![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgXEiixbAQNYs2Q9dx4Vdqk_Lqju3fIQKefRndHtya1JNGxVmuzxRm64e-rmZ3LX62YQqHB_PfiAlAIHP46YKahmvpUpt2MmfkmRwWzI2tWCNTc2ynBEt2QY0fqUFSYs0oMgf3whBM2hyphenhyphensj/s640/photo-1.jpg)
An update on the puppet lost here Avenue B between East Ninth Street and East Eighth Street... the reward has increased from $100 to $300.
Name: Hannah Rad
Occupation: Radio Presenter, DJ, East Village Radio (Thursdays, 6-8pm)
Location: EVR, 1st Avenue between 1st and 2nd Streets
Time: 6:15 on Thursday, Aug. 1
I’m from a suburb about 30 minutes south of Pittsburgh. It was a small, kind of farm country area. Right before I moved here after graduating college in 2004, my sister and I went to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland. We stopped in the gift store and they had this massive record sale. I grabbed a handful, and out of every record I could have picked out, I was like, “Oh, the New York Dolls.” I had no idea what they even sounded like, but I wanted to seem really cool when I got to New York and I thought this is going to be the album that does it. And then I come to find out years later that it’s truly such a vital piece of the East Village history and the entire New York music scene. It was those guys in bouffants on that cover that just made it for me.
Coming here was quite the culture shock. I don’t know that I ever considered moving to the city when I was younger, but I knew that I needed to get out of where I was from. I had a tough time when I first moved here. I hardly knew anyone. The first year or so I was like, “Do I belong here and is this where I need to be?” And then I started venturing out more and kind of getting lost in the city. I always found myself gravitating around this area. And now that I’m here I can’t imagine being any place else.
My first job was with a hotel company doing hospitality. It had nothing to do with my field of expertise — graphic design and communications, although that’s become pretty much antiquated now. It seems like everything I learned in college you can do with an app now. What is my degree worth now? Nothing. And I turned that into a design job. I was like, “Listen, I can do this, this and this but I can also do your design,” which eventually took me to working with a number of magazines and art directing. Then I landed at a job at Clear Channel, doing design for them. So I got pretty connected within radio, although EVR and Clear Channel had nothing to do with one another.
I had a lot of free time in between design projects, so I had amped my game up — I was writing a music blog, and it really took off at that time. One of the hosts on EVR, Jason Eldridge, who hosts Accidental Rhythm, had become a fan and we had communicated a little bit but we had never met. And then he emailed me out of the blue one day and said, “You know, I’m going to be out of town for 4 weeks, do you want to fill in?”
After a few weeks, they gave me my own show, and a few months after that they asked me to work here full-time. In that respect, I was able to fuse what I was doing with my blog and transfer that to the EVR site in terms of ramping up the content.
My show is from 6-8 pm on Thursdays. I play a lot of music from the UK and I try to break new artists. I’m taking newer acts and still using this platform and this area and name, this East Village stamp of approval, and saying, you know, we’re still fostering and cultivating new talent. It’s still a creative area.
I love working in the booth. I had been in the habit of leaving the door open when I first started the show. It gets a little weird at times. One of the more memorable moments was when this guy walked by, and I was like, “Oh shit, I think this is Howard Stern right now” and the guy comes in. He looks and sounds exactly like him and he hands me a card — he’s a Howard Stern impersonator. He had the voice and the look. So I put him on the mic and he was like, “Hey this is Howard Stern, East Village Radio.” That’s just one of the typical characters who walk by at any given time.
[Madonna was] my initial introduction to the East Village while growing up in rural Pittsburgh. I knew Madonna had been in this area on East 4th street when she was getting started. She just celebrated the 30th anniversary of the debut album, which excites me. I love reading the story of her just hanging out on a fire escape and just seeing those pictures. It’s just awesome to see that stuff, someone that you idolized so young and you see the progression where they’ve went, and you think, well maybe that will be me.
LEO PARTY at the new monthly Wednesday party hosted by Our Lady of Perpetual PMS (a Leo Lady) & D.J. Feo
Otto's Shrunken Head
538 E. 14th St. (btwn A & B)
NO COVER
(Donations collected for performers)
8/7 Theme: We Are Leo, Hear Us Roar! A Leonine Party that ROARS, brings home the bacon, & parties on top of the patriarchy!
classic punk, 90's grrrl anthems. Iconic ladies & their comrades, keeping it punk, weird, badass:
X, Bags, Blondie, Babes in Toyland, L7, Veruca Salt, Le Tigre, Lydia Lunch, etc. & Local NYC legends
9:30 pm: SKUM CITY: (NYC's best H/C Punk band decrying the demise of NYC & putting what's left loud, gritty, & in your face!)
10 pm: JESSICA DELFINO (The Lower East Side's own Queen of the Obscene! The return of our resident muse.)
10:30 pm: ANGEL EYEDEALISM (Legendary E. Village avant garde performance artist, classically gifted singer & theremin player)
11 pm: Avant Entertainment Hour with LeAnne & Olga's guitar & bass originals, street poetry & Spoken word by PMS & Feo, & more subversive performers!!
Copies of the brand new Shadow, NYC's only underground newspaper, published peroidically since 1988, will be available for $1.
Plus more treats TBA, we promise!
Suggested dress: Your tributes to the Lioness, Feline, & Cat Lady best. Leopard print, fiery flash, royal reds & blacks. Embrace the Leo Power! Leos welcomed & worshipped.
I'd been walking past empty shop fronts in the East Village and fantasizing about having a shop/HQ in the vein of Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren's Let it Rock, a place to collaborate with all the incredible creatives in my scene, feature all their creations and create more. After looking at a few spaces I realized it was financially unrealistic. But I mentioned it to a few friends, and a couple of months later a friend said "I think I found you a shop" and introduced me to these ladies on 1st Ave. who owned A Repeat Performance and had just taken the lease on the shop next door and were looking for a partner to collaborate with.
CHANGE OF USE, OCCUPANCY, AND EGRESS FROM THE EXISTING CELLAR, 1ST, 2ND & 3RD FLOOR, AND CREATE NEW 4TH FLOOR & 5TH FLOOR, OVER EXISTING ROOF, AS PER PLANS FILED.
In his final days, Ackerman was instrumental in working out a development deal for the badly deteriorating synagogue building that will revitalize the landmarked structure and also guarantee that space will be reserved there for the synagogue for the next 99 years.
The 10-day Summer Antifolk Festival at Sidewalk Cafe will feature performances by more than 90 acts in a jam-packed showcase of music and other performing arts that characterize the ongoing creative scene at the renowned East Village venue. The Fest, which runs August 6 through 16, is the concluding event in the year-long celebration of the 20th anniversary of Antifolk at Sidewalk Cafe. It brings together a large cross-section of performers who have been part of the close-knit Sidewalk community over the last two decades, many of whom are returning to the club for rare appearances.
It also features some of the brightest newcomers in the scene. The Summer Antifolk Festival runs August 6 through 16 at Sidewalk Cafe, 94 Avenue A (at Sixth Street). There is no cover charge for shows, although there is a one-item food or drink minimum.
"Home in Loisaida" Films! Featuring LES, directed by Coleen Fitzgibbon; HEART OF LOISAIDA, directed by Marci Reaven and Beni Matias; VIVA LOISAIDA, directed by Marlis Momber. Filmmakers Marci Reaven and Marlis Momber in attendance!
Fitzgibbon’s LES features striking footage of the Lower East Side’s buildings and people in 1976. A fake documentary, LES investigates the Island of Manhattan’s fiscal problems, which have resulted from the nefarious activities of the John Dough Cult. (16 min)
HEART OF LOISAIDA focuses on efforts to form tenant associations in buildings that have been ravaged by neglectful slumlords. (30 min)
VIVA LOISAIDA explores the strong identity of Loisaida through the eyes of the neighborhood’s prolific photographer, Marlis Momber. (40 min)
The program runs 86 minutes. Doors open at 7:30pm and the films begin at dusk. All filmmakers will be in attendance to introduce their films. Show up early for a good seat (or bring your own chair or blanket). $5 (suggested) at the door.
The paintings tell a story rooted in research of numberology, ancient history, and science, according to Bonfanti, who served as an assistant professor at Rio's esteemed Escola de Artes Visuais do Parque Lage. But they are also just to put some beautify out where it's needed, added Nicolina — among regular people in their everyday lives.
This is the core motivation behind the Free Art Society — to free it from institutions, from economic barriers, and in the end, from people's own minds. Asked about the potential actual effects of these projects, she says, "Hopefully this opens other people up to be more expressive themselves. Creative expression is contagious."
Boasting a warm and inviting aura, the focus of General Managers Aidan Fogarty, Mark Tafoya, and Jeff Winslow is upon capturing the essence of a classic British inspired public house and eatery. Although the bar will be stocked with 20 different types of old world/new world and British beer on tap, a batch of unique cocktails by Dominic Venegas, a talented mixologist and part of a James Beard Award nominated team, will garnish the menu.