Essential New York

Seconded. I love their chicken w/ mole sauce.

Agreed this is the BEST thing to start with. AND it’s FREE!!!

It’s great, it takes about half hour each way. You will not be disapointed.

Also walking over the Brooklyn Bridge is fun. But if you do this, take the EL to the Brooklyn and walk over to Manhattan. There’s nothing on the Brooklyn side, so when you’re done walking you’re like “OK now what.”

Go to the Empire State Building at night. This was so thrilling to see NYC lit up.

Carriage ride in Central Park, bring an apple for the horse.

Finally a great way to see things is the tour bus, the double decker ones. The great things is they have stops along the way. If you like what they are pointing out, you can get off, look around, wait for the next tour bus and get on that and continue your tour.

There is a night tour, a day-downtown tour and a day-north of Times Square tour.

They are all nice but beware the day trip downtown (it’s actually south of Central Park) because you’ll get traffic and it’s just sitting a lot.

The UN is fun to visit too as is the Intrepid and the Guggenheim. NBC has tours at Radio City and that is fun to go see.

Finally if you want to try to get cheap tickets to the Broadway, don’t wait in line in Times Squre, they have a another booth, it used to be at the WTC but now it’s located somewhere around Fulton’s Fish Market.

Sadly, I think the Crif is gone.

I just wanted to reiterate this. If you wanted to live like a real New Yorker you’d work a 12 hour day, spend 45 minutes jammed in a subway car, pick up some takeout on the way home and watch late night TV until you fell asleep in a small apartment with noisy neighbors.

:smiley:

You’re honeymoon is special, many of the touristy things are special.

My biggest advice would be don’t overbook yourself - give yourself time to stay somewhere longer than you planned or just take an extra long lunch or even a nap in the middle of the day.

There is tons of stuff to do on the Brooklyn side of the Bridge (Dumbo)

Brooklyn Bridge Park

St. Ann’s Warehouse (although I that’s being booted over a rezoning issue)
http://www.stannswarehouse.org/

Jacques Torres Chocolate

Bargemusic
http://www.bargemusic.org/

Brooklyn Ice Cream Factory

River Cafe

Galapagos
http://www.galapagosartspace.com/

And much more.

Also, if you hate waiting on lines, which I do, don’t go to the TKTS booths.

Sign up at for free:

The only thing these sites do is send you e-mails for discount codes which you then use for purchasing tickets.

The prices and ticket availability will be be about the same as the TKTS booth and there’s no wasting your time on line.

Be warned, there are some shows that are so popular, you won’t be able to get discounts (Billy Elliot, Jersey Boys for ex.).

Did it close in the last 6 months or something?

Two things:

  1. Where was this thread a week and a half ago?!? Lots of stuff here that I didn’t know about during my first trip. Although I only had two days to get it done.

  2. I will say that taking the Circle Tour cruise around Manhattan (three hours) was very worthwhile for my wife and me. It was basically the first thing we did while in NYC, and in addition to getting a great look at a lot of the big tourist attractions, it really gave us a solid sense of the geography of Manhattan (and of the boroughs as a whole).

Yeah! Or Wollman Rink in Central Park or the little rink at Bryant Park!

And I think NY is generally a lot milder that WI in the winter. Any time of the year is great in NY, so no, you’re not crazy to go then. The weather around here can get quite warm in the winter, actually, and Manhattan is usually slightly warmer than the surrounding areas, too. So make sure to pack layers and stuff so you can adapt.

Heh.

There’s no “El” in NYC, but there is an L-train, which is not elevated in Manhattan. Most subways are above ground somewhere along their route, but not in Manhattan. The only trains that cross the East River via the Manhattan bridge are the B,D, N (and Q I think). All others use tunnels so don’t be disappointed.

Actually the Brooklyn side is near Brooklyn Heights, one of Brooklyn’s nicest neighborhoods, and a short walk* to the Promenade from which a remarkable view of Manhattan can be seen at sunset. The Cosbys lived in Brooklyn Heights - their address 10 Stigwood Ave does not exist, but I believe the exteriors were shot on Pineapple Street.

*New Yorkers walk a lot. “A short walk” being roughly less than 10 blocks/half mile

Now what? You check out the Brooklyn Heights Promenade, then walk across the Fulton Mall (which still has the feel of ungentrified Brooklyn) over to Junior’s on Flatbush Ave. for their famous cheesecake (the unpretentious food ain’t bad either), then take the subway back to Manhattan!

And IMHO, Brooklyn Heights itself is a wonderful place to wander around in for the architecture alone. Of course I’m biased, I lived there for three of the best years of my life and would love to live there again some day.

sob It’s funny 'cause it’s true for so many people.

Subway musicians are hit or miss but there are some very good ones. I wouldn’t go out of my way to find specific ones (it’s not like they have published schedules), but if you’re going to visit Macy’s at 34th St. and Herald Square, the IND station there (where the B/D/F/R/V/N/Q/W trains run) often has not one but TWO reasonably good acts going on around midday. Peruvian pipers, African drummers, breakdancing troupes, etc.

I’m an architecturally oriented person when it comes to getting the feel of a city. I would say a walking tour starting at Washington Square Park in Greenwich Village meandering southwards to SoHo, Chinatown and Little Italy would be very “New York”. Get a map and look it over so you don’t get too lost, but then just… wander around! Lots of little shops and restaurants worth peeking into, if not to enter into. Then eat at any old place in Little Italy or Chinatown. If it’s not too late in the day I’d recommend “Big Wong” Restaurant on Mott St. off of Canal St. Cheap and authentic, I consider it a standard place for “Chinese soul food”.

As long as you’re heading down towards Greenwich Village, check out the Strand bookstore on 12th St. and Broadway. It’s got new and used books in just endless aisles of books on all subjects. Very cool if you’re a bibliophile.

I live in a city in WI, so it’s not like I live in the middle of some frozen prairie. I found the average temperatures are a little over 10 degrees warmer, but I know my luck. My luck says it’ll be 40 below and blizzarding on my wedding and then by the time I finish my honeymoon, that cold front will have moved to New York! I’m so afraid of that. Spring/summer/fall weddings worry about rain; I have to worry about frigid cold and blinding snow…

Make sure you bring waterproof (not only warm) boots. Beneath Manhattan are all manner of forces generating heat - from subways to steam tunnels. So snow usually melts relatively quickly on the ground. Expect slushy puddles if the weather goes above freezing, which it would on the average late Jan. day.

On the other side, the wind can be downright vicious at times.

If I can also expand on this. New Yorkers also spend a large amount of time in bars and restaurants. My friends and I have spent little time in each other’s appartments. Typically we’ll just meet at a mutually convenient bar since there is a) more room and b) it tends to be kept cleaner. There isn’t anything especially cool or trendy about them. They just happen to be the closest bars (and maybe they have Big Buck Hunter).

NYers also spend a lot of time spending $2500 a month in rent, wearing $400 shoes, dropping $100s on food and drink and complaining about how “poor” they are.

Great advice. Waterproof boots/shoes you can walk all day in. I buy a decent pair of Gore-Tex hiking boots every 5-6 years and they’re perfect for city winters. I even use them for hiking once in a while, too! My shoes are waterproof Rockport world traveller or something like that. They keep my feet dry and comfy all year round.

My favorite Chinese place in the city is Grand Sichuan, it’s not in China town. The food tends on the spicy side but it’s oh so good. There are several franchises so finding them shouldn’t be hard.

Ruby Foo’s in Times Square and on the Upper West Side is fun for Dim Sum and crazy martinis. It’s touristy though.

Republic on Union Square is a great noodle shop and has lots of crazy mixed drinks as well, it’s a great place to have dinner then go bar hopping.

I would check out Union Square on weekends. In addition to the Farmer’s Market, you also have an assortment of weirdos and protestors. I’m sure the lineup has changed, but you used to always see the STOP BUSH guys (the S’s replaced by swastikas of course), the FREE PALESTINE guys who would always get into an argument with the same group of Israelis, some Brazilian capoeira guys just breakdance fighting and a few other groups.

In addition to the Ganesvoort, you might want to check out the rooftop bars at 230 Fifthand the Empire Hotel.

Must have. This is secondhand, but a friend of mine was complaining over lunch that it was gone. I haven’t passed it in awhile, myself.

I actually tried to get a job there the summer after I finished my masters. Getting regular work was slow, and I just needed a little cash to tide me over and a little something to do. Sadly, it didn’t work out.

Something I just thought of today–

The subway map is NOT to scale. Manhattan is only 4 miles wide at its widest by 12 miles long at its longest. It appears on the map to be almost equal in size to Queens (and bigger than Staten Island!) which is not true.

So, don’t treat the subway map as if it were a real map. You can see the subway lines laid over an accurate geographic map of NYC here:

Compare to official subway map
http://www.mta.info/nyct/maps/submap.htm

I went to the Zoo! Also a native American theatre where they played huge drums. Very enjoyable performance, but I can’t remember the name of the place - somewhere in Manhattan.