The holidays in New York City are synonymous with extravagant window displays along the city's avenues. Cheryl McGinnis, Cheddar's Senior Art Correspondent, explains the significance of the one-of-a-kind window piece on display at the Prow Art Space in the Flatiron Building.
Prow and Sprint partnered with students at FIT to create the window display. McGinnis says it represents the beauty and welcoming nature of the holidays.
McGinnis also discusses the history of window displays in New York City. She says that they're meant to create an aura of wonder even for people who may not be able to buy the products inside the store.
Carlo and Baker discuss what is happening in Texas, where 3 million people are going on two days without any power or heat. Also, Biden ups the ante on vaccines, Bitcoin is going crazy and Chinese consumers are going back to the movies.
This platform has you covered with content on four important areas of personal wellness: physical activity, nutrition, sleep and mindfulness.
Cheddar explains why American homes are so flimsy - and the history that made them this way.
A winter storm that left millions without power in record-breaking cold weather has claimed more lives.
The weather is miserable pretty much everywhere. Here's the latest on the deep freeze that took out Texas' power grid, the continuing case for COVID optimism, and more.
From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, these are the top stories that moved markets and had investors, business leaders, and entrepreneurs talking this week on Cheddar.
Kevin Cohee, CEO of the largest Black-owned bank in the U.S. OneUnited, talked to Cheddar about its #OneTransaction campaign to help Black Americans build net worth to close the wealth gap.
Amazon is facing the biggest unionization push in its history. And it’s happening in the unlikeliest of places: Alabama, a state with laws that don’t favor unions.
Jill is joined by Baker Machado to talk about Dr. Fauci's new prediction for when most Americans should be able to get the COVID vaccine. Plus, it's the defense's turn in the impeachment trial, Bumble goes public, and Taylor Swift rerecords her music. So, how does it sound? Baker's got the scoop.
Bumble, known for letting female users make the first move, opened on the Nasdaq at $76 per share on Thursday afternoon.
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