• CornCon 11: “Manifest Your Inner Cyber Superhero,” October 10 and 11

    Founded in 2015 by the Quad Cities Cybersecurity Alliance and presented by the Docent Institute, the 11th-annual CornCon – an event designed to raise community awareness and provide business solutions for dealing with cybersecurity threats – will boast breakout sessions, expert speakers, panels, tutorials, vendors, a tech expo, children's activities, awards presentations, and more on October 10 and 11, this year's Davenport RiverCenter event titled Manifest Your Inner Cyber Superhero.

  • Bored Teachers, October 11

    For all those students who took any opportunity to laugh at their teachers, they can now atone for it by laughing with teachers during the national tour stop of the Bored Teachers' "The Struggle Is Real!" tour, a night of standup hilarity coming to Davenport's Adler Theatre on October 11.

  • Etta May, October 11

    Making an area stop on her latest national tour, Kentucky-based comedienne and Southern Fried Chicks headliner Etta May brings her reputation as “The Queen of Southern Sass” to Galesburg's Orpheum Theatre with an October 11 performance co-presented by Grandstand Concerts.

  • “Strange Objects from the Putnam,” October 12

    Presented by Christine Chandler, curator of natural science at Putnam Museum & Science Center, Strange Objects from the Putnam continues the popular "Kaffee und Kuchen" series at Davenport's German American Heritage Center, the October 12 event guiding participants through a number of wonderful and weird artifacts housed in the PM&SC.

  • Quad Cities Haunt Actors Ready to Scare Up a Good, Creepy Time

    Touring the haunted halls and dark crevices of Skellington Manor is scary enough, with its depraved permanent displays and figures. But add the colorful, creepy live performers during the haunted-house season of October 3 through November 2, and the fear factor is super-charged.

  • In Illinois, All Sides Are All “Kind of, You Know, It’s Like, What Are We Doing?” About an Agreed Bill

    The announcement last week that the Illinois AFL-CIO was withdrawing from the “agreed-bill process” at least forty years after its inception took almost everyone by surprise, but nobody was really shocked. For years, whenever the group engaged in carefully-constructed negotiations with business interests on workers’ compensation and unemployment insurance, labor leaders would grumble privately that most other states don’t have a similar process.

  • Eerie Iowa: The darker side of the Hawkeye state.
    Eerie Iowa: The Hawkeye State's Darker Side

    Overhead, Iowa's landscape is a quilt of green patches of cornfields stitched together by highways that connect its 934 cities. It’s a picturesque Grant Wood painting of rural America. But from the ground, these fields feel very different.

  • A Lincolnesque Time, Perhaps? An Interview with Professor David Clements

    While most voters have turned a blind eye to election irregularities that revealed themselves both in 2020 and 2024, there are still courageous, thoughtful, and measured Americans who continue to research and compile irrefutable hard evidence with the expectation that one day, the culprits will be exposed, prosecuted, and punished and fair, secure, honest elections restored to the people.

  • Biometrical Exceptions Encoded in Illinois Dems’ Energy Bill Leave Labor Supporters Less Than Electrified

    One of the reasons a giant energy-related bill failed to pass the Illinois General Assembly last spring was because organized labor remained neutral. At least one union opposed the bill, but overall, the unions weren’t helping to move the ball forward – and they have a whole lot of much-needed legislative muscle.

  • Getting Governor No to Governor Yes No Mean Feat for Illinois Legislators: Jim Edgar, 1946-2025

    Jim Edgar ran a brilliant campaign for governor in 1990. He set the template for every winning statewide race since then by focusing on the importance of independent suburban women. The Republican Edgar defeated a Catholic Democrat – Neil Hartigan – in that race, with a boost from the National Abortion Rights Action League’s endorsement. That endorsement most definitely helped him with suburban women, who were just starting to lean Democratic.

  • Signs of the Swarm, October 8

    Hailed by AllMusic as musicians who "combine neck-snapping breakdowns, caustic yet catchy riffs, and unhinged vocals to forge their particularly punitive style of deathcore," the rockers of Signs of the Swam bring their tour to Davenport's Capitol Theatre on October 8, the group's 2025 album To Rid Myself of Truth lauded by Distorted Sound as "an all-out ride through the depths of hell and the high heavens."

  • The Third Mind, October 9

    Touring in support of their September release Right Now!, and praised by AllMusic for delivering "a spontaneous mix of rock, blues, psychedelia, jazz, and improvisation," the indie talents of The Third Mind headline an October 8 concert at Davenport's Raccoon Motel, the group's latest recording, according to Rock & Blues Muse, a work that "more than earns its confident exclamation point."

  • Several States
    Parody Gold II: “Several States” Lyrics Inspired by Dylan's “Seven Days”

    These work products are considered a parody inspired by the original songs. And, given Lydia Electrum's focus on restoring the republic via sound money, namely using gold and silver, we have coined (pun intended) these series of songs "Parody Gold."

  • Are You Ready to Meet Your Shadow?: Celebrate October with Void Church

    October is Void Church season. The Quad Cities collective books shows in all seasons. But when the shadows fall and the light fades, when the veil draws thin and the wind whispers dark and suggestive secrets on the chilling air, Void Church falls into their element. The term “goth” is thrown around like a can of black lacquer, but it fits them like a pair of fishnets. They invite you to come revel in the dying of the light, with one caveat: “Are you ready to meet your shadow?”

  • “An Acoustic Evening with John Anderson,” October 10

    With the Grammy-nominated artist a 2014 inductee in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame who last year was also elected into the Country Music Hall of Fame, An Acoustic Evening with John Anderson comes to Davenport's Adler Theatre on October 10, the guitarist/vocalist responsible for more than 40 singles on the Billboard country charts, including the number-one hits "Wild and Blue," "Swingin,'" "Black Sheep," "Straight Tequila Night," and "Money in the Bank."

  • Lord of the Ring: “The Smashing Machine,” “Anemone,” and “Good Boy”

    In recent years, it was starting to look as though Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson was no longer capable of genuine screen rapport with anyone. Turns out he very much is. Maybe he just needed a true kindred spirit to share some with.

  • 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, October 2: Before Mike takes next week off, discussion of One Battle After Another, The Strangers: Chapter 2, Dead of Winter, and Eleanor the Great, and previews of The Smashing Machine, Good Boy, Anemone, and the new Taylor Swift experience. Mike won't be seeing that one. A handful of others probably will.

  • Revolutionaries' War: “One Battle After Another,” “The Strangers: Chapter 2,” “Dead of Winter,” and “Eleanor the Great”

    What do you get when you give $130-175 million to a filmmaker who, after nearly 30 years in the business, has never helmed a blockbuster, or even a movie that grossed more than $41 million domestic? If you're Warner Bros., which granted a nine-figure budget to Paul Thomas Anderson, you probably get all sorts of happy, because the writer/director's new screwball epic One Battle After Another is going through the roof in every imaginable way. Better still, it deserves to.

  • “Night of the Living Dead,” October 11

    With legendary film critic Pauling Kael describing the film as "one of the most gruesomely terrifying movies ever made," George A. Romero's legendary zombie thriller Night of the Living Dead enjoys a spooky-season screening at Rock Island's Rozz-Tox on October 11, this low-budget masterpiece also inspiring Rex Reed to state, "It is unthinkable for anyone seriously interested in horror movies not to see it."

  • Now Playing: Friday, October 3, through Thursday, October 9

    Now playing at area theaters.

Art

  • “Voces y Visiones: A Celebration of Hispanic Artists,” October 10 through December 5

    At Rock Island's Quad City Arts Gallery from October 10 through December 5, the public is invited to view arresting, playful, and beautiful works of art by 19 regional artists in the exhibition Voces y Visiones: A Celebration of Hispanic Artists, this showcase of talent and expressiveness boasting new works selected by an official judging panel.

  • “Day of the Dead,” October 11 through November 30

    A traditional Mexican holiday is again being celebrated in high style at Davenport's Figge Art Museum through the exhibit Day of the Dead, with museum patrons, from October 11 through November 30, invited to reflect on why this Mexican tradition endures, and how it is gaining new resonance across the United States.

  • “Huang Qingjun: Family Stuff,” through October 11

    An art project spanning more than 20 years and including some 150 photographs, he photography exhibit Huang Qingjun: Family Stuff opens the 2025-26 art-show season at Galesburg's Carl Sandburg College, this showcase through October 11 a series of deeply personal works by the artist who has been featured by the New York Times and the BBC.

  • Virtual Talk: “Stitching up History – Clothing in NGA Portraiture with Ninya Mikhaila,” October 16

    On October 16, guests of Davenport's Figge Art Museum are invited to watch a recorded fashion program in the second-floor John Deere Auditorium, with historical costumier Ninya Mikhaila's fascinating program Stitching up History - Clothing in NGA Portraiture being held in conjunction with the current exhibition The Golden Age: Featuring Northern European Works from the National Gallery of Art.

  • Scholar Talk: “Cats!”, October 23

    A dazzling, visually rich celebration of fascinating felines and the artists who love them, the Figge Art Museum exhibition Cats! can currently be viewed in the Davenport venue's third-floor gallery, and on October 23, a Scholar Talk on both the exhibit and the animal will be presented by Dr. Amy Freund and Dr. Michael Yonan, co-authors of the Journal18 article “Cats: The Soft Underbelly of the Enlightenment."