Day: August 3, 2019

Red Hook News, Red Hook Shopping

Red Hook: The Best Kept Shopping Secret

The neighborhood known for the city’s best dive bars, fresh seafood, and a Swedish superstore, moonlights as a shopping destination. There is much to be discovered on the neighborhood’s iconic Van Brunt Street, including handcrafted ceramics and perfect-fitting vintage denim. There is no shortage of reasons to shop locally: investing in the neighborhood economy, convenience, better service. But in a […]

Music

Jeffrey Lewis – Antifolk Hero & Comic Artist by Adam Whittaker

There is great reverence among the British towards certain American songwriters. The cultural impact crater from the US musical asteroid stretches across genres and time, and I’ve been unfortunate enough to bare witness to its effect in drizzly pubs, enduring a dire British approximation of a Johnny Cash impression in an oversized cowboy hat. As much as we fetishize American […]

Food, Red Hook News

Stockholm Syndrome: Is IKEA’s food actually any good? Or are its shoppers just a captive audience?

A few months ago, a friend of mine, a journalist named Jacob Kaye, heard I’d be working at the Star-Revue this summer and made what he probably thought was an innocuous joke. “You should review all the food at IKEA,” he said. “Little do you know,” I responded, “that Red Hook is a vibrant neighborhood with scores of excellent dining […]

Education, Kids, Red Hook News, Red Hook Youth

RHSR Roundup: Kids Beat the summer brain drain with these reading challenges

When students go home for the summer, sometimes the excitement surrounding vacation trips and other plans might make them forget what they’ve learned in school all year. So, to beat the ‘summer brain drain,’ here are five summer reading challenges and activities – with prizes – that might give your kids the extra incentive to pick up a book and […]

Arts, Books

‘The Tiger’s Wife’ author returns with a glorious tale of the American West

Téa Obreht’s former student reviews her long-awaited sequel Téa Obreht’s new novel Inland is a triumphant sweeping epic that sets out across the American West following two narrators: Lurie, a stateless orphan turned outlaw trying to claim his place in the world, and Nora, a frontierswoman clinging to the community she helped build as her husband and oldest sons go […]

Civic, Feature Story, Politics

Citizen Journalism Pays a Visit to US by Frank Stipp

Media, Literally The Human Rights Watch Film Festival comes to New York once a year. So when the director of the film ‘Bellingcat’ — a documentary about a popular European ‘citizen journalism’ site — strongly recommended it, we booked a seat. Citizen Journalism is widely believed to provide a cure for the corporate media model. The concept quite rightly implies […]

Arts, Books

New Crimes, Familiar Grounds: Kate Atkinson’s Detective Jackson Brodie Returns in ‘Big Sky’

It’s been nearly a decade since the world heard from Jackson Brodie, the sardonic private eye at the heart of British novelist Kate Atkinson’s series of mysteries. He was probably glad to have a vacation. Brodie has been through a lot in the course of his adventures, not least a seemingly perpetual midlife crisis, which he wrestles with at least […]

Arts, Dance, Music, Theater

Martina Arroyo’s Prelude to Performance Presents a Sparkling Die Fledermaus by Nino Pantano

Martina Arroyo, Kennedy Award ceremony honoree, soprano supreme, who has been a beacon of light and pioneer since the 1960’s and 1970’s, a crossover classical singer with a delightful sense of humor still is in the game. She is a brilliant teacher “go getter”and nurturer through her Martina Arroyo Foundation. This gala event occurred at the Kaye Playhouse at Hunter […]

Arts, Film

‘Legion’ wants to talk superhumans, not superheroes By Will Drickey

If you could make everyone believe you were a good person, would you ever bother to actually be one? That’s the central question of the third season of creator Noah Hawley and FX’s “Legion,” a run-off of the “X-Men” series. What’s odd is that the question isn’t asked by the show’s protagonist, David Haller, who discovers his diagnosis around schizophrenia […]

Arts, Film

Horror Is a Thing Bathed in Sunlight: Review of ‘Midsommar’ By Caleb Drickey

Masked killers, demons from another world, Beasts of Unusual Size: these are the things that go bump in the night, the denizens of horror films. Terrifyingly unknowable and unknowably terrifying, these monsters live in the dark, emerging only when least expected to destroy whichever horny teens disturbed their slumber. As evidenced by the recent box office success of “It,” “Halloween,” […]