Cheap or Free Things To Do In New York Next Week?
May 18, 2007 6:20 PM
I have a week in New York City and limited funds...
I'll be heading to New York City on Sunday and I'll be there until Saturday. I'd like some ideas for cool things to keep me occupied without costing me a ton. I'm staying at the
Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge. I plan on taking subways and walking, what is the best way to quickly get accustomed to the subway system? I've been to New York City once before, but it was about 3 or 4 years ago.
Friday I plan to hit some museums because they have free/pay what you can nights. I'd love to get tickets to see a taping of a show, but it seems like this is a bad time for that, are there even shows taping at this time? If so, how can I go about getting a hold of a couple tickets? I'd love to go to a neat tea store or cafe. I love tea, especially really unique atmospheres of tea stores. I'm sure there are a ton in New York, but what are some of the best?
I just graduated from art school and I think it would be cool to show my illustration portfolio to some art directors if possible. Does anyone know the best way to get in touch with art directors? Or is there a cool art scene I can hit up?
Also, this is probably a shot in the dark, but last time I was in New York we stumbled across a Udon place near the location of the former World Trade Center. My fiance's mom has tried to locate the place again on other trips but has been unsuccessful. Anyone know what this restaurant is called? It was almost exclusively udon, but it had other Japanese items as well.
I know there are a lot of New York tourist questions, but I didn't find any specifically addressing my questions about free/cheap things. Especially events that are taking place this coming week.
posted by Becko to Destinations: What to Do (16 comments total)
as for the subway, get a map, and don't be afraid to ask for directions. people are nice and will get you where you need to go. it's a confusing system, so just relax and ask for help if you take a wrong turn. get a streetwise map of manhattan, as well. i carried one for years when i lived there.
for tv tickets, go to the website of the show you want to see. there should be info there.
since you're there for a week, you might invest in a city pass, which costs something like $50 and gets you into eight or nine things, including a lot of museums, the empire state building (cheesy but worth it) and a circle line cruise.
as for tea houses, i don't know if it's the best, but teany is owned by moby (woo) and on rivington street, on the lower east side.
you might check out mediabistro.com, unbeige.com, and the art directors club to see if there are any design gatherings the week you're there. i don't really know how the business works, though. you might do better to just look up folks you might want to work for and send them cards or whatever.
posted by thinkingwoman at 6:36 PM on May 18