Calling all emoji enthusiasts, users and over-users––it’s that time of year again! World Emoji Day has come and gone—and in it’s wake Apple recently previewed a super-sized selection of what’s to come.

So what can you expect from your iOS device’s emoji options this fall? According to Apple the new emojis will, “Bring even more diversity to the keyboard, alongside fun and exciting additions to popular categories of food, animals, activities and smiley faces.”

With 59 new emojis set to hit iPhones, iPads and iEverythings for the fall 13.0 update, it looks like Apple is seriously focusing on inclusion. The often-used Holding Hands emoji will get an update, allowing users to select from 75 combinations of skin tones and genders.

The new emojis will also include accessibility-themed additions, such as a prosthetic arm, prosthetic leg, a new guide dog, wheelchairs and an ear with a hearing aid.

Other emojis to look forward to this fall include an all-new yawning smiley face, a one-piece swimsuit, waffles, falafel, butter and garlic. And if you’re all about animals, Apple will unveil a new sloth, flamingo, skunk and orangutan.

—Erica Loop

Photos: Courtesy of Apple

 

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Even for the most savvy New York parent, Lincoln Center can be kind of overwhelming. It’s that massive (16 acre), white marble (actually, it’s a limestone known as Travertine) complex on the west side where all types of art — frequently broadcast on PBS — happens. Opera, ballet, film, classical and jazz music concerts, and even swing dancing goes down there, and you’re pretty sure it’s got stuff your kid would like — but how are you supposed to navigate all that culture? The answer: the new and and improved family-friendly program from Lincoln Center, LC Kids.

photo: Lincoln Center

Introducing LC kids

While the name LC Kids is not new — previously, it has operated as a family membership with rates starting at $500 — the offerings, accessibility, and structure of the new Lincoln Center family-friendly program are. The revamped LC Kids includes a new slate of programming for families, a new web site, and more affordable membership rates.

Shows Just for Kids

LC Kids will be kicking off with a boffo Spring Fling celebration on May 9 (more on that later), but the new kids programming has already started rolling out. April brought the one man show “Sleeping Beauty with David Gonzalez” and a Greatest Hits show from musical sketch comedy group the Story Pirates. Upcoming events include a performance by the R&B-influenced musicians from Chad H’Sao Oria,  and a show from storyteller and singer Charlotte Blake Alston.

photo: Lincoln Center

New Membership Levels

The new LC Kids will introduce a new pricing structure for memberships, including a level that’s free. All members will receive a subscription to the monthly LC Kids eNewsletter, invitations to LC Kids events, discounts on Lincoln Center tours and special offers for family-friendly performances in NYC. Benefits of paying memberships, which start at $125, vary, but include priority access to tickets, discounts on shows across campus and access to exclusive kid-friendly events. (For the big bucks, perks include meet and greets with performers, backstage tours, access to last-minute seats and sold out shows, and more.)

photo: Christine and Hagen Graf via Flickr

A New Web Site

The revamped LC Kids will now also have its own dedicated web site at kids.lincolncenter.org, featuring all of the family-friendly programming happening throughout the Lincoln Center campus. This will include not only the newly-developed roster of LC Kids programming, but events, shows and performances from the companies in residence such as The Metropolitan Opera, the New York City Ballet, the New York Philharmonic and Jazz at Lincoln Center. (An example: “Bugs Bunny at the Symphony” with the New York Philharmonic on May 14-16.)

photo: Lincoln Center

The Big Kickoff

LC Kids officially launches on May 9, and Lincoln Center is celebrating with Spring Fling, a free day of performances, crafts and activities across the plazas of Lincoln Center from 11 a.m. -2 p.m. Highlights include a 45-minute singalong with Dan Zanes at the Revson Fountain, instrument tryouts with the New York Philharmonic, a scavenger hunt, and clowns from the Big Apple Circus. Additionally, an interactive Dance-Along Story Time event with Angelina Ballerina and author Katharine Holabird will take place in the David Rubenstein Atrium, and kids will be invited to a dance lesson under the tent in Damrosh Park. A full schedule of events for the day can be found here.

Lincoln Center’s LC Kids
Online: kids.lincolncenter.org

Have you been to Lincoln Center with your kids? What did you see? Tell us in the comments below!

—Mimi O’Connor

 

In a city with the size of ours, and with the brilliant chefs churning out world class eats, there is never a reason to eat sub-standard food.  But often we find ourselves munching sad, sorry slices that masquerade as pizza.  Why?  Kids aren’t always welcome at the fancy places where the wood ovens fire up your orders, and those prices make it less than kid friendly.  Well, it’s time to turn up the quality.  About 800 degrees.  And at this location, there’s room to bring the kids and let them experience pizza as Italy intended. (And room in your wallet to bring the kids, and their friends!) Pie in the Sky, Pie by the Sea.
Anyone who has wrapped around the block in Westwood can attest.  There’s pizza and there’s pizza worth enduring an hour wait in line.  800 Degrees Neapolitan Pizzeria was worthy.  Is worthy.  Continues to be worthy.  But that Westwood line…lines are kid kryptonite.

And So, Santa Monica.
Like you needed an 800th reason to head towards the sea, but this, this merits it.  800 Degrees new outpost at 2nd and Wilshire is a stone’s throw from 3rd Street Promenade plus a whole periscope of family friendly Westside whiles.  Literally, you can be upstairs at Crewcuts not 10 minutes after finishing your last slice.  Shopping to the east, sand and surf a block the other way: Now, smack between the two, 800 Degrees has rounded out the corner at 120 Wilshire.  Location Nirvana.  And wait till you bite into it.

And There’s Free Parking.
Who says there’s no free parking in Santa Monica?  Uh, we would have, until this little unveiling.  It’s unmarked and easy to miss so listen up.  Enter from Wilshire on the alley between 2nd and Ocean, there’s free parking right above the restaurant in the parking structure, 90 minutes free with validation.  All you have to do is eat a little pizza.  Tough call.

Pizza Gets Personal
While the margherita is mozzarella and basil kid bliss, the whole add-on system here is magnificently family friendly.  For a buck you can throw on a protein, a veggie, maybe a fancy cheese.  At under a ten spot you can customize your pie of choice.  And so can they, once they get on board with how good caramelized onions are (we recommend emphasizing the caramel part).

Immediate Gratification Friendly
The concept structure has us convinced that in addition to an undying allegiance to the Old World Naples based tradition; kids and families were also in the forefront here.  No additives, no artificial anything, but an assembly line set-up featuring custom designed ovens (bottom burning at 800 degrees) so that your personal creation is piping hot and ready in under one minute, just giving your time to scout out a table.  This is the well oiled machine that is not only definitive of the 800 Degrees concept, but a set-up that means that line around the block will move quickly, and table availability is guaranteed as your personal pie is pulled from the oven.  Ah, yes.  These are people who understand a child’s tolerance for waiting, and parent’s tolerance for whining.  800 thanks, right there.

Dinner and a Show
Alright, it’s not Les Mis on Broadway, but watching their personal pizza get created start to finish right before their longing eyes?  That’s high quality (free) entertainment.

Right on the money.
Ah, how something this good can still cost $5.85.  Be still the collective beat of burrata loving hearts.  Quality.  How nice to see it buddying up with affordability.

800 Degrees of Inseparation
The paper thin and ever so slightly charred crust is the magical results of those almond wood stone hearth ovens. The fact that pizza made without any fat, sugar, or oil in the dough or the sauce makes you feel good about a piza-for-dinner night on a weekly basis. And you can add this one to the list of restaurants you can take the kids to, but might just as easily return on a date night without them.  The quality is that good and the accessibility puts sacrificing fabulous for family something to wave at in the rear view mirror.  Put those sad cardboard slices to rest, people.  Because the domino effect has shifted about 800 Degrees.

800 Degrees Neapolitan Pizzeria
120 Wilshire Boulevard
Santa Monica, CA 90401
Phone: (310) 566-0801
Online: 800degreespizza.com

Where is your favorite pizza joint – the place where you get the good stuff, when you have the kids with you?

Written and photographed by Jolie Loeb

How do you like your wine? In a glass? By the bottle? What about a keg? Seattle Magazine has the skinny on which local restaurants are pairing up with area wineries to offer eco-friendly, inexpensive, and delicious wine by the carafe. The secret? Casks kept behind the bar. If you like your wine cheap and free flowing, consider one of the listed restaurants for your next Date Night.

You drive into some tiny village, walk into the local brasserie and order the set menu for lunch. A carafe of wine, pumped from a barrel and probably made in the barn of some fellow down the road, is plunked down on your table. Your bill? Around $25 for two.

That’s how Thierry Rautureau remembers doing things in his native France, and that’s the experience he wanted to re-create at Luc, his casual Madison Park eatery. So he turned to his winemaker down the road, Paul Beveridge, owner of Madrona’s Wilridge Winery. “I told Paul I wanted a carafe of wine on every table. Two glasses shouldn’t cost more than $10,” Rautureau says.

His timing was perfect. It was August 2010, the recession still slogging on, and Beveridge was working on a cheaper, greener and more efficient packaging concept he says no one in the state of Washington had done before (legally), though it was already becoming popular in New York and the Bay Area. “People were still drinking wine,” says Beveridge. “They were drinking more than ever. They just didn’t want to pay as much.”

Beveridge, who normally sells bottles for between $16 and $29, began eschewing traditional wine bottles and corks for 20-liter pony-size stainless steel kegs that restaurants could keep tapped behind the bar. When poured from the taps at Luc, his Wilridge Maison blends, a red and white that he says are comparable in quality to his pricier wines, cost $10 for a 10-ounce half-carafe. Winery customers can also buy the kegs ($260 for about 26 bottles) and refillable 1.5-liter magnum bottles ($20, plus a $8 bottle fee; also available at area Whole Foods).

Though the concept isn’t new, modern technology makes serving wines on tap a game changer. The winery’s packaging and shipping costs are drastically reduced, as is the carbon footprint. Inert gas in the kegs keeps the wine fresh for six months or longer, so bars and restaurants never have to pour wine down the drain. Bar owners are thrilled to pass the savings on to their customers. “I wouldn’t normally open up an $80 bottle and offer it by the glass,” says Henri Schock, owner of Bottlehouse in Madrona. But having three wines on tap enables him to offer glass pours of that caliber.

Other Northwest wineries have jumped in, including Woodinville’s Hestia Cellars, Syncline in the Columbia Valley, Lake Chelan Winery and Oregon’s A to Z Wineworks. The list of restaurants serving tap wine is growing, too; Bottlehouse (Madrona), Black Bottle (Downtown/Bellevue) and Locöl Barley and Vine (West Seattle), to name just a few. At Skillet Diner on Capitol Hill, Proletariat’s keg wine (served in a Mason jar) is the only option.

Darin Williams of Woodinville-based wine distributor Small Lot has been signing on two to three new keg wine clients a week since March, when his company started its own Walla Walla winery, Proletariat—a name that honors the accessibility of keg wine. “Wine should be for the people, not just the rich,” says Williams. He has brought in Sean Boyd, winemaker of Rotie Cellars in Walla Walla, to craft the Proletariat blends: four reds and four whites, all sourced from Washington grape growers. At Locöl, Proletariat and another tap wine, La Botte Piccola, have been so popular that the bar is going through two kegs a week—the equivalent of about 160 glasses, says Locöl’s Allison Workman. “Customers love it,” she says. “It’s greener, and the wine is really good.”

Woodinville’s La Botte Piccola Wine Company is now working with winemakers from J & S Crush and Edmonds Winery to distribute its own custom wines under the Piccola Cellars label. It’s also planning to allow customers to buy pony-size kegs from Locöl Barley and Vine (kegged wine can last for months at home, as long as it’s kept under pressure). At Piccola’s new Woodinville tasting room, the 1- or 1.5-liter bottles offered are refillable. “Unless it’s a wine that you want to mature for a while, the bottle just isn’t necessary,” says Diana Kaspic, owner of La Botte Piccola. And kegs, she says, are just the beginning. Her next project: refillable leather wineskin bags you can take camping.

If you’re asking yourself, where can I score some of these local tap wines, then be sure to read the full article.

This is our weekly guest post from our friends at Seattle Magazine, which keeps readers on the pulse of restaurants, personalities, arts, entertainment and culture that reflect the tapestry of our dynamic landscape. We’ve teamed up for an exciting partnership to bring you a weekly dose of fantastic Date Night ideas throughout greater Seattle.