Latest news with #ParkSlope
Yahoo
11-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Wife Goes to Opera Without Husband After Couple Went Together for 70 Years. The Reason Has People Tearing Up (Exclusive)
Sam Sporn and his wife, Ellen, have been married for 71 years The two attended the opera together for decades until Sam suffered several eye strokes in 2020 Sam's sweet way of staying connected to his wife through music went viralSam Sporn attended operas with his wife, Ellen, for over 70 years, stemming back to when they first started dating. Unfortunately, during the pandemic, Sam suffered several eye strokes and was left unable to read subtitles or navigate crowded spaces. Due to the irreversible damage to his eyesight, the 94-year-old no longer attends performances in person. This, however, has not stopped Sam from listening to the opera on WQXR while his 91-year-old wife heads to the theater. Although they no longer see the shows together, Sam is always eager to discuss his thoughts with Ellen when she returns home. The couple has managed to keep the music an integral part of their marriage despite the challenges that have come with age. 'Ellen had grown up loving music and playing the piano,' Sam tells PEOPLE exclusively. 'We were [opera] members way, way back, when we first moved back into Park Slope… We used to go very often and took great joy in it.' He and his wife had box seats at the Metropolitan Opera, as well as the Brooklyn Academy of Music, largely thanks to Ellen. Growing up, she used to attend shows with her family and later introduced it to Sam. 'I reacted to it in a very positive way because she loved it and I love her,' he says. 'I wanted very much to listen to the opera and understand the opera.' After each show, Ellen would often ask Sam what he thought and the two would end up discussing all the details – what they loved and what they disliked. Despite his busy schedule as a successful class action attorney, Sam loved to talk about the opera with his wife because he knew how much it meant to her. Ellen is a third-generation American from Brooklyn, N.Y., with grandparents who immigrated from Romania in the late 1800s. Her father, a lawyer and part-time post office worker, and her mother, a bookkeeper, both supported New York's cultural scene, exposing Ellen to opera, theater, and classical music from a young age. Even after Ellen's parents had passed, Sam says they 'continued going to the opera and keeping alive the music.' Given the deterioration of his eyesight, Sam has not been able to attend performances in person, however, he still gets excited every time Ellen gets back from a show. 'I feel terribly enthused because, not only did she see it, but she heard it and she enjoyed the pageantry and the music and the ambience, all of these things,' he explains. 'And that she still is able to at ell… I love that.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The music-adoring couple, who fell in love after being set up by mutual friends decades ago, ended up having three children. 'I love her, I totally love her,' Sam says of his wife, who earned her PhD and taught at York College as an ESL professor. 'She is definitely my soulmate, and, you know, we look after each other, and it's so important that we're in each other's corners.' Sam's granddaughter, Samy Cordero, has always been inspired by her grandparents' relationship and is determined to implement their values into her own life. 'My grandparents have always been partners. They take care of each other and they have each other's backs constantly,' Cordero reveals. 'This is the kind of relationship I will always aspire to have. And the kind of love I try to show my partner every day.' When asked what love means to him, Sam says it "means total devotion.' His commitment to preserving their tradition and nurturing his wife's love for opera illustrates the couple's unbreakable bond after 71 years of marriage. Read the original article on People
Yahoo
10-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Brooklyn Barnes & Noble to close for three-month renovation this summer
PARK SLOPE, Brooklyn (PIX11) — A popular spot for book lovers in Brooklyn will be closing over the summer for a 'much overdue renovation.' The Barnes & Noble Park Slope location at 267 Seventh Ave will close for renovations starting July 3, a spokesperson confirmed to PIX11 News. The bookstore chain plans to reopen the location by October. More Local News 'The renovation will include a design seen in our most recent store openings, including our store on Atlantic Ave. It will include an updated B&N Café,' the spokesperson said. The renovation announcement comes after rumors the popular Park Slope location may have been at risk of closing after its lease expired earlier this year. It is one of only two of the chain's locations in Brooklyn. More: Latest News from Around the Tri-State During the three-month-long renovation, book lovers were advised to visit the store's other location at 194 Atlantic Ave. 'You will see here our new bookstore design which is also in place in the recently renovated Barnes & Noble at Broadway and 82nd Street in Manhattan,' according to a social media post from the chain. More Brooklyn News Barnes & Noble Park Slope has been a staple in the neighborhood since it opened in 1997 especially due to its proximity to New York-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital and the John Jay Educational Campus. Residents can stay updated on renovation and reopening details through the Barnes & Noble Park Slope social media pages. Dominique Jack is a digital content producer from Brooklyn with more than five years of experience covering news. She joined PIX11 in 2024. More of her work can be found here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


New York Times
28-04-2025
- Politics
- New York Times
Brad Lander's 2 Goals in N.Y.C. Mayor's Race: Beat Cuomo and Win
Brad Lander, the New York City comptroller and self-described 'tough nerd,' knows that for him to win the race for mayor of New York City, Andrew M. Cuomo must fall. To make that more likely, Mr. Lander decided that his campaign strategy needed an overhaul. He would no longer focus his ire on the increasingly inconsequential mayor of New York City, Eric Adams, and his apparent alliance with the Trump administration. Instead, Mr. Lander, the Park Slope father with the University of Chicago degree, would use his distinctive voice — a singsong lilt that his critics find grating — to try to take down Mr. Cuomo, the former governor leading in the polls. During a Passover week meal of latkes and matzo ball soup at a restaurant on Montague Street in Brooklyn, Mr. Lander unspooled his indictment of Mr. Cuomo, allegation by allegation. 'I know he looks like a good leader, but actually, you know, he's just a corrupt chaos agent with an abusive personality that has shown through in every position he's been in, and that's dangerous for New York City,' Mr. Lander said, stopping only to spread sour cream and apple sauce on his potato pancake, or to sip from his French 75, a cocktail he likes because it is fizzy. New Yorkers, he said, deserved a stark alternative: 'I am a decent person. Let's just start there.' In eight weeks, Democratic primary voters will choose a candidate for mayor, with the victor promptly becoming the favorite to win the November general election in a city where Democrats outnumber Republicans six to one. What kind of person New Yorkers want as their mayor is the elemental question of this and any mayor's race. Do they want someone who projects a muscle-car style of masculinity, like the former governor, who resigned in disgrace in 2021 after an investigation found he had sexually harassed 11 women? (Mr. Cuomo has denied wrongdoing.) Would they rather a female politician adept at projecting an even-tempered self-confidence, like the City Council speaker, Adrienne Adams? Would they prefer a charismatic democratic socialist and son of a movie director from Queens with an age-appropriate aptitude for social media, like Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, who is now polling in second place? Or would they like Mr. Lander, an earnest-seeming policy wonk who read Antigone in the original Greek; a former member of the Democratic Socialists of America who in 2020 said he still considered himself a member, but whose spokeswoman now says hasn't attended a D.S.A. meeting in decades; a critic of the city-backed financing of the Hudson Yards development on Manhattan's West Side who has since come around; a reform Jew who considered becoming a rabbi, and who is also an anti-occupation Netanyahu critic who cursed Mr. Cuomo in Yiddish as he accused him of wielding antisemitism as a political weapon? At the moment, it appears that New York City voters are looking elsewhere. Mr. Lander is polling at 6 percent among registered Democratic voters, well behind Mr. Mamdani, a liberal upstart who has energized much of Mr. Lander's presumptive base. Twenty percent of voters remain undecided. Mayor Adams has opted out of the Democratic primary and will run as an independent in November instead. Lander partisans note that it is early. At this point in 2021, Andrew Yang was still leading the polls, Mr. Adams was in second place, and Maya Wiley, a civil rights lawyer, and Kathryn Garcia, the former sanitation commissioner, were polling at 7 and 4 percent, according to a Spectrum News NY1/Ipsos poll from the time. That June, Ms. Garcia lost to Mr. Adams by just 7,000 votes, Ms. Wiley finished third, and Mr. Yang finished fourth. And Mr. Lander won the Democratic primary for comptroller. 'What I did last time to win was build a coalition that had the Maya Wiley voters, like people that have a more progressive vision of a city that can deliver on affordability, and Kathryn Garcia voters, who just want a good manager who loves New York City,' Mr. Lander said. 'And I believe that coalition still exists and can be a majority of the Democratic primary electorate.' But first, Mr. Lander said, Mr. Cuomo has to be 'knocked down.' To that end, Mr. Lander has bombarded the press with anti-Cuomo messaging, hoping that something, anything, will stick. 'Lander Demands Cuomo Release His Tax Returns After History of Shady Business and Lies About His Income,' read one news release. 'In Addition to Shady Crypto Client, Who Else Has Cuomo Been Paid to Advise Since Resigning as Governor?' read another. Mr. Lander's first real political encounter with Mr. Cuomo happened in 2017, when Mr. Lander was the city councilman representing Park Slope, Brooklyn, and Mr. Cuomo was still governor. Mr. Cuomo effectively killed a New York City law imposing a 5-cent fee on plastic bags that Mr. Lander had sponsored, acting right before it was set to begin. 'Plastic bags won,' Mr. Lander said at the time. Four years after Mr. Lander's bill passed the City Council, a plastic bag ban signed by Mr. Cuomo went into effect. 'We call that 40 billion plastic bags later,' Mr. Lander said. More damning, Mr. Lander argues, were the Cuomo administration's choices during the height of the Covid pandemic, when it directed nursing homes to accept infected patients, and then failed to publicly account for the deaths of more than 4,000 nursing home residents, according to an audit by the state comptroller, Thomas P. DiNapoli. Mr. Lander has also tried to highlight the estimated $61 million New York has spent on legal representation related to issues surrounding Mr. Cuomo's tenure. 'In every relationship, he views it as like, how could I manipulate this other party to my benefit?' Mr. Lander said. 'And I really think that's how he thinks about New York City.' And so, inevitably, more than an hour into a pro-migrant, pro-trans-rights, pro-Mr. Lander event at a Unitarian church in Brooklyn Heights, Mr. Lander turned to Mr. Cuomo. He pinned Mr. Cuomo's polling status on 'name recognition in a time of Trumpian distraction' and 'pandemic memory repression.' He invoked a former Syracuse mayor, Stephanie Miner, who recently described Mr. Cuomo's kissing her against her will as a power play. He brought up Covid and the $5 million book deal on which Mr. Cuomo used government resources. He noted that Mr. Cuomo's lawyer had sought the gynecological records of a woman who had accused him of harassment. 'This is an abusive, corrupt person who is running for his own revenge tour,' Mr. Lander said. 'He is not looking to solve the problems of New York City, where he hasn't lived in 25 years.' Then Mr. Lander asked the room to sing 'Happy Birthday' to his 81-year-old mother, whose celebration he was missing while on the campaign trail. The audience happily complied. In a statement, Esther Jensen, a spokeswoman for Mr. Cuomo, described Mr. Lander's strategy as 'bizarre.' 'New Yorkers aren't naïve,' she said. 'They know Governor Cuomo is the only person in this race with the proven record of accomplishment, and leadership necessary to effectively confront the very serious challenges we face, and take on President Trump, which is why these repeated gutter attacks from Brad Lander, a career politician, with no meaningful record or vision of his own, are not only not working, but backfiring.' Mr. Lander, the 55-year-old son of a St. Louis lawyer and guidance counselor, met his wife at the University of Chicago and moved to New York City in 1992, so she could attend N.Y.U. law school. He found work running a community development corporation and then the Pratt Center for Community Development, both in Brooklyn. After Mr. Lander announced he would run for mayor, he began tacking toward the center, renouncing the defund the police movement he had once supported and giving a pro-growth speech at a prominent civic association. The speech won the respect of Dan Doctoroff, a former deputy mayor under Michael R. Bloomberg and a driving force behind New York City's economic development. 'The most important thing is he's adopted my vision of the pro-growth cycle,' Mr. Doctoroff said of Mr. Lander. It was a strategy seemingly predicated on the idea that moderates seeking competent governance would coalesce with left-leaning voters behind Mr. Lander. He has cast himself as a liberal with managerial chops, and a housing expert who promises to end the mental health crisis on city streets and to build apartments on public golf courses. But the left seems more enamored of Mr. Mamdani these days. In this city of shifting political loyalties, the pendulum may still swing in unexpected ways. At this point in 2021, Ms. Garcia, who was running on her managerial competence, was a political afterthought. Then she surged forward, winning the endorsements of The New York Times and The Daily News. Many voters still 'want someone who is going to be a good manager,' said Basil Smikle, a Democratic strategist who formerly led the state party. He added that voters were also looking for someone who could stand up to Mr. Trump. 'Brad Lander has a chance if he can make the case that he can do all of those things,' Mr. Smikle said.