New York City Charter section 20-d(e) requires the Office of Nightlife at the NYC Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment to publish a semi-annual report of Multi-Agency Response to Community Hotspot (M.A.R.C.H.) operations beginning in 2020. This report covers January 1 through June 30, 2021.
This report evaluates and describes the economic impact of the 7 key sectors that comprise NYC's film and television industry: motion picture talent, subscription programming, television broadcasting, advertising and media buying, postproduction and other services, and distribution and consumption.
Charter section 20-d(f) requires the Nightlife Advisory Board to submit recommendations about nightlife in New York City to the Mayor and the City Council. This report contains those recommendations.
New York City Charter section 20-d(e) requires the Office of Nightlife at the NYC Mayor’s
Office of Media and Entertainment to publish a semi-annual report of Multi-Agency
Response to Community Hotspot (M.A.R.C.H.) operations. This report states there were no M.A.R.C.H. operations 7/1-12/31/2020.
This report is a record of the NYC Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment's Office of Nightlife's work during its first three years, from 2018 to 2019, and sets forth recommendations regarding nightlife in New York City.
This plan explains how the Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment intends to make its programs accessible to people with limited English proficiency.
In 2019, the NYC Council passed Local Law 220 (2019), requiring the Office of Nightlife
at the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment to publish a semi-annual report of
Multi-Agency Response to Community Hotspot (M.A.R.C.H.) inspections. M.A.R.C.H. is a multi-agency inspection, led by the NYPD.
This study describes the structure of the small venue theater sector including its history, cultural and economic impacts, and operational practices, and concludes with a series of high-level findings that set the stage for future efforts to support the small venue theater industry.
Mayor de Blasio announced actions he would take in relation to the state of controversial monuments put up in the city, saying that as opposed to fully removing the monuments his administration would focus on adding education and nuance to the monuments.