- Sun 1pm: love saves the day: celebrating 1970s nyc lgbt nightlife: cultural studies professor and author tim lawrence (love saves the day: a history of american dance music culture, 1970-1979) pulls back the curtain on the loft’s ‘love saves the day’ private house party and its influence on new york’s lgbt nightlife scene in the 70s.
- Dec 12, 2019 New York City excels at many things, but one of its finest is Italian food. The area is known as the birthplace of red-sauce, Italian-American fare, and within the five boroughs lie perfect.
- Feb 02, 2021 Affordable housing lottery for Bushwick building. The bus driver was treated for minor injuries at the scene, according to ABC 7. With a history dating back to 1841, the Eagle is New York.
Feb 09, 2021 Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday that indoor restaurant dining can reopen in New York City at 25 percent capacity on Friday, two days before the Valentine’s Day opening he had announced earlier.
“If we’re talking must-read authors like Maya Angelou, James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison, the one-and-only Octavia Butler needs to be a part of the conversation. The groundbreaking sci-fi and speculative fiction author was a master of spinning imaginative tales that introduced you to both the possibilities—and dangers—of the human race, all while offering lessons on tribalism, race, gender, and sexuality.”
—O, The Oprah Magazine
In celebration of Octavia E. Butler’s extraordinary body of work, playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins (An Octoroon) leads a fascinating discussion with authors N. K. Jemisin (How Long ’til Black Future Month?), Walter Mosley (The Awkward Black Man), and Imani Perry (Breathe: A Letter to My Sons). With performances by actors Yetide Badaki (American Gods) and Adepero Oduye (When They See Us).
Audience members will be invited to join the conversation with questions for the panelists.
And don’t worry if you can’t make it to the live show — your ticket will give you access to the event until March 10.
Dating Scene Bushwick New York News
sponsored post