enough pyrotechnics for a 17-minute show went off at once over San Diego Bay. Content Chief Troy Johnson remembers the day and dug back through the story for a hilarious locals’ take on the big debate: Was it the worst fireworks show of all time, or the greatest? (Page 38.)

Before I leave you to our hard work, a sentimental note. When my parents moved from St. Louis to San Diego in the early ’90s, my mom subscribed to San Diego Magazine to learn about her new neighborhood. Now, over three decades later, I’m here—on this planet and in these pages. I thought about my parents a lot as we worked on this issue. Maybe there are a couple new San Diegans reading this magazine for the first time. Maybe that’s you.

Well then, to both of us, I say, “Welcome.” Let’s do this.

Emma Veidt

About Emma Veidt

Emma Veidt is an editor at San Diego Magazine. She earned her bachelor's and master's degrees from the Missouri School of Journalism. She loves running, hiking, and rock climbing, but really, she mostly loves encounters with the street cats around North Park.

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.

Everything SD JUNE 30, 2026

The Fireworks Disaster That Made San Diego a Legend

Eighteen seconds, one unforgettable mistake, and a Fourth of July story that somehow gets better with age

The Fireworks Disaster That Made San Diego a Legend
Courtesy of The Port of San Diego

There’s a famous video.

“This is insane!” the guy filming it seems to proclaim. “It’s the best fireworks show ever!” a companion confirms, inspiring a debate lasting over a decade.

All told, 7,000 fireworks exploded in the span of 25 seconds over San Diego Bay on July 4, 2012. A Michael Bay amount of unison. $125,000 worth of shells, cakes, Roman candles, and skyrockets had been placed on a barge—enough for 17 minutes of decorative sky flares—and…

Boom.

The sky looked like someone had set a giant Rorschach test on fire. Or as if whatever we all see in our Rorschachs—butterflies, clowns, tongue kissing, dads—was being electrocuted and lifted heavenward, amen. It was shocking how bright it was, how much it sizzled the local cosmos. Could’ve been one of those sci-fi films where a hole is ripped open between warring universes. But angstier, more metal—the work of some methy creator in a sleeveless concert tee.

The sound?

Lou Reed once released an entire album that contained 64 minutes of mindflaying guitar screeches and machine noises. No regular songs, just a fascinating amount of ear distress. His record label reps no doubt heard the melodic outro of their careers, but everyone else was in pain and stumped. That album still sounded better than the bay did that night. The bay sounded like a god who struggled with emotional regulation had blown his speakers and was working through the anger stage of AV grief.

In the left frame of the video, a middle-aged woman is attempting to drag her husband off by the hand. In no way does he want to go, possibly because he had missed the time Roseanne Barr sung the national anthem at a Padres game, simultaneously disemboweling and amusing America through the power of song. He would not willingly abandon an equally worthy San Diego trainwreck.

Another woman in the video appears to have just filled her beer, rushing to sit down for the show. She pauses mid-sit and returns to the full and upright position to properly bear witness. What was supposed to be prolonged entertainment has been so radically shortened that she will have to find another reason to drink. Lucky for her, drinking will be the only way to adequately process.

Locals remember the conspiracy theories. People wondered if the fuses had been tripped by a saboteur who was sympathetic to dogs, fish, or the growing suspicion that late-stage capitalism is a gorgeously branded but impossible dream sustained by remarkably efficient top-tier wealth retention and the soft compliance of fireworks-watchers who can no longer afford a house, a beer, or the personal impacts of human reproduction.

Speaking of being terrified of babies, babies were terrified. The children who witnessed it probably still can’t go near a candle store. But those kids will be tougher, perfectly scarred kids. They’ll write better songs.

That night helped us absolutely dominate the national news cycle. For a hot minute, we became America’s water-skiing squirrel. Now, years later, when you Google “fireworks gone wrong,” San Diego is always a top contender, along with that poor Nebraska family who nearly wiped out a couple generations in their front yard, their minivan somehow turning into a howitzer of recreational TNT.

There is still debate as to whether Big Bay Boom 2012 is the worst or greatest fireworks show of all time. But the advanced parts of civilization arrived at the truth as quickly as the women in the video did. It was undeniably amazing.

First of all, the point of Fourth of July fireworks isn’t “the intricate choreography of sky fire over a guaranteed amount of show time.” It’s about creating a vivid memory shared with some people you like, love, or would like to love.

BBB2012 used large-scale chemical fire to create the ultimate memory.

Sure, some people who iron their jeans subjected their family to a sermon about how San Diego managed to botch America’s birthday like a Disney princess-for-hire who smelled of quite a few Sauvignons.

The rest of us saw how perfectly it nailed the actual feeling of being an American. Because only a miniscule percentage of us bake postcard apple pies where every inch of crust is perfectly laminated like the wood in an Irish bar. Very few of us can paint on par with Picasso. The rest of us—despite truly believing in our America-activated abilities to achieve greatness in almost any field of our choosing—burn pies. We try to paint only to realize it looks like our fine motor skills have entered active death.

That’s why BBB2012 was the most perfectly American fireworks show ever: A wildly ambitious idea galvanized thousands upon thousands of people to both work on it and come to hold a beer and gawk at it, only to have it fail in the most glorious TMZ-level spectacle.

America isn’t about immaculate, storyless wins. It’s about how the framework of a country is solid enough that we can accidentally detonate our entire lives—a few times—and still probably be OK.

No one has America’d quite like San Diego did on that day. It was performance art. Lou Reed’s heart slow-clapped. Any brief municipal embarrassment quickly became a pride of our people. I can only hope the same for the Nebraskan yard family whose Dodge Aerostar became a hyperactive Death Star.

P.S. Local writer Maya Kroth compiled a quite great oral history of that night for Thrillist. The bottom lines for me were—it took nine months to prepare, no one was hurt, and even though the pyrotechnics company tried to zero out the bill, Big Bay Boom founder H. P. “Sandy” Purdon refused and paid them in full. This year will mark the 25th Anniversary of the yearly Big Bay Boom.

Troy Johnson

About Troy Johnson

Troy Johnson is the magazine’s award-winning food writer and humorist, and a long-standing expert on Food Network. His work has been featured on NatGeo, Travel Channel, NPR, and in Food Matters, a textbook of the best American food writing.

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
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Features JUNE 29, 2026

5 San Diego Food Trends to Know About

From surprise revivals to changing dining habits, these are the shifts redefining the local culinary landscape

5 San Diego Food Trends to Know About
Photo Credit: Arlene Ibarra

Comebacks Are the New Kickoffs

If absence makes hearts (and stomachs) grow fonder, then shuttered restaurants quickly become the hottest tickets in town—something a number of iconic institutions found out after taking very public hiatuses after historically long runs. For instance, following a lengthy (and extremely flip-floppy) closing process after 92 years in business, Las Cuatro Milpas reopened two blocks away in Mercado del Barrio. Similarly, Carlsbad butcher shop Tip Top Meats reopened in the same location (albeit a smaller space) after the death of founder Joachim “Big John” Haedrich in 2023. Finally, after a whopping decade out of business, Sami Ladeki and chef Alfie Szeprethy brought back Roppongi to its original Prospect Street space, where it was the talk of the town in the late ’90s. All came back under the same proprietors, so they weren’t third-party nostalgia-licensing deals. The algorithm may have ravaged our attention spans away from all but the newest and shiniest, but this proves there’s still hope for our collective prefrontal cortex.

New Generations Take the Reins

Other local eateries honored their pasts by bringing in new perspectives. The Lion’s Share in Embarcadero, Milton’s Deli in Del Mar, Dudley’s Bakery in Santa Ysabel, and J-K’s Greek Cafe in La Mesa handed over the keys to new owners willing to take on a big task: maintain the soul of icons through particularly rough economic circumstances for restaurants, navigate big feelings from longtime regulars (who often don’t take kindly to change), and make some necessary changes to keep going for another few decades. Taking over a project in process can be a lot harder than starting from scratch. But building that feel-good nostalgia doesn’t happen overnight, so it sure helps to have a well-established playbook of success passed down from those who came before.

Courtesy of Sugarfish

The Expansion Class Arrives

It wasn’t just restaurant groups from Los Angeles that decided to put down roots en masse, although San Diego saw plenty of LA transplants recently (Sugarfish, Mr. Charlie’s, For the Win, Katsuya Ko, Bacari). Global brands like Chef Fei, Zuma, and Pepper Lunch have locations of their own on the way, and upscale Canadian eatery Joey joined to the inescapable gravitational pull of Westfield UTC’s culinary cosmos for its first spot in America’s Finest City. Good to see the rest of the world is catching up with what we’ve been seeing the last few years—San Diego is a dining destination already on the rise.

Choosing To Not Choose

Between the never-ending news cycle of doom and perimenopause brain fog, I’m at the stage in life where I’m more than happy to let someone else make a decision for me, especially when it comes to what’s for dinner. And based on the way a lot of menus look right now, I’m not alone. It seems like half the places I visit offer some version of a prix fixe, omakase, or tasting menu. Restaurants are embracing the curated experience to solve the problem of affordability (a fixed menu reduces food and labor costs, guarantees an acceptable check average, etc.) and critical thinking in one fell swoop. Omakase (meaning “I leave it up to you”) is far from a new concept in high-end Japanese sushi culture, but now that it’s popping up everywhere from coffee experiences to grab-and-go sushi and sandwiches, it’s gone from somewhat niche to nearly omnipresent.

Courtesy of Rikka Fika

Local Coffee Hit the World Stage

The world got an up-close look at San Diego’s coffee industry when we hosted the premier specialty coffee expo World of Coffee for the first time this April. San Diego’s long and rich coffee history stretches back to the late 19th century. Things percolated fairly quietly for around a century before really picking up steam. Today, there are nearly 200 specialty roasters and cafes across the county, with many earning national accolades like the Good Food Award (Steady State Roasting, 2020; Bird Rock Coffee Roasters, 2023, 2021, 2019, 2017, 2016), Roaster of the Year by Roast Magazine (Mostra Coffee, 2020; Bird Rock Coffee Roasters, 2012), and the Specialty Coffee Association Coffee Design Award for packaging (Rikka Fika, 2026). Now that we’ve moved past the comically insufferable coffee snob era of the early 2000s, even java newbies can feel comfortable walking into pretty much any coffee shop in San Diego, asking questions, trying a few things, and feeling confident they’re going to get great service and a great beverage.

Beth Demmon

About Beth Demmon

Beth Demmon is an award-winning writer and podcaster whose work regularly appears in national outlets and San Diego Magazine. Her first book, The Beer Lover's Guide to Cider, is now available. Find out more on bethdemmon.com.

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.

Partner Content JULY 2, 2026

Top Lawyers 2026: Panakos LLP

Discover San Diego’s Top Lawyers — the region’s most trusted legal professionals across diverse practice areas.

Top Lawyers 2026: Panakos LLP
SDM: Top Lawyers 2026

Daniel A. Kaplan

Daniel A. Kaplan is a founding partner of Panakos LLP with more than three decades of civil litigation experience in both state and federal courts. Mr. Kaplan pursues and defends legal claims on behalf of companies, entrepreneurs, and business owners in high-stakes disputes. He focuses on business disputes including breach of contract, unfair competition, trade secret theft, securities disputes, fraud/misrepresentations, and employment matters.

“The best advocacy combines preparation, perspective, and a client relationship built on trust and candor.” — Daniel A. Kaplan

His clients include real estate investors, private and public corporations, and individuals seeking sophisticated legal counsel. Known for practical judgment and strategic advocacy, he works closely with an experienced and diverse legal team to protect, enforce, and defend his clients’ interests.

555 W. Beech Street, Ste. 500, San Diego, California 92101
619-8000-LAW
Panakos.law

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