SUbway Take
Emma's Set List Emma Baxter Emma's Set List Emma Baxter

SUbway Take

A subway card gets a full-blown funeral, complete with eulogies, processions, and “swipe swipe” chants, but beneath the spectacle is something real: the slow death of a New York icon. From its chaotic 90s debut to its final days in a contactless world, the MetroCard wasn’t just a way to get around, it was a personality, a ritual, a piece of the city’s pulse.

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Steel and Silence at the Guggenheim
Art & Culture Alina Gatrell Art & Culture Alina Gatrell

Steel and Silence at the Guggenheim

A Guggenheim opening promises access, play, and connection. Outside, protesting workers tell a different story. Inside, Carol Bove’s steel-heavy survey strains under repetition, leaving the museum’s message of openness feeling more performative than real.

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The Party Ends. Then What?
Screen Page Stage Stephanie A. Screen Page Stage Stephanie A.

The Party Ends. Then What?

A deeply immersive novel about NYC in your 20s and the quiet, disorienting shift into adulthood. So Old, So Young captures the friendships, choices, and creeping realization that life does not unfold the same way for everyone, and that you may not even notice it happening.

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Nicole Travolta Is Doing Meh.
Screen Page Stage A.C. Bonnett Screen Page Stage A.C. Bonnett

Nicole Travolta Is Doing Meh.

A one-woman show about shopping addiction and spiraling debt promises a redemption arc but delivers uneven pacing, forgotten lines, and a performance that never quite finds its footing. A few celebrity impressions land, but they’re not enough to save a production that feels more forced than fully realized.

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From One House to Another
Art & Culture Alina Gatrell Art & Culture Alina Gatrell

From One House to Another

At Japan Society, Kawai Kanjirō: House to House unfolds less like a museum exhibition and more like entering a life. What begins as a study of ceramics opens into something larger—an exploration of use, beauty, and what it means to live with intention.

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The Fringe Shows We’re Betting On (Part Three)
Screen Page Stage Stephanie A. Screen Page Stage Stephanie A.

The Fringe Shows We’re Betting On (Part Three)

Frigid’s New York City Fringe Festival is one of the best parts of the year for discovering new theater in New York. It’s where artists take big swings, follow their instincts, and put work on stage that feels fresh, specific, and alive. This is your greatest chance to see the type of theater that we’re all worried about disappearing. We’ve pulled together a few shows we’re especially excited to see and spoke with the creatives behind them.

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The PushOver Feels Off From The Start
Broadway Outsider Scott Brooks Broadway Outsider Scott Brooks

The PushOver Feels Off From The Start

At The Chain Theatre, John Patrick Shanley’s Pushover sets out to deliver danger, desire, and volatility but never quite lands. Despite a compelling premise and a standout turn from Di Zhu, the production struggles to find the heightened tone that defines Shanley at his best, leaving behind a play that feels more confusing than captivating.

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The Fringe Shows We’re Betting On (Part TWO)
Screen Page Stage Stephanie A. Screen Page Stage Stephanie A.

The Fringe Shows We’re Betting On (Part TWO)

Part two of our NYC Fringe Festival coverage leans into the personal. From a solo show about learning to drive at 40 to save a marriage, to a darkly funny spiral through alcohol and memory, to a glittering, high-energy love letter to New York and the artists who survive it—these are stories about risk, reinvention, and what it costs to keep going. Meet the creators bringing it all to the stage.

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