Is it just us or did January just fly by?! The holidays might firmly in the rear-view window, but there's plenty of things to be excited about this month. Take part in Black History Month events across DC, enjoy a winter wonderland and Polar Bear Plunge at Ice Yards, try your hand at a craft project and explore the museum at Renwick's Handi-Hour, learn the fine art of lock picking, catch the King Tut immersive exhibit and Ride the Cycle before they're gone, and so much more! We've curated 70+ awesome things to do this month, so read on and make plans to make the most of your February . . . Legend:
Ongoing The Utopia Project. The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum's The Utopia Project seeks to deconstruct the reasons why social change happens. Why does one tactic work and another fails? This interactive gallery will be a space to learn the art of activism and to unlock the creativity in each of us to transform our world. Through a series of experiential activities, you'll learn to tap into the issues you care about and then envision your own version of a utopia. Objects, photos, and stories from the ACM collection will be featured throughout the gallery, turning abstract ideas into real-world examples of community members making a difference throughout history. 🆓 Now thru March 1 Memories. Artist Nyugen E. Smith presents Bundlehouse: Ancient Future Memory, a mobile art gallery which uses found-objects, collage and assemblage, to represent the layered identities of Black African diasporic descendants and the forced migration or rehousing (physical & spiritual) of the African diaspora. 🆓 Now thru March 12 Called to Create: Black Artists of the American South. National Gallery of Art exhibits 40 acquired works from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation – an Atlanta-based organisation, which derives its name from a poem of 1921 by Langston Hughes, set up to promotes and preserve the work of African American artists from the Southeastern United States. Despite racism and other forms of discrimination, all of these artists drew on deep cultural and spiritual traditions to create some of the finest art of our time. ✊🏾🎉🆓 Now thru March 26 Black Like Me. Zenith Gallery presents a group exhibit of African-American artists, Featuring Artists: Wesley Clark, Julee Dickerson Thompson, Bulsby “Buzz” Duncan, Francine Haskins, Claudia Gibson-Hunter, Carolyn Goodridge, Bernie Houston, Hubert Jackson, Chris Malone, Kristine Mays, Ibou N’Diaye, Curtis Woody. Artist reception is Feb 15; RSVP to attend.✊🏾🎉 🆓 Now thru April 15 Hurry, Ending Soon National Geographic Mountain Film Festival. Prepare to be spellbound as you immerse yourself in outdoor adventures through Mexican volcanoes, historic villages, and wintery ski slopes at the return of National Geographic’s screenings of nature-packed movies. The Banff Centre Mountain Film Festival World Tour includes three films: Colors of Mexico, Flow, and Alta. Now - Feb 4 Walk like an Egyptian. “Beyond King Tut: The Immersive Experience” is an immersive cinematic exhibition at the National Geographic Museum that takes visitors on a journey to one of the greatest archaeological discoveries of all time. The exhibition celebrates the 100-year anniversary of the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings. 💲Now - Feb 6 Lunar New Year Ice Cream Tasting. Celebrate the Year of the Rabbit with a five-flavor flight of Ice Cream Jubilee's famous Asian-inspired ice cream flavors, including: Red Bean Almond Cookie, Miso Caramel Peanut Butter Cookie, Pear Plum Wine Sorbet, Roasted Barley Tea and Dan Tat Brulee. 💲Now thru Feb 12 Ride the Cyclone. In this quirky, edgy cult musical, the lives of six teen chamber choir singers are cut short in a freak roller coaster accident. Stuck in the afterlife, a mechanical fortuneteller gives them a chance to sing their way back to earth. 💲Now thru Feb 19 Double Rainbow. DC artists Holly Bass & Maps Glover present an exhibition with CulturalDC that features video work and archival materials from the artists’ collaborative performances, that subvert the current art historical cannon. The archives reflect the artists’ creative history and cultural lineages. 🆓 Now thru Feb 25 Shattered Glass. Culture House presents Stephanie Mercedes, A Sky of Shattered Glass Reflected by the Shining Sun, which uses sound, drawings, motors, and metal casting, to reflect on the vulnerability of the queer body. Rather than framing vulnerability as a weakness, these works invite the viewer to consider vulnerability as a weapon. 🆓 Now thru Feb 25 Balance of Power. Mehari Square Gallery presents Werrlayne Nunes' solo exhibition, Balance of Power," which examines the history of the land of Brazil, the perpetuity of promise and honors the creative and resilient spirit of childhood in the face of structural adversity. 🆓 Now thru Feb 26 Iran Film Festival. The Festival of Films from Iran returns to the Asian Art Museum for the first time since 2020 with tributes to persecuted filmmakers Jafar Panahi and Mohammad Rasoulof; celebrations of rebellious women in solidarity with the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement in Iran; and two restored classics. 🆓 Now thru Feb 27 Opening This Month Author Talk: His Name is George Floyd. In recognition of Black History Month, authors Toluse Olorunnipa, and Robert Samuels discuss their book His Name is George Floyd: One Man's Life in the Struggle for Racial Justice. Registration required ✊🏾🎉🆓 Feb 1 Georgetown African American History. In celebration of Black History Month, learn the story of African American history along the C&O Canal, and the development of Trinity Catholic Church and other congregations in Georgetown. The program also includes a musical performance by Ronald Walton. 💻👥 ✊🏾🎉🆓Feb 1 Le Cine Francais. Pesented in collaboration with the DC International Film Festival, discover or re-discover the French hits shown at the festival through this series curated by the Filmfest DC staff. All screenings will take place at La Maison Française. Titles include: The Intouchables, Mozart's Sister and The Hedgehog. 💲 Now thru Feb 28 Phillips After 5. Indulge in art appreciation after-hours at Phillips Museum's "I Heart Art" event. Listen to live music from indie band Color Palette, sample sweet treats from The Chocolate House, meet fellow art aficionados during a speed-friending activity, and take a trip to the City of Love through their special exhibition An Italian Impressionist in Paris: Giuseppe De Nittis.. 💲Feb 2 Thursday Throwback Movie Night. Kickback at the Southwest Neighborhood Library for throwback movie night. This week's screening: A disgruntled weatherman is forced to relive his least favorite day to forecast: Groundhog Day. 🆓 Feb 2 Ford’s Theatre festival. You can see three-days full of readings and play previews at the Ford’s Theatre A First Look festival. The featured inaugural plays spotlight underrepresented historical figures and themes of social justice and racial equity. The lineup of productions include Something Moving: A Meditation on Maynard, Blackbox, and Young and Just. 🆓 Feb 2 - 4 Bubbly Wine Tasting. Sommelier Michael Scaffidi provides a brief history of Champagne and sparkling wine, and leads a tasting of a variety of sparkling wines, including chappagne, prosecco and sparkling rose. 💲Feb 2 Cake. In Bekah Brunstetter's topical dramatic comedy, The Cake , a vivacious, conservative North Carolina baker named Della faces a crisis of conscience when Jen - whom she loves like a daughter - asks her to bake a cake for Jen's lesbian wedding. 💲 Feb 2 - 26 Native Gardens. GALA Hispanic Theatre presents the world premiere of Native Gardens, Set in a northwest DC neighborhood, two families – one a young Latino couple new to the neighborhood,the other a pair of older conservatives – clash over a garden dispute that soon turns into much more. Play is in Spanish with English sub-titles. 💲Feb 2 - 26 Musical Relations. A tale of two brothers. One a classical pianist, the other a jazz bass player. One a Christian, the other a Muslim. One living in freedom, the other in jail. Separated by bars, Bilal and Eric try to reconcile their differences through the language they know best: music. BARS and MEASURES is a journey through faith, family, melody, and time. 💲Feb 2 - 26 Hirshhorn Sound Shards. Inspired by artist Mark Bradford’s Pickett’s Charge, a monumental 360° installation that weaves together past and present, and illusion and abstraction, to reconsider how narratives of American history are shaped and contested, Hirshhorn presents a musical performance that challenges us to come to terms with our history and, specifically, the conflict of the Civil War. Tickets required. 🆓 Feb 4 DC Neighborhood Documentary Screening. From formerly enslaved people who purchased land here in the 1860s to the rise of Go-Go music in the 1980s— Barry Farm: Community, Land, and Justice in DC tells a story of community, racial segregation, displacement, and resistance. After the screening there will be a moderated discussion with filmmakers, a Q&A, and an opportunity to talk with the DC Oral History Collaborative about local history preservation.🆓 Feb 4 Artist Talk: Sam Gilliam. The Kreeger Museum hosts an engaging conversation about the late artist Sam Gilliam's piece, Cape, 1969, and his pivotal role as an African American Abstract Expressionist. Advance registration required ✊🏾🎉🆓 Feb 4 Seven Methods of Killing Kylie Jenner. In the U.S. premiere of Jasmine Lee Jones’ Seven Methods of Killing Kylie Jenner, online discourse spills into reality, blurring the tenuous lines between internet personas and who we are IRL when Forbes magazine declares Kylie Jenner a “self-made” billionaire, and Cleo takes to Twitter to call out white women who co-opt and profit from Black culture. 💲Feb 4 - 26 Schoolhouse Rock Sing-Along. It's the 50th anniversary of "Schoolhouse Rock! Celebrate the animated and educational tv show that taught millions of kids (now adults) "Three Is a Magic Number," or "I'm Just a Bill" with a fun sing-along, all day long at Parklands-Turner Neighborhood Library. 🆓 Feb 6 New Play Reading: Dawn. Spooky Action Theatre's New Works in Action Program provides you the chance to see fresh new full-length plays. Tuyết Thị Phạm Helen Hayes Award-winning actor presents Dawn, a mother-daughter story set against the scarring trauma of historical violence in Cambodia. 🆓 Feb 6 Sheila E. Noted drummer and singer Sheila Escovedo, otherwise known as Sheila E., picks up the sticks and the mic for an electric live show at the Howard Theatre. A long-time Prince protege, Sheila E. is also a famed percussionist, vocalist, composer, actress, TV personality, producer and musical collaborator. Feb 7 Black Film Festival. The Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library hosts the 34th Annual Black Film Festival which presents a selection of great Black Films and short documentaries before each film, to celebrate and showcase Black art and life in America. Titles include: I Am Not Your Negro, Strange Fruit, Woman King, and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Screenings every Tuesday in February. ✊🏾🎉🆓 Feb 7 - 28 Reading Black Books All Year. Join Politics & Prose and DC’s top bookstagrammers to talk about diversifying your bookshelf year-round and learn about their favorite Black-authored books.✊🏾🎉 🆓Feb 8 Beat the Bomb Opens. Check out DC's newest immersive experience! Step into real-life video games at Beat The Bomb, the world's craziest team game. Pick your mode of play: Mission or Game Bay. Take on a Mission where teams of 4 to 6 players suit up in hazmat gear and advance through 5 hi-tech video game rooms to disarm a bomb, or else...GET BLASTED by paint or foam! Or host your crew in one of our immersive Game Bays with access to a library of 15+ games. Round out the fun with vibrant drinks and tasty eats at The Bomb Bar. Opens Feb 10 Dessert Tour. Indulge your sweet tooth with a tasty tour of delicious desserts. Stroll down historic 8th Street Barracks Row & Eastern Market and sample cakes and confections from some of the best restaurants in the city. You'll get one dessert at each participating restaurant.💲 Feb 10 - 19 DC Newspaper Describe-a-Thon. In this virtual, interactive event, celebrate DC and LGBTQ+ history by helping The People’s Archive describe and catalog digitized issues of the Washington Blade and City Paper for the DC Public Library's digital collection. 🆓 Feb 11 Valentine's Day Card Pop-Up. Make two Valentine's Day cards at this fun, creative, mimosa-sipping pop-up. 💲Feb 12 New Play Reading: Magician's Daughter. Spooky Action Theatre's New Works in Action Program provides you the chance to see fresh new full-length plays. The Magician is a magical, fantastical, shape-shifting, Shakespeare-meets-Kafka approach to the hero(ine)’s journey, where the line between reality and illusion is fluid and a true metamorphosis lies at its heart. 🆓 Feb 13 Global Sounds on the Hill. Hill Center hosts Grammy-nominated bluesman Jontavious Willis as part of its ongoing concert series, Global Sounds on the Hill. Many fans of Willis regard him as an old soul. His style of playing the instruments and his voice touches the very roots of country blues. He brings back the true soul of the music. The series is curated and hosted by iconic DC impressario and musician Jim Thomson. 💲 Feb 16 Road Trip. Take a trip down memory lane at artist Jack Hornady's exhibit which showcases two timeless subjects in his colorful paintings: architecture and automobiles. The exhibit features 21 scenes from his childhood in the early 1970s -- vintage roadside diners, retro motels, mid-century office buildings, and obscure strip malls -- when minimalist roadside buildings still dotted the landscape and cruiser cars ruled the open roadways. Registration required 💲Feb 7 - May 10 Afrofuturism. National Museum of African American History & Culture screens Afrofuturism: The Origin Story, a documentary produced by the Smithsonian Channel in support of its newest exhibition, Afrofuturism - A History of Black Futures, Panel discussion follows the screening. Registration required 🆓 Feb 8 Art Afterwords: Book Discussion. Join the National Portrait Gallery and the DC Public Library as they analyze a portrait of human rights activist and musician Odetta as part of a discussion about gender, social movements and protest music. Registration required 🆓 Feb 9 Renwick Handi-Hour. Explore the full Renwick Gallery after hours with a special scavenger hunt and try your hand at a paper crafts project at SAAM’s Renwick Gallery while enjoying beer from Aslin Beer Company. Must be 21 or older to attend. 💲Feb 9 Frederick Douglass concert. This annual program celebrating Frederick Douglass includes music by the Jubilee Voices of the Washington Revels, performances by the student winners of the Douglass Oratorical Contest and a light-hearted debate style program that asks the question “What place did Frederick Douglass call home?” ✊🏾🎉🆓 Feb 11 Girl God. Comedy and writing duo Girl God brings its surreal, interactive performance featuring jokes from a trans and queer perspective. 💲Feb 11 Truffle Making Class. Learn how to make truffles while sipping a glass of sparkling wine in an intimate setting at Figleaf Bar and Lounge bar in Hotel Zena. 💲Feb 11 The Love and Soul Experience. Four-time Wammie award winner Jarreau Williams hosts a special Valentine’s Day weekend show for everyone in need of love. Jarreau is known across the DMV as “the man with the golden pipes”. The R&B/Soul artist will perform a mix of originals and covers; including the premiere of his latest single, Cherry (available worldwide Feb 10, 2023). Show also features DMV singer-songwriter Solia, event specific drinks and dinner specials.💲Feb 11 Beginner's Cross Stitch - Galentines Edition. Learn how to cross-stitch by making a cute little pattern with a customizable message to give to your best gal pal. Hand-sewing experience a bonus but not necessary. All materials will be provided. 💲Feb 12 Super Bowl Watch Party. It’s game time! Grab your friends, and your favorite football jersey, and head to metrobar to catch the big game -- and Rhianna -- on the big screen in heated enclosed and semi-enclosed spaces. 🆓 Feb 12 SPECIAL OFFER: DISCOUNT TICKETS TO RIDE THE CYCLONE + ANTI-PROM
Need Valentines Day plans? Join Arena Stage for the “Ride the Cyclone” Anti-Prom on Tues, Feb. 14. Whether you’re in love, out of love, or never got to experience love due to your demise in a rollercoaster accident, this event is for you! Use code ANTIPROM for $60 tix to the show! Included with your discounted ticket to see Ride the Cyclone on Tuesday, February 14, you’ll also receive a night of special snacks, drinks, dancing, and heart-stopping music — all with Arena’s very own (drag) prom queen, Tara Hoot, leading the festivities! The pre-show party gets started at 6:30 p.m., buckle in for the show at 8 p.m., and then they’ll keep the party going after too. And while dressing up is not required, they’d love to see you turn out in your best fits. Get $60 performance tickets with code ANTIPROM. There’s no additional cost for Anti-Prom; snacks and drinks not included. Concessions will be open as normal. Wine Academy. Join Drink the District for a romantic wine-tasting class in its new culinary academy. The class will offer six tantalizing and romantic wines that put an emphasis on taste and fun. 💲Feb 14 Worst Date Ever. Misery loves company. Join Story District as storytellers compete for a chance to win the coveted title of 2023’s Worst Date Ever. After hearing all the stories, the audience decides which story is the biggest dating dumpster fire. 💲Feb 14 NCNW and Local Leadership. Historian Dr. David Taft Terry discusses the role played by activists associated with the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) in the Great Depression and early years of World War II and social justice projects attempted during this period. Following the program, rangers will be giving tours of the home. 💻👥✊🏾🎉 🆓 Feb 15 Curling and Cocktails. Enjoy a friendly game of curling at the Wharf. The Canadian game marries hockey and shuffleboard for a low-pressure evening on the ice--no skates needed. Warm up with a cocktail from the concession stand. 🆓 Feb 15 ArtWalk Dupont. Put on your walking shoes and explore the Dupont Circle arts community and businesses, including live performances, public art activations and extended hours at the Phillips. 🆓 Feb 16 Candle-making Workshop. Learn the steps of the candle-making process and create a custom scent from a curated selection of oils, and pour two 6 oz candles to take home. 💲Feb 16 Comics of Flatbush Misdemeanors. Comedians from Showtime’s FLATBUSH MISDEMEANORS bring their standup to the Club at Studio K for one night only. In the Irreverent comedy series, the rising comedians play fictionalized versions of themselves: neighborhood best friends and urban millennials hilariously struggling to thrive in their new surroundings in Flatbush, Brooklyn. Feb 16 New Jack City Live. Set to the soundtrack of some of the most quintessential songs from the film, New Jack City Live lets you relive all your favorite, intense, heart-pounding moments from the blockbuster movie in a theatre setting. 💲Feb 17 - 18 Katsucon. Get your costume ready for the annual fan celebration of anime and manga where cosplay enthusiasts and Japanese culture fans gather and ielaborately costumed fans compete for prizes awarded for the best looks. There will also be live music from Broken by the Scream, a wild all-female Japanese metal act. Feb 17 - 19 Walk with Woodson. You'll get a rare chance to honor Black History Month by literally walking in the footsteps of its founder, Dr. Carter G. Woodson. On this walk, an actor portraying "Dr. Woodson" will take visitors on an interpretive journey to Dr. Woodson's residence in the Shaw Neighborhood, highlighting places relating to his contemporaries as A. Philip Randolph, Nannie Helen Burroughs and Belford Lawson (to name a few). The program concludes with Dr. Woodson's explanation of why he created Negro History Week and how YOU can prepare for it! Reservations required 🆓 ✊🏾🎉 Feb 18 President's Day Portraits. Celebrate all things presidential at the National Portrait Gallery‘s annual Presidential Family Fun Day. Rediscover past U.S. presidents in the nation’s only complete collection of presidential portraits, plus enjoy crafts, music, games, and special tours of the museum’s America’s Presidents gallery, including a new tactile display and a nine-foot-tall (!) painting of Abraham Lincoln. 🆓 Feb 18 Mardi Gras Celebration. Laissez les bons temps rouler! New Orleans comes to the Wharf with a community-wide Mardi Gras extravaganza featuring a spirited parade down Wharf Street, a dance party with live music on District Pier, and a special fireworks finale. 🆓 Feb 18 Jazz at Kreeger. Bassist and composer Steve Arnold, called "One of the District of Columbia’s breakout artists of the moment" by Washington City Paper, plays the Great Hall at Kreeger Museum with his band Sea Change, an ensemble that combines his deep love of jazz and improvised music with his rock, folk, soul, and musical theater roots. 💲Feb 18 Whiskey Makers in D.C.: A Pre-Prohibition History. Before Prohibition, a number of liquor merchants operated in the District of Columbia. Learn about the decade-long whiskey war, which involved every branch of the federal government as it sought to answer the question, “What is whiskey?” Local author and whiskey producer Troy Hughes provides a glimpse into Washington whiskey culture and the businesses of producers at the turn of the twentieth century. 💻👥 🆓 Feb 18 Endgame. The Washington Stage Guild brings you an eerie production of Endgame, where a quartet of characters inhabit a nearly empty room, surrounded by nothing, it seems. Do they want it to end, or can they go on with their limited lives? 💲Ends Feb 19 Lion King Anniversary Celebration Celebrate the 25th anniversary of Broadway's Lion King at the National Museum of African American History & History with a Community Day celebration including show-themed workshops led by Disney Theatrical Teaching Artists (separate passes required--information upon registration) and other in-museum activities for the whole family. 🆓 Feb 20 Language and Identity. Sanaz Toossi’s play English, set in a Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) class in Karaj, Iran in Spring 2009, looks at the ways speaking a new language can both expand your world and change your voice. Join playwright Toossi to discuss her play and the complex interplay of language and identity. 💻 🆓 Feb 21 Doc McStuffins. National Museum of African History & Culture hosts a Black History Month program inspired by Black children’s movie and TV characters. Join them for a program inspired by Disney's Doc McStuffins and get to know a Black doctor. Doctor Maia McCuiston will teach children about her job as a pediatrician and what makes our bodies so special. Then, be empowered by a body-positivity activity led by a museum educator. 💻✊🏾🎉🆓 Feb 21 Live! At the Library: African American Folk Music. A gifted musician and scholar of Black American music, Jake Blount performs on voice, banjo, and fiddle at this Library of Congress concert. Drawing repertoire from the collections of the Library’s American Folklife Center (AFC), he highlights Black and Indigenous histories of American folk tunes. Tickets are required 🆓 Feb 23 Lion of Anacostia. Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum hosts "Coffee and Collections" where you'll get to get up close and personal with some of their treasured artifacts related to Frederick Douglass, listen to an audio clip of civil rights activist Mary Church Terrell discuss her friendship with this remarkable statesman, all with a cup of Starbucks coffee to help fuel conversation. ✊🏾🎉🆓 Feb 23 Uncle Nearest Whiskey Dinner. As part of Black History Month, Hotel Zena hosts a special whiskey dinner featuring a very special collaboration with Uncle Nearest, the world's first-known African American master distiller, Nearest Green. Chef William Ham of Figleaf has curated a six-course tasting menu inspired by the godfather of Tennessee Whiskey. ✊🏾🎉💲Feb 23 Street Food Cooking Class. Chef Mark Haskell takes you on a culinary tour of the back alleys and busy streets of faraway countries in this workshop where you'll learn how to balance flavors and use the products and cooking techniques of Southeast Asia – Thailand, Cambodia & Vietnam. 💲Feb 23 King Lear. The head of a dysfunctional royal family grapples with power-hungry children and the threat of losing the empire he created as the incomparable Patrick Page returns to Shakespeare Theatre Company in King Lear. 💲Feb 23 - April 2 Golden Girls. Miami’s sassiest seniors return in an all-new show, Golden Girls: The Laughs Continue, that will have you reliving the heartfelt hilarity of four ladies who never stopped being your friends. 💲Feb 23 - 26 DC Views Book Launch. Join photojournalist Shedrick Pelt at the DC History Center for the launch of his book, District Postcard Views, which features vintage-inspired images of landmark locations throughout all eight wards, printed on removable, 5×7 postcards. Flipping through the pages, you are reintroduced to the city — recognizing some locations and discovering places that are new to you and off the beaten path. The night will include music, light food and drink, and Shedrick in conversation with Austin Graff and Jay Coleman talking about connecting to our evolving city by learning about the past. 🆓 Feb 24 Cryfest: The Cure vs. The Smiths Dance Party. Get all up in your feels at Black Cat and the largest Cure/Smiths dance party in the US with a 5-Hour DJ Set and visuals of CURE/SMITHS bangers, favorites, and deep cuts! Feb 25 Garifuna Language Concert. Enjoy a Garifuna language concert by James Lovell, a passionate Garifuna artist whose mission is to preserve the Garifuna culture, language and arts through music, at the National Museum of the American Indian. 🆓 Feb 25 Ice Yards. Bundle up for another installation of Ice Yards - winter's hottest frozen ticket. This arctic experience includes ax-throwing, a snowboard simulator, glacial Instagrammable moments, live ice carving, and a polar bear plunge pool. You can also warm up at a toasty fire pit with snacks and beverages from participating neighborhood restaurants. Proceeds will help benefit the Special Olympics District of Columbia. 💲Feb 25 Extraordinary Cinema. Kennedy Center hosts a screening of Everything Everywhere All At Once in the Justice Forum at the REACH. The film follows Evelyn Wang (Michelle Yeoh), a flustered immigrant mother, is contacted from a parallel universe and told that only she can save the world.🆓 Feb 26 Lock Picking Workshop. Learn how locks work and how to pick them, and try your hand at getting out of zip-ties and handcuffs. You’ll also discover the truth about field expedient lock picking tools or in other words just how handy a bobby pin can be. work in small groups getting hands-on practice with lock picking experts, and once you’ve gained some skill, you’ll compete against other pickers on timed challenges to open locked cases. A “Pick Your Poison” drink menu will be included. 💲Feb 27 Curious? There's More!
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Tien
1/31/2023 10:13:52 am
This is an amazing service! Thank you!
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