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Author: William Reynolds
Circle the date—Friday, June 19th, 2026—because 89 North Music Venue is loading up a lineup that’s ready to go off. Headlined by Major Moment and Gone Stereo, the night already had muscle… then The Chads and Amboy got added, and now it’s a full-on statement. This isn’t one of those shows where you’re just waiting for the headliners. Every slot matters. The Chads, holding it down for Long Island, have been building real momentum with a live set that refuses to play it safe. It’s pop-punk urgency smashed into ska bounce—fast, loud, and built to pull the crowd in immediately.…
Alright, so here’s the deal—Howard Bloom’s latest brain‑melter, The Case of the Sexual Cosmos: Everything You Know About Nature Is Wrong, is out there, and it’s… something. Wild, a little chaotic, definitely not your standard science popbook—and I kinda love it. Who the hell is Howard Bloom? He’s one of those rare humans who’s worn more hats than you can count. He started off as a science nerd—microscopy, immunology, cosmos-level thinking—as early as age ten, worked in science labs by sixteen, then pivoted full-throttle into rock music PR in the seventies and eighties. He’s behind the image polish for Prince,…
Nestled in the heart of SoHo, 76 Wooster Street stands as a silent witness to New York City’s evolution—from gritty industrialism and architectural transformation to cultural revolution and artistic renaissance. Built atop the bones of a pre-Civil War structure, the building has undergone numerous reinventions, each era etching its story into the red-brick facade. Today, under the ownership of John Pasquale and his firm PEP Real Estate, 76 Wooster Street continues its legacy as a cultural cornerstone in Lower Manhattan. A Brick-and-Mortar Timeline Originally a modest house, the property entered the commercial spotlight in 1871 when developers M. & S.…