From Broadway to Brooklyn: 44 Interesting Details About NYC

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1Howard Stern

Howard Stern

Howard Stern ran for Governor of New York in 1994 promising to limit road work to night hours. He eventually withdrew, but later that year, The Howard Stern Bill was signed into law which limited road construction in New York City and Long Island to night hours.


2. There’s a man named Raffi Stepanian in New York City who mines sidewalk cracks for gold. He can make over $600 a week.


3. New York City's sewer system experienced a 6.7 million gallon hike after people saw the series finale of *M-A-S-H*. It's estimated one million citizens held it in till the ending.


4. There is an abandoned subway station under City Hall in New York that no train stops at but you can see it in passing if you take the number 6 train.


5. There is a New York City hot dog vendor who pays $289,000/year for his location.


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6New York City

New York City

There were no reports of violent crime in all of New York City on November 26, 2012. This is the first time this was known to have happened.


7. New York City plans to turn all of its old phone booths into wifi hotspots.


8. During the 1977 New York blackout, a number of looters stole DJ equipment from electronics stores and as a result, the hip-hop genre, barely known outside of the Bronx at the time, grew at an astounding rate from 1977 onward.


9. Henryk Siwiak was fatally shot on 9/11 and because the deaths from the terror attacks are not included in the city's official crime statistics, Siwiak's death is the only homicide recorded in New York City on that date.


10. After the Empire State Building opened in New York City in 1931, much of its office space went unrented. It was nicknamed the "Empty State Building" by New Yorkers and didn't become profitable until 1950.


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11Nate Hill

Nate Hill

In 2012, an artist named Nate Hill dressed up as the Hamburglar and biked around New York City throwing partially-eaten McDonald’s cheeseburgers at bystanders. The artist said he wanted it to be “one of those little things that messes up your whole day.”


12. There is a 550-foot skyscraper (33 Thomas Street) in New York City with no windows. It was built to withstand the fallout of a nuclear blast for up to 2 weeks.


13. Chinese mathematician Yitang Zhang could not get an academic job upon graduating, having to work as an accountant and a delivery worker for a New York City restaurant. He later went on to solve a math problem that had been unsolved for 150 years and won a MacArthur Genius Grant.


14. The famous New York City tourist attraction, Wall Street's Charging Bull, cost $360,000 to build, was placed illegally in the middle of the night in 1989 after a stock market crash, was impounded, only to be returned to the streets due to public outcry.


15. The population density of Manhattan is much lower today than it was 100 years ago, and total population has fallen by about 25%.


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16Walton High School

Walton High School

7 schools (Walton High School) in New York City look exactly the same, apparently because they only had money for 1 set of blueprints.


17. On 9/11, when all transport out of the city was shut down, citizen boat owners managed to transport over 500,000 people from Manhattan Island in an amazing act known as the "9/11 Boatlift".


18. Decommissioned New York City Subway cars are dumped into the ocean to provide homes for sea creatures.


19. If the Native Americans really did sell Manhattan to the European for $16 in the 1600s and had invested that $16 at annual interest rates of 8%, today that $16 would be worth enough for them to buy back all of Manhattan and still have $222 Trillion dollars left over.


20. In 2012, a man named David Villalobos intentionally jumped off of the monorail at the Bronx Zoo into the tiger exhibit, to be 'one with the tiger'. He survived, and when the police asked him why he did it he replied: "everyone in life makes choices".


21Bayezid Osman

Bayezid Osman

The current heir to the former Ottoman Empire, Bayezid Osman, is a US citizen, World War 2 Veteran, and lives in New York City where he worked as a librarian before retiring.


22. In 1906, the Bronx Zoo featured a caged African Man (Ota Benga) as an exhibit.


23. If you die homeless or with no money in New York City, you are buried by prisoners on Hart Island in a mass grave, up to 1000 per grave for children and 50 for adults, with the exception of Special Baby number 1, the first baby to die of AIDS.


24. If Texas had the same population density as New York City, all of the world's 7.4 billion people would fit inside the state's borders.


25. New York City is one of four major cities in the United States whose drinking water is pure enough not to require purification by water treatment plants. The city is supplied with drinking water by the protected Catskill Mountains watershed.

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