
A 35 Year-Old Italian Restaurant Slated To Close Is Rescued by a Legacy Space Uptown
Nino's has hosted the likes of Clint Eastwood, Angela Lansbury, Chris Noth, Chelsea Clinton, and members of The Sopranos such as the late James Gandolfini, serving classics like baked clams, homemade ravioli, rigatoni alla vodka, and chicken Parm. It's one of a handful of Italian American restaurants that have had to close (and in this case, relocate), with others including Williamsburg's Frost and Tomasso in Bensonhurst. Babbo is temporarily closed for takeover
With Stephen Starr taking over Babbo and Lupa — made famous by Mario Batali and Joe Bastianich — Babbo, open since 1998, has closed to prepare for the transition of ownership. The Italian restaurant will be temporarily closing for renovations as we begin an exciting new chapter,' reads the Instagram post. 'We're working hard behind the scenes to bring you an elevated dining experience, with fresh updates and inspired touches — while keeping the heart and soul of Babbo you know and love.' No confirmation yet whether Mark Ladner is on track to take over as chef. Saga has rolled out a new tasting menu
The fine dining Saga menu in Fidi (70 Pine Street, 63rd Floor, at Pearl Street) has quietly changed over, according to a tipster. Since chef Charlie Mitchell took the helm in July, the tasting menu had kept to dishes the late Jamal James Kent served since the restaurant opened — until now. The restaurant is on track to shutter in August for renovations to the space, too. Ukrainian Festival is this weekend
The 49th annual St. George Ukrainian Festival is this weekend starting tonight at 5 p.m. and running through Sunday (30 E. Seventh Street, at Third Avenue). EV Grieve reports that 30,000 pierogies have been made in preparation.
Sign up for our newsletter.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
18 minutes ago
- New York Post
Nonnacore trend puts Italian grandma gear front and center with a boost from celebs like Rihanna and Kendall Jenner
NYC loves its nonnas. Italian grandmas are at the epicenter of the hottest accessory craze as summer moves into fall — silk scarves that sizzle as the new/old headpiece-de-resistance. 'It' girls are eating up and scarving down the latest vintage, voguish vibe — a styling movement known as 'nonnacore,' made haute by tastemakers from Rihanna to the runway to sirens on the subway. Advertisement 14 New Yorker Arianna Lombardo says her nonnacore style is inspired by A-listers such as Rihanna and Aaliyah, as well as her own Nonna. LP Media And any Gotham gal can acquire the look for themselves — by finishing an outfit with a colorful kerchief tied tautly atop one's tresses, à la sexy granny in her prime. It's an effortlessly luxe look that first went viral among A-listers and influencers, such as Beyoncé and Hailey Bieber, who stunned in the headgear way back on their respective, splashy summer 2024 vacations. Advertisement Now, everyday divas are following suit. 'It's simple, chic and ties a look together,' Arianna Lombardo, 30, a hairstylist and self-crowned 'fashion maximalist,' from Long Island, told The Post. The brunette recently dazzled over 82,000 social media fans with a detailed nonnacore headscarf how-to. 14 Cosmetologist Lombardo, known online as 'The Hair Ninja of New York,' racked up over 82,000 TikTok views with her headscarf tutorial. LP Media Advertisement 'Being Italian, I'm loving that the nonnas are getting this well-deserved fashion nod,' she said. It's sampled swag, much like the 'Mob Wives' dressing frenzy, which inspired glamour gals to wow in gangster garb, or the 'Tomato Girl Summer' of 2023 — a moment dedicated to veggie-inspired duds. But more than a bit of borrowed pizzazz, nonnacore offers budgeted fashionistas an effortless, affordable way to elevate any ensemble, according to NYC stylist Dawn Del Russo. Advertisement Owing to tariffs and inflation — economic bugaboos forcing clotheshorses to get creative when building their wardrobes — Del Russo said investing in a timeless piece — such as a scarf, be it designer label or a thrift-store find — is a haute hack for the pennywise. 'Bright, quality scarves are having a movement because they're versatile and recession-proof,' the en vogue expert explained to The Post while vacationing in Italy. 'Wearing one around your head is very popular right now, but you can also transform that same scarf into a cute necktie, crop top, belt or sarong,' she said. Repurposing fab finery is how nonnas would traditionally keep it cute, Del Russo noted. 14 Italian grandmas are rising as the year's hottest fashion accessory icons thanks to the Nonnacore movement. Veranika – 'Those old-world Italian grandmas didn't splurge,' she said. 'They probably took extra fabric from curtains or tablecloths, wore them on their heads and bodies, and made it fashion.' It's make-do splendor that Emily Bargeron, 40, a vintage clothes curator from Savanah, Georgia, and her wallet really appreciate. In fact, the millennial tells The Post the nonnacore scarf is like a mini Mediterranean trip for your head. Advertisement 'If you can afford to visit Europe this summer, you can bring Europe to you with this look,' said Bargeron, whose modish nod to Italian grannies has garnered over 1.4 million TikTok views. 'Almost everyone has a silk scarf in their closet — it's inexpensive, iconic and gets you tons of compliments,' she explained. Hollywood's hottest, however, are more concerned about slaying than saving. 14 Always ahead of the curve, music's Queen Bey helped kick off the headscarf trend well before its summer 2025 fashion boom. Beyonce/Instagram Advertisement 14 Actress Elle Fanning served a casual-chic slay with a nonnacore-inspired scarf at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals in May. WireImage 14 Rihanna gave headscarves a good rep during a recent outing in Beverly Hills. Blackbelts / BACKGRID Rihanna recently turned heads with a $650 Valentino Garavani Toute La V Silk Scarf over her chocolatey locks in Beverly Hills. The pregnant Grammy winner, 37, paired the popular add-on with a plain white button-down shirt, dark-wash cuffed jeans and croc-print heeled flip-flops from Amina Muaddi. Advertisement Anya Taylor-Joy, 26, rocked a show-stopper this month, too, wrapping a pleated green scarf around the full perimeter of her dome as did yesteryear bellas like Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn, as well as Italian starlets Sophia Loren and Gina Lollobrigida. 14 Hepburn and her swanky peers were well known for adding a chic headscarf to their looks in the 1950s and '60s. Corbis via Getty Images 14 'The Menu' actress Anya Taylor-Joy ate up the headscarf style — even with necessary ear protection — at a Formula 1 Grand Prix event earlier this month in Hungary. 14 Italian beauty Sophia Loren routinely wowed with her effortless look. ullstein bild via Getty Images Advertisement Kim Kardashian snapped saucy selfies and posed in a headscarf while promoting her Skims collaboration with Italian fashion house Roberto Cavalli, and little sister Kendall Jenner, 29, let a silk number shine as the mane attraction as a model for Gucci. But Arianne Antonio, 31, a publicist from Bushwick, is grateful that the unfussy fashion trend isn't limited to the rich and famous. The Brooklynite says a little nonnacore scarf can make a big difference to one's duds, as well as their mental health. 14 Sabrina Carpenter works an all-striped ensemble — including a matching scarf. Getty Images for Vogue 14 Arianne Antonio told The Post that a nonnacore-inspired scarf can add a little light to one's day during these trying times. EMMY PARK 14 Fashionista Antonio often wraps a silk scarf around her baseball cap for added flair. EMMY PARK 'With everything going on in the world right now, people are stressed and exhausted,' she said, noting the sea of headscarves she saw at this year's Lollapalooza music festival — an annual celebration of music and fashion. 'People need a colorful dash of fun in their lives.' '[Nonnacore scarves] are comfortable, cute and you can play around with them in so many different ways,' Antonio added. 'They're that little something that can completely transform an otherwise boring outfit,' she said. 14 Lombardo says the nonnacore headscarf movement is an easy fashion trend to follow. LP Media Lombardo agrees. 'They add a funky edge to everybody,' she said. 'If you're a wealthy celebrity or an everyday guy or girl in New York City, a headscarf can add to your aura.' 14 Antonio shows off a stylish, properly situated scarf. EMMY PARK Here is Lombardo's step-by-step how-to for achieving nonnacore:


Eater
18 minutes ago
- Eater
It's Time to Be Romantic in North Beach
Garrett Schlichte is an award-winning columnist, writer, and chef living in San Francisco. Garrett's work has appeared online and in print in The Washington Post , The New York Times , THEM, Jezebel, Slate, and other outlets. Welcome to Fire the Menu, a column from chef and writer Garrett Schlichte about over-ordering, over-indulging, and almost overdoing it in their favorite city in the world, the place they call home, San Francisco. From pre-fixe to quick fix and everything in between, it's time to find your people, tuck in, and, well, fire the menu. I'd have thought that getting dumped by someone a little over halfway through their 20s, when I'm almost halfway through my 30s, would have been more embarrassing, but after you've willingly posted your first Instagram Reel, really, everything else feels rote in comparison. If I'm being totally honest, the only actually embarrassing part of that breakup, aside from the fact that I was still wearing my yellow kitchen clogs when it happened, is that it took getting swept off my feet by a 26-year-old for me to finally understand just how beautiful North Beach is. It's not that I'd never been to North Beach, of course. I'm not an idiot (mostly). When I first moved to the city, I made the customary pilgrimage to City Lights. I've spent several pie-eyed afternoons squirreled away in the ever-elusive second-floor booth at Vesuvio, gossiping with friends over too many martinis, making up stories about how strangers on the first floor might have met. I've eaten a slice from Golden Boy, and Tony's, and Golden Boy again. But all of those were special occasions that felt, to be totally honest, a little bit like work. Regardless of the fact that our sweet little city is famously 7x7, gorgeous, and uniquely walkable and bikeable, I have, at times, been uncharacteristically lazy when it comes to traveling so far that I'm required to carry the customary light jacket the microclimates necessitate. Until, of course, a hot guy invited me to a part of the city that required walking, a train, and a cable car. If any city transit officials are looking for ways to inspire people to use public transit more regularly, they might consider having more 6-foot-7 men in slutty little glasses invite people on dates — I have some empirical evidence pointing toward the success of this tactic. But I'm not here to save Muni (although, of course, save Muni), I'm here to talk about North Beach, and how one truly perfect date broke me out of my neighborhood vortex. It is considerably easier to get to North Beach by bus, bike, or on foot than it is to get there by cable car, but I now think riding a cable car, one of the last vestiges of an almost-but-not-quite-bygone era of San Francisco, into the heart of North Beach is one of the most perfect and romantic things you can do. I will admit that when my date and I hopped off BART at Powell and then had to walk and wait an additional 17 minutes for the cable car, I was suspicious. The bottle of wine he had tucked in his tote was helpful, but even then, I wasn't quite sure of the whole idea. Garrett Schlichte Garrett Schlichte I'd never ridden a cable car because I considered it to be nothing more than a tourist trap. What an idiot I am! When the trolley finally arrived and we boarded and sat down, I was instantly in love (with the trolley, not the man). Sure, I was a little tipsy. Yes, I was holding hands with a tall, cute man. Of course, the moon was out and full, but I'm still sure that even if none of those things were true, I would have found it magical. Riding into North Beach down Powell in the open air is a reminder that our city, which can feel wonderfully like a town at times, is very much a city. The flickering marques and neon signs and the grind of the electric motor of the trolley was a pulsing heartbeat saying I'm here, I'm back, I never left. I don't remember where we finally hopped off except that it was in the middle of an intersection, which, of course, I found particularly endearing. As we wandered away from the track, I did a few twirls on the sidewalk. Red, green, and white lights strung across the streets were stars in my eyes, and I smelled a new kind of pizza every couple of blocks. Heaven! In 1940, the columnist Herb Caen wrote that North Beach was '1,001 neon-splattered joints alive with the Italian air of garlic and the jukebox wail of American folk songs.' That night, and now, I find myself delighted by how true that description still is. The rest of the date was fine, but gilded to better-than-fine by the thick ambrosial air that wafts through every inch of North Beach. I don't remember what restaurant we ate at, which is good because the food wasn't, although that didn't stop me from loving it. Bad food can be compensated for when a restaurant's heart is in the right place, and wherever we were, it definitely was. The owner sat a few tables away from us and came over to pour us wine when our glasses got low. An extra little treat was gifted to us for dessert. Sure, the chicken was dry, but our waiter hugged us on the way out — ugh! Back out on the street, we held hands and walked past increasingly busier and louder bar fronts, and my date wondered aloud if stopping to kiss on a street corner might get us hate-crimed. I looked around. For maybe the first time in my life in San Francisco, I couldn't spot another gay person around me, aside from the one whose hand I was holding. Despite North Beach's history as San Francisco's first gayborhood, long gone were the Paper Doll, the Beige Room, Mona's, and a dozen other bars and restaurants that made it so. Petite Lil's keeps the romantic energy alive and well. Garrett Schlichte Although we didn't let the stifling heterosexuality stop us from expressing our god-given right to lock lips on a street corner (North Beach or not, it's still San Francisco, after all), I did wonder mid-make-out if the lack of a gay outpost was part of what had kept me from frequenting one of the most romantic parts of the city for so long. In the Castro and Soma, and even the Tenderloin and Bernal, you're never too far from a queer watering hole, but I wouldn't necessarily call those places inherently romantic, or at least not in the same way North Beach is. Even though my relationship with that tall man didn't last much longer after that date, it was just the beginning of my love affair with North Beach. A couple of weeks after that night, I found myself back under the neon lights for a friend's book reading, and then miraculously snatching up the last two bar seats at Tony's for a beer, pizza, and a perfect Italian chopped salad. A week later, I was back on the trolley and tucking into the window seat at Petit Lil's for a cold martini and even colder oysters. Then, it was Tosca, and a late-night burger at Sam's. Then, upstairs at Trattoria Contadina. A cannoli on the street here and there, a cigarette outside of Vesuvio. Europe in the Bay! I've been broken up with in other cities I've lived in, and I always found ways to avoid the parts of town where I spent time with that person. But when relationships have ended in San Francisco, I find myself returning to those spots again and again, regardless of the little heart pangs a street corner or a bar might elicit. Perhaps that's the magic of San Francisco — it's just too good to keep yourself from enjoying all of it. Paper covers rock, and San Francisco covers heartbreak. So, I believe it is time to go be romantic in North Beach. With yourself, with a lover, or with friends — and it doesn't matter what counter you do it at, because every spot is perfect, even if it's not exactly good. North Beach is not a neighborhood of hidden gems. No, in North Beach, all the gems are visible. It wears those 1,001 neon signs Caen was talking about like a crown, each one inviting you in and daring you not to fall in love, either with a person or with the city itself. Nights in North Beach end with Sam's. That's the rule. Garrett Schlichte Eater SF All your essential food and restaurant intel delivered to you Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.


Skift
an hour ago
- Skift
7 Ways Planners Can Use Pinterest for Inspiration
Pinterest is much more than just a social media site for hobbyists. It's the second-fastest growing social media site (after Instagram), with more than half a billion monthly active users. Millennials and Gen Z'ers are a growing percentage of Pinterest users and are among the platform's most active groups, with some estimates saying that Gen Z'ers account for more than 40% of active users monthly. For meeting planners, the best way to start using Pinterest is to just jump in, exploring its photos, mood boards, and curated collections. From there, you can start creating your own boards for your various meetings and events, and for different aspects of each, such as F&B, event design, or marketing. Following are 7 Pinterest tips for planners: 1. Know the Keywords The secret to searching on Pinterest is to combine broad event concepts with specific planning objectives. For example, if you're planning a final evening event, you might search for 'elegant decor for an awards ceremony.' Or, if you want to create a custom cocktail for your event, you could try 'creative mocktails for a poolside cocktail party.' Following are some popular search terms for event planning: For event decor: event design ideas, corporate event decor; event lighting ideas, themed event ideas For F&B: creative catering ideas, food stations for events, mini desserts for events For networking: Interactive event ideas, corporate team-building activities, icebreaker ideas for events, CSR team-building For meeting formats: creative stage design ideas, creative seminar setups, outdoor corporate event setups, creative seating arrangements for meetings For gifting: corporate gifting ideas, trade show swag ideas, eco-friendly giveaways, luxury attendee gifts. 2. Create Collages Pinterest gives you the ability to combine multiple images into a single, interactive pin, making it easier to visualize how all the elements of a meeting that you have chosen would fit together. Think of the collage as a 360 degree view of your event. Check out the Skift Meetings Toolkit on Pinterest: 3. Follow Other Pinners In addition to planners, many suppliers, from entertainers to AV companies, have their own Pinterest accounts where they post the creative ideas they see at events. A majority of wedding and social event planners are also on Pinterest, and they can be a great source of inspiration, especially when it comes to F&B and decor. 4. Stay on Top of Trends Pinterest prides itself on being the place where ideas emerge before they hit the mainstream. For example, it's the social media site where interior designers and fashion designers test out concepts. If you search Pinterest for '2025 Event Trends,' you'll see dozens of Pinners' compilations all in one place. 5. Get Out of the Meetings Industry Bubble Many meeting planners tend to search out meetings industry web sites and for inspiration. Pinterest runs across all industries, so it allows you to explore trends in fashion, retail, food and beverage, and interior design — all of which have some influence on events. (Think: Pantone's Color of the Year) 6. Share Ideas With Internal/External Clients Every Pinterest board is shareable. As long as your collaborator has a Pinterest account, you can invite him or her to view, comment, and even add pins. You can also make a board secret, so that only you and invited individuals can see it. Or you can open it up and use it for presentations. 7. Follow Pinterest's Trends Reports Pinterest publishes its "Pinterest Predicts" trends report annually, which forecasts emerging trends based on user search data and behavior. In addition, the Pinterest News Room publishes seasonal reports. The Summer 2025 Report pointed to trends including nature bathing among Gen Z'ers, savory cocktails using fresh herbs, and a return to the early 2000's Boho aesthetic, among others.