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Coney Island is one of the beaches that most New Yorkers tend to skimp away from. The rumors circulating the waters are choppy at best: needles in the sand, broken glass bottles and a happy floating patch of radioactive waste that make up the paltry surface. We dug into the history of Coney Island and discovered the beauty that it once was.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF CONEY ISLAND

Vintage Dreamland Postcard . Photo via Heart of Coney Island

Before Coney Island became a hotbed for sketchiness, it was America’s most beloved beach. At it’s prime, Coney Island saw over a million visitors per day and was the number one resort for America’s wealthy and elite. With three primary amusement parks (Steeplechase, Dreamland & Luna) competing for America’s attention, the gamut of attractions ranged from an elephant-shaped hotel (that later turned into a brothel, okurrr), a mini-village of over 300 little people from all over the world called Lilliputia aka “Midget City” and the world’s first roller coaster in 1884. 

The Elephantine Colossus. Photo: Public Domain

BACK IN THE DAY

When Coney Island first opened its doors, it was considered a vacation for wealthy Manhattanites. Location wise, it was far away enough from Manhattan to be considered a mini- getaway and the three beaches – Manhattan Beach, Brighton Beach, and Coney Island were adorned with extravagant hotels, bathhouses, dance halls, and restaurants. Of the three, Coney Island became the litmus test for outrageous attractions – one of the main ones being Dreamland’s simulated submarine ride called, “Under and Over the Sea”, where visitors could watch a giant squid and animals of the deep fight one another. Another was the show “Fighting the Flames”, where a cast of over 2,000 actors fought a fake fire at a hotel. 

Dreamland’s Infamous “Fighting the Flames” show. Photo via Ephemeral NY

At it’s prime, Coney Island was the home to several technological firsts. Dreamland was a historical first and opened with over one million lightbulbs decorating its park. As part of its bizarre freak shows, Luna Park inadvertently played a part in medical advancement with their Baby Incubator exhibit. Headed by Dr. Martin Couney and an actual rotating cast of doctors and nurses, visitors could gawk at premature babies in a hospital ward. The exhibit ended up saving the lives of thousands of premature babies and offered free treatment to parents of premature babies.

Crowded beachgoers of Coney Island circa 1936. Photo via History.com

THE DOWNFALL

In the 1900s, a series of fires took down Coney Island. Dreamland had a fire in 1911 that totally engulfed the park in flames, ironically, starting at its haunted ride “HELL GATE”. By the time the Great Depression rolled around, visitors stopped coming to the park. In 1944, another scorcher hit the park and burned down half of the wooden structures of Luna Park. Eventually, parts of the amusement parks were torn down and converted to affordable housing (infamously owned by Fred Trump), and the remaining Coney Island became a shell of what it once was. 

In 2005, Mayor Bloomberg set off to revitalize Coney Island and bring back some of its former glory with an $83 million dollar renewal plan. Today, the glitter has been brought back to life and well worth a visit!

Chau Mui

Chau is the original New York City stoop kid who cut her teeth hanging out in Union Square, ate soup dumplings in Chinatown and explored this great city by train, foot and everything in between.

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Our New Yawker guide this week is Iqram Magdon-Ismail

Iqram is the ultimate hyphenate, a startup extraordinaire, musician, foodie, and overall badass New Yorker. Born in Zimbabwe, he founded VENMO with his college roommates and turned the very world you know upside down. Now, Iqram’s on his latest venture, an audio app called ENSE, where you can listen to the world from your phone and his band, Iqram and the Immigrant Groove. 

We spent the day with Iqram to check out a few of his favorite places in midtown. 

ABOUT MIDTOWN

Before Midtown became Midtown

  • For over 300 years, Lower Manhattan was the “BMOCONYC” aka Big Man on Campus Of NYC. Almost everything above 14th street was straight up country and midtown was as far away from suits, ties and steak lunches as possible. Probably where the phrase “I don’t go above 14th st” comes from.

So a train crash sparked the creation of Midtown?

  • It wasn’t until 1913 when one of the city’s WORST train crashes took place in the former Grand Central station. After this crash – steam locomotives were banned, and all trains in NYC were forced to go electric. New York Central Company, the railroad company
  • involved in the crash then built a NEW Grand Central, with trains underground. “It’s electric….boogie woogie woogie

And then they started selling literal “air” space

  • As New York Central continued moving its trains underground, they began to sell the “air rights” of the property above their trains to real estate developers. Park Avenue was one of the original streets where air rights were sold, and where the very first skyscrapers were built. From there, the skyscrapers grew and grew and grew. Now they’re unstoppable!
Photo by Tripadvisor
Eat

Hookahs, authentic Moroccan tagines, and live music.

For over 12 years, this authentic Moroccan restaurant has been a neighborhood staple. With belly dancing, hookah, and live music – the spot is an all-around answer to a good time. The best part about Tagine?  Iqram’s band, Iqram and the Immigrant Move play a live set here every THURSDAY. You can listen HERE and HERE on ENSE.

Drink

Drinks & The Best View of Columbus Circle

Located on the 9th floor of the Museum of Art and Design in Columbus Circle, Robert offers a GAW-GEOUS view of the city and Central Park. It’s old school, posh, and totally retro in a 1950’s advertising man who would take his mistress here during lunch break. Come for a cocktail and dessert and listen to the live piano. I promise you, you’ll fall in love. Enjoy a Grappa.

Photo by Space Billiards
See

Going into random apartment buildings is totally ok.

While the general advice is not to enter random buildings, Korea Town is the one place that rule does not apply. K Town is a hubbub of karaoke bars, restaurants and lounges stacked one above the other in random looking office buildings. The very best secret though is Space Billiards, where you enter a totally nondescript office building and enter a neon ultra-modern pool hall filled with a young after work crowd and buckets of beer.

Chau Mui

Chau is the original New York City stoop kid who cut her teeth hanging out in Union Square, ate soup dumplings in Chinatown and explored this great city by train, foot and everything in between.

Facebook Conversations

While the general advice is not to enter random buildings, Korea Town is the one place that rule does not apply. K Town is a hubbub of karaoke bars, restaurants and lounges stacked one above the other in random looking office buildings. Really, you just have to stand on the street, look up at the windows to see which have neon lights flashing and head over. Here are a few of our favorites.

Photo by Space Billiards
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Space Billiards

The very best secret though is Space Billiards, where you enter a totally nondescript office building and enter a neon ultra-modern pool hall filled with a young after work crowd and buckets of beer. The pool here is pricier than other pool halls (especially in the outer boroughs) but you can’t beat the instant street cred after taking a friend or date here for the first time.

Photo by Anytime
Eat

Anytime

There are a ton of Korean spots that we could suggest like Miss Korea, Woorjip and more but when it comes to shops hidden above the fold in K Town, we love Korean tapas bar – ANYTIME. Nestled on the 3rd floor, the spot even has a happy hour from 6-8pm.

Photo by Karaoke City
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Karaoke City

Karaoke City is midtown’s largest karaoke bar. While KTOWN has a plethora of spots for serenading drunken audiences, this is by far one of the most solid choices for getting your money’s worth. Private rooms come out to approx $8 per person per hour and they have an open bar special of $20 for an hour.

Chau Mui

Chau is the original New York City stoop kid who cut her teeth hanging out in Union Square, ate soup dumplings in Chinatown and explored this great city by train, foot and everything in between.

Facebook Conversations

(NOTICE: DMing is now closed.)

You could swipe your way to love…or you could let us find you some love

February is the month of love! As NYC’s unofficial but totally official matchmakers (umm..have you been to our Friend of a Friend party yet?), we’ve built up a thiccc rolodex of our hot, single, and fun friends. Now, we just want to send TWO of our lovely readers on a very special ciaooo! curated date!

To do so though, we’re going to need your help. DM us your single friends or yourselves- seriously. This includes your fun friends who are totally against all the apps, people who are totally into the apps, friends who are happily single, friends who are totally gorgeous and you have no idea why they are single, send them our way!

All you have to do to submit is:

DM us @ciaooomag their account on IG. List one reason why we should pick them (or you).

We’ll go through to scour some of the folks and see who may be the right fit for whom! In return, the winning couple will win an epic date…and let’s just say this…hey, at least we’ll end up fronting the bill.

To enter:

Must be residing in the 5 boroughs, 24+ years of age, SINGLE, cool. DM your friends to us @ciaooomag!

Chau Mui

Chau is the original New York City stoop kid who cut her teeth hanging out in Union Square, ate soup dumplings in Chinatown and explored this great city by train, foot and everything in between.

Facebook Conversations

For as long as Queens has been around, it’s been a landing ground for people coming to America. Germans, Greeks, Dutch, Bengali, Chinese, Arabic, Russians, Italians, Jews…Queens has more languages than anywhere in the world, with over 800 languages spoken throughout the borough.

Equal parts old school New Yawk, equal parts fresh to death gentrification, Astoria is one of the neighborhoods where the hipster hasn’t strangled the culture out of..yet. Instead, Astoria is a hybrid where you can still get old school Greek food from a grandma who still forces you to finish your plate, and grab an adult slushie from a tatted chick just a few blocks over. Astoria is truly old world meets new and definitely worth a visit from you this weekend!

 How Astoria got it’s name

  • The area was formerly known as Hallet’s Point and renamed Astoria after John Jacob Astor (then the wealthiest man in America worth $40 million) in the hopes that he would invest in the land. In the end he only invested $500 and never stepped foot on the place. Dang, Queens got played 

Sing us a song Piano Man 

  • Steinway Street is one of Queens’ most famous streets but did you know it was named after the infamous family behind Steinway and Sons pianos? The streets were alive with the sound of music when Astoria was nothing but a commune for it’s workers of mainly German descent. 

Eat

Agnanti Meze

Stepping inside Agnanti feels like walking into your grandma’s kitchen, where she dotes over you with homemade pita and white wine. Start off with an order of zucchini and cheese croquettes, coupled with a fresh greek salad, an off-the-menu moussaka, and a side of the best lemon potatoes in the borough. End with a tasty and tart greek yogurt for dessert. You’ll feel as stuffed as dolmades, but oh so happy once you’re done.

Drink

Madame Sou Sou

Whether you’re craving a Greek-style frappe, a triple chocolate donut or a fresh homemade chorizo quiche, Madame Sousou has something to satisfy any craving. They’re the perfect spot when you’re working from home, craving space to get in a good read, or for post-yoga pick me up. They’ve also recently expanded, so now you don’t have to feel guilty for hanging around for a few hours sampling all their delicious treats.

Shop

Ditmar’s Thrift Store

Digging through this donation based thrift store is the perfect way to spend an afternoon for any bibliophile. Grab a matcha or coffee to go from the nearby Queens Room and wander through stacks on stacks on stacks of $1 books and records. You may have to dig, but that’s half the fun. You’ll find everything from this amazing Barbra Streisand vinyl to a 1986 romance novel about the torrid love affair between a British Naval Officer and a Polynesian princess.

Courtesy of Socrates Sculpture Park
See

Socrates Sculpture Park

Transformed by a group of artists and local community members in 1986, what was once a landfill and illegal dumpsite is now an internationally renowned outdoor museum and exhibition space. Just a hop, skip, bike or quick cab ride away from the Broadway stop, the park is open from 9 am to sundown, 365 days a year. Socrates features groundbreaking contemporary artists who create large-scale beautiful installations using a mix of glass, concrete, paint, plaster, vinyl and more. The best part? It’s completely free – unless like me, you can’t resist the allure of the Mr. Softee truck nearby, a rainbow sprinkles vanilla cone is the perfect companion…trust me.

Chau Mui

Chau is the original New York City stoop kid who cut her teeth hanging out in Union Square, ate soup dumplings in Chinatown and explored this great city by train, foot and everything in between.

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