What we scrape
If it lists local events online, we can probably feed it into your site.
A breakdown of the kinds of sources we handle today, and the fields we pull from each.
Public library systems
Branch calendars, LibCal, Bibliocommons, custom WordPress library sites — including registration-required programs.
City government event sites
Official municipal calendars from city websites, including council meetings, public hearings, and community programming.
Parks & Recreation programs
Class registrations, sports leagues, after-school programs, and outdoor events from city or county parks departments.
Tourism & destination sites
"Visit [City]" event calendars run by local tourism boards — usually the highest-volume single source in any market.
Museums & cultural institutions
Special exhibits, lectures, family programming, and member events from local museums, science centers, and aquariums.
State, county, and regional park sites
Ranger-led events, outdoor programs, and seasonal special events from state and regional park systems.
iCal / RSS feeds
Anything publishing a structured feed — the easy mode of integration. We pull, normalize, and tag automatically.
Custom one-offs
Small venues, weird CMSes, JavaScript-rendered sites, PDF event lists. If it's published online, we can usually scrape it.
What we extract
The fields that make it through, every time.
- Title
- Description
- Date
- Start time
- End time
- Venue name
- Address
- Age range / audience
- Registration link
- Featured image
What about my metro?
If your area's libraries, parks, museums, and tourism sites publish events online, we can pipe them into your CMS. Most customers go from intake form to first weekly feed in under 2 weeks.
Tell us about your area.
Send us your CMS, your metro, and three sources you'd want covered. We'll come back with a quote.