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Athleisure Mag™ | Athleisure Culture

ATHLEISURE MAG™ | Athleisure Culture
  • FITNESS
  • Food
  • Beauty
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Athleisure Studio
  • Athleisure List
  • THIS ISSUE
  • Athleisure TV
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FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025

November 23, 2025

For a 3rd year, we’re covering the Food Network NYC Wine Food Festival presented by Invesco QQQ. This year’s culinary event took place at The Seaport featuring tastings, dinners, and education from Oct 15th - Oct 19th. As we have done in the past years of coverage, we cover the events, interview those who hosted events as well as culinary participants, and adjacent activities, restaurants and our partnering hotel that hosted us this year to add in the perfect Staycation to bring it all together. Each season, the coverage gets larger and we know that you’ll enjoy getting a bird’s eye view on what takes place as you begin to think about planning for next year’s event!

On the first day of the NYCWFF we made our way downtown to The Wall Street Hotel, which is where the culinary talent stays due to its proximity to The Seaport. We picked up our press passes and tickets so that we could attend all of the events we were scheduled for as our first was later on that night.

We then navigated to the CODA Williamsburg Hotel who hosted us for 5 nights. Make sure to read the in depth interview that we had with this hotel following our NYCWFF interviews and coverage.

A TASTE OF THE TIN BUILDING: A PARTY HOSTED BY JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN + GREGORY GOURDET

The Tin Building is a Food Hall that we have always enjoyed attending a number of editor events as well as to swing by when we are downtown. On this night, A Taste of the Tin Building: A Party Hosted by Jean-Georges Vongrenichten + Gregory Gourdet took place on both floors for an epic night of bites and sips.

Our first interview was with one of the night’s hosts, 3X James Beard Award Winning Chef Gregory Gourdet who is known for Kann in Portland, Oregon as well as being the Culinary Director of Printemps New York which has 5 dining options including: Maison Passrelle (fine dining), Cafe Jalu (all-day cafe), Salon Vert (raw bar), Red Room Bar (cocktail lounge), and Champagne Bar (a bar). We were first introduced to him on BRAVO’s Top Chef: Boston S12 where he was a runner up and Top Chef: All-Stars LA S17 where he was a finalist. You can also see him during various episodes with Top Chef: Dish with Kish.

ATHLEISURE MAG: We have enjoyed seeing you since you first appeared on Top Chef and have loved your storytelling around food and how you shared yourself with us, so it is an honor to meet to you!

CHEF GREGORY GOURDET: Thank you! It’s so nice to meet you too!

AM: When did you realize that you wanted to be a chef?

CHEF GG: I was cooking for myself for the first time to feed myself in college! I went to college in Montana. It was, like the first time I had to feed myself!

AM: Right.

CHEF GG: I just kind of like had a knack for it I think. My friends told me I was good at it. I would do a lot of potlucks and dinner parties, and it was just like, really, really fun, and I had really been struggling with finding what I really wanted to do in college anyway. I mean, back then, I didn’t even know where culinary school was. So, my first job was washing dishes and the chef suggested that I should go to culinary school and I literally went there! This was in 1990’s before any Food Network or what we knew like what a chef was.

AM: Exactly!

What led you to say that you wanted to do Top Chef? I mean, that is such a competition.

CHEF GG: Yeah, I mean, honestly, I’ve had friends who’ve been on Top Chef since S1. Actually, very funny, my friend, Lee Anne Wong (Top Chef: San Francisco S1, Top Chef: Colorado S15, Top Chef: All-Stars LA S17), was on S1. She worked at 66, which was a restaurant that was owned by Jean-Georges which is where I worked at! So this is a very full circle moment! I always grew up with Top Chef. I grew up as someone who was in my career and Top Chef was always an option, and I actually auditioned twice and finally by the third time, I got cast.

AM: I mean, your season was amazing. I love how you brought your point of view with the food. Why was it so important to present Haitian cuisine?

CHEF GG: Yeah, I mean, I think the thing about Top Chef, and what makes you really good at it, is when you know your food, you know? I think a lot of us, we worked in whatever space, fine dining, and it’s a different culture, and we’re just trying to learn. For so long, French fine dining was really the foundation of so much!

AM: Absolutely.

CHEF GG: You know, it’s like, when you’re on that show and you’re asked to push yourself – you’re trying to find out who you are.

AM: Right.

CHEF GG: As a chef, the best way to express yourself is through your food. So you start to find out what your food is, and you know you, you’re triggered on memory and taste, and things that you’re comfortable cooking.

AM: We’re here tonight, at the Food Network NYCWFF. Why did you want to be part part of this?

CHEF GG: Well, JG asked me.

AM: I mean, say no more!

CHEF GG: He’s my mentor and I’ll do anything for him.

AM: Exactly!

CHEF GG: I worked for him for a really long time for the formative years of my career! We’re still extremely close. He still influences a lot of my cooking, from seasonality to using lux ingredients, to him introducing me to so many spices! I consider myself a global chef today, and it’s a lot of the things that he taught me when I was a young cook.

AM: Thank you Chef for taking the time! We have been a fan for years and we always love seeing when you and Chef Kristen Kish (Top Chef: Seattle S10 winner, Top Chef: Wisconsin + Milwaukee S21 Host, Top Chef: Destination Canada S22 Host, and upcoming Top Chef: Charlotte, North + Greenville, South Carolina S23 Host, Athleisure Mag MAR ISSUE #99 2024 cover star) are together!

IG @nycwff

@tinbuilding

@theseaportnyc

@gg30000

ASIAN NIGHT MARKET HOSTED BY PADMA LAKSHMI + JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN | CHEF JEAN-GEOGES VONGERICHTEN

For our 2nd night, we made our way to the Asian Night Market Hosted by Padma Lakshmi + Jean-Georges Vongerichten at The Seaport for Asian street food, as well as to interview Chef JG himself, who was also the host for this event. We have had the pleasure of eating at a number of JG restaurants over the years including Spice Market which was a place we enjoyed everytime we were in the Meat Packing District, abc Kitchen, abcV, and more. After all of the many meals we have had there, we were excited to talk with him about how he got into the industry, his restaurants and why he enjoys being part of the NYCWFF.

ATHLEISURE MAG: It’s such a pleasure to chat with you as there is so much going on! We have been fans of your restaurants for years.

When did you realize you wanted to be a chef?

CHEF JEAN GEORGES VONGERICHTEN: Oh, my God, before you were born! It was in 1973, I was 16 years old. I was terrible in school - almost a dropout – I felt bad! I was bad in school, but my parents took me to a 3-Michelin star restaurant for my 16th birthday. It was just my parents and I, we never went to restaurants. At that time it was too big for kids, it was a time where people still had their grandparents and uncles living under one roof! It was 3 generations living under one roof, that doesn’t really exist anymore!

AM: Right –

CHEF JGV: So, they took me to the restaurant. I couldn’t believe how people were out there eating at this restaurant! For me, you ate at home, the pot was on the table, and you serve yourself! Seeing everything that I saw at that restaurant changed me and I enjoyed everything! When we finished our meal, the chef came to our table and he asked how everything was and my parents let him know that if he needed anything, whether it was to wash dishes or to peel potatoes, I was his man because they saw that I had shown an interest in this.

AM: Wow!

CHEF JGV: The chef let us know that they were in fact looking for an apprentice. So that’s how I started and I never washed dishes! I started in pastries and you had to weigh everything so I started in pastries for 6 months and then I continued on with my apprenticeship, but that day, I tell you, my eyes lit up at that meal!

AM: You knew it was for you!

CHEF JGV: I knew that this was delicious and it was everything that I was looking for. Everything you touched just made you feel it and I knew I could do it! I found my calling!

AM: Did you ever think that you would have the portfolio of restaurants that you have now?

CHEF JGV: Oh no! For me at that time, it was about getting out of the house, having a job, and being able to start my life and that was it!

AM: We have enjoyed eating at a number of your restaurants as it is always an experience! What do you look for when it comes to opening another restaurant – do you have a series of criteria that you’re looking for?

CHEF JGV: I mean, here in the city, I want to cover every zip code!

AM: Ok, fair, there are a few you have yet to tackle!

CHEF JGV: When I opened my first restaurant in 1991, JoJo, it’s on 64th and Lexington and it still exists. I love cooking for the neighborhood and tourists that are passing by and it’s in a Brownstone and it’s so cute! This was before social media and cell phones. People heard about it via word of mouth and they came, this was in ’91. So having people come and talking about it was great!

Then I opened Vong, then there was Jean-Georges, and then The Mercer Kitchen which is downtown and so on and so forth. I love downtown, I live in the West Village.

Then internationally, I like to go to a city where I’m going to see something so that means – Tokyo, going to Shanghai, going to Singapore, Paris, London, Marrakech – you always see something new! I have 16 restaurants across the world.

AM: That is amazing and it’s definitely a flex!

CHEF JGV: Oh yeah, I could go to Marrakech and come back with 2 new ideas. Traveling for me is –

AM: Your inspiration board!

CHEF JGV: Oh yes and NY is my inspiration as well! We have so many people from everywhere here! We have the best Italian, the best Asian, the best Chinese, the best Jamaican –

AM: You literally can just keep going down the street and there is something!

CHEF JGV: Oh yeah, Indian, Greek, - there is everything. So living in NY, you’re definitely at home because you’re all around the world in one place and NY is a world of it’s own and it’s like a country of it’s own – no?

AM: Basically!

We had the pleasure of being here last night for the first night of NYCWFF’s A Taste of the Tin Building: A Party Hosted by you and Chef Gregory Gourdet which was just amazing. It was just insane!

CHEF JGV: It was crazy, no?

AM: Without a doubt! I kept seeing you like run by, and I was like, “there’s Chef.”

CHEF JGV: Oh yeah! I did my 25,000 steps.

AM: I would think so!

Why did you want to be a part of the food festival?

CHEF JGV: I mean, I have known Lee Schrager for a long time. We have been participating in the SOBEWFF in Miami for a long time – 15 years.

AM: Yup.

CHEF JGV: We’ll do a dinner usually every year for NY so it could be at Jean-Georges, but we always do 1 or 2 of our restaurants for it. This time, Lee was begging to use The Seaport, because everything started down here.

AM: Absolutely!

CHEF JGV: The Fulton Fish Market was here and this was the city’s first working port. (Editor’s Note: The Seaport was New York’s first working port and by the 19th century, it was the busiest in the nation. The Tin Building by Jean-Georges the culinary heart of the Seaport is the former site of the original Fulton Fish Market which opened in 1822, which operated as the city’s seafood center for nearly 2 centuries. In 2005 The Fulton Fish Market moved to its current location in Hunts Point, the Bronx. New York City was once the oyster capital of the world, with the Seaport’s Fulton Fish Market as the central hub for what New Yorkers considered a staple food in their diet.) So I convinced my partners that we should do this here and they said yes!

AM: That’s amazing!

CHEF JGV: I mean, it’s a little boost as well. When we opened here 5 years ago, it was during the pandemic and everyone was escaping the city. Now that are people are back now and we’re all exploring, it was the perfect match to do this!

Doing our event yesterday with Gregory Gourdet was so much fun!

AM: We interviewed him yesterday, we love him as we do you!

CHEF JGV: He is a protégé of mine. We have been friends for awhile and he is such a delight! I am always very proud of him!

AM: I appreciate you taking the time as your restaurants have always been such an experience visually as well as from a culinary standpoint. We enjoyed last night’s event and are so excited for tonight’s Asian Night Market that you are co-hosting with Padma Lakshmi (BRAVO’s Top Chef Host S2 – S20, Hulu’s Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi, CBS’ America’s Culinary Cup).

CHEF JGV: Oh yeah, the street foods are going to be so good tonight! It’s a little cold!

AM: It’s a little chilly!

CHEF JGV: I just told my assistant that I need to have my sweater! I can’t walk around like this! My son is also cooking tonight too, you should check him out as well (Editor’s Note: Chef JG’s son, Cédric Vongerichten is the Executive Chef and Owner of Wayan (NYC, Aspen, and Hamptons), Co-Owner of Ma•dé, Maritime at Jeddah Editon Hotel, and Executive Chef/Co-Owner along with his father at Perry St.). Say hi to my son when you see him!

IG @chefjgv

GRAND TASTING: DAYTIME EDITION HOSTED BY SOFIA AND MANOLO VERGARA

Saturday morning’s Grand Tasting: Daytime Edition Hosted by Sofia and Manolo Vergara allowed us to enjoy an array of dishes via a Walking Tasting. It was a great way to see culinary demonstrations, a number of chefs on our favorite TV shows, and tasting incredible bites and sips throughout the day. We even heard hear from Sofia Vergara and her son Manolo who shared their empanada company, TOMA.

IG @eattoma

@sofiavergara

@manologonzalezvergara

BULLEIT + SEAN EVENS HOST OF PRIVATE TAKEOVER @ OLD MATES PUB

As soon as we left the NYCWFF Grand Tasting, we went around the corner to Old Mates Pub, which is an Aussie bar that is a cool vibe, to enjoy catching your favorite games. We were guests of Bulleit Frontier Whiskey, which was hosted by Sean Evans of Hot Ones. In partnership with the whiskey brand, he launched a new content series One More Round in collaboration with First We Feast. The series focuses on celebrating the moments when ideas move from napkin sketches to real action. He chats with WNBA legend Breanna Stewart, Black Thought of The Roots, and Lionel Boyce (Project Hail Mary, Shell, The Jellies) of The Bear.

Throughout the event, DJ BYNX made sure that the vibes were in full swing as we enjoyed Bulleit cocktails and an array of bites in a cool downstairs lounge aesthetic.

IG @bulleit

GRAND TASTING: AFTER DARK – THE STEAKHOUSE VIP SESSION PRESENTED BY OLD FORESTER

We made our way back across the street after the Bulleit event to go to the Grand Tasting: After Dark The Steakhouse VIP Session Presented by Old Forester that took place at Carne Mare, a phenomenal steakhouse. At this event, 4 steakhouses showcased bites as well as classic cocktails that used Old Forester. We enjoyed Carne Mare, Cote Korean Steakhouse, La Boite, and Hawksmoor. It was great to enjoy these bites at the restaurant and to take a break from the festivities taking place outside for the larger Grand Tasting: After Dark.

IG @oldforester

@carnemare

@cotekoreansteakhouse

@hawksmoor

@laboiteny

GRAND TASTING: AFTER DARK HOSTED BY CHEF BOBBY FLAY + CHEF BROOKE WILLIAMSON

After the Steakhouse VIP Session, we went back to the Grand Tasting: After Dark presented by Montchevre Goat Cheese Hosted by Chef Bobby Flay + Chef Brooke Williamson for late night eats. We even swung by the stage on the promenade to hear how Lee Schrager got Chef Bobby Flay and Chef Brooke Williamson to host this particular event. An added surprise was to see the 2 dance the night away under the stars which you can see here.

IG @bobbyflay

@chefbrookew

GRAND TASTING: AFTER DARK HOSTED BY CHEF BOBBY FLAY + CHEF BROOKE WILLIAMSON | JEFF MAURO

We caught up with the Sandwich King, Jeff Mauro right before he did a demo that night with his fellow co-star of The Kitchen, Chef Geoffrey Zakarian. We wanted to hear about how his passion for food and why he loves being part of this festival!

ATHLEISURE MAG: When did you first fall in love with food?

JEFF MAURO: Jumping right into it! Growing up in a giant Italian-American Family, food is everything to us. Seeing the power of food from a young age where, if you were that just, you know, sweeter to your grandma or your aunts, your mom - tug on their apron, oh so gently - they will give you a little morsel while they’re cooking, right? I was, like, oh my God, this is everything! When we had family parties, graduations, funerals, birthdays - all that stuff I was in it for the food. So, I saw how food is so transformative from a young age just because of the the matriarchs in my family!

AM: Wow!

What was the first bite that you felt that you fell in love with?

JM: My grandma used to make this, like, just homemade pizza, right? She caught it with scissors and it was like so undercooked and gooey that I couldn’t get enough of it, right? It was just like homemade dough, and a little bit of cheese and a little thin. She has this old white stove, and I remember these big steel scissors and just the noise of her snipping, the pizza was like a call to action for me, and you take that bite and that was it!

AM: What do you love about being at the food festival? I mean, it’s always such a fun time and so many people to see in the community.

JM: It’s all my friends you know? We’re a tight-knit group. There’s only you know a couple dozen of us if that, and this is when we all get to hang out. We’re not running around crazy on the TV set or competing, or, you know, this is like, we see each other in the lobby at the hotel. We get drinks, there’s Chef Arrón Sánchez sitting there and you know, you’re in the lobby with the Brothers Voltaggio (Michael and Bryan), as I call them. They’re sitting there having a drink at the hotel lobby and then you come here and I’m with Chef Geoffrey Zakarian and it’s a little yearly reunion every time we do these things!

AM: I love that.

IG @jeffmauro

FOODIECON

On the last day of the NYCWFF, we made our way to Foodiecon which is the educational portion of this event. Guests were able to hear from culinary personalities, chefs, and content creators to find out about their business and how they go about doing it. In addition, there were additional bites, sips, and settings that allowed for people to create content for their social platforms to make their own.

SUNDAY SUPPER PRESENTED BY PERONI HOSTED BY THE PASTA QUEEN NADIA CATERINA MUNNO + LIL MO MOZZARELLA

The final event of the NYCWFF was Sunday Supper presented by Peroni Hosted by The Pasta Queen Nadia Caterina Munno + Lil Mo Mozzarella which allowed us to enjoy a number of our favorite Italian dishes and beverages! It was a great vibe and closing to a successful food festival series.

SUNDAY SUPPER PRESENTED BY PERONI HOSTED BY THE PASTA QUEEN NADIA CATERINA MUNNO + LIL MO MOZZARELLA | CHEF KAREN AKUNOWICZ

Our final interview took place with James Beard Award winner for 2018 Best Chef (her restaurant Fox & the Knife debuted in 2020 and in that year, it was a finalist for Best New Restaurant in America) Chef Karen Akunowicz which was another Top Chef favorite of ours! We wanted to take a few moments with her even though her booth was hopping to find out what she loves about being a chef and why she participated in this year’s festival.

ATHLEISURE MAG: It’s so great to meet you! We have been fans of yours since we first saw you on Top Chef: California S13 where you were a finalist and again Top Chef All-Stars L.A S17.

CHEF KAREN AKUNOWICZ: I appreciate that, thank you so much!

AM: Of course!

So what was the first bite of food that you ate that made you fall in love food?

CHEF KA: Oh my gosh!

AM: I know, it’s a tough question!

CHEF KA: What made me fall in love with food? My mom’s chicken cutlets. That was my birthday dish every year. I still ask her to make them when she comes to my house. I make them for my daughter, the exact same way that she made them. I don’t chef them up.

AM: Wow.

CHEF KA: It’s like 4C Italian Bread Crumbs. I make them exactly the way that she did, and there’s something in that for me that resonates so much!

AM: When did you realize that you wanted to be a chef?

CHEF KA: I realized I wanted to be a chef - I worked in restaurants since I was 17 years old, and I would say that I have done every job there is to do. I worked in FOH for a very long time. I was a barista, I was a server, I was a waitress in a diner, I was a general manager before I ever started cooking. I was applying to get my Master’s degree in Social Work.

AM: Okay!

CHEF KA: While that was going on, I noticed that I never talked about what I was going to do with that, but I would always say, “someday if I own my own restaurant.”

AM: Right.

CHEF KA: That’s what prompted me to go to culinary school. I think for me, you know, that was like a turning point. I said, okay, if I’m gonna do this, I want to have the foundation, the understanding, and I didn’t know if I would continue to cook or not.

AM: Yup.

CHEF KA: But it stuck.

AM: As a fellow Virgo, we like to have all our details!

CHEF KA: Oh yeah, all of our ducks in a row! And also, you know, that, like, I always was aware that, like, I wouldn’t be given many opportunities to fail.

AM: Well, there’s also that part.

CHEF KA: So I had to succeed.

AM: Yup.

CHEF KA: Because I would never be given a second chance and I’m sure, you know, that as well even more than I do.

AM: 100%.

The business of being a chef has gained nuances and layer. It seems like being a chef is amazing, but then adding in TV – shows like Top Chef, social etc. How has that been beneficial to your career?

CHEF KA: It’s beneficial to the restaurants. TV has definitely given that breadth and reach that nobody else has. The thing about it for me is also that it keeps different parts of my brain going. So it energizes me and it inspires me in ways that keep me motivated in different ways in my career, in restaurants, and it also brings new life and ideas to that as well. I think that I’m somebody who I used to say, I really like to be busy. It’s not that I like to be busy, but I like to be inspired and motivated. I like all different sides of my brain to work. I write cookbooks because it works a different part of my brain, even though the entire time I’m writing I’m like, “writing a cookbook is so hard!” It makes your brain work in different ways and it makes everything work better. So I’m so lucky to have these creative outlets in my career.

AM: So you’re here at the Food Network NYCWFF today. Why are you a part of it as we love covering it!

CHEF KA: For me, New York has always been the epicenter of the world, truly. I’m from New Jersey originally, so my dad worked in the city forever, so this is really, you know, it’s the room where it happens, right?

AM: It’s happening.

CHEF KA: It’s always an honor for me to be back. I’m also deeply inspired by what the festival is able to contribute to different organizations there working with the James Beard Foundation specifically to continue programs like, WEL – Women’s Entrepreneurship Leadership. It’s so important. So anything I can do to continue and forward those things is really valuable to me. There’s the stuff that we have to do and then there’s the stuff we get to do.

AM: Exactly!

CHEF KA: The NYCWFF is something that I get to do!

IG @chefkarenakunowicz

@foxandtheknife

SUNDAY SUPPER PRESENTED BY PERONI HOSTED BY THE PASTA QUEEN NADIA CATERINA MUNNO + LIL MO MOZZARELLA | CHEF MATTHEW CUTOLO

While we were at Sunday Supper, we talked with Chef Matthew Cutolo who is the chef at Gargiulo’s to talk about the storied Italian restaurant that has been around for over a 100 years and is a staple in Coney Island. We talked about the restaurant, his love of chefing and why they participated in this year’s festival.

ATHLEISURE MAG: What was the first dish that made you fall in love with food?

CHEF MATTHEW CUTOLO: Without a doubt, pizza. It’s the first thing I ever learned to make with my grandfather. We have two brick ovens that were imported from Naples in the 1970s, and we spent our summers making brick oven pizzas together. There are photos of me at just two years old, standing on a kitchen stool with my hands in the dough. It wasn’t just about the food, it was about the time spent with him. Those moments in the kitchen are some of my most cherished memories and really where my love for cooking began.

AM: When did you realize that you wanted to be a chef?

CHEF MC: My grandfather instilled my love for food at a young age, but I actually went to school for accounting and finance. About halfway through, after a conversation with my Uncle Louie, I realized I couldn’t picture myself sitting behind a desk for the rest of my life. My uncle pretty much said, “are you coming to work when you’re done?” For me it was an easy decision.

From there, I learned from each of my four uncles and aunt, the owners of Gargiulo’s, which gave me a great foundation in every part of the business. But I was always drawn to the kitchen. I learned so much from my cousin Mike the Bake and my Uncle Mike, the head chef. That’s where I truly found my place, and the rest is history.

AM: You’re the chef at the historic Gargiulo’s, which has been around since 1907 in Coney Island! Tell us about this restaurant.

CHEF MC: Gargiulo’s first opened in 1907, founded by the Gargiulo family, and my family purchased it in 1965. Today, my aunt and uncles own the restaurant, and I’m proud to represent the third generation continuing the tradition.Coney Island has changed a lot over the years, but Gargiulo’s has remained a constant. In 1977, we earned 3 stars from The New York Times, which was unheard of for a restaurant outside Manhattan. In the restaurant outside Manhattan. In the early 1980s. we added the catering hall where countless families have celebrated special occasions. We’re a white-tablecloth, tuxedo-clad, fine dining Italian restaurant serving classic Neapolitan cuisine with recipes passed down through generations. Our goal is to make every guest feel welcomed, like they’re sitting at their nonna’s table.

AM: We had the pleasure of trying your dish at Sunday Supper to close out this season’s NYCWFF. Why did you and your restaurant want to be part of this event?

CHEF MC: It’s the best food festival! The energy, the people, the chefs, it’s an incredible experience every year. I love connecting with so many talented chefs, personalities, guests, and brands, whether it’s catching up with old friends or making new ones and always having a laugh. This was my third year at the festival, and it’s something I look forward to every year.

IG @chefmatthewcutolo

PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS | Paul Farkas

During the Food Network NYCWFF our hosts for the 5 days of coverage of this culinary festival was at CODA Williamsburg Hotel. We loved the fact that we could enjoy this staycation, take in the neighborhood and still pop in and out of the city to head to The Seaport to enjoy sips and bites from phenomenal chefs.

We sat down with the hotel’s Interim General Manager, Alberto Hinojosa who talked with us about this poperty whether you’re staying for a vacation, staycation, business travel, or your simply in the neighborhood. He shares features of this hotel from common areas, amenities, their restaurant, and CODA Beach Club!

ATHLEISURE MAG: When did CODA open, and what can you tell us about the hotel in terms of occupancy and its proximity to areas nearby?

ALBERTO HINOJOS: Coda opened its doors in 2023 and is centrally located in Williamsburg, just steps from Greenpoint. The hotel sits in one of the best spots in Brooklyn — easy to reach both Manhattan and local favorites around the neighborhood.

AM: Tell us about the common areas that guests have access to.

AH: Guests have access to our co-working space, a 24-hour fitness center, and our rooftop bar and restaurant serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Each space was designed to feel relaxed and welcoming — you can work, unwind, or socialize all in one place.

AM: You also have a restaurant that is part of the hotel, Meili – what can you tell us about that?

AH: Meili is a Sichuan Chinese restaurant led by Michelin-rated Chef Peter He. Williamsburg has a few Sichuan options, but this is the best one.

AM: We were on your rooftop during Bar Convent Brooklyn – tell us about Meili Rooftop.

AH: The rooftop is open daily except Mondays, with a happy hour from 6–8 PM.

AM: Although we’re no longer in the summer season, you also have a pool. Tell us about this amenity, and for those who are not guests, do you have pool passes that people can buy to enjoy CODA Beach Club?

AH: The Beach Club will reopen in May 2026 and run through September. It’s open daily to hotel guests, and non-guests can purchase advance day passes directly from the hotel. The Beach Club is adult-only, though next season we’ll introduce limited extended family swim hours as well.

AM: For guests staying at the hotel, tell us about the kinds of rooms available as well as the amenities that are offered in them.

AH: We offer a full range of rooms — Standard Queen (240 sq ft), Standard King (250 sq ft), Deluxe King (295 sq ft), King Suites (490 sq ft), and our Penthouse at 1,500 sq ft. All rooms include DS & Durga bath products, Kassatex bedding and towels, custom furniture from House of CODA and minifridges/coffee makers upon request.

AM: Tell us about the House of CODA.

AH: House of CODA is a California-based furniture designer that’s been around for over 30 years. They specialize in made-to-order pieces, and every room and public area at the hotel features their work. It gives the property a really cohesive, custom feel.

AM: What can you tell us about the neighborhood, and what are 3 things that we should do, check out, or eat?

AH: Williamsburg should definitely be your second stop after Manhattan. It has everything the city offers but with more of a local, community vibe and a slower pace. My go-to spots: Café Collette on Berry for breakfast or lunch, Amber Steakhouse in Greenpoint for dinner, and Peter Pan Donuts for a great flagel. For nightlife, Superior Ingredients is just a block away and always has top DJs.

AM: What makes CODA Hotel Williamsburg a great option for guests?

AH: The human connection we offer. Our team genuinely enjoys making a difference and creating great experiences for our guests. The reviews speak for themselves — people can feel that authenticity.

AM: Is there anything we should know about as we look ahead to spring or summer?

AH: We’re planning several activations for the 2026 Beach Club season and will be launching the Coda Creatives Speaker Series in Q2. The series will bring together NYC locals and creatives to share their stories and inspire the community.

IG @coda.hotels

PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY | PG 42 - 47 Coda Williamsburg

Of course, we had an epic time at the Food Network NYCWFF and ate so many bites from our favorite restaurants and chefs! With 5 days of coverage, we found ourselves with a day off and made our way to INDN to enjoy Indian cuisine and phenomenal cocktails. The vibe of this midtown restaurant, the attention to detail, and of course the sweet and savory options are definitely going to live in our tastebuds until we come back again. We had the pleasure of meeting Owner and Beverage Dir. Simran Bakshi to talk more about this restaurant!

ATHLEISURE MAG: Before we delve into INDN, tell us about the Co-Founders of INDN in terms of their backgrounds and how they came to the culinary industry.

SIMRAN BAKSHI: I’ve been in hospitality for over a decade, building restaurants from the ground up. My focus has always been on creating concepts that balance originality with operational excellence — designing guest journeys, developing menus that tell a story, and ensuring every sensory detail aligns with the vision.

Kanika Vij Bakshi is the creative force behind our design and brand aesthetic. She translates emotion into space — from lighting and scent to flow and materials — shaping how the guest feels from the moment they walk in.

Vicky Vij, Kanika’s father, is one of the pioneers of Indian dining in NYC, best known for founding Bukhara Grill. His decades of experience anchor INDN in real hospitality wisdom.

Together, we represent three generations of Indian dining — tradition, creativity, and strategy — coming together to redefine how Indian cuisine is experienced in New York.

AM: What is the concept of INDN kitchen, and why did you want to open this restaurant?

SB: We wanted to create something New York hadn’t seen yet — a cocktail-driven Indian restaurant where food is designed to pair with drinks, not the other way around. INDN focuses on North Indian flavours presented through a small-plates format.

Most Indian restaurants in the city are built around full meals and family-style dining. We saw the opportunity to present Indian food in a more social, bar-forward setting — bold, fun, and unapologetically Indian, but elevated for a modern audience.

The goal was simple: drinks first, food second — but both world-class.

AM: Tell us about the interior design and what diners can expect from an aesthetic standpoint.

SB: The space is intentionally minimal but expressive — a reflection of Kanika’s design philosophy. We focused on warm lighting, tactile textures, and a layout that draws people toward the bar.

There are no stereotypical “Indian theme” elements. Instead, it’s a New York bar with an Indian soul — subtle details, natural materials, and curated playlists that evolve through the night.

We wanted INDN to feel like an adult playground — refined, energetic, and distinctly ours. The kind of place where you can grab a cocktail, share plates, and stay late.

AM: We truly enjoyed our meal and love how the cocktails, as well as the dishes, are a delicate balancing act! Tell us about the approach you took to the menu.

SB: The entire menu is structured around balance — between spice, acid, and richness; between boldness and restraint.

We start with cocktails, not the kitchen. Every drink informs the food — the spice profiles, the acidity, the texture of each dish.We keep our flavours authentic to India, but our presentation and pairings are contemporary. No fusion. No gimmicks. Just honest flavours built with modern precision.

Every dish is meant to be shared — not to fill you up, but to keep you engaged through your drinks and conversation.

AM: As a small-plates approach, only dinner and brunch on Sundays is offered here. Do you envision adding lunch to the offerings?

SB: Not for now. Our rhythm works best in the evenings — the space, lighting, and energy are built around that. Sunday brunch already offers a different mood with Chai Nashta, so we’re happy with that balance.

That said, we’ll always adapt to guest demand. If the right moment comes, we’ll explore lunch in the future.

AM: We love the bar — it has an opulent vibe while being approachable. For those who opt to be there, is there a special menu?

SB: The bar is the heartbeat of INDN. While there isn’t a separate “bar-only” menu, the experience is different when you sit there.

Guests at the bar get first access to new cocktails, quick-fire small plates, and one-on-one interaction with the bartenders. It’s designed for spontaneity — grab a drink, share a few plates, meet people.

That’s the spirit of INDN — it’s social, not scripted.

AM: Focusing on dinner, what does Chakhna mean, and what are 3 dishes you suggest ordering from this portion?

SB: Chakhna means small, snackable plates traditionally eaten with alcohol in India — the kind of food meant to keep the conversation and drinks flowing.

Three must-try Chakhna dishes are:

Amritsari Fish – 10-spice battered fish fried crisp.

Keema Pao – Slow-cooked minced lamb served with buttered pao.

Paneer Tikka – Tandoor-charred paneer with mint marinade.

They represent the full flavour range — seafood, lamb, vegetarian — all bold, shareable, and built to pair perfectly with cocktails.

AM: What does Daru Ke Baad … Ya Saath mean, and what 3 items complement those small plates?

SB: The phrase translates to “after the drinks… or with them.” It’s our section of larger, heartier plates — for when you’re ready to transition from bar bites to a full meal.

Three dishes to try:

Yakhni Pulao – Aromatic mutton broth rice.

Traditional Butter Chicken – Charred chicken in creamy tomato gravy.

Pudina Lachha Parantha – Flaky mint-layered bread.

They complement the small plates beautifully and close out the savoury journey with warmth and comfort.

AM: To end our meal, what are 3 desserts that we should have in mind?

SB: Shahi Tukda – A rich bread pudding soaked in saffron milk.

Jalebi with Rabri – Crispy spirals with sweetened condensed milk.

Dessert of the Day – Our chefs rotate creative sweets based on the season.

They’re indulgent, nostalgic, and distinctly Indian — a perfect finale to an evening that started with spice and smoke.

AM: Tell us about your beverage program — the cocktails are incredible.

SB: Our cocktail program defines INDN. It’s what sets us apart.

We build drinks like dishes — layering spice, acidity, fat, and aromatics. The base spirits come alive with Indian ingredients like turmeric, fenugreek, saag, tamarind, and ghee, but without being kitschy or overpowering.

Every cocktail is built for depth and drinkability. Our team spent months clarifying, infusing, and balancing to make sure the end result feels familiar yet completely new.

This isn’t just “Indian-inspired mixology” — it’s culinary bartending rooted in Indian sensibility.

AM: What are 3 cocktails we should have in mind?

SB: Butterface – Mezcal, fenugreek, garam masala, and lemon.

Paneer Panic – Gin, cilantro, turmeric, and lime — inspired by saag paneer.

Pink City, Red Flags – Vodka, St-Germain, Bianco, and Indian tonic.

Each one is a playful nod to regional India — smoky, green, and floral — and designed to tell a story through flavour.

AM: As we look at brunch, what are 3 dishes perfect for the weekend?

SB: Pao Bhaji – Comfort food at its best; buttery, spicy, and soulful.

Samosa Chaat – Crunchy, tangy, and perfect with chai or a cocktail.

Stuffed Parantha Trio – Classic North Indian breakfast in refined form.

Our brunch is casual but still elevated — meant to feel nostalgic and social at the same time.

AM: What is Chai Nashta?

SB: Chai Nashta translates to tea and snacks — a cherished Indian ritual that bridges breakfast and lunch.

At INDN, it’s our take on the Sunday ritual: comfort food, shared over chai or cocktails, set to music that feels like a lazy weekend morning turned into a lively afternoon.

AM: What are 3 dishes within Chai Nashta we should consider?

SB: Poha – Flattened rice with curry leaves and peanuts.

Anda Curry with Parantha – Spiced egg curry with flaky layered bread.

Vada Pao – The Mumbai street-food staple: spicy potato fritter in a buttered bun.

It’s India’s brunch culture reimagined for New York.

AM: As someone who loves chai, tell us more about High Chai.

SB: High Chai is our elevated tea ritual — masala chai served with a spread of savoury and sweet nibbles like khari biscuits, cocktail samosas, and cookies.

It’s indulgent yet comforting — a pause in the day that celebrates India’s tea culture with the refinement of a New York bar.

AM: What are 3 brunch cocktails that we should have our eye on?

SB: Bloody Mary Marlo – Butter-washed vodka with curry leaf and mustard seed.

Espresso Martini – Mezcal, fennel, chili, and chocolate bitters.

Garibaldi – Campari, Japanese strawberry, vanilla, and orange.

They’re playful, layered, and refreshingly different — a reminder that brunch drinks don’t have to be predictable.

AM: From a seasonality perspective, will your menu reflect that?

SB: Always. We source fresh produce and adjust marinades, spices, and cooking styles to reflect the season.

In the fall and winter, expect deeper spice profiles and slow-cooked dishes; in spring and summer, fresher herbs, lighter curries, and brighter drinks.

It keeps the menu evolving and the team inspired.

AM: Are there any upcoming events for the Fall and holiday season?

SB: We’re introducing a holiday cocktail series — reimagining winter spices and Indian warmth through drinks.

There will also be special Chai Nashta takeovers during December weekends with festive sweets and DJ brunches.

We’ll close the year with a New Year’s Eve celebration that connects INDN upstairs with our lounge 16 Sola downstairs — two worlds, one night.

IG @indn.nyc

PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY | INDN

Read the OCT ISSUE #118 of Athleisure Mag and see FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025 in mag.

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ATHLEISURE LIST | HOT TUB BOATS

March 23, 2022

We love taking moments and heading outside for a bit of fresh air and to hang out with friends and family, When we heard about Hot Tub Boats, we knew this was something we would enjoy doing on our next visit to Seattle!

Created by Adam Karpenske, Hot Tub Boats are not hot tubs that can float or boats with hot tubs, but truly a Hot Tub Boat. Combining the freedom of a boat and the comfort of a spa, these one-of-a-kind teak decking vessels come with Bluetooth speakers, joystick navigation, plenty of storage space for food and drinks, continuous onboard heating at 104 degrees, thermostat and unparalleled views of Seattle.

Every single Hot Tub Boat is handcrafted in the Ballard neighborhood of Seattle by devoted shipwrights. You can rent them at their Lake Union location. Visit their site and click Book My Boat. This pulls up the calendar where guests will see the availability on their calendar to select the date, add amenities and confirm the booking with your credit card. Each rental is in 2-hour increments.

When you’re planning your experience, it's worth noting a few rules to keep in mind for you and your guests. Hot Tub Boats has a maximum of 6 people, no drugs or alcohol is allowed, no swimming and no nudity is allowed. They are available every day except for Thanksgiving and Christmas and regardless if it is raining or snowing! Keep an eye on their site as they have plans to open in a new city this summer although they are keeping that under wraps for now!

Your group is bound to have a good time and customers drive the boat! One person must be 21+ on board the Hot Tub Boat, but due to its custom engineering, only a valid ID is required to drive the boat - no boater's or even driver's license required!

After seeing these boats and thinking about enjoying taking them out in Lake Union, we were excited to learn that if you are as intrigued as we are about these vessels, that you can have a custom boat built for you! Just check out Hot Tub Boats Builds and fill out the form so that they can get back to you!

HOT TUB BOATS

2520 Westlake Ave N

Seattle, WA 98109

hottubboats.com

IG @hottubboats

PHOTOS COURTESY | Hot Tub Boats

Read the FEB ISSUE #74 of Athleisure Mag and see ATHLEISURE LIST | Hot Tub Boats in mag.

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In AM, Athleisure List, Feb 2022, Travel Tags Athleisure List, Seattle, Hot Tub Boats, Boats
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HANDLING THE HOLIDAYS WITH CHEF TOM DOUGLAS

January 13, 2019

There are a number of events surrounding the holiday from those that you plan to those that just happen! We took some time to get tips from Chef Tom Douglas, an Executive Chef, Restaurateur of Tom Douglas Seattle Kitchen Restaurant Group, author and radio show talk host. He is known for his innovative role in defining Pacific Northwest cuisine. He won a James Beard Award in 1994 for Best Northwest Chef and in 2012 he won another for Best Restaurateur. He is the author of Tom Douglas' Seattle Kitchen which was named the Best American Cookbook by the James Beard Foundation and KitchenAid in 2001. Later he would appear on an episode of Food Network's Iron Chef America where he defeated Chef Masaharu Morimoto.

With a number of restaurants under his belt, Prosser Farm which provides all his restaurants with organically grown produce, a catering business, an event space, a product line of sauces and spices, a cooking school and NY Times Best Selling Author, he seemed like the perfect person to get us ready for our culinary challenges as well as how to be the hostest with the mostest.

ATHLEISURE MAG: When did you realize that you wanted to be a chef?

CHEF TOM DOUGLAS: Well you know, back in Highschool, I took Home Ec and it turns out there were a lot of girls in Home Ec and it seemed like I was in the right spot! I’ve been enamored with it ever since and it has become my life’s challenge, work and passion.

AM: How do you define your style of cooking?

CTD: I would call it Northwest in a way because for us the real key is to keep it simple. For us, I’d say that we spend about 50% of our time on trying to buy the best product and then really, it’s all about getting out of the way whether that comes down to wine or fish or meat. You just try to buy the most delicious things, put them together, walk away and let people enjoy them. That’s a real Northwest style.

AM: What is the most important part of creating a successful holiday party.

CTD: The plan! You have to have a plan. I plan everything – the dishware and the wines. I buy the wine about a week in advance so I can taste them and see what kinds of foods I want to serve with them. For me, at a party, I always want to have a little sparkling wine for people when they walk through the front door so I bought the Domaine Ste Michelle Brut and I made a homemade cranberry syrup, I got some cranberry bitters at the store and I made what I like to call, a Cranberry Fizz. It’s a welcoming pink fizz cocktail that goes great with Goat Cheese Fondue which is goat cheese, cream and chives that are mixed together – super simple with grilled bread and apple slices which gives you a welcoming feeling that says, “I’m happy to have you at my house.”

AM: That sounds pretty easy for a lot of people to do!

CTD: Well, it’s super easy and I serve them in individual goat cheese fondue pots so that you don’t have the big crush! A lot of people have the one big fondue pot and it gets a little funky in there after a few minutes. With these, I can just put them around the house because they have little tealight candles under them and you can refresh them at any point and just a couple of people are eating out of them. It’s a nice way and trick to have a successful fondue party.

AM: You mentioned that you want to test the wine about a week in advance – why is this something that we should do?

CTD: Because I want to think about things and get things prepped in advance. So let’s take this Eroica Riesling for example, I tried it and it has this lemony kind of citrusy flavor. It’s a bit sweet and has nice acidity. It seemed to me that it would go with all sorts of foods and I know that in my menu planning, I want some vegetarian and some not and some gluten free and some not for dishes. So it’s all part of that process and I thought about the wine and decided on a leek and potato empanada. It’s got cheese tarragon in it which is fragrant and I just baked them off and the treat is that I can get them all made up and then freeze them raw so an hour or two before your party, you can pull them out and bake them and it feels like you made them that afternoon. Those are little tricks of the trade that help you to be a more successful party planner.

AM: How easy is it for someone to take a dish and change it for those that are vegetarian, gluten free or other kinds of dietary needs?

CTD: Well it’s super easy because just 10 years ago, it was hard to find a good gluten-free flour, now they’re all over the place and they’re really good! Gluten-free flour, pasta, you name it – the key has been into the lock on gluten- free so we have delicious foods that way. Simplicity is key and vegetarian is key too so this little fennel tart that I made – a little caramel, a little fresh fennel slices and a little gluten free fennel on top, you cook them upside down so when you pop them out you get this golden mahogany nugget of deliciousness and you can serve it just like that or you can take a nice piece of Wagyu beautiful steak like what I have here and sear it and slice it thin and put it right on top and now you have a meat eaters delight. So with the same dish, you have made a classic dish that no one has had vegetarian wise and something for the meat eater that is coming to the party.

You know that you’re going to have red wine and we have the Chateau St Michelle Cabernet Sauvignon from Indian Wells Vineyards so you need a rich dish to go with a wine like that. You’ve got a party with all of these different kinds of wines and it really helps to try them in advance and then to plan the apps to go with them!

AM: What are ingredients that we should always have at home just in case someone comes by that we don’t expect and then it becomes a bit of a party?

CTD: That happens all the time at my house – that’s so funny! There are some really good premade dough out there. I try to always keep in my freezer, a pie dough and puff pastry dough. It’s the beginning of everything good and I always keep a chunk of smoked salmon in my fridge. We have beautiful wild salmon here and it would go along with all of these wines (probably not the red one that we talked about). I always keep that around and have good crackers, a little fresh chevre (goat cheese) – those are some of my ideas on quick apps to get things rolling.

AM: What are your suggestions for dishes to make for office parties for busy people that want to look like they have spent so much time on them?

CTD: Well they have to look good right? I mean, if you’re bringing it to work, it’s going to be hours later. One of the dishes I love to make which everybody loves them is a Roasted Vegetable Salad. It goes great with a Northwest Chardonnay. Take all the different veggies – fennel, cauliflower, broccoli, carrots, pepper rings – all those different vegetables, douse them with a little olive oil and pop them into a 500 degree oven and roast them off until you have all kinds of caramelized edges, and dress them with lemon juice and vinegar. Bring a bottle of the Eroica and bring it to the office as you’re going to be a hero because you have solved every problem right? You’ve solved gluten-free, vegetarian and vegan!

IG @TomDouglasCo

Read more from the Dec Issue of Athleisure Mag and see Handling the Holidays with Chef Tom Douglas in mag.

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In Dec 2018, Food, Lifestyle, Magazine Tags Chef Tom Douglas, Holiday Planning, Eroica Wines, Chateau St Michelle Cabernet Sauvignon, vegetarian, vegan, Indian Wells Winery, Eroica Rieseling, Domaine Ste Michelle Brut, Seattle, foods, parties, Food Network, Chef Masaharu Morimoto, Tom Douglas Seattle Kitchen Restaurant Group, James Beard Award, Pacific Northwest, cuisine
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AM JUL SMARTER CITIES-1.jpg

SMARTER CITIES

August 19, 2018

BY PAUL FARKAS, TECH DIRECTOR

We joined The Boston Globe at host Wayfair HQ in Boston for its "Smarter City, Smarter Skills" panel discussion on how the innovation economy is reshaping our world. The event was sponsored by Iron Mountain, and the Rockefeller Foundation, with Knowledge Partner, McKinsey & Company, and moderated by Shirley Leung, Columnist, The Boston Globe, and Matt Viser, Deputy Washington Bureau Chief, The Boston Globe.

The day started with a brief message from Boston’s Mayor Marty Walsh on asking questions needed to understand the impact of technology on workforce.

McKinsey’s John Means gave a presentation on his co-authored MGI report: "Smart Cities – Digital Solutions to a More Livable Future." His report found we are in a new era of smart cities, moving past the hype and criticisms, and turning to look toward the future where improving quality of life and outcomes for citizens will be the focus in addition to the applications and technology. Key is deploying digital technologies with impact directly on the citizen and public issues to capture the benefits of smart cities, while being mindful of the effects of its implementation. The report also measured the infrastructure and application layers across 50 cities from every element of a citizen’s experience of a city; including energy, mobility, water, waste, safety, community engagement, security, health, and economic development and housing. Interconnection of applications and technologies and their impact was stressed to meet opportunities of higher levels of citizen engagement. He gave some core takeaway highlights, namely that cities should - look how our new infrastructure investments could embed smart city technology for the potential of connected sensors and autonomous vehicles; move toward openness in data and partnerships; invest in civic tech-savvy leaders for cross agency and sector cooperation; and become more cyber-savvy with understanding the implications of security and privacy disruption in our communities. It was found that even the most advanced cities still have a long way to go.

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Joseph Aoun, President of Northeastern University, said "[It is] projected up to 50% of the jobs are going to disappear in the next 20 years.. at the same time we are projecting new jobs will be created, and frankly no one knows whether the new jobs that will be created will compensate the ones that will disappear. Inequalities are going to increase unless we step in. Historically, education had been the equalizer giving opportunity for people, to first educate themselves and afterwards to continuously re-tool." He recommends society become robot-proof, including mastering humanics in college, including technological, data and human literacies. Please see Mr. Aoun’s book, Robot Proof: Higher Education in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.

Niraj Shah, CEO of Wayfair, stated, "The types of skills you need for the future are not necessarily the ones in the past.. We think STEM education should be part of a basic curriculum. A skill sought after by many companies is data science, we have a bootcamp that addresses a gap out there."

AM JUL SMARTER CITIES-4.jpg

"We have a planet-scale reskilling effort on our hands," Anant Agarwal said, a professor at the MIT and founder of edX MicroMasters programs, a series of online courses featuring graduate-level training in specialized technical fields (~$1,000 a course, counted as credit toward graduate degrees).

U.S. Representative Ro Khanna (D - California) pointed out, "It shouldn’t be 'Move Fast and Break Things,' It should be ‘Move Fast and Build Things,'" urging that there should be a Moore’s Law for job creation.

Susan Crawford stated innovation can be thought as of a set of recipes - new ways of making a living, new ways of creating competitive industries – that require some basic materials that the US Federal Government has historically been very brave at providing; namely basic infrastructure, funding basic science research and setting standards that unleash innovation for everyone else.

Seattle’s Mayor Jenny Durkan noted, "The net is the highway of this current time and if it isn’t equitable and accessible for all the economy won’t be accessible for all.. we have to be balancing innovation with thoughtfulness" in preparing for the consequences of the future of work.

"This effort has to start early-on, in pre-school.. the traditional model of twelve years of school is not the way to go.. [I]t is important to re-evaluate it.. there are schools that are starting to teach for mastery," said Mayor Yvonne Spicer of Framingham, Massachusetts. She noted many kids of color are not getting or are afraid of getting STEM because they think it is for bright or white kids.

"Disruption is a very good thing, and deregulation isn’t necessarily a bad thing.. Even as disrupting,.. you can’t leave behind your old values," Senator Ed Markey (D - Massachusetts) summarized.

PHOTOGRAPHY | Athleisure Mag

Read more from the July Issue of Athleisure Mag and see Smarter Cities in mag.

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In Tech, Pop Culture, Magazine, Lifestyle, Jul 2018 Tags Smarter Cities, McKinsey, MIT, Mayor Yonne Spicer, Senator Ed Markey, D - Massachusetts, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, Susan Crawford, Harvard, U.S. Representative Ro Khanna, D - California, Moore's Law, Wayfair, edX, Anant Agarwal, Joseph Aoun, Northeastern University, Robot Proof, Artificial Intelligence, Jon Means, Digital Solutions, The Boston Globe, Rockefeller Foundation, Iron Mountain, Columist, Deputy Washington Bureau Chief, Shirley Leung, Matt Viser, Boston, Seattle
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ATHLEISURE LIST | PENELOPE & THE BEAUTY BAR

June 10, 2018

Angela Rosen opened the doors of Seattle’s renowned Penelope & The Beauty Bar 10 years ago. Located inside the historic Fairmont Olympic Hotel in the heart of downtown, Penelope & The Beauty Bar quickly became Seattle’s most in demand day spa. In 2016, Angela brought the leading services from Penelope & The Beauty Bar to a new market, creating the ultimate destination for customized skin care in downtown Manhattan with DAPHNE Studio. The team’s specialty is blending the philosophy and techniques of European skin care with the most up-to-date technology on the market. Most notably, the traditional Sugaring is a very unique service not offered by most waxing and sugaring locations in NYC.

Both spas carry premier French skincare brand Biologique Recherche and feature highly clinical and customized, results-driven facial and body treatments, including body wraps and body polishes, for both men and women. All of the spa’s estheticians are carefully selected and European-trained, bringing years of experience to its clientele.

The spa treatments include European facials and non-surgical face-lifts, utilizing the best micro-current machines in the industry. Our French contouring + detoxifying wrap and body
scrubs, along with the body-toning ion magnum can help with improvement in skin texture and weight loss. Their range of bodywork consists of several massage modalities, such as prenatal
massage and cranial sacral therapy. Grooming services include hair and makeup, as well as eyelash extensions, waxing, sugaring, and nails. In addition, we offer infrared sauna and collagen bed treatments. They carry exclusive, top-of-the-line products brought to Penelope & the beauty bar directly from Europe.

Nearly 40 years ago, when the laboratory Biologique Recherche was created, Yvan and Josette Allouche, a biologist and a physiotherapist, combined their expertise and passion to chart their unique and visionary course on the cosmetic care market. The company was then operating as a research and development unit, the sole purpose of which was to create care treatments and formulate products designed for professionals disappointed with those that already existed.

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Nowadays, the combination of a clinical approach to personalized cosmetic treatment, pure, concentrated, almost raw products, complex formulas and original and rigorous treatments is the foundation of the reputation for efficacy of Biologique Recherche's Methodology. Biologique Recherche personalized treatments are now available in more than 70 countries in cosmetic and medical strongholds which exclusively distribute the brand's treatment methods and products.

The spa's infrared Pod involves redlight therapy penetrates seven inches deep to burn an average of 1,500 – 3,000 calories at once, detox the body, improve lymphatic circulation,
reduce stress and fatigue, strengthen and support a healthy immune system, increase cardiovascular conditioning, and improve skin by cleansing pores. The pod is also lined with Jade stone which has healing properties. The treatment is $75 for one session and $150 for three.


PENELOPE & THE BEAUTY BAR
411 University St
Seattle, WA 98101
www.PenelopeandtheBeautyBar.com

Read more from the May Issue of Athleisure Mag and see Athleisure List | Penelope & The Beauty Bar in mag.

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KEY ART COURTESY | Sold

PUT AN END TO SEX TRAFFICKING

October 9, 2016

Athleisure Mag proudly supports SOLD in efforts to help stop children sex trafficking.
 
The story of one brave thirteen-year old Nepalese girl who dreams of buying a tin roof for her family home, only to be tricked and taken to a prison brothel in India where she is coerced into bonded sexual slavery. Despite conditions, her will is never broken. Gradually, she builds friendships and trust with others, creating a new family, while secretly planning her escape. Grounded in hope and the resilience of the human spirit, the film rouses feelings of outrage and inspires action.  

ATHLEISURE MAG: What led you to begin the project and mission? (tell us more about the book by Patricia McCormick)?

JEFFREY D. BROWN: My father is a pediatrician who worked in refugee camps most of his career helping children in dire circumstances in Haiti, Somalia, Biafra, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Sorevjo, and many other countries.

I wanted to make a film that could drive a campaign to help real children.  When I read SOLD in one sitting 10 years ago, I knew I had found the vehicle I was looking for.

AM: Who else joined forces to get the film made?

JDB: Jane Charles was the first call I made and she read the book and came on board immediately.  Together we raised the funds to get the film made and distributed and now we are raising the funds to continue our campaign across the world. We made SOLD as a tool for change, and everyone can be part of it by bringing SOLD to your community, church group, college, high school or corporation.  We created two versions of the film for this purpose - the full length version which has opened in 9 film festivals, won 4 audience awards and two Jury Awards and a shorter 50 min version which is rated PG-13 for high schools and corporations.  If you go to www.soldthemovie you can request a screening there.

AM: Tell us about the film? How is it a call-to-action and what light does it shed about human spirit?

JDB: The film, ike the book, is in a first person account.  We put you in the shoes of one amazing girl who we follow as she is tricked and trafficked.  By telling one girl's story - we tell the story of the 5.5 million children who are trafficked every year. Statistics go into your head - SOLD goes straight into your heart.  

When you learn first hand what is happening - you have to then do something about it. The Taught Not Trafficked campaign gives our audience a way to become part of the solution. Along with our many partner organizations we are re-building schools in Nepal destroyed in the earthquake. If you can keep a child in school until they are 16 years old, their chances of getting trafficked drop 80%. We are bringing vocational training and healing to children who were trafficked.  And we are building safe houses to get the children of sex workers out of brothels before they are forced into the work their mothers do- so we are interrupting second generation trafficking.

AM: What personal lessons and growth have you seen over the course of doing the film and project?

JDB: Making this film and waging this campaign has personally made me much stronger.  We have encountered all kinds of tests and challenges.  It has affirmed my faith that nothing succeeds like patience and any time not spent on love is wasted.  I have described this journey as a long and winding walk on red hot coals.  You have two choices- keep going and trust or get off.  Jane and I have kept going because in meeting thousands of girls who were trafficked- we now must make a difference in their lives.

AM: What were the first steps to action (and what were difficult obstacles to get going)?

JDB: We went to India and made a trailer before we made the film. We did this incredibly inexpensively to give people a feel for what we were aiming to create. It still took 2 years to raise our funds. It also took 6 months to find the lead Niyar who is just amazing. We saw over 1000 girls before she was cast.

AM: What went into the casting process and tell us about some of the amazing talent in the film?

JDB: Tess Joseph in Mumbai was our casting agent and she found amazing talent for us.  There are so many wonderful, well trained actors in India. Sushmita Mukerjee who plays the iron fisted brothel madam - auditioned for us- she is famous in India and had never auditioned for anything.  She is an amazing TV star.  She rented a long wig and just nailed the part in her audition. She is funny and scary and unpredicatable. The other amazing cast includes Gillian Anderson from X- Files and David Arquette from Scream - both were friends of mine.  From India we have many award winning cast members: Tillotama Shome (Monsoon Wedding) Seema Biswas (Water, Midnight's Children) Ankur Vikal (Slumdog Millionaire) Parambrata Chatterjee (Kaahani).  But the most incredible performance is from Niyar Saikia who plays the lead - Lakshmi.

AM: How many schools have been rebuilt so far and what are short and longer term goals? Tell us more about the educational awareness and boarding facilities programs.

JDB: So far, with Childreach International and the #TaughtNotTrafficked campaign we have re-built 90 classrooms.  We will build another 200 in the Spring when SOLD goes out to 40 UK Universities.

32,000 classrooms were destroyed in the earth quakes, that is 5,000 schools leaving over a million children with no schools to attend.  They are now 300% more likely to get trafficked then they were when they were attending school.

We are also with Arto of Living's Care For Children Initiaitive, using SOLD to raise funds to build 10 boarding safe houses for children of sex workers. If we can get thousands of children out of the brothels before they are forced into prostitution at age 13- things will change.

We are bringing vocational training with Build A Nest and healing with iRest training from the iRest Institute.  Initially we are bringing this to survivors at 5 NGO's and also to three businesses which employ survivors. With vocational training the girls who were trafficked can earn their own way. Sadly, most of them cannot go home because of the shame and stigma.  Our long term goal is to prove this vocational training and healing work and spread it to the 50 other NGO's in India and to all NGO's with survivors in Nepal as well.

AM: Where can we see the film and what is the present campaign?

JDB: If you go to www.soldthemovie.com,  there are buttons to click there with links to bringing the film to your community or school.

If you go to our website and click on Take Action - there is a host of things you can do to become part of the solution including shopping from survivor made products like clothing and jewelry. All of what you purchase supports survivors and 15% of sales that go through our website support the #TaughtNotTrafficked campaign.

It will take hundreds of people working together to make change. Together we can do it.

AM: How can people help?

JDB: Arrange to see SOLD in your church, school, rotary club, club or corporation and support the #TaughtNotTrafficked campaign.  

Bring others to this issue by showing SOLD. After the screening unite the audience together with a pledge to make change. Funds are needed for local and international non-profits who are dedicated to making a difference.  Our supporters started StolenYouth.org in Seattle and have made huge changes there.  We have a downloadable PDF called Circles of Change- which shows how to start an organization like that which simply raises funds each year for existing organizations in Seattle to help them scale up.

In #Athspo, #AthTribe, Lifestyle, Magazine, Sep 2016 Tags Sex Trafficking, SOLD, Take Action, Social Good, #TaughtNotTrafficked, Campaign, Stolen Yourh, Seattle, Circles of Change, Survivor, India, NGO, iRest Institute, Nepal, training, David Arquette, Gillian Anderson, Sush, Sushmita Mukerjee, Niyar Saikia, Parambrata Chatterjee, Ankur Vikal, Seema Biswas, Tillotama Shome, girls, earthquake, Taught Not Trafficked, Jeffrey D Brown, Vietnam, Haiti, Somalia, Biafra, Bangladesh
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