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Fascinating Rhythm

Bandleader, composer, musician, entrepreneur – Jon Batiste’s moment is now



KEY OF LIFE Jon Batiste gives an impromptu concert on a Steinway & Sons baby grand piano, looking out over the city from the 79th floor of 3 World Trade Center.



Batiste stands in front of “Akoma,” a mural by artist Georgie Nakima, in 3 World Trade Center. He is wearing a Coach X Jean-Michel Basquiat trench coat.

 






 

TAKE THE A TRAIN Batiste plays the classic Duke Ellington/Billy Strayhorn tune.

 

 



He has said that Duke Ellington is one of his many inspirations

IN A CAVERNOUS SPACE ON THE 79TH FLOOR of 3 World Trade Center, a tall, Black man summons glorious sounds from a baby grand piano, surrounded by endless views of Manhattan. He is full of kinetic energy, sometimes standing, sometimes sitting, shoes off, feet working the pedals, hands in motion, jumping from classical themes to jazz riffs to popular songs in a seamless flow of Music, with a capital M. This is Jon Batiste.

He arrives at our photoshoot tossing a tennis ball and sporting a jacket decorated with a Jimmy Carter campaign button. He radiates joy, and the personal soundtrack playing in his head spills out in phrases, snippets of songs, mischievous looks, inside jokes. Then the music goes on and it’s Billy Joel’s New York State of Mind. “Oh, that sax, Billy!” Batiste sings a little, plays air guitar on a pool cue, toggles between Rat Pack cool cat and exuberant man-child: “YEAH!” he shouts as Billy sings. He shares that he is really into Elton John lately, and we agree that Elton looks so happy with his family. “He’s at peace,” Batiste says. “It’s what we all want.”

 

“It must have been The Itsy, Bitsy Spider.”

 

Batiste’s musical timeline threads back through several generations. He is part of the legendary New Orleans Batiste family of jazz musicians. There is a pool table at our shoot and he shares that his dad became something of a pool sharp while touring on the Chitlin’ Circuit, where there was always a pool table to fool around with between sets. He knows a great deal about music history because his family helped write it. His first cogent musical memory is of being pushed on stage during the filming of a commercial. “I must have been around seven or eight, and I believe it was for a concert, a performance that my family was doing in Japan. I was asked to sing a nursery rhyme. It must have been The Itsy, Bitsy Spider.” Was he a natural? “I remember having such intense stage fright and going through many different takes. Fast forward 25 years later, and I’m on TV.”

Yes, he is. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert just recently celebrated its 1,000th show, and Batiste has been the show’s bandleader, with his band Stay Human, from the start. So, he has a day job that involves an intense schedule of composing music for the show, rehearsing, and taping—all complicated by a global pandemic. And while that would be a full slate for some, it’s just the tip of the iceberg for Batiste. He recently completed scoring, and collaborating on a Christmas Day Pixar release called Soul: “I put so much of myself in the film, it’s emotional to see this character’s essence in his story, and the things that are happening in his world draw so much from my personal experience in New York.”

 

This year, he also received two Grammy nominations

 

He has written a symphony that is scheduled to be performed next year at Carnegie Hall, where he will be the artist in residence. He says, “If you think about Beethoven, well, his Seventh Symphony is the one. The seventh one. Writing a symphony takes so much of yourself, so I wanted to start taking a swing at it at age 31 or 32 when I started it.” This year, he also received two Grammy nominations, and he is always working on new music. A body in motion, to the beat of his own internal soundtrack. And what does all of this sound like?

“It sounds like transition, evolution, growth, and leadership. It’s been quite a journey. If you look at the things that have happened over the last five or six years in my life: graduating from Juilliard and going on the road; doing television; writing plays and musicals; releasing albums; and all of the different awards and all of the people that I’ve met…” He pauses and then continues, “Now I feel like I’m at a stage where I’ve become a leader. And I’ve always, innately, felt like a leader and wanted to show people a better way. But now it has evolved into a very tangible state. I feel like I can see how my position in the world is meant to be facilitated, how it’s meant to be enacted.”

He’s grateful for the experience of working on The Late Show. “When you have something that you do five days a week for over five years, the consistency gives you perspective in a way that nothing else can. And I think that doing something like that is a blessing for me because if I didn’t have that, I don’t know if I would recognize this point in my evolution.”

 

It has always been a way to bridge the gap and connect.

 

Music isn’t only entertainment for Batiste. During the Black Lives Matter protests this summer he performed for the crowd at Barclay’s Center, and on election day he shared his particular brand of love and inspiration for people going to the polls in Philadelphia. He says, “Music is a gift because it can touch people and they don’t have to know why or how. It has always been a way to bridge the gap and connect. All of the different times that I’ve experienced really transformational life moments, there’s been some sort of music involved. Whether it’s through the form of tradition or whether it’s ritualistic, whether it’s worship, or whether it’s just nostalgia, there’s always some sort of soundtrack.”

 

TOP OF THE WORLD Batiste’s Grammy-nominated 2018 album, “Hollywood Africans,” was named after a painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat, which makes participating in the new Coach x Jean-Michel Basquiat campaign a perfect fit.

 

 


This year, he collected two more nominations: Best Contemporary Instrumental Album for Chronology of a Dream: Live at the Village Vanguard; and Best New Age Album for Meditations.

 

 

 

“The intention of something is always felt at a higher frequency when it’s about something bigger than oneself, and that’s across the board.” — Jon Batiste

 

Does he miss the live performance? “I miss performing in front of people, but I will say that I am enjoying thinking of different ways of presenting music, even in the virtual environment, because I think it’s more like being a movie producer now. I’ve always been into creating visual worlds and thought at some point that I would get into film as a director. But it takes a different muscle. And I don’t think a lot of musicians want to deal with that stuff.

So, the musician side of me is sick of it, and I just want to be able to go and play a show in front of people, even if it’s in my house. But the director side of me is having fun experimenting.”

He thinks the limits posed by COVID-19 offer a reset button for the way we experience music. “Music—before it was
put into the context of selling products and scaled so that it could be a commodity—was a part of the fabric of everyday life. It was something that people used to entertain themselves, in their home, in community gatherings, rituals, and cultural traditions, dating back to African tribes and drum circles or rumba sessions in Cuba. In New Orleans today, we have the second line in funerals. Social music is what I call it.”

He says, “I believe social music is really what we’ve always been primed for. People’s relationship to music is inherently social, and when it’s made into a commodity it skews that relationship. We lose something essential. Even with the protests that I’ve been doing, and in all of the different ways that I see music being made now remotely and online, it’s going back to a more social context, playing in small groups where the presentation is more geared to smaller community gatherings.”

I feel the responsibility to my family and my lineage.

He is conscious of his role as a leader. “I think about the different lineages that I’m a part of. Both New Orleans musicians, and all of the different styles of music and culture that I’ve drawn from, and I think about my great-great-uncle who fought in World War II, and my grandfather who was in the Korean War, and my uncle and my cousins who were in Vietnam. I think about the range of sacrifice that has allowed me to be a financially independent, successful Black entrepreneur, musician, artist. Apart from what I think the role of a musician is in society, I feel the responsibility to my family and my lineage.

Art doesn’t always have to be for a cause or to raise awareness. But I do think that for me, the intention of something is always felt at a higher frequency when it’s about something bigger than oneself, and that’s across the board.”

Photography and post-production by Andrew Matusik, Hair by Jenna Robinson, Makeup by Jesse Lindholm, Manager, David Patterson, Chris Chambers, Lauren Woulard, The Chambers Group
Piano by Steinway & Sons Location: 3 World Trade Center 79th floor Silverstein Properties

Categories
Culture Featured Music NYC

NYC’s Lesley Barth Hits The Sweet Spot With “Big Time Baby”

Lesley Barth has often wrestled with a sense of feeling like an outsider in her own life. The questions arising around the key to happiness; a sense of identity that deems outside validation unnecessary; the corporate grind. What is it all for, in the end? Barth’s hunger for a meaningful, mindful existence has resulted in her stellar sophomore album, Big Time Baby, all with a feminine 70s-pop sheen reminiscent of Jenny Lewis. Drawing frequent comparisons to songwriting greats such as Joni Mitchell, Carole King, and Fleetwood Mac, with a commanding and singular voice reminiscent of Natalie Merchant, Barth shapes these influences into a mixture of confessional songwriting, poetry, and wry observations about human nature. Big Time Baby is an album about feeling isolated, wearing masks, failing, rebuilding yourself, questioning societal norms, and the quicksand that is our modern non-stop notifications, performance-driven, social-media-optimized life.

“I learned that you can’t perform your life and live your life at the same time,” says Barth.  “There are moments where performing is what’s required.  But if we don’t take the mask off from time to time and connect to who we really are, I can tell you from experience that one day you will wake up and not recognize who you are and the life you’ve built for yourself.  I hope this album gives people hope that, no matter how uncomfortable or out of place they feel in their life, they can change it by finding the courage to take off the mask and really get to know who they are underneath.”

 

Photo: Harish Pathak

Barth paired her artistry with Philadelphia producer Joe Michelini (American Trappist, River City Extension).  The resulting three singles, all tinged with that 70s songwriter groove, speak to various stages of the process of redefining her life.  Woman Looking Back at Me, a disco-flavored tune, seeks to understand negative self-talk and distance Barth from the critical voice in her head.  The neon-cowboy-hued Nashville tries to understand better the internal demons that keep us away from the lives we want, and the catchy and empowering You Gotta Hand it to the Man is an indictment of the ubiquity of a patriarchal society and capitalism gone awry, with accompanying video criticizing the precariousness of the American health care system: “Almost all the savings I had for quitting my job got wiped away by healthcare costs, and I had to scramble.”

Lower East Side sees Barth immediately admitting to failure and a sense of unreadiness for the journey ahead.

“Making this album has been a rejection of the concept of ‘big time’ and ‘small time;’ living for other people’s validation is what got me into the whole mess of a life that felt foreign to me, so I wanted this album to be a declaration of who I am,” says Barth. She penned the album as her life became uprooted, and recorded it as she navigated the uncertainty of the structure of the gig economy.

“It’s an album for these uncertain times where many people feel their lives have been stripped to the bone, they’ve woken up from a daydream, and they weren’t sure what tomorrow would bring because that’s where I felt I was when I wrote it,” says Barth.

Sign o’ the times. Enjoy Big Time Baby.

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Entertainment Featured Music

Yoli Mayor the Cuban Sound Machine

With a powerful voice, Yoli Mayor wants her music to be real and mean something to others.

Besides her singing, Yoli Mayor, a Cuban American has also written and performed in plays and dabbled in jewelry and clothing design.
With a powerful voice, YOLI MAYOR wants her music to be real, and mean something to others. Singer Yoli Mayor began singing when she was two. But she didn’t croon “My LittleTeapot” or “Old MacDonald.”

Yoli Mayor
Photography by Udo Spreitzenbarth

The first song she remembers singing is one of Aerosmith’s biggest hits.“It honestly just happened,” she says. “The first things I remember singing are “I Don’t wanna miss a Thing” by Aerosmith and the song from The Little Mermaid, “Part of Your World.”Perhaps she was destined, from the time she was two and singing Aerosmith, to lift up her voice with power and grace. Which she did, during the first episode of season 12 of America’s Got Talent.
However, infamous judge Simon Cowell was not so impressed when she first opened her mouth to sing “I Put a Spell on You” by Annie Lennox. He told her the performance didn’t feel young enough and asked if she could sing something else. After harried host Tyra Banks ran out on stage to assist in removing Yoli’s diamond jewelry and kicking off her shoes, Yoli chose“Make It Rain” by Ed Sheeran. And she blew the roof off the place.
Yoli didn’t magically arrive at this point in her life. Her family, especially her parents, uplifted and encouraged her along the way.“My mom has always been the number-one fan, my parents, together,” she says. “From the beginning, my mom always encouraged me to keep singing, and my dad was the voice of reason but he still always supported me. He’s a harsh critic, but that’s because he wanted me to grow.

”Her musical inspiration comes from several different artists, including Frank Sinatra and Amy Winehouse.“I love Amy Winehouse because she was raw from start to finish,”

Yoli Mayor
Photography by Udo Spreitzenbarth

Yoli says. “Her music was real and unapologetic, and that’s what is attractive to me as a songwriter.”Yoli wants to reach people with her music.“I want people to hear my music and think, ‘How does she know? How did she know that’ show I felt?
Phototography by Udo Speitzenbarth, Styling Laurean Ossoiro, Hair & Makeup D.Nicole, Top & Skirt Naerual Leinad, Jewels: Jany Kaye Jewelry, Shoes Bernardo
Categories
Culture Featured Music

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

By Alice Teeple

Photos by Alice Teeple

Christine Smith takes a drag from her well-deserved cigarette outside the Bowery Electric. She’s just wrapped a spectacular solo performance for her sophomore album release, Meet Me On The Far Side Of A Star. It’s fitting this album made its debut in the intimate Map Room: its twinkling, celestial backdrop placing Smith in a sort of netherworld somewhere between Weimar Berlin and Major Tom’s shuttle. 

“Oh dear! Looks like I’m molting,” she chuckles, as several wisps of black marabou feathers float from her dress to the sidewalk. She stamps out her smoke, signs a CD for a fan, and warmly greets old friends who came to see the songstress on her former stomping grounds. 

The Bowery is foggy, with a damp chill in the air: the kind of weather that reluctantly welcomes nostalgia and melancholy. This night, Smith served as the ferrywoman, steering the boat with electric piano keys and a small red Spanish accordion, through an emotive display of loss, longing, and regret. Christine Smith treads the line between days gone by and harsh modernity. She ruefully gazes back at the storms of the past with wry observation, hard-fought wisdom, and persistent optimism. She is a seasoned warrior armed with wit, poetic dreams and a delicious glass of red to calm those tides. 

Smith’s seen her fair share of touring and recording over the last twenty years, having played with Crash Test Dummies, Jesse Malin, and Ryan Adams; as well as sharing the stage with Bruce Springsteen, Pogues frontman Shane MacGowan, Lenny Kaye of the Patti Smith Group, and H.R. of Bad Brains. 

With such a punk/rock background, it’s astonishing to hear Smith’s own gentle, conversational voice and classic piano plucked straight out of a 1930s cabaret. It turns out that during her early days living as an ex-pat in London, Smith supported herself playing jazz standards. From there she served as the musical director for Newsrevue (London’s longest-running satire show). 

There are strong elements of the Great American Songbook in this album, but Smith proudly wears her other influences on her sleeve – echoes of Petula Clark here, some Patti Smith there, some Simon LeBon flair, sprinkled with a bit of Angelo Badalamenti and 1950s doo-wop. She is a shining result of her eclectic tastes and influences. Her autobiography will be one hell of an incredible read one day. 

Meet Me On The Far Side Of A Star began as a collaboration with Texas singer-songwriter Victor Camozzi, who shared Smith’s passion for 1930s-40s American classics. A year and some massive life shifts later, Smith’s “achingly beautiful” masterpiece was finished. Meet Me On The Far Side Of A Star is an artistic triumph. Rolling Stone recently praised her track Happily Never After (featuring Tommy Stinson of the Replacements) as a top ten Country/Americana song of 2019. One hopes that Christine Smith keeps exploring her own voice and draws more from her deep well of experience and compassion.  

The album is available for purchase here.

It can also be streamed here:

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Categories
Culture Featured Music

Artist To Watch: Natalie Clark

Natalie Clark
Natalie Clark

By Alice Teeple

Scene: Hot August night, secret location in SoHo.  A hundred people sit on the floor, eagerly awaiting the show. A petite, raven-haired woman enters the room with a merry wave and vermillion red smile.  She thumps her guitar, startling it awake. Natalie Clark is eager to get this Sofar Sounds party started. 

Cheers erupt as she launches her latest single, Grown Ass Woman, a raucous anthem for those constantly “on the go” to make ends meet. The message deeply resonates with the audience: heads nod sympathetically as Clark rattles off a wistful roster of activities one can do with a healthier paycheck. After the set, they thank her for “really getting it.”

Natalie Clark is a colorful storyteller in the vein of Dolly Parton and Loretta Lynn, liberally peppering her repertoire with joyful shrieks and fierce whoops. Her pleasant Glaswegian speaking voice belies a rock n’ roll ferocity: part Eddie Cochran, part oracle. 

Less than a decade ago, Clark was a schoolteacher in Scotland. Coming from a musical family with a passion for jazz and Motown, she daydreamt about a music career. For years, pragmatism proved an obstacle. 

Fate set her path in motion: while attending a BBC Radio One Academy session, Richard Branson invited her onstage for an impromptu performance of her song Weakness. Clark stunned the crowd and grabbed UK headlines. Despite the thriving music scene in Scotland, she hungered for a change of pace and moved to London. From there, Clark emigrated to Los Angeles. The relentless grind of odd jobs and gigging proved difficult in her new city, but Clark, ever the optimist, found inspiration.

“I feel excitement and creativity in the air! Also, being from Scotland, the sunshine helps,” she adds cheekily. “It’s inspiring to be surrounded by people making art in all different forms. I just followed my instinct to explore opportunities.” 

Clark’s gamble was rewarded: KTLA “Artist To Watch.” Mercedes-Benz ad campaign. Appearance on The Voice. Hand-picked opening act for the Indigo Girls. 

Natalie Clark
Natalie Clark

Clark’s sophomore album, Head North, explores the highs and lows of independence. No silly love songs in this EP, just blissful discovery of self-worth despite tight budgets, heady ideals, and roadblocks. Head North is the perfect soundtrack for getting your shit together. “It’s time to face the fear!” she roars in More Than A Mountain.

Natalie Clark is a familiar face in the LES music scene. In addition to several recent Sofar NYC appearances, she played a fiery set at Rockwood Music Hall in March. CraicFest also hosted Clark at Mercury Lounge, where she shared a bill with Pogues bassist Cáit O’Riordan, Ash’s Tim Wheeler, and The Mighty Stef.

“It’s been a magical journey,” she says, “I’d love to do a full US tour! I love connecting with people. I hope to get the chance.” 

No doubt this Scottish firebrand has the willpower and drive to make her dreams reality. Head North drops on 23 August. 

More Than A Mountain Video:

Grown Ass Woman Video: 

Official website

Categories
Culture Entertainment Featured NYC

“American Housewife” Star Meg Donnelly Will Always Be a New Yorker

Meg Donnelly landed the part of Taylor Otto on American Housewife at age 16 and suddenly moved from New York City to Los Angeles. She was not cast in the pilot and was about to take a break from auditioning to be a normal teenager when she got the call that they wanted her for the series. Now in its third season, American Housewife is a hilarious look at suburban America and the families that do or don’t seem to “fit in” there. We chatted with the now 18 year old Donnelly about how her life has changed, her acting dreams, and her New York City favorites.

Photo by the Riker Brothers

Downtown: You grew up in NYC, are you an Uptown or Downtown person?

Meg Donnelly: Neither really! Sort of in the middle. I grew up on 56th and 10th so Hell’s Kitchen, a little bit more Uptown I guess. I’ve loved growing up here, and we are so close from the water, we’re only two blocks from the Hudson River so it’s really nice.

Downtown: What did you start first: dancing, acting, or singing?

MD: I started in theater so it’s kind of all three in one, but I fell in love with singing probably first. When I was about 11 I had my first agent/manager type thing and I went on theater auditions and then I started doing straight acting auditions and I fell in love with that too.

Downtown: When you were starting what was the dream?

MD: Ever since I was younger High School Musical was my thing, I was obsessed with it, it was such a big deal. Also Spongebob always had the musicals too and it is my all time favorite.

Downtown: Did you see the musical?

MD: Yes, I did! I see everything Spongebob, it’s the best, but my dream was to do a combo of theater and movies because I loved HSM so much. I think the things where you combine the two are the coolest, so when Zombies came around I was crying because that was my dream all my life.

Downtown: Do you have a favorite musical?

MD: I love Book of Mormon. I remember being 11 and listening to the soundtrack and thinking it’s so scandalous, I love this! I ended up seeing the show and it was so good. Also, of course Hamilton but that kind of goes without saying, it’s just kind of legendary. In The Heights is so good, “96,000” is one of my favorite songs, but my favorite of all time is Rent for sure.

Downtown: Would your dream role be in Rent?

MD: Mimi. It was kind of bad too because when I was like 7 or 8 I would say my dream role is Mimi, and people would say, “so your dream role is to be a stripper?” and I would say, “well kind of, but it was more dimensions to it.”

Downtown: What was your life like right before you booked American Housewife?

MD: I was just going to high school here in the city, it was pretty normal. I had been auditioning professionally since I was 11 and I did jobs here and there but nothing really big. In the pilot for American Housewife they cast another girl and then they recast it and I was picked up for the series. After the auditions for the pilot I thought to myself, I was really close and I really wanted this role so I think I’m just going to take a break and just be a normal kid and if stuff comes up that’s cool but I just want to take a break. Right when I said I was going to take a break American Housewife was like just kidding! It was kind of a weird coincidence, and I’m so glad.

Photo by the Riker Brothers

Downtown: What’s it like being in LA?

MD: Way different than here for sure. It was kind of a whirlwind because I was 16 and I was just going to high school like a normal kid and all the sudden it was like, “hey, you’re moving to LA tomorrow, congrats!” When I moved to, LA I didn’t know anyone out there. I slowly started connecting but I was also really shy because it was all so new to me and I didn’t know how long I was going to be there. When season two came around, and that was after Zombies, I knew more people, and they helped me so much to be more confident and outgoing.

Downtown: Does it feel like home there yet or are you still a real New Yorker?

MD: New York will always be home but LA is definitely homey. I love living there for sure, the weather’s really nice, the people are cool, but New York will always be home.

Downtown: Did you start shooting for the new Zombies yet?

MD: No, we start shooting in May and it’s in Toronto again in the same building that we stayed in last time. I am so excited because that was easily the best summer of my life. All the people are coming back, and there’s going to be new people so there’s going to be additional family members, which is going to be incredible, and they’re going to be awesome, and we’re going to have so much fun.

Downtown: Were you a Disney kid or Nickelodeon kid?

MD: I was both because Nickelodeon had some great shows like Drake and Josh, iCarly, Victorious, Ned’s Declassified, Zoey 101, that was my favorite, but then Disney Channel had like Wizards of Waverly Place, Zack and Cody, Hannah Montanna, High School Musical, it never gets old. There are shows on Disney Channel that I actually watch like Andi Mack, that show’s good.

Downtown: Do you think that if you weren’t in American Housewife you would watch it?

MD: I think so, I think I would watch it. I love watching ABC shows like Modern Family so i feel like I would stumble upon it. I feel like I would love the character Greg. Diedrich (Bader) is the best.

Downtown: What are some of the most memorable scenes or episodes that you’ve shot?

MD: The American Idol one was crazy. That one was so surreal because it was a normal day on set and then we went to American Idol to sing for the judges. We went to where the auditions were, but I just thought I was singing in front of my TV parents Katy (Mixon) and Diedrich at the set, and then we got to the set and they said, “oh, no, no, no, you’re singing in front of the actual judges,” and I was like, “Sorry, did I hear you right?” That was crazy.

Downtown: Was that a childhood dream?

MD: It was a childhood dream, and I was terrified because I’m on a TV show, if I mess up I can do it again, but these contestants have one shot and that’s it, the pressure is crazy.

Downtown: Do you have time to work on your music?

MD: Yeah, I’ve actually been recording music every day since I’ve been here in New York. The studio that I record at primarily is here, so every time I come here I’m in the studio every day. Sometimes people fly out to LA, and I’ll record there. I have an EP scheduled to come out in June while I’m filming Zombies, so that’s going to be crazy.

Downtown: Do you write or play instruments?

MD: I primarily write with this woman named Dahlia who is the best person ever, but I love writing. Every time I have an idea or a concept I’ll just write it down in my notes or a word will come up and I’ll write it down or text Dahlia and ask if it’s a good concept because she’s amazing. As for instruments, I play guitar and I dabble in piano, I never could really get the concept of piano but I’m working on it.

Photo by the Riker Brothers

Downtown: What are some of your favorite restaurants in New York City?

MD: There’s a place called Ivy on 5tth and 8th, and it’s really good, they have the best veggie burgers ever. I’m not a vegetarian anymore but I used to be, and their veggie burgers are insane and they have these polenta fries, it’s so good. Then mexican food, there’s this place called Los Tacos which is really good, their guacamole is insane. On 50th and 8th, Don Antonio has the best Italian food.

Downtown: What’s your favorite area to shop in the city?

MD: I go to SoHo every time I come here, I just want to be there the whole time because the shopping is amazing. There’s a place called Tokio 7 that’s really good, Kith is really good, it’s such a cool shop, Vintage Twin is good, I just went to the Glossier in that area and it’s so cool, it’s such a cool setup.

Downtown: Do you have a favorite museum?

MD: The Whitney, I love the Whitney. The ideal thing is to go take the subway to 23rd and 8th, and then just walk down. There’s this really good breakfast place that has amazing avocado toast, and then you walk, and underneath the Highline there’s all these mini museums and little galleries that you just go into for a second and walk out, and there’s always the craziest stuff in there, it’s so much fun. Then you go up to the Highline and then go to the Whitney and then walk to the village and see all of that and then to Washington Square Park and then to SoHo. Then they see the actual, real New York City because most people just see Times Square and Broadway and Rockefeller Center, which you have to do and it’s great, but if they want to see like the real sort of non-touristy stuff, if you’re coming to New York that’s what you should do.

Downtown: Do you have any one thing that has to be the first thing when you get back?

MD: The first thing, I have to eat pizza and bagels, that’s the number one thing, when I wake up I’m going to have a bagel and then for lunch I’m going to have pizza.

Photo by the Riker Brokers

Downtown: How did you learn to speak Japanese?

MD: This is a crazy story. Basically there was this Japanese boy band that came to my school as exchange students. It was insane everyone, they were  amazing hip hop dancers but a lot of people were like, “Why don’t they speak English?” and I’m like, “because they’re from Japan, what do you mean?” They weren’t as nice to them and so they didn’t really get to learn English because they were just staying in their group the whole time. So I started hanging out with them, and my friends started hanging out with them as well, and I decided to learn Japanese even though I was going to make a fool of myself. I butchered it, and they laughed.

Downtown: Do you have the language skills to go there and have a conversation?

MD: Yeah, that’s what I did during the summer. I went there for two weeks with my family and I was my parents’ translator. I started learning from the guys and YouTube videos and now I actually take lessons because I didn’t know it was going to go this far.

Downtown: Now that you live in LA have you learned how to drive?

MD: No, I haven’t and I have no excuse! It’s on the list. I have the course and I’ve been studying it for the written test, but I just haven’t done it yet. They put it on the show, and the car was in neutral, and they pushed me, I swear, no joke, but I’ve been in LA for like two and a half years now, I have no excuse.

Downtown: What should viewers look for in the rest of the season?

MD: There’s this really great episode coming that actually was so much fun. I don’t want to spoil it but it has to do with Peyton Meyer (Trip) and Franklin (Evan O’Toole) who’s Anna-Kat’s best friend. It is the funniest episode, I think I laughed the whole time we were filming, oh my god it’s so funny.

American Housewife airs on Tuesdays at 8:00 PM on ABC.