Head out to East Williamsburg to see the immersive theater experience Then She Fell put on by The Rail Projects.
When the immersive play “Then She Fell” premiered in 2012 at Arts@Renaissance, a former Greenpoint hospital, critics were outdoing themselves in their praises
“If there’s anyone our students can see themselves in, it’s Jacqueline”
The project of songwriter Mia Berrin dropped their second EP last month, and its jam-packed with intensely personal, grunge-punk anthems.
Whew, what a whirlwind summer! For those of you who managed to escape the concrete clutches of the city for a few months, the neighborhood might seem a little different now. There’s about a bazillion new places to get sloshed, and most of them serve food, too. Unfortunately, this summer also saw the demise of […]
Ever heard of Then She Fell, named as one of Ben Brantley’s top theater performances of 2012? If not, please take note
It might not be what you expected, though
From Post Malone to Punks for Palestine, we’re revisiting this year’s top local stories.
“Really big deal,” says local pol
Safety concerns and money mixups now plague a luxury housing development In Bushwick
What’s her go-to opening? ‘I’m an e4 player, but working on d4 now’
Scenes among “a discoherent group of young people making a discoherent collection of art”
How a flurry of small businesses are changing a corner of Queens
“They patronize us and we patronize them”
The star of a new NBC show says Brooklyn is a real character.
“That’s the kind of thing that happens when a community gets split.”
A grocery delivery service took the the place of Brooklyn Cider House on Flushing Avenue – they’re opening their doors this weekend.
Redistricting moves and scatters a heated political race, while Elizabeth Crowley has committed to moving within the borders of wherever it is she ends up representing.
“Spaces in Brooklyn are more open to all types of drag,” says Bobby LeMaire “You can do whatever as long as you can give a show.”
A leak from the Supreme Court inspires two fundraisers at the new Bushwick club.
Bushwick’s answer to Kacey Musgraves is a Texas transplant who generates feels from deep inside the major label machine
After four years of growing, the beloved lounge, musical home and studio, Wilson Live, was severely damaged by Hurricane Ida.
The ultimate guide to Bushwick vintage stores.
Many community boards, including CB4, have pushed back against making New York’s restaurant sidewalk seating permanent. But the city will likely move forward with the program anyway.
The 14th annual Bushwick Film Festival will be the biggest one yet, said founder and CEO Kweighbaye Kotee.
What changes do you want to see in Bushwick? Let Community Board 4 know before October 25.
Attendees at Evergreens Cemetery were able to view Jupiter’s moons, Saturn’s rings, and our moon’s craters among other astronomical objects, and you can too!
Ecuador’s national sport has made its way to Bushwick, where it thrives on the red-top courts at Maria Hernández Park.
In a crowded race, candidates promise to do more than Eric Adams.
A Michelin-approved highlight just off Graham Avenue stays under-the-radar, with a focus on digestivos.
Some of the best falafel in the city is getting made right on Morgan Avenue
Amid an ongoing pandemic, Dashi Brooklyn packs up contemporary Japanese, to-go.