You'd be mad too if someone threw you into the Gowanus.
A stretch of Seventh Street was officially named "Joe and Flo Leopoldi Way" over the weekend to honor the longtime hardware store owners.
A new "Not Just Chocolate" shop on Fifth Avenue won't just make normal chocolate bars, but squirrels, golden wrenches and postcards too.
R.L. Stine will be one of several writers to share their creepiest stories in a darkly-lit puppet workshop the weekend before Halloween.
A "Drag Performance Workshop" is one of three BK Arts Exchange classes where kids and adults explore complex topics, like gender identity.
Spoke the Hub Dancing and Koko NYC are teaming up to build a studio in their Gowanus Arts Annex, but need donations to make it happen.
From familiar subway performers, to a new "Wicked Witch of the Upper East Side"— here's a sneak peek at the historic beauty pageant revival.
The theater will celebrate the prolific horror actor with a themed four-course meal, movie screening and conversation with his daughter.
It's the fall feast, haunted stroll and apple butter-making time of year in Brooklyn's backyard. Take a look at the next few month's events.
Somebody put up a microphone, balloons and an "I'm dropping out" sign in front of the mayor's favorite gym on Thursday.
A "Secret Brooklyn" tour this month will let 20 New Yorkers explore a shooting range and a hidden veteran's museum in the Park Slope Armory.
Brooklyn's first openly gay district leader, who lived in Park Slope, died on Tuesday after a five-year cancer battle.
Union-backing members will petition Friday since the coop refused to sign a neutrality agreement even after they settled a labor board case.
A rescued Pekin duck couldn't see food in front of her bill a month ago, but after surgery in Park Slope she's back to her mischevous self.
Dogs will strut their stuff at this weekend's Fifth Avenue summer stroll, complete with a night of 80s music, a bouncy house and games.
The neighborhood ranked second leafiest in Brooklyn and third leafiest across the city in a new study on the number of street trees.
The ducklings fell into the drain after being spooked by a dog.
A stretch of 7th Street will be named "Joe and Flo Leopoldi Way" to honor the family that has owned the Fifth Ave. store for 50 years.
At another tense meeting about the projects, residents were split about supporting or opposing two new homeless shelters on Fourth Avenue.
A would-be bomber called the wrong YMCA Wednesday and threatened to blow it up because the mayor works out there and "likes black people."
Groups opposing and supporting the Fourth Ave shelters will make their voices heard at a Tuesday forum, where the public can ask questions.
The red chalk will show up on neighborhood sidewalks over the next month as part of an exhibit about federal redlining maps from the 1930s.
Park Slope and Gowanus rounded out a list of the top 10 "summertime fun" spots in the city based on outdoor eateries, parks and bikes.
Parts of Fifth Avenue will close to cars for three weekends in August. Here's what summer activities will replace the traffic.
A weekend tournament and Park Slope filmmaker's movie will bring back the days when street-style baseball was "a way of life" in Brooklyn.
A movie night featuring local Brooklyn filmmakers and a "silent disco" party will take over the turf at the Old Stone House.
The Prospect Park YMCA was still closed Monday after chemicals got in its drinking water early last week.
Callum McGeory will bring his culinary skills to the kids' version of the Food Network series.
Prospect Park YMCA closed Monday after its water supply was contaminated by the toxic chemical propylene glycol.
The clothing and toy store will close at the end of the month, partly because of high rent prices, and will instead open a new brand online.
The popular Park Slope-based children's book character became a permanent resident of the library's reading garden Thursday.
Author, illustrator and former Park Sloper Mo Willems will be there to unveil the picture book character and read the story to children.
Hundreds of supporters have signed a petition asking for a "neutrality agreement" from managers about an effort to unionize the employees.
"Without the petition, the idea that Park Slope hates homeless people would continue to be a headline," its author said.
More than a dozen streets in the neighborhood are in the running for the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens greenest block contest this year.
Park Slope, Carroll Gardens and Red Hook had the lowest percentage of residents living in poverty in the borough, a city report shows.
Workers claim they were disciplined for trying to join a union, but others say the majority of employees at the coop don't want to organize.
Neighbors of two city shelters planned for Fourth Avenue have started a petition and an activist group to seek answers about the plans.
The green space at Fifth Ave and President St is struggling to raise money to fix a broken gate that will cost 10 times its usual budget.
The Brooklyn Heights studio Heatwise is opening its second location on 9th Street in June.