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What to Do in New York City in March

What to Do in New York City in March

New York Times27-02-2025
Comedy
'Drunk Black History'
Derek Waters had an epiphany: Alcohol can make history more interesting and funnier. So in 2007 he created 'Drunk History' by plying his friends with liquor, recording them as they channeled their inner Jon Meachams and having comedians re-enact the resulting stories. The series gained traction through Funny or Die's website and YouTube channel, eventually moving to Comedy Central, where it remained until 2019.
As 'Drunk History' was wrapping up, Brandon Collins started putting his own spin on the concept, hosting live events in New York that focused on the storytellers and their boozy recollections of overlooked moments in Black history. Since then he has grown 'Drunk Black History' into a podcast as well as a touring show, with upcoming gigs in Austin, Boston and Detroit. But before Black History Month comes to a close, Collins will present a round of inebriated tales of African American greatness at Littlefield in Brooklyn, with the sports commentator Bomani Jones and the comedians Sarah Cooper, Charles McBee and Onika McLean.
Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 on the day of the show on the club's website. SEAN L. McCARTHY
Music
Diana Ross
When Diana Ross presented Kendrick Lamar with the Grammy for song of the year earlier this month, the rapper's triumph was tempered by reverence: He bowed to his elder and started his acceptance speech by declaring himself star-struck.
He's not alone. Undeniable star power has kept Ross, now 80, in the spotlight for over six decades. In the 1960s, she was the buoyant lead voice of the Supremes, anchoring Motown classics like 'You Can't Hurry Love' and 'Stop! In the Name of Love.' She recorded silky soul tunes and reintroduced herself as a movie star in the '70s, then carried the torch of disco into the '80s with her Chic-produced triumph 'Diana.'
More than a dozen albums later, Ross continues to tour regularly. In 2015, she played the inaugural show for the rechristening of Kings Theater, and this weekend she returns there to celebrate the 10th anniversary. Tickets start at around $100 on the theater's website. OLIVIA HORN
Zwilich's Double Quartet
What's better than one string quartet? Why two, of course.
Such enhanced string power fosters new relationships among the instruments and players, which will be on display at this concert by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center on Sunday. It starts contentiously with Ellen Taaffe Zwilich's Double Quartet, which she wrote for the Chamber Music Society soon after she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for music. The work pairs two string quartets, which at first battle each other and then join forces, all in Zwilich's spiny, vigorously dissonant style. As for the other pieces on the bill, Louis Spohr's Double Quartet No. 1 in D minor picks a clear leader — the first violin of the first quartet — and offers a sprightly charm; Max Bruch's posthumously published String Octet in B-flat major swaps a cello for a double bass; and in Olli Mustonen's Nonet II, the double bass remains in the conversation, one full of singing melodies and luscious, loamy harmonies.
Tickets start at $35 on the society's website. GABRIELLE FERRARI
Kids
Crankies Take New York!
Crankies may sound like an affliction that strikes children when they're underfed, overstimulated or just plain bored. But crankies are actually an art form, and this weekend they should make young people smile.
Popular during the 19th century, these handmade narrative tools consist of a box containing two spools and an illustrated scroll. A storyteller or singer winds a crank that unfurls the scroll, providing pictures for a tale or ballad.
Hosted by Emily Schubert, the festival Crankies Take New York! will include performances at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday that are geared more toward adolescents and grown-ups, and a Sunday master class just for adults. Saturday afternoon, however, is a kid-oriented extravaganza.
At 1 p.m. that day, young artists can participate in a make-your-own-crankie workshop, using cardboard and drawing materials. At 2 p.m., they can enjoy the 'Witchy & Weird Crankie Show for Families,' in which Josh Kohn, Nasaria Suckoo and Randy Chollette will relate a Caymanian ghost story; the Boxcutter Collective will join Charming Disaster for a tale about a haunted lighthouse; and the Lantern Sisters will perform a spooky fiction about cats.
The children's workshop is $5 with a ticket stub from any performance; it is free for adults accompanying young participants as well as members and their children. Show tickets start at $8. LAUREL GRAEBER
Film
Tales From The New Yorker
The New Yorker is celebrating its centennial this year, and this Film Forum series shows that the magazine has influenced movies for nearly that long. All the titles are, in one way or another, connected to its pages.
In 'Adaptation' (screening on Friday and Saturday), derived by the screenwriter Charlie Kaufman from Susan Orlean's book 'The Orchid Thief,' which originated as an article in the magazine, the joke is that New Yorker stories aren't obviously the stuff of exciting cinema. For 'Shadow of a Doubt' (on Saturday and Tuesday), Alfred Hitchcock hired Thornton Wilder, fresh off 'Our Town,' to write the screenplay. But later, as he told François Truffaut, the longtime New Yorker contributor Sally Benson was brought in to 'inject some comedy highlights that would counterpoint the drama.' And shortly before it was published in English, Milan Kundera's novel 'The Unbearable Lightness of Being' was excerpted in the magazine. The screen version, which stars Daniel Day-Lewis, Lena Olin and Juliette Binoche, plays on Saturday and Monday. BEN KENIGSBERG
Theater
'English'
The winner of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for drama, Sanaz Toossi's quiet comedy is set in an Iranian classroom, where a group of adults is learning English from a teacher who once lived abroad, and dreaming of inhabiting different lives. Knud Adams, who staged the exquisite Off Broadway production in 2022, directs the original cast. Read the review.
'Gypsy'
Grabbing the baton first handed off by Ethel Merman, Audra McDonald plays the formidable Momma Rose in the fifth Broadway revival of Arthur Laurents, Jule Styne and Stephen Sondheim's exalted 1959 musical about a vaudeville stage mother and her daughters: June, the favorite child, and Louise, who becomes the burlesque stripper Gypsy Rose Lee. Directed by George C. Wolfe, with choreography by Camille A. Brown, the cast includes Danny Burstein, Joy Woods, Jordan Tyson and Lesli Margherita. Read the review.
'Hell's Kitchen'
Alicia Keys's own coming-of-age is the inspiration for this jukebox musical, which won two Tonys. Studded with Keys's songs, including 'Girl on Fire,' 'Fallin'' and 'Empire State of Mind,' it's the story of a 17-year-old girl (Maleah Joi Moon, last year's winner for best actress) in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of Manhattan, growing into an artist. Directed by Michael Greif, the show has a book by Kristoffer Diaz and choreography by Camille A. Brown. Read the review.
'Maybe Happy Ending'
Robot neighbors in Seoul, nearing obsolescence, tumble into odd-couple friendship in this wistfully romantic charmer of a musical comedy by Will Aronson and Hue Park, starring Darren Criss and Helen J Shen. Michael Arden ('Parade') directs. Read the review.
Art
'Harmony & Dissonance: Orphism in Paris, 1910-1930'
Sprawling, mood-lifting and masterpiece-studded, this exhibition confers a thrilling sharpness on a movement that has long been a blur. This first in-depth look at Orphism brings together about 80 works by 26 artists that mostly date to the enchanted years preceding World War I, an upbeat time when inventions ranging from incandescent lightbulbs to the first cars and airplanes were leading artists to rethink their mission. You may think that Picasso and Braque had already answered the question adequately through their Cubist canvases. But no, not to the Orphists, who sought to infuse the dun-hued planes of cubism with rapturous color. Read the review.
'Luna Luna: Forgotten Fantasy'
This reconstruction of a fair held in Hamburg, Germany, in the summer of 1987 — complete with carnival rides decorated by artists such as Kenny Scharf and Jean-Michel Basquiat, which are unfortunately cordoned off — reserves its greatest pleasures for visitors with more art-historical tastes. Crammed with informative wall texts, this event — or is it an exhibition? — documents, but barely recreates, a long-lost cultural experiment that 'blurred the lines between art and play.' Thirty-seven years later, at the Shed, those lines stay largely well defined. Most everything stays ensconced on the 'art' side. The whole thing feels weirdly peaceful, hardly the midway I expected. Read the review.
'Ceremonies Out of the Air: Ralph Lemon'
Africa is unmistakably among the few direct references to global culture in this show, which covers Lemon's work from roughly the past two decades. But it's his encounters with American culture that really seem to grip him, as is evident in a recent and continuing series of large ink-and-paint drawings. There's also a quick picker-upper in his body-and-mind-blaster of a performance video called 'Rant (redux).' In it, eight stellar dancers leap, dive, writhe and vogue to a high-decibel score by the artist Kevin Beasley, while Lemon himself, the work's choreographer, shout-reads words by Angela Davis and other liberationist thinkers. Read the review.
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Comedian Munya Chawawa says ‘death of British TV' cannot be blamed on TikTok
Comedian Munya Chawawa says ‘death of British TV' cannot be blamed on TikTok

Yahoo

timea few seconds ago

  • Yahoo

Comedian Munya Chawawa says ‘death of British TV' cannot be blamed on TikTok

Comedian and actor Munya Chawawa has said British TV is dying, not because of online platforms like TikTok, but 'because it's lost its willingness to take risks'. The comedian, 32, who turns political discourse into satirical videos online, was given a standing ovation after he delivered the Alternative MacTaggart lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival on Thursday. In his speech, Chawawa said: 'Meticulously crafted, traditionally-produced TV shows have come to terms with the fact that the apex of their existence might be as a pixelated repost on TikTok soundtracked by the Jet2holiday theme song. 'The horsemen of the apocalypse, the broadsheets, bellow out unanimously 'traditional TV is dying', and perhaps the most devastating impact is the fact that much of it is self-inflicted. 'In the face of a rapidly-changing landscape, British television has ignored evolution and the same outdated gatekeepers have stuck to the same outdated guns whilst yelling, 'Hey guys, remember this one?' like an out-of-touch dad doing the worm.' He continued: 'British TV isn't dying because of TikTok. It's dying because it's lost its willingness to take risks, to throw caution to the wind and to gamble on great ideas. 'While traditional television desperately throw texts to its ex with the promise of nostalgia and reboots of all the favourites, the audience swipe through a collection of new hot guys, Instagram, YouTube and TikTok.' In July, an annual Ofcom report revealed that YouTube is now the second most-watched media service in the UK behind the BBC and ahead of ITV. In a separate report, the regulatory body said that traditional public service media (PSM) is under threat and that the Government should bring forward legislation to help 'ensure that PSM content is prominent and easy to find on the (sharing) platforms, and on fair commercial terms'. Chawawa also spoke about the surprising success of Netflix dystopian drama Squid Game, which is a non-English language title whose figures have made it one of Netflix's most watched shows globally. 'Now, whatever doubts you had about the internet's ability to outmatch TV was settled when the first series (of Squid Game) dropped on Netflix, given Squid Game was a revolutionary Korean-language international streaming show. 'However, it set records for what audiences for high-end drama could reach after the first season it sat at a colossal 265 million views. Debate settled. TV wins. 'Until a few months later, when a YouTuber named Mr Beast recreated the show up on his channel and got 850 million views.' The US YouTube star published a video on the platform that was based on the popular South Korean show, which sees 456 people compete for a cash prize. Chawawa said: 'The message was clear, anything you can do, we can do better, and now present-day evidence supports that theory more than ever. ' He added: 'To survive, tele has to move forward … where creators have passion, TV can sculpt it into ideas and formats, where creators have ideas, we can bring them into formats where creators have formats already. TV can inject budget to elevate them to their full potential.' After his speech, Chawawa spoke about the precarity of working in TV and said: 'I could have been someone who worked at my digital following, had a shot on TV and then just blew it, just by virtue of the fact that it was such an alien landscape. 'There was no sort of nurturing up through to those points… it can't be that our relationship with digital talent is prove to us you are somebody, then we'll put you on the big shows, and if you flop that's the end of your TV career.' Chawawa won best breakthrough comedian at the 2021 National Comedy Awards and has starred in entertainment shows including Would I Lie To You? and Taskmaster. Former Countdown star Carol Vorderman and former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn are among the public figures who have delivered the Alternative MacTaggart lecture before. The Observer's editor-in-chief, James Harding, delivered the James MacTaggart Memorial Lecture lecture on Wednesday and spoke about recent criticisms directed at the BBC.

Aim High with Silvermoon Tide – Kar98K – BGMI Redeem Codes Live Today!
Aim High with Silvermoon Tide – Kar98K – BGMI Redeem Codes Live Today!

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Aim High with Silvermoon Tide – Kar98K – BGMI Redeem Codes Live Today!

By Business Wire India Published on August 21, 2025, 12:30 IST Fans of BATTLEGROUNDS MOBILE INDIA (BGMI), the iconic Indian game, can now claim today's exclusive reward – the Silvermoon Tide – Kar98K. Business Wire India 50 official redeem codes released to unlock exclusive in-game rewards BGMI players can redeem codes only via BGMI's official website at Fans of BATTLEGROUNDS MOBILE INDIA (BGMI), the iconic Indian game , can now claim today's exclusive reward – the Silvermoon Tide – Kar98K. Perfect for sharpshooters, this special edition adds a polished edge to your armory. Each code is limited to 10 redemptions. Redeem codes are valid until September 12, 2025, and will be released daily on BGMI's official channels. Redeem Codes: EGZBZB5HQRDJSNBU EGZCZD45397TXU68 EGZDZTNSQEUSST88 EGZEZU6SVNG7QMU6 EGZFZDTXMS9QV3Q8 EGZGZ74ANQ8CUAMJ EGZHZAVUK48SAFEG EGZIZUNR8J9ASVU6 EGZJZBMA7Q5798BU EGZKZ8886G968B87 EGZLZRXVXF839W3X EGZMZ5WHFTX6B6TU EGZNZAF5H6JGSRSQ EGZOZA7MX7MNM7DC EGZPZGMGGG8R9J84 EGZQZ5XDBFJVXK4B EGZRZUMQXHSQT8RS EGZVZ6US9MKC7R9G EGZTZKMJ7XA553PN EGZUZXDGDWWWBBWE EGZBAZ5P9BHT88BF EGZBBZHDJQ396RSM EGZBCZ4593X66J6M EGZBDZEMNCQVN8NE EGZBEZGVS5NW66NH EGZBFZWEFE6FDDXH EGZBGZ9NBU4GG3QF EGZBHZ438UWNETNG EGZBIZ6F4JTAMPJ7 EGZBJZHXGUTK4SG3 EGZBKZSKRUWGFNDP EGZBLZN8RV68JSX9 EGZBMZHX8DMXQXHF EGZBNZS7THRFXB46 EGZBOZ8PK57CFBSG EGZBPZS3FEXCEBKP EGZBQZNNW89DWHTR EGZBRZWHP6CQPS7H EGZBVZ6RAX73PWWB EGZBTZA65GD5EPDS EGZBUZ3AFVSE96DM EGZCAZSENGCCXUW9 EGZCBZFQ9WESDJNA EGZCCZ7PQ3BG7CFR EGZCDZCEBGEM46UB EGZCEZGWE7J7A64C EGZCFZ48RVUMES9P EGZCGZ6S5V6PV6R8 EGZCHZS6F73XWTBF EGZCIZDA4MJDTSMT Steps to redeem: Players can follow these simple steps to claim their rewards: Step 1: Go to the Redeem section on BGMI's official website Step 2: Enter your Character ID Step 3: Enter the Redemption Code Step 4: Enter the verification/ Captcha code → A message will confirm 'Code redeemed successfully' Step 5: The reward will be delivered via in-game mail Rules to Remember: A maximum of 10 users can redeem each code on a first-come, first-served basis A user cannot redeem a code twice Users must claim their rewards via in-game mail within 7 days, else the mail will expire If a player is among the first 10 users to successfully redeem the code, a message will confirm 'Code redeemed successfully' . If not, users will see 'Code expired' or a similar expiry message Each user account can redeem only one code per day Redeem codes cannot be used via guest accounts Rewards to be claimed within 30 days from receiving the in-game mail post which the mail gets deleted. For the latest updates, follow BGMI's official YouTube , Instagram and Facebook pages. Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with Business Wire India. Business Upturn take no editorial responsibility for the same. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Business Wire India, established in 2002, India's premier media distribution company ensures guaranteed media coverage through its network of 30+ cities and top news agencies.

'Almost like therapy': Ex-AL MVP Mo Vaughn is back in game with podcast
'Almost like therapy': Ex-AL MVP Mo Vaughn is back in game with podcast

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

'Almost like therapy': Ex-AL MVP Mo Vaughn is back in game with podcast

Mo Vaughn was nothing short of formidable as a hitter during the prime of his 12-year major league career. Today, he admits, he's a little nervous. 'Every time I've had a mic in front of my face, what are we doing? We're deflecting, we're trying not to say too much,' says Vaughn, the former AL MVP who hit .293 and averaged 35 home runs per 162 games. 'We gotta be cognizant of so-called not creating headlines and things like that. 'Now I got the podcast in front of me and we're talking trash.' 'MVP: The Mo Vaughn Podcast,' his new weekly show presented by Perfect Game, premieres Aug. 21. He chats this week with fellow former Red Sox luminary David Ortiz, who has become a baseball media personality as well. How can you watch Mo Vaughn's podcast and who are the guests? There will be fresh episodes every Thursday at 5 a.m. ET on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Play and other podcast platforms. Episodes will debut Thursdays on Vaughn's YouTube channel at noon and air at 8 p.m. ET on and on the PGTV app. Vaughn, 57, was disenchanted with baseball until he began coaching his son, Lee, now 13, and has thrown himself back into the game. He says he'll be delivering candid baseball conversations from the youth level to the big leagues. 'I know how it feels to struggle': Why Mo Vaughn coaches kids Upcoming guests after Ortiz include former major league All-Stars Rafael Palmeiro and Nomar Garciaparra and former MLB commissioner Bud Selig.'This has been such a great time talking to them, guys I played with, guys I played against, guys that came into Boston and did great things and won championships,' Vaughn tells USA TODAY Sports. 'I talked to my friend Rafael Palmeiro, who I know was feeling a certain way after he left the game. I got a chance to let them know that, no matter what was said, who cares? We were all baseball guys, and I'm here to amplify the good things that you are. And I think that's what I enjoy.' What does Mo Vaughn discuss on his podcasts? Vaughn launched his Vaughn Sports Academy in 2017 in Boca Raton, Florida, and coaches baseball at a local high school. He also works with young players from around the country through Perfect Game, the elite baseball and softball scouting service for which he is an adviser. 'I got Nomar Garciaparra, a kid I raised in the game, and I get to talk to him about certain things," he says. "That's where it's all about for me but I was nervous, like I didn't know how it was gonna go, but, man, almost like therapy, this podcast has been, because when I start talking to 'em, my thing is I want to amplify them, what they are, how good they were, and let people know exactly why they were good. There's a game inside the numbers that I know because I was a player. 'I go in there, I hit different things and bring up their stats and I'm looking at it and I'm going, this is pretty good. Now I know why people want to be journalists and reporters now because they get to look at these things and create these stories. I get it. I'm doing the same thing on a smaller level.' Ortiz and Vaughn never played together in Boston, though their big league careers overlapped by a number of years in the late 1990s and early 2000s. 'Big Mo, man, he was one my biggest guys I want to watch and learn from,' Ortiz says to Vaughn on the podcast, which was shared with USA TODAY Sports before its release. 'In our days I always had questions for him and he always had answers for me.' Such as about hitting the ball toward Fenway Park's left field wall. 'The Green Monster,' Ortiz says, 'after many conversations with you, I can understand the importance of driving the ball that way. It was like a way out for us, to be honest with you.' The two take a relatively unfiltered look at the majors past and present. Ortiz opines on Aaron Judge ('A lot of people are gonna hate what I'm gonna say right now but Aaron Judge is one of my favorite players because he is that good') and how Rafael Devers helped get himself traded out of Boston. ('As a superstar, when they let 'em get away with this, they let 'em get away with that … you begin to engage yourself toward something that at some point became unstoppable.') Of umpires, Ortiz says: 'I had a great relationship with umpires but we all got that one moment that you lose it. The way I prepared to play every game, it was different. I got to the field by noon to play a 7 p.m. game. The umpire get to the field an hour before the game. … You don't know what I was doing those six hours before the game. … That's all I do, hit. And you're not gonna take it away from me. I'm not donating at-bats.' What does Mo Vaughn want to ask Bud Selig? Vaughn, who co-hosts the podcast with ESPN Radio personality Brendan Tobin, has had lots of time to reflect on his tenure in the majors, which ended rather abruptly in 2003 after he dealt with a wave of injuries. 'Bud Selig was an owner,' Vaughn said in our interview earlier this month. 'He took his Milwaukee Brewers to the World Series in '82. I want to ask him, 'Commissioner, you went to the World Series. I'm sure you guys stole bases. I'm sure you guys bunted with a man on first and second with no outs when you needed a run. I'm sure you got the guy over from second to third with no outs. What do you think the state of the game is right now?' Because he has to know … they got a little market team in Milwaukee, I think they're kind of playing the game the way the old guys played the game. 'You're spending all this money in the Northeast in these big markets, and we can't get a bunt down, turn a double play, hit behind the runner. Well, we got a great example in Milwaukee doing all those things. I think it's gonna show for itself and I hope it gets back to corner guys hit home runs, your center fielder can run it down, your two middle guys can play defense, make the routine plays, and the catchers gotta get back up on their feet and start defending and blocking and doing what they gotta do. I hope it gets back to that because that's when the game was great.' Will Vaughn talk about PEDs in the podcast? Vaughn didn't address performance enhancing drugs in the podcast with Ortiz, who was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2022. Ortiz tested positive for a banned substance during anonymous survey drug testing in 2003, a result commissioner Rob Manfred later questioned. Palmeiro, 60, who topped 3,000 hits and 500 homers during his 20-year major league career that ran from 1986 to 2005. That final year, testifying before Congress, he said, "I have never used steroids. Period." Later that season, MLB announced Palmeiro had violated the league's joint drug program and would be suspended for 10 games. He was soon out of the majors. He acknowledged that he had tested positive for the anabolic steroid stanozolol, according to former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell's report on performance-enhancing drug use in baseball, which was released in 2007. 'I didn't do anything intentional to enhance myself,' Palmeiro told in 2022. 'I had no reason to cheat. '[The test] killed my career. It killed my personal life. It killed my friendships. It killed my opportunity to make money. It's been tough.' Vaughn said this year he injected his knee with human growth hormone near the end of his career. 'I would do anything to get back on the field,' he told USA TODAY Sports. 'I don't even consider it really anything factual that it's a testament to what I did in the game, do for the game and in the game. It's just a part of time, in my opinion.' Vaughn and Palmeiro have both fallen off the Baseball Writers' Association of America ballot after receiving less than 5% of the vote.

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