A Duane Reade cashier shows off his diamond cross while working in New York, NY. Referring to the cross, he stated: “I iced it out because we always gotta show love to Jesus."
A jogger goes for a run along 5th avenue while wearing a face mask in New York, NY. Make have now become mandatory to enter essential establishments throughout the city.
Military members walk towards the entrance of the Jacob Javits Center, located on 34th street and 12h avenue, which will open as a field hospital for coronavirus patients beginning Monday March 30, 2020 in New York, NY.
Topics
Documentary, Epidemics, Pandemics, Photography, Photojournalism, Street
New York City’s once busiest neighborhoods are now mostly desolate leaving nothing but deafening silence in its wake. Walking around different areas of Manhattan, the occasional passerby on the streets are either people who have no choice but to go outside, or those who have no where else to go. Observing this bizarre new normal reminds me of the stories my parents used to tell me about living in Hell’s Kitchen, which was one of Manhattan’s most dangerous neighborhoods in the 1980s. Working as a photojournalist, I have covered numerous situations where danger was present and the attention of the media was unwanted. This is the first time I genuinely felt unsafe doing my job. This is ongoing coverage of the coronavirus pandemic in New York City.