Brooke Lefferts
Michael Kors is a top designer, of course, but he’s also a confirmed theater geek. He celebrated his love for the performing arts as he marked his 40th anniversary as a designer this week, with a digital show that showcased the razzle-dazzle of Broadway.
“Honestly even just talking about it makes me feel joy,” he said in live comments from Times Square Tuesday, about the experience of sitting in a Broadway theater. Then, in a show taped several nights earlier, his models sashayed down a runway that was actually West 45th Street, in the heart of Manhattan’s still-shuttered theater district.
City preps for pandemic-era snowstorm De Blasio foresees post-Christmas shutdown Candidates get matching funds
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It snows every year, but there’s never been a year like 2020. So with up to a foot of snow expected in New York City starting later today,
Beleaguered restaurants are girding for another blow, just days after they were required to shut down indoor dining. Under the city’s snow alert, they’ve
been ordered to stop outdoor dining in roadways today as of 2 p.m. While the closure order will be lifted when the storm has passed, restaurant owners
Restaurant Workers Rally In Times Square To Save Indoor Dining
I’ve covered a lot of protests in my day, protests demanding all kinds of things, but Tuesday was the first time I’ve ever attended a protest where people were simply demanding the right to go to work at jobs they already have.
In Times Square Tuesday morning, an industry tired of being a scapegoat for hypocritical politicians who are destroying their livelihoods begged for the right to work. The right to feed their families, to buy their kids Christmas presents.
As one speaker put it, first in Spanish then in English, “We are tired of being the guinea pig of the government.”