New/Old Adam Driver for Brooklyn Magazine, 2014
Via @adamdrivermedia
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“Tonight was good. It was juicy.”
-- The doorman at the hotel where we hosted Fated Mates Live
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Andy Warhol and 'Get Out': The Week in Pop-Culture Writing
Andy Warhol and ‘Get Out’: The Week in Pop-Culture Writing
30 Years After His Death, Andy Warhol’s Spirit Is Still Very Much AliveR.C. Baker | The Village Voice“How much responsibility does a mirror bear for whatever beauty or ugliness it beholds? Warhol loved both the heights and depths of American culture, and reflected it back at us through his work, which remains resonant to this day. Here is the spin he put on the concept of American exceptionalism…
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Brooklyn Decker for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, 2007
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A crowd of Brooklyn Dodger rookies hoping to make the team gathered at Dodgertown during spring training and were photographed for the April 5, 1948 issue of Life magazine.
Photo: George Silk via Allposters
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Weeksville, Brooklyn.
Brooklyn is home to many monumental neighborhoods, but few come close to the history and culturally rich Weeksville. Originating in the mid-1800s sat a small African American village named Weeksville, formed during the post-abolition era. At that time, Weeksville and the surrounding Brooklyn area had one of the country’s densest rates of enslaved people. Brooklyn continued to develop, resulting in Weeksville’s absorption of the Bed-Stuy and Crown Heights neighborhoods. Despite the merger, echoes of Weeksville’s past still exist.
Weeksville earned its name from a freed African American dock worker named James Weeks, who purchased a plot of land in the community following abolition in the state.
As word spread that African Americans like Weeks were making a living in New York, more would head to the area for the same opportunity as long-standing families continued to sell off their land in the Brooklyn area. In the 1850s, the population boomed to over 500 residents, nearly half of the residents were originally born in the South. All with different stories and backgrounds, the occupations of these settlers included educators, health care professionals, and entrepreneurs. As time went on, the Weeks village would go on to operate a “colored” school, cemetery, senior home, and multiple churches. Not to mention, the village was amongst the highest rates for ownership of property and business among an African American settlement.
Weeksville quickly became a safe haven for African Americans throughout New York.
The community has changed over the years, but the history of Weeksville remains one of the most influential neighborhoods in New York State, particularly for African Americans.
CARTER™️ Magazine
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New photo of Richard for Nobleman Magazine by Kaitlyn Mikayla.
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patrick d. pagnano / empire roller disco
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