Also, I'm trying to schedule this all for this upcoming Friday since the game studio I work for has a deadline conveniently placed on Valentine's Day. Ugh... Not sure if that makes a difference.
NYC Valentine's day help
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Phyre
United States1288 Posts
Also, I'm trying to schedule this all for this upcoming Friday since the game studio I work for has a deadline conveniently placed on Valentine's Day. Ugh... Not sure if that makes a difference. | ||
Sayle
United Kingdom3685 Posts
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Phyre
United States1288 Posts
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QuanticHawk
United States32024 Posts
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Catch]22
Sweden2683 Posts
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Michaelj
United States186 Posts
Speaking of Sushi... is there a reason you are going to brooklyn? There are some pretty awesome sushi places in midtown (the only good kind of food in the area). Here are some places I've been to that are all super authentic and good. The rolls are probably not the forte at most of these places... probably Hatsuhana and Nippon are probably your best options if you are looking for a nice date place with good alternatives to Sushi (Nippon claims to grow, thresh, and hand-make their own buckwheat soba noodles). The other restaurants are just my contribution to people who love sushi in New York (not rolls, but quality fish). Hatsuhana: Great service, surprisingly affordable (probably about $20 to $30 of sushi per person). Large enough with a bit of a fancy vibe. Sasabune: Upper east side Omakase-only (Chef's choice). Super-pricey at $100+ per person, but they give you amazing food (Abalone, Toro, Clam, etc etc). Alcohol is affordable here. No real atmosphere, but probably the best sushi I've had. Sushi You: $35 omakase in a fun atmosphere, a bit crowded and lively Inase: Nice homely place that is family run. Their Chirashi lunch special is a great deal. Nippon: Servers in tuxes and kimonos, but the atmosphere is not pretentious. I often see diplomat-types go there. Solid, if a little pricey, food | ||
MoreFaSho
United States1427 Posts
P.S. Make sure your tickets don't have an obscured view, but if they did they would probably tell you when you were trying to buy them. | ||
QuanticHawk
United States32024 Posts
On February 10 2011 00:03 MoreFaSho wrote: P.S. Make sure your tickets don't have an obscured view, but if they did they would probably tell you when you were trying to buy them. oh jesus, I clunked down like nearly $200 a pop for tickets to Rain a few weeks ago and if my view is anything but fucking perfect I will kill someone. Also, broadway online has like $30 fees per ticket, if knowing that before hand at all helps quell the rage you'll get when you see that... | ||
MoreFaSho
United States1427 Posts
On February 10 2011 00:10 Hawk wrote: oh jesus, I clunked down like nearly $200 a pop for tickets to Rain a few weeks ago and if my view is anything but fucking perfect I will kill someone. Also, broadway online has like $30 fees per ticket, if knowing that before hand at all helps quell the rage you'll get when you see that... No way tickets that expensive have obstructed views, they always charge a decent amount less for them. Sometimes if you're tall they're actually good seats (your eye level is way over the rail and they're like front-row balcony). | ||
Phyre
United States1288 Posts
On February 09 2011 23:44 Michaelj wrote: Man tickets for Wicked are expensive, that's a nice gift you are getting her. Speaking of Sushi... is there a reason you are going to brooklyn? There are some pretty awesome sushi places in midtown (the only good kind of food in the area). Here are some places I've been to that are all super authentic and good. The rolls are probably not the forte at most of these places... probably Hatsuhana and Nippon are probably your best options if you are looking for a nice date place with good alternatives to Sushi (Nippon claims to grow, thresh, and hand-make their own buckwheat soba noodles). The other restaurants are just my contribution to people who love sushi in New York (not rolls, but quality fish). Hatsuhana: Great service, surprisingly affordable (probably about $20 to $30 of sushi per person). Large enough with a bit of a fancy vibe. Sasabune: Upper east side Omakase-only (Chef's choice). Super-pricey at $100+ per person, but they give you amazing food (Abalone, Toro, Clam, etc etc). Alcohol is affordable here. No real atmosphere, but probably the best sushi I've had. Sushi You: $35 omakase in a fun atmosphere, a bit crowded and lively Inase: Nice homely place that is family run. Their Chirashi lunch special is a great deal. Nippon: Servers in tuxes and kimonos, but the atmosphere is not pretentious. I often see diplomat-types go there. Solid, if a little pricey, food I'll definitely look into those places! I found that Ki Sushi place through Yelp, when I sorted by highest rating within a certain price range. Thanks for the tips! Thanks everyone else for the advice as well. I just put in the order for tickets, I hope she likes it. I also hope she hasn't seen it yet, 99% sure but it's possible she could have seen it with friends or something. | ||
Phyre
United States1288 Posts
They all have good ratings on yelp so that doesn't help XD. | ||
Phyre
United States1288 Posts
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Phyre
United States1288 Posts
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Bereft
United States1007 Posts
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