Day: January 9, 2022

News

A new middle school for Red Hook, by Nathan Weiser

PS 676 has disclosed new details about their transition from an elementary school to the Harbor Middle School. The transition will begin in September. PS 676 will add a sixth grade with the current fifth graders given priority. All of the existing classes will move up through the elementary school. Next year the school will go from Pre-K through sixth […]

News

Opinion: Governing by Tweet, by George Fiala

Not much space to write this month, but that’s fine. I was actually going to write about how much of news gathering, as well as politicking, is done not in person anymore, but via Twitter and other non-social media thingies. So this can be like an expanded tweet. I’m not sure if Red Hook yet knows this, but for the […]

News

Build the Block discusses theft and traffic, by Nathan Weiser

The 76th Precinct Sector C held a virtual “Build the Block” meeting on December 15 for the community. Sector C Officers Vegnel and Moet led the meeting in which community issues were discussed. They discussed package theft and recommended Ring cameras which can help catch people in action who might be stealing packages. There was an instance recently when a […]

News

Senator Kavanagh’s Virtual Town Hall, by Brian Abate

New York State Senator Brian Kavanagh held a virtual town hall for South Brooklyn this December. He has represented South Brooklyn and some parts of Lower Manhattan in the senate since 2017, having replaced Daniel Squadron. One of the issues that came up a few times was the increased street traffic caused by lane closures on the Brooklyn Queens Expressway. […]

Feature Story

Re-recordings Are The New Napster? by Roderick Thomas

STREAMING IS KING Over the past couple of decades, record labels have sought new ways to profit off their recording artists. In the early 2000s, the music industry was being ravaged by leaks and free music downloads through sites like Napster and the advent of the mp3 file. Today, streaming services (Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, etc.) have replaced sites like […]

Feature Story

Italy’s vaccine battles, by Dario Pio Mucilli, Foreign Correspondent

As in much of the globalized world, the pandemic has become a battle not only of health, but politics as well. Italy has struggled with COVID for two years. The introduction of the Green Pass has marked a turning point in strategies adopted by the Government. In April 2021 the European Union created the Pass which is a certificate with […]

Arts

Memorial Concert for Regina Opera’s Maestro José Alejando “Alex” Guzmán, by Nino Pantano

On the afternoon of Sunday, November 21st at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Catholic Academy of Brooklyn, in Sunset Park Brooklyn, a special memorial tribute to famed conductor José Alejando “Alex” Guzmán (1946-2021) was presented to his longtime fans at the Regina Opera. Selections from Mozart’s Le Nozze Di Figaro and Don Giovanni; Beethoven’s Fidelio, Verdi’s Otello, Puccini’s Manon Lescaut, […]

Arts

OPERA REVIEW JANUARY, by Frank Raso

Tosca A Revival of Sir David McVicar’s production of Tosca opened on Dec 2. A Revival already happened of this production and a scheduled one got cancelled. So, a revival of this production, or Tosca in general, wasn’t very rare so it just seemed a typical revival along with so many others in the season. Yet, it was terrific. It […]

Arts

Looking Forward, Looking Back, by George Grella

This month’s name comes from Janus, the two-faced god, looking forward and backward. A crossroads on the calendar, in other words, and here we are again at a crossroads that I’m sure most of us wish we could leave behind. Where is jazz in January? As December began, I was organizing this month around the return of the NYC Winter […]