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The ultimate guide to Galentine's Day in Greater Binghamton

The ultimate guide to Galentine's Day in Greater Binghamton

Yahoo31-01-2025

GREATER BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (WIVT/WBGH) – Valentine's Day is for the girls, so grab your besties and celebrate the bond you share with these local events.
Greater Binghamton is home to several can't miss Galentine's Day activities this year. If you're looking for a special outing dedicated to the power of friendship, News 34 has got you covered. We've compiled a list of events that promote bonding and well-being with the ones you love most–your best friends.
Coined by Leslie Knope of the hit TV show 'Parks and Recreation', Galentine's Day is an opportunity to declare your love and affection for your support system. Held on February 13, Galentine's Day is Knope's favorite February tradition. As the show grew in popularity, so did the unofficial holiday which is now celebrated by women across the world.
Grab your girl gang and check out the following events!
: Held on February 8, The Terracotta House is hosting its Valentine's Day Market at Factory by Beer Tree in Johnson City. From 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., guest can shop from 25 local small businesses who will be offering items such as candles, jewelry, clothing, sweet treats, and more. A permanent jewelry vendor will also be available.
: If you liked the Valentine's Day Market, you're going to love the Galentine's Day Brunch. Come back to Factory on February 9 for its annual Galentine's event. Factory says this year's event is going to be bigger and better than ever before. There will be flash tats, Botox, a flower bar, brunch and drink specials, permanent jewelry, and more. The event will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Beer Hall. No ticket is required to attend.
: The Chalk Market, a local DIY creative art studio in Johnson City, is joining in on all of the Galentine's Day fun. The studio is hosting an afternoon of sweet treats and champagne on February 8. There will be a bloom bar with crystal vases as well as a mini DIY Valentine's Day sign. Tickets to the events are $40. Sessions will be held at 10, 12, 2 and 4 and will last approximately an hour and a half.
: Looking for a new furry best friend? Every Cat's Dream has got you covered. The organization is hosting an adoption event at the Vestal Public Library on February 8 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Come meet the sweet and fabulous felines while purchasing sweet treats and donating you bottles and cans to benefit the adoption agency.
: The Broome County Regional Farmer's Market in the Town of Dickinson is inviting everyone to join to for a special cookie decorating class on February 9. Hosted by Sugared Sweet Cookies, those in attendance will participate in a step-by-step tutorial on how to decorate adorable Valentine's cookies that they will go home with. The event will be held at 2 p.m.
: Looking for February's most fabulous brunch event? Join Factory by Beer Tree for the Broken Hearts Drag Brunch on February 15 as the area's best drag performers slay the house down from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tickets go on sale February 1 at 10 a.m. on the Factory by Beer Tree Facebook Page. The event is for those 18 years of age or older.
Make it a Galentine's Day to remember as you gossip with your girls inside of a beautiful igloo at North Street Tavern in Endicott. There will be sweets treats, drinks, games, and surprises for the ladies in attendance. Reservations can be made for February 15 between the hours of 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Spaces are limited! Call (607)765-8163 by February 10 to book your spot.
: Celebrate with your besties in style at 205 Dry's 7th Annual Galentine's Tea Party on February 16. The brunch will feature your choice of bottomless French 75s or bottomless mimosas as well as sweet and savory snacks. There will also be an appearance from cupid. Tickets to the event are $60. To reserve your spot, call (607)760-2103.The ultimate guide to Galentine's Day in Greater Binghamton
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The couple had been living in Joss's childhood home in San Antonio, Texas — which his father built for his mother in 1957 — for several years before his death. Joss struggled with addiction throughout his life and had been open about spending time in mental health treatment. He said on the Bwaaa! The King of the Hill Podcast that he was not sober. Recorded one day before his death, the episode would become his last interview. "I've already lost everything. My house burnt down. I ain't going to give up drugs. I ain't going to give up drinking. They're my friends," he said. - YouTube Joss's home burned down in January, resulting in the deaths of his and Kern de Gonzales's three dogs. The couple had been staying in a hotel due to electricity issues after the home was vandalized but returned regularly to take care of the dogs. Upon returning one afternoon, Joss found a blaze had consumed the house. Joss said that he had been using a propane tank inside the house for heat but that he had turned it off before he left. He and Kern de Gonzales soon after launched a GoFundMe to help with their living expenses. "This is a house I grew up in. I'm more concerned about my dog that died, but you know what? The good Lord will protect us,' Joss told local outlet KSAT at the time. 'Mistakes happen, man. And it's my fault for, I guess, leaving something on. Or if somebody came in and did something, who knows?' Joss was often candid on social media about their financial struggles, offering Cameos to earn revenue. He denied a rumor that he started the fire for insurance money, telling the the Bwaaa! podcast hosts that he would never kill his dogs. "My closest friend said, 'Jonathan, we know you set that fire. ... We know you did it for money,'" Joss said. "I said, 'Guys, my dogs ... were there. I would never hurt my dogs. ... I would never light my dogs on fire.'" - YouTube Just two days before his death, Joss interrupted a King of the Hill reunion panel by claiming the fire that destroyed his house was a deliberate act of arson against him because of his sexual orientation. Joss was not invited to the panel, which was meant to be a small gathering of he main cast, but attended in the audience. When one of the actors said of Joss, "We love our guy, Johnny, and so sad he's not here," he revealed himself in the crowd and took a microphone meant for fan questions. 'You were talking about Johnny, and I want to say something about him,' the panel moderator from Variety recalled him saying. 'Our house burnt down three months ago. Because I'm gay." Joss explained the moment on Bwaaa!, saying that he did not initially intend to interrupt the panel but spoke up in the heat of the moment. "The worst thing about not existing in the world is someone ignoring you when they have taken from your culture," he said. Jonathan Joss Kern de Gonzales revealed in a Facebook post that he and Joss were "involved in a shooting" when they returned to the site of their former home to check the mail. He claimed that the fire and the shooting occurred "after over two years of threats from people in the area who repeatedly told us they would set it on fire" and that despite reporting the threats to law enforcement multiple times, "nothing was done." "When we returned to the site to check our mail we discovered the skull of one of our dogs and its harness placed in clear view," Kern de Gonzales wrote. "This caused both of us severe emotional distress. We began yelling and crying in response to the pain of what we saw. While we were doing this a man approached us. He started yelling violent homophobic slurs at us. He then raised a gun from his lap and fired." "Jonathan and I had no weapons. We were not threatening anyone. We were grieving," he continued. "We were standing side by side. When the man fired Jonathan pushed me out of the way. He saved my life." - YouTube Kern de Gonzales later told NBC that he and Joss, after seeing their dead dog's skull placed in front of their burnt down home, believed it to be a message from their neighbors taunting them. In anger, Joss began shouting and walking back and forth in the street with a pitchfork. One neighbor shared a video with KSAT that shows Joss walking with the pitchfork and yelling about half an hour before his death. 'I knew something was going to happen. I wanted to call the police, but he hadn't done anything," she said. Kern de Gonzales said the suspect pulled up in his car several minutes after Joss had returned to his side. Kern de Gonzales said the man called him and his husband "jotos," a Spanish slur for gay people, before shooting Joss. 'I could give two fucks less if me or my husband had 50 pitchforks in every orifice of our body rolling up and down that street like tumbleweed," Kern de Gonzales said. "It don't matter." Bexar County Sheriff's Office via Getty Images Sigfredo Ceja Alvarez's mug shot Sigfredo Ceja Alvarez, 56, was arrested and charged with murder in connection with Joss's killing, telling officers as he was being detained "I shot him," according to the police report. The two neighbors had reportedly been feuding for over a year, with law enforcement frequently being called to Joss's residence to settle their disputes. Alvarez told police in June 2024 that Joss approached his house with a crossbow while calling him racial slurs, though Joss claimed that he walked over to "talk about their dogs fighting with each other." Upon searching Joss's house, officers found a crossbow and confiscated it. Joss accused Alvarez of being the one who burned his home down in January, according to a separate police report via NBC. The officer taking the report wrote, "I have classified this fire to be undetermined in nature at this time but cannot rule out human involvement intentional or unintentional." Alvarez posted his $200,000 bond Monday night, a Bexar County court spokesperson told Yahoo News. He is now under house arrest, during which he is subject to random drug testing and is not allowed to access firearms. NBC Jonathan Joss Multiple neighbors have said that Joss often spoke loudly and behaved erratically but that no violent confrontations had occurred until he was shot. One woman said that Joss and Alvarez would often fire guns on their own property, but never at each other. 'I've been here six years and when we moved in, it was already going on, so it's just been years of feud with these two,' she told the New York Post. 'I'm not taking nobody's side because I do have reports on both of them, but nothing got done. This man should be alive today, but nothing got done.' The neighbor who took the video of Joss with the pitchfork also said that he "was always yelling at the top of his lungs." She explained, "He would say that all the children on this street were going to die, and that we were all going to go to hell because we're sinners and God is on his side.' Another neighbor told San Antonio TV station WOAI that she had seen Joss outside minutes before his death and that he seemed upset about something. She said that he and his husband "had been repeatedly harassed because they were gay and their home was burned down after years of threats from neighbors." The San Antonio Police Department released a statement shortly after Joss's death claiming it had uncovered "no evidence" to suggest that the killing was a hate crime, which his husband's statement contested. The department later retracted its comments. Police Chief William McManus walked back the statement at a press conference Thursday while also apologizing to the LGBTQ+ community for dismissing their concerns, saying "it was way too early in the process for any statement of that nature to be issued." "We understand that many in the LBGTQ+ [sic] community are feeling anxious and concerned," McManus said. "A lot of that has to do with that premature statement that we released, and again, I own that. We shouldn't have done it. The loss of Jonathan Joss was tragic and most heavily felt by the LBGTQ+ [sic] community." McManus also clarified that the police department doesn't charge hate crimes in Texas. Instead, police "gather the facts and we give those facts to the district attorney's office; then that hate-crime designation is determined at sentencing." Kern de Gonzales had asserted in his Facebook post that throughout their time living at Joss's family home as a couple, they "were harassed regularly by individuals who made it clear they did not accept our relationship. Much of the harassment was openly homophobic." "He was murdered by someone who could not stand the sight of two men loving each other," he said. Screenshot from @prattprattpratt on Instagram Chris Pratt tribute to Jonathan Joss Several of Joss's colleagues from King of the Hill and Parks and Recreation have posted messages mourning the actor. The official social media accounts for the shows have also posted tributes. King of the Hill creators Mike Judge and Greg Daniels and current showrunner Saladin Patterson released a statement on the show's Instagram page saying that "his voice will be missed at King of the Hill, and we extend our deepest condolences to Jonathan's friends and family." Toby Huss, who voiced Kahn Souphanousinphone and Cotton Hill on King of the Hill, wrote on Instagram Story in reaction to the news,"RIP old friend. Godspeed." Chris Pratt, who played Andy Dwyer on Parks and Recreation, also posted a message to his story, which read, "Damn. RIP Jonathan. Always such a kind dude. He played Ken Hotate in Parks and was also in Mag 7 [The Magnificent Seven]. Sad to see. Prayers up. Hug your loved ones." Nick Offerman, who played Ron Swanson on Parks and Recreation, told People that the cast had been texting about the news and were all "heartbroken." He added,"Jonathan was such a sweet guy and we loved having him as our Chief Ken Hotate. A terrible tragedy."

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