Categories
Culture Fashion Featured

Destination Tomorrow and Dominique Jackson Honored at Coach Signature Ball

On Sunday night, Coach honored model, activist, and FX Pose cast member Dominique Jackson at the Coach Signature Ball 2018. Jackson was honored for her work with Destination Tomorrow, a Bronx-based community organization. Destination Tomorrow works to empower those that identify as trans and gender non-conforming, as well as the LGBTQ youth and members of the House and Ballroom community. This important organization prepares these people for a better tomorrow

PC: Hunter Murphy

 

SLAY THE RUNWAY

The evening celebrated Ballroom Culture with two categories. The Fierce and Feminine Pride performance invited all genders to showcase their signature move and ‘let it all out’.  In The Walking Wonders, participants were invited to “walk like a model, serve like a legend, and slay it like an icon.”   

Notables from places such as the House of Balenciaga, the House of Revlon, and the House of Ninja, sealed the deal on the Coach runway with their supermodel poses. 
DESTINATION TOMORROW

To learn more about this organization, visit http://destinationtomorrow.org/.

@coach
@dominquet.a.r.jackson
 https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=774879254
@poseonfx 
Categories
Featured

Santa Claus Sighting at Brookfield Place

Santa Claus Sighting Downtown at Brookfield Place

Brookfield Place is hosting Santa, you are all invited. Take advantage of this holiday photo opportunity. Be sure to visit Brookfield Place there is something for everyone. It’s all about the holiday’s this time of year. There’s magic in the air, especially when there is a Santa Claus Sighting. Stop in for shopping, dining, and ice skating all right here in Lower Manhattan.

 

The word is out that there has been a Santa Claus Sighting. With the holidays coming quickly, there are many short cuts to be found in Lower Manhattan. Parents take advantage, with several ways to register for a photo of your children and Santa. Santa Claus is for all the children throughout the world, have you been naughty or nice? Santa and his elves, are working very hard in his workshop at the North Pole making sure that each little boy and girl has just the present they wished for.

Be sure to create lasting photo memories with the jolly man in red! Santa Claus sighting at Santa’s winter wonderland features a special children’s activity center, and is the place for everyone to capture the magic of the holidays while shopping and dining at Brookfield Place. See below for special hours for your furry friends!

THREE EASY WAYS TO REGISTER FOR SANTA
(Choose 1 option)

1) Book ahead & skip the line using the Ritual app starting November 17! You can schedule your appointment day and time up to a week in advance.
2) Check-in on-site for an appointment that day and select the time you would like to visit Santa. Available for same-day appointments only.
3) Walk-ins are accepted. Weekdays are the best time for walk-ins.

HOURS:
Monday – Friday, 12 – 8pm
Saturdays, 10am – 8pm
Sundays, 10am – 6pm
Dec. 24, 10am – 4pm

Location: 230 Vesey Street (Brookfield Place)

 

Ages: All

Fee: Free Admission
Photo’s: Package Options

Special hours for you and your four-legged friends!
Sunday, Dec 3, 6:30 – 7:30pm
Sunday, Dec 10, 6:30 – 7:30pm
*Small dogs under 25lbs only. Dogs must be carried or in a carrier at all times with the exception of service animals.

NY Waterway promotion: 
$5 off packages A or B for NY Waterway riders with promo code or voucher through December 10.
PLUS Kids under 12 ride free!  Details here.
Redeem on-site only, not to be combined with any other offer.

To learn more and register, please visit the website HERE

Categories
Events Fitness Health

A Taste of Tennis with Citi and W Hotels

Last night, Citi and the W Hotels hosted A Taste of Tennis in anticipation of the US Open, which starts next week.

The event attracted tennis stars like Venus Williams, tennis enthusiasts, and chefs from some of NYC’s top restaurants. Guests dined on sushi from Morimoto, truffles from Davio’s, and burgers from 5 Napkin Burger.

LG SIGNATURE showcased some of their best new technology and just when you thought you had seen it all, there was virtual reality tennis. Poised on Centre Court, you were serving for the match against virtual tennis stars. Citi literally transported attendees to a world of tennis, food, and music.

Venus Williams showcased her cooking skills as she and chef Jonathan Waxman served up a culinary ace. And as if that wasn’t enough, Etihad Airways teamed up with Royce Leather to create personalized luggage tags. Game, set and Match.

Categories
Events Living

Downtown TripPicks: July 10 – July 17

Trip.com is an innovative planning tool that tailors recommendations for places to stay, eat and play to your specific tastes. It also allows you to share your great experiences with people who have the same interests as you; people in your “tribes.” Trip.com’s TripPicks This Week feature empowers you to discover and take advantage of great events, openings and exhibits throughout the city each week.

Here are some exciting events and sites to check out this week in Downtown New York, courtesy of Trip.com. Visit their website or download the app for more upcoming events.

Weekend Pool Party

Every weekend, the fabulous James Hotel hosts JIMMY Summer Pool Parties. Starting at 3pm, the seasonal rooftop bar and pool open to the public.  Stop by to take in the views, enjoy a drink and take a dip. FREE

Where: James Hotel (SoHo)
When: Saturdays-Sundays at 3pm

City of Water Day

This Saturday, let the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance help you discover New York’s waterfront. FREE and with waterfront locations throughout the 5 boroughs, activities include kayaking, canoeing, rowing, paddling fishing and more. A day for the whole family, there will be boat tours, food, music and plenty of hands-on water fun for the kiddies. FREE

Where: Check site for complete list of locations
When: Saturday, July 15 from 10 am-4 pm

Billion Bubble Party

Billions of bubbles will be burst at this bubble party, and that’s not metaphorical… bring your own bubble making paraphernalia and let them loose. FREE

Where: Washington Square Park (Greenwich Village)
When: Saturday, July 15 from 1-3pm

LGBTQ Arts Fest

The Fresh Fruit Festival is a celebration of LGBTQ art and culture. The multidisciplinary arts festival features performance art, dance, theatre, video, film, spoken word, graphic arts and music. The goal of the festival is to fight intolerance by showcasing the various aspects of the LGBTQ experience from emerging and established artists. Tickets start at $18.

Where: The Wild Project (East Village), 195 E 3rd Street, New York, NY  10009
When: Monday, July 10 to Sunday, July 23 (check site for times)

Categories
Events News

Museum of Jewish Heritage To Celebrate 20th Anniversary

This year, the Museum of Jewish Heritage celebrates its 20th anniversary. In doing so, the museum have put together a great calendar for the upcoming months and continue “to educate people of all ages and backgrounds about the broad tapestry of Jewish life in the 20th and 21st centuries—before, during, and after the Holocaust.”

Downtown sat down with the Museum’s CEO and President Michael Glickman for a talk about the Museum of Jewish Heritage, its upcoming exhibitions and a few questions about Glickman himself, inside and outside the museum.

Photo courtesy of John Halpern

How did you wind up working with the Museum of Jewish Heritage? Did you know people working there?

Michael Glickman: I spent a decade working in the Jewish cultural world and I was quite familiar with the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. When the presidency of the Museum became available, I found the opportunities and challenges that surrounded the position to be incredibly interesting and thrilling.

Had you been to the museum before taking the job? Had you spent a lot of time in Lower Manhattan?

MG: I had been to the Museum many times for different exhibitions and programs. And, for a period of time, until September 11, 2001, I worked on Rector Street for a city agency.

Do you have any goals for the museum? Is there something that you would like to see happen?

MG: The Museum is a remarkable institution, unique to this city, as we present the history of the Holocaust. We are working hard to find innovative ways to tell the stories of individuals that capture the attention of a culturally sophisticated audience and hope to grow our attendance by leaps and bounds over the coming years. We at the Museum face the necessary challenge of representing the facts of the Holocaust, while encouraging visitors to connect to history on a human level.

Visitors to our New York home can explore items that represent personal experience of global significance. Just as importantly, they can discover thousands of testimonies by Holocaust survivors, liberators, rescuers, Jews who served in the Allied Armies during World War II, and many others. We are defining the future of testimony-based Holocaust education, pioneering new ways to explore survivor accounts and oral histories. We are focusing on how the Museum will take on an even greater role in allowing visitors to hear from witnesses and make human connections mediated through technology and supported by artifacts.

What inspired you to launch the Center for the Study of Anti-Semitism?

I was fortunate that the Board of Trustees had the foresight to launch the Center about a year before I arrived.

In our own time, we are seeing a rise in both anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial. We have to remain vigilant and we must protect the historical record. Given what we are seeing around the city and around the world, this center, through exhibition, program and scholarship, will offer the public opportunities to explore the history of this greatest hatred in new and meaningful ways.

Do you have a favorite exhibit or attraction within the museum? LOX, perhaps?

MG: I may be a bit biased as I think the entirety of the Museum is extraordinary. I’ve had the good fortune to produce two new installations since I arrived in the fall and I’m quite partial to the idea that we are able to present pieces that focus on the individual experience – from My Name Is to Eyewitness – it’s important for me to be able to present the stories of those who experienced the trauma of extreme loss in the Shoah and how we will not allow the memory of millions to pass into stony silence.

I also think Andy Goldsworthy’s Garden of Stones is a marvelous oasis at the heart of our Museum that allows a visitor to experience the serenity of our city. And I’m pretty partial to LOX as well, particularly since we can offer a café that combines great modern fare with old world charm.

Any exciting events coming up for the museum?

MG: We’re kicking off our 20th anniversary year in July with a series of new exhibitions and installations that are certain to capture the attention and interest of New Yorkers and tourists alike. The Capture & Trial of Adolf Eichmann, which opens in September 2017, documents how the Nazi responsible for transporting millions of innocent people to death camps mysteriously disappeared after World War II, his daring capture and his historic trail. It contains recently declassified material from the Mossad, and for the first time on view in New York, the glass booth that Eichmann sat in during his trial.

Accompanying this exhibition will be New Dimensions in Testimony, which for the first time in NYC will present hologram technology that will allow for a “virtual conversation” with Holocaust survivors. Eichmann will be at one end of the museum – the man responsible for killing millions – and one of the survivors will be virtually recounting his experiences at the other end, enabling the Museum to not only mourn those who were killed and comfort those who suffered, but that we tell their story with precision, accuracy, and the utmost of respect for human dignity.

When not busy with the Museum of Jewish Heritage, how do you like to spend your free time?

MG: I have three children who keep my wife and I very busy, so really any moment that I’m not at the Museum, I am with my family. It offers an incredible balance and perspective, and helps me focus on what’s important.

Beyond LOX, do you have a favorite restaurant in New York?

MG: I have found some of the most wonderful restaurants in Lower Manhattan, so I’ll give you my two favorites – Gigino and Inatteso.

Do you have tickets to any upcoming concerts or events?

I had a chance to see Billy Joel reopen Nassau Coliseum, which was amazing. And I’m looking forward to seeing the Amerike – The Golden Land, a National Yiddish
Theatre Folksbiene musical that will open at the Museum in July.

Finally, Michael, any last words for the kids?

Be present and attentive. We live in challenging times and we need to work together to keep moving forward.

Categories
Education Events News

Oliver Scholars 2017 Gala

On May 3, Downtown Magazine‘s CEO & Publisher Grace A. Capobianco had the pleasure of attending Oliver Scholars‘ Annual Gala, honoring Ryan Speedo Green, an American Bass baritone opera singer, as well as members of the graduating class of 2017.



Robert Guimento, David Allyn,  Timothy Pope

This year’s gala was held in downtown, New York City at the IAC building, hosted by Lynda Baquero, Consumer Reporter of NBC 4.


Lynda Baquero, NBC 4

Oliver Scholars — founded in 1984 — fosters the development of the next generation of thought leaders, change-makers, and trailblazers.

Chair Dorothea Schlosser

Meandering around during the cocktail party, Capobianco was thrilled to be able to interview several young senior trailblazers.

Oliver Alumni Shirley Rumierk, Terry-Ann Burrell, Alba Roman

Scholar, Stephanie Bravo, imagined herself as a surgeon at a very young age. Today, because of Oliver Scholars, that dream will become a reality. After graduating, she plans to go onto study biology and pre-med. When asked to describe her experience with this program in a few words, Bravo chose the words “transforming” and “caring”.

Stephanie Bravo, Makeda Lewis , Lutfah Subair

Lutfah Subair, class of 2017, will study at Cornell to become a neurosurgeon — working on global healthcare. She wants to see Nigerians have a better health care system to ensure that the health care crisis does not continue with future generations. When asked, Lutfah’s one word to describe Oliver Scholars was “encouraging”.

Makeda, a staffer with Oliver Scholars, noted that the students are already driven, most have strong support from their parents and don’t need much pushing.

Krystal Ramirez, class of 2017, learned of Oliver Scholars from her guidance counselor when she was in the seventh grade. Ramirez’s father Julius works in law enforcement in New York and could not be more proud of his children. Laritza, Ramirez’s mother, chose Oliver Scholars program for her older sister and hoped that Krystal would follow in her footsteps.

Julius Ramirez, Krystal Ramirez, Laritza RamirezKrystal Ramirez, Alba Roman

Zozi Flores, class of 2017, was fresh out of middle school and after taking the SSAT was accepted into the program. He plans to start Brown University to study Mechanical engineering. After graduating, Flores wishes to go back to Park Slope to help better his childhood neighborhood. Flores’ words to describe the Oliver Scholars program was “unbelievable” and “opportunistic”.

Richard Andrews, Krystal Ramirez, Tahrieq Koonce – Student Awards Winner

“Children of today, with hard work, dedication and good parental guidance have opportunities which were not always available when I was young.” stated Capobianco. Her advice to the young scholars, “Study hard, get noticed, talk with your school’s guidance counselor, and reach out to these organizations who can help you set a solid foundation for not only your future but for our country’s future.”

Judith-Ann Corrente, Ryan Speedo Green