Mark schapiro nyc run on november

  • Mark Schapiro's latest in Smithsonian Magazine is a story about an NYC premiere at DOC NYC in November.
  • Mara Denise Steinberg and Mark Ira Shapiro were married last evening by Rabbi Stanley Schickler at the Pratt Mansions in New York.
  • New York City's oldest walking tour program, since 1956.
  • More than nine months into the coronavirus pandemic, restaurants across the city continue to move forward with openings, sometimes because their concepts could be adapted for delivery and outdoor dining service, but more often because their owners saw no other choice but to forge ahead. Since mid-March, when the state temporarily closed indoor dining, hundreds of new restaurants have opened their doors. This list of pandemic-born businesses includes subterranean Asian food markets, several birria taco destinations, and two new sources for Thai drinking snacks.

    Here’s a round-up of the restaurants and bars that opened in månad. This list will be updated weekly. If there’s an opening in your neighborhood that we’ve missed, let us know at tips@eater.com.


    December 23

    Carroll Gardens: Three years after opening acclaimed Middle Eastern restaurant Miss Ada, arbetsledare and owner Tomer Blechman has openedNili, a casual counter cafe and kaffe shop beside the ingång to the Carroll Stre

  • mark schapiro nyc run on november
  • Berkeley Journalism Quarterly Newsletter: Winter 2025

     

    Dear Berkeley Journalism Community,

    Our hearts go out to you and yours in the Los Angeles-area who have been contending with the devastating fires and aftermath. And thanks to all of the devoted journalists who are covering this ongoing crisis.

    At a time of turmoil in our natural and political worlds, it feels more important than ever to be a journalist and to be in a position to educate future journalists. I am grateful to be associated with UC Berkeley Journalism and the important work of our students, faculty, staff and alums in these times. Please take a look at much of this work all in one place: Berkeley Journalism’s 2024 Impact Report highlights the extraordinary work of our community.

    In this winter Quarterly News, you will find more about our award-winning faculty and students and the stories they’re reporting every day. Read about our commitment to local news and the success of the 75 fellows (and

    KB

    I know that you did undergrad at Columbia University in art history, and then you got your BFA at the San Francisco Art Institute in film and photography. What drove you towards academia, versus developing an artistic practice? Or a path in film? Can you walk me through who you are now, and how you’ve ended up where you’re at?

    JC

    [Laughs.] Okay, that means going way back.  I grew up in various places in New England and had done a lot of art and writing in high school—painting, sculpture, photography and poetry. When I arrived at Columbia in the fall of 1968, I was hoping that I’d be able to continue some of this work. I registered for one of the few studio courses on-offer back then, reserved darkroom time in the student center, and joined the filmmaking club. But all of this was quickly overshadowed by the activism on campus which was following all the tumultuous events and Vietnam War protests of the previous spring. I soon joined Students for a Democratic Society, and