July Events + NYCity on YouTube (07/10)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.”
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.

Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being. Stay Safe.

============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture” – updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times.

We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.
Today it’s NYC on YouTube.

==============================================================

There are some very fine NYC YouTube videos, it’s tough to pick just a few.
Here are some of my faves:

Treasures of New York: American Museum of Natural History

Central Park – Everything You Need to Know

Best Food Carts in New York City

How to photograph New York City from a Helicopter

The best of New York City in a few days trip

Treasures of New York: The New-York Historical Society

xx

Harry Nilsson – I Guess the Lord Must Be in New York City

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We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

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Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

New York City, a city of neighborhoods, is filled with sights that every tourist should see. No neighborhood has more spectacular sights than Lower Manhattan. Today’s feature:

“This 104-story, 1,776 foot-tall building is the Western hemisphere’s tallest skyscraper (and the fourth tallest in the world). Designed by David Childs of the august firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, One WTC starts at ground level with a traditional square base, but as it rises, the edges are pared away, yielding a distinctive eight-sided tower composed of a series of soaring isosceles triangles, and topped by a 408-foot spire. Built on the site of the original 6 World Trade Center, the structure formerly known as the “Freedom Tower” includes restaurants and One World Observatory for the public, as well as plenty of commercial office space.”  (nycgo.com)

“There are a million things to experience in New York City but only one way to truly see them all. Start by hopping a Sky Pod to the top of the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere. There, 102 stories up, find yourself facing New York’s iconic skyline. Walk the three sprawling levels of the Observatory; drop into the café and grab a bite to eat; take an interactive guided tour of the City with the help of a Tour Ambassador; and stop by the One Mix bar.” (nycgo.com)

=======================================================

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 10 – July 16

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include Front Row Summer Evenings, Because Once You Enter My House It Becomes Our House, a radio broadcast of Richard II and more. Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Because Once You Enter My House, It Becomes Our House

Because Once You Enter My House, It Becomes Our House

Socrates Sculpture Park

Queens

Fri, Jul 10, 2020 – Thu, Dec 31, 2020

As the country grapples with both a deadly pandemic and the tragic consequences of systemic racism, Socrates Sculpture Park will open an exhibition of new outdoor monuments this summer. MONUMENTS NOW seeks to address the role of monuments in American society – some of which have been removed in recent days – and presents artist-envisioned monuments highlighting underrepresented histories including queer, Indigenous, and diasporic narratives.Socrates Sculpture Park, as with all NYC Parks, has been open and operating …

Front Row Summer Evenings

Front Row Summer Evenings

Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

Manhattan

Sun, Jul 12, 2020 – Fri, Aug 21, 2020

CMS also announces the extension of its online concert series with Front Row Summer Evenings, six weeks of at-home programming beginning July 12.  The series is comprised of HD performance video from the CMS archive, featuring the thoughtfully curated repertoire that CMS audiences have come to expect and enjoy. About the Summer Evenings series programming, Artistic Directors David Finckel and Wu Han commented: “Summer Evenings concerts have traditionally presented music that breathes the pleasant airs of …

Miró Quartet Complete Beethoven String Quartets

Miró Quartet Complete Beethoven String Quartets

Orcas Island Chamber Music Festival

Manhattan

Thu, Jul 16, 2020 – Sat, Aug 08, 2020

For their first major project since the coronavirus outbreak, the Miró Quartet will come together in-person to perform all sixteen Beethoven string quartets and the “Grosse Fuge” live for online audiences via the streaming platform OurConcerts.live.Since mid-March, members of the Quartet have been apart, isolating separately at home with their families. Upon reuniting for this series, they will follow strict protocols in their daily lives to mitigate the risk of virus transmission amongst themselves. Presented by the …

William Shakespeare’s RICHARD II

William Shakespeare’s RICHARD II

The Public Theater

Manhattan

Mon, Jul 13, 2020 – Thu, Jul 16, 2020

Join WNYC and The Public Theater as they bring Free Shakespeare in the Park to the airwaves with William Shakespeare’s RICHARD II. Brought to you in a serialized radio broadcast over four nights, listen as the last of the divinely anointed monarchs descends and loses it all. When King Richard banishes his cousin Henry Bolingbroke and deprives him of his inheritance, he unwittingly creates an enemy who will ultimately force him from the throne. One of the …

Confidence in the Future

Confidence in the Future

Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos

Bronx

Fri, May 01, 2020 – Mon, Aug 31, 2020

The Bronx Council on the Arts (BCA) is delighted to present “Confidence in the Future” at the Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos. Throughout the 2020 season, BCA continues to focus on paying homage to socially conscious artwork and to art that comes from artists who are actively engaged in creating a vision of the future and expanding our understanding of the role of resistance. The eight artists featured in the show were chosen through an Open …

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In the age of Covid-19 this info from City Guide is one of the best sources of info on What’s Happening, even if some are only available in your home, and not in your favorite venue.

Things to Do This Weekend in NYC (7/10-7/12)

City Guide News Desk

(7/10-7/12) New York City has entered Phase 3 of its cautious reopening and there’s more to do in NYC than there’s been since our mid-March lockdown. This detailed map of open restaurants shows over 7,300 venues now serving; included in that number are 4,000 places where you can eat outside. Entire streets are being closed to traffic and opened to expanded outdoor dining plans, including Arthur Avenue in the Bronx; Doyers Street in Chinatown, East 101st Street in Harlem, 46th Street along Midtown East and West, stretches of the Meatpacking District, Broadway in the Flatiron, Orchard and Broome Sts., on the Lower East Side, and Mulberry Street and Hester Street in Little Italy; Brooklyn will be welcoming along Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, in addition to stretches of Red Hook and Dumbo; Bell Boulevard and 41st Avenue in Bayside will represent Queens and New Dorp Lane for Staten Island. Read on for more reopenings and other things to do in NYC this weekend!

CHELSEA PIERS POP-UP ROOFTOP

spirit cruises nyc skyline

Credit: Hornblower Cruises and Events.

You can enjoy the city skyline from entry points in both New York City and New Jersey with Spirit Cruises. A regular program of outdoor dining experiences will be available from Saturday, July 11 onwards aboard the Spirit of New Jersey, which has a fabulous rooftop experience, sailing from its home port of Lincoln Harbor Marina in Weehawken. Delicious cuisine and a full array of drinks are equalled only by unbeatable views of the Empire State Building, Brooklyn Bridge, and Statue of Liberty. Prices start at $69 for lunch and $120 for dinner and and include a multi-course menu of freshly prepared entrees, salads, and desserts. Across the Hudson in Chelsea, come out this Friday, July 10th for an outdoor pop-up experience onboard at Chelsea Piers. There will be table-side bar service and light bites available for purchase, with free entry (first-come first-served in accordance with current capacity limits). Vessels offer expansive decks, providing plentiful space and fresh air, ensuring more than enough room on board for everyone to stay safely apart. For more on SafeCruise by Hornblower’s industry-defining standards for health, safety, and security, see above or read more at hornblower.com/safecruiseSpirit of New York: Chelsea Piers, 212-727-2789; Spirit of New Jersey: Lincoln Harbor, 201-333-8600; spiritcruises.com

NEWLY REOPENED!

starbucks roastery nyc

The Starbucks Reserve® Roastery New York in the Meatpacking District is a place to experience Starbucks like never before. This 23,000-square-foot plant contains not only retail space but also an operating coffee roastery. Back open and welcoming visitors again, you can enjoy a variety of coffee classics and roastery creations—each drink is handcrafted with Starbucks’s rarest coffees, roasted on site. In addition, there are Princi Italian pastries made fresh daily, and “Family Meals” that you can enjoy at home. New cleaning and social distancing protocols will keep guests safe. 61 Ninth Ave., 212-691-0531, starbucksreserve.com/newyork

Photo: Jin Lee

The 9/11 Memorial & Museum has reopened the plaza to the general public as of Sunday, July 5th.

A small group of Statue Cruises surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

Although the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island remain temporarily closed, Statue Cruises is once again out and about in New York Harbor. Sixty-minute tours, complete with history and stunning views, can now be booked, with a focus on safety. Tours run four times daily out of the Battery Park departure point in Lower Manhattan at 10am, 11:30am, 1pm, and 2:30pm. These tours will continue until Liberty Island and Ellis Island reopen (Statue Cruises is the exclusive provider of ferry service for the National Park Service to the two landmarks). Tickets are $26/adult, $19/seniors, $14/child and free for children three years and under. Tickets may be purchased in advance (strongly encouraged) from the Statue Cruises website or at Gangway 5 in Battery Park. statuecruises.com

PIANO IN BRYANT PARK

One of Bryant Park’s most popular programs, “Piano in Bryant Park,” is back again. Audiences are encouraged to wear masks and practice social distancing while seated in the park’s iconic moveable bistro chairs. On July 6, 7, and 9 enjoy the sounds of jazz pianist Kuni Mikami. Piano in Bryant Park, which showcases the finest ragtime, stride, and jazz pianists, takes place Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 12:30 to 2:30pm through August.

NYC RESOURCES

cosi fan tutti met opera

The Metropolitan Opera is streaming operas FREE nightly.

The French Institute Alliance Française is taking its annual Bastille Day celebration online this year. From Saturday, July 11th through Tuesday, July 14th, head to Zoom and Facebook for a four-day virtual fête that comes complete with virtual performances, film screenings, rosé and Champagne tastings, cooking events, kids activities, dance parties, and much more. fiaf.org/event_tag/2020-bastille-day

The New York Public Library provides access to more than 300,000 FREE e-books and e-audio books.

NYC Health information page for COVID-19.

NYC restaurant world information.

Stream hundreds of Broadway shows (by subscription).

15 Broadway shows you can watch from home.

Broadway performances live—from stars’ living rooms.

The New York City Ballet presents a spring digital season.

Virtual programming will keep you connected to the York Theatre Company.

One World Observatory has made One World Explorer, the attraction’s Digital Skyline Guide, available for remote watching. Virtual helicopter tours of the city’s most iconic sites are available now.

51 New York TV shows and movies.

5 eras of New York to enjoy in books and movies.

2,500 museums and galleries you can visit virtually.

The New York Botanical Garden in bloom from home.

Exploring Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Times Square.

The Top of the Rock launches a brief virtual tour on YouTube.

Livestreamed fitness classes.

Fun at-home activities for kids.

6 podcast series to help you understand New York.

Discover the best of New York, from hidden gems to iconic landmarks, through The New York Landmarks Conservancy’s “Tourist in your own Town” Video Series.

VIRTUAL MUSEUMS

Explore the world of design with Cooper Hewitt.

Experience the Intrepid Museum anywhere.

New-York Historical Society from home.

The Brooklyn Museum remotely.

Guggenheim Museum from home.

The Morgan’s exhibitions.

Virtually visit the Louis Armstrong House Museum.

The Merchant’s House Museum from home.

rubin shrine room virtual tour

You can take a virtual tour of the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room at the Rubin Museum of Art. (You can find two hours of meditative chanting as well, if you’re searching out some respite.)

VIRTUAL TALKS, LECTURES, AND EVENTS

Thought Gallery has hundreds of livestream talks, lectures, performances, and more. Check out sessions with celebs, live concerts, and opportunities to learn the latest on everything from science to philosophy to social justice

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WFUV Live Online (July 09 -July 15)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/9 – My Morning Jacket The Waterfall II party

7/9 – Lucius: Wildewoman (with Brandi Carlile)

7/10 – Citizen Cope debut performance of his brand new acoustic album plus deep cuts

7/10 – Brooklyn Bowl 11th Anniversary Celebration 11+ hours of music and more with Phil Lesh, Soulive, Tank & The Bangas, Fantastic Negrito and more

7/10 – Norah Jones performance and Q&A

7/11 – Winnipeg Folk Festival At Home: new performances from Waxahatchee, Kurt Vile and more; past sets from Arlo Guthrie, Brandi Carlile, Jason Isbell, Courtney Barnett

7/11 – Rufus Wainwright Unfollow the Rules record release party

7/12 – Brandi Carlile performs Bear Creek

7/12 – Ani DiFranco on the Awful Good Writers Heavy Hitters Festival

7/12 – Mary Gauthier – Sundays w/Mary special guest Lori McKenna

7/14-19 – Woody Fest 2020 with Arlo Guthrie, Jason Mraz, Glen Hansard, Graham Nash, Mary Gauthier and more, plus seminars, panels and poetry

7/14 – On Your Radar with WFUV’s John Platt: Tragedy Ann, Mark Dvorak and Siobhan O’Brien

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

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STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events + Corona Culture (c) (07/09)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.”
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.

Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being. Stay Safe.

============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture” – updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times.

We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s Corona Culture (c).

===========================================================

Pondering the end of the world? An apocalyptic entertainment guide, if you can’t help it. / LAT
For those seeking content about the end of the world during the coronavirus crisis, we’ve curated a guide to apocalyptic entertainment for your viewing, reading or listening pleasure.

See New York City Under Quarantine From a Bird’s-Eye View / Viewing NYC

The Hidden Feats that Built New York’s Towering Skyscrapers./ NYT
The ingenuity of engineers helped build landmarks like Black Rock and the new supertalls. Take a virtual tour with the New York Times architecture critic.

When Manhattan was Mannahatta: a stroll through the centuries./ NYT
From lush forest to metropolis, the evolution of lower Manhattan.

Aerial View of New York City Amidst Coronavirus Quarantine. / Viewing NYC
Shot with a drone for a real birds-eye view

Biking in New York City  / nycgo.com

Can New York’s Restaurants Survive on Outdoor Dining Alone? / Grub Street

Cannes 2020 is canceled: here are 28 of the festival’s best films you can stream right now./LAT
Films that have played the festival since 2006, now available for viewing at home.

========================================================

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

New York City, a city of neighborhoods, is filled with sights that every tourist should see. No neighborhood has more spectacular sights than Lower Manhattan. Today’s feature:

9/11 Memorial & Museum

“The National September 11 Memorial and Museum remembers and honors those killed in the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001 and 2/26/1993, those who risked their lives to save others, and all who demonstrated extraordinary compassion in the aftermath through commemoration, exhibitions and educational programs.

The memorial consists of two reflecting pools set in the footprints of the Twin Towers, with names of the victims inscribed in bronze around the pools. The museum serves as the principal institution concerned with exploring the implications of the events of 9/11, documenting their impact and exploring 9/11’s continuing significance.” (nycgo.com)

=======================================================

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

In the age of Covid-19 this info from City Guide is one of the best sources of info on What’s Happening, even if some are only available in your home, and not in your favorite venue.

Things to Do This Weekend in NYC (7/10-7/12)

City Guide News Desk

(7/10-7/12) New York City has entered Phase 3 of its cautious reopening and there’s more to do in NYC than there’s been since our mid-March lockdown. This detailed map of open restaurants shows over 7,300 venues now serving; included in that number are 4,000 places where you can eat outside. Entire streets are being closed to traffic and opened to expanded outdoor dining plans, including Arthur Avenue in the Bronx; Doyers Street in Chinatown, East 101st Street in Harlem, 46th Street along Midtown East and West, stretches of the Meatpacking District, Broadway in the Flatiron, Orchard and Broome Sts., on the Lower East Side, and Mulberry Street and Hester Street in Little Italy; Brooklyn will be welcoming along Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, in addition to stretches of Red Hook and Dumbo; Bell Boulevard and 41st Avenue in Bayside will represent Queens and New Dorp Lane for Staten Island. Read on for more reopenings and other things to do in NYC this weekend!

CHELSEA PIERS POP-UP ROOFTOP

spirit cruises nyc skyline

Credit: Hornblower Cruises and Events.

You can enjoy the city skyline from entry points in both New York City and New Jersey with Spirit Cruises. A regular program of outdoor dining experiences will be available from Saturday, July 11 onwards aboard the Spirit of New Jersey, which has a fabulous rooftop experience, sailing from its home port of Lincoln Harbor Marina in Weehawken. Delicious cuisine and a full array of drinks are equalled only by unbeatable views of the Empire State Building, Brooklyn Bridge, and Statue of Liberty. Prices start at $69 for lunch and $120 for dinner and and include a multi-course menu of freshly prepared entrees, salads, and desserts. Across the Hudson in Chelsea, come out this Friday, July 10th for an outdoor pop-up experience onboard at Chelsea Piers. There will be table-side bar service and light bites available for purchase, with free entry (first-come first-served in accordance with current capacity limits). Vessels offer expansive decks, providing plentiful space and fresh air, ensuring more than enough room on board for everyone to stay safely apart. For more on SafeCruise by Hornblower’s industry-defining standards for health, safety, and security, see above or read more at hornblower.com/safecruiseSpirit of New York: Chelsea Piers, 212-727-2789; Spirit of New Jersey: Lincoln Harbor, 201-333-8600; spiritcruises.com

NEWLY REOPENED!

starbucks roastery nyc

The Starbucks Reserve® Roastery New York in the Meatpacking District is a place to experience Starbucks like never before. This 23,000-square-foot plant contains not only retail space but also an operating coffee roastery. Back open and welcoming visitors again, you can enjoy a variety of coffee classics and roastery creations—each drink is handcrafted with Starbucks’s rarest coffees, roasted on site. In addition, there are Princi Italian pastries made fresh daily, and “Family Meals” that you can enjoy at home. New cleaning and social distancing protocols will keep guests safe. 61 Ninth Ave., 212-691-0531, starbucksreserve.com/newyork

Photo: Jin Lee

The 9/11 Memorial & Museum has reopened the plaza to the general public as of Sunday, July 5th.

A small group of Statue Cruises surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

Although the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island remain temporarily closed, Statue Cruises is once again out and about in New York Harbor. Sixty-minute tours, complete with history and stunning views, can now be booked, with a focus on safety. Tours run four times daily out of the Battery Park departure point in Lower Manhattan at 10am, 11:30am, 1pm, and 2:30pm. These tours will continue until Liberty Island and Ellis Island reopen (Statue Cruises is the exclusive provider of ferry service for the National Park Service to the two landmarks). Tickets are $26/adult, $19/seniors, $14/child and free for children three years and under. Tickets may be purchased in advance (strongly encouraged) from the Statue Cruises website or at Gangway 5 in Battery Park. statuecruises.com

PIANO IN BRYANT PARK

One of Bryant Park’s most popular programs, “Piano in Bryant Park,” is back again. Audiences are encouraged to wear masks and practice social distancing while seated in the park’s iconic moveable bistro chairs. On July 6, 7, and 9 enjoy the sounds of jazz pianist Kuni Mikami. Piano in Bryant Park, which showcases the finest ragtime, stride, and jazz pianists, takes place Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 12:30 to 2:30pm through August.

NYC RESOURCES

cosi fan tutti met opera

The Metropolitan Opera is streaming operas FREE nightly.

The French Institute Alliance Française is taking its annual Bastille Day celebration online this year. From Saturday, July 11th through Tuesday, July 14th, head to Zoom and Facebook for a four-day virtual fête that comes complete with virtual performances, film screenings, rosé and Champagne tastings, cooking events, kids activities, dance parties, and much more. fiaf.org/event_tag/2020-bastille-day

The New York Public Library provides access to more than 300,000 FREE e-books and e-audio books.

NYC Health information page for COVID-19.

NYC restaurant world information.

Stream hundreds of Broadway shows (by subscription).

15 Broadway shows you can watch from home.

Broadway performances live—from stars’ living rooms.

The New York City Ballet presents a spring digital season.

Virtual programming will keep you connected to the York Theatre Company.

One World Observatory has made One World Explorer, the attraction’s Digital Skyline Guide, available for remote watching. Virtual helicopter tours of the city’s most iconic sites are available now.

51 New York TV shows and movies.

5 eras of New York to enjoy in books and movies.

2,500 museums and galleries you can visit virtually.

The New York Botanical Garden in bloom from home.

Exploring Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Times Square.

The Top of the Rock launches a brief virtual tour on YouTube.

Livestreamed fitness classes.

Fun at-home activities for kids.

6 podcast series to help you understand New York.

Discover the best of New York, from hidden gems to iconic landmarks, through The New York Landmarks Conservancy’s “Tourist in your own Town” Video Series.

VIRTUAL MUSEUMS

Explore the world of design with Cooper Hewitt.

Experience the Intrepid Museum anywhere.

New-York Historical Society from home.

The Brooklyn Museum remotely.

Guggenheim Museum from home.

The Morgan’s exhibitions.

Virtually visit the Louis Armstrong House Museum.

The Merchant’s House Museum from home.

rubin shrine room virtual tour

You can take a virtual tour of the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room at the Rubin Museum of Art. (You can find two hours of meditative chanting as well, if you’re searching out some respite.)

VIRTUAL TALKS, LECTURES, AND EVENTS

Thought Gallery has hundreds of livestream talks, lectures, performances, and more. Check out sessions with celebs, live concerts, and opportunities to learn the latest on everything from science to philosophy to social justice

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 09 -July 15)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/9 – My Morning Jacket The Waterfall II party

7/9 – Lucius: Wildewoman (with Brandi Carlile)

7/10 – Citizen Cope debut performance of his brand new acoustic album plus deep cuts

7/10 – Brooklyn Bowl 11th Anniversary Celebration 11+ hours of music and more with Phil Lesh, Soulive, Tank & The Bangas, Fantastic Negrito and more

7/10 – Norah Jones performance and Q&A

7/11 – Winnipeg Folk Festival At Home: new performances from Waxahatchee, Kurt Vile and more; past sets from Arlo Guthrie, Brandi Carlile, Jason Isbell, Courtney Barnett

7/11 – Rufus Wainwright Unfollow the Rules record release party

7/12 – Brandi Carlile performs Bear Creek

7/12 – Ani DiFranco on the Awful Good Writers Heavy Hitters Festival

7/12 – Mary Gauthier – Sundays w/Mary special guest Lori McKenna

7/14-19 – Woody Fest 2020 with Arlo Guthrie, Jason Mraz, Glen Hansard, Graham Nash, Mary Gauthier and more, plus seminars, panels and poetry

7/14 – On Your Radar with WFUV’s John Platt: Tragedy Ann, Mark Dvorak and Siobhan O’Brien

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events and Best NYC Restaurants (07/08)

We made it as easy as 1-2-3.
Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being.
Stay Safe.
==============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture” – updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times.

We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.
Today it’s Best NYCity Restaurants.

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With restaurants partially opened or only open for takeout, this info is more useful for that glorious time when we have beaten the virus and life has returned to some form of normal.

It’s not difficult to find a place to eat in Manhattan. Seems like there is at least one restaurant on every block. The New York City health department inspected over 10,000 eating establishments in Manhattan alone last year. And the selection of restaurants includes cuisines from all over the world.

Finding a good place to eat is a bit harder. We could start with New York City’s 72 Michelin-Starred Restaurants, but they are more suitable for those on expense accounts or celebrating a special event. No worries. There are many guides to good eating available, if you know where to look.

Here are a few of my favorite guides to the best restaurants in various neighborhoods:

Best Places to Eat in Times Square  (tripsavvy.com)

Best Restaurants in 55 NYC Neighborhoods  (zagat.com)

Where To Eat Uptown in NYC  (fodors.com)

The Definitive Midtown Dining Guide  (thrilist.com)

Where to Eat and Drink Near the High Line (thrilist.com)

The Grub Street Guide to Affordable Sushi in New York  (grubstreet,com)

The Absolute Best Restaurants in the Meatpacking District (grubstreet,com)

11 Tastes of Chinatown  (nycgo.com)

Restaurant Row Guide (nycgo.com)

The 15 Best Places with a Happy Hour in the Upper West Side  (foursquare)

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We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

New York City, a city of neighborhoods, is filled with sights that every tourist should see. No neighborhood has more spectacular sights than Lower Manhattan. Today’s feature:

World Trade Center Transportation Hub

“Designed by famed Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, the new World Trade Center Transportation Hub brings together the PATH train from New Jersey and, eventually, 11 MTA subway lines in a dramatic new addition to the City’s architecture.

The all white transit hub is meant to resemble the wings of a dove, but also bears similarities to a rib cage.The hub is centered around a stunning, cathedral-like oval known as the Oculus, which allows daylight to stream into the massive, column-free space two stories underground.The skylight will open to the elements on certain sunny days, as well as every year to commemorate September 11.

In a city of iconic architecture, nothing is quite like the Oculus. The bi-level concourse is ringed by a wide variety of retail stores as part of the Westfield World Trade Center shopping center, a retail destination for top fashions, tech goods and high-end jewelry. The (open-air) Oculus Greenmarket operates on Tuesdays during winter months, but on any day of the week you can find great food options throughout the WTC complex—including at the renowned Eataly NYC Downtown. The underground concourse leads to Brookfield Place, which houses a host of affordable eating options and upscale shops.” (nycgo.com)

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Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

GD: In the age of Covid-19 this info from City Guide is one of the best sources of info on What’s Happening, even if some are only available in your home, and not in your favorite venue. Stay Safe.

Things to Do This Weekend in NYC (7/10-7/12)

(7/10-7/12) New York City has entered Phase 3 of its cautious reopening and there’s more to do in NYC than there’s been since our mid-March lockdown. This detailed map of open restaurants shows over 7,300 venues now serving; included in that number are 4,000 places where you can eat outside. Entire streets are being closed to traffic and opened to expanded outdoor dining plans, including Arthur Avenue in the Bronx; Doyers Street in Chinatown, East 101st Street in Harlem, 46th Street along Midtown East and West, stretches of the Meatpacking District, Broadway in the Flatiron, Orchard and Broome Sts., on the Lower East Side, and Mulberry Street and Hester Street in Little Italy; Brooklyn will be welcoming along Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, in addition to stretches of Red Hook and Dumbo; Bell Boulevard and 41st Avenue in Bayside will represent Queens and New Dorp Lane for Staten Island. Read on for more reopenings and other things to do in NYC this weekend!

CHELSEA PIERS POP-UP ROOFTOP

spirit cruises nyc skyline

Credit: Hornblower Cruises and Events.

You can enjoy the city skyline from entry points in both New York City and New Jersey with Spirit Cruises. A regular program of outdoor dining experiences will be available from Saturday, July 11 onwards aboard the Spirit of New Jersey, which has a fabulous rooftop experience, sailing from its home port of Lincoln Harbor Marina in Weehawken. Delicious cuisine and a full array of drinks are equalled only by unbeatable views of the Empire State Building, Brooklyn Bridge, and Statue of Liberty. Prices start at $69 for lunch and $120 for dinner and and include a multi-course menu of freshly prepared entrees, salads, and desserts. Across the Hudson in Chelsea, come out this Friday, July 10th for an outdoor pop-up experience onboard at Chelsea Piers. There will be table-side bar service and light bites available for purchase, with free entry (first-come first-served in accordance with current capacity limits). Vessels offer expansive decks, providing plentiful space and fresh air, ensuring more than enough room on board for everyone to stay safely apart. For more on SafeCruise by Hornblower’s industry-defining standards for health, safety, and security, see above or read more at hornblower.com/safecruiseSpirit of New York: Chelsea Piers, 212-727-2789; Spirit of New Jersey: Lincoln Harbor, 201-333-8600; spiritcruises.com

NEWLY REOPENED!

starbucks roastery nyc

The Starbucks Reserve® Roastery New York in the Meatpacking District is a place to experience Starbucks like never before. This 23,000-square-foot plant contains not only retail space but also an operating coffee roastery. Back open and welcoming visitors again, you can enjoy a variety of coffee classics and roastery creations—each drink is handcrafted with Starbucks’s rarest coffees, roasted on site. In addition, there are Princi Italian pastries made fresh daily, and “Family Meals” that you can enjoy at home. New cleaning and social distancing protocols will keep guests safe. 61 Ninth Ave., 212-691-0531, starbucksreserve.com/newyork

Photo: Jin Lee

The 9/11 Memorial & Museum has reopened the plaza to the general public as of Sunday, July 5th.

A small group of Statue Cruises surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

Although the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island remain temporarily closed, Statue Cruises is once again out and about in New York Harbor. Sixty-minute tours, complete with history and stunning views, can now be booked, with a focus on safety. Tours run four times daily out of the Battery Park departure point in Lower Manhattan at 10am, 11:30am, 1pm, and 2:30pm. These tours will continue until Liberty Island and Ellis Island reopen (Statue Cruises is the exclusive provider of ferry service for the National Park Service to the two landmarks). Tickets are $26/adult, $19/seniors, $14/child and free for children three years and under. Tickets may be purchased in advance (strongly encouraged) from the Statue Cruises website or at Gangway 5 in Battery Park. statuecruises.com

PIANO IN BRYANT PARK

One of Bryant Park’s most popular programs, “Piano in Bryant Park,” is back again. Audiences are encouraged to wear masks and practice social distancing while seated in the park’s iconic moveable bistro chairs. On July 6, 7, and 9 enjoy the sounds of jazz pianist Kuni Mikami. Piano in Bryant Park, which showcases the finest ragtime, stride, and jazz pianists, takes place Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 12:30 to 2:30pm through August.

NYC RESOURCES

cosi fan tutti met opera

The Metropolitan Opera is streaming operas FREE nightly.

The French Institute Alliance Française is taking its annual Bastille Day celebration online this year. From Saturday, July 11th through Tuesday, July 14th, head to Zoom and Facebook for a four-day virtual fête that comes complete with virtual performances, film screenings, rosé and Champagne tastings, cooking events, kids activities, dance parties, and much more. fiaf.org/event_tag/2020-bastille-day

The New York Public Library provides access to more than 300,000 FREE e-books and e-audio books.

NYC Health information page for COVID-19.

NYC restaurant world information.

Stream hundreds of Broadway shows (by subscription).

15 Broadway shows you can watch from home.

Broadway performances live—from stars’ living rooms.

The New York City Ballet presents a spring digital season.

Virtual programming will keep you connected to the York Theatre Company.

One World Observatory has made One World Explorer, the attraction’s Digital Skyline Guide, available for remote watching. Virtual helicopter tours of the city’s most iconic sites are available now.

51 New York TV shows and movies.

5 eras of New York to enjoy in books and movies.

2,500 museums and galleries you can visit virtually.

The New York Botanical Garden in bloom from home.

Exploring Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Times Square.

The Top of the Rock launches a brief virtual tour on YouTube.

Livestreamed fitness classes.

Fun at-home activities for kids.

6 podcast series to help you understand New York.

Discover the best of New York, from hidden gems to iconic landmarks, through The New York Landmarks Conservancy’s “Tourist in your own Town” Video Series.

VIRTUAL MUSEUMS

Explore the world of design with Cooper Hewitt.

Experience the Intrepid Museum anywhere.

New-York Historical Society from home.

The Brooklyn Museum remotely.

Guggenheim Museum from home.

The Morgan’s exhibitions.

Virtually visit the Louis Armstrong House Museum.

The Merchant’s House Museum from home.

rubin shrine room virtual tour

You can take a virtual tour of the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room at the Rubin Museum of Art. (You can find two hours of meditative chanting as well, if you’re searching out some respite.)

VIRTUAL TALKS, LECTURES, AND EVENTS

Thought Gallery has hundreds of livestream talks, lectures, performances, and more. Check out sessions with celebs, live concerts, and opportunities to learn the latest on everything from science to philosophy to social justice

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events + Corona Culture (b) (07/07)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.
Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being.
Stay Safe.
============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture,” updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times. We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s Corona Culture (b).

==============================================================

Brooklyn Bridge, Star of the City: Here’s a Tour. / NYT
The Times architecture critic explores the bridge and the neighborhoods on either side with the architects Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi.

Classic skyscrapers define New York. Take a virtual tour./ NYT
The Times architecture critic strolls Park Avenue with the architect Annabelle Selldorf.

Why Driving in New York City Now Feels “Post Apocalyptic.” / NYT
For now it’s open road, miles and miles of it.

See an Empty NYC from a Bird’s-Eye View in This Aerial Capture During Lockdown./ Viewing NYC  Shot with a drone for a real birds-eye view.

New York Philharmonic Takes Show to Rooftops, Stairwells./ WSJ
After the orchestra canceled performances, many musicians found new ways—and reasons—to play.

Virtual Day Trips You Can Now Take Online / ReadersDigest

Cannes 2020 is canceled: here are 28 of the festival’s best films you can stream right now./LAT
Films that have played the festival since 2006, and which are now available for viewing at home.

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

There are some fine spots to grab a meal in Lower Manhattan.

You could try Underground Pizza
3 Hanover Sq., 212-425-4442, Financial District, Manhattan
“Underground Pizza isn’t underground, but it is on the down low—apart from local office workers who rely on it for a cheap and filling breakfast or lunch. Around the corner from elegant Delmonico’s, this slice joint has lasted since 1979 and looks it. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, especially since any slice you get—plain cheese, meaty or vegetarian—is as good as any slice anywhere in the City. Whole pies are available too. In addition to traditional toppings are combinations like bacon and jalapeño, which has a cult following. So does the grandma pizza, squares layered with tomato sauce, three cheeses and fried garlic. The two-tiered, brightly lit spot has a dropped ceiling and walls adorned with Yankees photos, maps of Sicily and hand-sanitizer dispensers. For families on a budget and groups that want something quick, get in line.”
Dine Out Downtown (nycgo.com)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

GD: In the age of Covid-19 this info from City Guide is one of the best sources of info on What’s Happening, even if some are only available in your home, and not in your favorite venue. Stay Safe.

Things to Do This Weekend in NYC (7/10-7/12)

(7/10-7/12) New York City has entered Phase 3 of its cautious reopening and there’s more to do in NYC than there’s been since our mid-March lockdown. This detailed map of open restaurants shows over 7,300 venues now serving; included in that number are 4,000 places where you can eat outside. Entire streets are being closed to traffic and opened to expanded outdoor dining plans, including Arthur Avenue in the Bronx; Doyers Street in Chinatown, East 101st Street in Harlem, 46th Street along Midtown East and West, stretches of the Meatpacking District, Broadway in the Flatiron, Orchard and Broome Sts., on the Lower East Side, and Mulberry Street and Hester Street in Little Italy; Brooklyn will be welcoming along Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, in addition to stretches of Red Hook and Dumbo; Bell Boulevard and 41st Avenue in Bayside will represent Queens and New Dorp Lane for Staten Island. Read on for more reopenings and other things to do in NYC this weekend!

CHELSEA PIERS POP-UP ROOFTOP

spirit cruises nyc skyline

Credit: Hornblower Cruises and Events.

You can enjoy the city skyline from entry points in both New York City and New Jersey with Spirit Cruises. A regular program of outdoor dining experiences will be available from Saturday, July 11 onwards aboard the Spirit of New Jersey, which has a fabulous rooftop experience, sailing from its home port of Lincoln Harbor Marina in Weehawken. Delicious cuisine and a full array of drinks are equalled only by unbeatable views of the Empire State Building, Brooklyn Bridge, and Statue of Liberty. Prices start at $69 for lunch and $120 for dinner and and include a multi-course menu of freshly prepared entrees, salads, and desserts. Across the Hudson in Chelsea, come out this Friday, July 10th for an outdoor pop-up experience onboard at Chelsea Piers. There will be table-side bar service and light bites available for purchase, with free entry (first-come first-served in accordance with current capacity limits). Vessels offer expansive decks, providing plentiful space and fresh air, ensuring more than enough room on board for everyone to stay safely apart. For more on SafeCruise by Hornblower’s industry-defining standards for health, safety, and security, see above or read more at hornblower.com/safecruiseSpirit of New York: Chelsea Piers, 212-727-2789; Spirit of New Jersey: Lincoln Harbor, 201-333-8600; spiritcruises.com

NEWLY REOPENED!

starbucks roastery nyc

The Starbucks Reserve® Roastery New York in the Meatpacking District is a place to experience Starbucks like never before. This 23,000-square-foot plant contains not only retail space but also an operating coffee roastery. Back open and welcoming visitors again, you can enjoy a variety of coffee classics and roastery creations—each drink is handcrafted with Starbucks’s rarest coffees, roasted on site. In addition, there are Princi Italian pastries made fresh daily, and “Family Meals” that you can enjoy at home. New cleaning and social distancing protocols will keep guests safe. 61 Ninth Ave., 212-691-0531, starbucksreserve.com/newyork

Photo: Jin Lee

The 9/11 Memorial & Museum has reopened the plaza to the general public as of Sunday, July 5th.

A small group of Statue Cruises surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

Although the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island remain temporarily closed, Statue Cruises is once again out and about in New York Harbor. Sixty-minute tours, complete with history and stunning views, can now be booked, with a focus on safety. Tours run four times daily out of the Battery Park departure point in Lower Manhattan at 10am, 11:30am, 1pm, and 2:30pm. These tours will continue until Liberty Island and Ellis Island reopen (Statue Cruises is the exclusive provider of ferry service for the National Park Service to the two landmarks). Tickets are $26/adult, $19/seniors, $14/child and free for children three years and under. Tickets may be purchased in advance (strongly encouraged) from the Statue Cruises website or at Gangway 5 in Battery Park. statuecruises.com

PIANO IN BRYANT PARK

One of Bryant Park’s most popular programs, “Piano in Bryant Park,” is back again. Audiences are encouraged to wear masks and practice social distancing while seated in the park’s iconic moveable bistro chairs. On July 6, 7, and 9 enjoy the sounds of jazz pianist Kuni Mikami. Piano in Bryant Park, which showcases the finest ragtime, stride, and jazz pianists, takes place Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 12:30 to 2:30pm through August.

NYC RESOURCES

cosi fan tutti met opera

The Metropolitan Opera is streaming operas FREE nightly.

The French Institute Alliance Française is taking its annual Bastille Day celebration online this year. From Saturday, July 11th through Tuesday, July 14th, head to Zoom and Facebook for a four-day virtual fête that comes complete with virtual performances, film screenings, rosé and Champagne tastings, cooking events, kids activities, dance parties, and much more. fiaf.org/event_tag/2020-bastille-day

The New York Public Library provides access to more than 300,000 FREE e-books and e-audio books.

NYC Health information page for COVID-19.

NYC restaurant world information.

Stream hundreds of Broadway shows (by subscription).

15 Broadway shows you can watch from home.

Broadway performances live—from stars’ living rooms.

The New York City Ballet presents a spring digital season.

Virtual programming will keep you connected to the York Theatre Company.

One World Observatory has made One World Explorer, the attraction’s Digital Skyline Guide, available for remote watching. Virtual helicopter tours of the city’s most iconic sites are available now.

51 New York TV shows and movies.

5 eras of New York to enjoy in books and movies.

2,500 museums and galleries you can visit virtually.

The New York Botanical Garden in bloom from home.

Exploring Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Times Square.

The Top of the Rock launches a brief virtual tour on YouTube.

Livestreamed fitness classes.

Fun at-home activities for kids.

6 podcast series to help you understand New York.

Discover the best of New York, from hidden gems to iconic landmarks, through The New York Landmarks Conservancy’s “Tourist in your own Town” Video Series.

VIRTUAL MUSEUMS

Explore the world of design with Cooper Hewitt.

Experience the Intrepid Museum anywhere.

New-York Historical Society from home.

The Brooklyn Museum remotely.

Guggenheim Museum from home.

The Morgan’s exhibitions.

Virtually visit the Louis Armstrong House Museum.

The Merchant’s House Museum from home.

rubin shrine room virtual tour

You can take a virtual tour of the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room at the Rubin Museum of Art. (You can find two hours of meditative chanting as well, if you’re searching out some respite.)

VIRTUAL TALKS, LECTURES, AND EVENTS

Thought Gallery has hundreds of livestream talks, lectures, performances, and more. Check out sessions with celebs, live concerts, and opportunities to learn the latest on everything from science to philosophy to social justice

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events + Selected NYC Instagram Photos (b) (07/06)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.
Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being.
Stay Safe.
============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture,” updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times. We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s Selected NYC Instagram Photos (b).

============================================================

gigi.nyc

humzadeas

joshfromny

openhousenewyork

jssilberman

aidan.f0x

theamazingknight

don_humberto_colmenares

nycprimeshot

mynamesjefff

new_york_city_photo

=============================================================

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

There are some fine spots to grab a meal in Lower Manhattan.

You could try North End Grill
104 North End Ave., 646-747-1600, Battery Park City, Manhattan
“While Danny Meyer’s Blue Smoke celebrates the American South, the restaurateur’s North End Grill has a more local, northerly approach. Chef Eric Korsh, who recently got two stars in the New York Times, offers Wellfleet oysters, house-cured charcuterie, grilled clam pizza with chili flakes and a Berkshire tomahawk pork chop for two. The upscale restaurant sports white tablecloths and a streamlined, contemporary design. Relatively undiscovered wines, New York State–brewed beer and –distilled spirits and more than 150 bottlings of Scotch help make it a destination dining spot rather than just a neighborhood option.”
Dine Out Downtown (nycgo.com)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

GD: In the age of Covid-19 this info from City Guide is one of the best sources of info on What’s Happening, even if some are only available in your home, and not in your favorite venue. Stay Safe.

Things to Do This Weekend in NYC (7/10-7/12)

(7/10-7/12) New York City has entered Phase 3 of its cautious reopening and there’s more to do in NYC than there’s been since our mid-March lockdown. This detailed map of open restaurants shows over 7,300 venues now serving; included in that number are 4,000 places where you can eat outside. Entire streets are being closed to traffic and opened to expanded outdoor dining plans, including Arthur Avenue in the Bronx; Doyers Street in Chinatown, East 101st Street in Harlem, 46th Street along Midtown East and West, stretches of the Meatpacking District, Broadway in the Flatiron, Orchard and Broome Sts., on the Lower East Side, and Mulberry Street and Hester Street in Little Italy; Brooklyn will be welcoming along Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, in addition to stretches of Red Hook and Dumbo; Bell Boulevard and 41st Avenue in Bayside will represent Queens and New Dorp Lane for Staten Island. Read on for more reopenings and other things to do in NYC this weekend!

CHELSEA PIERS POP-UP ROOFTOP

spirit cruises nyc skyline

Credit: Hornblower Cruises and Events.

You can enjoy the city skyline from entry points in both New York City and New Jersey with Spirit Cruises. A regular program of outdoor dining experiences will be available from Saturday, July 11 onwards aboard the Spirit of New Jersey, which has a fabulous rooftop experience, sailing from its home port of Lincoln Harbor Marina in Weehawken. Delicious cuisine and a full array of drinks are equalled only by unbeatable views of the Empire State Building, Brooklyn Bridge, and Statue of Liberty. Prices start at $69 for lunch and $120 for dinner and and include a multi-course menu of freshly prepared entrees, salads, and desserts. Across the Hudson in Chelsea, come out this Friday, July 10th for an outdoor pop-up experience onboard at Chelsea Piers. There will be table-side bar service and light bites available for purchase, with free entry (first-come first-served in accordance with current capacity limits). Vessels offer expansive decks, providing plentiful space and fresh air, ensuring more than enough room on board for everyone to stay safely apart. For more on SafeCruise by Hornblower’s industry-defining standards for health, safety, and security, see above or read more at hornblower.com/safecruiseSpirit of New York: Chelsea Piers, 212-727-2789; Spirit of New Jersey: Lincoln Harbor, 201-333-8600; spiritcruises.com

NEWLY REOPENED!

starbucks roastery nyc

The Starbucks Reserve® Roastery New York in the Meatpacking District is a place to experience Starbucks like never before. This 23,000-square-foot plant contains not only retail space but also an operating coffee roastery. Back open and welcoming visitors again, you can enjoy a variety of coffee classics and roastery creations—each drink is handcrafted with Starbucks’s rarest coffees, roasted on site. In addition, there are Princi Italian pastries made fresh daily, and “Family Meals” that you can enjoy at home. New cleaning and social distancing protocols will keep guests safe. 61 Ninth Ave., 212-691-0531, starbucksreserve.com/newyork

Photo: Jin Lee

The 9/11 Memorial & Museum has reopened the plaza to the general public as of Sunday, July 5th.

A small group of Statue Cruises surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

Although the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island remain temporarily closed, Statue Cruises is once again out and about in New York Harbor. Sixty-minute tours, complete with history and stunning views, can now be booked, with a focus on safety. Tours run four times daily out of the Battery Park departure point in Lower Manhattan at 10am, 11:30am, 1pm, and 2:30pm. These tours will continue until Liberty Island and Ellis Island reopen (Statue Cruises is the exclusive provider of ferry service for the National Park Service to the two landmarks). Tickets are $26/adult, $19/seniors, $14/child and free for children three years and under. Tickets may be purchased in advance (strongly encouraged) from the Statue Cruises website or at Gangway 5 in Battery Park. statuecruises.com

PIANO IN BRYANT PARK

One of Bryant Park’s most popular programs, “Piano in Bryant Park,” is back again. Audiences are encouraged to wear masks and practice social distancing while seated in the park’s iconic moveable bistro chairs. On July 6, 7, and 9 enjoy the sounds of jazz pianist Kuni Mikami. Piano in Bryant Park, which showcases the finest ragtime, stride, and jazz pianists, takes place Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 12:30 to 2:30pm through August.

NYC RESOURCES

cosi fan tutti met opera

The Metropolitan Opera is streaming operas FREE nightly.

The French Institute Alliance Française is taking its annual Bastille Day celebration online this year. From Saturday, July 11th through Tuesday, July 14th, head to Zoom and Facebook for a four-day virtual fête that comes complete with virtual performances, film screenings, rosé and Champagne tastings, cooking events, kids activities, dance parties, and much more. fiaf.org/event_tag/2020-bastille-day

The New York Public Library provides access to more than 300,000 FREE e-books and e-audio books.

NYC Health information page for COVID-19.

NYC restaurant world information.

Stream hundreds of Broadway shows (by subscription).

15 Broadway shows you can watch from home.

Broadway performances live—from stars’ living rooms.

The New York City Ballet presents a spring digital season.

Virtual programming will keep you connected to the York Theatre Company.

One World Observatory has made One World Explorer, the attraction’s Digital Skyline Guide, available for remote watching. Virtual helicopter tours of the city’s most iconic sites are available now.

51 New York TV shows and movies.

5 eras of New York to enjoy in books and movies.

2,500 museums and galleries you can visit virtually.

The New York Botanical Garden in bloom from home.

Exploring Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Times Square.

The Top of the Rock launches a brief virtual tour on YouTube.

Livestreamed fitness classes.

Fun at-home activities for kids.

6 podcast series to help you understand New York.

Discover the best of New York, from hidden gems to iconic landmarks, through The New York Landmarks Conservancy’s “Tourist in your own Town” Video Series.

VIRTUAL MUSEUMS

Explore the world of design with Cooper Hewitt.

Experience the Intrepid Museum anywhere.

New-York Historical Society from home.

The Brooklyn Museum remotely.

Guggenheim Museum from home.

The Morgan’s exhibitions.

Virtually visit the Louis Armstrong House Museum.

The Merchant’s House Museum from home.

rubin shrine room virtual tour

You can take a virtual tour of the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room at the Rubin Museum of Art. (You can find two hours of meditative chanting as well, if you’re searching out some respite.)

VIRTUAL TALKS, LECTURES, AND EVENTS

Thought Gallery has hundreds of livestream talks, lectures, performances, and more. Check out sessions with celebs, live concerts, and opportunities to learn the latest on everything from science to philosophy to social justice

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

 

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July Events + Corona Culture (a) (07/05)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.
Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being.
Stay Safe.
============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture,” updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times. We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s Corona Culture (a).

==============================================================

These Stunning George Steinmetz Aerial Images Show Empty NYC Under Coronavirus Lockdown | Viewing NYC / shown on “CBS This Morning.”
a 6 minute video of a virtual ghost town.

Rockefeller Center’s Art Deco Marvel: A Virtual Tour (NYT)
an informative discussion between NYT architecture critic Michael Kimmelman and historian Daniel Okrent. Don’t miss the great photos of Rocky Center.

Now Virtual and in Video, Museum Websites Shake Off the Dust. (NYT)
Critic’s guide to the best online presentations from the world’s leading art palaces and picture galleries.

Brooklyn, Before It Was a Global Brand: Walk Its History (NYT)
A few hundred years in the borough, from the brownstones to the shipyards. The NYT  critic chats with fourth generation Brooklynite and historian Thomas J. Campanella.
Wonderful photos all over the borough, especially Brooklyn Heights.

‘Surreal’: What It’s Like to Ride a Motorcycle Through New York Right Now (NYT)  The video of the scooter riding down an empty 7th Ave. is especially interesting.

Cannes 2020 is canceled: here are 28 of the festival’s best films you can stream right now./LAT
Films that have played the festival since 2006, now available for viewing at home.

========================================================

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

There are some fine spots to grab a meal in Lower Manhattan.

You could try Hudson Eats
Brookfield Place, 200–250 Vesey St., 2nd level, 212-417-7000, Battery Park City,
“A vista of the Statue of Liberty, shimmering Hudson River and yachts moored at the North Cove Marina make the food taste even better at Hudson Eats, a food hall extraordinaire that opened last year. To find it, follow signs in the massive office complex or take an escalator up from the Winter Garden, a glass atrium with a grove of palm trees and park benches. The 30,000-square-foot space holds 14 fast-casual concepts and can accommodate 600 people. At lunchtime it completely fills up, so try to go in off-peak hours. Choices range from Blue Ribbon Sushi and Black Seed Bagels to Chopt Creative Salad Company and Umami Burger. In short, there is something here for everyone in your party. High marble counters are provided for a stand-and-eat experience, but for something more relaxing try for a window table where you can sit and enjoy the view.”
Dine Out Downtown (nycgo.com)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events + The Nifty Nine NYCity News Sources (07/04)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.
Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being.
Stay Safe.
============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture,” updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times. We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s The Nifty Nine NYC News sources.

==============================================================

All the NYCity News You Need to Start Your Day

The New York Times – New York Today / Daily Briefings

AM / Metro New York

The New York Times – Regional New York News

Wall Street Journal Greater New York (Region News)

Grub Street – NY Magazine’s Food and Restaurant Blog

Gothamist: News, Food, Arts and Events

The New York Times – Art and Design

Metro / New York Post

amNY Online

=============================================================

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

There are some fine spots to grab a meal in Lower Manhattan.

You could try Kaffe 1668
275 Greenwich St., 212-693-3750, TriBeCa, Manhattan
“Hard-core coffee, tea and cold-pressed juice drinkers: you know who you are. The not so easy to please should head right over to this serious-minded café in TriBeCa, a few short blocks north of One World Trade Center. Kaffe 1668 does not refer to its address but rather to the year New York City’s Dutch founders allegedly introduced coffee as a breakfast beverage (replacing beer). Single-origin, direct-trade beans are ground fresh for each espresso and served in pretty, porcelain Iittala cups from Finland (paper cups are available for those on the run). Heavy wood tables, free WiFi, enchanting toy sheep and extra seating downstairs for brainstorming sessions and secluded reading escapes make the place enticing for all kinds of reasons. Fresh-baked goods, both sweet and savory, are available to grab for a snack.”
Dine Out Downtown (nycgo.com)

=======================================================

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events + Corona Culture (c) (07/03)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.”
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.

Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being. Stay Safe.

============================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture” – info and video especially suited to these difficult times.

We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s Corona Culture (c).

===========================================================

See New York City Under Quarantine From a Bird’s-Eye View / Viewing NYC

The Hidden Feats that Built New York’s Towering Skyscrapers./ NYT
The ingenuity of engineers helped build landmarks like Black Rock and the new supertalls. Take a virtual tour with the New York Times architecture critic.

When Manhattan was Mannahatta: a stroll through the centuries./ NYT
From lush forest to metropolis, the evolution of lower Manhattan.

Pondering the end of the world? An apocalyptic entertainment guide, if you can’t help it. / LAT
For those seeking content about the end of the world during the coronavirus crisis, we’ve curated a guide to apocalyptic entertainment for your viewing, reading or listening pleasure.

Aerial View of New York City Amidst Coronavirus Quarantine. / Viewing NYC
Shot with a drone for a real birds-eye view

Biking in New York City  / nycgo.com

Can New York’s Restaurants Survive on Outdoor Dining Alone? / Grub Street

Cannes 2020 is canceled: here are 28 of the festival’s best films you can stream right now./LAT
Films that have played the festival since 2006, now available for viewing at home.

========================================================

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

There are some fine spots to grab a meal in Lower Manhattan.

You could try El Vez
259 Vesey St., 212-233-2500, Battery Park City, Manhattan
“Elvis Presley’s fetching cowboy look from movies like Charro! and Flaming Star is on display at this sprawling, Mexican-American saloon with touches of the Old West. Mega-restaurateur Stephen Starr (Upland, Buddakan, Morimoto NY) opened this Battery Park City venue last year following the longtime success of his flagship El Vez in Philadelphia. (El Vez, in case you don’t keep up on these things, is a Mexican-American Elvis impersonator.) Cast-iron chandeliers, bunches of chili peppers, Day of the Dead skeletons and dozens of bottles of tequila and mezcal help advance the concept. Huitlacoche quesadillas with Chihuahua cheese and a scoop of guacamole, chicken enchiladas and Baja-style whole fish with pickled jalapeños come in satisfying portions. A quick-serve, lunchtime burrito counter (to open soon) aims to give Chipotle a run for its money.”
Dine Out Downtown (nycgo.com)

=======================================================

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

July Events and 14 Classic NYCity Films (07/02)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.”
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.

Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being.
Stay Safe.

===========================================================

For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture” – updated info and video especially suited to these difficult times.

We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.
Today it’s 14 Classic NYCity Films (plus a few more personal faves).

If you want to get in the mood for your visit to NYCity, then make yourself some popcorn and pick up a copy of one of these great films at your local Netflix.
(and if you have seen any of these before, remember Director Robert Altman’s advice:
“It’s better to see a great movie again than an average one the first time. Because even though the movie hasn’t changed, you have. And you’ll see something new..”)

The Naked City (1948)

https://dailymotion.com/video/x55gwgh

m

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On the Waterfront (1954)

m

m

Sweet Smell Of Success (1957) — “I love this dirty town!”, says Burt Lancaster — and so do we, in one of his signature films — a sour, caustic tale about a twisted gossip columnist, partly modeled on the legendary Walter Winchell. Lancaster is superb, and guess what, so is Tony Curtis.

mm

West Side Story (1961)

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Midnight Cowboy (1969) — Two drifters meet in a mutual attempt to survive in, then escape from, Manhattan’s grimy underbelly. Hoffman is incredible as Ratso. The kind they don’t make anymore, this “Cowboy” still packs a hefty wallop.

mm

The French Connection (1971) — Maybe the best cop movie ever, portraying one of the city’s bigger drug busts back in the day. Gene Hackman won as Oscar and became a bankable star with this movie — and it’s easy to see why.

mm

The Godfather (1972)

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Mean Streets (1973) — Scorsese’s breakthrough about a conflicted small-time crook and his wacko, self-destructive cousin in Little Italy. Rich in emotion, immediacy, and atmosphere, this film set the pungent, propulsive Scorsese style we’d see again in movies like 1990′s Goodfellas.

mm

The Godfather, Part 2 (1974) — Coppola managed to improve on a masterpiece with this one, which paints on a broader canvas and offers even richer period flavor. And for the price of Brando, we get a young Robert De Niro, who’s equally brilliant.

mm

Annie Hall (1977) — Inveterate New Yorker Woody Allen’s best film ever, with some hilariously dead-on insights about the bi-coastal dilemma: New York vs. Los Angeles. I’m with Woody: give me Gotham every time. This turned Diane Keaton into a star, and it’s still her signature role.

mm

Manhattan (1979)

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Broadway Danny Rose (1984)

Three Woody Allen films in a row may seem a bit much, but for me Woody is the quintessential NYCity film auteur. Heck, I could have added “Hannah and Her Sisters” (1986), “Crimes and Misdemeanors” (1989), and “Bullets Over Broadway” (1994).

mm

Moonstruck (1987) — This love letter to Brooklyn is full of charm and humanity, though some disagree… worth the price of admission for Vincent Gardenia and Olympia Dukakis alone. And look for an unusual early turn from Nic Cage as a mooning, eccentric baker.

mm

A Bronx Tale (1993)

mm

Half of this list is from the wonderful film critic John Farr.
The other half (films without the write up’s) are my additional personal faves.

Heck, there are just too many great NYCity movies.
Need to make room for these classics:

1910s – Regeneration (1915, Raoul Walsh)
1920s – The Crowd (1928, Dir. King Vidor); Speedy (1928, Ted Wilde)
1930s – Dead End (1937, Dir. William Wyler); King Kong (1933, Merian C. Cooper)
1940s – On The Town (1949, Gene Kelly,)
1950s – Shadows (1959, John Cassavetes); On The Bowery (!956, Lionel Rogosin); Little Fugitive (1953, Ray Ashley,..); Marty (1955, Paddy Chayefsky); Pickup on South Street (1953, Samuel Fuller )
1960s – The Apartment (1960, Dir. Billy Wilder); The Cool World (1964, Shirley Clarke); Rosemary’s Baby (1968, Roman Polansky); Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961, Blake Edwards)
1970s – a Golden Decade for NYCity Films
Hester Street (1975 Dir. Joan Silver); Klute (1971, Alan J. Pakula); Superfly (1972, Gordon Parks); Serpico (1973, Sidney Lumet); The Taking of Pelham1-2-3 (!974, Joseph Sargent); Dog Day Afternoon (1975, Sidney Lumet); Taxi Driver (1976, Martin Scorsese) (great movie but NYCity at its worst); Saturday Night Fever (1977, John Badham); The Warriors (1979, Walter Hill); All That Jazz (1979, Bob Fosse); Shaft (1971, Gordon Parks); Three Days of the Condor (1975, Sydney Pollack); An Unmarried Woman (1978, Paul Mazursky)
1980s—Do The Right Thing (1989, Dir. Spike Lee); Raging Bull (1980, Martin Scorsese); Once Upon a Time in America (1984, Sergio Leone); The Pope of Greenwich Village (1984, Stuart Rosenberg); When Harry Met Sally (1989, Rob Reiner); Ghostbusters (1984, Ivan Reitman); Wall Street (1987, Oliver Stone); Working Girl (1988, Mike Nichols)
1990s – Goodfellas (1990, Martin Scorsese); Metropolitan (1990, Whit Stillman); Kids (1995, Larry Clark); Men in Black (1997, Barry Sonnenfeld)
2000s – Man on Wire (2008, James Marsh); 25th Hour (2002, Spike Lee); Rent (2005, Chris Columbus); The Devil Wears Prada (2006, David Frankel); We Own the Night (2007, James Gray)
2010s – Black Swan (2010, Darren Aronofsky); Margaret (2011, Kenneth Lonergan); Spider-Man into the Spider Verse (2018, Bob Persichetti); Inside Llewyn Davis (2013, Ethan/Joel Cohen; Birdman (2014, Alejandro González Iñárritu); Brooklyn (2015, John Crowley); Frances Ha (2012, Noah Baumbach)

Want to know what some other folks thought were NYCity’s best movies:

The Best New York Movies: 50 Flicks About The City That Never Sleeps  (Complex)

19 Movies That Will Bring New York to You  (Vogue)

The 21 Best Films Set in New York City   (Culture Trip)

The 101 best New York movies of all time  (Time Out New York)

49 Movies That Will Transport You to New York City  (CN Traveler)

The Best Movies That Capture What It Means to Be a New Yorker (Thrillist)

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

There are some fine spots to grab a meal in Lower Manhattan.

You could try Blue Smoke
255 Vesey St., 212-899-2005, Battery Park City, Manhattan
“The Battery Park City offshoot of Danny Meyer’s Flatiron District barbecue hit is a smart and lively addition to this buttoned-down neighborhood. An after-work crowd packs into the bar while families bundle into red booths. Both camps blend harmoniously. The bar crowd digs into burgers with house-smoked bacon (not on the official dinner menu, but you can ask for them nonetheless) and chipotle chicken wings with blue cheese dip. Vegetarians are sated by North Carolina salt peanuts and kale salad with sweet tea pecans and pickled grapes. Barbecue lovers will find juicy brisket and baby back ribs, while Cajun fans will return again and again for Louisiana chef Jean-Paul Bourgeois’ tremendous take on the shrimp boil.”
Dine Out Downtown (nycgo.com)

=======================================================

Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: July 03 – July 09

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include The Lotus Effect, THE LINE, Figurative Summer and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Ai Weiwei’s Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads: Bronze
LongHouse Reserve
Long Island
Wed, Jul 08, 2020 – Sun, Oct 31, 2021

THE LINE
The Public Theater
Manhattan
Wed, Jul 08, 2020, 7:30 pm – Tue, Aug 04, 2020, 11:59 pm

Figurative Summer
Jenkins Johnson Gallery
Brooklyn
Wed, Jun 24, 2020 – Thu, Aug 27, 2020

The Lotus Effect
Rubin Museum of Art
Manhattan
Thu, Jun 18, 2020 – Mon, Jan 04, 2021

Black Dance Stories
Manhattan
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Thu, Jul 30, 2020

=============================================================

WFUV Live Online (July 02 -July 08)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

7/4 – Willie Nelson’s Fourth of July Picnic with Kurt Vile, Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real, Margo Price, Sheryl Crow, Devon Gilfillian and more ($)

7/5 – Grateful Dead “Fare Thee Well” Marathon rebroadcast from July 2015, the final time that Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, and Bill Kreutzmann shared the stage together

7/6 – Waxahatchee performs the entirety of her latest album, Saint Cloud ($)

7/7 – Ringo Starr celebrates his 80th birthday with a concert: Paul McCartney, Ben Harper, Gary Clark Jr., Sheila E. and more

7/7 – SummerStage Anywhere: Femi Kuti and DJ Rich Medina

7/8 – Dalai Lama Global Meditation: Mantras & teachings set to music; each meditation is hosted by guests from around the globe

7/8 – SummerStage Anywhere: Live session with British singer/songwriter Shura

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

========================================================

STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

===========================================================

One more, just found this. For another perspective on essential NYCity movies (nycgo.com):

11 Movies That Make You Want to Visit New York City

Birdman (2014)
For fans of: Broadway theater, inventive indies and the throngs in Times Square
What happens: An actor seeks redemption on the Broadway stage.
Why you’ll book a flight: This look at the cutthroat, behind-the-scenes world of Broadway could make anyone want to go to the St. James Theater (currently showing:Something Rotten), where most of the film takes place. Michael Keaton stars as a former movie superhero in this meta-drama about drama that took home the Oscar for Best Picture of 2014. If you come to the City, you can soak up some of that Broadway pizazz (and intense, postshow conflict, like what takes place in the gorgeously restored Rum House—an après-theater hangout in the Hotel Edison) for yourself. Just don’t expect to see Keaton running through Times Square in his underwear. —Brian Sloan
Where to go:
St. James Theatre
The Rum House
Times Square (the block in front of the Marriot Marquis, specifically)

 

Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992)
For fans of: The holiday season in New York City
What happens: Kevin McCallister hops on the wrong plane, unexpectedly ends up in the City and, again, has a run-in with the world’s worst burglars, the Sticky Bandits (aka the Wet Bandits).
Why you’ll book a flight: Kevin’s in a tough spot, but the movie still shows why New York City is a great place to be during the holidays. Even when you’re on the run from burglars and without parental supervision, the luxury of the Plaza Hotel and the majesty of the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree are bound to put a smile on your face. And if there’s any city where you could still, just maybe, track down a Talkboy, this would be the one. —Tess Kornfeld
Where to go:
Plaza Hotel
Gapstow Bridge, Central Park
Rockefeller Center

 

When Harry Met Sally (1989)
For fans of: Romance and shoulder pads
What happens: Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal meet, fall out of touch, meet again, fall out of touch again, meet yet again, stay in touch this time and fall in love.
Why you’ll book a flight: Shoulder pads may be out, but New York City attractions like Central Park, the Met and, yes, even Katz’s remain romantic all these years later. Late-’80s New York serves as the backdrop for all kinds of key questions: Can men and women ever be friends? Will Harry and Sally ever find love? Can we have what she’s having? Head for the Lower East Side, and you certainly can. —Alyson Penn
Where to go:
• Gallery 131 (Temple of Dendur), Metropolitan Museum of Art 
Katz’s Delicatessen
Washington Square Park
Loeb Central Park Boathouse

 

Coming to America (1988)
For fans of: Following one’s heart, violating franchise agreements
What happens: Akeem (Eddie Murphy), prince of the imaginary African nation Zamunda, goes looking for a future queen in Queens.
Why you’ll book a flight: Prince Akeem’s attempt to find love and the shape-shifting, multiple-role performances of the stars, Murphy and Arsenio Hall, are metaphors for the ways you can reinvent yourself in NYC. As Akeem tells his love interest, Lisa (whose father owns a familiar-looking fast-food restaurant called McDowell’s), “No journey is too great when one finds what he seeks.” —Adam Kuban
Where to go:
Waldorf Astoria New York
Brooklyn Heights Promenade

 

Working Girl (1988)
For fans of: Big ambition, big hair and making it in NYC against all odds
What happens: A smart, sexy Staten Island secretary conquers Wall Street and Harrison Ford.
Why you’ll book a flight: Melanie Griffith’s workplace,One New York Plaza, is adjacent to the Staten Island Ferry terminal; some of the movie’s best scenes take place on her commute (including a sweeping opening shot featuring the Statue of Liberty, to the tune of Carly Simon’s anthemic “Let the River Run”). The sparks between Griffith and Ford fly when they crash a wedding at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, but things get complicated with the return of Ford’s girlfriend (Griffith’s boss), memorably played by Sigourney Weaver. When Griffith finally ascends to the top, her office with a view is in One Chase Manhattan Plaza, a landmarked skyscraper near the World Trade Center site. You know the drill: if you can make it here… —Brian Sloan
Where to go:
Staten Island Ferry
Statue of Liberty
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum
• Pier 6

 

Ghostbusters (1984)
For fans of: New York City’s magnetic, larger-than-life personalities
What happens: A ragtag crew hunts ghosts.
Why you’ll book a flight: You’re unlikely to encounter ghosts, ghouls or spirits of any sort on a trip to NYC—though you’re welcome to go looking! —but you will find plenty of silver-tongued personalities (and, if you watch TV at the right time, local ads that fit in alongside the Ghostbusters’ commercial). Not everyone’s going to be as quick with the quips as Dr. Peter Venkman, or as charmingly long-suffering as Janine Melnitz, or as proficient at the cello as Dana Barrett, but if you don’t find at least one New Yorker with that distinctly sardonic joie de vivre—a wonderful natural by-product of living in cramped quarters alongside 8 million other people—then someone’s not doing their job. (No, we’re not going to name names. Don’t be rude.) —Jonathan Durbin
Where to go:
New York Public Library
Tavern on the Green
Hook & Ladder 8 

 

Splash (1984)
For fans of: Fantasies, metaphorically/literally getting one’s feet wet in NYC
What happens: A man falls for a mermaid who comes to NYC to seek him out years after they first met.
Why you’ll book a flight: While you may not arrive naked at the Statue of Liberty (at least not if you plan your trip right), Daryl Hannah’s adventures as Madison (a mermaid who gets her name, naturally, from Madison Avenue) adapting to life in New York City—and assorted rendezvous with Lady Liberty and other landmarks, like the Brooklyn Bridge—should be inspiring for humans and mermaids alike. —Heather Liang
Where to go:
Statue of Liberty
Bloomingdale’s
Brooklyn Bridge
Madison Avenue

 

The Warriors (1979)
For fans of: Leather vests and interborough travel
What happens: A stylish, leather-clad gang evades the police and rival gangs in an apocalyptic, graffiti-covered NYC.
Why you’ll book a flight: Thankfully, the real New York City isn’t a dystopia. But it is a place to set free your inner explorer. Throw on a leather vest, find your way to Pelham Bay Park and pretend, in your role as Warriors new de facto leader Swan, that you’ve got to make your way back to home turf. Stop off in Riverside Park, Central Park and Union Square, before meeting up with your friends—and coming out to play—in Coney Island. —Christina Parella
Where to go:
Pelham Bay Park
Riverside Park 
Union Square
Coney Island

 

Annie Hall (1977)
For fans of: Existentialism, complicated relationships, Marshall McLuhan
What happens: Alvy Singer (Woody Allen) contemplates what went wrong in his relationship with Annie Hall (Diane Keaton).
Why you’ll book a flight: This movie promises that NYC will feel like home for neurotic intellectuals who are never comfortable anywhere else. (The quiet of the country makes Alvy nervous and, besides, there’s nowhere to walk after dinner out there. As for Los Angeles…well, he’s got nothing nice to say about Los Angeles). Alvy remembers a childhood living beneath the Thunderbolt roller-coaster in Coney Island. You can’t live there, but you can ride the new version of the since-demolished ride. You can also people-watch at the Central Park Zoo, chat and argue on streets from the Upper East Side to Greenwich Village and bring your date to a bookstore and insist that she read The Denial of Death. —Jonathan Zeller
Where to go:
Coney Island
Brooklyn Bridge
Central Park Zoo

 

Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961)
For fans of: Breakfast, Tiffany’s
What happens: Paul (George Peppard) falls for his neighbor Holly Golightly (Audrey Hepburn), a charming but unreliable eccentric.
Why you’ll book a flight: Come chase the mean reds away like Audrey Hepburn does at her stylish best: romp through Central Park, the New York Public Library, Park Avenue, the Upper East Side and, of course, outside Tiffany & Co. with a danish in the wee hours. —Joyce Rutter Kaye
Where to go:
Central Park
New York Public Library
• Well, obviously Tiffany & Co.

 

Two Men in Manhattan (1959)
For fans of: Noir, nightlife and NYC enchantment
What happens: Two journalists spend a long day’s journey into night trying to pick up a missing French diplomat’s tracks.
Why you’ll book a flight: Those who want to pack as much into one day, or night, as possible, can use Two Men in Manhattan as inspiration, if not actual template—though it’s wonderful to imagine that burlesque joint in Ridgewood, Queens (OK, it doesn’t all take place in Manhattan), and the Pike Slip Inn still exist. This quasi-buddy-road-trip movie is part noir thriller and part paean to NYC’s big sights and nighttime high jinks: the director is like a kid in a candy store showing off the lights of Times Square and rolling through the City streets. There’s smoky jazz, atmospheric bars and 24-hour diners…everything a late night in New York should have; the fact that the interiors were shot in a studio in France should be of little consequence. —Andrew Rosenberg
Where to go:
United Nations
Times Square
Pike Slip

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July Events + Corona Culture (b) (07/01)

Pre Covid-19 we searched the internet everyday looking for the very best of What’s Happening, primarily on Manhattan’s WestSide, so that you didn’t have to.”
We made it as easy as 1-2-3.

Covid-19 has required some changes for the time being. Stay Safe.

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For the month of July we are going to try a different format – on some days we will go visual and offer a selection of the very best NYCity Instagram photos or YouTube videos. Some days you will find “the Nifty Nine”, all the NYC news you need to start your day, or the Top Online Travel Forums with NYC info. On other days we will offer “Corona Culture” – info and video especially suited to these difficult times.

We hope you will come back often to see what’s cooking here.

Today it’s Corona Culture (b).

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Classic skyscrapers define New York. Take a virtual tour./ NYT
The Times architecture critic strolls Park Avenue with the architect Annabelle Selldorf.

Why Driving in New York City Now Feels “Post Apocalyptic.” / NYT
For now it’s open road, miles and miles of it.

See an Empty NYC from a Bird’s-Eye View in This Aerial Capture During Lockdown./ Viewing NYC  Shot with a drone for a real birds-eye view.

Brooklyn Bridge, Star of the City: Here’s a Tour. / NYT
The Times architecture critic explores the bridge and the neighborhoods on either side with the architects Marion Weiss and Michael Manfredi.

New York Philharmonic Takes Show to Rooftops, Stairwells./ WSJ
After the orchestra canceled performances, many musicians found new ways—and reasons—to play.

Virtual Day Trips You Can Now Take Online / ReadersDigest

Cannes 2020 is canceled: here are 28 of the festival’s best films you can stream right now./LAT
Films that have played the festival since 2006, and which are now available for viewing at home.

We hope you enjoy this change of pace, then please return here August 1, and every day for our daily, hot off the presses event guide with “Only the Best” NYCity event info.

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Lower Manhattan – Did you know?

Manhattan, with more than 50,000 different buildings, is famous for its Art Deco architecture, especially in Lower Manhattan.

29 Broadway

“Not far from 1 Wall Street sits another Art Deco building finished in 1931. Built by Sloan & Robertson, known for many Art Deco structures in New York, 29 Broadway has a more understated look. A geometric pattern runs up the white marble facade alongside black bands of windows, and the lobby features sculpted marble and an aluminum leaf ceiling. From the style of the building’s street number to the shape of the handrails to the cylindrical light in the entrance vestibule, Art Deco details abound.”
(Art Deco Society of New York)  (ny.curbed.com)

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Now how about some other useful information during these trying times.

NYC-Arts Top Five Virtual Picks: June 26 – July 2

Interesting. Unusual. Uniquely NYC. Highlights of this week’s top virtual events include Bach at Home, Summer 20/2.0, Works & Process 2020 and more. Follow links to a fuller description for each.

Get the NYC-ARTS Top Five in your inbox every Friday and follow @NYC_ARTS on Instagram or @NYCARTS on Twitter to stay abreast of events as they happen.

Bach at Home
Orchestra of St. Luke’s
Manhattan
Tue, Jun 23, 2020 – Tue, Jul 14, 2020

“Somos La Luz” (“We Are the Light”)
Queens Museum
Queens
Fri, May 29, 2020 – Mon, Aug 31, 2020

Summer 20/2.0
Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts
Bronx
Thu, Jul 02, 2020 – Sat, Aug 08, 2020

Works & Process Artists 2020
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Manhattan
Mon, Jun 01, 2020 – Tue, Jun 30, 2020

Public Art Fund at Home
Public Art Fund
Manhattan
Mon, Jun 01, 2020 – Mon, Aug 31, 2020

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WFUV Live Online (June 25-July 01)

Live Online

Scheduled Shows

6/25 – Hug Your Farmer: Dave Matthews, Grace Potter, Martin Sexton, Kelli O’Hara, Chadwick Stokes of Dispatch and more

6/25 – Depeche Mode streams their full concert from the “SPIRITS in the Forest” documentary from their 2017-2018 Global Spirit Tour

6/26 – Angelique Kidjo – Summerstage Anywhere Series

6/27 – Rufus Wainwright, “Unfollow the Rules: The Paramour Session” livestream concert

6/27 – Virtual Roots Picnic with The Roots, H.E.R., SZA, Lil Baby, Kirk Franklin, Musiq Soulchild and more. Hosted by Questlove, Black Thought and Michelle Obama

6/28 – Justice Comes Alive with Phil Lesh & The Terrapin Family Band, Tank & The Bangas, Umphrey’s McGee, Ivan Neville, Lettuce, Galactic, Stanley Jordan, Antibalas and 50+ artists

6/28 – Andrew Bird Live from the Old Style Guitar Shop in LA for Performance Now!

6/29 – Waxahatchee (aka Katie Crutchfield) full discography livestream series: Saint Cloud

 

Get a running list of Live and Archived online concerts at wfuv.org

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Billboard also has some good info:

All the Livestreams & Virtual Concerts to Watch During Coronavirus 

Looking for a Refund? How to Get Your Money Back for Concert & Festival Tickets

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STAY HOME FOR A BIT LONGER – MASK UP AND STAY SAFE.

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