ReportWire

Tag: New York

  • Will Zohran Mamdani defund New York City police?

    [ad_1]

    In the February/March 2026 issue of Reason, we explore Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s policy goals and what they mean for New York City. Click here to read the other entries.

    Central to Zohran Mamdani’s 2020 campaign for New York State Assembly was a pitch to radically constrain law enforcement. “Queer liberation means defund the police,” he posted two days after securing his seat representing Astoria, an apt coda to that election season.

    It was November 2020, just months after the George Floyd protests began—a time when calls to defund the police were more common. Such a plan was arguably always a tougher sell in a mayoral campaign where candidates have to court a more politically diverse electorate than the one in western Queens, a district that overlaps with that of the socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D–N.Y.).

    Which helps explain why Mamdani pivoted fairly dramatically on criminal justice in his run to be mayor of America’s most populous city. “I am not defunding the police,” he said on the campaign trail. “I am not running to defund the police.” One way he has tried to show he is serious about that promise: asking Jessica Tisch, who was an ally of Mayor Eric Adams, to stay on as New York City police commissioner.

    That type of law enforcement partnership would have been difficult to imagine with the Mamdani who made his political debut just over five years ago. What might their differences mean for New York City?

    On one hand, not much. A great deal has been made, for example, of Mamdani and Tisch diverging considerably on New York’s state bail law, which bars judges from contemplating a defendant’s dangerousness when making decisions about bond. It is the only state with that ban. While Tisch’s skepticism of that policy has merit—nearby New Jersey successfully eliminated cash bail in 2017 but did so in favor of a risk-based system—neither she nor Mamdani has the power to alter the legislation.

    The same goes for their disagreements on New York’s Raise the Age law, which diverted most 16- and 17-year-old alleged offenders out of adult court. Mamdani likes the law; Tisch is against it. That debate is important, but it ultimately rests with state legislators.

    Other differences are more consequential, or at least have potential to be. Currently, the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) can recommend disciplinary action after investigating allegations of misconduct at the New York Police Department (NYPD). The final say, however, belongs to the commissioner—something Mamdani campaigned on revoking.

    The dispute over where that power should reside reached a fever pitch this summer, right in the heat of the New York mayoral campaign, when Tisch rejected a CCRB finding that an officer should be fired in connection with a fatal 2019 shooting. In that case, Lt. Jonathan Rivera inserted himself into a vehicle as a suspect, Allan Feliz, attempted to drive away from a traffic stop. When the car sped forward, Rivera shot Feliz in the chest.

    At trial, a judge did not buy Rivera’s testimony that he feared Feliz was poised to run over his colleague, Officer Edward Barrett. Tisch instead cited a report from New York Attorney General Letitia James, who wrote that Rivera had “a reasonable perception—or at least not an obviously unreasonable one” that deadly force was justified. (James declined to prosecute Rivera in criminal court.)

    Whatever you think of Tisch’s decision, her record on law enforcement misconduct may surprise those whose impression was formed solely by the headlines about Rivera. “Not only has Tisch signaled a greater willingness to discipline officers more frequently” than her predecessors, reported Gothamist last year, but “she’s also imposing tougher penalties.” And despite Mamdani’s campaign emphasis on depriving the commissioner of veto power over officer discipline, he praised Tisch’s efforts to “root out corruption” as something that united the two.

    They are decidedly not united on how many NYPD officers there should be and, in some sense, on what they should be doing. Tisch expressed support for Adams’ plan to add 5,000 officers to the force, which has decreased in recent years, whereas Mamdani wants to keep the current head count.

    Perhaps more notable are their differing enforcement priorities. A hallmark of Tisch’s tenure has been her focus on low-level offenses—including open drug use, prostitution, and fare evasion—to crack down on public disorder. “When neighborhoods are plagued by issues such as aggressive panhandling, unruly street vending, public urination, abandoned vehicles, it gives the impression of an unsafe community,” she said in January 2025. The NYPD has credited that strategy, often referred to as broken windows policing, with the city’s recent crime decline.

    Mamdani also prefers a prevention-oriented approach, but it bears no resemblance to Tisch’s. He has said that police officers should be free to target major crimes. To accomplish that, he campaigned on creating a Department of Community Safety, with a budget over $1 billion, that would seek to address poverty and inequality; it would also divert lower-level calls to mental health specialists and social workers. While focusing police resources on serious offenses is an appealing idea, it’s worth noting that New York City already has a hefty social safety net.

    Which ideological vision for the NYPD will win out will become clearer with time. Shortly after announcing Tisch would stay on, Mamdani unveiled his public safety transition team. Among others, it includes Alex Vitale, a sociologist who has argued we should abolish police.

    This article originally appeared in print under the headline “Will Mamdani Defund the Police?.”

    [ad_2]

    Billy Binion

    Source link

  • What Should a Democratic Socialist Wear? Enter Mayor Zohran Mamdani and First Lady Rama Duwaji

    [ad_1]

    This afternoon, Zohran Mamdani was sworn in as New York City’s youngest mayor “in generations,” to quote Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s opening remarks at the ceremony. The 34-year-old is also the first South Asian and Muslim to take on the role, which he underscored by taking his oath with two family Qurans during both of his swearing-ins, one held privately at midnight on January 1 and a second, public one held in the afternoon at City Hall Plaza.

    In his inaugural speech, Mamdani vowed to govern “expansively and audaciously,” and said that New York will not be a city “governed only by the one percent,” or “a tale of two cities, the rich versus the poor.” He was sworn in by Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who thanked New York City for electing Mamdani as mayor, and reminded the crowd that his ideas are “not radical.”

    And yet, Mamdani and his First Lady, 28-year-old illustrator Rama Duwaji, have broken the political mold. Not solely because of Mamdani’s perhaps not radical but inarguably progressive ideas—to, say, tax the rich or enforce a rent freeze—but also because of their ages and backgrounds, which have been underscored repeatedly by the media as cause of celebration or with Islamophobic dismay.

    Mamdani was born in Uganda to Indian parents, and Duwaji in Texas to Syrian Muslim progenitors. They are young and progressive, and they also look the part. The balancing act moving forward, as it pertains to their style now that they’re embedded in the political establishment, will be to negotiate between the newfound gloss of their public image while keeping it consistent with their politics.

    When Mamdani celebrated his election in November of 2025, Duwaji donned a top by London-based Palestinian-Jordanian designer Zeid Hijazi paired with a skirt by the New York-born and -based Ulla Johnson, who is known for her bohemian flair. She managed the task of looking both like a first lady and a 20-something woman dressing for a special occasion with aplomb. Back then, she had been advised—free of charge—by stylist Bailey Moon, who dresses the likes of Morgan Spector and Cristin Milioti and is most widely known for having worked with Jill Biden and her family throughout president Joe Biden’s administration.

    Rama Duwaji and Zohran Mamdani on election night in November, 2025.

    Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

    [ad_2]

    José Criales-Unzueta

    Source link

  • Zohran Mamdani Hit the Right Notes in a Rousing Inauguration Speech

    [ad_1]

    Probably the most important member of that group was New York state governor Kathy Hochul. Hochul, a centrist who is up for reelection this year, strongly encouraged Mamdani to retain the city’s police commissioner, Jessica Tisch; when he agreed, Hochul saw it as a sign of Mamdani’s pragmatism on fighting crime and of his desire to reach out to political moderates.

    The governor is highly interested in finding common ground with Mamdani on his push for universal day care. How to pay the multi-billion-dollar tab for such a plan, though, will be the tricky part, and may be where her differences with Mamdani come to a head. “We will deliver universal childcare for the many by taxing the wealthiest few!” the mayor declared in his speech, drawing one of his biggest ovations. Hochul, though, has repeatedly taken a hard line against raising personal income taxes. “The last thing she wants to do is raise taxes on anybody. And we do tax the rich already,” a Hochul insider told me in advance of Mamdani’s inauguration. “It doesn’t mean that there’s not room for an ongoing conversation.”

    Mamdani intends to raise the volume of that conversation by incorporating the voices of the people who were standing on Broadway today. He has spoken with Barack Obama about how the former president’s “Obama for America” organization did not translate campaign momentum into governing momentum. Mamdani doesn’t plan to make the same mistake, and a key ally is already on the case. The Democratic Socialists of America were crucial to Mamdani’s upset campaign win, organizing a door-knocking army of nearly 100,000 volunteers. “We’re mounting a massive campaign to raise revenue,” says Grace Mausser, a co-chair of DSA’s New York City chapter. “One of the days it snowed pretty heavily in December, we knocked on 15,000 doors. We’re asking them to call their legislators, their assembly members, and their state senators and tell them that they want to tax the rich to fund child-care.”

    [ad_2]

    Chris Smith

    Source link

  • Zohran Mamdani Sworn in as New York City Mayor at Historic Subway Station

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — Zohran Mamdani became mayor of New York City just after midnight Thursday, taking the oath of office at an historic, decommissioned subway station in Manhattan.

    Mamdani, a Democrat, was sworn in as the first Muslim leader of America’s biggest city, placing his hand on a Quran as he took his oath.

    The ceremony, administered by New York Attorney General Letitia James, a political ally, took place at the old City Hall station, one of the city’s original subway stops that is known for its stunning arched ceilings.

    He will be sworn in again, in grander style, in a public ceremony at City Hall at 1 p.m. by U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, one of the mayor’s political heroes. That will be followed by what the new administration is billing as a public block party on a stretch of Broadway known as the “Canyon of Heroes,” famous for its ticker-tape parades.

    In addition to being the city’s first Muslim mayor, Mamdani is also its first of South Asian descent and the first to be born in Africa. At 34, Mamdani is also the city’s youngest mayor in generations.

    In a campaign that helped make “affordability” a buzzword across the political spectrum, the democratic socialist promised to bring transformative change with policies intended to lower the cost of living in one of the world’s most expensive cities. His platform included free child care, free buses, a rent freeze for about 1 million households, and a pilot of city-run grocery stores.

    But he will also have to face other responsibilities: handling trash and snow and rats, while getting blamed for subway delays and potholes.

    Mamdani was born in Kampala, Uganda, the son of filmmaker Mira Nair and Mahmood Mamdani, an academic and author. His family moved to New York City when he was 7, with Mamdani growing up in a post-9/11 city where Muslims didn’t always feel welcome. He became an American citizen in 2018.

    He worked on political campaigns for Democratic candidates in the city before he sought public office himself, winning a state Assembly seat in 2020 to represent a section of Queens.

    Mamdani inherits a city on the upswing, after years of slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. Violent crime has dropped to pre-pandemic lows. Tourists are back. Unemployment, which soared during the pandemic years, is also back to pre-COVID levels.

    Yet deep concerns remain about high prices and rising rents in the city.

    He’ll also have to deal with Republican President Donald Trump.

    During the mayoral race, Trump threatened to withhold federal funding from the city if Mamdani won and mused about sending National Guard troops to the city.

    But Trump surprised supporters and foes alike by inviting the Democrat to the White House for what ended up being a cordial meeting in November.

    “I want him to do a great job and will help him do a great job,” Trump said.

    Still, tensions between the two leaders are almost certain to resurface, given their deep policy disagreements, particularly over immigration.

    Mamdani also faces skepticism and opposition from some members of the city’s Jewish community over his criticisms of Israel’s government.

    The new mayor and his team have spent the weeks since his election victory preparing for the transition, surrounding Mamdani with seasoned hands who have worked inside or alongside city government.

    That included persuading the city’s police commissioner, Jessica Tisch, to remain in her position — a move that helped calm fears in the business community that the administration might be planning radical changes in policing strategy.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Mamdani Appoints Corporation Counsel, Health Deputy Mayor

    [ad_1]

    The incoming mayor named a former de Blasio administration official to run the city’s legal operation and elevated a Queens hospital executive to oversee health and human services

    New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani announced additional senior appointments Tuesday, naming new leadership for the New York City’s legal operation and a hospital executive to oversee health and human services as he continues to assemble his administration ahead of inauguration.

    Mamdani selected Steve Banks as corporation counsel, the city’s top lawyer, and appointed Ramzi Kassem as chief counsel, a senior advisory position that does not require City Council approval. Banks’ appointment as corporation counsel must be approved by the council.

    Banks previously served as commissioner of New York City’s Department of Social Services under former Mayor Bill de Blasio and later led the Legal Aid Society. As corporation counsel, he would direct the Law Department, which represents the city and its agencies in litigation and provides legal guidance to City Hall.

    Kassem is a law professor known for civil rights and constitutional litigation and has served in advisory roles at both the city and federal levels. As chief counsel, he will advise the mayor on legal strategy and policy matters but will not manage day-to-day litigation. Some critics have zeroed in on Mamdani’s choice of Kassem as chief counsel-they argue the pick implicates an “ideological” approach to the city’s legal leadership. One local critic via The NY Post said the appointment sends a message that “America haters … have a place in his City Hall.” 

    In a separate announcement, Mamdani named Helen Arteaga, chief executive officer of NYC Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst, as Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services.

    Arteaga has led Elmhurst Hospital, a major safety net and “ethnically-diverse” facility in Queens, since before the COVID-19 pandemic. In her new role, Arteaga will oversee agencies responsible for public health, hospitals, mental health services and social support programs.

    Mamdani said the appointments reflect his priorities heading into office, and additional senior positions remain unfilled as the transition continues. The Mayor-elect is scheduled to be sworn in at the start of the new year.

    [ad_2]

    Lauren Conlin

    Source link

  • Isiah Whitlock Jr., Actor From ‘The Wire,’ ‘Veep’ and Spike Lee Films, Dies at 71

    [ad_1]

    Isiah Whitlock Jr., an actor who made frequent memorable appearances on the HBO series “The Wire” and “Veep” and in the films of Spike Lee, died Tuesday. He was 71.

    Whitlock’s manager Brian Liebman told The Associated Press in an email that the actor died in New York after a short illness.

    Whitlock played openly corrupt city councilman Clay Davis on 25 episodes across the five seasons of “The Wire.”

    Davis, a fan-favorite character, was known for his profane catchphrase — “sheee-it” — delivered by Whitlock in moments of triumph and blunt honesty. The actor first used the phrase in his first film with Lee, 2002’s “The 25th Hour.”

    “The Wire” creator David Simon posted a photo of Whitlock on Bluesky in tribute.

    Whitlock is the second significant star of the show to die in recent weeks after the death of actor James Ransone.

    A native of South Bend, Indiana, Whitlock went to Southwest Minnesota State University, where he played football and studied theater. Injuries pushed him to study acting, and he moved to San Francisco to work in theater.

    He began appearing in small television guest roles on shows including “Cagney and Lacy” in the late 1980s, and he had very small roles in the 1990 films “Goodfellas” and “Gremlins 2: The New Batch.”

    He went on to appear in five of Lee’s films, including “She Hate Me,” “Red Hook Summer,” “Chi-Raq,” “BlacKkKlansman” and “Da 5 Bloods.”

    He played Secretary of Defense George Maddox for three seasons on the political satire “Veep.” The character ran against Julia Louis-Dreyfus ‘ Selina Meyer in presidential primaries.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Winter Storm Packing Snow and Strong Winds to Descend on Great Lakes and Northeast

    [ad_1]

    A wild winter storm was expected to bring strong winds, heavy snow and frigid temperatures to the Great Lakes and Northeast on Tuesday, a day after a bomb cyclone barreled across the northern U.S. and left tens thousands of customers without power.

    The storm that hit parts of the Plains and Great Lakes on Monday brought sharply colder air, strong winds and a mix of snow, ice and rain that led to treacherous travel. Forecasters said it intensified quickly enough to meet the criteria of a bomb cyclone, a system that strengthens rapidly as pressure drops.

    Nationwide, more than 153,000 customers were without power early Tuesday, more than a third of them in Michigan, according to Poweroutage.us.

    As Monday’s storm moved into Canada, the National Weather Service predicted more inclement weather conditions for the Eastern U.S, including quick bursts of heavy snow and gusty winds known as snow squalls.

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul warned that whiteout conditions were expected Tuesday in parts of the state, including the Syracuse-metro area.

    “If you’re in an impacted area, please avoid all unnecessary travel,” she said in a post on the social media platform X,

    Snow piled up quickly in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula on Monday, where as much as 2 feet (60 centimeters) fell in some areas, according to the National Weather Service. Meteorologist Ryan Metzger said additional snow was expected in the coming days, although totals would be far lighter.

    Waves on Lake Superior that were expected to reach 20 feet (6 meters) Monday sent all but one cargo ship into harbors for shelter, according to MarineTraffic.com. Weather forecasting on the lakes has improved greatly since the Edmund Fitzgerald sank in 1975 after waves were predicted at up to 16 feet (4.8 meters).

    The fierce winds on Lake Erie sent water surging toward the basin’s eastern end near Buffalo, New York, while lowering water on the western side in Michigan to expose normally submerged lakebed — even the wreck of a car and a snowmobile.

    Kevin Aldrich, 33, a maintenance worker from Monroe, Michigan, said he has never seen the lake recede so much and was surprised on Monday to spot the remnants of old piers dating back to the 1830s. He posted photos on social media of wooden pilings sticking up several feet from the muck.

    “Where those are at would typically be probably 12 feet deep,” he said. “We can usually drive our boat over them.”

    Dangerous wind chills plunged as low as minus 30 F (minus 34 C) across parts of North Dakota and Minnesota on Monday. And in northeast West Virginia, rare, nearly hurricane-force winds were recorded on a mountain near Dolly Sods, according to the National Weather Service.

    In Iowa, after blizzard conditions eased by Monday morning, high winds continued blowing fallen snow across roadways, keeping more than 200 miles (320 kilometers) of Interstate 35 closed. State troopers reported dozens of crashes during the storm, including one that killed a person.

    On the West Coast, the National Weather Service warned that moderate to strong Santa Ana winds were expected in parts of Southern California through Tuesday, raising concerns about downed trees in areas where soils have been saturated by recent storms. Two more storms were forecast later this week, with rain on New Year’s Day potentially soaking the Rose Parade in Pasadena for the first time in about two decades.

    Associated Press writers Julie Walker in New York; Corey Williams in Detroit; Margery Beck in Omaha, Nebraska; Susan Haigh in Norwich, Connecticut; and Becky Bohrer in Juneau, Alaska, contributed.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • The end of the line: New York City’s iconic MetroCard is about to go out of service

    [ad_1]

    For more than three decades, lifelong New Yorkers and tourists visiting the Big Apple have shared the experience of a MetroCard swipe gone wrong. Swiping the transit card too fast or too slow, with the stripe facing the wrong side, or having insufficient fare all led to the subsequent, seemingly judgmental thud of the turnstile slamming into you.”It’s embarrassing. You feel like you’re not an authentic New Yorker if you’re not swiping your MetroCard the right way,” said Mike Glenwick, 37, who has lived in the city most of his life and has been collecting limited-edition MetroCards since he was six.Now the days of swiping the blue and yellow plastic cards are numbered. Come January 1, the Metropolitan Transit Authority will no longer sell MetroCards, and riders will be required to use OMNY, a contactless fare payment system. (Existing MetroCards will continue to be accepted at terminals, though MTA said their “final acceptance date will be announced at a later time.”)Bidding farewell to the card has been a journey for New Yorkers and the MTA alike.From tokens to cardsNew York City subway’s iconic tokens were the default form of fare payment before the MetroCard was introduced. When tokens were initially rolled out in 1953, they were about the size of a dime and most had a hollowed-out Y between an engraved N and C, spelling out NYC.Though clunky to carry around, they were easy to use: all transit passengers had to do was drop the tokens into a turnstile or farebox. For the MTA, it overcame the issue of being able to increase fares without having to redesign fare collection systems to accept various kinds of coins.But in 1983 Richard Ravitch, then the commissioner of the MTA, began to envision a different fare payment system. Instead, he floated a magnetic stripe card with a stored value.”His argument was that New York is a very modern cosmopolitan city and there are other modern cosmopolitan cities that are using this as their fare payment system,” said Jodi Shapiro, curator of the FAREwell MetroCard exhibit at the New York Transit Museum. But as his idea gained traction, it quickly became about more than just keeping up with other cities. At one point the MTA considered integrating MetroCards with pay phones so callers didn’t have to use coins (that didn’t end up happening, though).The MTA initially thought the shift to MetroCards would “spell the death knell for fare evasion” since many riders were previously getting away with using various other kinds of coins and tokens, said Noah McClain, a sociology professor who has researched MetroCard technology and fare evasion trends. But that was hardly the case: “Fare evasion certainly endured, albeit often in different forms.”One famous one, “swipers,” as they came to be known, sold bent MetroCards that allowed riders to fraudulently bypass turnstiles. Separately, a group of hackers was able to successfully reverse engineer many parts of the MetroCard.But riders saw benefits, too. One of the biggest selling points for the MetroCard was that users could purchase different, more flexible fares. That included discounts for seniors, disabled people and students, as well as cards that offered unlimited rides throughout the month.Cards also came with a massive perk that tokens didn’t: free transfers. One swipe of a MetroCard on a bus or subway meant riders didn’t have to pay again if they transferred to another bus or subway train.A collector’s itemBut just as New York subway tokens became icons of the city, so did the MetroCard. And that was by design.”MetroCards were made to be collected,” Shapiro said. The year the MTA launched the MetroCard, 1994, was also when it released an inaugural limited edition card. Since then there have been around 400 commemorative MetroCards issued. Some of those have featured advertisements, a major source of revenue for the MTA, while others have commemorated historic events, such as Grand Central’s centennial anniversary and the first game between the Yankees and Mets in 1997, a tradition now known as the “Subway Series.”Other notable cards include the Supreme-branded ones and the David Bowie ones aimed at marketing a museum exhibit timed to the release of cards. New Yorkers reported hours-long lines to purchase these at stations.Glenwick has nearly 100 MetroCards in his collection, and his first featured members of the New York Rangers after the team won the Stanley Cup in 1994 for the first time in 54 years.The idea to collect MetroCards immediately clicked for him: “It was something that was accessible to collect. I didn’t spend extra money because we used the MetroCards anyway,” he said.An art mediumThomas McKean has lost track of how many MetroCards he’s accumulated over the past 25 years. It all started on a subway ride where he forgot to bring a newspaper or a book, something he’d typically do before the age of smartphones.In their absence, to pass the time, he stared at his MetroCard, idly wondering how many words he could wring from its letters. When he got off the subway, he grabbed a fistful of MetroCards lying around on the ground of the station, and once he got home, he started making MetroCards with different words.”And then without even realizing it, I got hooked because I love the material and aesthetic,” McKean told CNN. His designs were initially two-dimensional, using the front and back of MetroCards cut up and pieced together like a mosaic, but eventually he started experimenting with three-dimensional designs, too.McKean’s art has been featured at home goods store Fishs Eddy in Manhattan, as well as on the cover of a Time Out New York magazine. His art will also be featured at an upcoming exhibit at the Transit Museum’s Grand Central gallery. Over the years, he’s taken on several commissions. To his surprise, many of those customers aren’t based in New York and yet they exhibit the same admiration for the MetroCard as lifelong New Yorkers.McKean said he has several thousand untouched MetroCards left in his reserves in addition to all the scraps from prior projects. “I never throw anything away until it’s just too small to use.”A tap-and-go futureThe transit system going forward, OMNY, short for One Metro New York, replaces swipes with taps at turnstiles via smartphones or smartwatches with mobile wallets, credit cards or OMNY cards.For now, riders can still use cash to purchase OMNY cards for $1 at vending machines at subways and at retailers across the city. But many feel as though it’s a matter of time before the MTA stops accepting cash, like many retailers have, which has essentially excluded people who are unbanked and lack a credit or debit card. (The MTA didn’t respond to CNN’s request for comment.)”While there’s no doubt the MetroCard will remain an iconic New York City symbol, tap-and-go fare payment has been a game changer for everyday riders and visitors, saving them the guessing game on what fare package is most cost efficient for their travels and making using NYC’s transit system much easier,” MTA chief customer officer Shanifah Rieara said in a statement in March, when the phaseout of the MetroCard was announced.At the time, the MTA said the change will save the agency $20 million annually “in costs related to MetroCard production and distribution; vending machine repairs; and cash collection and handling.”But for all the benefits that the MTA has advertised OMNY contains, including unlimited rides after your 12th of the week, Glenwick is not ready to make the transition.”I feel like part of my childhood is disappearing… I don’t want to let it go until I have to.”

    For more than three decades, lifelong New Yorkers and tourists visiting the Big Apple have shared the experience of a MetroCard swipe gone wrong. Swiping the transit card too fast or too slow, with the stripe facing the wrong side, or having insufficient fare all led to the subsequent, seemingly judgmental thud of the turnstile slamming into you.

    “It’s embarrassing. You feel like you’re not an authentic New Yorker if you’re not swiping your MetroCard the right way,” said Mike Glenwick, 37, who has lived in the city most of his life and has been collecting limited-edition MetroCards since he was six.

    Now the days of swiping the blue and yellow plastic cards are numbered. Come January 1, the Metropolitan Transit Authority will no longer sell MetroCards, and riders will be required to use OMNY, a contactless fare payment system. (Existing MetroCards will continue to be accepted at terminals, though MTA said their “final acceptance date will be announced at a later time.”)

    Bidding farewell to the card has been a journey for New Yorkers and the MTA alike.

    From tokens to cards

    New York City subway’s iconic tokens were the default form of fare payment before the MetroCard was introduced. When tokens were initially rolled out in 1953, they were about the size of a dime and most had a hollowed-out Y between an engraved N and C, spelling out NYC.

    Though clunky to carry around, they were easy to use: all transit passengers had to do was drop the tokens into a turnstile or farebox. For the MTA, it overcame the issue of being able to increase fares without having to redesign fare collection systems to accept various kinds of coins.

    But in 1983 Richard Ravitch, then the commissioner of the MTA, began to envision a different fare payment system. Instead, he floated a magnetic stripe card with a stored value.

    “His argument was that New York is a very modern cosmopolitan city and there are other modern cosmopolitan cities that are using this as their fare payment system,” said Jodi Shapiro, curator of the FAREwell MetroCard exhibit at the New York Transit Museum. But as his idea gained traction, it quickly became about more than just keeping up with other cities. At one point the MTA considered integrating MetroCards with pay phones so callers didn’t have to use coins (that didn’t end up happening, though).

    The MTA initially thought the shift to MetroCards would “spell the death knell for fare evasion” since many riders were previously getting away with using various other kinds of coins and tokens, said Noah McClain, a sociology professor who has researched MetroCard technology and fare evasion trends. But that was hardly the case: “Fare evasion certainly endured, albeit often in different forms.”

    One famous one, “swipers,” as they came to be known, sold bent MetroCards that allowed riders to fraudulently bypass turnstiles. Separately, a group of hackers was able to successfully reverse engineer many parts of the MetroCard.

    But riders saw benefits, too. One of the biggest selling points for the MetroCard was that users could purchase different, more flexible fares. That included discounts for seniors, disabled people and students, as well as cards that offered unlimited rides throughout the month.

    Cards also came with a massive perk that tokens didn’t: free transfers. One swipe of a MetroCard on a bus or subway meant riders didn’t have to pay again if they transferred to another bus or subway train.

    A collector’s item

    But just as New York subway tokens became icons of the city, so did the MetroCard. And that was by design.

    “MetroCards were made to be collected,” Shapiro said. The year the MTA launched the MetroCard, 1994, was also when it released an inaugural limited edition card. Since then there have been around 400 commemorative MetroCards issued. Some of those have featured advertisements, a major source of revenue for the MTA, while others have commemorated historic events, such as Grand Central’s centennial anniversary and the first game between the Yankees and Mets in 1997, a tradition now known as the “Subway Series.”

    Other notable cards include the Supreme-branded ones and the David Bowie ones aimed at marketing a museum exhibit timed to the release of cards. New Yorkers reported hours-long lines to purchase these at stations.

    Glenwick has nearly 100 MetroCards in his collection, and his first featured members of the New York Rangers after the team won the Stanley Cup in 1994 for the first time in 54 years.

    The idea to collect MetroCards immediately clicked for him: “It was something that was accessible to collect. I didn’t spend extra money because we used the MetroCards anyway,” he said.

    An art medium

    Thomas McKean has lost track of how many MetroCards he’s accumulated over the past 25 years. It all started on a subway ride where he forgot to bring a newspaper or a book, something he’d typically do before the age of smartphones.

    In their absence, to pass the time, he stared at his MetroCard, idly wondering how many words he could wring from its letters. When he got off the subway, he grabbed a fistful of MetroCards lying around on the ground of the station, and once he got home, he started making MetroCards with different words.

    “And then without even realizing it, I got hooked because I love the material and aesthetic,” McKean told CNN. His designs were initially two-dimensional, using the front and back of MetroCards cut up and pieced together like a mosaic, but eventually he started experimenting with three-dimensional designs, too.

    McKean’s art has been featured at home goods store Fishs Eddy in Manhattan, as well as on the cover of a Time Out New York magazine. His art will also be featured at an upcoming exhibit at the Transit Museum’s Grand Central gallery. Over the years, he’s taken on several commissions. To his surprise, many of those customers aren’t based in New York and yet they exhibit the same admiration for the MetroCard as lifelong New Yorkers.

    McKean said he has several thousand untouched MetroCards left in his reserves in addition to all the scraps from prior projects. “I never throw anything away until it’s just too small to use.”

    A tap-and-go future

    The transit system going forward, OMNY, short for One Metro New York, replaces swipes with taps at turnstiles via smartphones or smartwatches with mobile wallets, credit cards or OMNY cards.

    For now, riders can still use cash to purchase OMNY cards for $1 at vending machines at subways and at retailers across the city. But many feel as though it’s a matter of time before the MTA stops accepting cash, like many retailers have, which has essentially excluded people who are unbanked and lack a credit or debit card. (The MTA didn’t respond to CNN’s request for comment.)

    “While there’s no doubt the MetroCard will remain an iconic New York City symbol, tap-and-go fare payment has been a game changer for everyday riders and visitors, saving them the guessing game on what fare package is most cost efficient for their travels and making using NYC’s transit system much easier,” MTA chief customer officer Shanifah Rieara said in a statement in March, when the phaseout of the MetroCard was announced.

    At the time, the MTA said the change will save the agency $20 million annually “in costs related to MetroCard production and distribution; vending machine repairs; and cash collection and handling.”

    But for all the benefits that the MTA has advertised OMNY contains, including unlimited rides after your 12th of the week, Glenwick is not ready to make the transition.

    “I feel like part of my childhood is disappearing… I don’t want to let it go until I have to.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Powerful winter storm brings heavy snow to Northeast

    [ad_1]

    The storm that hit the Northeast this weekend dropped up to a foot of snow in some areas. New York City saw its highest level of snowfall in nearly four years, and the region’s three major airports experienced significant delays and disruptions. Ali Bauman has more on the storm’s impact, and CBS News meteorologist Andrew Kozak has the latest forecast.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • New York woman’s hangover is so bad that she decides to call 911. It was a controversial move: ‘We have patients that call for a stubbed toe…’

    [ad_1]

    A woman is facing backlash online after revealing she called an ambulance during a severe hangover. Many viewers argued the situation didn’t warrant emergency services and accused her of wasting resources.

    In her initial clip, which has garnered over 936,300 views, TikToker Gia (@gia.marini) films herself with an IV in her arm, looking visibly unwell. “U guys ever have a hangover so bad u call 911,” she writes in the video’s text overlay.

    According to Gia, the situation felt like a real emergency at the time. “In all seriousness i thought i was gonna die so…” she adds.

    Netizens Have Zero Empathy

    Viewers in the comments criticized Gia heavily, arguing that she wasted medical professionals’ time.

    “No I’ve never wasted a bunch of EMT’s time because of my drinking. I normally take an advil and sleep it off like an adult,” wrote one person, getting over 17,700 likes.

    “No because I don’t use resources I don’t actually need!” wrote another. “Hope this helps <3.”

    Others questioned her condition at that moment. “But you’re sitting up and recording yourself?”

    However, some comments were defending her decision to call 911.

    “Paramedic here! She did what we would 100% advise a patient to do! She was worried, she got help, and she was ok,” wrote one person. “We have patients that call for a stubbed toe….I promise this woman calling because she physically could not get up off the floor is 100% valid. And we get paid by hour not by the triage level of a patient. I promise the medics are doing just fine that helped her.”

    “I went to the ER bc I was hungover and was dry heaving at that point,” shared another commenter. “Turned out I needed three bags of fluids and my blood sugar was 47. I definitely wouldn’t have recovered on my own.”

    Gia Shares More Details in a Follow-Up

    After the backlash, Gia posted a second video explaining what actually led her to call 911.

    She says she woke up on her bathroom floor after throwing up all night and into the next morning. “I couldn’t make it to the toilet. I was so weak,” she explains, adding that the vomiting continued until early afternoon.

    Around 12:30 or 1 p.m., she says she started noticing new symptoms that scared her. Her hands begin tingling, then go numb. “My mouth was tingling, my legs were tingling, and I couldn’t move my body,” she says. She adds that her breathing becomes rapid and shallow, to the point where she could barely catch her breath.

    At that point, she says she was curled up on the bathroom floor and panicking. “I’ve had bad hangovers, but nothing like this ever,” she says. “I was genuinely so scared.”

    EMTs Were Reassuring

    Gia admits she knows how dramatic it sounds, but she insists the fear felt real in the moment. “When I called 911, I literally said, ‘Please, I don’t want to die,’” she recalls. “I genuinely felt like I was dying.”

    She says calling for help feels like the only option left. She doesn’t think she could have recovered without medical treatment. “I wouldn’t have been able to feel better without an IV, without Zofran or anything like that,” she says.

    Throughout the experience, she keeps apologizing to the EMTs, worried she’s wasting their time. “I reiterated a million times, ‘I’m so sorry, this is stupid,’” she says. According to Gia, they shut that down immediately.

    “They were very reassuring,” she explains. “They kept telling me I made the right call. It’s better to be safe than sorry.”

    She adds that the hospital staff echo the same thing once she’s admitted. “They reassured me that I wasn’t wasting anyone’s time,” she says. “You gotta do what you gotta do sometimes.”

    At one point, Gia even wonders if something more serious might have caused her symptoms. “For a second, I thought maybe I was roofied,” she says, though she clarifies her blood work comes back normal. She later jokes that at least that would have explained what happened, before quickly adding, “That was a joke, by the way.”

    By the end of the video, she’s back home trying to recover slowly. She’s sipping electrolyte drinks, sticking to liquids, and taking the day to rest. “It was just the freakiest thing ever,” she says. “I’ve never felt anything like that.”

    @gia.mariano in all seriousness i thought i was gonna d*e so #lol ♬ F my fing chungus life – emipih

    It Could’ve Been More Than Just a ‘Bad’ Hangover

    From the symptoms she describes, such as vomiting that wouldn’t stop, rapid or irregular breathing, and feeling like she couldn’t catch her breath, it sounds like more than a typical hangover. Those are symptoms commonly associated with alcohol poisoning.

    Healthline notes that signs like persistent vomiting, confusion, seizures, slowed or irregular breathing, and low body temperature are all valid reasons to call 911 immediately.

    At the same time, it’s worth noting that in the U.S., calling an ambulance isn’t something people do casually. Emergency medical services come with a very real financial cost, and the person making that call is the one who has to live with the bill afterward.

    In fact, according to a 2024 YouGov survey, 23% of Americans stated that they chose not to call an ambulance specifically because of its high cost.

    On average, an ambulance ride in the U.S. costs around $1,366, making it one of the most expensive emergency transport systems in the world. In many European countries, including Germany and Spain, public emergency ambulance services are typically free in urgent situations.

    The Mary Sue has reached out to Gia via email for comment.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Image of Ljeonida Mulabazi

    Ljeonida Mulabazi

    Ljeonida is a reporter and writer with a degree in journalism and communications from the University of Tirana in her native Albania. She has a particular interest in all things digital marketing; she considers herself a copywriter, content producer, SEO specialist, and passionate marketer. Ljeonida is based in Tbilisi, Georgia, and her work can also be found at the Daily Dot.

    [ad_2]

    Ljeonida Mulabazi

    Source link

  • Soprano Asmik Grigorian to Lead ‘Carmen’ and Sing Mezzo-Soprano Role This Summer

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — Asmik Grigorian is reaching a new low – in a positive way — and doing it on one of the world’s top stages.

    A star soprano, she will sing the title role next summer in Georges Bizet’s “Carmen,” a mezzo-soprano touchstone, at the Salzburg Festival.

    “I thought if I want to do ‘Carmen’ I need to do it now because I don’t want to do when I will be 54,” the 44-year-old Grigorian said ahead of a concert this weekend at New York‘s Carnegie Hall.

    Maria Callas, Leontyne Price, Jessye Norman and Angela Gheorghiu all recorded Carmen but never sang the complete role on stage.

    Ana María Martinez and Danielle de Niese are the most notable sopranos in recent years to have sung live performances of the famous seductress, while Victoria de los Ángeles took it on late in her career in the 1970s, and Geraldine Farrar and Rosa Ponselle performed it decades earlier.


    She debuts in the role in July 2026

    Grigorian is to sing eight “Carmen” performances starting July 26 in a new production by Gabriela Carrizo with Jonathan Tetelman as Don José, Kristina Mkhitaryan as Micaëla, with Teodor Currentzis conducting the Utopia Orchestra.

    “I would not bet against her,” Metropolitan Opera’s general manager Peter Gelb said. “She’s very much of a kind of old-school singer. She’s kind of fearless when it comes to taking on new repertoire.”

    Grigorian will be singing at Carnegie Hall on Saturday alongside Thomas Hampson, Sondra Radvanovsky, Nadine Sierra, Brian Jagde and Anita Monserrat, an unusually timed performance during a period when peripatetic singers often are home for the holidays. She is to join Hampson in the final scene from Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin,” an opera she is to perform at the Met starting April 20.

    Promoter Eugene Wintour, arranging his first U.S. event, wanted to pair stars who hadn’t sung together before. Advance ticket sales at Carnegie were slow, and Wintour said he is planning another star-filled concert next year but before the holidays.

    “In Europe, Christmas and New Year’s concerts are sold out instantly,” he said through a translator. “It’s a learning curve working here in the states.”

    Grigorian traveled Friday from Vilnius, Lithuania; to Zurich and then to New York, going straight from JFK International Airport to a rehearsal at Riverside Church.

    “I really promised myself that I’m not going to be away during Christmas because it’s the only day when all the family, we kind of collect ourselves to be in one place and this is a very, very important day for me,” she said.


    A star two decades in the making

    A daughter of tenor Gegham Grigorian, she made her opera debut in 2004 as Donna Anna in Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” in Norway and has since become one of the world’s leading dramatic sopranos. Her current season includes the title roles in Giacomo Puccini’s “Turandot” and “Manon Lescaut,” and in Richard Strauss’ “Salome,” and she has tentatively planned Richard Wagner’s “Tristan und Isolde” for the first time at the Vienna State Opera in 2029.

    While she has sung Micaëla, Carmen has a lower tessitura and breaking vocal fach boundaries can spark controversy. When Ponselle headlined “Carmen” at the Met for the first time in 1935, Olin Downes wrote in The New York Times: “We have never heard Miss Ponselle sing so badly.”

    “If you feel that you have the notes and you have the personality and you have the desire and you’re a star like Asmik or you’re a star like Ana María Martínez and a theater will give it to you, hallelujah,” soprano Lisette Oropesa said.

    Martínez made her debut as Carmen in 2014 at the Houston Grand Opera at the behest of Anthony Freud, the company’s general director from 2006-11.

    “The most intimidating aspect of ‘Carmen’ is nothing vocal. … It’s much more about commanding the stage.” Martínez said. “Asmik is going to just be incredible in the role simply because of her presence on stage and her magnetism.”

    Grigorian’s first performance as Carmen is expected to draw considerable attention in the classical music world.

    “I started to live that role day by day a bit,” she said. “I never know if I can sing something before I start to do it, so maybe it will be my failure? Who knows? Let’s see.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Four Trends in Art Buying That Dominated 2025

    [ad_1]

    David Hockney, The Poet, from The Blue Guitar, 1976-77. Courtesy of Adam Baumgold Gallery

    Auction results are usually the only public data available for reading the art market, even though they reflect only the secondary sphere. Art fair sales reports can hint at how the primary market is behaving and what collectors are circling, but even those numbers are unstable, shaped by discounts, negotiations and the many variables that can shift between an invoice being issued and a wire arriving. Artsy, widely regarded as the largest online marketplace for art, recently released its first Buyer Trends Report based on the searches and primary-market transactions on its platform, offering a clearer picture of what collectors were buying in 2025.

    “This report reinforces the patterns we identified in Artsy’s Art Market Trends 2025: collectors are becoming more selective, and that discipline is directing demand toward the primary market—especially mid-tier and emerging artists,” Artsy CEO Jeffrey Yin told Observer, noting that works priced under $10,000 are benefiting as buyers look for strong entry points that do not rely on speculation. “Even as the top end recalibrates, the fundamentals remain healthy. People are acquiring art they genuinely want to live with, at price points that feel responsible in today’s market.”

    Trend 1: Smaller paintings at smaller prices

    Small paintings have dominated recent gallery shows and fairs, particularly on the emerging side. Pocket-sized works encourage a more intimate and emotional relationship with the subject, but they are also easier to live with—lighter to ship, simpler to frame and far less punishing when it comes to storage or relocation. In cities like New York and London, where aggressive real estate markets make long-term leases a luxury, collectors are increasingly opting for art that can move with them.

    Artsy’s users in 2025 were actively seeking art on a micro scale, with searches for “micro,” “mini” and “small” rising 40 percent, 47 percent and 49 percent. Forty percent of all purchases on the platform were for small works, and acquisitions tagged as “miniature and small-scale paintings” increased 66 percent year over year.

    A pocket size painting of a book in a white cube spaceA pocket size painting of a book in a white cube space
    Installation view: Olivia Jia’s “Mirror stage” at Margot Samel in the spring of 2025. © Matthew Sherman 2025

    These numbers may be predictable for an online marketplace, where buyers tend to trust digital transactions for lower price tiers rather than multimillion-dollar blue-chip masterpieces that require in-person due diligence. Still, the pattern aligns with the 2025 Art Basel & UBS Art Market Report, which noted that while the highest-end segment contracted sharply (sales above $10 million fell steeply in both number and total value), works priced below $50,000 accounted for roughly 85 percent of dealer transactions in 2024. Smaller galleries—those with under $250,000 in annual turnover—reported a 17 percent increase in sales. The report also confirmed steady growth in the sub-$5,000 range, mirroring Artprice’s recent data showing a rise in transactions under $10,000. Hiscox’s 2024 Online Art Trade Report found that 60 percent of online buyers purchased works under $5,000, with the fastest-growing bracket under $1,000. At the fair level—from NADA Miami and Untitled Art, which just closed, to Independent New York and Future Fair—small-format works were often among the first to sell out, frequently within VIP day, as both younger and seasoned collectors favored accessible entry points that fit urban apartments.

    The design world is echoing the same preference. Artsy identified the rise of “gallery wall” and salon-style décor as a key trend, with interiors favoring densely hung arrangements of small pieces over single statement works. Publications from Elle Decor to The New York Times have likewise pointed to small-format art as the next major wave in collecting—easier to buy, easier to place and uncannily suited to the economic and spatial realities of 2025.

    As collectors lean toward more affordable, manageable formats, editions and drawings are also gaining popularity, particularly for those who want to access established and blue-chip names otherwise out of reach. Artsy’s report dedicates a spotlight to David Hockney, who, after a few landmark years of museum shows, saw a spike in demand not only for paintings but also for prints available at more accessible price points. Searches for his name were up 46 percent on Artsy in 2025, making him the third most searched artist on the platform, with strong demand for his more “popular-priced” etchings.

    Trend 2:  Blue’s growing appeal

    In a time of uncertainty and global turmoil, collectors have been turning toward the calming psychological pull of blue. Searches for “blue” on Artsy were up 20 percent year over year, with a particular preference for cobalt, a deep, vivid shade. Searches for “cobalt” rose 131 percent year over year, while purchases tagged “bright and vivid colors” increased 22 percent.

    Large blue monocrome paintingLarge blue monocrome painting
    Yves Klein, California (IKB 71), 1961. Sold for €18.4 million ($21.4 million). Christie’s

    As water becomes more precious and record-hot summers force us to reckon with its growing scarcity, blue has gained traction for its association with water. Works depicting swimming pools, waves and open seas have seen growing interest, with searches for “ocean,” “sea” and “water” rising by 33 percent, 28 percent and 24 percent, respectively. This trend has been visible at fairs over the past few years and in the auction market—most notably with Yves Klein’s California (IKB 71) (1961), a monumental museum-grade masterpiece that sold for €18.37 million ($21.34 million) at Christie’s Paris in October.

    But the blue trend extends well beyond the art world. Pantone’s Spring 2025 palette featured multiple saturated blues, with Strong Blue among its most circulated seasonal shades. Vogue declared cobalt the “new it-color,” as designers Tommy Hilfiger and Loewe leaned into deep blues in their spring/summer 2025 runway shows. Miu Miu, Balenciaga and Ferragamo pushed electric and ultramarine blues in recent campaigns, while beauty and consumer culture followed suit: Glossier and Rare Beauty launched cobalt liners, Dyson released cobalt-violet appliances that became TikTok fixtures and Apple’s deep-blue iPhone finish emerged as the most ordered shade of its cycle.

    Trend 3: A return to nature

    This widespread desire to disconnect and return to the essence has also fueled a renewed longing for nature—something many rediscovered during the pandemic. This “bucolic escapism,” a contemporary take on the idyll, has taken hold in gallery shows and fair presentations through dreamy landscapes, rolling hillsides, lush gardens and flower compositions, as well as scenes of horses.

    Art history offers precedent: renewed fascination with pastoral imagery tends to surface during moments of political fatigue or cultural volatility. In Ancient Rome, pastoral ideals emerged amid expansion, civil war and social anxiety, as poets and painters projected fantasies of rustic simplicity—Virgil’s Arcadia being the archetype. After the turmoil of the Napoleonic era, European painters embraced a neoclassical pastoral vocabulary as an antidote to upheaval and imperial overreach. The pastoral has long served as a stabilizing fiction—a world governed by harmony rather than conflict, by timeless nature rather than chaotic politics. Today’s appetite for harmonious landscapes, garden scenes and atmospheric horizons reflects similar pressures: climate dread, digital overload and geopolitical tension.

    A lone figure stands beside a waterfall under the glow of a rainbow, bathed in mystical light, creating an atmosphere of quiet awe and connection with nature.A lone figure stands beside a waterfall under the glow of a rainbow, bathed in mystical light, creating an atmosphere of quiet awe and connection with nature.
    Caleb Hahne Quintana, A Flicker in the Ancient Rhythm (detail), 2025. Flashe and drybrush on linen, 74 x 54 in. Courtesy the artist and Anat Ebgi, Los Angeles / New York. Photo by Shark Senesac

    On Artsy, purchases of works tagged “landscapes and waterscapes” were up 35 percent year over year, “flora” up 44 percent and “earth tones” up 29 percent. Searches for related topics also accelerated: “picnic” rose 208 percent, “outdoors” 80 percent, “nature” 30 percent and “landscapes” 19 percent.

    Once again, the trend extends beyond the art world, with organic, nature-inspired shapes, earth tones and natural light dominating collectible design and interiors—fueling continued momentum for the Lalannes—and echoing lifestyle culture more broadly. Biophilic design, from indoor gardens to moss-green upholstery and stone surfaces, has become a recurring feature in architecture and retail, while fashion and wellness brands lean into materials and palettes that promise grounding and retreat in an increasingly unstable, urbanized world. Pinterest’s 2025 summer trend report highlighted a sharp rise in nature-oriented searches tied to the “digital detox” narrative. Airbnb reported a 100 percent increase in searches for countryside stays and a 50 percent rise for national park stays, with Gen Z driving a 26 percent surge in fall travel searches—Vermont ranked as a top foliage destination. TripAdvisor and other booking data indicate that smaller, nature-adjacent cities are outperforming major metropolitan destinations, and the U.S. National Park System logged roughly 332 million visits in 2024, confirming that nature-based travel and outdoor engagement have become defining trends of 2025.

    Trend 4: The return of domestic tableus

    With the pandemic, for better or worse, people rediscovered the pleasures of staying home, reviving interest in domestic rituals such as cooking and shared meals. Unsurprisingly, the final key trend Artsy identified is the rising popularity of still lifes that depict this comforting domesticity, along with scenes of people eating together. Purchases of works tagged “food” were up 61 percent year over year, while searches for “dinner” and “food” each rose 44 percent, “dining” 38 percent, “meal” 28 percent and “table” 18 percent.

    A 1969 painting titled Candy Counter by Wayne Thiebaud displays an orderly confectionery display with lollipops, wrapped candies, and sweets on trays, set against a clean background with a scale and glass jar.A 1969 painting titled Candy Counter by Wayne Thiebaud displays an orderly confectionery display with lollipops, wrapped candies, and sweets on trays, set against a clean background with a scale and glass jar.
    Wayne Thiebaud, Candy Counter, 1969. 120.7 x 91.8 cm., from a private collection. © Wayne Thiebaud VAGA at ARS, NY and DACS, London 2025

    Once again, the trend extends across lifestyle and communication. Etsy reported that searches for “dining ware” and “supper club,” driven by table-setting categories, surged by 1,000 percent. Social platforms are flooded with cooking tutorials, dinner-party events and images of dining—often at home. On TikTok, “dinner parties” content views were up 70 percent year over year and #CookingTok remained one of the most active tags, while on Instagram, posts tagged #tablescape increased over 35 percent. On YouTube, cooking videos saw a 25 percent increase in watch time, and Eventbrite reported a 45 percent rise in cooking-class bookings in 2024-2025. As eating out becomes more expensive and people feel more disconnected and alienated, the rediscovery of cooking and sharing food reflects a contemporary nostalgia as much as a desire to reconnect with the essence—what truly nourishes body and soul.

    Now, if we think of art as both symptom and palliative, these buying patterns begin to read as something larger than market behavior. They reveal a broader societal undercurrent—a map of what people are seeking, avoiding or trying to soothe. In this sense, what collectors gravitate toward becomes a quiet proxy for the contemporary condition, a way of understanding not only what is selling but what people feel they need.

    More art market news

    Four Trends in Art Buying That Dominated 2025

    [ad_2]

    Elisa Carollo

    Source link

  • 3 New England governors demand briefing on power project risks

    [ad_1]

    Four Northeast governors on Wednesday demanded a classified briefing from the Trump administration to understand the national security risks underlying the pause on offshore wind project leases.

    Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee also called for the pause to be lifted immediately on the five offshore wind projects, including Vineyard Wind 1 off the coast of Nantucket.

    “It strains credulity to believe that vital, substantial projects that underwent many federal reviews and processes, including by the DoD (Department of Defense), all of a sudden present new, existential, unforeseen threats,” the governors wrote in a letter to U.S. Department of Interior Secretary Doug Burgum.

    The Department of Interior announced Monday that it was pausing all large-scale offshore wind leases immediately in response to “national security risks identified by the Department of War in recently completed classified reports.” The department said it would work with the Department of War and other government agencies to “assess the possibility of mitigating the national security risks posed by these projects.”

    In their requested briefing, the governors said they want a “clear description of the specific national security risks” and “[i]dentification of the particular project components, if any, alleged to give rise to those risks.”

    The governors wrote that federal officials did not notify states about “any purportedly new risk” before the project suspensions.

    “The sudden emergence of a new ‘national security threat’ appears to be less a legitimate, rational finding of fact and more a pretextual excuse to justify a predetermined outcome consistent with the President’s frequently stated personal opposition to offshore wind,” their letter says.

    In its announcement, the Department of Interior pointed to national security risks that are “inherent” to large offshore wind projects and invoked unclassified federal government reports that “have long found that the movement of massive turbine blades and the highly reflective towers create radar interference called ‘clutter.’”

    The governors argued that, “If ‘clutter’ were such a grave threat, it might also apply to the thousands of oil rigs and other seaborne infrastructure in our coastal waters.” They also emphasized the projects have already been vetted by federal officials, including at the Department of Defense.

    “The military had the opportunity to raise concerns and object. They did not, and further certified there was no threat to national security,” their letter says. “To claim a threat exists now, after billions of dollars have been invested in these projects and reviews fully completed, is the height of irrationality.”

    Fifty iron workers lost their jobs just before the holidays due to the halted work on Vineyard Wind, Ironworkers Local 7 said Tuesday. The union said it is “thoroughly disgusted and furious” at the administration’s action.

    “If we are serious about making energy more affordable and strengthening American industry, we need more energy projects of all types, not fewer,” the union said. “We call on the president to reverse this decision so our members can get back to work providing reliable, affordable power for Massachusetts.”

    [ad_2]

    Alison Kuznitz

    Source link

  • Democratic Governors Call on Trump Administration to Lift Freeze on Offshore Wind Projects

    [ad_1]

    WASHINGTON, Dec 24 (Reuters) – Four ‌Democratic ​governors wrote to U.S. Interior ‌Secretary Doug Burgum on Wednesday to ask the ​Trump administration to lift its halt on five offshore wind projects on the ‍U.S. East Coast.

    The Department ​of the Interior on Monday attributed its suspension of the leases ​for the ⁠projects to national security concerns.

    However, New York Governor Kathy Hochul, Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey and Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee rejected those claims, saying that the projects had already undergone extensive ‌federal review, including an assessment that addressed national security considerations.

    They said ​neither ‌the Interior Department nor ‍any other ⁠agency, including the Pentagon, informed their states about a new risk prior to the suspensions.

    “The sudden emergence of a new ‘national security threat’ appears to be less a legitimate, rational finding of fact and more a pretextual excuse to justify a predetermined outcome consistent with the President’s frequently stated personal opposition ​to offshore wind,” the governors wrote.

    The Interior Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The suspension was the latest blow for offshore wind developers that have faced repeated disruptions to their multi-billion-dollar projects under U.S. President Donald Trump, who has said he finds wind turbines ugly, costly and inefficient.

    Agencies including the U.S. Departments of the Interior and Commerce and the Environmental Protection Agency have been implementing a directive to suspend all ​new approvals needed for both onshore and offshore wind projects pending a review of leasing and permitting practices.

    Earlier this month, a federal judge rejected the Trump administration’s halt to all federal ​approvals for new wind energy projects.  

    (Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington; Editing by Alistair Bell)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • ‘Brink of collapse’: NYC legal services provider says city owes $20M in backpay – amNewYork

    [ad_1]

    The city owes tens of millions of dollars to the legal nonprofits it relies on to fulfill its promise of free counsel to low-income and elderly New Yorkers facing eviction, landlord harassment and immigration issues.

    And, if the city doesn’t pay them by next month, some of those nonprofits say their operations will be thrown into crisis and they’ll have to stop providing services to thousands who are counting on them.

    “If we aren’t paid, it would create existential problems for our organization,” said Greg Klemm, the chief financial officer of Legal Services NYC, which provides tens of thousands of New Yorkers with counsel. 

    Klemm said the city owes his organization roughly $20 million for work attorneys have done over the past year and a half for city programs that provide the most vulnerable New Yorkers with free counsel as they fight to stay in their homes, through the citizenship or green card process or against landlord harassment and deportations. 

    The lag in payment has gone on for so long that it’s pushed Legal Services NYC to a breaking point, Klemm said, forcing it to max out its line of credit at $15 million to maintain its operations and pay staff, a practice that’s now racked up $370,000 in interest just this year — enough to fund the salaries of two and half full-time employees.

    Klemm said the city hasn’t provided a timeline to releasing payments, forcing the group, which gets 45% of its income from city contracts, to drain its reserves. 

    “It’s putting us in a bind,” he continued. “If they do not pay us at all for December or January, we wouldn’t be able to meet payroll at the end of January.”

    If bank accounts of multiple legal service providers dry up at once, Klemm said it would have a catastrophic ripple effect across the city’s courts.

    “That is a substantial number of people that would not get services,” Klemm said. “I couldn’t imagine the devastating impact it would have on low-income New Yorkers taking legal action against landlords who are not making sufficient repairs. There would likely be an increased threat of deportation and family separation. It would be devastating.”

    Legal Services NYC isn’t the only legal nonprofit the city’s left hanging. Legal Aid Society and New York Legal Assistance Group also reported late payments on city contracts, with Legal Aid saying it’s owed $16 million for work completed during FY 2025, which ended six months ago, and NYLAG reporting over $5.5 million in outstanding dues stretching as far back as Financial Year 2023. 

    Though the city provided Legal Aid with a 50% advance on its FY 2026 contract, the midway point has now passed, and the city hasn’t approved its FY26 budget or allowed it to submit invoices for payment for work on FY26 contracts, which began on July 1.

    The delay in payments severely impacts the Legal Aid Society’s cash flow and threatens our ability to make payroll for our staff and to pay vendors and subcontractors who are critical to service delivery,” a Legal Aid spokesperson told amNewYork Law. “LAS spends a significant amount of time just trying to get paid. [The city] has created unnecessarily complex processes and procedures that delay contract budget approval and invoice submission, this complexity not only delays a crucial payment process but also diverts limited staff time to attending to this rather than other crucial priorities.”  

    The New York Legal Assistance Group said that while it was “grateful” to the city for providing significant advances for its work, it was still experiencing delays and unapproved budgets that affect its financial stability and prevent it from providing vital services.

    “As we move into the second half of this fiscal year, budgets remain unapproved, we remain unable to invoice, and no additional advances have been provided,” the group’s CEO, Lisa Rivera, wrote in an email. “The costs of doing this work exist in real time, addressing contract registration and payment delays is crucial, and expanding the use of advances when those delays cannot be mitigated is essential.” 

    The city’s Department of Social Services, which handles the nonprofits’ contract payments, told amNewYork Law that payment delays “can be caused by numerous factors,” and that it was “continuing to work through all outstanding budget items with our legal services providers.”

    Ensuring all appropriate payments are made in a timely manner is a top priority and both the city and agency have made significant strides to address payment delays,” a DSS spokesperson wrote in an emailed statement. “This includes appointing a chief nonprofit officer to improve coordination with our nonprofit partners, streamline operations, and resolve payment issues; working with providers to identify and address pain points in the contracting process; and reforming procedures to minimize delays in registering contracts to ensure providers are receiving payment for the work they do.”

    The office did not respond to a direct question on when it planned to pay the money it owes the organizations. 

    Legal Services NYC said it has been in touch with the city’s contract managers, but hasn’t been able to establish any contact with upper leadership at DSS, despite trying for weeks. 

    “It is hard to tell whether it is stonewalling or incompetence, but there seems to be a general lack of willingness by them to move quicker,” Legal Services NYC communication director Seth Hoy told amNewYork Law in an email. He added that the organization was trying to get the city to release at least $2 million for one of their outstanding invoices this week, though it wasn’t clear if that would be successful.

    The organization says it has grown to meet the city’s demands, hiring staff and ramping up its caseload, only to be left destabilized by quick growth it can’t sustain without the money it was promised to fund that growth from the city that asked for it.

    “We have grown our organization to meet the city’s desperate need for eviction defense attorneys, and that means relying on the city’s promise to fulfill its end of our contracting bargain,” Hoy said. “Yet, year after year we find ourselves on the brink of collapse due to the city’s inability to pay legal service providers on time.” 

    If attorneys aren’t paid in January, Klemm fears staff quitting. He imagines it would take a significant period of time for the organization to bounce back, and would make it difficult to hire new staff if the group can’t pay its existing team.

    The fact that late payments aren’t a new phenomenon for nonprofit legal services providers, Klemm said, is both confusing and frustrating, arguing that the city doesn’t treat other contractors this way.

    “We estimate that we save the city over $350 million a year in averted shelter costs by keeping our clients in their homes, yet we have to continually beg to get paid for that work,” Klemm said. “It’s hard for me to speculate why it keeps happening, but it’s not okay.” 

    What he does know is that his organization needs the money the city promised it, quickly. 

    “The city has to make immediate payments on its nonprofit contracts,” Klemm said. “Time is running out.”

    [ad_2]

    Isabella Gallo

    Source link

  • US Judge Tosses Trump Challenge to New York Immigration-Related Law

    [ad_1]

    Dec 23 (Reuters) – ‌A ​federal judge ‌on Tuesday ​dismissed a lawsuit ‍the U.S. Department ​of ​Justice ⁠filed challenging a New York law that President Donald ‌Trump’s administration said was ​impeding immigration ‌enforcement.

    U.S. ‍District Judge ⁠Anne Nardacci in Syracuse rejected the Justice Department’s arguments that ​a New York law that bars the Democratic-led state from sharing vehicle and address information with federal immigration authorities violated ​the U.S. Constitution.

    (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; ​Editing by Chris Reese)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Indian and Latin cuisines collide at Taco Mahal

    [ad_1]

    Danikkah Josan is the half-Indian, half-Puerto Rican chef and owner of Taco Mahal in New York City, where she serves mouth-watering fusion dishes like chicken tikka masala tacos and basmati rice bowls.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Former New York State Prison Guard Sentenced For Inmate’s Death

    [ad_1]

    UTICA, N.Y. (AP) — A former New York state prison guard convicted of murder for his role in the brutal beating of an inmate that was captured on body-camera footage was sentenced Friday to 25 years to life in prison.

    David Kingsley also received a 25-year sentence for a manslaughter conviction in the case. He is the only former guard convicted of murder in the death of Robert Brooks, who was pummeled by corrections officers on the night of Dec. 9, 2024, at Marcy Correctional Facility. Five other guards charged in the 43-year-old Black man’s death have pleaded guilty to manslaughter.

    Video footage of Brooks in handcuffs being punched and stomped by guards triggered widespread shock and calls for reform in New York’s prisons.

    Six guards were indicted by a grand jury for murder charges brought earlier this year by the special prosecutor, Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick, who also charged four others with lesser crimes. Three of the defendants charged with murder later pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter.

    Prosecutors said Kingsley deserved the maximum sentence because he refused to take responsibility for his actions and made Brooks’ family go through the trauma of a trial. Speaking in court before the sentence was imposed, Kingsley apologized to Brooks’ relatives for his role in the “senseless” actions that led to his death.

    The victim’s son, Robert Brooks Jr., said that he hopes the case will prevent similar incidents in the future. Brooks’ brother, Jared Ricks, added that while forgiveness is a long way off, justice being served is a step on that path.

    Kingsley, 45, was one of three guards tried before a jury in October on charges of murder and first-degree manslaughter. He was the only one of the trio found guilty. Body-camera footage played at the trial showed him holding Brooks by the neck and lifting him as multiple guards surrounded the handcuffed man.

    A final defendant is scheduled to stand trial Jan. 12 on a second-degree manslaughter charge. Another guard was released from prison this month as he attempts to withdraw his guilty plea to second-degree manslaughter.

    Fitzpatrick became the special prosecutor after state Attorney General Letitia James recused herself, citing her office’s representation of several officers in separate lawsuits. He also is prosecuting guards in the fatal beating of Messiah Nantwi on March 1 at a nearby prison, the Mid-State Correctional Facility. Ten guards were indicted in April, including two who are charged with murder, in Nantwi’s death.

    The prisons are about 180 miles (290 kilometers) northwest of New York City.

    This image provided by the New York State Attorney General office shows body camera footage of correction officers beating a handcuffed man, Robert Brooks, at the Marcy Correctional Facility in Oneida County, N.Y., Dec. 9, 2024. (New York State Attorney General office via AP, File)

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 3 Officers Wounded and Suspect Killed After Rochester, New York, Domestic Violence Call

    [ad_1]

    ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — Three police officers responding to a domestic violence call were wounded and a suspect was killed Friday night in Rochester, New York, according to officials.

    “Multiple shots were fired” after Rochester Police Department officers responded, the city’s Police Chief David Smith said at a news conference. The suspect then fled and officers found the person again nearby, Smith said.

    The three wounded officers were in the hospital. Details on their conditions were not released.

    “This is always our biggest nightmare during this time of the year; these type of instances,” said Rochester Mayor Malik Evans.

    He asked everyone to pray for the officers.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Stefanik exits New York governor’s race after Trump stays neutral and worries flare about a bitter primary

    [ad_1]

    Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik dropped out of the New York governor’s race Friday, concluding that a potentially fractious GOP primary could hurt Republicans’ chances in an uphill statewide contest, as President Trump signaled he would not make an endorsement at this stage. 

    Stefanik pointed to the risks in a statement to supporters, writing: “While we would have overwhelmingly won this primary, it is not an effective use of our time or your generous resources to spend the first half of next year in an unnecessary and protracted Republican primary, especially in a challenging state like New York.”

    Stefanik’s political future is now unclear, as she said she is not planning to run for re-election in Congress. Stefanik, considered a rising MAGA leader, was initially set to leave Congress after Mr. Trump picked her in November 2024 for U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, before her nomination was pulled by the administration in March over concerns about a narrowing Republican majority in the House. 

    Two sources confirmed to CBS News that Stefanik spoke directly with President Trump on Thursday to discuss her decision to leave the gubernatorial race. Their conversation was first reported by The New York Times.

    Mr. Trump later issued a statement following her announcement applauding Stefanik, calling her “a fantastic person and Congresswoman from New York State” and describing her as “a tremendous talent.” He said she would have “great success” in whatever she chooses next and signaled his continued support.

    A Republican member of Congress with direct knowledge of the race told CBS News they believed Stefanik ultimately concluded that a contested Republican primary would be difficult and potentially damaging, even if she were likely to win. The other major candidate is Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, another Trump ally.

    Under New York GOP rules, candidates must secure at least 25% of the weighted vote at the state party’s February convention to qualify for the June primary ballot, or otherwise submit nominating petitions.

    While Stefanik was believed to have early support representing well above that threshold — possibly more than 75% of the weighted vote due to early endorsements from local party officials — New York Republicans told CBS News that a challenge from Blakeman still risked becoming a prolonged intraparty fight.

    The eventual nominee is expected to face off against incumbent Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul. New York hasn’t elected a Republican governor since 2002, though Hochul won her 2022 race by a single-digit margin of  6.4 percentage points, which spurred renewed interest among Republicans who viewed the result as a sign of potential Democratic vulnerability.

    “My gut tells me this is not the right political time,” Stefanik told New York Magazine in an interview on Friday. “This is not the sort of array of things lining up — which is so difficult in New York, which is incredibly difficult in a picture-perfect year–let alone with a primary and everything else.”

    “We viewed it as a waste of resources,” she said, also citing family considerations. “I have a 4-year old son, and that is a priority for our family.”

    A senior House Republican official also said Stefanik was frustrated that Mr. Trump declined to endorse her early and effectively clear the field for her, a move that Stefanik allies believed could have avoided a divisive primary. 

    Mr. Trump did call Blakeman after he entered the race, according to sources familiar with the phone call. He told the county executive that he did not like seeing “good Republicans” face each other in an electoral battle.

    Asked about the race on Dec. 10, the president repeatedly emphasized his reluctance to publicly intervene, stressing his personal relationships with both candidates and concern about collateral damage from a contested primary. 

    “First of all, he’s a friend. She’s a friend,” Mr. Trump told reporters at the White House. “These are two great people running. In a way, I hate to see them running against each other. I hope they’re not going to be damaging each other.”  

    Mr. Trump went on to praise both candidates, saying, “Elise is fantastic, and Bruce is. They’re two fantastic people, and I always hate it when two very good friends of mine are running.”

    Pointing to the state GOP convention, Trump said, “I think you’ll know pretty much at the end of February what’s going to happen. And I’ll probably have to, you know, do what I want to do.”

    “We have two very talented people. Either one should win against the Democrats,” he added.

    After Stefanik announced she would end her campaign, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt praised her record, calling her “an incredible advocate” for her Upstate New York district and “a true friend” to Mr. Trump. Leavitt, who previously worked for Stefanik as a top adviser, added that she is “a great leader, and an even better person.”

    Stefanik, a member of House Republican leadership and one of Trump’s closest allies in Congress, had been viewed by New York Republicans as a formidable contender given her national profile and fundraising strength — over $12 million raised. 

    But she faced an uphill battle in deep-blue New York, with a recent Siena College poll showing Hochul with a double-digit lead versus both Republicans at this stage of the race. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link