Talk:History of New York City (1978–present)
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Gentrification
How can we talk about NYC in this period and not even mention gentrification? The East Village (and well into Alphabet City: think of the transformation of Thompkins Square), the Lower East Side, Soho (already gentrifying before this period, but nothing to what has happened since), Nolita (CBGB isn't even in a bad neighborhood anymore, which will be its doom, sorry Hilly), Tribeca (another name dating from roughly the start of this era), Chelsea (not a lot of Cubans these days, and the ones who remain are prosperous. Or gay.), Clinton (which was still "Hell's Kitchen" when I was growing up), Harlem (can we say "Virgin Records on 125th Street"?), Williamsburg (pricing out the artists who put it back on the map, just like Soho), Dumbo (Dumbo?!), Fort Greene, you name it. And I'm sure I'm missing a lot on that list: I'm orignally from the area, but I live in Seattle. -- Jmabel | Talk June 28, 2005 21:56 (UTC)
Central Park jogger
We say "On
If I remember correctly, while the youths in question were definitely not the type of people you'd want for neighbors, their convictions were eventually thrown out on appeal, and it looks like the police got the wrong guys. Am I wrong in this? Certainly, if I am not, the article should mention that as well. - Jmabel | Talk 07:05, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
If you go to the
New era? (Rename 1978-2018, create new article 2019-present)
We are currently at the 54-year mark since the beginning of this article's scope from 1978, and I think a case could be made that COVID-19 has drawn a clear and natural dividing line between turn-of-the-millennium New York, and the situation it finds itself in today and moving forward.
The pandemic and NYC's response to it has marked a cultural sea change in our economy, how we work, how we interact physically, how we communicate with each other, the hobbies we pursue, the accessibility of education, and so many other facets of life. T