video montage showing scenes from new york city
Gamecock Nation
New York City
As we celebrate the Mighty Sound of the Southeast’s appearance at the 2024 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, let’s also take a moment to celebrate the greater Gamecock spirit. From Times Square Studios to the New York Public Library, from Bryant Park to Broadway, New York is Carolina country, and we’ve got the stories and pictures to prove it.
For the latest installment of Gamecock Nation, the University of South Carolina social media team and Carolinian magazine traveled to New York City to meet a cross section of proud alumni living, working and chasing their dreams in the city that never sleeps. These proud Gamecocks have all blossomed in the Big Apple, but their stories remain firmly rooted on the campus they call home.
For more stories about alumni living the dream in New York City check out “Gamecocks Take Manhattan” in the winter edition of Carolinian. To keep up with everything else garnet and black, follow the university on social media.
Carolinian spotlight: Sara Bako
As division president for London Times, a subsidiary of dressmaker Maggy London, Sara Bako is living two of her biggest dreams at once: She and her family live in New York City, and she works in the retail industry. But the Atlanta native and ’04 retail management graduate draws on her Southern roots every day.
“I consider myself a Southerner in New York,” says Bako. “I won't ever let go of that. It’s a defining part of who I am, and it's a defining part of my approach to business. So much of women's apparel is based in the Northeast, and too often stores make assumptions about what Southern customers want. I understand that customer and that part of the U.S. That’s one of my secret weapons.”
Carolinian spotlight: Stan Brown
This spring, actor Stan Brown made his Broadway debut at the age of 61. The theatre double alumnus, ’84, ’89 MFA, calls the role as Camel in the musical Water for Elephants “a dream deferred,” but it’s not as if he has been waiting in the wings all these years. The Great White Way is just the latest chapter in a long and gratifying career.
“I never expected to do Broadway when I came here as a younger man,” Brown explains from a box overlooking the stage of the Imperial Theater. “I couldn't get an agent to meet with me, let alone represent me, so I just kind of changed my plans. I had my degree from USC, so I could teach, and I fell in love with that.”
Carolinian spotlight: Eva Pilgrim
You’ve seen Eva Pilgrim in the co-host seat on Good Morning America and GMA3, but the broadcast journalism alumna has a rich life beyond TV. And while she’s been living, working and enjoying her career in New York City for nearly a decade, she approaches life in the Big Apple on her own terms.
“People think of New York as this big city, hustle and bustle, but it can also be what you choose to make it,” she says. “I did live the hustle and bustle life for a very long time — I was a single young person in the city, living it up for a while — but you can also have something very different.”
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