July Events

July is here! Start planning your weekend activities with the events below and see why the Dallas Region is home to growth, fun, and memories for all. 

EVENTS IN THE REGION

Discover unforgettable summer moments with must-attend events in the Dallas Region this July!

Community Fireworks– Carrollton July 3
July Jubilee– Denton July 3
Red, White, and You– Garland July 3
Wylie Fireworks– Wylie July 3
Kaboom Town– Addison July 3
Sparks and Stripes– Irving July 3-4
Crape Myrtle Festival, Fireworks, and Parade– Waxahachie July 3-4
Fair Park Fourth– Dallas July 4
Fireworks on Main– Rowlett July 4
July Jubilee– Little Elm July 4
Liberty by the Lake– The Colony July 4
Summer Soul Affair– Waxahachie  July 6
Too Hot to Handle 5K– Dallas July 20

BOOMING MEMORIES

Take in the fresh air outdoors and experience the best of summer with exciting activities around DFW!

Salsa Dance Lesson & Party Dallas
Friday Night Market Celina
Rockin’ The River at Panther Island Fort Worth
GAL-A-PALOOZA Fort Worth
Farmers Market at the Lawn Little Elm

MUST SEE EXHIBITS 

Check out some of the region’s most visited museums and hidden gems.

He Said/ She Said: Contemporary Women Artists Interject Dallas
Art Battle Dallas Dallas
Bale Creek Allen Gallery Fort Worth
Meow Wolf Grapevine

LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION

Tune in to performances from small artists to some of the biggest names touring in the Dallas Region.

Ellen’s Last Stand Up Dallas
Peso Pluma Dallas
Missy Elliott Ft. Worth
AJR Ft. Worth
Morgan Wallen Arlington




June Events

EVENTS IN THE REGION

Beat the heat with events happening indoors from Fan Expos to cultural events like Juneteenth festivals. Enjoy what the Dallas Region has to offer each weekend with our guide to fun. 

NEW EVENT: Hold on to your hat — Deryck Todd is strutting his stuff all the way from New York City to the heart of Texas, inviting you to join us at the most glamorous Pride Month party of the year at Virgin Hotels Dallas feat. electrifying DJs, drag artists and burlesque ready to snatch your wigs and knock your boots off! Plus pop up shops and a local charity raffle! Our headliner is none other than Brooke Lynn Hytes from RuPaul’s Drag Race and Canada’s Drag Race — all hail the Queen! Get tickets now!

 

Dallas Pride Music Festival– Dallas Jun. 1
Crawfish Festival– DeSoto Jun. 1
Mustang Creek Music and Arts Festival– Forney Jun. 1
Summer Splash– Anna  Jun. 1
Dallas Pride Parade– Dallas Jun. 2
Fan Expo– Dallas Jun. 7
Summer Nights– Frisco Jun. 8
Paws on the Square– Carrollton Jun. 8
Grapevine Main Live!– Dallas Jun.  7-9
Juneteenth Celebration: Jazz in the Park– Irving Jun. 14
Juneteenth Celebration– Garland Jun. 15
Trinity Pride Festival– Fort Worth Jun. 15
Juneteenth Parade and Festival– Waxahachie Jun. 15
Texas Whipfest– Ennis Jun. 22
Liberty Run– Denton Jun. 29
Splash and Blast– Celina Jun. 29

MEMORIES IN JUNE

Take in the fresh air outdoors!

 

MUST SEE EXHIBITS 

Check out some of the region’s most visited museums and hidden gems.

Wildcat Movie Premier Dallas
Patrick Martinez: Histories Dallas
40 Days 40 Nights By Shafaq Ahmad Dallas
Adult-Verse Grapevine

LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION

Tune in to performances from small artists to some of the biggest names touring in the Dallas Region.

 

Dave Matthews Band in Concert Dallas
Bleachers in Concert Dallas
Hairspray Dallas
blink-182 in Concert Ft. Worth
Midland in Concert Ft. Worth




The Ministry of Presence you can find at DFW International Airport

Next time you’re at DFW International, while running from a TSA checkpoint to your gate, or reading a book during a layover, you may look up an see a priest roaming around the terminal – saying hello and projecting calm in an environment that can be anything but.  

“Not everybody is going to Disneyland … people are going to do life here,” says Father Greg McBrayer — Executive Director and Corporate Chaplain at DFW Airport Interfaith Chaplaincy and the founder of American Airlines IOC (AA) Christian EBRG Monday Ministry Chapter.   

“I grew up loving airplanes from the time I was a child – I was flying them by the time I was 17,” but poor eyesight ended his dream of a career at 35-thousand feet.  

 

Instead, he used his extensive knowledge in aviation to become a Licensed Flight Dispatcher, which placed him on the flight plan to his current roles at AA and DFW Airport – it was a perfect integration of his vocation and profession which started in 1979…and was divinely combined on September 11, 2001.  

On that day “I had flights coming into the New York Center airspace, and I said, ‘Captain, I’ve got Richmond clear for you; you need to land immediately and call me on arrival.’  

Father Greg, as he’s affectionately known, remembers helping get his flights out of the five thousand planes that are in the sky at any given time, safely on the ground. A long day gave way to a sleepless night and a lot of praying.  

“When I went into that operations control center the next day – there was nothing flying, nothing on the radar, no noise at all, just a deafening silence. I thought to myself dear God, my life and my work will never be the same! Lord we need you here! It was at that moment I heard God clearly tell me, that’s why I placed you here.”  

He stopped compartmentalizing his faith at that moment and today sits on the flight control bridge in American Airlines Integrated Operations nerve center as a Bi-vocational Priest and Chief Flight Controller—picture the biggest newsroom you’ve ever seen. Each person is responsible for a different part of your journey: licensed flight controllers, meteorologists, customer service specialists, crew scheduling personnel, and aviation maintenance experts, all working in concert to safeguard your flight. “These mechanics are experts for each type of aircraft that American has in service. If the pilot calls his flight dispatcher with a problem, we will then get the maintenance person on the line and have a three-way call to make the determination if it needs to make an unexpected landing and where that might be or continue and address the issue at the final destination.”  

Even on a day with ‘routine’ hiccups, this can be a very stressful atmosphere. Part of Father Greg’s mission as a corporate chaplain is to maintain peace, and diffuse situations when they do arise. It’s a role he thinks every corporation should have – someone who is there simply to make things go smoother and help hold people together. He compares this job to common household products …  

 

 

“What does every home need? WD40 and duct tape – that’s what chaplains are like,” he says. Like WD40 and duct tape, chaplains can ease friction and help people hold things together.”   

According to the International Association of Civil Aviation Chaplains, chaplaincy ministry is available at more than one hundred airports around the world. The one at DFW International Airport is one of the first and is the world’s largest.  

At American’s Fort Worth campus, which houses roughly 6000 employees – and at DFW Airport, where roughly 65-thousand people work – Father Greg is well known, and well-liked.  

“Heeeey Padre,” says one, while extending his hand for a high five.  

“Hi Father Greg,” says another while walking by.   

He doesn’t proselytize or try to recruit members to his congregation. Instead, he brings what he refers to as ‘the priceless ministry of presence’ to anyone who needs it. For the employees and the roughly 200-thousand travelers who come through DFW daily, he offers 30-minute chapel masses on Sunday mornings and throughout the week. And he always begins the same way:  

“You probably didn’t know you were going to be here today, but God did, and you heard His voice over the airport intercom invite you to this Chapel today to receive something He knew you wanted or needed on your journey.”  

He and his Chaplaincy team respond to the spiritual needs of airport employees, first responders, our military, the TSA and travelers through their DFW Airport Interfaith Chaplaincy—DDFWAIC chap app. Download it at dfwairportchapel.org  

 

 

The channels may change, but his message remains the same: “God is ahead of you on every step of your journey to eternity.” And if He’s there for eternity, of course He’s going to be there for your trip to Nashville. Father Greg and his chaplaincy team, just try to make Him more accessible. For the times he’s not available for a one-on-one, his presence can be found in the Chapel at DFW or in one of the Interfaith prayer rooms he helped bring to American Airlines’ headquarters campus. They are quiet Interfaith prayer rooms for people of every faith — there, you will find numerous Holy books, prayer rugs, and ablution stations for the Muslim’s ceremonial foot washing. The prayer rooms ironically double tornado shelters, and the symbolism isn’t lost on Father Greg.   

All Are Welcome.  




May Events

EVENTS IN THE REGION

Enjoy the weather with events from cultural celebrations to music festivals. 

 

Mayfest– Fort Worth May 2-5
Plano Asiafest– Plano May 4
Cotton Wood Art Festival– Richardson May 4-5
Cinco de Mayo Duncanville by Mudhook Bar+Kitchen– Duncanville May 4-5
Taste of Wylie– Wylie May 6
Arts Festival at Heritage Park– Flower Mound May 11
Bagel Run– Dallas May 12
Culturemap Tastemaker Awards– Dallas May 16
Grapevine Main Street Fest– Grapevine May 17-19
Garland Asian American Heritage Festival– Garland May 18
Wildflower Festival– Richardson May 19
The Lone Star Jam– Round Rock May 24-26
Twogether Land Festival– Dallas May 25-26
Ubbi Dubbi Festival– Fort Worth May 25-26
Fiesta Charra– Lewisville May 26
Taste Addison– Addison May 21-Jun. 2

MEMORIES IN MAY

Take in the fresh air outdoors!

 

MUST SEE EXHIBITS 

Check out some of the region’s most visited museums and hidden gems.

Hello Kitty Market Dallas
Dreamhack Dallas Dallas
Black Heritage Celebration Dallas
Texas Liberty Forever! Dallas
The Ann & Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Museum Dallas

LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION

Tune in to performances from small artists to some of the biggest names touring in the Dallas Region.

 

Hamilton Dallas
Pepe Aguilar in Concert Dallas
Kenny Chesney in Concert Arlington
Luis Miguel in Concert Dallas
T-Pain in Concert Dallas
Bad Bunny in Concert Dallas




From Commercial Litigator to CASA CEO

Today you may know Kathleen LaValle as the CEO of Dallas CASA. This July marks her ten-year anniversary … but her path there was not a straight one.

“Prior to becoming the CEO, I was a practicing attorney,” said LaValle. “I focused on commercial litigation and regulatory disputes, primarily in the telecommunications and electric power sectors. When I accepted the role of CEO, a dear friend suggested I had fallen and hit my head and asked what I would do when I woke up?”

LaValle understood the confusion and agreed that her decision to move from a commercial law practice to nonprofit management wasn’t a pivot, so much as a leap.

CASA – or court-appointed special advocates – was created in 1977 by a Seattle superior court judge who was concerned about a decision-making process that impacted the lives of abused and neglected children but wasn’t always informed by complete information. In 1980, Dallas CASA was established as one of three national pilot programs, and today it is the largest of more than 900 independent CASA programs.

The immediate priority of CASA advocates, or volunteers, is to find safe, permanent homes for children in need. Over time, the goal is to break the cycle of abuse and neglect.

While this work bears no similarity to her career as a lawyer, it was a perfect fit with an issue that was close to her heart. She had been serving on the Dallas CASA board for several years when the chief executive role opened up.

She recalls talking through the situation with her husband – a clinical psychologist.

“We would take our goldendoodle – Bailey – on walks and my husband helped me process what I was experiencing – and the decision I would eventually come around to.”

She said her husband told her if the CEO role was something she really wanted, to go for it. And her children – in their twenties when this opportunity presented itself – and both adopted — were equally supportive. In fact, the older one was not only okay with it, but pushed her to apply.

“She has volunteered for National Adoption Day since she was about seven.” She thought this job at Dallas CASA was an obvious next step for her mother to take.

LaValle recalls that the overwhelming support was balanced with concern from their younger child about how she might handle being immersed in details of child abuse cases.

Other parts of her job highlight her ability to communicate effectively – inform, and when she needs to, persuade. On CASA Day at the state capital, she joined other members of their legislative advocacy team in meetings with lawmakers; at board meetings, she highlights issues and decisions being made that impact the services they provide.

“Being a familiar brand is important to our efforts to recruit volunteer advocates to serve the children,” said LaValle.

That’s why she also works to establish and foster community connections by opening up their training center to any nonprofit that serves children or families. The Dallas County Welfare Board, Dallas County Disproportionality and Disparities Committee, and the North Texas Coalition Against Human Trafficking all meet in Dallas CASA’s building.

The organizations may be different but people at each are united in their commitment to improving outcomes for children in need.

LaValle’s team takes all Dallas County child welfare case appointments – something unique to a nonprofit CASA program operating in an urban area the size of Dallas County.

“We achieved 100 percent acceptance five years ago, and we’ve been able to sustain it,” said LaValle. That adds up to more than 7,000 children being served by about 2,700 volunteer advocates.

To continue operating at that level, LaValle and the development team also invest time in researching grants and other fundraising opportunities; she serves on a statewide committee called the Public Private Partnership – overseen by the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services; and she is on the board for the North Texas Foster Care Coalition.

Her days look nothing like they did when she was immersed in legal work. But LaValle says leading a team that helps improve the lives of thousands of North Texas children is the best job in the world.