Tacos and Tequila Festival planned Saturday

A Tacos and Tequila Festival will be held from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 4, at the Legends Field, 1800 Village West Parkway, Kansas City, Kansas.

The festival will feature hip-hop artists including T.I., Juvenile, Ginuwine, Chingy, Ying Yang Twins, Petey Pablo, Baby Bash and D.J. Ashton Martin.

Tacos, tequila tastings and craft margaritas will be available. One hundred local chef inspired street tacos will be available.

There will be live music performances from throwback artists, Lucha Libre wrestling, an exotic car showcase, a Chihuahua beauty pageant and art installations.

General admission tickets are already sold out for the festival. It is a rain or shine event.

To see if other tickets are still available, visit www.kctacosandtequila.com.

Celebration at the Station to be tonight

The Celebration at the Station, a free Memorial Day weekend concert by the Kansas City Symphony at Union Station, 30 W. Pershing Road, Kansas City, Missouri, will take place at 8 p.m. Sunday, May 29.


During the past two years, the event was canceled because of COVID-19, but it is back on the schedule again tonight.

This year’s event supporter is the Bank of America. The concert will be carried on KCPT-TV.

Those attending may arrive as early as 5 p.m. Fireworks are a part of the concert’s ending.

The event is on the grounds of Union Station and the National World War I Museum and Memorial.

Art exhibit opens today to raise awareness for mental health

The Wyandot Behavioral Health Network is the host of a StART the conversation art exhibit on Friday, May 20, at the Velvet Nova, 705 N. 6th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

The exhibit is part of the Downtown KCK Third Friday Art Walk.

Hours of the Wyandot BHN exhibit are 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. May 20.

A spokesman for Wyandot BHN stated that individual who have lived with mental health challenges often face a stigmatizing language that can make it difficult to fully explain what they experience. Art often plays a meaningful part in the recovery journey of individuals who face mental health challenges, the spokesman stated.

The stART the conversation art exhibit will amplify the voices of individuals with lived experience, as well as community artists, in the hope of starting open and honest conversations about mental health, according to the spokesman.

Each of nearly two dozen artists included in the exhibition have a story to share about their own mental health journeys. The artwork featured in the exhibit speaks to a number of topics, including depression, psychosis, grief and loss, self-acceptance and recovery, according to the spokesman.

“I hope there are people who come into this exhibition who have never even considered that we can talk openly about mental health,” said Jordan Graves, Wyandot BHN therapist. “I hope that there is someone who walks in and can look at a piece of artwork and see their child or even themselves in it and recognize that everything is going to be OK.”

The art exhibit is free and open to the public.