Lyndhurst 14
Well-known member
- Jan 16, 2008
- 5,241
Yep – a bad day in New York will always beat a good day in London.Bloody love NYC, would move there if I could.
Yep – a bad day in New York will always beat a good day in London.Bloody love NYC, would move there if I could.
Sorry, forgot about this!
It was amazing. Amongst other things, points of note were..
- Went to the basketball - Atmosphere wasn't what I'd expected - a bit flat. But the Barclays Center is a sight to behold and the whole experience was quality.
- Top of the Rock - views are unreal. Highly recommend
- Highline - FREEEEEZING, but a really nice walk. Walked from North to South which was definitely a better option than walking up and ending up in the middle of a construction site.
- Went for dinner at The View for my other half's birthday, it'ts a revolving restaurant above Times Sq. Food was average but as the name suggests, the views were worth it.
- 9/11 Memorial - Although I liked the actual water features, I wasn't really impressed with the way they've branded it all - felt a bit tacky rather than worthy of such an event. The museum isn't ready yet, so there wasn't that much there to really inform people. But glad I saw it nonetheless.
- Walked A LOT
- Shopped A LOT
- Am now poor
US immigration is the slowest and most unwelcoming in the world. The attitude of the Home Land Security people stinks.
I flew into New York on a Japanese flight from Tokyo and the immigration guys were just stamping the Japanese passports and waving them through. When I handed over my British passport the guy looked at me and his face lit up like a Christmas tree. He then proceeded to grill me for 20 minutes on every subject under the sun before letting me through.
So it would appear that they are only concerned with grilling the people who can actually speak English.
Fat wanker.
OK re-loading this.
Where is best to stay - Times Square, Staten Island, Brooklyn or Queens (and no jokes Ernest).
And what I mean is by access to NY from the three later locations.
I flew into New York on a Japanese flight from Tokyo and the immigration guys were just stamping the Japanese passports and waving them through. When I handed over my British passport the guy looked at me and his face lit up like a Christmas tree. He then proceeded to grill me for 20 minutes on every subject under the sun before letting me through.
So it would appear that they are only concerned with grilling the people who can actually speak English.
Fat wanker.
I know this has been done before, but I'd like any new/updated tips and ideas that people might be able to offer.
Basically, 3 weeks tomorrow I'm off to New York for a week. This will be my 4th trip there, but my first since 2007 so I'm sure there's a whole load of new stuff to see and do since last time.
What I'm looking for here is the NSC personal touch of recommended things to do, things to see and things to avoid if applicable that are beyond the "usual" NY attractions.
Ta.
OK going at half-term so have pre-booked Broadway show, city passes, Ground Zero and Statue of Liberty.
Some assistance about the subway which we intend to use all the time there is a weekly ticket which is around $27 so can this be used anytime, can you just buy it from a ticket machine or do you need a photo ID card as well ?
You can buy it from the ticket machine, no id needed. It really is incredible value - there are no 'zones', no limits, it's just a straight $30 fro a week's unlimited subway and bus travel, ANYWHERE in NYC.
I'm there for Christmas shopping at the beginning of December so keep the ideas flowing please.
Excellent thanks for that, first thing we will purchase.