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HBO & House of the Dragon To Bring Limited-Time Activations To NYC This Week

As we await for season 2 of HBO’s House of the Dragon to debut this Sunday (June 16), there’s been a full NYC takeover that’s even seen some banners fly across the Big Apple! Whether you’re #TeamGreen or #TeamBlack, there’s plenty of ways for fans to support their side as many NYC businesses are offering collaborative specials leading into the new season. Check out all of the amazing limited-time activations that are happening this week…including food and drink specials and interactive experiences.

1. The Empire State Building

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 10: Empire State Building Dragon Photo Opp at the The Empire State Building on June 10, 2024 in New York City. (
Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Empire State Realty Trust)

From now until June 18, the Empire State Building is inviting fans to experience a House of the Dragon takeover…and a chance to choose their alliance. With the World’s Most Famous Building choosing allegiance to Team Green, fans are welcome to come take a photo on the iconic Iron Throne as well as experience Zynga’s “Game of Thrones: Legends” mobile game and transport themselves into the “Game of Thrones” universe. Plus, all 21+ guests will get to try out a House of the Dragon-inspired dragon fruit sorbet with tequila and orange liquor, included in admission. Learn more about the massive ESB takeover and how to book a spot here!

2. Gray’s Papaya

Source / Gray’s Papaya

Pledge your allegiance to the Rightful Queen at Gray’s Papaya, who’s serving up the Dragonstone Dog from now until June 16. The special menu item “topped with a little extra dragon heat” is their classic hotdog topped with a spicy jalapeño crunchy topper.

Where: 2090 Broadway

3. Leon’s Bagels

Source / Leon’s Bagels

Get your House of Dragons-themed bagel fix at Leon’s Bagels, where they’re serving a funky green Bacon, Aegon & Cheese bagel through June 16! It comes served on a green bagel and topped with Zab’s hot sauce for $13. You can also upgrade it to a Green Council Breakfast for $2 more by adding a matcha (iced or hot)

Where: 169 Thompson St Suite B

4. Roberta’s

Source / Roberta’s

Roberta’s is #TeamBlack and from now until June 16, you can try out their A Slice of the Seven Kingdoms, which is a pizza topped with smoked mozzarella, calabrian chili, basil, and tellicherry pepper. It’s happening at both of their locations this week!

Where: 261 Moore St & 6 Grand St, Brooklyn (2 separate locations)

5. Mile End Deli

Source / Mile End Deli

Mile End Deli is offering a trio of special menu items this week, including an All Must Cheese burger which is deemed “a cheeseburger worth raising your banner for.” There’s also some Team Green Fire Poutine, which are hand cut fries topped in cheese curds, smoked chicken, salsa verde, and cilantro. And for dessert, there’s Valyrian Cheesecake…served with some tasty allegiance badges.

Where: 97A Hoyt St, Brooklyn

6. Murray’s Bagels

Source / Murray’s Bagels

For our bagel fans supporting #TeamBlack, stop by Murray’s Bagels and order the Dragonstone’s Delight, a midnight everything bagel with smoked lox, kairn scottish salmon, a achemear of plain creem cheese, beefsteak tomatoes, red onions, and black tobiko “Dragon Egg” caviar. It’s available through June 16.

Where: 500 6th Ave

7. John’s of Bleecker Street

Source / John’s of Bleecker Street

Feast on Vhagar’s Pie at John’s of Bleecker Street, which is a pie of mozzarella, cherry peppers, pepperoni, garlic, and red pepper! It even comes served in a limited-edition House of Dragons-themed box! It’s available on their special menu until June 16.

Where: 278 Bleecker St

8. Ray’s

Source / Ray’s

Lower East Side staple Ray’s is serving a speciality cocktail this week in honor of the Season 2 launch, dubbed the Team Black Targa-Ray-Ta…a twist on Ray’s Marga-Tay-Ta paying homage to House Targaryen. It’s tequila, lime, blackberries and thyme, and it’ll run you $18.

Where: 177 Chrystie St

9. The Flower Shop

Source / The Flower Shop

The Flower Shop is serving up a #TeamGreen cocktail called the Team Green Targarita...consisting of mezcal, cucumbers, fresh lime with fiery jalapenos and a dragon burnt lime wheel. It’s available this week and will cost you $16!

Where: 107 Eldridge St

10. Citi Field / New York Mets

Source / Citi Field

The New York Mets are hosting House of the Dragon Night on Friday, June 14 against the San Diego Padres! Fans can purchase themed ticket packages for the game which include collectibles like a limited-edition t-shirt and access to take a photo on the Iron Throne! Learn more here.

Where: Citi Field

The post HBO & House of the Dragon To Bring Limited-Time Activations To NYC This Week appeared first on Secret NYC.

* This article was originally published here

Union Square will debut its first-ever Night Market next month

Union Square will debut its first-ever Night Market next month

The Union Square Greenmarket is already a sunny-day staple for New Yorkers and now the lively park and public plaza is going to be taking over your evenings, too, with a brand-new night market set to debut this July. 

RECOMMENDED: Here are all the NYC night markets to indulge in this year, from vegan food to Latin faves

As part of the Union Square Partnership’s annual Summer in the Square series—weekly outdoor programming that includes free movie screenings, fitness classes, CityPickle courts, family-friendly activities and more—Union Square will host its first-ever Night Market during summer evenings beginning in July. The open-air market will run for four Thursdays at the park’s South Plaza, starting July 11 and stretching through August 1. It will be presented by Urbanspace, the same folks who puts on the square’s Holiday Market each year, so you already know that they know what they’re doing. 

Though a full food vendor lineup is still to come (watch this space!), the Union Square Night Market by UrbanSpace will feature the tasty wares of 20 independent and local vendors. The nearby UrbanSpace Union Square food hall boasts tasty food options like Playa Bowl smoothies, Bobwhite Counter fried chicken, Summer Salt’s Baja-style tacos, Casa Toscana’s focaccia sandwiches and more, so we’d be surprised if one or more of those don’t pop up in the Night Market lineup. 

And the Night Market is just one of many new activities and activations happening in Union Square in the coming weeks, from new outdoor art pieces—including an interactive sculpture that wants you to spell out the word “LOVE”, a gorgeous 7,500-square-foot Talisa Almonte mural stretching across 14th Street and free subway-station art courtesy of The Whitney Museum—to zany events, like the chance to meet the viral Cheeseball man in person at the park this Friday.

* This article was originally published here

Rev. James M Lawson, Jr., bellwether of nonviolence in the civil rights movement

An iconic stalwart and a progenitor of nonviolence in the civil rights movement, the Rev. James Lawson, Jr. who inherited a Methodist ministry from his father and grandfather, died on June 9 in Los Angeles, Calif. from cardiac arrest. He was 95.

Rev. Lawson’s deep immersion in nonviolence that he learned during his study in India was instrumental in giving Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. the ballast he needed during the turbulent sixties and the struggle for civil rights. His teaching and particularly his brilliance as a tactician were indispensable for a cadre of activists such as John Lewis, James Bevel and Diane Nash, to name but a few.

He was born on September 22, 1928 in Uniontown, Pennsylvania to Philane May Cover and James Morris Lawson, Sr., the sixth of nine children and was raised in Massillon, Ohio. Given his lineage and connection to the Methodist church, a ministry license he acquired in 1947, while still in high school, was inevitable.  

At Baldwin Wallace College in Berea, Ohio, Lawson studied sociology. When he was drafted to serve in the U.S. military, he resisted and was convicted of evasion. He was sentenced to two years in prison, serving 13 months before returning to college to earn his degree.  After becoming a member of the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), he joined the CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), all of which prepared him for his missionary trip to India, to study the ideas and practice of Mahatma Gandhi.  

Upon his return to the States in 1956, he enrolled at Oberlin College’s Graduate School of Theology. It was there that he was formally introduced to Dr. King who a year later urged him to move to the south, convincing him of his uniqueness and how vitally important an asset he would be to the evolving movement. Lawson heeded the request and moved to Nashville, where he attended Vanderbilt University and began teaching the tactics of nonviolence, incorporation with the Nashville Christian Leadership Conference as well as an affiliate of SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference).  Through these entities he began launching workshops at selected churches in Nashville.

“In 1960, intensive role-playing and discussions among Lawson, John Lewis, C.T. Vivian, Diane Nash, Bernard Lafeyette, and others in the Nashville student movement helped to launch sit-ins at lunch counters, to spark mass marches, and to fill the jails in an attempt to desegregate downtown Nashville,” Michael Honey wrote in the Introduction of Lawson’s book Revolutionary Nonviolence: Organizing for Freedom (2022). One of the significant developments of this activism was the creation of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

In February 1960, with the sit-in underway at the Woolworth’s stores in Greensboro, North Carolina, Lawson and several other activists were arrested, but their action proved pivotal in desegregating several lunch counters. Subsequently, these activities led to his being expelled from Vanderbilt. Such an expulsion came as a result of misleading stories published in the Nashville Banner newspaper.  This action was supported by the Chancellor Harvie Branscomb who later regretted that he did not delay the decision until it was reviewed by a committee at least for three months until Lawson’s graduation.

After the initial wave of sit-ins, Lawson strategized with the students for a second advance of Freedom Rides from Alabama in which he joined. When they arrived at the whites-only waiting room they were arrested. They refused the bail payment offered by the NAACP, choosing to wait for trial. In September 1961, President Kennedy ordered that passengers be allowed to sit anywhere. A year later, Lawson played a critical role in uniting Dr. King and Rev. Bevel, with them agreeing to set aside their differences and work together. One of the consolations was Bevel’s appointment as SCLC’s Director of Direct Action and Director of Nonviolent Education.

In 1962, he was the pastor of Centenary Methodist Church in Memphis; six years later when the sanitation workers began striking for higher wages and union recognition, Lawson served as chair of the strike committee and it was he who extended the invitation for Dr. King to speak in Memphis where he delivered his famous “Mountaintop” and speech was killed the following day.

He became pastor of Holman United Methodist Church in Los Angeles in 1974 and remained there until his retirement in 1999. Meanwhile, his commitment to civil rights never wavered with involvements in the labor movement, civil liberties, gay and reproductive rights. His activities included media formats where his radio and television helped promote social and human rights issues.

When Vanderbilt University sponsored a three-day Freedom Ride commemorative program in 2007 Lawson participated.  A year before this event, during a graduation ceremony, the university apologized for its treatment of him and he later returned to teach at the college. His papers were donated to Vanderbilt in 2013. For several years he served as a visiting scholar at California State University Northridge (CSUN), where he taught a semester-long course on nonviolence.

He was part of a team at the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict conducted an eight-day seminar on civil resistance facilitated by Lawson in 2013 and 2014. A class Lawson taught inspired UCLA students to publish Nonviolence and Social Movements, a book that focused on the principles of nonviolence and social change that Lawson taught. Awards and commendations flowed ceaselessly to him for his tireless advocacy for civil and human rights, and some of this remarkable life was captured in the film The Butler and he was the subject of the film “Love and Solidarity: Rev. James Lawson and Nonviolence in the Search for Workers Rights,” bJamesy Michael Honey.

The post Rev. James M Lawson, Jr., bellwether of nonviolence in the civil rights movement appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.

* This article was originally published here

Mayor Adams Highlights Public Space Improvements With New Chief Public Realm Officer

The #1 source in the world for all things Harlem.

 New York City Mayor Eric Adams today released a new report highlighting capital improvements and policy changes the Adams administration has made. They show the changes made and continues to make to improve the public realm over the last year, following his appointment of the city’s first-ever chief public realm officer, Ya-Ting Liu, as he delivered on a…

The post Mayor Adams Highlights Public Space Improvements With New Chief Public Realm Officer appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

These digital ID cards just made New York travel way easier

These digital ID cards just made New York travel way easier

Navigating JFK or LaGuardia Airport just got a bit easier: Governor Kathy Hochul announced this week that the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles has launched the New York Mobile ID, a secure digital version of a state-issued driver license, learner permit or ID on a smartphone. And, yes, the new form of mobile identification will be accepted by The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) at participating checkpoints nationwide. 

RECOMMENDED: Everything you need to know about the new ID card all New Yorkers need to travel

First thing’s first: yes, you’re still going to need to have a license, permit, or non-driver ID card issued by the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles. But you can now freely download the secure Mobile ID app on IOS and Android devices through Google Play or the App Store, upload photos of the front and back of your physical card as well as a selfie of yourself, and then use the digital ID in lieu of your physical photo ID and boarding pass at TSA security checkpoints. The Mobile ID has already been approved for use at nearly 30 participating airports across the country, including all terminals at LaGuardia and John F. Kennedy airports. 

“We’re thrilled to give New Yorkers access to this cutting-edge technology which provides convenience and added security for Mobile ID users and those who accept it,” Governor Hochul said in a statement. “Not only will New Yorkers be able to quickly display their IDs, but they will have control over the personal information they share.”

Cutely called “MiD,” the free digital identification card will be unlocked through FaceID, TouchID, or a 6-digit PIN that you set up and will be registered to a user’s phone number; data like date of birth and home addresses can be kept private. 

“Digital credentials are the future of identity verification, and New York is proud to be among the States leading this innovation in partnership with the TSA,” said DMV Commissioner Mark J.F. Schroeder, per a press release. “This is an exciting way to prove who you are without having to dig through your wallet or purse to find your physical document. Rather than handing over your physical ID with lots of personal information, the Mobile ID gives you greater control over what personal data you share, making it both more convenient and much safer for you,” he said.

Outside of air travel, the DMV is currently working with various businesses, organizations, associations and state government partners to expand the scope of the New York MiD. 

* This article was originally published here