There’s something about nurses that makes you wonder. How do they carry the weight of the world? And how do they still show up every day? Thursday marks day 18 of the New York City nurses’ strike. The end still feels far off. The nurses weren’t letting the snow—or anything else—slow them down. They returned to the picket lines outside […]
When Healing Meets the Picket Line: NYC Nurses Stand Their Ground
Broadway, When the Curtain Never Really Falls
People in the Broadway community will tell you something that sounds simple, but isn’t: This isn’t just work. It’s family. That truth filled the room Wednesday at the Museum of Broadway. Performers, creatives, and supporters gathered there for an event called “Casting the Role of a Lifeline.” The goal wasn’t applause. It was something far more urgent—finding bone marrow matches […]
You Can’t Make This Up: The Jailbreak That Wasn’t
There are crime stories that feel dark. And then there are crime stories that feel… confused. This one lands squarely in the second category. Authorities say a Minnesota man showed up at a federal detention center in Brooklyn this week. He tried to walk out with a murder suspect by pretending to be the FBI. Mark Anderson, 36, arrived at […]
When the Fastest Woman in the Room Hits the Brakes
Speed has always been Sha’Carri Richardson’s superpower. It’s what made her a headline. What made her a champion. What made the world stop and stare. This week, that same speed landed her in a Florida jail cell. The Olympic gold medalist was arrested Thursday in Orange County, Florida, and charged with dangerous excessive speeding after authorities say she was driving […]
I couldn’t help but wonder… can City Hall finally learn to save?
I couldn’t help but notice something different coming out of City Hall this week. Instead of a ribbon cutting or a press conference, Mayor Zohran Mamdani pulled out a pen and signed an executive order about something far less glamorous: saving money. Starting now, every New York City agency will have a Chief Savings Officer. Not a new hire. Not […]
Single in the City – January 29
This morning, the city felt alert. Not rushed — aware. The kind of cold, clear morning that sharpens your thinking and asks you to move with purpose. January is settling in now. The novelty of the new year has worn off, and what remains is discipline, intention, and care. Today’s Single in the City is about sustaining momentum without burning […]
On This Day in Black History — January 29
On this day in 2000, Oprah Winfrey launched O, The Oprah Magazine. She became the first African American woman to own and lead a major national lifestyle magazine. At the time, women’s magazines were largely about appearance, trends, and perfection. O changed that. It talked about healing, purpose, faith, and personal growth. These were things many readers were craving. They […]
Gospel Music Sees Resurgence Among Younger Audiences
I remember the first time gospel music hit me in a way that was completely unexpected. It wasn’t in the pews of Sunday morning. It wasn’t with the ritual of a choir singing in perfect harmony. It was through my headphones late at night. I was scrolling through playlists. There was a vibrancy in the voices, a rawness in the […]
When Help Shows Up: Volunteers, Shelters, and the Heart of Community
I walked past a local community shelter last week. I noticed a small cluster of people unloading blankets, food boxes, and winter coats from a van. The volunteers moved with purpose, their faces calm yet determined, as if the act of giving was instinctual, not obligatory. In that moment, I realized something important. The world debates policy, budgets, and bureaucracy. […]
The Cost of Eating: Grocery Carts, Restaurant Bills, and the Price of Everyday Life
I was standing in the grocery store the other day. My cart was half-full of produce, bread, and coffee. Suddenly, I realized something. I was calculating—not just the total, but the invisible emotional cost of every choice. Do I pick the organic apples or the conventional ones? Can I afford the fancy cheese this week, or do I settle for […]
