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NYC to Bring Vaccines to Beaches, Popular Summer Spots Memorial Day Weekend

As a means of getting more people vaccinated, New York City announced that it is bringing mobile vaccination sites to its beaches and popular summer spots starting Memorial Day weekend. “We are going to combine the joy of summer and the beaches reopening with the vaccination effort and this weekend mobile vaccination buses will be out there at beaches all...

New-york , United-states , Governors-island , City-of-new-york , State-of-new-jersey , New-jersey , Coney-island , Island-beach-state-park , Orchard-beach , Queens-borough-hall , Lou-gehrig-plaza , Flushing-meadows-corona-park

Join SoulCycle's Lady Gaga-Themed Born This Way Ride


This Weekend, We're Ready to Ride With SoulCycle to a Lady Gaga-Themed Ride. Paws Up!
6 Shares
Calling all Little Monsters to the bike! In its continued support of the Born This Way Foundation, SoulCycle is hosting a one-of-a-kind Lady Gaga-themed ride that honors Mental Health Awareness Month and celebrates the 10th anniversary of Lady Gaga's
Born This Way album, which amplifies the important message of embracing individuality. For the past decade, the Born This Way Foundation has been developing programs that provide mental health resources and support for the younger generation. Through these programs, the foundation aims to create a "kinder and braver world" — a message that SoulCycle is "proud to support," according to promotional materials.

New-york , United-states , Alexi-rosenfeld-getty , Getty-alexi-rosenfeld , Mental-health-awareness-month , Born-this-way-foundation , Hudson-yards , Getty-images , Little-monsters , Lady-gaga-themed , Lady-gaga , Born-this-way

Retail Workers' Union Urges Stores to Require Masks as Largest Grocery Chain Lifts Mandate

"Keeping retail mask rules in place for most people will help us protect each other and our families," United Food and Commercial Workers President Marc Perrone said Wednesday.

United-states , America , Alexi-rosenfeld-getty , Marc-perrone , Centers-for-disease , Walmart , Costco , Department-of-labor , Health-administration , Kroger , Trader-joe , Meijer

This is what America's reopening looks like so far


People sit at a bar in Houston on May 4, after social-distancing guidelines were relaxed. (Callaghan O'Hare/Reuters)
This is what America’s reopening looks like so far
Published 10:00 PM ET, Wed May 19, 2021
People sit at a bar in Houston on May 4, after social-distancing guidelines were relaxed. (Callaghan O'Hare/Reuters)
As more and more Americans become fully vaccinated against Covid-19, life is starting to look something like it did before the pandemic.
Cities and states are relaxing their restrictions, allowing businesses to expand their capacity. People are returning to schools and their places of worship. Entertainment venues are reopening. Sports fans are starting to fill up stadiums again.

Miami , Florida , United-states , Washington-monument , Maryland , New-york , Georgia , Montana , El-paso , Texas , Brooklyn , Alaska

Photos of the Week: Sandy Hooves, Sunny Park, Count Binface


Patrick Van Emst / ANP / AFP / Getty
Read more
People dance during a party to celebrate the end of the curfew, as Belgium reopens their outdoor spaces, including terraces of bars and restaurants, after closing down for months due to the coronavirus pandemic, in central Brussels, Belgium, on May 8, 2021.
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Count Binface, a mayoral candidate, poses for photos after the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan (not pictured) was re-elected in the London mayoral election, at City Hall in London, England, on May 8, 2021.
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A person in a Darth Vader costume stands on the side of a road during a gathering of supporters of anti-government protest leaders arrested and charged with lese majeste (defaming the monarchy), waiting for their release in Bangkok, Thailand, on May 11, 2021.

Australia , Istanbul , Turkey , Cuitzeo , Jalisco , Mexico , United-kingdom , New-delhi , Delhi , India , Bogota , Cundinamarca

Everything you need to know about visiting New York City this summer


Everything you need to know about visiting New York City this summer
Victoria M. Walker
© Provided by The Points Guy
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This time last year, New Yorkers like myself were hunkered down at home. Outside, the familiar sounds of city life had been replaced by an eerie quiet.
Now, there’s a new energy in New York City — and it feels electric.
In a lot of ways, it’s beginning to feel like a normal, pre-pandemic spring in the city (drinks in the park, happy hours with coworkers and friends, feeling annoyed when you

New-york , United-states , Lower-east-side , Empire-state-building , Brooklyn , East-village , East-river , Italy , Times-square , Queens , Liberty-island , New-yorker

Fully vaccinated? Here's the deal with masks


Fully vaccinated? Here's the deal with masks
TODAY
2 hrs ago
Kerry Breen
As more and more Americans become fully vaccinated against COVID-19, questions linger about what they can and cannot do. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released updated guidelines this week detailing what precautions people do and don't need to take once they've been vaccinated.
Here is everything you need to know.
CDC says fully vaccinated Americans can stop wearing masks
Replay Video
What does it mean to be fully vaccinated?
A person becomes fully vaccinated at least two weeks after their final dose of a coronavirus vaccine. For the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, which require two doses, this means two weeks after the second dose. For the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which requires just one dose, this means two weeks after the first and only dose.

New-haven , Connecticut , United-states , Americans , Alexi-rosenfeld-getty , Rochelle-walensky , Ashish-jha , Sten-vermund , Natalie-azar , Centers-for-disease , Pfizer , Brown-university-school-of-public-health

Illinois Coronavirus Updates: Bridge Phase Begins, Pritzker to Update Mask Order


Illinois Coronavirus Updates: Bridge Phase Begins, Pritzker to Update Mask Order
© Getty Images
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 13: A person wearing a mask walks past posters for Chicago and Moulin Rouge in Times Square on October 13, 2020 in New York City. The pandemic has caused long-term repercussions throughout the tourism and entertainment industries, causing short-term and permanent closures of historic and iconic venues while keeping the doors of Broadway suspended until June of 2021 costing the city and businesses billions in revenue. (Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
After months in Phase 4, Illinois and Chicago entered the Bridge Phase Friday, with higher capacity limits now in place across the city and state as part of a transition to the final Phase 5 of reopening.

Cincinnati , Ohio , United-states , Illinois , New-york , Chicago , Washington , Wrigley-field , Six-flags-great-america , Moulin-rouge , Alexi-rosenfeld-getty , White-sox

Lifesaving tips on reopening the US (Opinion)


Lifesaving tips on reopening the US (Opinion)
CNN
5/12/2021
© Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images
People wearing masks walk by people dining in New York City.
Widespread vaccine coverage in the US is rapidly reducing new infections, illnesses and deaths from Covid-19. States and cities are quickly removing restrictions on business and leisure activities. Yet, while the public enjoys the return to normalcy, governments behind the scenes should be ramping up public health systems to guard against another possible wave and to build more competency for the inevitable next epidemic, whenever it may arise.
First, a note of warning. Newly confirmed cases in the US are now below 40,000 per day. This is down from the peak in January, when new cases reached over 300,000 per day. And daily cases continue to decline, even more rapidly. Yet, just before India's recent surge to over 400,000 cases per day, that country had reported just over 10,000 cases per day as recently as early March. It's a reminder that the Covid-19 epidemic can spread from very few cases to a devastating surge at a terrifying rate, in just a few weeks.

United-states , New-york , Australia , New-zealand , India , Vietnam , Republic-of , China , Russia , Americans , America , Jeffreyd-sachs

Why, yes, you are paying more for your third-party delivery


Why, yes, you are paying more for your third-party delivery
Aimee Levitt
© Photo: Alexi Rosenfeld (Getty Images)
A Grubhub delivery driver carries food on a bike through the snow
Pandemic brain makes your memory hazy, makes you question your entire conception of the Beforetimes. It edits out the screaming children at restaurants and the crowded banquettes, the long wait at the bar for a drink, the FOMO when you see on social media that your friends went out without you. But rest assured, your memory is right about one thing: you are
definitely paying more for your food delivery via third-party app than you were before.

New-york , United-states , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , Alexi-rosenfeld-getty , New-york-times , Alexi-rosenfeld , Getty-images , Wall-street-journalconducted , New-york-city , புதியது-யார்க் , ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில்