
The Quarantine Diary: Hudson County
This is the scene is a couple of places in Hudson County. Though outdoor dining is open and indoor dining just passed, it’s no doubt that life in Hudson County — and around the world — is now different.

This is the scene is a couple of places in Hudson County. Though outdoor dining is open and indoor dining just passed, it’s no doubt that life in Hudson County — and around the world — is now different.

This part is written by co-founder Adrienne J. Romero. “He’s not going to make it.” That’s a phrase you never want to hear, but it’s one that thousands of people have heard since March, the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. But now, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced the reopening

“(Because of basketball and hip-hop) it’s not really hard to influence Filipinos in like streetwear/hypebeast culture,” Macatangay laughed.

We weren’t always allowed to go outside, or at least, it was advised to do otherwise. Here’s a look back at the emptier and quieter streets in the West Side section of Jersey City in May.

22-year-old Justin Holness grew up like other Black children, he said. He was warned about how to act if ever pulled over by police as well as in general. He says the movement is dying down, but he’s seen the impact it’s already had.

Disclaimer: Adrienne is a Filipino-American. PHILIPPINES — In Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith, character Padme Amidala — a senator and mother of Luke Skywalker and Leia Organa — once said “So this is how liberty dies… with thunderous applause.” But, in the Philippines, it died in a quiet courtroom

July 7 — that’s New Jersey’s Primary Election Day, which will help determine who moves on to the General Election in November. One person asked Slice of Culture to show what candidates Hudson County — and New Jersey — will be seeing on their ballots. Here’s the first part of New

Black Lives Matter. Bayonne, NJ. 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Another Hudson County protest drew hundreds to Stephen R. Gregg Park in Bayonne on Sunday. The crowd marched with signs and chanted down the road in the park to the park’s steps. Here, protesters kneeled for 8 minutes and

JERSEY CITY — When Bri’Che Lynn saw the video of the killing of George Floyd, she cried. But on Monday, she wiped her tears and instead walked in solidarity with her people, she said. Lynn was one of the hundreds who protested the death of Floyd in Jersey City Monday

Black Lives Matter. Jersey City, New Jersey. 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. On Monday, June 1, hundreds of protestors came out to Berry Lane Park in solidarity with the Minneapolis, Minnesota protestors following the death of George Floyd. Adrienne J. Romero went to
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