Author: ECCYC

‘Insulted’ by Contract Impasse, South Orange-Maplewood Teachers will March & Rally on Monday – The Village Green

From the South Orange-Maplewood Education Association:

On Monday, December 20, 2021, the South Orange-Maplewood Education Association (SOMEA) will conduct a march and rally in order to express its discontent with the state of contract negotiations with the South Orange-Maplewood Board of Education.  Currently, the two parties are at impasse.  At the last negotiations session on October 7th of this year, the Board of Education offered a percentage for salary guide increases far below the Essex County average of 3.3%.  SOMEA is disheartened and insulted and regards the Board of Education’s offer as an unjustified show of disrespect.  SOMEA teachers and staff deserve salaries that are comparable to other Essex County districts. We urge the Board of Education to return to the table and bargain in good faith.

SOMEA members will gather at two points, South Orange Middle School in South Orange and Maplewood Middle School in Maplewood, and each group will march through the two towns at 6:15 PM to the Board of Education office at 525 Academy Street in Maplewood.  There, the members will rally and attend the Board of Education’s monthly meeting beginning at 7:30 PM.

During the public speaking portion of the meeting, SOMEA members and community members plan to speak about the state of the district as they see it, and about the role a fair contract can play in maintaining a healthy district, one that would attract top job candidates and encourage veteran teacher retention.  Additionally, members will speak about their struggles with the long-inadequate salary guide and with the often-deteriorating conditions on the job.

The South Orange and Maplewood Association

SOMEA is the inclusive union that represents more than 750 South Orange-Maplewood Public School employees, including transportation & maintenance personnel, secretaries, IT specialists, athletic trainers, child study teams, social workers, counselors, librarians, nurses, and teachers.

For more information please contact:

David Mastrodonato, SOMEA Action Chair, mastro431@yahoo.com

Rocio Lopez, SOMEA President, someapresident@gmail.com

Top 10 Most Read Stories at New Jersey Stage For Week of December 12-18 – New Jersey Stage

NEWS | FEATURES | PREVIEWS | EVENTS




originally published: 12/19/2021

Top 10 Most Read Stories at New Jersey Stage For Week of December 12-18

Here’s a look at the top 10 most read articles published at New Jersey Stage during the week of December 12-18, 2021.  Each week, we publish about 70 articles, including several original columns and features, along with news releases for events happening throughout the state and nearby areas like Philadelphia and New York City. This week’s Top 10 includes articles involving 3 counties in New Jersey (Bergen, Essex,  Morris) and New York City. The top story was the tragic death of Nai-Ni Chen, which was a huge loss to the New Jersey arts community.

1) Nai-Ni Chen Passed Away On December 12th in Honolulu – (FORT LEE, NJ) — “The members of the Board of the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company are devastated by the loss of our dear friend Nai-Ni Chen, who died in a swimming accident while on vacation with her family in Hawaii on Sunday (December 12, 2021). Her innovative work as a choreographer and dancer is deeply rooted in her Asian-American immigrant experience and strongly impacted the mainstream American dance scene. Our hearts go out to her family and we are committed to preserving her legacy,” said Board Chair Theresa A. Shubeck.

2) Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story” Uses New Jersey As Its Backdrop – (NEWARK, NJ) — Steven Spielberg’s reimagining of the legendary “West Side Story” was filmed on location on the streets of Paterson and Newark. The film, already garnering positive reviews from critics, marks Spielberg’s musical debut and his third time filming in New Jersey.

3) Dance on the Lawn Issues Statement On Death of Nai-Ni Chen – (MONTCLAIR, NJ) — Dance on The Lawn: Montclair’s Free Outdoor Dance Festival mourns the loss of fellow New Jersey dance artist Nai-Ni Chen, founder, choreographer, and Artistic Director of the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company. Nai-Ni died in a swimming accident while on vacation with her family in Hawaii on Sunday, December 12.  

4) The Invesco QQQ Legacy Classic Career Summit Takes Place Friday in Newark – (NEWARK, NJ) — HBCU Heroes, a non-profit founded by CEO Tracey Pennywell and NBA veteran, George Lynch, is partnering with the Invesco QQQ Legacy Classic Basketball Showcase to host the Invesco QQQ Legacy Classic Career Summit presented by Amazon, December 17th at the Prudential Center in Newark, NJ from 10:00am – 6:00pm. Registration is free and open to the public

 

Advertise with New Jersey Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info

5) REVIEW: “A Jolly Holiday: Celebrating Disney’s Broadway Hits” at Paper Mill Playhouse – Live on stage, Paper Mill Playhouse premieres a new Disney musical revue, perfectly timed for the season “A Jolly Holiday: Celebrating Disney’s Broadway Hits.”  Set at a holiday party on a stage festooned with presents, Christmas trees, a heart, menorahs, five insanely talented performers sing and dance to your heart’s delight.  I defy you to resist singing along, tapping your feet, clapping or beaming ear to ear beneath your mask. 

6) Christmas Spectacular Starring the Radio City Rockettes Returns After Being Cancelled in 2020 Due to the Pandemic – (NEW YORK, NY) — The 2021 Christmas Spectacular Starring the Radio City Rockettes, presented by Chase, is back this holiday season with performances at Radio City Music Hall now through January 2, 2022. The Christmas Spectacular – seen by more than 69 million people since it debuted in 1933 – is a one-of-a-kind tradition where the magic of Christmas in New York comes alive. The beloved show returns following a 2020 absence due to the pandemic, which marked the first time in 87 years the production was canceled.  

7) New Jersey Symphony rebrands to better reflect institution’s innovation and vision – (NEWARK, NJ) — On December 16, 2021, the New Jersey Symphony launched a new brand to better reflect the institution’s innovation, evolution, warmth and bold vision. To develop this new brand, the Symphony partnered with brand strategy firm Sametz Blackstone Associates and conducted focus-group studies with institutional stakeholders and community members to inform the project’s direction.

8) Newark Social Launches ‘Newark Winter Village’ Event, Offering Shopping and Ice Skating Downtown – (NEWARK, NJ) — Newark Social has turned downtown Newark’s Mulberry Commons, and the nearby Ironside Building, into winter wonderlands for their Newark Winter Village event. The event kicked off on December 1 and runs through January 31, featuring an ice skating rink, a shopping marketplace, and a variety of games and activities. This will be the first time Newark residents will be able to enjoy public outdoor ice skating in their city.

9) Shakespeare Theatre of NJ Presents “A Child’s Christmas in Wales” – (MADISON, NJ) — After almost two years of darkness, The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey (STNJ) will light up its Main Stage again for the holidays. The company’s long-awaited return to indoor, in-person performances will kick off with an all-new production of A Child’s Christmas in Wales, based on the classic story by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas and adapted for the stage by Jeremy Brooks and Adrian Mitchell. Performances begin December 8 and run through January 2 at the beautiful F.M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre on the campus of Drew University. 

10) “Bless Your Heart!” Spotlight on The Allman Betts Band’s Berry Duane Oakley – Berry Duane Oakley is the talented bassist for The Allman Betts Band, a group which plays an eclectic mix of rock, blues, country, folk, vintage R&B, jazz, and soul. Of the seven musicians who comprise the ensemble, three are the sons of original members of The Allman Brothers Band. Devon Allman is the son of vocalist/keyboardist Gregg Allman, Duane Betts is the son of guitarist Dickey Betts, and Berry Duane Oakley is the son of The Allman Brothers’ bassist Berry Oakley. In addition, Oakley’s stepdad is singer Chuck Negron of Three Dog Night fame.

As you can see by this list, event previews are always one of the most popular areas of the website. Event previews get noticed when we first publish them and then get noticed again when they are brought back to the main area of the site the week the event takes place – sometimes even several months later.  Make sure your events get previewed by sending press releases to us at info@newjerseystage.com – for even more promotion, check out our ad rates which run $50-$100 for an entire month of advertising. It’s the best deal around!




Toms River man charged in Lakewood double murder Sunday – wobm.com

A Toms River man is facing two counts of Murder in the deaths of two people inside an apartment complex on River Avenue in Lakewood Sunday morning, according to a statement from Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley Billhimer.

Tyshaun Drummond, 39, of Toms River, was arrested and subsequently charged for allegedly causing the deaths of Nicholas Hardy, 36, of Toms River, and Sergio Chavez-Perez, 32, of Lakewood.

In addition to the two murder charges, Drummond is also facing charges for Possession of a Weapon for an Unlawful Purpose, Unlawful Possession of a Weapon and Burglary.

Lakewood Police were first to respond to the scene around 7:20 am at the apartment complex after getting reports of shots fired.

Officers heading to the scene were also proved with a description of a man who fired the shots.

When police got to the scene, they found the man described to them on the way in — who turned out to be Drummond as he was standing in front of the apartment complex.

As police spotted Drummond, they ordered him to lay on the ground.

Drummond refused to do so and was then subdued by a taser — Conducted Energy Device.

Police then entered the building where the murders had occurred and found the bodies of Hardy and Chavez-Perez, both of whom had been shot in the head.

Lakewood Police, the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office Major Crimes Unit as well as the Ocean County Sheriff’s Office Crime Scene Investigation Unit then identified Drummond as the suspect.

Drummond was then brought to a nearby hospital.

While a suspect is in custody, an investigation is just underway as police look into what happened and why.

“The deaths of these two men are senseless and tragic. The responding Lakewood Township Police Officers should be commended for their bravery and their use of less than lethal force in taking Drummond into custody. They prevented a bad situation from getting worse.”

The most heinous New Jersey murders that shook our communities

Here are New Jersey’s Most Wanted Criminals

South Orange-Maplewood Education Association Statement – InsiderNJ

South Orange-Maplewood Education Association

For Immediate Release

 

On Monday, December 20, 2021, the South Orange-Maplewood Education Association (SOMEA) will conduct a march and rally in order to express its discontent with the state of contract negotiations with the South Orange-Maplewood Board of Education.  Currently, the two parties are at impasse.  At the last negotiations session on October 7th of this year, the Board of Education offered a percentage for salary guide increases far below the Essex County average of 3.3%.  SOMEA is disheartened and insulted and regards the Board of Education’s offer as an unjustified show of disrespect.  SOMEA teachers and staff deserve salaries that are comparable to other Essex County districts. We urge the Board of Education to return to the table and bargain in good faith.

SOMEA members will gather at two points, South Orange Middle School in South Orange and Maplewood Middle School in Maplewood, and each group will march through the two towns at 6:15 PM to the Board of Education office at 525 Academy Street in Maplewood.  There, the members will rally and attend the Board of Education’s monthly meeting beginning at 7:30 PM.

During the public speaking portion of the meeting, SOMEA members and community members plan to speak about the state of the district as they see it, and about the role a fair contract can play in maintaining a healthy district, one that would attract top job candidates and encourage veteran teacher retention.  Additionally, members will speak about their struggles with the long-inadequate salary guide and with the often-deteriorating conditions on the job.

The South Orange and Maplewood Association

SOMEA is the inclusive union that represents more than 750 South Orange-Maplewood Public School employees, including transportation & maintenance personnel, secretaries, IT specialists, athletic trainers, child study teams, social workers, counselors, librarians, nurses, and teachers.

(Visited 43 times, 43 visits today)

Double homicide in Lakewood under investigation by authorities – wobm.com

An investigation is ongoing into a double homicide that occurred in Lakewood Township early on Sunday morning.

Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley Billhimer issued a statement announcing that the OCPO’s Major Crimes Unit along with Lakewood Police and the Ocean County Sheriff’s Office Crime Scene Investigation Unit are looking into the murder that occurred this morning in the township.

“We have a suspect in custody and there is no immediate danger to the public at this time,” Prosecutor Billhimer said in a statement. “This is an active investigation and more details will be released when they become available.”

This is a developing story, stay tuned for additional information as it is released.

The most heinous New Jersey murders that shook our communities

Here are New Jersey’s Most Wanted Criminals

East Orange teacher makes numbers less intimidating in new children’s book – Essex News Daily

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EAST ORANGE, NJ — Anthony Collins, a language arts teacher at the Cicely L. Tyson Community School of Performing and Fine Arts, was looking for a way to make reading fun for his students while making math and numbers less intimidating. His solution: He wrote a book, “Begin Again 10,” that does just that.

The book teaches children the wonders of learning base 10 in a fun and interesting way. 

“‘Begin Again 10’ tells the story of the first numbers that ever existed in the universe. In the darkness, they sing their names, and they have to sing in perfect timing or the number line will change, and they all understand that. But what happens is, the Number One is upset because he wants to be (first in the number line) but Zero, his sister, starts first in the count,” Collins told the Record-Transcript on Dec. 12. “Due to Zero starting first, Number One says to himself, ‘What is Zero? Zero is nothing,’ while Zero says to her brother, Number One, ‘But without me, the numbers wouldn’t have any value. You wouldn’t be able to know your value without the zero.’ So, because of that argument, Number One decides not to sing during his turn but decides to sing during his sister’s turn.”

Because One does this, he and Zero switch places, creating the titular character, Begin Again 10. Throughout the book, the numbers zero through one come to learn that Begin Again 10 is part of their family, even though they originally shunned him for being a two-digit number.

“Every time the numbers get bigger, the universe is created, and we see trees and different things and you see the beginning of things, because the numbers are growing, and when the numbers are growing, it’s a metaphor for life,” Collins said. “As numbers grow, it’s emblematic of life in itself. Begin Again 10 learns and the number line learns that they don’t disappear, they grow as Begin Again 10 grows.”

According to Collins, the story teaches children what the number line is, and that it begins with zero, not one. Another important lesson in Collins’ book is that Zero, who is female, should not be undervalued and pushed to the side for her brother. Like all girls and boys, Zero has value. 

Though “Begin Again 10” is a children’s book, adults can take away a great deal as well. For instance, when Collins’ brother read the book, he said it reminded him of the millennium debate in 1999.

“In 1999, people actually said that the millennium didn’t start until 2001, let’s not count the zero because that’s not really the beginning,” Collins said. “That’s a theoretical argument that people actually have. Some people think the millennium started in the year 2000, while others think it started in the year 2001. Those are the kind of things that can come out of this story. Younger children might look at this story as Zero being a girl and being overlooked and not valued. It turns out that she is the ultimate value because, without her, the number line wouldn’t have any value at all.”

Collins conceived of the book when he considered how children eventually grow up, leave home and start their own families. He therefore viewed the number 10 as the next generation of a family and set out to humanize the number. According to Collins, regardless of whether a number is in the tens value, the hundreds value or higher, it is still part of the number family — a powerful message for him.

“Begin Again 10” is Collins’ second book; the first, “The Jealous Adjective,” features Adjective, a female character who wants to share the throne with King Noun. Just as “Begin Again 10” is about recognizing the inherent value in all numbers — and by extension all people — “The Jealous Adjective” highlights the value of teamwork and the need for many types of words. 

Collins said he is glad to be writing again and offering his newest book for sale. It can be purchased online at https://tinyurl.com/2p8rhtzk. Collins can be reached by email at skypointpublishing26@gmail.com and by phone at 908-523-8528.

“The individual sales are doing well, but I would like for districts, starting with my own in East Orange, to buy copies for every child and for teachers to be able to teach from this book throughout the state of New Jersey and eventually across the country,” Collins said.

With ‘shoe drop’ protests, parents preemptively oppose a school vaccination mandate – NJ.com

The empty pairs of shoes outside Ridgefield Park Junior-Senior High School provided arresting imagery.

Work boots, sandals, soccer cleats and a toddler’s aqua shoes — each pair representing a child who would be absent from school if a COVID-19 vaccination mandate were put in place.

Jennifer Schmitt, standing amid the rows of shoes on Wednesday night, said she’s all for protecting others — she herself is vaccinated — but won’t vaccinate her child.

“If we’re weighing the risks and benefits on their own, why would I vaccinate her? Either she gets the sniffles from COVID-19, or I could give her the shot. But she’s got a rare genetic disorder. How can you tell me you know enough about that to give her the shot that just came out a year ago?”

Schmidt and the dozens of others who left 96 pairs of shoes outside the high school Wednesday night are the latest participants in a statewide preemptive campaign to oppose any potential vaccine mandate for kids, known as “Operation Shoe Drop,” which has included 13 such silent protests around the state with more planned.

To be clear: there is no mandate that children be vaccinated against COVID-19 in order to attend school in New Jersey. California is the one state to have announced it will require it but only after the Food and Drug Administration fully approves the shots for children. Murphy has repeatedly said he has no intention of ordering a school vaccination mandate.

But the virus is now surging once again in New Jersey and elsewhere, with last week’s seven-day average caseload for the state hitting its highest level since April, and the omicron variant creating new uncertainties. And Murphy has not ruled out a mandate.

In its guidance on addressing the coronavirus in schools, the federal Centers for Disease Control states that, “Vaccination is the leading public health prevention strategy to end the COVID-19 pandemic,” and that “promoting vaccination can help schools safely return to in-person learning as well as extracurricular activities and sports.”

Currently, anyone over the age of 5 is eligible for a vaccine and anyone over the age of 16 is now eligible for a booster. The CDC has said COVID-19 in children can result in hospitalizations, deaths, and long-term complications.

However, the CDC stops short of recommending that vaccinations be mandatory, and it prescribes a combination of measures to curb transmission of the virus, “including indoor masking by all students — age 2 and older — staff, teachers, and visitors to K-12 schools, regardless of vaccination status.” In August, Murphy did order that school and other public employees must be vaccinated or submit to regular testing.

Schmitt said she pulled together Wednesday’s drop mainly through a local chat group. But the broader campaign has been led by a group she said she does not belong to, known as New Jersey for Medical Freedom, or NJ4MF which is part of network of libertarian and conservative-leaning organizations or social media sites focused on health and education-related issues.

The shoe drop protests coincided with another show of defiance involving a coronavirus-related mandate on Dec. 2, when Republican lawmakers defied a Statehouse requirement to present proof of vaccination or submit to rapid testing as a condition of entering the Assembly chamber for a voter session.

The shoe campaign was dismissed on legal and ethical grounds by Prof. T. Patrick Hill of Rutgers’ Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, where he teaches public health law and ethics.

Hill said there was more than a century of legal precedent upholding states’ rights to mandate vaccinations, dating back to the 1905 U.S. Supreme Court case Jacobson v Massachusetts.

Since then, New Jersey has imposed a host of vaccine mandates on school children at various grade levels, starting with Polio, tetanus, measles, rubella and others in 1975, up through Hepatitis B shots required as of 2004 in grades 9-12.

Hill’s harshest criticism of vaccine mandate opponents was for what he characterized as their selfish willingness to let other people’s children — though not their own— be exposed to a perceived risk from the vaccine amid an ongoing effort to achieve the herd immunity that would protect vaccinated and unvaccinated families alike.

“They are benefiting from the degree of immunity that is achieved through this vaccine, but they are unwilling to contribute to the development of that immunity,” Hill said. “That, to me, is freeloading.’’

But Sue Collins, president of the New Jersey Coalition for Vaccination Choice, said the focus on vaccination ignores the role of natural immunity resulting from an individuals’ exposure to the virus in protecting the herd.

However, the CDC said evidence suggests that while reinfection within 90 days is uncommon, its unknown how long that immunity will last and “the risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19 far outweighs any benefits of natural immunity.”

One of NJ4HF’s affiliates, NJStandsUP.org, has posted the fliers for all 13 shoe drops since Nov. 21, when the campaign launched with three drops in three counties: Ocean County, at an elementary school in Brick Township; Middlesex, at the Edison Board of Education office; Essex, at the Archdiocese of Newark, which oversees Catholic schools in the state’s northeast corner.

Subsequent drops have occurred outside schools or board offices in Burlington County, in Medford; Monmouth County, in Holmdel, Manalapan and Middletown; Bergen County, in Glen Rock and Wednesday night’s event in Ridgefield Park; and Ocean County, where there were drops in Jackson and Berkeley townships after the one in Brick.

Signs were also posted on the ground at Ridgefield Park.

“Declining a medical action or product is still a Basic Human Right. Keep the Vaccine a Choice,” read one.

Amela Feratovic, 30, a Ridgefield Park mother of two, was at the high school Wednesday night even though she had already pulled her children from their elementary classes after masks became a requirement and her daughter had trouble breathing through hers.

“I was not a fan of the masks,” said Feratovic, who had little faith in their efficacy or that of vaccines.

As for the shoes, organizers say they’re donated to charities, a gesture Ridgefield Park Superintendent of Schools Barry Haimes strongly supported.

“I love the idea that we take up a shoe collection,” Haimes told NJAM before the event. “I would put out a large box for a canned food collection.”

The last shoe drop before Ridgefield Park’s was on Monday morning at the Jackson Township Board of Education office, where Superintendent Nicole Pornelli went out and talked to the organizers. Pornelli later issued a statement reflecting school officials’ delicate position between local constituents and higher authorities.

“What I saw was a peaceful and passionate display from parents advocating for their children,” Pornelli wrote. “We hope our parents will continue to champion their children’s interests, and we will continue to listen and to be as responsive as we can within the mandates and executive orders we are required to follow.”

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Steve Strunsky may be reached at sstrunsky@njadvancemedia.com

Racism in NJ’s child protection system – nj.com – NJ.com

One unguarded moment of desperation nearly cost Iesha Hammons everything.

A stay-at-home mother of three, Hammons was not the kind of person who went looking for a fight. She said she spent years “walking on eggshells” in an abusive relationship because she believed her children needed their parents under one roof. When she finally got a restraining order against the children’s father and his family, she thought the worst was over.

Racism in N.J.’s child protection system – nj.com – NJ.com

One unguarded moment of desperation nearly cost Iesha Hammons everything.

A stay-at-home mother of three, Hammons was not the kind of person who went looking for a fight. She said she spent years “walking on eggshells” in an abusive relationship because she believed her children needed their parents under one roof. When she finally got a restraining order against the children’s father and his family, she thought the worst was over.

Murphy: Vaccines, mask wearing by choice ‘going to work for us’ – New Jersey 101.5 FM

When it comes to the possibility of another COVID lockdown nearly two years into the pandemic, “You have to leave it on the table, but I don’t see it,” Gov. Phil Murphy said during a TV appearance on Fox News Sunday.

“Among other reasons — we have a very high degree of vaccinations, folks are getting boosted which clearly gives another layer of protection against this,” Murphy told Fox News host Bret Baier.

The governor said the virus has humbled “all of us,” and that he understands the COVID fatigue, which he also is feeling, this long after the health crisis was officially marked as arriving in New Jersey back in March 2020.

Murphy said he was at the “biggest mall in North America” over the weekend where there was a high rate of mask wearing and that for a majority of residents “As fatigued as they are, they are largely accepting of what you need to do to push back at this.”

He said “for the time being, we think that is going to work for us.”

Murphy did not clarify whether the mall he was describing was American Dream in East Rutherford, which is among the largest malls on the continent.

Watch the latest video at

foxnews.com

On Sunday, there were 6,533 new confirmed cases and 988 new likely cases, based on COVID test results statewide.

There also were 1,852 COVID patients hospitalized, including 343 of them in intensive care units.

Those are double the number of hospitalizations and ICU patients from one year ago, respectively.

The first COVID vaccinations had just begun for health care personnel days earlier, as 7,606 doses of Pfizer had been given out as of Dec. 18, 2020.

As of Sunday, 14.7 million vaccine doses had been administered statewide, including nearly two million booster or dose three shots of Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson and Johnson, combined. Those doses involve 6.35 million fully vaccinated people who live, work or study in the state.

There also have been nearly 292,000 pediatric doses given to children, between the ages of 5 and 11 years old.

When asked about the current court battles regarding the federal vaccine mandate, Murphy said that his reaction is not “as strident, as perhaps others.”

He said there has been a high “take up rate” to the state’s current requirements, which still offer public sector workers and educators the option to either get vaccinated or tested weekly for COVID-19.

In New Jersey, face masks have not been required in many outdoor and indoor settings since late May, with the exception of schools, healthcare facilities, public transportation, child care centers correctional facilities, and homeless shelters.

Answers to 25 common COVID-19 vaccine questions

Vaccinations for COVID-19 began being administered in the U.S. on Dec. 14, 2020. The quick rollout came a little more than a year after the virus was first identified in November 2019. The impressive speed with which vaccines were developed has also left a lot of people with a lot of questions. The questions range from the practical—how will I get vaccinated?—to the scientific—how do these vaccines even work?

Keep reading to discover answers to 25 common COVID-19 vaccine questions.

Every NJ pizza joint Barstool’s Dave Portnoy has reviewed

Dave Portnoy, commonly known as El Presidente, is the founder of Barstool Sports. Somewhere along the way, he decided to start reviewing local pizzerias, and the concept took off. Here is every New Jersey pizzeria Dave has stopped in, along with the score he gave them.

54 Jersey natives playing in the NFL in 2021 (+ 2 head coaches)

Some of them may even be on your fantasy football team.