• “Sacred Places,” June 14 through September 1

    Inviting guests to explores sites worldwide, share the beliefs of young worshippers, and view images, artifacts, and stories from more than two dozen sites and across various faiths, Davenport's Putnam Museum & Science Center, from June 14 through September 1, will host the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis's traveling exhibit Sacred Places, allowing patrons to explore the significance and insights provided by the locales of its title.

  • “Midwest Murder Live,” June 21

    With their popular audio series designed to debunk the phrase “that kind of this doesn't happen in our town,” Jonah Lantto and Dawn Palumbo bring their Midwest Murder Live podcast to Davenport's Rhythm City Casino Resort Rhythm Room on June 21, the event boasting a live taping of a future broadcast concerning astonishing and sometimes grisly acts committed in small towns nationwide.

  • Ecdysiast Arts Museum Grand Opening, June 21

    Danielle Colby, star of the hit series American Pickers and a longtime advocate for the performing arts, is proud to announce the grand-opening celebration for the Ecdysiast Arts Museum, this museum in the heart of downtown Davenport dedicated to preserving and celebrating the rich history and artistry of burlesque. The June 21 event promises an evening of education and entertainment, featuring curated exhibits that delve into the glittering world of burlesque, as well as live performances that pay homage to this vibrant art form.

  • “German Expressionist Prints from the David & Sarojini Johnson Collection,” June 21 through December 14

    Amassed over four decades by a pair of noted printmakers and educators, the fascinating works found in German Expressionist Prints from the David & Sarojini Johnson Collection will be on display in Davenport's German American Heritage Center from June 21 through December 14, this showcase of arresting pieces held in conjunction with the Figge Art Museum's companion exhibit Fever Dreams: German Expressionism.

  • 2025 Midsommar Music Festival, June 21

    With highlights from the eagerly awaited annual event including free concerts in the park, a Swedish Maypole celebration, a book signing, children's activities, and more, everyone is invited to bring lawn chairs and have a wonderful time the 2025 Bishop Hill Midsommar Music Festival on June 21, the historic Illinois town's family-friendly celebration of this Swedish holiday.

  • Ambitious Illinois Lobbyists Need Only Know When Lethargic Last-Minute Lawmakers Take Their Coffee

    I asked Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch last week about the failure to pass an omnibus energy bill (the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act) during the just-ended spring legislative session.

  • One Governor Does Not a Firewall Make ... but Perhaps Two Do

    As I write this, multiple news outlets have reported that the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency is preparing to deploy its Special Response Teams to five major U.S. cities, including Chicago, in the very near future. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas told reporters last week: “There will be tactical teams, mini-tanks, other tools they use in which they plan to do raids, as we saw in Los Angeles.”

  • DCI Report on 324 Main Street Case Number 2023014262 Version 1 Cover Page
    Where Is Scott County's Local Grand Jury When You Need Them?

    The watchers are no longer being watched by the people. At least in Scott County, Iowa, that is.

  • 1034 June 2025 3 Faces of Uncle Scam Three Branches
    Got Curruption?

    Inexplicably, for decades, incurious American voters refuse to remove el

  •  At inauguration, George Washington had been symbolically careful to wear a suit made of cloth wov
    Tariffs in American History

    Tariffs are among the oldest of taxes for the simple reason that they are easy to collect. Just send in the tax collectors and don’t let the goods being transported move until the duty has been paid. Being one of the earliest forms of taxation, it is not surprising that tariffs produced one of the earliest forms of tax evasion: smuggling.

  • Parental Dissection Is Advised: “The Addams Family,” at the Clinton Area Showboat Theatre through June 22

    They're creepy and they’re kooky, but I must tell you: For a musical comedy about a clan that generally lacks enthusiasm for anything other than the macabre, the Clinton Area Showboat Theatre's The Addams Family was truly a high-energy showcase of talent and spectacle. Director Courtney Ryan Crouse, who's also the company's artistic director, brought the ghoulish tale to light in a way that was hysterically heartwarming.

  • Opera Quad Cities' “Die Fledermaus,” June 20 and 22

    One of history's most adored classical operettas enchanting audiences at Davenport's St. Ambrose University on June 20 and 22 when the talents of Opera Quad Cities debut Die Fledermaus, Johann Straus II's legendary 1874 work that's sure to deliver mischief, masks, laughter, and some of the area's most astounding voices.

  • “Miss Nelson Is Missing!”, June 20 through 29

    A family-friendly treat that the River Cities' Reader said “bubbles with color, personality, and wit,” the sweet and hilarious musical Miss Nelson Is Missing! enjoys a June 20 through 29 run at Moline's Playcrafters Barn Theatre, the show based on a series of beloved, best-selling children's books by Harry Allard and James Marshall.

  • “Rock of Ages,” June 20 through July 6

    Described by Time Out New York as an “insanely fun mixtape musical” and by Variety as a show that “gleefully apes the worst excesses of the era's pole-dancing, crotch-grinding, big-hair-tossing movies,” the Broadway smash Rock of Ages enjoys a June 20 through July 6 run at Mt. Carroll's Timber Lake Playhouse, treating audiences to a celebration of 1980s chart-toppers that NY1 called “so cleverly staged and impressively performed that it's an irresistible, offbeat trip of a show that hits all the right notes.”

  • Genesius Guild's “Much Ado About Nothing,” June 21 through 29

    One of William Shakespeare's most memorable and beloved romantic comedies returns to Rock Island's Lincoln Park when Genesius Guild presents its June 21 through 29 staging of Much Ado About Nothing, the Bard-ian classic that enjoyed a Tony-winning Broadway run in 1985, a 1993 movie showcase for Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson, and a 2011 black-and-white film modernization by pop icon Joss Whedon.

  • Ryan Adams, June 17

    With his discography boasting such top-10 Billboard smashes as Easy Tiger, Ashes & Fire, 1989, Prisoner, and his self-titled 2014 album, Grammy-nominated rock and alt-country singer/songwriter Ryan Adams brings his long-awaited “Heartbreaker '25 World Tour” to Davenport's Capitol Theatre, the June 17 event celebrating the 25th anniversary of Adams' solo debut Heartbreaker and delivering an intimate, acoustic set that highlights his massive career.

  • The Thing with Feathers, June 18

    Lauded by Ease Up Mag for their "strong indie pop and rock sound that is seamlessly correlated with the stories told in their songwriting," the touring musicians of The Thing with Feathers headline a June 18 concert at Davenport's Raccoon Motel, the magazine adding that the trio is "a band you truly don’t want to miss out on."

  • The Jayhawks, June 19

    Their most recent album XOXO lauded by Pitchfork for being "a distillation of their manifold strengths" boasting "pastoral accounts of American beauty curdling into something coarser and sadder," the Minneasota-based alt-country and country-rock outfit The Jayhawks headlines a June 19 concert at Maquoketa's Codfish Hollow Barn, Louder Than War adding that "there is a real feel of togetherness on XOXO which is reflected in the interchanging lead vocals and instruments."

  • GS70 and jm wave, June 21

    Two touring indie-music acts based in the Windy City team up for one special night in Rock Island on June 21, with Rozz-Tox hosting an evening with GS70, the solo project of Anastasia Gladkova, and jm wave, the solo project of Zachary Sprenger.

  • Night Moves, June 21

    Hitting the road in support of their forthcoming recording Double Life, scheduled for release this July, the Minnesota-based indie rockers of Night Moves headline a June 21 concert event at Maquoketa's Codfish Hollow Barn, the outfit's previous album Can You Ever Find Me hailed by Pass the Aux as "cosmic psychedelia tethered unmistakably to specific eras, but able to transcend its influences by virtue of its creators’ talents."

  • Matchmaker's Mark: “Materialists,” “The Life of Chuck,” and “How to Train Your Dragon”

    No one can singlehandedly revive the fading genre of the swoony big-screen romance. Yet with only two features under her belt to date, Celine Song is certainly giving it a good shot.

  • Mike Schulz with Dave & Darren on Planet 93.9 FM

    Going to the cineplex or staying in and streaming this weekend? Every Thursday morning at 8:15 a.m. you can listen to Mike Schulz dish on recent movie releases & talk smack about Hollywood celebs on Planet 93.9 FM with the fabulous Dave & Darren in the Morning team of Dave Levora and Darren Pitra. The morning crew previews upcoming releases, too.

    Or you can check the Reader Web site and listen to their latest conversation by the warm glow of your electronic device. Never miss a pithy comment from these three scintillating pundits again.

    Thursday, June 12: Discussion of Ballerina, The Phoenician Scheme, and Dangerous Animals; previews of How to Train Your Dragon, Materialists, The Life of Chuck, and The Unholy Trinity; and a detour on Mickey 17's weird Pigeon Man whom Mike doesn't remember and Dave remembers all too well.

  • Pas de Duels: “Ballerina,” “The Phoenician Scheme,” and “Dangerous Animals”

    Although the movie isn't very funny until it begins hitting us with its really creative gory deaths, there was a moment not long into director Len Wiseman's Ballerina a continuation being helpfully marketed as From the World of John Wick: Ballerina that made me and others among our Thursday-afternoon crowd laugh out loud.

  • Cobra Why?: “Karate Kid: Legends,” “Bring Her Back,” and “Mountainhead”

    You'll rarely hear me complain about a film, especially an umpteenth followup in an apparently endless franchise, being too modestly scaled or too short. However, in the case of this latest installment in the KKU, I do feel obligated to ask: Really? This is it? This whole, paltry, badly shot thing exists simply to get Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio on-screen together – and even then only barely, and not until almost a full hour has passed?

  • Now Playing: Friday, June 13, through Thursday, June 19

    Now playing at area theaters.

Art

  • “Brown, Lennox, & Wenthe,” through June 20

    Exploring themes of place and time by highlighting the Earth and capturing fragments of memories in paint, fiber, and clay, a trio of Midwestern artisans enjoy a collective exhibition at Rock Island's Quad City Arts Center through June 20, the Brown, Lennox, & Wenthe exhibit boasting Afrofuturist art by Monica Brown, quilted art by Cheryl Lennox, and ceramic sculpture by Elissa Wenthe.

  • “Fever Dreams: German Expressionism,” June 21 through December 7

    With the Davenport venue partnering alongside the German American Heritage Center and Museum for programming during the exhibit's run, the Figge Art Museum will house Fever Dreams: German Expressionism in the Lewis Gallery from June 21 through December 7, this arresting exhibition featuring loans from the David and Sarojini Johnson Print Collection, and showcased in conjunction with the GAHC's companion exhibit German Expressionist Prints from the Johnson Collection.

  • “Cats!”, June 21 through January 4

    A dazzling, visually rich celebration of fascinating felines and the artists who love them, Cats! (the exhibit, not the musical) can be viewed in the third-floor gallery of Davenport's Figge Art Museum from June 21 through January 4, this rich showcase inspired by our four-legged friends boasting works from both the museum's collection and on loan, and on display through the aid of contributing sponsors Carrie Kimple and Sue Quail.

  • “CHAIN RE·AC·TION,” June 21 through September 28

    With the exhibition made possible through generous funding from Art Bridges Foundation, and with KLJB FOX 18 serving as media sponsor, the fascinating collaborative exhibit CHAIN RE·AC·TION will be on view in the Figge Art Museum's Mary Waterman Gildehaus Community Gallery June 21 through September 28, visitors to the Davenport venue invited to witness the art experience's continuous cycle of inspiration, reflection, and response.

  • “Olson, Stampfli, & Sunderman,” through June 30

    Highlighting the importance of sustainability in the arts and encouraging their audience to see the beauty of Earth’s resources and ecosystem, a trio of Illinois and Iowa talents enjoy a collective exhibition at the Quad City Arts International Airport Gallery through June 30, Olson, Stampfli, & Sunderman showcasing a beautiful assemblage of quilted art by Lindsay Olson and Jessie Stampfli and sculpture by Robert Sunderman.