I know the NYCC socials encourage getting will call tickets before Thursday but I can't drive all the way to New York just to do that. If I get in the Will Call line on Thursday at like 8:30, how long am I waiting? Like 30 minutes? 2 hours? More? I have no clue.

As Sandy Schlossberg points out below, I encourage my online students to start with a spiral. It teaches the various steps of the fabric collage process, while keeping the subject simple enough to ensure success in learning the basics.


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Due to this fire having trains on their own dedicated platform seemed like an almost natural way to operate 7th Street Metro Center; no one uses this station for transfers to Blue or Expo lines anyway, Pico station is much more suitable for that. No more boarding the wrong train, no more crowding of the platform. Delays for one line do not affect the other line. The tail track can still be used for both lines.

Breaking Update: Senator Tammy Baldwin will join UAW Local 75 workers on the UAW Stand Up Strike picket line at 3280 S. Clement Ave, Milwaukee this Thursday, October 12 at 11:30 am. Click here for additional details and join Senator Baldwin and UAW Local 75 workers on the picket line.

Support Wisconsin UAW Families. Our brothers and sisters of UAW Local 722 who work at the GM parts distribution facility in Hudson and our brothers and sisters of UAW Local 75 who work at the Stellantis Mopar parts center in Bay View, Milwaukee have now been on strike for over two weeks. Join them on the picket line in solidarity.

More than a dozen community organizations demonstrated outside a committee meeting in May, asking leaders to adopt recommendations in a report that outlined ways to avoid displacing immigrant communities and communities of color along the extended route. The Blue Line Extension advisory committee voted in favor of the report at a June meeting.

The meeting will take place Nov. 21, at 7 p.m., at the North Berkeley Senior Center at 1901 Hearst Ave. Information about the project can be found online. Community members can submit written comments to Tammy Kyllo, administrative coordinator for AC Transit, 1600 Franklin St., Oakland, Calif., 94612, or by email to planning@actransit.org. The planning department can be reached by phone at 510-891-4755.

The one-hour hearing begins at 2:30 p.m. and will take place in downtown Reno in Department Four of the Washoe County Courthouse before District Judge Connie Steinheimer. The session is in person only for those who want to attend. There is no online viewing.

Dutch Dance Performances: 12:00pm



White Glove Inspection and Community Street Scrubbing: 2:00pm

Beginning at 8th Street & Columbia Ave., continuing on 8th Street to Kollen Park

The public is invited to take part in this grand tradition. They will don their Dutch costumes, grab a bucket and a broom, and scrub the streets clean for the coming performances. Town officials will walk through with their ceremonial white glove inspection to approve the streets for the parade and when the town crier officially announces the official's approval, the parade will start.


STREET SCRUBBERS: Please bring your own brooms and buckets. Scrubbing starts at 2:00 pm at the corner of 8th Street and Columbia Ave. Participants are encouraged to show up at 1:15 to line up. Scrubbers are asked to gather in the pocket park on the northeast corner of 8th Street and Columbia Ave.


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In popular culture, the phrase is most strongly associated with the network's entire Thursday night lineup, including both sitcoms and dramas, which dominated the ratings from the 1980s through the late 1990s.

By 1979, NBC had fallen to third place in the Nielsen ratings. Network executive Fred Silverman, who previously led ABC and CBS to the top of the ratings, joined the network a year earlier, however, he could not bring the same ratings success he had as programming whiz at the latter two networks, resulting in a string of new programs that were derided by critics and eventually being canceled after a few showings. The 1980-81 television season was the low point for NBC; as the network had only three shows in the Nielsen top 20 (one of them, Diff'rent Strokes, would enter NBC's Thursday night lineup for the 1981-82 season). Silverman would leave NBC in the summer of 1981; and was replaced by Brandon Tartikoff. Starting with the 1981-82 season, situation comedies would enter NBC's Thursday programming, such as Diff'rent Strokes, Harper Valley, and newcomers Gimme a Break! and Lewis & Clark (the latter was canceled after one season).

Branding the quality Thursday night lineup began during the 1982-83 season, which NBC promoted Fame, Hill Street Blues, Taxi (after being canceled by ABC after its fourth season) and new arrival Cheers, as "America's Best Night of Television on Television". When the season ended, Fame and Taxi were canceled, with the former being later revived in first-run syndication. However, though Cheers disappointed on ratings during its first season (74th out of 77 shows in that year's ratings), it was critically acclaimed, mostly due to its early success at the Primetime Emmy Awards, and Tartikoff decided to renew the show for a second season, which would premiere during the 1983-84 season, which saw none of its nine fall shows being renewed for a second season (one of them, the short-lived sitcom We Got It Made, premiered on Thursdays during most of its first season until January 1984, and later was revived for syndication). NBC decided to move both Family Ties and Buffalo Bill from Wednesdays to Thursdays during the winter of 1984, joining Cheers, Hill Street Blues and Gimme a Break!, with newcomer Night Court joining the lineup during the summer.

What marked the beginning of NBC's dominance on Thursday nights was during the 1984-85 season, when the network premiered a new show to lead that evening: The Cosby Show, receiving critical acclaim, with TV Guide listing the series as "TV's biggest hit in the 1980s", adding it "almost single-handedly revived the sitcom genre and NBC's ratings fortunes".[3] The enormous success of Cosby (which became the third-most watched show of the season in the US) also helped the other shows on its Thursday night lineup increase its ratings dramatically, with Family Ties entering the top-ten for the first time; and Cheers and Night Court both entering the top-twenty; while Hill Street Blues remained steadily on the top-thirty. When Cosby debuted, it marked a major turning point for NBC as well, as the network rose to second place at the end of the season; and reached first place at the end of the 1985-86 season, with Cosby being the number-one show in the United States, which it managed to stay on that position for four more seasons until 1990.

On November 3, 1994, NBC's Thursday night lineup featured the "Blackout Thursday" programming stunt, in which three of the four sitcoms on that night's "Must See TV" schedule incorporated a storyline involving a power outage in New York City.[6] The stunt started with Mad About You episode "Pandora's Box", in which Jamie Buchman (Helen Hunt) accidentally causes the blackout while trying to steal cable; it continued with the Friends episode "The One with the Blackout", featuring a sub-plot in which Chandler Bing (Matthew Perry) is trapped in an ATM vestibule with Victoria's Secret model Jill Goodacre and ended with the Madman of the People episode "Birthday in the Big House" (the Seinfeld episode that followed Friends and preceded Madman, "The Gymnast", did not have a blackout storyline though was promoted as part of the event).

As the lineup includes flagship hits such as Friends and ER, NBC dominated once again Thursday nights for the rest of the 1990s decade, with other shows joining and becoming hits for the network, such as Will & Grace, Caroline in the City, Suddenly Susan, Veronica's Closet and The Single Guy. The series finale of Seinfeld, "The Finale", became the fourth-most watched overall series finale in the US after M*A*S*H, Cheers and The Fugitive,[7] with its ninth and final season reaching the top of the Nielsen ratings, becoming only the third show finishing its runs at the top of the ratings, following I Love Lucy and The Andy Griffith Show.[8] Consequently, Friends emerged as NBC's biggest television show after the 1998 Seinfeld final broadcast.

The expansion began during the 1994-95 season, when NBC added a second night comedy block: "Must See TV Tuesday", with Frasier and Wings moving to that night and being joined by The John Larroquette Show and the short-lived sitcom The Martin Short Show (which was replaced by freshman hit NewsRadio). The "Must See TV Tuesday" was created to compete with ABC's powerhouse Tuesday lineup, which includes flagship hits such as Home Improvement, Full House and Grace Under Fire.

However, though it received heavy promotion by the network, all three nights did not replicate the enormous success of "Must See TV Thursday", as during the 1996-97 season, the Sunday night two-hour comedy was shortened to one hour, to gave priority to Dateline NBC (3rd Rock was also moved from its original Tuesday night to Sundays), while Mad About You and Caroline in the City moved to Tuesdays. The trend would continue until the 1998-99 season, when the Sunday comedy night was officially dropped out, being replaced by two hours of Dateline, followed by the NBC Sunday Night Movie. Frasier returned to Thursday nights after Seinfeld ended its run, taking its 9:00 PM timeslot (eventually it was moved back to Tuesdays starting with the 2000-01 season until the show ended in 2004). 006ab0faaa

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