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#Ice Skating NYC
jetsetvenue123 · 3 months
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Elevate Your Earnings in 2024: Join Our Referral Program
A Fresh Start: Begin 2024 with Amazing Rewards
Welcome to the first week of January 2024! As we step into this new year, we’re thrilled to offer you an opportunity to be more involved and rewarded in our community. Do you have friends or colleagues planning an event or in search of the perfect venue? Your connections can now lead to exciting rewards for you!
Introducing Our Enhanced Referral Rewards for 2024
To kick off the new year, we are delighted to launch our Referral Program. Your efforts in connecting us with new clients don’t just support our growth—they also bring you tangible benefits. Here’s how you can participate and earn:
1. Initial Referral Incentive: For every new client you refer who books an event, you start earning right away, with rewards beginning at $500. The reward scale includes:
$100 for events with a budget of up to $1,000.
$500 for events with a budget of up to $5,000.
2. Ongoing Rewards: The benefits don’t stop after the first event. For every subsequent booking your referred client makes, you will continue to earn an appreciation fee, fostering a rewarding, long-term relationship.
Why Join Our Referral Program?
Financially Rewarding: Earn significant rewards for each successful referral.
Build Lasting Connections: Enhance your network by connecting friends and colleagues with our top-tier venue services.
Continuous Earnings: Enjoy the perk of recurring rewards for repeat bookings from your referrals.
User-Friendly Process: Referring is made easy through our streamlined communication channels.
Get Started Now!
Engaging in our referral program is simple and straightforward. If you’re interested or want more information, we’re just a message away:
For more details, contact us here: JetSetVenue Contact
To discuss this opportunity, schedule a call: Schedule with JetSetVenue
Make 2024 a Year of Connections and Rewards!
Your network can significantly enhance your net worth, especially with our 2024 Referral Program. Leverage your connections for mutual benefit and embark on a journey of continuous growth and rewards. We’re excited to partner with you in this venture and anticipate a year rich with successful collaborations.Join us in this rewarding endeavor. Let’s make the most of these early days of 2024 and set the stage for a year of prosperity and shared success!
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newyorkthegoldenage · 5 months
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Wollman Rink, Central Park, 1954. This is a photograph, although it looks like a painting.
Photo: Edward Pfizenmaier via Christie's
Note: I seem to have screwed up my queue for the last few days, but I think everything is now OK.
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whitefireprincess · 3 months
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The Rink, Rockefeller Center, NYC | Liubov Moseikina
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patriciastrike · 3 months
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Skating rink at Rockefeller Center
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warmfuzzyphoto · 1 year
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NYC
1989
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andallshallbewell · 1 year
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sunkissedfawn · 1 year
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scenes of winter by gossipgirls
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bobmckenzie · 7 months
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OKAY LAST LOUIS POST FOR TONIGHT I PROMISE (PROBABLY) (I MIGHT BE LYING)
I keep thinking about how cute Louis is in the TRGB episode with his nephew, and how the two of us would probably babysit for him SO often, to the point where he starts to see us more as parental figures than his own parents since they hardly pay any attention to him. but I'm ALSO thinking about how Lawrence probably wouldn't like me at first and would lash out when Louis starts seeing me, bc he's so used to people not paying attention to him and he thinks I'm gonna steal all of Louis' time and attention away 😭😭😭
(this ofc is resolved as he slowly realizes "OHHH this means I'm getting attention from TWO PEOPLE??" and that I care about him :'))
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ultra-nohai · 4 months
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thin ice
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To be honest, I can't ice skate in real life.
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My Mood-Board
❄⛸👑💙🤍����👾💋✨🧁🍭🗽
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musicalchaos07 · 9 months
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JonEl is real to me even if their only screentime is him performing mall food court surgery
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jetsetvenue123 · 3 months
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Chill & Thrill: NYC in January
New York City, in the heart of January, transforms into a magical winter wonderland, offering a unique blend of vibrant energy and cozy experiences. Despite being the coldest month, NYC never loses its charm, bustling with life and a plethora of activities. From the culinary delights of Restaurant Week to the theatrical allure of Broadway Week (for more, see last week’s blog here), the city is a hub of excitement. Ready to dive into the winter spirit? Here’s your ultimate guide to enjoying January in NYC: Sky-High Winter Views: Enclosed Rooftops Craving breathtaking views with a side of comfort? NYC’s enclosed rooftops are your answer. A prime example is Glass Ceiling, where you can sip a drink, stay cozy, and still feel connected to the city’s vibrant outdoor energy. Glide into Fun: Ice Skating Adventures Embrace the season with ice skating, a quintessential NYC winter activity. Glide across the ice at the Winter Village in Bryant Park for free with your skates and a reservation. Don’t miss other popular rinks like Wollman Rink and The Rink at Brookfield Place, each offering a unique skating experience.
Cultural Escapes: Museums Take a break from the cold and immerse yourself in culture and history. Many of NYC’s esteemed museums, including the American Museum of Natural History and MoMA PS1, offer free or suggested admission for NY residents. It’s the perfect opportunity to explore the city’s rich artistic and historical tapestry.
Culinary Delights: Seasonal Menus NYC’s culinary scene is ever-evolving, with restaurants like Riverpark introducing new seasonal delights. Don’t miss their latest creation, the “No End in Sight” cocktail, promising to warm you from the inside out. Discover more at Riverpark.
Winter Thrills: Bumper Cars at Bryant Park The much-anticipated Bumper Cars are back at Bryant Park’s Winter Village! Book your ticket for a whirl of laughter and fun in this unique winter setting.
New York City in January is not just about enduring the cold; it’s about embracing and enjoying it. Wrap up warm, hit the streets, and discover the countless joys the NYC winter has in store. Whether it’s indulging in seasonal flavors, exploring cultural hotspots, or engaging in outdoor activities, there’s something magical waiting for you in every corner of this vibrant city.  Visit Our Website :- www.JetSetVenue.com
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newyorkthegoldenage · 5 months
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According to Life magazine, "Spectators who crowd the walls around Rockefeller Center's sunken skating rink are more easily moved by pratfalls than by pirouettes. Lately, however, this critical audience has been applauding the remarkable efforts of 3-year-old Helen Ann Rousselle." The image above ran in the story and shows Helen Ann flying through the air with the help of professional skaters Muriel Pack and Skippy Baxter. The photo was part of the cover story of the January 15, 1950 issue of Life.
Photo: George Silk via Life magazine Instagram
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pinkariiii · 8 months
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I think ab this daily
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missriyochuchi · 6 months
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I’m mildly obsessed with the livestream of the Winter Village Ice Rink in Bryant Park, not just because I want to be there so badly, but because every so often, I’ll catch someone hobbling across the ice and wipe out and it’ll never not be funny, esp since they’re usually laughing once they’re down, like I just caught a couple fall together because he wouldn’t let go of her hand and his legs swept underneath her and c’est cinéma poetique!
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marlowe1-blog · 1 year
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"The Angel of the Bridge" (The Stories of John Cheever)
OCD hits at a bad time
This is going to be an interesting exercise since I finished the book. I'm done. Only I haven't been writing the reviews. As soon as I'm done reviewing these stories, I'm going to put the beat up copy on a free library shelf and maybe read something else by him but not this year.
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As such remembering these stories is going to be a tough time. Only this one I very much remember because it reminds me of something that happened to me in my twenties. Someone said "Why are people afraid of heights? Because they are tempted." From that moment on, I spent years freaked out about heights. I hated walking over bridges. I went on a ferris wheel with my then girlfriend and just stiffened up in fear imagining my head cracking open on the pavement 50 feet below. Somehow I got over it enough to not freak out, but I'm not exactly eager to walk over a bridge.
Re-reading the early passages in the book, I'm not sure whether to be impressed or confused by the way that Cheever sets the story by talking about his mother as an ice skater and how much he's embarrassed by her dancing all over the Rockefeller Center ice rink. This leads to him talking about his mother asking him to invite his brother over, but his brother is afraid of elevators. And then we get to the point where he talks about his brother being so afraid of elevators that he quits a job because it moves to the 52nd floor and his talk about how great airplane travel is.
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Then finally we get to the point of the story which is that he suddenly crosses The George Washington Bridge on a stormy night and feels the fear of thinking that the whole thing will collapse. And then the story is about how he's afraid of bridges.
This will come up in almost every story from now on, but a weird thing about late period Cheever is that he seems to take a long time to get to the actual story. At least this one fits it all together in the end when he says that his brother is still afraid of elevators and his mother still dances on ice skates, but it's still strange and a slap in the face to that editor note to START AT THE BEGINNING OF YOUR STORY.
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As in, when you know what the actual story is, lop off all the weird stuff you put in the beginning before you knew where it was going. Cheever might have done that in the 40s and 50s but he's certainly not doing it in the 60s.
In some cases, it's frustrating but I think it works in this story since this is an arrogant character who dismisses his mother's ice skating and his brother's fear of elevators before getting hit upside the head with irony and his own irrational fear.
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It would be a much weaker story if it had just started out with him crossing GWB and being freaked out. It's also one of the first person stories.
The angel refers to a hitchhiker that he accidentally picks up when he pulls to the side of the bridge to freak out and he's too distracted by the hitchhiker to think about falling to his imminent death.
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