you could name any noah kahan song and i’d be able to pair at least one stranger things character with each.

#football#world cup#jude bellingham#soccer#england nt#world cup 2026




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you could name any noah kahan song and i’d be able to pair at least one stranger things character with each.
Get an inside look into the inspiration and process behind artworks in KAWS: WHAT PARTY on April 22 during a virtual conversation between KAWS and curator Eugenie Tsai. Tickets here!
Installation view of KAWS: WHAT PARTY. (Photo: Michael Biondo)
Virtual Brooklyn Talks are presented by Bank of America
All they had to do was add like a quick kiss in that ending montage or something and they could have canonized it. But fuck them! I literally gave up on this show post season 3 I came back Cuz I found out about tjlc. Fuck moftiss
Reflect on Studio 54’s cultural influence with Ian Schrager, cofounder of the iconic venue, on March 12 in conversation with fashion designer Norma Kamali and Refinery29's Christene Barberich! While supplies last, select a ticket bundle to explore Studio 54: Night Magic before it opens to the public. Book your tickets today!⠀
Ian Schrager. (Photo: Courtesy of Ian Schrager); Norma Kamali. (Photo: Courtesy of Norma Kamali); Christene Barberich. (Photo: Frankie Marin)
Our January 9 conversation with astrologer Chani Nicholas and artist Tourmaline is just around the corner! Join the two as they discuss the intersection of astrology and storytelling and celebrate Nicholas' new book You Were Born for This, an introduction to how your birth chart reveals your unique talents, opportunities, and challenges.
For tickets and more information, visit http://bit.ly/2swjO5Y.
Photos: Chani Nicholas (Photo: Luke Fontana); Tourmaline (Photo: Miranda Barnes)
You may know artist Titus Kaphar from his recent New York Times profile or his 2017 Ted Talk, Can art amend history? Get to know him a little more tomorrow night when he joins writer and art critic Antwaun Sargent for a Brooklyn Talk discussing the resulting painting of that famous talk, Shifting the Gaze, as well and the artist's recent initiatives in New Haven. After the talk, you'll be able to see the painting in our special exhibition One: Titus Kaphar before it opens to the public this Friday. Tickets are still available here.
Photo courtesy John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
"Slavery didn't end in 1865. It evolved." —Bryan Stevenson, founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI).
Only two more weeks to see EJI's groundbreaking research into the history of lynching alongside artworks and archival material from the @brooklynmuseum collection. Explore The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America, now through October 8th, and be sure to catch our upcoming Brooklyn Talks with leading scholars Paul Butler and Michelle Alexander on October 5. Tickets are available here.
truly, one of humans greatest inventions is animation