Walking Tour

Danielle Itshaik

Response 2 of 5

I have always considered myself to be a New Yorker, but recently this class has made me contemplate if that’s actually true. Moreover, it’s made me rethink what being a New Yorker means. I’m pretty familiar with the city, I can navigate through trains, figure out directions, and get to my destination with some ease. But, I have never really ventured past the main attractions there. Central Park, Times Square, and a few scattered museums are the extent of my city experience. The walking tour on Tuesday made me see the city in a different light.

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So much more to see when in NYC

Response 5 of 5: Walking/Eating Tour

By: Mariam Esa

     When I was a kid, I used to go to Manhattan almost every day with my dad. He’d take me to work with him and afterwards we’d head out to different places such as Central Park, Toys R Us and Planet Hollywood. I thought then that I had a pretty good understanding on the diversity of the city. However, I learned this past Tuesday just how little I actually knew. Continue reading “So much more to see when in NYC”

Never Knew Beef Jerky Could Be So Soft

By: Charles Lauer

I was little apprehensive about going on the eating tour this past Tuesday. Partially because I was worried I might have to pay for everything (and I barely had enough money for the bus ride home) and partially because, until the beginning of this year, I had only eaten things that were certified Kosher.

In case you don’t know, eating Kosher is a traditional Jewish practice that imposes many rules and regulates on what you can and can’t eat. Some of these rules include: forbidding the eating of meat and milk simultaneously, banning a decent size of the animal kingdom from Jewish consumption, and requiring Jewish oversight in the cooking or baking of almost any food you could hope to eat.

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NYC subway lines expose Income Gaps.

 

Joseph Dwan

Reflection 3 of 5

 

The subway is one of the more common things of New York city. Something that most new yorkers use to get around. It can normally be described as dirty, somewhat unreliable and oh god I really hope that puddle is water. But there is another fact that the subway hides from all but the most careful of viewers. In this article Larry Buchanan actively shows the income inequality of New York through an interactive infographic and short article with highlights on how extreme some of the income gaps are. The article quotes an almost 143,000 dollar median household income difference. That is a pretty extreme difference almost unnoticeable, unsurprising as most commuters are too busy trying to get some shuteye on their way to work. The interactive infographic is also very useful as it gives a very in depth look into the income differences over a large area like a subway overall route. The routes show mostly downtown brooklyn and manhattan as the more wealthier with the more lower earning income classes on the ends of the spectrum in queens and lower brooklyn.

 

This article is quite interesting as a lot of people don’t notice the income differences while riding and focusing from stop to stop, the graph and article really brings these things to light. The article could be improved a bit by including who lives where(demographic) to really highlight income disparity instead of just putting numbers, a face to go with the numbers would really be helpful. The article should be blasted out to some mainstream site where this article would be consumed by more people as this income difference is very low key and something people would rather not address. This article is something everyone in the city should check out, you could really find out a lot about people living just a few stops away.

 

Questions

Is there a difference in service quality the MTA provides to these areas or does everyone get the same “crappy service”?

 

How can the MTA assist in leveling out the income desparity?

Immigrant Enclaves

Response 1 of 5

“Take the A train to Little Guyana: Immigrant Enclaves in NYC” – Kirk Semple

Scattered among all five boroughs of New York City, immigrant enclaves, or ethnic neighborhoods can be found. These neighborhoods allow for immigrants to ease into the New York lifestyle with the comfort of having their native cultures still around them. They also allow the people living there to feel at home, and give them a place where they can “fit in.” Overall, they seem to have a mostly positive effect on the people living there. However, immigrant enclaves also have clear downsides.

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Subway Stories

Response 4 of 5: Underground Movements: Modern Culture on the New City Subway by Sunny Stalter-Pace

By: Mariam Esa

      Sunny Stalter-Pace’s Underground Movements: Modern Culture on the New City Subway considers various views of the subway as voiced by numerous people. The book in a sense represents the city by providing a wide array of subway stories that reminds us of the countless perspectives to be found in New York City. Throughout the course of this book, we are introduced to ideas of the dangers of the subway, the artistic expression of it, the way it portrays diversity, and much more. It allows us to see just how integrated the subway is in making New York City what it is. Continue reading “Subway Stories”

Underground Movements: Modern Culture on the New York City Subway

Underground Movements: Modern Culture on the New York City Subway

This book talked about how the subway has helped to shape New York City today. It was said that the subway would define New York City in a new way and indeed it has. Before the development of the subway, many newspaper companies were conflicted between it being a life-changer for citizens of NYC or if it would cause more harm and damage than good.


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Inequality in New York

Rachel Swed

Reflection 4 of 5

Inequality and New York’s Subway

A huge problem in New York is inequality and huge income gaps between citizens. In the article, Inequality and New York’s Subway, Larry Buchanan brings up very valid points about the injustice in New York by simply looking at the subway system. He provides an interactive infographic that shifts for different subway lines. The infographic shows the income of people who live around those stops. Through this interactive, you can see that there is a great inequality between these boroughs. Majority of this information shows that Manhattan has the highest median income out of the five boroughs in New York. There are huge gaps in income between not only boroughs but also between stops on the subway lines! Continue reading “Inequality in New York”

the Subway System: Shaping NYC

(Reflection 4 of 5)

by Anna Tsomo

Sunny Stalter-Pace’s Underground Movements: Modern Culture on the New York City Subway is an apt representation of the subject on which it is written. Meandering, multifaceted yet somehow cohesive, the book is much like the New York City subway system. Through its well-developed perspectives, it allows readers to understand how fully the subway has influenced modern culture—not only literature, but the wider meaning of subway stories, and how they become truths. While that is the focus of the text, it also sheds light on how the subway divides and connects people.

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