Today’s entertainment picks:


Today’s entertainment picks:

v WaterFire, 2 to 11 p.m.: If you have never been to a WaterFire festival, with its fire ceremony at dusk, what are you waiting for? It’s in downtown Sharon, Pa., today; waterfiresharonpa.org.

v Brier Hill Festival, 2-11 p.m.: Everyone is like family at this Italian street festival in the Brier Hill section of Youngstown’s North Side (corner of Victoria and Calvin streets).

v Latino Heritage Festival, noon to 9 p.m.: The festival will actually begin with a parade at 11:30 a.m. from Campbell city hall to Roosevelt Park. Today’s events will include wrestling and a performance by Grupo Tumbao at 6 p.m.

v Ultimate Aldean, 5 p.m.: This Jason Aldean tribute act ($8) will be preceded by country band Northern Whiskey. It’s at Warren Community Amphitheatre; riverrockattheamp.com.

v Youngstown Flea, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.: Peruse art, crafts and all sorts or interesting and one of a kind objects at this sale in the parking lot near Covelli Centre.

“Pink Collar Crimes” (8 p.m., CBS): Tonight’s episode of this true-crime series about felonious females focuses on Lizzy Mulder. Over the course of seven years, Mulder posed as an accountant for her phony tax consulting business and convinced her victims to put their IRS payments in her hands. Always scheming, she gained the trust of potential clients by befriending them and attending their baptisms and weddings, all the while using their money for personal expenses to live a lavish lifestyle.

“6-Headed Shark Attack” (9 p.m., Syfy): This made-for-TV movie has a title that says it all.

“Rocktopia live in budapest” (11 p.m., pbs): Classical music is fused with classic rock in this unique show co-written and conducted by Randall Craig Fleischer, music director of the Youngstown Symphony Orchestra.

For complete TV listings, see TV Week magazine, included with today’s paper.

LOCAL TOPICS ON TV

“A Conversation with Dee” (Sunday at 7:30 a.m. on WYTV-TV): Host Dee Crawford explores the Jewish Community Center of Youngstown and discusses its programming for people of all faiths and ages.

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Rocker files suit against hospital

NEW YORK

A co-founder of Jefferson Airplane is accusing a New York City hospital of destroying his musical career with a botched tracheotomy.

A lawsuit filed by Marty Balin against Mount Sinai Beth Israel hospital says the singer and guitarist lost part of his tongue and has a paralyzed vocal cord because of the procedure done after he was hospitalized for emergency heart surgery in 2016.

The 77-year-old Balin helped form Jefferson Airplane in San Francisco in the mid-1960s. The band’s signature hits include “Somebody to Love” and “White Rabbit.”

Lawyers for Balin sued Thursday in federal court in Manhattan. The suit seeks unspecified damages.

There was no immediate response Friday to a message seeking a comment from hospital officials.