th floor at 711 Third Avenue.
“We’re pleased to welcome Ellington Management to 711 Third Avenue,” said Steven Durels, Executive Vice President and Director of Leasing and Real Property at SL Green. “This transaction comes on the heels of several recent new leases within our portfolio as leasing velocity increases due to tenants rapidly reentering the market now that vaccines are widely available, and companies announce plans to reboard employees back into the office.”
711 Third Avenue is located between 44th and 45th Streets, one block east of Grand Central Terminal. The building has a 165-car parking garage, has a platinum level Wired Score and received the ENERGY STAR label which designates it as one of the most efficient buildings nationwide.
Dine Out Maine: What to expect when you’re expecting (to visit Maine)
Restaurant people set expectations for diners this summer: In sum, be kind.
By Andrew Ross
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Margaret Murphy takes orders from regulars at the Brunswick Diner in this file photo from summer, 2020. Be patient with restaurant workers in the upcoming tourist season, say people in the industry, as there are not nearly enough workers to go around. Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer
My plumber, upon learning what I do for a living, grinned at me and posed a Sphinx-like question. “Do you know what do summer people like to do best when they get to Maine?” I did not. “They like to drive 15 miles an hour on Route 1 with their hazards on and book up every restaurant in the state. It’s a love-hate thing, but God bless ‘em,” he added with a chuckle.
Netflix won this several years ago, they re the only ones who have the scale and momentum to keep making these somewhat lunatic investments in programming, Diller, the chairman of IAC, said in an interview with Andrew Ross Sorkin. You cannot compete with the momentum, the scale, no one will ever be able to do that.
Legacy media have jumped into the streaming space in recent years to win back customers and strengthen their businesses. Disney, Comcast, ViacomCBS and AMC Networks have jumped on board to transition their aging television-focused businesses.
Most recently, AT&T announced a deal to combine its content unit WarnerMedia with Discovery to form a new media giant. The new media company could be worth well over $100 billion, and executives said the two companies already spend a combined $20 billion per year on content, including programming for their linear networks. AT&T said Discovery CEO David Zaslav will lead the new company.
West Point cadets pay tribute to Lexington native, late Army Capt. Drew Ross Ross was killed in combat in Afghanistan in 2018
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LEXINGTON, Va. – Honoring a local war hero, the actions of West Point cadets are keeping a local Army Captain’s legacy alive.
Army Capt. Andrew Ross, a Green Beret from Lexington, Virginia, served more than seven years in the military.
During his second overseas tour, Ross and two other men were killed in action in November 2018 when their vehicle was hit by an IED. He was serving with 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group (Airborne) in Afghanistan’s Ghazni Province.
Dine Out Maine: A once and future critic
What was, what is, what will be. Critic Andrew Ross ponders how to return to restaurant criticism after the pandemic convulsion.
By Andrew Ross
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The Korean BBQ Pork Nachos at Foulmouthed Brewing. Do these indicate critic Andrew Ross not-so-secret love of pork? Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer
Editor’s Note: This is the second of a two-part retrospective looking back on the previous few decades of Maine dining.
The Past (2016-20)
I can pinpoint the moment when I realized I was no longer “the new guy.” About a year into my time as the restaurant critic, a reader e-mailed me a terse message that seemed to incorporate both a Seinfeldian observation and an indirect rebuke: “You sure like to talk about pork, don’t you?”