Cincinnati Magazine
February 4, 2021
During the COVID-19 era, most of us have become better acquainted with takeout and the various things that can go wrong with it: the fraught moment when you sort out which dish belongs to who, what part of the order didnât go through, what sides and sauces get put where, and what has, inevitably, gotten spilled or smushed on the way home.
Photograph by Jeremy Kramer
I mention this because the dinners at Nada are by far the best packaged food I have ever received. Every container is labeled with a printed sticker, and every sauce is labeled not only with its own name, but with the name of the dish to which it belongs. Each dish comes in the exact right container: a circular dish that perfectly fits the jalapeño cornbread, a rather grand golden platter for the Peruvian chicken, paper bags for the fries and tortillas (so they donât self-steam and get soggy), and a separate bottle for the Nadarita, with instructions to serve it over i
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Cincinnati Magazine
January 7, 2021
This summer, The Christ Hospital surgeon Gina Maccarone, M.D., opened a new med spa on the hospitalâs main and Liberty Township campuses. Designed to combine medical expertise and The Christ Hospital safety with restorative body treatments, the spa is a new frontier in the âscience behind beauty, skincare, and overall wellness,â says Maccarone.
Gina Maccarone, M.D
Photograph by Jeremy Kramer
Iâm a surgeon [but] Iâve always had an interest in doing aesthetics. I pitched to the hospital the scenario where I would continue my role as a general surgeon but then have a side department where weâd offer aesthetic treatments. They had never embarked on this kind of project before so it took time to figure out the logistics.
Cincinnati Magazine
January 7, 2021
Subito is a term usually used in classical music, indicating that something happens suddenly for example, when a section becomes abruptly loud or soft. In the case of this new restaurant in the new Lytle Park Hotel, the name is appropriate; things certainly changed suddenly. On the cusp of opening in March, the pandemic rose to its spring peak, and Subito had to quickly hit the pause button. In the three months before the restaurant finally opened in June, Assistant Manager Kyle Goebel says the team continued to refine its recipes and focus on training its staff.
Courtesy of DreamWorks Animation; Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images; Matt Kennedy/Lionsgate; Courtesy of Nicole Dove/MGM; Courtesy of Amazon Studios;Courtesy of Apple TV+
As COVID-19 shuttered productions, Paramount had no movies shooting, but Disney had a half-dozen. Apple and Amazon went on buying sprees, while MGM bid on big-ticket packages and Sony fast-tracked movies with minimal casts.
This year, studios threw out their playbooks. Leadership structures were overhauled, eight-figure deals came out of virtual film festivals, executives navigated COVID-19 production halts, and the crumbling theatrical window was shattered.
One studio s delayed theatrical title became another studio s new original streaming film. While some focused on remounting pipeline productions, others fast-tracked new productions that allowed for contained stories with minimal casts. Big-ticket packages were purchased with the hope of a future return to theaters and franchise films rejiggered to allow for
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