Forget that pumpkin spice latte, we’re warming ourselves up this autumn with soup dumplings! Where you might ask? Well at NYC’s first-ever soup dumpling festival taking over 6th Avenue this October.
The entire event is being put on by soup-dumpling powerhouse and Michelin Guide recommended, Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao. Born out of Flushing, Queens, this iconic soup dumpling shop now has a location in Koreatown and the East Village.
Hungry guests will be able to attend the festivities on October 6th, from 10am – 6pm along 6th Avenue between 29th and 30th Street (near the Kimpton Hotel).
Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao honors Chinese comfort food and traditional Southern Chinese cuisine that will all be highlighted at the event.
Of course, you’ll be able to feast on their famous rainbow-colored soup dumplings, known as the Lucky Six Combo. However, there will be additional menu items beyond soup dumplings to enjoy.
NYC Soup Dumpling Festival menu highlights:
Lucky Six Combo
Classics: crab meat & pork
Four Happiness Sponge Tofu
Pan Fried Pork Buns
Braised Beef Noodle Soup
And if you’re really into soup dumplings you can learn to make them yourself with classes offered during the festival both morning and afternoon. But be weary, the classes will only accept a capacity of 10-12 students.
By HWM While Wall Street celebrated the Federal Reserve’s first interest rate cut in four years, importers and supply chain experts are warning of an economic catastrophe that could occur in less than two weeks. “… dock workers at 36 East Coast and Gulf Coast ports …” The International Longshoreman’s Association (ILA), which represents dock…
A hit-and-run accident is a nightmare scenario. In the aftermath of a crash, you may feel shock, anger, and confusion as the other driver flees the scene. However, knowing the right steps to take can save you significant stress and secure the compensation you might need. Hit-and-runs are frighteningly common, and they leave victims with…
Sabrina Carpenter wasn’t kidding when she said she was working late–on top of her fall 2024 North American tour, which is making two stops in NYC, she’ll be serving New Yorkers espresso from her very own Short N’ Sweet Cafe pop-up!
Carpenters (and no, not the kind who build things–or, actually, maybe them too!) will be thrilled to know that Cash App is partnering with Sabrina Carpenter to bring her Short n’ Sweet Tour to life through coffee shop takeovers in three cities this fall, and NYC is one of them! So get ready for that caffeine buzz.
The Short N’ Sweet Cafe will bring Carpenter’s latest album to life, offering fans an immersive experience that celebrates her music and style with exciting new merchandise and special Sabrina-inspired menu items. And while the exact details haven’t yet been announced, we have a pretty good feeling espresso will be on the menu (and you can watch the music video for the song below)!
Sabrina Carpenter stated:
I am so excited for the ‘Short n Sweet’ tour and to see all my fans at the shows and excited for you to be able to experience the pop-ups too! These pop-ups will be such a fun experience – and a way to make sure everyone gets ‘that me espresso’ so they can dance the night away at the concert.
The Short N’ Sweet Cafe will pop up at Partners Coffee, NYC’s independent, women-owned specialty coffee roaster based out of Brooklyn, for three days only September 27th through 29th. Carpenters who are also Cash App customers will receive even sweeter deals in the form of exclusive discounts on their purchases–more specifically, Cash App Visa Card holders will receive 30% off when using their card.
So Please Please Please mark your calendars, you won’t want to miss this!
by Shaun Abreu The Bijan Royal Tenants’ Union rallied with City Council Member Shaun Abreu and the Goddard Riverside Law Project this week to call on the city to oversee repairs to dangerous and unacceptable conditions at their two buildings in West Harlem. The buildings— 572 West 141st St. and 619 West 140th St.— are…
There’s truly nothing like spending your time before a flight in an airport lounge: those plush cushions, unlimited food, and endless outlet access. So whether you’re a frequent flyer, pay for priority pass, have a credit card that grants you access or a very kind friend who lets you join as their guest, entering into an airport lounge truly feels like the ultimate VIP treatment. And soon, fliers of JetBlue will get to experience its first ever airport lounge coming to JFK’s Terminal 5 in late 2025.
In part of JetBlue’s ‘JetForward’ strategy, the new airport lounge will cater to the demand for more premium offerings. Entry will be a signature perk for its loyal customers and credit card members, such as Transatlantic Mint customers, TrueBlue Mosaic members and a new premium credit card that’s coming soon.
The new lounge will stretch across 8,000 square feet, featuring JetBlue’s signature blue brand elements. Guests can expect a full-service bar, fast Wi-Fi, private workspaces, barista-made coffee bar beverages, complimentary food and drink, along with comfortable seating.
JFK Airport makes sense for the airline’s first-ever lounge, as JetBlue is New York’s Hometown Airline; however, a second lounge from JetBlue will arrive at Boston Logan International Airport shortly following to continue JetBlue’s mission of creating the best leisure network along the East Coast.
Customers have asked for a JetBlue lounge for years and we can’t wait to unveil our take in New York and Boston,” said Marty St. George, president of JetBlue. “Lounges have become an essential offering for the growing numbers of customers seeking premium experiences, and JetBlue’s lounges will further boost the value of our TrueBlue loyalty program as we expand our portfolio of JetBlue credit cards.
Customer status and their lounge perks:
TrueBlue Mosaic 4 members
Complimentary access
Complimentary access for a guest
New premium JetBlue credit card
Complimentary access
Complimentary access for a guest
Eligible JetBlue customers
Day/guest passes for purchase when space is available
All JetBlue customers
Annual pass for purchase
Additional info on the upcoming airport lounge can be found on JetBlue’s website.
Carlos Velazquez, Executive Director, of the Police Athletic League in New York City was recognized on the prestigious 2024 City & State Power of Diversity: Latino 100 List. These dedicated individuals represent leaders from a variety of sectors who all possess an incredible and innate passion for innovation, culture, and community leadership within the Latino community. City…
Countless secrets exist among the carved headstones, winding paths, and towering trees at Woodlawn Cemetery. Considering that 315,000 New Yorkers have made this Bronx green space their final resting place, it’s no surprise that they’d bring some incredible stories to rest alongside them.
Woodlawn Cemetery & Conservancy dates back to the mid 1860s—a time when burials were outlawed in Manhattan, pushing cemeteries to spring up in the outer boroughs. Given Woodlawn’s location along train lines, it became a popular cemetery where Manhattanites could easily go to visit their lost loved ones, and it remains so today. Burials are still accepted, and there’s even a historic, gently used mausoleum for sale for $10 million (yes, just like in Succession). In addition to that HBO-level fun fact, here are five more secrets of Woodlawn Cemetery we learned on a tour with the cemetery’s coordinator of programming, Liz Hunter.
It’s the final resting place for many notable New Yorkers
On a walk through Woodlawn, you’ll definitely see names you recognize: Augustus D. Juilliard, Fiorello La Guardia, Angelica Van Buren, Herman Melville, Celia Cruz, Joseph Pulitzer, Nellie Bly, J.C. Penney, F.W. Woolworth and more.
You’ll also walk by names that you might not immediately recognize but who made major contributions that you’ll certainly have heard about: To name a few, Louis Marx, creator of Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots; Margaret Rudkin, founder of Pepperidge Farm; and U.S. Navy Admiral David Farragut who said “Damn the torpedoes!”
Woodlawn is home to incredible suffrage history
If you’ve seen the musical Suffs, then you know about Alva Vanderbilt Belmont, the wealthy woman who helped to finance the suffrage movement. She opened the Marble House, a place where women could meet to talk about politics and the suffrage movement. She even bought the Suffs matching outfits and banners for protests.
She also dedicated herself to creating a beautiful mausoleum as a final resting place for herself and her late husband Oliver Belmont. Inspired by their travels in France, she designed their mausoleum after the Chapel of Saint-Hubert in Amboise, carefully considering every detail. She had the stained glass windows covered in a gray tint so they’d look like old medieval windows. Guastavino tiles (the same kind found in Grand Central Terminal) make up the ceiling.
On the day of her funeral in 1933, her fellow suffragists lined up outside the mausoleum and carried purple-white-and-gold suffrage banners. Belmont’s original suffrage banner, now faded and tattered, hangs inside her mausoleum.
“Alva also changed the rules at Woodlawn,” Hunter says. “She wanted people to come and see her beautiful mausoleum that she built. So at one point, she’d hired a security guard who would sit inside the gate, inside the doors of the mausoleum and welcome guests to come and look inside.”
Though the interior is no longer open for public viewing, you can still stand outside of the beautiful mausoleum to pay tribute to Belmont and her legacy.
In addition to Belmont, several other suffragists are buried at Woodlawn, including Anna Bliss, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Katherine Duer Mackay and Carrie Chapman Catt.
Jazz icons have found a home there
Thousands of visitors each year descend upon Woodlawn’s Jazz Corner, a section of the cemetery where a variety of jazz artists are buried. Duke Ellington is at rest there, near to Miles Davis, Jackie McLean, Frankie Manning, Max Roach and Lionel Hampton.
Many of these stars have unique monuments. Ellington chose a spot under a beautiful linden tree; then Hampton wanted to be buried as close to Ellington as possible. That simple request began the Jazz Corner. On Davis’ headstone, you’ll see an etching of his song “Solar;” McLean’s bears an image of him playing the saxophone; and an image of Manning performing the Lindy Hop decorates his tombstone. At the grave of bebop drummer Max Roach, visitors often leave drumsticks as a tribute.
You can see the world’s first marriage equality sculpture
Back in 2002, when same-sex marriage was still illegal in the U.S., two artists took on the bold move of designing their own burial plot. The world’s first marriage equality sculpture, this three-ton marble sculpture by Patricia Cronin and Deborah Kass depicts the two women entwined in an embrace on a bed. When same-sex marriage became legal, they were one of the first couples to get married at city hall.
Eventually, Hunter said, there will be space for their cremains around the memorial.
Thirteen Titanic passengers are buried there
An Egyptian funeral barge makes up the final reseting place for Isidor and Ida Strauss, a wealthy older couple who died on the Titanic. Though they were offered places in lifeboats, Isidor wanted to give up his place to a younger man. Ida refused get in a lifeboat and leave Isidor behind. The last time they were seen is arm-in-arm of the deck of the ship listening to the music being played as the behemoth ship sank. Isidor’s remains were found, while Ida was lost at sea.
The Strausses became the inspiration for the older couple seen lying in bed during the movie version of Titanic.
In addition to Isidor and Ida, several other passengers of the Titanic are buried at Woodlawn; many were first-class passengers who were rescued and died later in life.
The New York Choral Society, a pioneering symphonic chorus committed to presenting diverse repertoire and innovative collaborations for the last 65 years will perform Voices of Light by Richard Einhorn. This performance, paired with the screening of the silent film classic The Passion of Joan of Arc, will take place on Friday, November 1, 2024, at 7:30 PM at Lincoln Center’s…