Since the beginning, creatives, performers and entertainers alike have called New York City home. Nuyorican Poets Cafe is one of the city’s many cultural cornerstones that fosters this visionary environment. And now, it will shut down for three whole years to undergo $24 million worth of renovations.
Located on East 3rd Street between Avenues A and B, the cafe wasn’t always in this former tenement building. Before the founders purchased the space in 1981, Nuyorican Poets Cafe started in a humble East Village apartment living room nearly a decade prior. It was allegedly here that the action of snapping to applaud poets first began. It’s even one of our Secret NYC-approved local businesses!
“It’s the birthplace of a cultural movement, it’s something very meaningful to Puerto Ricans from Loisaida, from the Bronx, from everyone from that diaspora,” said local Councilmember Carlina Rivera.
The entire renovation project will take three years to complete. Once finished, art lovers can expect a new performance space on the first floor, an refurbished electrical and mechanical system, new elevators, a changing room in the basement and additional performance and office spaces on the higher floors, shared a spokesperson for the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs.
The renovation is years in the making, as the cafe officially turns 50 this year. Supposedly, the cafe will host pop-ups and collaborations during the duration of the renovation.
To go out with a massive celebration and fundraising event, Nuyorican Poets Cafe will host a costume ball on October 31st.
“All these wonderful places are inviting us to bring the work, so it’s really not an ending at all. It’s the beginning of something totally new,” Caridad De La Luz, the cafe’s executive director, told The City. “In the long run if we want this place to keep going for the next 50 years it needs so much,” she said. “Pour some love back into the space for all it’s given to us and to prepare it for the next 50 years.”
When Dean Obeidallah and Maysoon Zayid hosted the first New York Arab American Comedy Festival shortly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, they expected it to be just a one-time event. Now, the annual show is celebrating 20 years with a continued dedication to cultural expression and fostering understanding through laughter.
For two decades, the festival has worked to combat negative portrayals of Arab Americans and Muslims, while showcasing a powerhouse lineup of comedians. This year’s festival runs November 16-19 at two iconic NYC venues.
When the festival started in 2003, the organizers had to convince their actor friends that they could be comedians. Some venues didn’t even want them to use the word “Arab.”
“Now it’s so internally diverse—you have diversity in religion, you have diversity in age, we have LGBTQ people, we have women wearing hijab, we have women who are going full Kardashian,” Zayid tells Time Out New York. “You can never see this caliber of comedians all on one show. These are all headliners.”
You have diversity in religion, you have diversity in age, we have LGBTQ people, we have women wearing hijab, we have women who are going full Kardashian.
Zayid and Obeidallah met through comedy decades ago.
For Obeidallah, comedy wasn’t on his path, though he always enjoyed making people laugh. While working as a lawyer (and hating it), he tried participating in the New Jersey Bar Association’s Funniest Lawyer Competition and soon decided to pursue standup comedy.
Zayid, who calls herself “a total drama queen,” felt inspired to explore standup comedy. While taking classes, her teacher encouraged her to mention her disability (cerebral palsy), and that has led to her extremely powerful work—and to making the festival a deeply inclusive and accessible event.
“A year after I started comedy, 9/11 happened,” Zayid said. “We got thrown into this, like ‘we’re public enemy number one.’ Let’s make people laugh.”
Obeidallah wanted the festival to “counter the negative narrative.”
“We’re two years after 9/11, here are a bunch of Arab Americans doing comedy and telling their own story through a very American form of art—standup comedy,” he said.
The show found success, and over the years, it’s grown and evolved.
“Internally, the comedy has evolved over 20 years mirroring what the community’s gone through,” he explained. “Even myself, pre-9/11, I really identified as a white guy,” Obeidallah explains. “September 10, I went to sleep a white guy; September 11, I woke up an Arab because America changed. The very first jokes I did after 9/11 about being Arab were just how everything was changing around us.
“The early years were very much about, ‘Hey, we’re just like you. Don’t beat us up, like literally don’t attack us. We’re like you, we’re Americans. We were born here, some of us have an accent, some don’t,’” he continued.
The 2023 New York Arab American Comedy Festival
For the 20th anniversary celebration, expect four nights of laughs. The first three nights, November 16, 17, and 18, run at Gotham Comedy Club. There’s a Comedy Bazaar on November 16 with 20 comics in under 90 minutes; The Haram Show on November 17; and Arab All Stars on November 18. The show closes on November 19 at Town Hall on Broadway with a packed lineup of comedy veterans, plus some special surprise guests. Get tickets here.
Performers include Eman Morgan (Showtime, Netflix, Funny or Die); Atheer Yacoub (Comedy Central Special, Gotham Comedy Live); Mohanad Elshieky (Comedy Central, Conan, Lemonade’s “I’m Sorry” podcast, “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee”); Dave Merheje (Comedy Network, MTV Live, CBC, and co-starring in “Ramy”); Aron Kader (Axis of Evil Comedy Tour, “The Muslims are Coming!” documentary); Laura Laham (Best of the Fest in 2022’s Burbank Comedy Festival); and Nataly Aukar (Netflix Is a Joke Festival, opened for Ramy Youssef, Hasan Minhaj and Gad El Maleh).
Of course, Zayid and Obeidallah will also perform. You may know Zayid from her record-setting TED Talk “I’ve got 99 Problems… Palsy is Just One” and as a regular on CNN, MSNBC, OWN and General Hospital. Obeidallah is known for “The Dean Obeidallah Show” on SiriusXM radio as well as his appearances on MSNBC, CNN, Comedy Central’s “Axis of Evil,” and the award-winning documentary “The Muslims are Coming!”
We can embrace a true diversity and show our fellow Americans something they’ve never seen before.
When they founded the festival, part of the motivation was to encourage Arab communities to consider going into the arts. At first, they didn’t have enough comedians, but now they have so many they have to turn away applicants. The organizers work to nurture young comedians, ensuring the longevity of the festival for years to come.
“It’s not a religious festival—there are Arabs who are Christian and Jewish and Muslim and Buddhists and atheist, it’s everything. It’s an ethnicity,” Obeidallah said. “We can embrace a true diversity and show our fellow Americans something they’ve never seen before. This true diversity that tells our story through comedy. It’s funny, you’re going to really enjoy it and you’re going to laugh a lot and learn something at the same time.”
Halloween is almost in full force, and you’ll surely want to celebrate at Pumpkin Worldthis year. Featuring thousands of beautifully carved pumpkins in all shapes and sizes, the autumnal extravaganza has everything from spooky creations, to whimsical wonderlands, to adorable “Gourdies.”
The unforgettable experience will be filled with thrills, delicious seasonal bites, live performances, festive music and much more! You’ll have to act fast, however, since Pumpkin World will close its doors on October 31st.
Pumpkin World is packed with seasonal surprises around every bend, from Halloween photo ops to an augmented reality scavenger hunt. The experience even features expert pumpkin carvers both at workstations and atop the main stage, unveiling all of the hard work that goes into creating these jaw-dropping creations.
Open from now until Halloween on October 31st, Pumpkin Worldinvites you to enjoy music, dancing, food, and more than 5,000 hand-carved real and forever pumpkins. If you’re still on the fence, take a look at these stellar reviews from visitors who have already checked it out:
“Very good, amazing carvings. All of my family enjoyed Pumpkin World! It is the perfect Halloween plan – different, fun and accessible.” Mike J.
“I took my son and we had a great time! It happened to be a full moon when we went, so it definitely added to the spookiness of the event. The jack o’lanterns were all beautiful! Great food and merchandise vendors. Awesome and plenty of photo ops! Definitely worth the visit.” Kendar L.
“Great experience! So glad I picked the 6:30 time slot – perfect time for families and photo ops/pumpkin patch. Once it was dark, we did the walk and it was so much fun. Such a nice location. Clean bathrooms and plenty of parking.” Jenny J.