Whoopi Goldberg promotes new memoir at 92NY

On May 6, legendary actress, comedian, and EGOT winner Whoopi Goldberg (née Caryn Johnson) appeared at 92nd Street Y to promote her new memoir, “Bits and Pieces.” Interviewed before a packed audience at the venue’s Kauffman Auditorium by award-winning playwright, television writer, producer, and novelist Adriana Trigiani, Goldberg opened up about the thing most important to her: family. Specifically, she discussed her memories of her mother Emma and brother Clyde and all they meant to her.

It’s clear that though Goldberg lost her mother and brother in 2010 and 2015, respectively, she still misses, perhaps even grieves, them. She shared that her mother kept an extremely neat home in the Chelsea-Elliott Houses where she grew up, and was an extraordinary person all around. Goldberg’s mother Emma started out as a nurse and pivoted to become one of the first teachers in the nation’s Head Start programs, which prepare children for school. 

“She became one of the great teachers for Head Start for kids,” Goldberg said. “It did amazing things for children.”

She also detailed some of her mother’s struggles, including with mental illness, and how they affected her. 

“I had to go through changes. My mother had a nervous breakdown. I was seven or eight and she disappeared from my life for two years.” Goldberg seemed to draw somewhat of a parallel between this experience with her mother and her own of raising her daughter as a single mom, working long days and often being away to build a career in Hollywood. “I know that most mothers would say let’s wait and it’ll come back around again, but I didn’t think that’s going to happen for me,” Goldberg revealed. 

Her daughter later opened up to her about her feelings around that decision. “My kid said ‘Hey, listen. I know when you left I got more than one pair of shoes. We ate, we did things, we went places. But I missed you.’ I said ‘Well, as strange as this is going to sound, I missed you too.’ And she said, ‘Not enough to stop what you were doing.’”

The advice she received from her mother even helps Goldberg navigate the challenges posed by today’s social media-dominated media landscape. “Social media is meant to f— up your day. Make you feel like you’re not enough. My mother always said, ‘Don’t let people throw you because people want to throw you. They want to make you uncomfortable.’ These people don’t know you and you give them the power to shut you down.”

Goldberg shared that she never attended high school but always believed in herself because of the confidence instilled in her at home. “The upbringing I had gave me the conditioning that I needed to never doubt that I was thinking smartly,” she said. 

As someone who once struggled with addiction, she was quick to add, however, that being “stoned” negatively impacted this otherwise steady self-assuredness.

Trigiani, whose love and respect for the comedian was evident throughout their conversation, called Goldberg her “heroine” and revealed that Goldberg got her through a rough time in her own life. Asked if she was always funny, Goldberg shared that she didn’t believe she was. 

“I don’t think I was funny in high school. But my mother and my brother and my aunt were funny,” she explained. “They were funny in the house, and whatever I have I stole from my mother and my brother and her cousin.” 

Whoopi added that she was entertained, as a child, by their imitations of the dialects from various people found in the environs of their Chelsea neighborhood. “They were doing ‘New York’ and they were irreverent. I wasn’t humorous, but people thought the stuff I was doing was funny so they labeled me as a comic.”

During the conversation, Goldberg displayed one of the best examples of how and why she has held steady as a sought-after celebrity, even after more than 40 years in the business. The famously picky eater did a five-minute long riff on the virtues (none) and flaws (too numerous to count) of food, setting them in the context of everything from candy stores to alien invasions.

Much of the conversation was centered around grief and the grieving process. Goldberg’s grieving process, she shared, was easier because of the relationship she had with her mother and brother while they were alive. She stated that after each died, she kept waiting for a big moment where she would be physically overwhelmed with the weight of it. “But that moment never came,” she said as if still surprised. “I didn’t understand why. And then like two weeks ago, I was like ‘Oh, I know why. It’s because you don’t have to.’ There was nothing left unsaid. They knew I knew how they felt about me. So there is none of that.”

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* This article was originally published here

This popular affordable grocery store just opened a location in Two Bridges

This popular affordable grocery store just opened a location in Two Bridges

Lower Manhattan residents, rejoice: affordable supermarket Brooklyn Fare Kitchen & Market just opened at 227 Cherry Street by Pike Street in Two Bridges, right where Pathmark used to be over a decade ago. 

You’ll find the massive, 25,500-square-foot, all-glass storefront at the base of luxury condo One Manhattan Square. Inside, the chain’s largest market ever is filled with both fresh produce and prepared foods, all at pretty decent prices.

We are beyond thrilled to be opening on the Lower East Side. Not only is it our first store on the East Side of Manhattan, it’s also our largest store to date,” said Moe Issa, Owner and Founder of Brooklyn Fare, in an official statement. “What is even better is that we are providing a much-needed service to the residents of the Lower East Side, and that’s just awesome: to be able to bring great food and grocery items at affordable prices to the neighborhoods in which we serve. That’s what Brooklyn Fare is all about, and that’s why we do what we do.”

Brooklyn Fare at One Manhattan Square
Photograph: Courtesy of One Manhattan Square

In addition to “traditional” grocery store products, you’ll also get to grab a cup of coffee from the on-site cafe, plus freshly made bread, sushi from a specialty counter and tons of frozen food. It’s basically the only market you’ll want to shop at when in the area.

But we don’t really need to sell you on the awesomeness that is Brooklyn Fare. Since first opening in NYC back in 2009, the market has garnered a pretty solid fanbase that has allowed the chain to set up a number of locations in the West Village, Hudson Yards, Lincoln Square and Downtown Brooklyn. 

If you don’t buy your groceries at the various shops, you have at the very least heard about the Michelin-starred restaurant that opened inside the Brooklyn location of the supermarket back in 2009 but now operates from the Hudson Yards address of the company at West 37th Street: Chef’s Table.

The debut of Brooklyn Fare in Two Bridges has been a long time coming: the Pathmark that was operating on site closed back in 2012 after thirty years of business so plenty of neighborhood folks have been complaining about the lack of proper shopping destinations in the area since then. 

It’s taken a lot of time, but we’re happy to see locals’ wishes come true.

* This article was originally published here

Council Member Shaun Abreu Honors Hubert T. Delany With Street Co-Naming In Harlem

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Council Member Shaun Abreu will host a street co-naming ceremony to commemorate civil rights icon Hubert T. Delany at the northeast corner of West 145th Street and Riverside Drive in Harlem this Saturday, May 11, 2024. Delany, the son of a former slave, was a trailblazer who graduated from the City College of New York…

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* This article was originally published here

This entire NYC neighborhood has turned into an art gallery

This entire NYC neighborhood has turned into an art gallery

Painter Sonya Sklaroff is known for turning NYC neighborhoods into art. And now an NYC neighborhood has transformed into a gallery of her creations. 

The new event, NoHo Art Nexus: Outside In, features Sklaroff’s paintings in 17 locations throughout Noho. The artworks are on view through May 28 at local stores, cafes, and bars in the neighborhood, making for a perfect DIY art crawl (keep scrolling for the full list).  

RECOMMENDED: The best museum exhibitions in NYC right now

Sklaroff’s oil-on-canvas works capture the dreamy dusk hours downtown. Buildings are silhouetted against darkening skies while colorful windows illuminate the scene and inspire curiosity. Who lives there in that Manhattan apartment? What are they doing inside? You’ll catch a glimpse of intimate everyday moments—a woman preparing for bed, a couple sharing a quiet moment, friends dining together.

The artist’s paintings invite viewers to stand outside and peer into private worlds. Now thanks to Art Nexus, the paintings also inspire New Yorkers to step inside local businesses they may have never experienced.

Participating businesses will offer maps and passports, so you can collect stamps along the way. Those who complete the artistic trail can enter to win prizes, including a signed catalog, prints, and other gifts. 

The NoHo Business Improvement District invited Sklaroff to transform the neighborhood into her own personal gallery for the month of May as a way to “invigorate the neighborhood with its unique charm.”

Sklaroff’s work captures the magic of NoHo.

“For over 50 years Noho has been a haven for artists inspired by the unique architecture and urban fabric of the neighborhood,” Chandler Forsythe, the nonprofit’s director of operations and community engagement says. “Sklaroff’s work captures the magic of NoHo.”  

In one work, titled “NoHo neighbors,” two water towers stand silhouetted against a vibrant blue evening sky while nighttime scenes unfold in an apartment building. In “Stained glass apartments,” an intricate iron-clad fire escape pops against a red dusk sky. 

Paintings on a wall.
Photograph: Courtesy of The NoHo Business Improvement District

The NYC-based Sklaroff has exhibited work across the U.S. and abroad. You may have seen her paintings featured on LinkNYC’s 4,000 digital kiosks across the city or heard her name in Sex and the City. Last year, she painted New Yorkers’ secrets

For her, New York City makes a perfect muse. 

“As dusk envelops the streets, my gaze drifts upwards, drawn to the striking silhouettes of New York City’s iconic architecture against the evening sky. Each window emits a vibrant glow, casting a kaleidoscope of colors in a mesmerizing dance. And within each illuminated pane lies a miniature world of human activity. From the warmth of shared meals to the solitude of reading or watching TV, these scenes unfold inside, hidden within the urban landscape,” she says. “Through my paintings of NoHo and beyond, I strive to capture these moments, inviting viewers into the lives of the strangers who occupy our collective metropolis. These anonymous faces populate our surroundings, at once familiar and enigmatic. As we look from the outside in, I imagine the stories of these strangers-yet-neighbors, embracing the anonymity of city life.”

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Here’s where to see her work this month: 

  • ATLA – 372 Lafayette St.
  • Away – 10 Bond St.
  • Bleecker Street Bar – 648 Broadway
  • Bond 07 by Selima – 7 Bond St.
  • Cozy’s Soup n Burger- 739 Broadway
  • The Evolution Store- 687 Broadway
  • Haven Spa – 250 Mercer St.
  • Il Buco Alimentari – 53 Great Jones St.
  • Lafayette – 380 Lafayette St.
  • LINES NYC – 302 Bowery
  • Little Market NYC – 637 Broadway
  • M&D Shapiro Hardware – 7 Great Jones St.
  • ORA Space – 9 E 4th St.
  • Rooq – 13 B E 4th St.
  • Sabah – 56 Bleecker St.
  • Slowear – 333 Lafayette St.
  • Wildlike – 49 Bond St.

* This article was originally published here

New YA fantasy novel inspired by Beyoncé’s music

Alabama born and raised author, screenwriter, director, and playwright LaDarrion Williams has given new meaning to the phrase carpe diem. Williams, who recently spoke to the AmNews in advance of his May 13 appearance at the 92nd Street Y (92NY), shared that he left his Alabama small town on a whim to strike out in pursuit of his lifelong dreams. “I was working at Taco Bell, depressed, and just wanted to get away. One night, my paycheck hit my direct deposit and I bought a $181 Southwest ticket. I’d never been on a plane before. It was a one-way ticket. I clicked to buy the ticket and I was like, ‘I guess I’m moving to LA!’”

Williams is promoting his soon-to-be-released YA Fantasy novel “Blood at the Root,” a book that appears to fulfill the dashed promises of the once highly anticipated film “The American Society of Magical Negroes (ASMN).” That story wasn’t about a Black Hogwarts as many assumed, but “Blood at the Root” in many ways, is. It chronicles the life of 17 year-old Malik as he tries to forget a traumatic past and begin a new life along with his younger foster brother. His journey brings him to a university, an HBCU in fact, that houses a community of people who, like him, harbor magical powers.

Williams recalls the flurry of activity among his peers when “ASMN” was initially announced. “That morning when I woke up my phone kept going off and there were all these texts and messages saying congratulations on the movie on Instagram and Tik Tok and what not. I was like, ‘Lord did they make my movie and not tell me? Or pay me?’” Williams was relieved, to say the least, when he realized “ASMN” was about something much different. “I was like, y’all, this ain’t my movie. This is not my story!”

Though Williams respects those involved with “ASMN,” the narrative isn’t something he is completely comfortable with, to the point that he decided not to see the film. “I’m at a point in my artistry where I want to consume something that’s going to uplift us though I’m not saying that story’s not uplifting for someone. But I can’t in my good conscience as a Black man and as a Black Fantasy writer who is out here fighting for my stories, go watch a movie where a Black character is only using his magic to help white people.”

Crushed hopes for the film were laid bare across social media after the trailer came out, the comments revealing, in no uncertain terms, the deep disappointment of many fantasy genre fans. “Black people are wanting to see us in a fantasy genre, because we have been excluded for years in the fantasy genre. Or we were only there as the sacrificial lamb. And so what people are really wanting and needing and what Hollywood and publishing needs to start realizing is that we want our own fantasy stories. We want our own Black magical stories.”

Williams’ plan for the story was originally as a film. In fact, the book was adapted from that now viral short film. “Blood at the Root wasn’t supposed to be a book. It was supposed to be a TV show. I wrote and I created a short film and the TV pilot. The reason I turned it into a book is because I had to pivot. Hollywood kept slamming their doors in my face.” His posts on X and TikTok have had tremendous engagement, including with popular existing trends like #BlackatHogwarts and #HBCUHogwarts. 

TV’s “Lovecraft Country” and music—Beyoncé’s music specifically—inspired Williams to write “Blood at the Root.” The song that propelled him was “Find Your Way Back,” the South African House  Music influenced track from “The Lion King: The Gift” album literally about reclaiming what one has lost. “It really sparked something for me,” Williams recalled. “Beyoncé created this beautiful story about a Black boy going from the Motherland all the way to here and the ancestry of it and I was like, I want to write that. That is going to be my mission.”

“Find Your Way Back” was also intensely personal for Williams. “I don’t know what that lady put in that song, but it really, it sparked something for me. It made me come to terms with not only myself but my childhood. My relationship with my father, my relationship with my mother, and my relationship with my hometown. We always talk about the inner child, but we never talk about the inner teenager because my teenage years were rough.”

Hippolyta’s (played by Aunjanue Ellis) mystical, galactic arc and the recreation of the events of the Tulsa Massacre as rendered in “Lovecraft Country” also catalyzed Williams’ writing of “Blood at the Root.” “She said I am—I am Hippolyta. I am.” Those are powerful words.”

Williams’ work contains some of the best examples of ways that popular entertainment can be lovingly referential, affirming, and uplifting. States Williams, “Those elements I took from “Lovecraft Country” and “Find Your Way Back” were like, yes, Blackness is magic. It’s Royal. It’s beautiful. It’s so badass! Beyoncé, thank you. Misha Green, the creator of “Lovecraft Country, Thank you.”

For more info, visit 

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/738959/blood-at-the-root-by-ladarrion-williams

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* This article was originally published here

Upstate chainlet Moonburger is bringing meat-free patties to NYC

Upstate chainlet Moonburger is bringing meat-free patties to NYC

vegetarian hamburgers—piled-high creations each made with a griddled Impossible patty, double onion, dill pickle, crunchy lettuce, special sauce and optional American cheese on a Schmidt’s potato rolloat milkshakes and “hot fries” (flavored with “a secret spice blend with a not-so-secret kick”). To make sure Moonburger’s offerings appealed to both veggievores and meat lovers alike, founder Jeremy Robinson-Leon put together a strong panel of culinary personalities to advice on the menu, including cookbook author Alison Roman, Bon Appétit editor Amiel Stanek and Strange Delight restaurateur Anoop Pillarisetti.

The team parlayed that patty popularity into a few more New York locations, including in New Paltz and Poughkeepsie. And now Moonburger is officially touching down in New York City, with a location set to open this July at 126 Bedford Avenue and North 10th Street in Williamsburg, Eater reports. 

And Brooklynites can expect all of the Moonburger menu favorites, which you can get a la carte or as a “Full Moon Combo” (classic cheeseburger, small fries and a soda.) Along with the main food options, popular extras like the brand’s homemade Cooper Sharp cheese sauce and dairy-free drinks like the MB Brownie Batter Shake (homemade chocolate ganache spun with Oatly milk) will likely be making the move to the big city. 

The various locations of Moonburger all sport a kitschy-fun space theme, so we’re hoping for something truly out of this world decor-wise for the Brooklyn outpost. Stay tuned!

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* This article was originally published here

Black talent shines in this year’s Tony noms

The nominations for the 77th Annual Tony Awards were announced and many Black folks are shining in the list of nominees. The Tony Awards will take place  on Sunday, June 16, live at the David H. Hoch Theater at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, from 8-11pm. A huge light has been turned on to “Hell’s Kitchen,” as the Alicia Keys musical has 13 nominations. Included in those nominations are best musical; best book of a musical—Kristoffer Diaz; best performance by an actress in a leading role in a musical—Maleah Joi Moon; best performance by an actor in a featured role in a musical—Brandon Victor Dixon; best performance by an actress in a featured role in a musical—Kecia Lewis. 

There are nominations for best choreography for Camille A. Brown; best costume design of a musical—Dede Ayite, who is actually nominated for three different productions: Along with “Hell’s Kitchen,” Ayite is up for best costume design of a play for both “Appropriate” and “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding.” “Hell’s Kitchen” is also nominated for best direction—Michael Greif; best scenic design of a musical—Robert Brill and Peter Nigrini; best sound design of a musical—Gareth Owen; Tom Kitt and Adam Blackstone for best orchestration; best performance by an actress for a featured role in a musical for Shoshana Bean; and best lighting design of a musical—Natasha Katz.

The beloved revival of the late Ossie Davis’ “Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch” received six impressive nominations including best revival of a play; best direction of a play—Kenny Leon; best performance by an actor in a leading role in a play—Leslie Odom Jr.; best performance by an actress in a featured role in a play—Kara Young; best scenic design of a play—Derek McLane; and best costume design of a play—Emilio Sosa.

“Jaja’s African Hair Braiding” received five Tony nominations for best play—Jocelyn Bioh; best direction of a play—Whitney White; best scenic design of a play—David Zinn; best costume design of a play—again, Dede Ayite; and best sound design of a play—Justin Ellington and Stefania Bulbarella.

“The Notebook” garnered a nomination for Dorian Harewood in the best performance by an actor in a leading role in a musical. In the musical, “The Outsiders” Joshua Boone is nominated for best performance by an actor in a featured role in a musical. In the musical “Suffs” Nikki M. James earned a nomination for best performance by an actress in a featured role in a musical. “Suffs” also earned a nomination for Paul Tazewell in best costume design of a musical.

When it came to plays, William Jackson Harper earned a nomination for best performance by an actor in a leading role in a play for his performance in “Uncle Vanya.” Quincy Tyler Bernstine is up for best performance by an actress in a featured role in a play for “Doubt: A Parable.”

A play which is quite powerful to experience and is also up for best revival of a play is “Appropriate” by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins.

The Black folks nominated in these categories delivered exceptional performances and displayed awe-inspiring talent. CBS, Channel 2 will run the production live and Paramount+ will have it on demand. This awards show always lets people see what Broadway has to offer, and right now that is certainly a lot. I’ll be at the awards covering it, and I hope you’ll be enjoying it at home.

For more info visit www.tonyawards.com

The post Black talent shines in this year’s Tony noms appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.

* This article was originally published here

It’s official: New York City rents are rising way faster than wages

It's official: New York City rents are rising way faster than wages

We obviously don’t need some groundbreaking study to know that living in New York has gotten way too expensive, but sometimes it’s nice to have some hard, cold data to back the claim up. 

According to a report by StreetEasy that analyzed extensive data from Zillow, rent increases in about half of major metro areas throughout the country have grown at a faster pace than wages, but New York takes the cake when it comes to disparities between the average person’s salary and how much their apartment is costing them on a monthly basis.

RECOMMENDED: This popular affordable grocery store just opened a location in Two Bridges

Among its many shocking but also not that shocking findings, the report found that NYC rents grew far faster than local wages—boasting the largest gap in the country as a whole. While wages here grew just 1.2% between 2022 and 2023, rent prices have increased seven times faster. 

The report attributes some of these disparities to surging demand for renting in New York with low vacancy rates, a situation that allows landlords to jack up prices and finding willing tenants.

That will hopefully soon change: last month, the local government approved legislation to combat dramatic rent increases and will allow tenants to challenge any escalation that surpasses 8.5% year to year, per Gothamist. Still, enforcement may be tricky.  

Back to the report: according to the outlet, upfront costs when looking for a home in New York reach an average of $10,500 because of extremely high broker fees, deposits and other factors. 

The news wasn’t all bad, though—if you don’t live here. In some cities, wages have actually increased faster than rent prices, including San Jose, Houston, Salt Lake City, Austin and Raleigh. 

Before you pack it up to try and make a life for yourself in North Carolina, though, it seems like the market is finally, albeit slowly, starting to moderate in some parts of the city. Shockingly, median asking rents in Manhattan for February 2024 dropped 4.6% compared to February 2023, according to StreetEasy. Even more shockingly, though, median prices in Queens have skyrocketed by 13.5% during the same time period, with competition being particularly rough in neighborhoods like Long Island City, Astoria and Sunnyside, according to the data. 

In conclusion, you’re not wrong: you’re not getting paid enough. 

* This article was originally published here

Sponsored Love: How Can Brands Use Custom Cream Boxes To Boost Sales?

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A single trip to a supermarket is enough to reveal the number of brands competing in the cosmetic cream segment. There are boxes upon boxes of creams, each waiting to be noticed and purchased. However, not all are lucky enough; some even have to head back to the brand’s warehouse. From a business point of…

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* This article was originally published here