For those on mobile Timestamps 0:50 - Exiting the Canal Street Subway Station 3:01 - Canal Street & Centre Street 4:25 - Canal Street & Baxter Street 5:58 - Canal Street & Mulberry Street 7:35 - Mott Street & Canal Street 9:36 - Mott Street & Bayard Street 10:47 - Pell Street & Mott Street 11:50 - Doyers Street & Pell Street (The Bloody Angle) 13:50 - Chatham Square / Bowery & Doyers Street 15:45 - Worth Street & Chatham Square / Mott Street 16:45 - Mulberry Street & Worth Street 17:25 - Mosco Street & Mulberry Street 18:46 - Columbus Park Playground 20:15 - Baxter Street & Hogan Place 20:45 - Columbus Park Main Section 22:41 - Bayard Street & Mulberry Street 23:45 - Bayard Street & Mott Street 24:58 - Bayard Street & Elizabeth Street 26:04 - Bowery & Bayard Street 27:35 - Bowery / Chatham Square & Division Street 28:20 - Chatham Square & Catherine Street 28:55 - East Broadway & Chatham Square 31:00 - East Broadway & Catherine Street 34:30 - East Broadway & Market Street 35:02 - LOUD Truck Horn (Turn Down Volume!) 35:08 - Forsyth Street / Eldridge Street & East Broadway 36:17 - Forsyth Street & Division Street 39:05 - Canal Street & Forsyth Street 40:15 - Chrystie Street & Canal Street 41:55 - Chrystie Street & Hester Street 44:15 - Grand Street & Chrystie Street 45:15 - Grand Street & Bowery 46:30 - Grand Street & Elizabeth Street 47:35 - Grand Street & Mott Street 48:35 - Mulberry Street & Grand Street 50:35 - Mulberry Street & Hester Street 52:30 - Mulberry Street & Canal Street
You are the absolute best! I live in Wichita KS and it's so much different than my beloved NYC. I feel like we're walking together down the streets of the greatest city in the world. Bless you, my friend!
I went to NYC the first time for Spring Break this year. (lifelong dream) I watched your videos before when dreaming about visiting someday. Now I watch because I miss it. Thanks for taking us on your walks!
Exceptional! Educational and in depth. Narration is very helpful here. I have been to Chinatown several times, but you were able to capture more than what most people see. Thanks!
Didnt know Manhattan still has these types of areas. Great explanation on how many Chinese families own these blocks and stop modern development. Hope it will stay like that because its a great look into the past how New York used to look back in the day. Much more interesting than anonymous skyscrapers that could be anywhere.
@@Drownedinblood Hmmm, maybe the community can somehow apply for a historic district status or something similar on state or perhaps federal level and bypass the city government. An area like that should really be preserved because once its gone, its gone for good.
I am a very big fan of your videos. I really appreciate & admire your dedication to N.Y. for I'm a former NYer who lives in Reading, Pa & always feel like I'm right back home whenever I get the chance to watch them... Thank You!!!
Very useful all the information you give while walking the streets, we can know a lot of history of every corner of NYC, the history of immigration is a very important part of that city and the whole country.
I've been watching your videos and they're absolutely amazing and really cool! I'm an undergraduate about to move in to NY from TX for college. I like studying these videos so I know where to go if I ever felt like taking a day to walk around, it helps me feel a bit less overwhelmed about a very big city.
Great video! This will really help me when I come to the city next week to visit Chinatown with my daughter and friend. Thank you for making this narrative
Oh, I adore this area of Manhattan. I LOVE that sound of the subway - loud is okay! Thanks for your awesome walks, AK! I am home recovering with medical treatment and wow, these walks help!
I like your all narrated videos, some are real urbanistic and historical performances. Great job!! Have a nice day! This is real popular education ( I think)!!
Excellent as per usual ActionKid. Very informative. Good job! I hope a Historical Society has taken note of your outstanding narrations and documentation efforts. From a cultural and sociological perspective, you are performing an excellent service for NYC urban historians. Bill
Awesome video, thanks for your commentary! Really enjoyed it as always : )
5 ปีที่แล้ว
I actually caught a glimpse of you in the reflection on a window, you have extraordinary knowledge and a rhetorical cultural depth of all new york's burroughs. I especially enjoyed your historical overview of Chinatown. Even though I am a new yorker, no longer living there, your pedestrian and cross pollinated historical knowledge is astounding and quite revealing. Thanks so very much.
At 49:25 on the left 140 Mullberry street, next to the Christmas shop is a Sigarshop with a famous webcam from Earthcam.Com on the wall. Between the icecreambar and the blue banner. Ruud Mulder NYC Fan The Netherlands
46:23 I see similar sights in my city and I've come to the conclusion that bike thieves steal a bike and then lock it up somewhere and strip the parts over time because I've seen ones with fewer and fewer parts over a number of days so I doubt it is locked where the rightful owner left it. It reminds me of the thorn birds that impale prey and come back for it later.
There are mini-Chinatowns spread through all the boroughs and much more concentrated because of no tourists. Many of the second, third and forth generation Chinese, now live uptown or the suburbs, but regularly come back here to visit their elderly relations.
Don't be. Italian immigrants are living more comfortably within other White communities. Chinese people aren't so lucky, however, so they had to build a larger shelter.
@@jellofel8138 Maybe Italians want to represent their own cultural identity too instead of being clustered with other cultures just based on skin color. Cultural pride is not a sign of poverty. Look at the Jews. Italians are some of the most culturally and moralistically rich people I've ever met in the states. My girlfriend is even Italian for crying out loud. Best next to only Russians that always moved back after college or work program was up. Sadly! Acting as though a group of people are better off clustered with people who merely look like them is like saying Blacks and Indians (India) share a lot in common. That's an insult and you'd think would be categorized as racist. It's more than just skin.
@@coreym162 Then why the fuck they fucking moved away then? It's not like the Chinese kicked them out of Little Italy. They moved away to Staten Island, to Long Island, whatever.
Thanks ActionKid! You helped us a lot because we are going to NYC next month and we're staying two nights on Grand Ave/Little Italy. We love your video. Lots of information for people like us who never experienced NYC. Great job!
Ah man. We stayed in a hotel close to Chinatown in May 2017, and on the first night we went to this small Chinese place right under the Manhattan bridge. We ordered, and the food was done in about five minutes. Two days later we returned to the same restaurant, the owner recognized us and asked if we wanted the same. Sure thing. On the last day in New York we decided to stop by one last time. He didn’t even ask. Just brought out the food in under five minutes. Now that’s what I call service. Great food too. I think you passed it around 34:50. That, or around 36:30, or it’s further down the road the other way. To end I’d like to say that you’ve done an amazing job here. It’s cool to hear some history of the streets I walked there. Thanks!
Thank you so much! I lived in New Jersey for a brief time & we went to Chinatown or we thought many times. Now I have more to see on my next visit. Your walking tour is perfect and enjoyed by myself and others..
Buongiorno sono stata a novembre .ed stata una vacanza bellissima.girato tutta new York.ed una città che rimane nel cuore ti seguo sempre .saluti da Italia
As an Asian male from San Francisco you made this video much more interesting. Good job. We're planning to visit NYC for 4 days. We might stay at the lower east side of New York for 2 days. 🗽👍And of course spend a whole day in China Town.
Fantastic video. Always a history lesson in each vid and myself been a complete history geek i love hearing all your facts you tell us along the way 💙 much love from scotland 💙🏴
30:20 there is also a west broadway roughtly associated with 7th avenue on the other side of lower manhattan, plus totally unrelated broadways in queens, brooklyn and stanten island (while the main one in manhattan goes into the bronx). new york is like that; why have one only of something?
Very interesting your walking vids and very good made too. New York is the city of my heart and watching its beauty in this particular way is priceless. Thanks so much. Renata
I love nyc, I used to work down at 25 broad St. years ago, the bank I worked for in buffalo had 2 offices down there I used to audit. no one wanted to go there, but I fell in love with the city and the people.
14:30 a little guide to the streets eminating from chatham square: oliver st will lead to the east end of grand st and corlears hook. park row will lead to city hall park and then lead to broadway. at the intersection of broadway and park row is ann st on one side of broadway and vesey st at the other which leads to rooservelt park from which you can get some of the best views of similtanously world trade center and the empire state building as well as the new jersey and lower manhattan skylines. following down ann st on the other side of broadway will lead to gold st will which become madison st after crossing under the brooklyn bridge which will lead to the east end of grand st and corlears hook again. one street below vesey/ann is fulton st which is one of the few streets below 14th where you can walk continuously on one st between the east and hudson rivers as most streets in lower manhattan fall short of the full width of the island to one side or the other. fulton also offers spectacular views of WTC as you walk west along it. fulton also has one of the main subway hub stations where you can transfer between trains if you need to and it has a sort of underground mall you can walk through as a result, which I believe ActionKid has a video of. below chatham square the bowery, which is the continuation of 3rd avenue below 4th st where the southern edge of washington square park is further west and who's terminus is near the place where bleecker becomes 9th ave and the top of greenwich st, becomes st james st which becomes a part of pearl st which becomes water st which is the only other street directly leading to the battery other than greenwich st and broadway. division st will become ludlow st after crossing canal st which will become east 1st st after crossing houston st will which will lead to bleecker after crossing bowery. bleecker will then lead you through greenwich village to a point on west 14th st near the top of greenwich st which leads downtown to the battery while bleecker itself becomes 9th avenue. chatham square is quite a place!
I knew better than to walk with you this morning. Now you got me thinking pasta... One visit to the diet clinic.. you and I are going to talk. I'm trying to drop another dress size before this weekend! I must have been out of my mind this morning! You know I am loving you kiddo for the glorious company this morning. Keep the miles coming baby.
Just as you made a left on Grand Street , the first fish store is perhaps the best place to buy fish in this area. Freshest fish at remarkably low prices. If our mayor, Bill Di Blasio wasn't avoiding his responsibilities of governing this city, instead of running for President ( he has 0 chance of winning), maybe the homeless crisis would get more attention. The " Bloody Angle" ( Doyer St) is a street where more murders have been committed than on any street in America..because of the Tong Wars, as explained. Thanks for the informative video and keep up the great work.
Loved this one Action Kid, great narration. 😉👍. It would be brilliant to see a nighttime tour of this route sometime if you could manage it. Thank you from Yorkshire, England. xx
i love China Town i came here years ago from Boston's China Town, first time in NY too. and your page is greatly appreciated i dont get to travel much anymore ( Adult Hood sucks lol ) so this is the next best thing
Great informative video Kid!! Appreciate the Chinese history lessons. We don't learn enough about the various cultures within China and how they interact. Very interesting!! Thank you.
For those on mobile
Timestamps
0:50 - Exiting the Canal Street Subway Station
3:01 - Canal Street & Centre Street
4:25 - Canal Street & Baxter Street
5:58 - Canal Street & Mulberry Street
7:35 - Mott Street & Canal Street
9:36 - Mott Street & Bayard Street
10:47 - Pell Street & Mott Street
11:50 - Doyers Street & Pell Street (The Bloody Angle)
13:50 - Chatham Square / Bowery & Doyers Street
15:45 - Worth Street & Chatham Square / Mott Street
16:45 - Mulberry Street & Worth Street
17:25 - Mosco Street & Mulberry Street
18:46 - Columbus Park Playground
20:15 - Baxter Street & Hogan Place
20:45 - Columbus Park Main Section
22:41 - Bayard Street & Mulberry Street
23:45 - Bayard Street & Mott Street
24:58 - Bayard Street & Elizabeth Street
26:04 - Bowery & Bayard Street
27:35 - Bowery / Chatham Square & Division Street
28:20 - Chatham Square & Catherine Street
28:55 - East Broadway & Chatham Square
31:00 - East Broadway & Catherine Street
34:30 - East Broadway & Market Street
35:02 - LOUD Truck Horn (Turn Down Volume!)
35:08 - Forsyth Street / Eldridge Street & East Broadway
36:17 - Forsyth Street & Division Street
39:05 - Canal Street & Forsyth Street
40:15 - Chrystie Street & Canal Street
41:55 - Chrystie Street & Hester Street
44:15 - Grand Street & Chrystie Street
45:15 - Grand Street & Bowery
46:30 - Grand Street & Elizabeth Street
47:35 - Grand Street & Mott Street
48:35 - Mulberry Street & Grand Street
50:35 - Mulberry Street & Hester Street
52:30 - Mulberry Street & Canal Street
Im Glad This Video Will have More walking videos
first china kid hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
Visit Detroit man I'm learning Michigan myself. Detroit is an automobile or automotive city obviously with Ford.
You are the absolute best! I live in Wichita KS and it's so much different than my beloved NYC. I feel like we're walking together down the streets of the greatest city in the world. Bless you, my friend!
I went to NYC the first time for Spring Break this year. (lifelong dream)
I watched your videos before when dreaming about visiting someday.
Now I watch because I miss it. Thanks for taking us on your walks!
Those skaters are 0:57 were friendly!
Love it when they're friendly!
Excellent video! Highly informed narration about city history, too!
Every day on time for my lunch break. thanks Actionkid, greetings from Oldenburg / Germany
Exceptional! Educational and in depth. Narration is very helpful here. I have been to Chinatown several times, but you were able to capture more than what most people see. Thanks!
You’re welcome! I really enjoyed making this video
i love the sound of the subway
Little Italy is about one street long now, I can remember when it took in most of the area, how things change.
Me too 😓
New York City is so gorgeous, it is like my childhood city I never even been to, because of all the movies and TV series I watched since I was a kid
it wasn't like that 25 years ago it was a very dangerous city
Didnt know Manhattan still has these types of areas. Great explanation on how many Chinese families own these blocks and stop modern development. Hope it will stay like that because its a great look into the past how New York used to look back in the day. Much more interesting than anonymous skyscrapers that could be anywhere.
@@Drownedinblood Hmmm, maybe the community can somehow apply for a historic district status or something similar on state or perhaps federal level and bypass the city government. An area like that should really be preserved because once its gone, its gone for good.
Awesome narrated walk - I loved it, you shared so many interesting facts! :)
Thanks!
God bless you! This was one of your best videos so far. Loved it
I am a very big fan of your videos. I really appreciate & admire your dedication to N.Y. for I'm a former NYer who lives in Reading, Pa & always feel like I'm right back home whenever I get the chance to watch them... Thank You!!!
My pleasure 😇
Chinatown's are always a hugely interesting part of many western cities. Thank you ActionKid!
謝謝你的影片,讓我能夠重拾幾年前在Canal Street China Town 行過的日子!
我是來自香港。
Well another informative video. Let me be 1st to congratulate you on 50k. Ur on ur way Mr. Amazing.( Straight outta Atlanta).
Thank you very much!
I enjoy the narration, thanks for another great tour.
One more incredible video of NYC, congrats man and keep moving with your journey. Peace, dude!!
Best tour even money can't buy !
Made a cup of tea and watching today’s video.
Your narration is great,
miss neighborhoods of
NYC. Much success to
you & THANK YOU 😻
Very useful all the information you give while walking the streets, we can know a lot of history of every corner of NYC, the history of immigration is a very important part of that city and the whole country.
Congratulations on this new video!! I really enjoy your videos and narrative Actionkid!! 💕
Wow! Chinatown sounded like it was nothing to mess with back in the day. Interesting history! Great video!
Super, Mega, Great walking!!!
Thanks for the storytime! :) interesting narration and video.
I've been watching your videos and they're absolutely amazing and really cool! I'm an undergraduate about to move in to NY from TX for college. I like studying these videos so I know where to go if I ever felt like taking a day to walk around, it helps me feel a bit less overwhelmed about a very big city.
You’re welcome! I’m happy my videos are helping you to experience New York before you move here.
Great video! This will really help me when I come to the city next week to visit Chinatown with my daughter and friend. Thank you for making this narrative
Oh, I adore this area of Manhattan. I LOVE that sound of the subway - loud is okay! Thanks for your awesome walks, AK! I am home recovering with medical treatment and wow, these walks help!
Fantastic video AK! So relaxing to watch. Thanks.
Great video! Thank you for all the interesting and informative information about china town!
I like your all narrated videos, some are real urbanistic and historical performances. Great job!! Have a nice day! This is real popular education ( I think)!!
One of the greatest travel videos I've seen. You should do other cities and maybe national parks.
Great video!! Thoroughly enjoyed it 😊
I think this is my favorite ActionKid video...I live in Sylvania ohio. Downtown here is one block long. Keep up the good work!!!!
I love this channel. Makes me feel I'm walking there myself to fulfill my dream of visiting NY ❤
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to see real life in NY. Excellent video. Greetings form Berlin, Germany
Excellent as per usual ActionKid. Very informative. Good job! I hope a Historical Society has taken note of your outstanding narrations and documentation efforts. From a cultural and sociological perspective, you are performing an excellent service for NYC urban historians. Bill
Thank you!
23:30: the smell of chinatown is the smell of chinese food and cigarettes, so true. lol
Another wonderful video. Thank you. You have shown how fascinating Chinatown in NYC is.
Very good video! Congratulations on 50k Subs! I see you also have merch now, cool!
Thank you!
@@ActionKid You're welcome, look forward to you hitting 100k and beyond!
I've enjoyed Dim Sun in Chinatown many times-do miss that!
Awesome video, thanks for your commentary! Really enjoyed it as always : )
I actually caught a glimpse of you in the reflection on a window, you have extraordinary knowledge and a rhetorical cultural depth of all new york's burroughs. I especially enjoyed your historical overview of Chinatown. Even though I am a new yorker, no longer living there, your pedestrian and cross pollinated historical knowledge is astounding and quite revealing. Thanks so very much.
You’re welcome! I love sharing my city and knowledge with people.
i loved it,allways.keep doing that.
At 49:25 on the left 140 Mullberry street, next to the Christmas shop is a Sigarshop with a famous webcam from Earthcam.Com on the wall. Between the icecreambar and the blue banner. Ruud Mulder NYC Fan The Netherlands
Fantastic history lesson about Chinatown....Thank you....😁👍😁
You’re welcome 😃
I often go to Chinatown. So, I can tell you this video is accurate and enjoyable and up to date!!
46:23 I see similar sights in my city and I've come to the conclusion that bike thieves steal a bike and then lock it up somewhere and strip the parts over time because I've seen ones with fewer and fewer parts over a number of days so I doubt it is locked where the rightful owner left it. It reminds me of the thorn birds that impale prey and come back for it later.
Thank you. Love the history and tour. I always learn from your videos.
Another super great video. Amazing. Thanks again
Enjoyed the video. Another good narrated video. Thank you
This was a real treat for me. Thank you!
There are mini-Chinatowns spread through all the boroughs and much more concentrated because of no tourists. Many of the second, third and forth generation Chinese, now live uptown or the suburbs, but regularly come back here to visit their elderly relations.
I'm italian and it's sad to see how Little Italy is so small compared to chi-town
Don't be. Italian immigrants are living more comfortably within other White communities. Chinese people aren't so lucky, however, so they had to build a larger shelter.
@@jellofel8138 Maybe Italians want to represent their own cultural identity too instead of being clustered with other cultures just based on skin color. Cultural pride is not a sign of poverty. Look at the Jews. Italians are some of the most culturally and moralistically rich people I've ever met in the states. My girlfriend is even Italian for crying out loud. Best next to only Russians that always moved back after college or work program was up. Sadly! Acting as though a group of people are better off clustered with people who merely look like them is like saying Blacks and Indians (India) share a lot in common. That's an insult and you'd think would be categorized as racist. It's more than just skin.
@@michaelchin3550 I don't have any Italian friends, but I sure love me some Italian food. LOL
@Richard Head Yeah, that's true
@@coreym162 Then why the fuck they fucking moved away then? It's not like the Chinese kicked them out of Little Italy. They moved away to Staten Island, to Long Island, whatever.
I am so happy I found your channel. Modern technology is amazing. thank you .
42:15 Cripple doggie with wheel chair... Feel so sad but overwhelmed that someone took time to give him wheels...
It was very inspiring to see that!
At 40:40 (beginning of Chrystie Street busstop of a local chinese buscompany to Boston (oneway 10 box) Ruud Mulder NYC fan The Netherlands
Great, better than the others with narrations 😉
Great knowledge of all the areas you cover. Great job!
Thank you!
Another absolute banger, dude 👏👏
Great job ! thanks a lot and keep up the good work !
Thank you. I watch it everyday!!! Excellent channel.
Thanks ActionKid! You helped us a lot because we are going to NYC next month and we're staying two nights on Grand Ave/Little Italy. We love your video. Lots of information for people like us who never experienced NYC. Great job!
These are cool. Keep posting!
@15:00, I dont think that guy got the help he needed.
Tremayne Sirmons 😂
Ah man. We stayed in a hotel close to Chinatown in May 2017, and on the first night we went to this small Chinese place right under the Manhattan bridge. We ordered, and the food was done in about five minutes. Two days later we returned to the same restaurant, the owner recognized us and asked if we wanted the same. Sure thing. On the last day in New York we decided to stop by one last time. He didn’t even ask. Just brought out the food in under five minutes. Now that’s what I call service. Great food too. I think you passed it around 34:50. That, or around 36:30, or it’s further down the road the other way. To end I’d like to say that you’ve done an amazing job here. It’s cool to hear some history of the streets I walked there. Thanks!
You're welcome! I'm happy you enjoyed that restaurant so much that you returned two more times!
This is a very interesting walk, I really enjoyed it. thank you ActionKid.
Thank you so much! I lived in New Jersey for a brief time & we went to Chinatown or we thought many times. Now I have more to see on my next visit. Your walking tour is perfect and enjoyed by myself and others..
Next visit is in July, thanks
Glad you enjoyed the video!
Great video. Thanks for the walking tips around NYC. 32:12...Rey from Star Wars...just after your sneeze. That was a good one.
Love your videos about NY! Pleeeease, do more for us! :)
Buongiorno sono stata a novembre .ed stata una vacanza bellissima.girato tutta new York.ed una città che rimane nel cuore ti seguo sempre .saluti da Italia
As an Asian male from San Francisco you made this video much more interesting. Good job. We're planning to visit NYC for 4 days. We might stay at the lower east side of New York for 2 days. 🗽👍And of course spend a whole day in China Town.
Just love these guides. Looking forward to tasting the food in Chinatown and Little Italy.
Great video as always. And may I say god bless you for all the 🤧. Thank you for all the great information 💖💖
Thank you 😊
Fantastic video. Always a history lesson in each vid and myself been a complete history geek i love hearing all your facts you tell us along the way 💙 much love from scotland 💙🏴
Excellent video!!!
i was in NYC in october 2019. this video remind me a lot of memories. Thanks for doing this
20:15 the setting for half of every Law & Order episode. :-)
Thank you for your great vids, they are very helpful for planning my trip in June 😀👌
Excellent! I was interested all the way,beginning to end! Unusual for me!
Thank you very much!
Confusis say man who narrate video gets more views then mute video lol ...great video dude
30:20 there is also a west broadway roughtly associated with 7th avenue on the other side of lower manhattan, plus totally unrelated broadways in queens, brooklyn and stanten island (while the main one in manhattan goes into the bronx). new york is like that; why have one only of something?
Very interesting your walking vids and very good made too.
New York is the city of my heart and watching its beauty in this particular way is priceless. Thanks so much. Renata
Great video i haven't been to nyc china town in years but it all looks the same still, and thats a good thing!
I love nyc, I used to work down at 25 broad St. years ago, the bank I worked for in buffalo had 2 offices down there I used to audit. no one wanted to go there, but I fell in love with the city and the people.
14:30 a little guide to the streets eminating from chatham square:
oliver st will lead to the east end of grand st and corlears hook.
park row will lead to city hall park and then lead to broadway. at the intersection of broadway and park row is ann st on one side of broadway and vesey st at the other which leads to rooservelt park from which you can get some of the best views of similtanously world trade center and the empire state building as well as the new jersey and lower manhattan skylines. following down ann st on the other side of broadway will lead to gold st will which become madison st after crossing under the brooklyn bridge which will lead to the east end of grand st and corlears hook again. one street below vesey/ann is fulton st which is one of the few streets below 14th where you can walk continuously on one st between the east and hudson rivers as most streets in lower manhattan fall short of the full width of the island to one side or the other. fulton also offers spectacular views of WTC as you walk west along it. fulton also has one of the main subway hub stations where you can transfer between trains if you need to and it has a sort of underground mall you can walk through as a result, which I believe ActionKid has a video of.
below chatham square the bowery, which is the continuation of 3rd avenue below 4th st where the southern edge of washington square park is further west and who's terminus is near the place where bleecker becomes 9th ave and the top of greenwich st, becomes st james st which becomes a part of pearl st which becomes water st which is the only other street directly leading to the battery other than greenwich st and broadway.
division st will become ludlow st after crossing canal st which will become east 1st st after crossing houston st will which will lead to bleecker after crossing bowery. bleecker will then lead you through greenwich village to a point on west 14th st near the top of greenwich st which leads downtown to the battery while bleecker itself becomes 9th avenue.
chatham square is quite a place!
I knew better than to walk with you this morning. Now you got me thinking pasta... One visit to the diet clinic.. you and I are going to talk. I'm trying to drop another dress size before this weekend! I must have been out of my mind this morning! You know I am loving you kiddo for the glorious company this morning. Keep the miles coming baby.
Very well done, a lot of info on the area.
Subbed for all your hard work.... You're like a walking "History Channel".
Thank you so much!
You're absolutely the best!!!
Just as you made a left on Grand Street , the first fish store is perhaps the best place to buy fish in this area. Freshest fish at remarkably low prices. If our mayor, Bill Di Blasio wasn't avoiding his responsibilities of governing this city, instead of running for President ( he has 0 chance of winning), maybe the homeless crisis would get more attention. The " Bloody Angle" ( Doyer St) is a street where more murders have been committed than on any street in America..because of the Tong Wars, as explained. Thanks for the informative video and keep up the great work.
Loved this one Action Kid, great narration. 😉👍. It would be brilliant to see a nighttime tour of this route sometime if you could manage it. Thank you from Yorkshire, England. xx
i love China Town i came here years ago from Boston's China Town, first time in NY too. and your page is greatly appreciated i dont get to travel much anymore ( Adult Hood sucks lol ) so this is the next best thing
Great informative video Kid!! Appreciate the Chinese history lessons. We don't learn enough about the various cultures within China and how they interact. Very interesting!! Thank you.
You’re welcome! Glad you enjoyed the video.
Awesome video really enjoyed your tour of Chinatown
waou!,magnifique vidéo je n'avais imaginé le quartier de chinatown, aussi grand comme ça, merci
Cool video! I can’t travel at this time, but this is the next best thing. Thanks for sharing! :)
Thanks action K my favorite place in manhattan is Chinatown, cheap seafood and goods thanks
Thanks for the video. Great work. :)