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Though it shares a moniker with that very famous Copenhagen restaurant, this NOMA could not be more different. 

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● Boston: Head to Salem, just 35 miles from the city and center of all things spooky for centuries. The weekend is packed with events, from the Friday night Halloween Ball, to Saturday’s Vampire Masquerade, to Sunday’s Dinner with the Dead, a silent dinner and séance. ● New Orleans: The Voodoo Experience brings Snoop Dogg, Soundgarten, Girl Talk, and 30-something other bands to City Park in New Orleans all weekend long, along with art installations, great food, and of course, crazy costumes.

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Fall means football season, championship baseball, professional hockey, even the start of soccer season, but where to watch when you’re on the road? Unsurprisingly, anywhere there are great fans, there are great places to drink and cheer on your team -- which is the home team, if you know what’s good for you. Here are some of our favorites across the country.

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"A Lolllapalooza of Booze"

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When The Levees Broke, Spike Lee’s haunting 2006 documentary about Hurricane Katrina, is the director’s strongest work to date, and arguably the most powerful mainstream artistic response to the tragedy. For the film, Lee ditched the out-sized ego and over-the-top sensibility that tended to carry his projects into the realm of spectacle (see: Bamboozled, Crooklyn). Instead, we got a humbling and humbly shot masterpiece that relied on the power of images—destroyed homes, detritus in the streets, funeral parades—to tell its story. It remains an important film, the first piece of media to give American audiences a true taste of the storm’s severity. Now Lee is back with a follow-up documentary, If God Is Willing and Da Creek Don’t Rise, which airs tonight and tomorrow night on HBO.

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Beloved BlackBook alumnus Steve Garbarino has a great piece in the New York Observer today: "The Cajun Expats," concerning New Orleans' post-Katrina revamp as an attractive new home for New Yorkers weary of the Big Apple's rat race and cancerous economy. Media mandarins, movie folk, artists, PR mavens, and others are profiled, such as Sean McCusker (formerly of Complex) pictured above in front of his new restaurant space. All their reasons for relocating sound pretty compelling actually. Especially the parts about beignets and coffee. And beer, and roast beef po-boys ...

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Traditionally, Valentine's Day is known as a "Hallmark Holiday," but really it's so much more than that. Its crass commercialization isn't limited to the greeting card world; there are flowers and chocolates and ridiculously marked up restaurants packaged, and yes, there are oddly contrived "romance" packages at hotels around the world. Single or coupled, old or young, pro or anti-John Mayer, there's a hotel Valentine's Day marketing gimmick just for you.

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We've expanded our city guide coverage to New Orleans (home of the Saints, who happen to be NFC Champions, in case you hadn't heard), as well as the wildcat Texas town of Houston. As per usual, browse through the best nightlife, shopping, restaurants, and hotels -- either online or via our free iPhone app.

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Wireless internet service at airports is becoming more rule, less exception. Google has embraced the holiday spirit by distributing free Wi-Fi at 47 U.S. airports until January 15, 2010. And several airlines have begun to offer wireless service on board flights, ensuring that jetting won’t hinder your daily routine of stalking your exes on Facebook. In a recent survey by American Airlines and HP, 47% of business travelers indicated that Wi-Fi was more valued than food during their flight. People are looking to stay connected with the outside world, especially while in transit. While many airports now offer wireless, some are better at it than others.

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Deep in the 1960s closet

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