See and hear the space for yourself at the opening of “Earshot,” a sound-sculpture show with which the audience participates.
As New York City gears up for the 2024 elections, Bushwick stands at a pivotal point due to its history as a bellwether for progressive voting patterns across the country.
Local Tiki enthusiast says he isn’t closing the doors on Dromedary just yet, either.
In advance of NYFW, we’re looking at some of the hottest local names and brands to look out for
Juan Ardila, the 27-year-old progressive, came up roughly 500 votes shy against incumbent Councilman Robert Holden, with roughly 46 percent of the vote according to early tallies. Ardila hasn’t yet conceded.
The Bushwick reproductive rights group is pushing for lasting change through specificity and inclusivity.
Featuring more than 150 live performers, the festival celebrates diversity and inclusivity.
Making sustainability easy, cheap, and accessible to the Gen Z and millennial crowd.
Sunset views, $1 oysters, refreshing drinks!
Two women of color started an inclusive, diverse, and body positive movement.
Two hospitality veterans offer fun, vegetarian food, and lots more!
MetroRock is creating an accessible space for queer athletes.
Sustainable Brooklyn’s Dominique Drakeford and Whitney McGuire are on a mission to make the environmental movement more inclusive.
Affordable and inclusive plant-based food by Brooklynite Francesca Chaney is booming.
Secret venues, comedy in a lingerie store, all-female lineups, and more gems!
More ways to stay active this winter!
Inclusivity in bathing and relaxation.
Works and performances range from images of gentrification to the personification of chemical compounds and software.
A temporary restraining order has halted the development of this small, but very controversial patch of land.
Manifest Bodyworks had been operating out of a Bushwick apartment since this past Winter—and now has a permanent home on Bushwick’s Central Avenue!
Bushwick’s local Tedx chapter has announced its 2016 lineup—and it’s nothing if not dynamic, with presenters ranging from a New York City civil rights attorney who will speak about police and community relations to the executive director of Clowns Without Borders
Heading in to watch the final dress rehearsal before the opening of Emily Dickinson OUTER SPACE at The Bushwick Starr, I am gleefully informed by Noel Allain, the theater’s artistic director, that they are making some “adjustments” to the staging of the show