chunk_id
stringlengths 3
9
| chunk
stringlengths 1
100
|
---|---|
17_93
|
street from Glasslands was being demolished to make way for luxury condo high-rises. Columns and
|
17_94
|
features on the closing were published in The New York Times, Billboard, Paper Magazine, Gawker,
|
17_95
|
Gothamist, The Fader and other outlets.
|
17_96
|
In its final weeks of operation, Glasslands harkened back to its art gallery roots, bringing in
|
17_97
|
Collective Craft NYC to install works by visual artists Jillian Siegel, Courtney McKenna, Grant
|
17_98
|
Guilliams, Ashley Blanton and more. Annalise Yuri Murphy, a projection artist, created a mapped
|
17_99
|
visual installation projecting all the Glasslands Posters from opening to close. Glasslands
|
17_100
|
bartenders Luiza Kurzyna and Zachary Clausen also contributed new pieces, as did James Devito of
|
17_101
|
Anamanaguchi and Kengo “Peelander Yellow” Hioki of Peelander-Z.
|
17_102
|
On December 15, 2014, Glasslands announced its final event “Lastlands” for New Year’s Eve, and when
|
17_103
|
tickets went on sale two days later they sold out instantly. The show’s line-up – DIIV, Sky
|
17_104
|
Ferreira, Smith Westerns and Beverly – was not revealed until doors opened for the event. Recapping
|
17_105
|
the night, Jen Carlson wrote, “RIP Glasslands. RIP Williamsburg. RIP Brooklyn. Etc.”
|
17_106
|
Trivia
|
17_107
|
Glasslands was the setting of a scene in the episode “I Saw You” of the HBO show Girls. Scenes
|
17_108
|
were also filmed for Blue Bloods, Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll starring Dennis Leary, and the movie
|
17_109
|
Song One starring Anne Hathaway, as well as a number of music videos and other productions. Footage
|
17_110
|
from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ secret performance at Glasslands was used to create the official live
|
17_111
|
video for their song “Isis”, released in 2007.
|
17_112
|
Comedians that performed at Glasslands included Trevor Noah, Hannibal Buress, Sasheer Zamata, Jo
|
17_113
|
Firestone and Dylan Marron.
|
17_114
|
A number of the venue’s night staff were also musicians and artists, notably Celeste Cruz, Kitty,
|
17_115
|
Cameron Hull of Suckers, Matthew Scheiner of Oberhofer and Mon Khmer, Angus Tarnawsky of Apache
|
17_116
|
Beat and Flowers of Evil, Joe Stickney of Bear in Heaven, plus members of True Womanhood,
|
17_117
|
Bodyparts, Klaus, Infinity Shred, Call of the Wild, and Candide.
|
17_118
|
References
|
17_119
|
External links
Glasslands website
"The Boys of Glasslands". The Manifesto. 18 March 2014.
|
17_120
|
Caramanica, Jon (27 December 2014). "Another Demise in Williamsburg". The New York Times
|
17_121
|
2006 establishments in New York City
2015 disestablishments in New York (state)
|
17_122
|
Art museums and galleries in Brooklyn
Nightclubs in New York City
Music venues in Brooklyn
|
17_123
|
Grand Street and Grand Avenue
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
|
18_0
|
Makybe Diva (foaled 21 March 1999) is a champion Australian Thoroughbred racehorse who is the only
|
18_1
|
horse to win three Melbourne Cups and the only mare to win it more than once. She achieved the feat
|
18_2
|
in 2003, 2004, and 2005. She also won the 2005 Cox Plate. She was the highest stakes-earner in
|
18_3
|
Australian history, winning more than A$ 14 million.
|
18_4
|
She is by Desert King (a winner of the Irish Derby and Irish 2,000 Guineas) out of Tugela by
|
18_5
|
Riverman (USA). Tugela was also the dam of the Australian stakes-winners, Musket and Valkyrie
|
18_6
|
Diva. Makybe Diva is owned by South Australian tuna fisherman Tony Šantić, who named her after five
|
18_7
|
of his employees - Maureen, Kylie, Belinda, Diane, and Vanessa - by taking the first two letters
|
18_8
|
from each of their names.
|
18_9
|
Background
|
18_10
|
Tony Šantić's bloodstock agent John Foote purchased Tugela in foal to Desert King for 60,000
|
18_11
|
guineas at the December 1998 Tattersall's Sale. As normally happens with Santic's British-purchased
|
18_12
|
horses, she was taken to Dick Fowlston's Britton House Stud in Somerset to board before being sent
|
18_13
|
on to Australia. Tugela gave birth to a filly at five minutes past midnight on 21 March 1999. The
|
18_14
|
filly was offered for sale at the 1999 Tatts Newmarket foal sale, but did not make the reserve.
|
18_15
|
Named Makybe Diva, the filly remained at Britton House Stud until August 2000, when she and Tugela
|
18_16
|
were shipped to Australia.
|
18_17
|
Racing career
|
18_18
|
2002: Three-Year-Old Season
|
18_19
|
Originally trained by David Hall, Makybe Diva made her racetrack debut in late July 2002, as a
|
18_20
|
three-year-old, in a maiden at Benalla, Victoria, and finished fourth.
|
18_21
|
2002/2003: Four-Year-Old Season
|
18_22
|
In her next start two weeks later - and now classed as a four-year-old - Makybe Diva began a
|
18_23
|
six-race winning sequence in a maiden at Wangaratta, which culminated in stakes wins, three months
|
18_24
|
later, in the Werribee Cup (2,000 m) and the Queen Elizabeth Stakes (2,500 m). The last win was
|
18_25
|
significant in that it qualified the mare for the following year's Melbourne Cup, and allowed her
|
18_26
|
trainer to give her a light autumn campaign, which consisted of just two starts in relatively short
|
18_27
|
races.
|
18_28
|
Makybe Diva's early career was unusual in that she was unable to contest any major races against
|
18_29
|
horses of her own age, such as the VRC Oaks, because she was foaled in the U.K. to the Northern
|
18_30
|
Hemisphere breeding calendar. This meant that, for Australian racing purposes, where horses
|
18_31
|
"age-up" on 1 August each year, she was bracketed with horses foaled about six months earlier, in
|
18_32
|
the Southern Hemisphere spring.
|
18_33
|
2003/2004: Five-Year-Old Season (Melbourne Cup 1)
|
18_34
|
Makybe Diva resumed racing in the spring over , but while being reasonably competitive, she did not
|
18_35
|
win any major races. Second up at her next start in the Group 3 Stock Stakes, she came from behind
|
18_36
|
to finish fourth, beaten by just over two lengths. She then started 5-1 equal favourite in the
|
18_37
|
Group 2 Turnbull Stakes, where she again raced at the back of the field, before finishing fourth,
|
18_38
|
beaten by only one length.
|
18_39
|
After finishing as a 14-1 outsider in the Caulfield Cup, she began her partnership with Sydney
|
18_40
|
jockey Glen Boss. Coming from near last with to go in the 2400-m race, she finished fourth behind
|
18_41
|
the Lee Freedman-trained Mummify. The first Tuesday in November 2003 was her first Melbourne Cup
|
18_42
|
victory. Starting as an $8 second favourite, Makybe Diva raced at the back of the field until the
|
18_43
|
finishing straight, where jockey Boss picked his way through the field to win by lengths.
|
18_44
|
In the autumn of 2004, she resumed over 1400 m (7 furlongs) carrying 59.5 kg followed by a
|
18_45
|
third-place finish in the Group 3 Carlyon Cup. Following this, she was blocked when making a
|
18_46
|
winning run in the Australian Cup before being taken to Sydney, where she placed third in the
|
18_47
|
Ranvet Stakes and The BMW Stakes, both Group 1 races. The Group 1 Sydney Cup over 3200 m (2 mi) was
|
18_48
|
to be her final run for the campaign. Sent out as a $3.50 second favourite, she began off the pace,
|
18_49
|
but ran home to record a win by half a length, becoming the first mare to ever win the Sydney
|
18_50
|
Cup/Melbourne Cup double in the same season, and only the fourth horse to have accomplished the
|
18_51
|
double win.
|
18_52
|
After the 2003–2004 season, trainer David Hall left to train in Hong Kong, and Makybe Diva was
|
18_53
|
transferred to trainer Lee Freedman, generally regarded as one of Australia's top trainers.
|
18_54
|
2004/2005: Six-Year-Old Season (Melbourne Cup 2)
|
18_55
|
Her campaign in the spring of 2004 was aimed at winning the Melbourne Cup for a second time. It
|
18_56
|
followed the pattern of her previous cup-winning campaign, though she appeared to be racing better
|
18_57
|
than before. A close second in the Group 2 John F Feehan Stakes over at Moonee Valley showed her
|
18_58
|
competitiveness in shorter races. In the 2004 Caulfield Cup, Makybe Diva drew barrier 18 and
|
18_59
|
settled at the back of the field. She was narrowly defeated by Elvstroem, who led all the way.
|
18_60
|
Makybe Diva was sent out a $3.60 favourite, and won the 2004 Melbourne Cup. In driving rain, the
|
18_61
|
mare defeated a field featuring multiple Irish St. Leger winner Vinnie Roe, Caulfield Cup winners
|
18_62
|
Mummify and Elvstroem, Mamool from the Godolphin stable, and the 2002 Melbourne Cup winner Media
|
18_63
|
Puzzle.
|
18_64
|
Resuming racing in February, Makybe Diva put in close finishes behind Elvstroem in both the C F Orr
|
18_65
|
Stakes and St George Stakes, at Caulfield. On 12 March, she won the Australian Cup, a weight for
|
18_66
|
age event over , and in the process broke the Australian record and set an unofficial world record
|
18_67
|
for 2000 m on turf. She proceeded to win Sydney's most important WFA race, the BMW Stakes, with a
|
18_68
|
last-to-first burst. In April and May, she raced in Japan, where she failed in two starts, the
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.