Nostalgia & History: L'Amour Show February 2009
As part of our Nostalgia & History series, in this essay, Will Gallagher revisits Staten Island’s early 2000s punk scene through the eyes of a South Shore kid discovering his voice. From the quiet streets of Rossville to the life-changing night at L’Amour’s Battle of the Bands, this story captures how one night of local music transformed isolation into belonging—and how Staten Island’s underground culture continues to shape lives far beyond the stage.
The Staten Island Paradox: Abundance, Scarcity, and What Comes Next
In this cultural essay, Jahtiek Long explores Staten Island's paradoxical nature, how the borough is bursting with talent and creativity yet struggles with a lack of space, funding, and support. It celebrates the resilience of local artists and communities while asking what it would take to finally build the cultural scene Staten Island deserves.
First It Was Muddy, Then Full, But Always Delicious
Can you taste it? Is that steaming hot cup of java simmering and wafting? You think to yourself, What ingredients does it possess and was it made lovingly? Who is pouring it? What’s the intention? Like any sought-after food and drink recipe, ingredients are key. And just like that, a place you visit with real investment in its community also possesses these ingredients. If you were around in the early 2000s, chances are you could look no further than the Muddy Cup Coffeehouse, which was located at 388 Van Duzer Street in Staten Island’s Stapleton district during the height of the early aughts.