— Tuesday, March 6th, 2018 —

Tarot Readings with Laetitia
406 3rd Avenue at Halyards
Time: 6pm – 9pm
Price: $20 for 10 minutes
Join Laetitia, an experienced tarot reader and a firm believer in the empowering nature of the Tarot as a a visual tool to help us bring clarity to the complexity of life, providing information and insights on decisions we’re facing, or shining a light on options that we might not have considered.

The Future of Feminism
128 Pierrepont Street at Brooklyn Historical Society
Time: 6:30pm – 8pm
Price: $5; FREE/members
Jezebel editor-in-chief Koa Beck and writer Ashley C. Ford come together to discuss the intersection of contemporary feminism with other social justice movements involving racial equality, transgender rights, and immigrant protection. Moderated by Rebecca Carroll, Editor of Special Projects for WNYC.

NORMA RAE (International Women’s Day Fundraiser w/ The Braod Room)
136 Metropolitan Avenue at Nitehawk Cinema
Time: 7:15pm
Price: $16
Ahead of International Women’s Day, Nitehawk is partnering with The Broad Room, a nonprofit group empowering young women to take political action, for a fundraiser screening of NORMA RAE. A portion of ticket sales as well as the Justice & Mercy drink special will go to the organization to help ensure their trainings, events, and weekly action letters are free to the public. Intro by Co-founder Elana Leopold and member Bailey Usdin.

Disney Trivia Night!
40 Bogart Street at Syndicated
Time: 8pm – 10pm
FREE
Are you the biggest Disney fan? Do you know everything from Mickey Mouse to Elsa? Test your knowledge at this special Disney edition of movie trivia, in honor of the release of A Wrinkle in Time! Hosted by Jake Levitt, you could win fun prizes including gift certificates, drinks, and movie tickets.

The Poetry Brothel: Area 51
2 Wyckoff Avenue at House of YES
Time: 8pm – 2am
Price: $40
Enjoy this unique and immersive poetry event that takes poetry outside classrooms and lecture halls and places it in the lush interiors of a bordello. The Madame presents a rotating cast of poets, each operating within a carefully crafted character, who impart their work in public readings, spontaneous eruptions of poetry, and most distinctly, as purveyors of private poetry readings on beds, chaise lounges and in private rooms.