So, we stopped in Dallas on our road trip back to Louisville (after my fun life or death two-month-long hospital adventure in California), where we usually stay when we actually stay somewhere. 🚗 💨 Besides taking the southern route back because winter 🥶 two of our Texas homies came up north from other cities to hang out for a couple days and share mad hugs. 🤗 And beer. 🍻 I love you to death, Moses and Danny. Anywho, I absolutely wanted to check out Manhattan Project, so we ubered through the shitty Dallas traffic to finally arrive and get to work on their beer menu. Literally everything here is insanely crushable, from light bois to triples. My body and brain were on high enjoyment alert between the experience of being here and the experience of having two of my most amazing friends next to me. Especially after that aforementioned deathly bullshit. 🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳 What a fucking treat. Love you all. Including you, delicious and tasty Manhattan Project. Smooch! 😘 - Ryan---------------------------------------Brewery: Manhattan ProjectFrom: Dallas, TX 🇺🇸
Fact or fiction? Denmark’s Carlsberg Brewery gifted Nobel Prize winner Niels Bohr an entire house, complete with a pipeline providing fresh beer for life.
Sato, Susumu Japanese/ American 1951 - 2021 Spoon Full of Cherry C print image 18 x 14 in.plus margins sheet 20 x 16 in. Signed and dated 1989 Framed Susumu Sato’s photography has spanned for more than 2 decades in Manhattan. From his early street photography, in the tradition of great American and European master photographers, through editorial work including covers for New York Times Magazine, Self and Money. This also included still-life advertising projects, and personal projects blending technical skill with his eye for portraiture. Known professionally as Sato, the photographer grew up in Japan and graduated from the Tokyo College of Photography in 1973. He moved to Manhattan that year, and soon began photographing the street life of the city, in the tradition of his heroes – documentary photographers Lee Friedlander, Gary Winogrand, and most importantly Cartier–Bresson. Susumu Sato enjoyed a distinguished career spanning three decades in Manhattan, New York City, where his commercial work for such companies as Rolling Rock Beer, Pepsi Cola, Movado and other high profile accounts earned him numerous awards including a Gold Medal, Addy, Clio and The Award of Excellence in Photography from the United Nations. He also photographed covers for New York Times Magazine, Self, Money Magazine to mention a few. less
Niels Bohr got a Nobel Prize and free beer for life. Click to read the full fact.
The globe-trotting chef’s CNN series Parts Unknown returns on September 28; here, he talks about his favorite destinations, memorable food experiences, and more.