280 The Fenway
Boston, MA 02115
Machine is an old-school style dance club with a state of the art sound system and light show with one of the biggest dance floors in Boston. An essential player in Boston nightlife since 1998, Machine continues to feature top notch entertainment in the form of DJ driven dance nights, theater shows, drag shows, themed parties, private events, benefits, karaoke, and game nights. Along with the poolroom, now known as “The Ballroom”, there is something to do almost every night at Machine. The weekend begins with “Machine Friday”; Boston's longest running gay dance night with DJ Jay Ine in Machine and DJ Ian Diver in The Ballroom. Always packed with a great looking crowd, Friday’s is all ages with weekly themes, cd releases, bands, and drag shows. Saturday night has four rotating parties: First Saturday is “Blend”; an adventure into underground techno. Second Saturdays, Kristen Porter brings “Dyke Night” to Machine with DJ Dena, Third Saturday is fetish night with “Sin-O-Matic”. Mondays are legendary for “All Star Monday” with DJ Jay Ine and a drag show with hostess Lili Whiteass. Thursday is Karaoke in The Ballroom with VJ Paulina Lubio & Rob Botelho on the bar. Please check the Machine website, www.machine-boston.com for specific information about all events.
Machine is Boston's and New England's largest gay club and Friday has been the premiere night to go out dancing for 14 years. ”Machine Friday” is considered to be "Boston's Best Night Out" with a great looking crowd, delicious cocktails, state of the art sound and lights, and great music guaranteed. DJ Jay Ine plays Top 40, remixes, Electro, and vocal house in the big room. DJ Diver plays the best of the 90's, 2000's, and today in The Ballroom. Photos by Corey Banda Photography. Great Drag Show in the Lounge.
Blazing Paddles offers 12 championship style ping pong tables, exclusive boxes for any type of event, and even the same batting cage used by the Red Sox visiting team. Our events include but are not limited to Pre-Games/Game Watches, Corporate Outings, Birthday Parties, Bachelor/Ette Parties, Fundraisers, Receptions, and Showers. If you can imagine it, we can do it, and the amount of fun is endless! Book today and leave the rest up to us.
Founded in 2009, by the Bodega Crew with a goal of creating more places for punks to loiter, artists to flourish, and more voices to be heard. The idea was to turn dormant commercial spaces into pop up gallery spaces reclaiming urban space for public art projects and progressive exhibitions. We keep it independent/free form and curate cultural artifacts for the neighborhood. We settled into our current location at 132 brookline Ave. Boston MA 02215 a wonderful 3,000 square foot gallery with many possibilities.
D.J. Kuro spins an eclectic mix of Retro, 90's, Glam, Goth, Industrial, Synth-Pop, Alterna-Pop, 80's, Punk, Metal, and more! Your requests are always welcome! Daisy (from LEGENDARY ManRay) and Donald will be mixing the drinks! Guest DJs on occasion. The Attic occurs at Machine (upstairs) No cover. 21+
If you want to get involved in any of the following "departments" of the station, please email the respective e-board member: Promotions & Marketing: Owen Harrelseon [email protected] Music: Adam Kenny [email protected] News & Underwriting: Audrey Pence [email protected] Programming: Rae Fagin [email protected] Sports: Jake Fischer [email protected] Webmaster: Stefan Cepko [email protected] Events: Carly Goldberg [email protected] Engineering: Jeremy Breef-Pilz [email protected] Finance: Josh Brown [email protected] General Manager: Stephanie Smith [email protected]
Museum of Fine Arts is a surface-level tram stop on the MBTA Green Line "E" Branch, located the median of Huntington Avenue in Boston, Massachusetts, between Museum Road and Ruggles Street. The station is named after the adjacent Museum of Fine Arts, although it also provides access to Northeastern University, Wentworth Institute of Technology, and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Museum of Fine Arts station is fully handicapped accessible.HistoryThe modern Green Line "E" Branch opened on February 16, 1941 with the completion of the Huntington Avenue subway from Copley to the Northeastern Incline. (Before then, trams had run on the surface from the Boylston Street portal). Until the 1970s, there were not truly distinct stations on the surface portion of the line; passengers merely waited on street corners. Museum of Fine Arts first appeared on system maps in 1990 as Museum (sometimes Museum/Ruggles), and small asphalt platforms were installed north of Museum Road around that time. Most current system maps show the name as Museum Fine Arts to save space, though the MBTA still uses the full Museum of Fine Arts name on Green Line-only maps and station signage.In a renovation that took place in 2002 and 2003, a new handicapped-accessible station was built between Museum Road and Ruggles Street. Wiring slots for an automatic fare collection system were installed during the upgrade, though fare collection at the station is still on board trains. A signal prioritization system for Northeastern University and all stops further outbound is also in place.
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum or Fenway Court, as the museum was known during Isabella Stewart Gardner's lifetime, is a museum in the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, located within walking distance of the Museum of Fine Arts and near the Back Bay Fens. The museum houses an art collection of world importance, including significant examples of European, Asian, and American art, from paintings and sculpture to tapestries and decorative arts. In 1990, thirteen of the museum's works were stolen; the high-profile crime remains unsolved and the artwork's location is still unknown. Today, the museum hosts exhibitions of historic and contemporary art, as well as concerts, lectures, family and community programs, and changing courtyard displays. In accordance with the will of Isabella Stewart Gardner, admittance is discounted to those wearing Boston Red Sox memorabilia, and is free to anyone named Isabella.
The Tufts School of the Museum of Fine Arts is one of the schools that comprise Tufts University, located in Boston, Massachusetts. The school offers undergraduate and graduate degrees dedicated to the visual arts. It is affiliated with the Museum of Fine Arts. SMFA is also a member of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design, a consortium of several dozen leading art schools in the United States.OverviewThe school does not have a foundations program, but it does require all new students to take a freshman seminar. Encouraged to build an individual program of interdisciplinary study, students are not asked to declare a major, but by choosing among in-depth courses in a dozen disciplines, students are free to concentrate in a medium of their choice.One of the unique attributes of SMFA is that students are required to participate in a "Review Board" which is a review of all of the art work that a student has done during the semester. Review Boards are led by two faculty members, one of whom is the students' choice, and two fellow students. There are many opportunities for students to exhibit their artwork at both the main building and the Mission Hill building.Opportunities to exhibit works include the annual Museum School Art Sale and the juried "Student Annual Exhibition". Various galleries and spaces that are available to students around the school buildings include Bag Gallery, Hallway Gallery, Bathroom Gallery, Underground Gallery, as well as the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
The Tufts School of the Museum of Fine Arts is one of the schools that comprise Tufts University, located in Boston, Massachusetts. The school offers undergraduate and graduate degrees dedicated to the visual arts. It is affiliated with the Museum of Fine Arts. SMFA is also a member of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design, a consortium of several dozen leading art schools in the United States.OverviewThe school does not have a foundations program, but it does require all new students to take a freshman seminar. Encouraged to build an individual program of interdisciplinary study, students are not asked to declare a major, but by choosing among in-depth courses in a dozen disciplines, students are free to concentrate in a medium of their choice.One of the unique attributes of SMFA is that students are required to participate in a "Review Board" which is a review of all of the art work that a student has done during the semester. Review Boards are led by two faculty members, one of whom is the students' choice, and two fellow students. There are many opportunities for students to exhibit their artwork at both the main building and the Mission Hill building.Opportunities to exhibit works include the annual Museum School Art Sale and the juried "Student Annual Exhibition". Various galleries and spaces that are available to students around the school buildings include Bag Gallery, Hallway Gallery, Bathroom Gallery, Underground Gallery, as well as the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.