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Vulture Festival returns to Milk Studios on May 20 & 21

 

Photo courtesy of Vulture Festival

Last week, Vulture announced that its entertainment extravaganza Vulture Festival is expanding to Los Angeles in 2017, with a weekend of pop culture events set for Nov. 18 and 19 at the iconic Hollywood Roosevelt. But more importantly to Downtown, the fourth edition of Vulture Festival New York will take place May 20 and 21 at Milk Studios.

The Vulture Festival is known to bring together today’s television, film, comedy, and music over the course of a weekend-long series of high-profile events. The talent lineup for Vulture Festival New York will be announced in the spring, comprising roughly 40 events from panels to screenings to live podcast recordings. Past participants have included Jerry Seinfeld, Amy Poehler, Shonda Rhimes, Trevor Noah, Ethan Hawke, Solange, and The Muppets. Sponsors for Vulture Festival New York include AT&T/DIRECTV, with a two-year commitment, and TNT, which will also sponsor Vulture Festival Los Angeles.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82dumWRKLao

“We’re delighted to return as a sponsor of Vulture Festival for two more years, and introduce Vulture’s audience of passionate entertainment enthusiasts to DIRECTV NOW, the new AT&T streaming service,” said Hanny Patel, Vice President, Video Marketing for AT&T. “We’re also looking forward to presenting .

twork”>AT&T AUDIENCE Network and its critically-acclaimed original content at the festival for a second year in a row.”

Media sponsors and content partners for Vulture Festival New York include OUTFRONT Media, WNBC-TV, Screenvision Media, the Mayor’s Office of Media & Entertainment, Carolines on Broadway, and Stitcher, which will serve as content partner for a full two-day slate of live podcast programming. This year’s event will include an upgraded Vulture Lounge at Highline Stages, doubling in size to allow for increased traffic to accommodate festival growth. The Standard is the New York festival’s official hotel partner, and Bridge Lane Wines its official wine sponsor.

Talent updates and ticket announcements to be made at vulturefestival.com and @VultureFestival.

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Culture Events Music

Meijin Bruttomesso on this year’s inaugural Rocker Stalker Fest, CMJ and more

Meijin Bruttomesso / Photo: Deneka Peniston
Meijin Bruttomesso / Photo: Deneka Peniston

When October comes around in New York City each year, fans of independent and alternative music know to anticipate the annual CMJ Music Marathon. Only this year, no CMJ announcement has emerged. Rather than sitting around and wallowing about the lack of live music, publicist Meijin Bruttomesso has done something about it by creating Rocker Stalker Fest.

Running from Oct. 13 to 16, the inaugural Rocker Stalker Fest will feature seven shows over the course of four days. Participating Manhattan venues include Pianos, Bowery Electric and Rockwood Music Hall. Participating Brooklyn venues include Gold Sounds, Bar Matchless and Our Wicked Lady. Participating artists include The VeeVees, whose vocalist Sophia Urista is a contestant on NBC’s The Voice this season; the band plays at Bowery Electric on Oct. 16.

Meijin spoke to Downtown about the motivation behind Rocker Stalker Fest and what is ahead for Rocker Stalker as a whole.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQFqGmvU8dY

Where did the idea for this festival come from? Is it a response to there being no CMJ this year?

Meijin Bruttomesso: I’ve been booking shows for awhile and several festival showcases at CMJ, SXSW and Northside over the last several years, and every year, I book more shows and have better responses. Usually CMJ announces their dates in May or June but it was crickets this year. So I took the bull by the horns and figured what better time than now to get my own festival on the road!?! It’s been something I’ve wanted to do but hadn’t had the opportunity to pursue, so yes, no CMJ was definitely an impetus.

What has the process of putting the festival together been like? When did you start working on it?

MB: I started back in July when I sensed something was off about CMJ’s whereabouts. I reached out to almost 100 artists and 30 venues. The process has been intense, to say the least. I grew from four intended shows to seven [shows] over four days, so it’s been a huge jigsaw puzzle figuring out line ups, venues and set times, but I’m proud that the vision is coming to fruition.

Are there other people working with you to put everything together?

MB: It’s mostly me working with the artists and venues, but I’ve had some good friends over at Behind The Curtains Media and Sad Boy Management send some of their artists my way. We’ve worked together before so I know we operate well together.

How did you come up with the name of the festival?

MB: My blog and booking/promotions company is called Rocker Stalker, so naturally Rocker Stalker Fest had a nice ring to it!

Are there particular highlights for you in this year’s schedule?

MB: I’m super-excited about all of it. The fact that I’m showcasing so many New York City bands is awesome, even if it seems obvious. It’s nice to reconnect with your “scene” on a bigger level.

Do you have any other Rocker Stalker-related plans after this year’s festival wraps? Are there plans to make this an annual event?

MB: Yes to both! I’m probably going to have some local shows in early December and then maybe a first Rocker Stalker show in Nashville in January. Then, SXSW shows in March…All stuff I’m planning now.

When not busy with music, how do you like to spend your free time?

MB: I’m a bit of a gym rat. I work out every day; I’m really into pilates and pole dancing, too. I actually dance at Lucky 13 Saloon in Park Slope, so come visit me when I’m there! Also, I like to Netflix and — actually — chill, hang out with my cat and eat/be a foodie.

Finally, Meijin, any last words for the kids?

MB: (laughs) The kids. I’m barely a functioning adult myself, but I guess my words of wisdom are: stay true to yourself and people will believe and love you for being genuine.

Categories
Culture Entertainment Events

“Saturday Night Live” star Sasheer Zamata talks Brooklyn Comedy Festival, New York living

As with much of the current Saturday Night Live cast, Sasheer Zamata has roots in the sketch comedy world. She not only performed with the Upright Citizens Brigade prior to joining SNL, but was also part of sketches on FX’s Totally Biased With W. Kamau Bell, The Cooking Channel’s Fodder, MTV’s Hey Girl and College Humor. Beyond all of that, she had a web series with Nicole Byer called Pursuit of Sexiness, which may be coming back soon.

When not busy with Saturday Night Live, Sasheer does a lot of stand-up gigs. One such appearance is Saturday, August 29th at The Knitting Factory, as part of this year’s Brooklyn Comedy Festival. During our phone chat – as arranged by the lovely folks at NBC – Sasheer was able to explain the concept of her stand-up comedy in one simple word. Beyond that, she kindly took some questions about her leaner years as a new resident of New York City. Altogether, she came across as someone who worked hard to get where she is, who also has no plans of slowing down anytime soon.

SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE -- Pictured: Sasheer Zamata -- (Photo by: Mary Ellen Matthews/NBC)
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE — Pictured: Sasheer Zamata — (Photo by: Mary Ellen Matthews/NBC)

For someone who hasn’t seen you do stand-up before, how would you describe your show?

Sasheer Zamata: Umm…hilarious.

Simply hilarious?

S: Yeah, I mean…I don’t know. I’m a stand-up and I talk about personal experiences and things that are on my mind and things that are happening in society and in black communities, so it’s a lot of me.

That makes a lot of sense. Something to me that’s very interesting about you is Saturday Night Live is probably the fourth or fifth sketch show you’ve been a part of. You did stuff on Fodder, Kamal Bell’s show, and with College Humor and all that. Is that something that ever came up when you were auditioning for the show?

S: Not really. SNL is concerned with SNL and to them, they’re the premiere sketch show, so they weren’t asking me any questions about other stuff that I’ve done.

A lot of people who do sketch comedy are a lot more about improv than written material, but you seem to do both. Is there anything that you attribute to the fact that you can do stand-up, improv and regular sketch?

S: They’re all different skill sets, but they complement each other in different ways. It’s fun to improvise on-stage when I’m doing stand-up on-stage and being able to talk to the audience or riff on something that’s a good idea that’s spiraling in a good direction. I haven’t seen how sketch or stand-up have really bled into improv, because you’re just creating on the spot, but they do kind of influence each other.

Before you got on SNL, did you have a day job? I know you had a few years in New York before you big break happened here.

S: Yeah, I had a lot of odd jobs that were terrible (laughs). Some were fine. I mostly worked in clothing stores. I worked at a lingerie shop…a vintage store… I worked a very fancy boutique where everything was organically made, a lot of very affluent ladies would come and buy clothes there when they weren’t summering somewhere else. But I also worked for promotions and packed up t-shirts for different companies and flyers for things. A lot of different small jobs, it wasn’t until 2011 or so when I was able to sustain myself on entertainment ventures, which was really nice. I would audition for commercials and book a few, hopefully get paid for stand-up and writing gigs here and there. It eventually got to a point where I could sustain myself on comedy, which was nice.

With the idea of moving to New York, was that rooted in the idea of pursuing entertainment? Or you just wanted to be in New York?

S: I think the driving force of it was to be in New York but I also wanted to perform. I majored in drama and thought I wanted to pursue a theater career when I got to New York. I was auditioning for off-Broadway shows, trying to get my Equity card, but that was a very long process. After a while, I got out of it. I kept going to see UCB shows, I was aware of UCB when I was in college and kept seeing improv shows and was like, “This is where I need to be.” I started taking classes and then really dove into the scene. It wasn’t until a year or so when I was like, “I want to be a comedian.”

Photo courtesy of Luke Fontana
Photo courtesy of Luke Fontana

When you first came to New York, besides making ends meet, were there any challenges or surprises for you? Indianapolis, where you’re from, is a big city but not exactly a public transportation-based city.

S: I don’t know… The trains weren’t too hard for me to navigate. After a while, you get used to it. I guess what I didn’t realize when I moved to New York was that we are all kind of just okay with living in small quarters. We just live on top of each other. I lived in an illegal building with four bedrooms, three of which did not have windows, for four years. We had mice and roaches and there was a lot of stuff going on in that apartment. I was amazed at how well-adjusted I could be living in situations like that. Looking back, I’m like “How was I okay with that?” But at the time, that’s what I had to do because I couldn’t afford a better situation.

The article on you that went up on you yesterday in the Orlando Sentinel talked about all of the volunteer work that you did in New York. Was all of that going on while you were working in clothing stores and trying to get into the improv scene?

S: Yeah, a little bit. When I first moved here, I worked with Public Allies and at the same time I was doing UCB. So I would leave work, go straight to the city and take classes or go see a show or perform in a show or do an open mic or do a practice group. It was a busy time. There were a lot of busy years leading up to right now. It was a hustle, I was trying to make ends meet and also pursue this goal.

Understandably you’re very busy now between SNL, doing stand-up on the road, and doing other performing and writing. But are there any causes you still champion or volunteer for?

S: Yeah, Black Lives Matter and whenever there is a chance to shine a light on stuff that I care about, I do that. That’s not volunteering so much as giving exposure to things now.

On the Saturday Night Live end, had you read the Live From New York book about SNL growing up?

S: Not growing up, but I did read it.

Having read it, and having been on the show for a year and a half, do you find that the book had any misconception or inaccuracies? Is there anything that you could say “That’s not true” or “That didn’t happen?”

S: Well, all of it is stuff that happened before I got there, so there’s no way I could possibly know if things happened…

Let me rephrase that, I’m sorry. When they talk about the lifestyle of being on the show, do you feel that there are any misconceptions about it?

S: No, well, Live From New York is an oral history, so it’s people who worked there who are talking about their experiences working there, so I’m assuming they’re true. They’re just people recounting their experiences. People write about the show in all other sorts of ways and there are tons of misconceptions outside of it…

I’ll read between the lines and say that show that the show is everything that you hoped it would be (laughs).

S: Great (laughs).

Might we see anymore of the Pursuit Of Sexiness web series in the future?

S: Yes, I hope so. We have another season written, we’re just trying to figure out how we’re going to execute it right now. We’re in talks with Above Average and trying to figure out a good time for us to produce it. But we definitely have it in the works.

When you’re not working, what do you like to do with yourself?

S: Be with friends, be with people I love, dance, watch movies, all sorts of things.

So more staying local is what you like to do?

S: Oh yeah, I definitely love to stay in Brooklyn or around my house. I love going out, I love enjoying my neighborhood and enjoying my friends that all live very close to me. I’m not exactly a homebody but I do love being local.

Is there anything that you wish more people knew about you in general?

S: No (laughs), not really. The less they know is the better actually.

So finally, Sasheer, any last words for the kids?

S: Keep going, keep doing whatever you want to do.

-by Darren Paltrowitz

Categories
Culture Entertainment Music

2015 Summer Concert Roundup

 

 

Concerts
Photo courtesy of Alyssa Bajek

This summer, a number of big name concerts will be coming to the city and broadcasted nationally on morning shows. This is your guide to NYC summer concert tours and how to attend them.

Good Morning America concerts:  All concerts take place at Central Park’s Rumsey Playfield. Enter at the 72nd Street entrance on Fifth Avenue. The park opens at 6 a.m. The concert is scheduled to begin at 7 a.m. to end at 9 a.m. Concert is free.

NBC Today Show concerts: All concerts take place on 49th Street at Rockefeller Plaza.  Concerts can be viewed for free from the Today Show Windows on the World studio. It is recommended audiences arrive by 6 a.m. for the best spots.

Fox concerts: All concerts take place at 1211 Avenue of Americas on the corner of 48th Street and 6th Avenue. It is recommended that audiences arrive at 6 a.m. and concerts are scheduled from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. The concerts are free to attend. Attendees will also have a chance to receive food from Famous Dave’s Barbeque, for free.

CBS Early Show concerts: All concerts take place at CBS Plaza. Guests are required to reserve tickets ahead of time. Tickets are available at 1iota.com under the Early Show logo two to three weeks before each individual CBS Early Show concert date.

A list of this year’s summer concert schedule, with the host program listed is available below:

June 5

Lighthouse on Fox

Charli XCX on the Today Show

Florence + the Machine on Good Morning America

June 9

Christina Aguilera on the Early Show

June 12

Billy Currington on Fox

Fall Out Boy on the Today Show

Jason Derulo on Good Morning America

June 15

James Taylor on the Today Show

June 19

Artist TBD on Fox

Nate Ruess on the Today Show

Adam Lambert on Good Morning America

June 23

Janelle Monae and Wondaland on the Today Show

June 26

Dierks Bentley on Good Morning America

Imagine Dragons on the Today Show

Artist TBD on Fox

July 2

Alicia Keys on the Early Show

July 3

Mika on Good Morning America

Flo Rida on the Today Show

Lee Greenwood on Fox

July 10

Walk the Moon on Good Morning America

Carly Rae Jepsen on the Today Show

Brett Michaels on Fox

July 16

Sting on the Early Show

July 17

Artist TBD on Good Morning America

Alan Jackson on the Today Show

Kelsea Ballerini on Fox

July 23

Enrique Iglesias on the Early Show

July 24

Nicki Minaj on Good Morning America

Blues Traveler on Fox

July 30

Cyndi Lauper on the Early Show

July 31

Hozier on Good Morning America

Jason Aldean on the Today Show

Scotty McCreery on Fox

Date TBA in August

Jennifer Lopez on the Today Show

August 7

Luke Bryan on Good Morning America

KC & The Sunshine Band on Fox

August 12

Lunch Money Lewis on the Today Show

August 13

Train on the Early Show

August 14

Artist TBD on Good Morning America

Alice Cooper on Fox

August 20

David Gray on the Early Show

August 21

Night Ranger on Fox

5 Seconds of Summer on Good Morning America

August 26

Sheryl Crow on the Early Show

August 28

Artist TBD on Good Morning America

Blue Oyster Cult on Fox

September 3

Usher on the Early Show

September 4

Florida Georgia Line on Good Morning America

Brad Paisley on the Today Show