"I love you New York!" 🎸
In 2003, 13-year-old Taylor Swift performed "Lucky You" in a Knicks talent show at MSG.
On Wednesday, @taylorswift13 was in the crowd to witness the largest comeback in NBA Finals history.
We're throwing it back to celebrate the Knicks coming home! Meet us at the World Trade Center E station at 4:15 to take a ride on a vintage R32 train, which was running when the Knicks last won the Finals in 1973.
The train—outfitted with the K roll sign—will run local on the E from World Trade Center to 59 St-Columbus Circle, then run express to 168 St. There will be fun Knicks-themed surprises—join us for more, and let’s go Knicks!
It would take far more than a month to honor the contributions of queer and transgender New Yorkers.
From the Cercle Hermaphroditos in 1895, the first trans advocacy group in the United States, to the drag balls of the Harlem Renaissance, to the Stonewall uprising, to the Lesbian Herstory Archives, to ACT UP!, founded in 1987 as queer people fought for their lives while the Reagan administration looked away, New York City's history has long been shaped by queer and trans New Yorkers.
To all our queer and trans neighbors: you deserve a City where you can afford to live safely, openly, and joyfully.
Happy Pride, New York City.