This year's parade will feature 16 giant balloons, 28 floats, 40 novelty inflatables, 12 marching bands, 700 clowns, and, of course, Santa.
Trick-or-treaters rejoice, drivers beware. Open Streets will extend to nearly 100 city streets Monday afternoon.
“Quite often you just have an invisible roommate," Paranormal investigator Vinny Carbone tells Patch. "You have to learn to live with it.”
That’s not quite a done deal yet, but it would be a welcome change for families whose kids were marked absent from school to celebrate.
This holiday season, see your kids' faces light up with over 360 lanterns and immersive light shows at the Bronx Zoo's Holiday Lights.
Fall foliage will be in peak condition across parts of our area.
Mark your calendars, sleepyheads — you'll get an extra hour of slumber Nov. 6.
Here are a few festivals and events in New York City worth putting on the calendar.
Carve out some extra space in your wallet this Halloween.
The mayor has vowed many times to Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain families that kids would get a day off from school to observe.
For 6 years, Stella Herold and her family have been flying in from Arizona for the event, carrying the names and photos of those they lost.
Somber memorials are taking place at the World Trade Center, in Washington D.C., and Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
As New Yorkers grab their last bit of summer fun, don't expect to find an open post office.
J'ouvert will return after a two-year hiatus, beaches beckon and more is happening across the city this Labor Day.
The bike portion of the event was shortened to 12.4 miles, down from 24.8. The run portion was shortened to 2.5 miles, instead of 6.2.
“They don’t know where the noise is coming from," said an American Kennel Club exec. "They try to escape because they don’t understand."
The fireworks will launch from five barges in the East River around 9:25 p.m. Monday.
The march starts at noon at 25th Street and Fifth Avenue, then passes the historic Stonewall Inn and ends in Chelsea.
New York is celebrating Juneteenth with a day of concerts, festivals and workshops. The first started at 8 a.m.
Skip the fishing gear and dad joke mugs. Treat him to smokey cocktails and gumbo instead.
Don't let the light pollution get you down — you too, New Yorker, can star gaze. (And we don't mean staring down celebrities in the subway.)
Mayor Eric Adams promised to find a "creative" solution with the parks department: "We have to have young people learn how to swim."
Rain or shine, organizers expect 1.5 million spectators to line Fifth Avenue, CBS2's Christina Fan reported.
Brave New Yorkers planning to hit the beaches may have to jump some hurdles and duck some rain. Also, beware the rip tide.
Here's what's open and closed in New York City as the nation honors its military heroes and welcomes the unofficial start of summer.
Do you need an excuse to guzzle margaritas? Thought not.
Because a card just isn't gonna cut it. But a sauna hat might!
Get ready to dance, listen to live music performances, take in art — and more — as the city's Open Streets season officially kicks off.
New Yorkers lucky enough to have Good Friday off won’t find much closed.
"Perhaps," one Twitter user suggested, "he is starting too many days with more than one."
Your semi-annual tradition of forgetting how to set your microwave's clock returns.
Get ready for balmy spring and hot summer, New Yorkers — if the almanac can be believed.
Like it or not, daylight saving time is almost here.
There are plenty of ways to celebrate, with several events planned in New York City.
Nearly 40 Bronx Center Residents Attend Holy Night Service & Celebration
New Yorkers can honor the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. by turning the holiday into a day of service. Here's what you can do.
The New Year's Eve festivities will be livestreamed and broadcast on several TV networks.
See the images that defined life in New York City in 2021.
How the 2021 Holiday Season Bounced Back From 2020
“The health and safety of all participants in the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show are paramount," the board said.