Rechercher dans ce blog

Sunday, May 16, 2021

America is Reopening. Here's What it Looks Like - The New York Times

adanyabegini.blogspot.com
Arthur, N.D.
Burbank, Calif.
Chicago
Columbus, Ohio
Knoxville, Tenn.
New York
Waterford, Miss.
Rigby, Idaho
Ronan, Mont.
El Paso

Scenes From America’s Reopening

Scenes From America’s Reopening

With climbing vaccinations and dwindling virus cases, Americans from Honolulu to Sumter, S.C., have begun to return to the things they did before — the nights out, religious services and annual traditions that made life richer. But after a year of isolation, it has all been a bit uncertain, both familiar and not quite.

“Even doing normal isn’t normal,” said Amy Holson-Schwartz, 37, who took her family to an annual sheepshearing event on a farm in Vermont that was canceled last year because of the coronavirus pandemic. She said it was odd to see other children’s uncovered faces in public and watched as her 18-month-old daughter, whose 10-word lexicon includes “mask,” gawked at other babies.

“She’s had no interaction with other kids,” Ms. Holson-Schwartz said.

Photographers for The Times documented Americans re-emerging in all 50 states in recent weeks. The approach to reopening has been much like the nation’s patchwork response to the virus: conflicting guidance, competing narratives and Americans left to gauge their own comfort levels.

Ashlee Wolsky, 23 and fully vaccinated, felt comfortable attending the reopening of Arthur’s Barn in Arthur, N.D., where revelers flipped one another over on the crowded floor of the honky-tonk. The old routine of dressing up to go out on a Friday night felt newly charged. “It had a different level of excitement that I haven’t felt before,” she said.

She delighted in seeing an older couple she recognized, dancing. “You don’t know anything about them, but it’s a familiar face in the barn,” she said. “It’s a touch of normal.”

— Aidan Gardiner

Taking the Stage

<strong> McClurg, Mo.</strong>
Terra Fondriest for The New York Times

Like so many other performers, musicians who played in the McClurg jam moved their mountain music sessions outdoors. In November, cold weather and safety concerns halted the weekly jams that have been going for decades, but a warm spring brought the music back.

“There’s a lot of good musicians in these hills if you can just get ’em out,” said Alvie Dooms, far left.

September Dawn Bottoms for The New York Times

Though major productions on America’s premier stages most likely won’t happen for several months, easing restrictions on crowd sizes and live entertainment have allowed many performers to return to familiar venues.

September Dawn Bottoms for The New York Times

In Oklahoma, the Tulsa Performing Arts Center welcomed an audience of 600 into its nearly 2,400-seat theater on May 2 — its first in-person performance since early 2020 — to watch “Greenwood Overcomes,” an opera marking the centennial of the massacre of Black people living in Tulsa’s then-affluent Greenwood neighborhood by a white mob.

Stephen Speranza for The New York Times
Travis Dove for The New York Times
Michelle Mishina Kunz for The New York Times
Annie Flanagan for The New York Times

New Orleans allowed bands to resume indoor performances on March 12, but left some restrictions on wind instruments in place, forcing some bands that played at the venue Favela Chic that night to change their usual lineup.

Shawn Poynter for The New York Times
Shawn Poynter for The New York Times
Jon Cherry for The New York Times

Actors performed “Romeo and Juliet” in masks for Kentucky Shakespeare’s celebration of the playwright on April 23, the anniversary of his death. The annual event was canceled last year.

Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The New York Times

On the Job

Tristan Spinski for The New York Times

Cameron Barner, left, and Ben Hamilton farm oysters off their company boat, Ralph, in Maine. Their business was hit hard by restaurant closures and few customers at the ones that remained open.

“We are really excited to have a comeback with full force, and have people vaccinated, and have that appetite for oysters be insatiable again,” Mr. Barner said.

Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

David Steckel, a conductor on the Mount Cuba Meteor, checked in on passengers before the train pulled out of the station in Delaware. The Wilmington and Western Railroad, an operating railroad museum, stopped operations for several months, before reopening to limited capacity that increased to 50 percent in April.

Rosem Morton for The New York Times
Sharon Chischilly for The New York Times
Robert Wright for The New York Times

Lockdowns devastated businesses throughout the country. There are still 8.2 million fewer jobs than at the start of the pandemic. The dizzying whipsaw of regulations forced many restaurants to limit capacity and often lay off staff members. Many restrictions are now being lifted, as they have in New York, where indoor dining capacity was recently increased to 75 percent.

Those changes will most likely mean more business for the food industry, but some safety precautions may remain, as they have in other industries.

Cayce Clifford for The New York Times

Offices, like Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., are being rearranged and redesigned, though many who have worked from home for the past year may not return, which some fear could fundamentally transform cities.

Kristian Thacker for The New York Times
Tailyr Irvine for The New York Times

Some quiet projects have resumed too. In St. Ignatius, Mont., Sxwlekws Bell, left, Willie Stevens, center, and Gary Stevens restarted work on a canoe that they hadn’t worked on since 2019.

“It sat for a year, but at least now the wood is dried out,” Mr. Stevens said.

Breaking Bread

Emily Rose Bennett for The New York Times

Eddie Osman, 49, and his wife, Regina Osman, 47, celebrated getting their first dose of a vaccine over chocolate cake, espresso and tea on April 16. It was their first meal in a restaurant since last spring.

An Rong Xu for The New York Times

The pandemic was a blow to the food industry. Many restaurants drastically changed how they operated. Many others couldn’t survive. In some cases, people clamored for their favorite eateries to reopen, resulting in the kinds of clusters of Covid-19 infections that led to the initial lockdowns.

But, with increased vaccinations and restrictions rolled back in most states, Americans are breaking bread together again.

Rosem Morton for The New York Times

In Washington, Lakisha Howard hugged her husband, Wendell, during a Mother’s Day cruise with their family on May 9.

“My husband proposed to me 15 years ago on this boat,” she said. “He re-proposed to me today and all the kids kept it a secret.”

Nicole Canegata for The New York Times
Nicole Canegata for The New York Times
Ricardo Nagaoka for The New York Times
Michelle Mishina Kunz for The New York Times
John Tully for The New York Times

Sharon Nicholls and Al Simons kissed during a performance by the band BeefStu in Concord, N.H., on April 24.

“We learned, out of this, don’t waste any time,” Ms. Nicholls said.

out on the Field

Tailyr Irvine for The New York Times

The virus’s sudden appearance led many competitions to halt last spring. Play eventually resumed, sometimes with profound changes, like professional athletes retreating into “bubbles” meant to protect them from the threat of infection.

Simbarashe Cha for The New York Times
Natalie Behring for The New York Times

Convoluted regulations have begun to recede for younger athletes who often risked infection for the social, emotional and academic benefits of competition.

Kreed Sanderson, a high school student, wrestled a steer at the Idaho District 7 seasonal rodeo April 24. Fewer spectators watched last year’s rodeo in early May when the state was reporting close to 30 new virus cases a day.

Chase Castor for The New York Times
Christopher Capozziello for The New York Times

Rules for gyms are easing too. In Connecticut, where Ester Sanches-Naek ran on a treadmill in an empty Club Fitness, capacity limits were lifted in March. Still, few have returned to her gym amid a boom in outdoor running.

Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times

Maureen Nafula, right, 13, worked on her car before racing in the Columbus Soap Box Derby Spring Rally on April 24. Racers competed for a spot in the All American Race in Akron, Ohio, in July. The Columbus race, which was canceled in 2020, had run continuously since 1962. Until last year, the Akron championship races hadn’t been canceled since World War II.

Philip Cheung for The New York Times
Stephen Speranza for The New York Times
Hannah Yoon for The New York Times
Hannah Yoon for The New York Times

Danny Pearson and Patrick Hegarty cheered for the Philadelphia Union, a Major League Soccer team, at their home opener on April 24. Last year, the league played a truncated season.

Micah Green for The New York Times

Casey Jones applied makeup to Selena Smith during a bodybuilding competition in South Carolina on April 24. Organizers required temperature checks and safety forms from everyone at the event. Only competitors were allowed to forgo masks.

Terra Fondriest for The New York Times
Kathryn Gamble for The New York Times
Lauren Justice for The New York Times
Doug Mills/The New York Times

Faith & Fellowship

Taylor Glascock for The New York Times
Taylor Glascock for The New York Times

In Chicago, Rosie McGee, 94, left, and Patricia Butts, 65, embraced at the entrance of Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church on May 2. It was Ms. McGee’s first in-person service at the church since the pandemic began.

“It felt like coming home,” she said.

James Estrin/The New York Times
James Estrin/The New York Times

Early in the pandemic, hard-hit states like New York and California imposed strict rules on the types of religious gatherings that drove many early infections. But ritual remained a powerful draw, especially in a difficult time, and the Supreme Court repeatedly struck down such restrictions. On April 9, the court struck down California’s rules against religious gatherings in private homes.

Christopher Capozziello for The New York Times
Christopher Capozziello for The New York Times

Now, ancient traditions mingle with new precautions: temperature checks, safety questionnaires and pews marked with painter’s tape, as they were at Church of Christ Congregational in Newington Conn., where Thomas Weeden led the service from behind a transparent barrier.

At the South Metro Islamic Center in Minnesota, people were encouraged to wash elsewhere, rather than at the mosque as is typical, before visiting the mosque, where blue circles on the carpet designated space for prayer rugs.

Aaron Nesheim for The New York Times
John Tully for The New York Times

Nights OUT

Charity Rachelle for The New York Times
Charity Rachelle for The New York Times

There’s still a risk though, to revelers and workers alike.

Bars and nightclubs — with patrons packed in dark rooms — have proved to be effective sites for the virus to spread. Thousands of infections last summer stemmed from watering holes that reopened for the season, prompting officials to shut them down again in many cities. Now, some bouncers are asking for both ID and proof of vaccination.

Timothy Ivy for The New York Times
Tim Gruber for The New York Times

Ashlee Wolsky attended the reopening of Arthur’s Barn in North Dakota on April 16 with friends. She grew up in the area hearing older neighbors talk about it and first visited when she was a freshman in college.

“Life is never going to be the same after a global pandemic,” she said. “But we can make it close to as enjoyable as before.”

Emily Kask for The New York Times
Matthew Busch for The New York Times

in the moment

Kaiti Sullivan for The New York Times
Kaiti Sullivan for The New York Times

Phillip Burgess, center, posed with his mother, Prof. Sheron Fraser-Burgess, left, and father, the Rev. Darryl Burgess, after the commencement ceremony at Ball State University on May 8.

“Today, I was humbled,” Dr. Fraser-Burgess said. “For us to see him walk across that stage, for him to do that, it means so much.”

Cody O'Loughlin for The New York Times
Ricardo Nagaoka for The New York Times
Ricardo Nagaoka for The New York Times

There are paintings by Monet to ponder in Boston, llamas to hug again at the Portland Night Market and saplings to retrieve from the annual tree giveaway in San Juan, P.R., that returned after last year’s cancellation.

Erika P. Rodriguez for The New York Times
Ash Adams for The New York Times

Children spun cartwheels in front of an ’80s cover band in Palmer, Alaska. Bikers roared through Daytona Beach, Fla. And families met dinosaurs at a balloon festival in Goodyear, Ariz.

Zack Wittman for The New York Times
Zack Wittman for The New York Times
Michelle Mishina Kunz for The New York Times
Jesse Rieser for The New York Times
Jesse Rieser for The New York Times
Jesse Rieser for The New York Times
Kim Raff for The New York Times

Kira Mildenstein, 41, and her husband, Jon, took their five children to an annual tulip festival in Lehi, Utah, on April 24 for their first family outing since last spring. Attending had been a kind of family tradition, but she and her husband paused this year to weigh the risks and their own comfort. At the festival she noticed all the differences: fewer people, masks, dry water fountains and her own wariness about her children touching things.

“It was weird because so many people were treating it like any other day,” she said. “There was almost an eerie quality to it because it felt normal but still not normal at the same time.”

Calla Kessler for The New York Times

In Nebraska, the queen’s court wore anachronistic masks during a renaissance festival on May 9.

Joe Buglewicz for The New York Times
Carlos Bernate for The New York Times
Carlos Bernate for The New York Times
Philip Keith for The New York Times
Walker Pickering for The New York Times

In South Dakota, Brynn Henning and Brooke Scheitler, both 8, paused to laugh during the Great Cardboard Boat Race at the Midco Aquatic Center.

Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
Mike Belleme for The New York Times
Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times
Kelly Burgess for The New York Times
Cayla Nimmo for The New York Times
Adria Malcolm for The New York Times

The pandemic isn’t over. On May 12, the virus killed 629 people in the United States and 13,4425 around the world. It may never leave us.

But after a year, grief and fear have begun to give way to optimism. There’s a path back now, to the lives we knew, to something closer to normal.

Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The New York Times

Top photographs: Columbus, Ohio: Maddie McGarvey; Arthur, N.D.: Tim Gruber; Burbank, Calif.: Philip Cheung; El Paso: Ivan Pierre Aguirre; New York: An Rong Xu; Chicago: Taylor Glascock; Knoxville, Tenn.: Shawn Poynter; Rigby, Idaho: Natalie Behring; Waterford, Miss.: Timothy Ivy; Ronan, Montana: Tailyr Irvine.

Produced by Sarah Almukhtar, Clinton Cargill, Heather Casey, Sarah Eckinger, Rebecca Halleck and Virginia Lozano.

Adblock test (Why?)



"here" - Google News
May 16, 2021 at 04:00PM
https://ift.tt/3uWVxBu

America is Reopening. Here's What it Looks Like - The New York Times
"here" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2z7PfXP
https://ift.tt/2Yv8ZPx

No comments:

Post a Comment

Search

Featured Post

Nothing Like This Has Ever Been Discovered Before": In Petra, 12 Human Skeletons Unearthed Beneath a Mausoleum, the Largest Deposit Found in the City - The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel

[unable to retrieve full-text content] Nothing Like This Has Ever Been Discovered Before": In Petra, 12 Human Skeletons Unearthed Bene...

Postingan Populer