Lifestyle
Hey Babe, Let’s Meet for Steak, Crayons and … Jazz?
“Backgammon is the cruelest game — so much of it is based on luck,” said Joe Urso, who was one tournament away from earning his grandmaster title, but down a few points in his match on a recent Wednesday night last month.
Mr. Urso, 41, and several other backgammon enthusiasts were meeting for the Clinton Hill Backgammon Club’s weekly game at Funny Bar, a new jazz-bar-restaurant on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. The backgammon club typically convenes in the restaurant’s conversation pit, in the center of the space that once housed a mechanical bull.
Before Funny Bar, the Essex Street venue lived several lives. It was once a Western-themed barbecue joint, then a hip-hop brunch spot. And for 40-years, it housed Schmulka Bernstein’s, New York City’s first kosher Chinese restaurant. The current owners, Tom Moore and Billy Jones, have worked some relics from these disparate incarnations into Funny Bar’s design. But they made sure the new version had no distinguishable theme.
“A lot of restaurants and clubs in New York present these very complete ideas to the customer,” said Mr. Moore, 30, whose parents met working in Chicago’s hotel industry. In the past couple of years, the rise of the overly designed clubstaurant has homogenized Lower Manhattan’s nightlife aesthetics: wood treated to look patinated, shelves packed with tchotchkes and vintage photos framed to imply a storied, local status that has yet to be earned.
The cavernous 2,800-square-foot interior of Funny Bar, designed by Safwat Riad, reflects a cheeky, Lynchian sensibility, with kitschy glass bricks, a slick grand piano and just-between-us lighting. The dining room’s walls are lined with purposely empty shelves. Crayons and paper tablecloths add a playful vibe to the massive, low-slung leather booths. Servers with face tattoos wear spotless, buttoned-up uniforms, adding to the sense of dissonance and mischief. The overall effect may make diners feel like children who stole their parents credit cards and went out for martinis.
“There are a lot of couples mindlessly doodling each other, but I really like when there are businessmen eating together and they start using the crayons to do math on the tables,” said Ava Schwartz, Funny Bar’s director, who, alongside Mr. Moore, can be spotted most nights greeting regulars and running steak frites. Funny Bar goes through about 600 crayons a week.
The owners did not bother with a drink menu. “We’re not really going for special,” said Funny Bar’s head chef, Raphael Wolf. The restaurant’s menu is appropriately simple and crowd-pleasing: salad, steak frites and a brownie sundae. Usually, there’s an off-menu vegetable dish. Of the decision to offer only steak, Mr. Moore said he did not want diners to feel bloated or like their breath smelled; he wanted to keep the night sexy. “And nothing is sexier than steak,” he added.
Mr. Moore and Mr. Jones opened the more popular Nightclub 101 just a few blocks away, but they have been reluctant to over-publicize Funny Bar, preferring to let it find patrons slowly. The location — tucked away on the side of Essex Street that most New Yorkers avoid — makes it that much more “if you know, you know.” The bar does not promote scheduled musical performances, and it has fewer than 3,000 Instagram followers.
Despite being coy about seeking attention, Funny Bar has found an eclectic fan base. On any given night, the crowd includes young fashion hounds, baby stockbrokers, middle-aged couples on dates and musicians like King Princess and the Dare, who are connected to Mr. Moore and Mr. Jones through their third venue, Baby’s All Right in Brooklyn.
Over the course of a typical night, tables and parties tend to merge, with guests eventually spilling into the conversation pit, mirroring the bustle and spontaneity of live jazz — the only music you’ll ever hear in Funny Bar. (So much is its commitment to the genre, that it was even worked into the restaurant’s phone number: 212-516-JAZZ.)
Some patrons have compared the social swirl of Funny Bar to that of the bars portrayed in the first season of Sex and the City — a comparison that proves itself every time someone writes their phone number down in crayon, tears it from its sheet and hands it off to a cute stranger.
Lifestyle
We unpack Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show : Pop Culture Happy Hour
Bad Bunny performs onstage during the Super Bowl halftime show at Levi’s Stadium.
Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
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Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
At the Super Bowl halftime show, Bad Bunny put on an endlessly rewatchable performance. It featured Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin, and a real wedding. But it didn’t shy away from this political moment, and Bad Bunny’s place in the culture wars.
Lifestyle
Rep. Lauren Underwood Says She’d Perform Well on ‘Survivor’
Rep. Lauren Underwood
I’m A Capitol Hill Survivor …
And I’d Survive the Show, Too!!!
Published
TMZ.com
Representative Lauren Underwood says she’s got the skills to win political debates and immunity idols … telling us Wednesday she’d kill it on the show “Survivor.”
The Democratic Congresswoman from Illinois says that she absolutely loves the long-running reality competition show … and with trust, alliances, and doing whatever it takes to win — she says that’s a lot like Congress.
Watch the clip … Underwood lays out all the reasons — including her background as a nurse and her time in the Girl Scouts — she thinks she’d crush it on “Survivor.”
TMZ.com
Worth noting … we talked to Delaware Rep. Sarah McBride recently — and she says GOP lawmakers are better suited for the show “The Traitors.”
Sounds like Congress is obsessed with reality TV these days … which is better than when the House floor turns into a “Real Housewives”-level shouting match, we gotta say!
Lifestyle
In this Icelandic drama, a couple quietly drifts apart
The Love That Remains opens with a simple shot of a construction crane prying the roof off of an empty building by the sea. Anna (Saga Garðarsdóttir), watches from her car as developers tear apart her art studio, her dog by her side. The shot lingers as the roof slowly tilts and drifts out of the frame while the film’s title cards roll. Without fuss, Icelandic director Hlynur Pálmason establishes the film’s central premise — the quiet dismantling of a home and the heightened exposure to natural forces that follows.
Pálmason’s fourth feature is broadly about the separation between Anna, an artist, and Magnús (Sverrir Guðnason), an industrial fisherman in rural Iceland. Pálmason doesn’t reveal the cause of their rift, and instead places the viewer in its aftermath. Without her studio, Anna begins working outdoors, where much of her practice involves pressing large slabs of iron onto canvas. Anna lives with their three children, played by Pálmason’s real-life children, and his real-life sheepdog, Panda, while Magnús spends most of his time at sea. He attempts to maintain a presence in his family’s life by dropping into the house when he can, but his visits feel more like he’s overstaying his welcome than he is a missing piece coming into place. There’s less animosity between the two than there is pity from Anna toward Magnús. She sees their relationship as over, while he sees things as more complicated.
Saga Garðarsdóttir with Þorgils Hlynsson, Grímur Hlynsson and Ída Mekkín Hlynsdóttir.
Janus Films
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Janus Films
Pálmason’s follow-up to 2022’s Godland shares its predecessor’s arresting and cinematic visuals, which portray nature as both serene and a force to be reckoned with. Through careful observations of the beautiful and the ugly, Pálmason emphasizes the inseparable bond between nature, family, and love — all elements of the world that are forever changing and require tending to. Scenes of domestic life are cut between vignettes of the natural world, from luscious green landscapes to a mushroom being torn open, with the film’s melodic, piano-driven soundtrack adding an affecting layer of sentimentality. It is no coincidence that Magnús works at sea, one of many natural forces that place him in tension between control and surrender. At times he attempts to reassert himself as a present and authoritative figure in his family, while at others, he seems to accept the reality: the dynamics at home have changed. But a repeated image of Magnús floating on his back in the ocean suggests which he ultimately yields to.


In The Love That Remains, the children’s outlooks on the world are as prominent as their parents’ and at times, their roles reverse. While on the road with his teenage daughter Ída (Ída Mekkín Hlynsdóttir) behind the wheel, Magnús confesses that he killed their rooster with a rock. To her dismay, he explains that he didn’t want to do it, but her mother asked him to get rid of it. He offers a clouded explanation about how sometimes when you’re an adult, you have to do things that you don’t want to do. His daughter pushes back, insisting, “There’s no way I’ll be like that,” and the two argue. With her hands on the wheel and Magnus in the passenger seat, her ardent response is marked by a moral clarity that Magnus’ adulthood seems to have eroded.
You’d be forgiven for forgetting you aren’t watching a real family on screen; through sustained observations of its characters and their surroundings, the film allows meaning to emerge over time rather than through heavy-handed narrative arcs. But Pálmason surprises in moments when the film indulges in a fantasy realm tinged with humor. After Anna hosts a painstakingly long meeting with a gallerist who is more concerned with talking about natural wine than her work, she imagines his plane magnificently crashing. And in one scene, a rooster — a giant version of the one Magnús killed — comes back to haunt him, taking him by the beak and repeatedly throwing him against the wall.
In an early dinner table conversation about the family dog, Panda, Anna’s father says, “Life is nothing but a f****** hassle, but animals bring us joy,” a line reflecting both the minutiae and absurdity of everyday existence. Pálmason’s The Love That Remains doesn’t attempt to make a grand thesis on love and family, but successfully captures both its smallness and precious enormity.

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