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“We’re Ready for Chaos”: Jeremy O. Harris Guest Edits Interview’s September Issue

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Tank Top by Fruit of the Loom. Pants by Loewe. Necklace by Carolina Herrera. Belts Stylist’s Own.

Devan texted the GC last summer and simply said, “New York is really giving!” To which Hari replied, “It really is…Jeremy you NEED to get back here.” I smiled, closed my messages, crawled back into my bed, and went back to scrolling my TikTok somewhere in Southern Italy. This was August 2020, and all I could imagine New York giving me was COVID. Moreover, the New York I had dreamed of since I was a child— a New York of casual glamour, open debauchery, and overwhelming talent—felt extinct. The New York that my peers and I had inherited was one traumatized and sanitized in the wake of Giuliani and Bush. Moreover, a New York without “New York:” its restaurants, its shopping, its theatre, its night clubs felt like no New York at all. So I stayed in Europe, in another fantasy—that of the Black expat artists, one part Vaginal Davis, one part Baldwin, even as images of a new kind of moment in NYC were populating my IG feed.

When I returned to New York this winter it didn’t feel necessarily new, but it did feel quiet in a way I hadn’t seen before. It also, for the first time since living here, felt less like a city and more like a community. The faces one saw became more centralized to one’s neighborhood. I finally knew who ACTUALLY lived in my neighborhood and not just who was always around. A sense of quiet caretaking had become an ethos in NYC in a way I had never known, and I had only read about in the works of Sarah Schulman or Samuel Delaney (who is featured in this issue). It was reminiscent of the world I saw on TV exactly 20 years ago, as the city came together post-9/11, in ways we see when we revisit the harrowing photographs of Joel Meyerowitz that appear in this issue.

New York, like a phoenix, goes through radical transformations after a tragedy, for better or worse. After the litany of complex tragedies of 2020, the New York we are witnessing in this nascent moment is one full of optimism and mystery. It’s both horny and brooding, like a teenager who grew up watching French films.

This is the energy I wanted to celebrate in this issue when I was asked to guest-edit the September issue of Interview: a city (and a magazine) in the midst of a radical transformation, finding its legs and its personality. I also wanted to celebrate the parts of New York that tickled my imagination as a child in North Carolina, and drew me here primarily through film and literature, while also making space for the figures, friends, and images that became my lifeblood during the last 18 months of insanity. That’s why our “Establishing Shot” is of Leyna Bloom, the stunning actress who first made her way in New York as a denizen of the ball scene. Then there’s Sean Pablo, a figure I’m sure I’ve seen skating outside my apartment on my way to breakfast. Then there’s Abe Yoon wearing Willy Chavarria—a TikTok model I couldn’t get out of my For You page, and the designer whose shows I couldn’t stop seeing on my IG.

Jacket and Pants by Bottega Veneta. Bonnet Stylist’s Own. Sunglasses and Ring Jeremy’s Own.

I don’t know how to make a magazine, and I didn’t pretend to. I decided to take a Warhol approach and just invite the things I wanted to see around the themes that were populating my mind in the lead-up to September. I thought a lot about cinema, specifically the cinema of seedy motel rooms and sweat-stained sheets, and then decided to dream up a screenplay for the actors Riley Keough and Sebastian Chacon. I thought about the queer artists of New York who had built the foundation for my life in this city, so I invited the experimental director Stephen Winter, the artist Mickalene Thomas, and the writer Samuel Delaney to talk about their lives, their loves, and their work.

But I also know that if New York taught me anything, it taught me the importance of a DIVA. A star who shines so bright others dim in their presence. So we’ve populated the magazine with them: Azealia the diva who usurped the NYC hip-hop throne with the MOST New York anthem ever, and still injects queer, Black, radical feminity into the architecture of all of her songs; the young divas who’ve kept the vibes alive this year (in a editorial reminiscent of the Interview classic ANDY’S GIRLS), and the Grand Dames of Broadway, who are the women I’ve grown up idolizing and imitating that make up the foundation of New York’s theatrical heartbeat. These divas taught me in various ways how to BE in a pandemic—not quiet and morose but LOUD.     

   

And then there’s our cover star, Doja Cat, who was so LOUD that her pervasiveness these last two years has felt as though it was part of the architecture of any place I went. Her rise reminded me of the similarly pervasive and transformative music of Missy Elliott, and so they sat together for a revealing conversation about music, the internet, and, as my friend Moses once said in the GC, the sense that Doja is an artist “too talented to be canceled”.

I’m not a New Yorker by blood or birth but by association. Like many who live here but came from the far reaches of the Midwest or the South and grew up with the twinkle of skyscrapers in their eyes, I lived in an idyllic New York of my imagination for many years. One that was fostered by films and shows and magazines like this one. In many ways, meeting the awkward, sweaty, poop-on-the-train reality of this town can be startling for those like me because the imagination is static and New York is transformative and dynamic. I hope this issue feels the same way.

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Hair: Dhairius Thomas using OGX at Factory Downtown and Rochelle Walker

Makeup: Eunice Kim using Glossier and MAC Cosmetics

Fashion Assistant: Juan Zenon



Chanté Moore – Jesus, I Want You (Live 2013)

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Live rendition of her new gospel smash “Jesus, I Want You” available on her new album “Moore Is More”. Check it out on…
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Charlie Wilson – Somebody Loves You (Audio)

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New album, Forever Charlie, out now! iTunes:
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Red Hook’s Fort Defiance Reopens As a Grocery Store and Cafe

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Inside the market and café.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

When St. John Frizell opened Fort Defiance in Red Hook in 2009, the small tavern’s casual vibe, standout brunch, and excellent drinks made it an instant hit in the neighborhood and a destination for curious diners. Last year, Frizell converted Fort Defiance into a general store, selling produce, to-go cocktails, and other necessities for pandemic-era living. The move was a business necessity as COVID-19 forced dining rooms shut, one made by plenty of other operators at the time, but even once he was allowed to reopen as a full-capacity restaurant, Frizell decided to run with the shop, announcing in June that Fort Defiance, home of the city’s premier Irish coffee, wouldn’t reopen as a restaurant. But when he closed to rejigger the space for this purpose, he realized he had a problem, like a sagging kitchen and other necessary upgrades. He says he realized he only had two real choices: invest $100,000, or move. The decision was easy, and he relocated to a new space, at 347 Van Brunt, that’s right up the street and twice the size of the original.

“This allowed us the ability to build-to-suit our new mission,” Frizell explains, “instead of trying to retrofit it in a place that was built solely as a restaurant.” That new mission is to open a Fort Defiance that is something of a hybrid of Fort Defiance (restaurant) and Fort Defiance (general store). “I don’t know of any gourmet grocery that has a barroom in the back,” he adds, “but that’s exactly what we’re going to do.”

There are some comparable other businesses: Any bodega or deli that has a restaurant squeezed in, like La Esquina Del Camaron Mexicano, does something similar, though not necessarily “gourmet.” The Bushwick store Foster Sundry is maybe the closer, daytime analog, offering beer, cider, and wine on tap alongside its menu of sandwiches. And Mekelburg’s in Clinton Hill offers a curated selection of grocery items upfront, along with a bar and caviar-topped baked potatoes in back. But, generally speaking, every neighborhood needs a spot where you can sit down for a Negroni and leave with lettuces for dinner.

Sandwich time.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

At the new Fort Defiance — which is currently open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. — the front room is a combination café and store, with a produce case, deli case, and, soon, a freezer. There’s a menu of prepared foods (gazpacho and ratatouille both make appearances while we’re in the midst of prime tomato time), as well as breakfast and lunch items like a broccoli melt with Gruyère, or a BLT with hot-pepper mayo. (Dinner is still on the way.)

Frizell says he considered having an on-site butcher, but ultimately went in a more plant-forward direction, instead investing in a bakery setup. His chef Aaron Taber has some experience baking bread, though Frizell says the idea for including a bakery came from a friend’s sourdough bread, which they started selling in the store. At the new shop, they’ll have homemade bagels alongside country and Pullman loaves, English muffins, and baguettes. On the sweeter side, Anna Lockwood is contributing scones, cookies, hand pies, and other pastries. (At the moment, there’s no Irish coffee, or any other drinks for that matter, because the original location’s liquor license hasn’t been transferred over yet; Frizell says he applied four months ago.)

The other big change is that Frizell is now thinking, for the first time, about expansion. In the past, he thought of Fort Defiance as a one-off business. “I just felt the character of the place was very tied into where it was, and I didn’t think it would work anywhere else,” he explains. But now that he’s moved — albeit only slightly — he says it’s opened his eyes to the possibility that new stores, supplied with baked goods and drinks and grab-and-go salads, would make sense, well … everywhere.

A cherry tea cake.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

One of pastry chef Anna Lockwood’s hand pies.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

The front room.
Photo: DeSean McClinton-Holland

Fort Defiance, 347 Van Brunt St., at Wolcott St.; 347-453-6672

Hollywood Dubbed Tamil Movie Crocodile HD | Crocodile Movie Marana Payam | English Super Hit Film HD

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Hollywood Dubbed Tamil Movie Crocodile HD | Crocodile Movie Marana Payam | English Super Hit Film HD

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Gigi Hadid Captivates New York Fashion Week With First Runway Strut

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Somehow, it feels perfectly fitting for Gigi Hadid to help get New York Fashion Week started with a bang. 

The 26-year-old model hit the runway for the Proenza Schouler show as the festivities kicked off in New York City on Wednesday, Sept. 8. As seen in the below photo, Gigi wore a long-sleeved dress with a yellow and blue pattern that was connected to a black vest, and her natural beauty was clearly on display as well. 

Among those in the crowd to take in the brand’s spring/summer 2022 collection at the outdoor show were Emily Ratajkowski and Tommy Dorfman. Tommy posted a pic from the show to her Instagram Story in which the models were standing still with intense looks on their faces, and Tommy wrote, “choose your fighter.”

Gigi, who also shared footage from the show to her Instagram Story, definitely seemed excited leading up to the big moment. That morning, she had posted photos from one of her shoots and wrote in part for the caption, “fashion month begins.”



The Yakuza’s Guide to Babysitting Anime Adaptation Announced

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The Yakuza’s Guide to Babysitting is officially getting an anime TV adaption, as announced by its creator Tsukiya on Twitter.

Originally launched on the Comic Ride pixiv site, the manga series has hit a surge of popularity since its move to Comic Elmo. There’s currently no word on which studio will be handling the anime adaption or when it will release.

Much like Way of the Househusband, The Yakuza’s Guide to Babysitting puts a rugged Yakuza member into an unlikely situation that requires his softer side.

Kirishima Tooru is the right-hand man of the Sakuragi crime family,” says the official description of the manga. “For him, the job is a perfect excuse to let his violent instincts run wild, earning him the nickname ‘the Demon of Sakuragi’. It seems like nothing will stand in the way of his vicious nature. But then one day, he receives an assignment like never before from the boss—babysitting his daughter! This is the heartwarming (or is it bloodcurdling?) story of a little girl and her yakuza caretaker!”

The sixth volume of the manga is set to release soon in Japan, and the series recently started making its way West with the second volume releasing digitally back in June.



Eric Prydz Threw Down as Cirez D & Pryda for ARC Music Festival in Chicago [WATCH]

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Eric Prydz took over Chicago’s ARC Music Festival this past weekend with a headlining performance, as well as sets from his aliases Cirez D and Pryda (both of which have hit the internet).

On Saturday, Cirez D commanded the techno-focused Expansions stage with an enthralling set, gracefully driving the festival’s soundtrack from daylight into dusk. Featuring music from Adam Beyer, Boys Noize, Yan Cook, Christian Smith, and a handful of Cirez D cuts as well.

“someone felt the urge to record my whole set as Cirez D. I might as well share it…” Prydz tweeted out after the long weekend. “Love you Chicago.”

MORE: Enjoy Five Hours Worth of Eric Prydz Live Shows at Factory 93 DTLA [FULL SETS]

On Sunday, the producer followed up strong with a two-hour performance as Eric Prydz on The Grid stage and capped off the weekend with a special Pryda after party at Radius.

His performances as Cirez D and Pryda are documented via JPMediaProductions.

See below and explore more footage from the weekend here.

Cirez D @ ARC Music Festival

Pryda @ ARC Music Festival After Party

 

Photo via Tomorrowland





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Prince – 17 Days (Live At The Los Angeles Forum, April 28, 2011)

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“17 Days” from the Welcome 2 America Live Blu-Ray included in the deluxe edition of Welcome 2 America
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This amazing performance of “17 Days” was captured on April 28, 2011 at The Forum in Inglewood, CA. The fan favorite was originally released as the B-side to “When Doves Cry” and Prince performs it here with his 2011-era lineup of the New Power Generation, including Shelby J., Liv Warfield, Elisa Fiorillo, and Morris Hayes, additional keyboardists Renato Neto and Cassandra O’Neal, bassist Ida Nielsen, drummer John Blackwell, and dancers Maya and Nandy McClean (The Twinz). The song includes a fun segue into the band covering Teena Marie’s “Lovergirl” from her 1984 album Starchild. The complete performance of this live concert is included in the Deluxe Edition of Welcome 2 America, the highly anticipated first full complete album released from Prince’s legendary Paisley Park vault. Recorded in the spring of 2010 and then mysteriously archived by Prince, the statement album documents Prince’s concerns, hopes, and visions for a shifting society, presciently foreshadowing an era of political division, disinformation, and a renewed fight for racial justice.

The Deluxe Edition includes the complete studio vault album on both CD and black vinyl (accompanied with a hi-res digital download). The black vinyl edition will have music on three sides and a collectible etching on the fourth side. The live concert video, presented in 1080p HD with stereo, 5.1 surround and Dolby Atmos audio, was captured midway through his legendary marathon “21 Nite Stand” at The Forum and this performance documents the spontaneity and incendiary energy of that historic portion of the Welcome 2 America Tour – an audiovisual testament to the proclamation he made at the launch of the tour in October, 2010, stating “Bring friends, bring Ur children, and bring foot spray, because… it’s gonna B funky.”

Besides “17 Days,” the performance features covers of Bob Dylan’s “Make You Feel My Love,” Janet Jackson’s “What Have You Done For Me Lately” and Roxy Music’s “More Than This” alongside Prince favorites including “Controversy,” “1999,” “Purple Rain” and many more. The Deluxe Edition of Welcome 2 America will be presented as a luxe gold-foil package designed by GRAMMY-nominated artist Mathieu Bitton and GRAMMY-nominated creative director and Prince associate Trevor Guy, complete with a 12”x12” 32-page companion book and embossed vellum envelope containing exclusive Welcome 2 America era ephemera (photographic art print, 23”x36” poster, replica setlist, ticket, VIP invitation and backstage passes). Experienced as a complete package, the Deluxe Edition provides a multidimensional and immersive view of Prince’s creative genius during his spontaneous, energetic, and thought-provoking Welcome 2 America era.

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Let the rain come down
Let the rain come down, down

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Dance of Senses. Afro Cuban Jazz

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Provided to YouTube by IIP-DDS

Dance of Senses. Afro Cuban Jazz · Sexual Music Collection · Cuban Latin Collection

Traditional Brazilian Dance Jazz

℗ 2021 Explosive Jazz Atmosphere

Released on: 2021-04-12

Music Publisher: Marco Rinaldo
Composer: Marco Rinaldo

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