
 
        
         
		Eric Prydz brings legendary  
 HOLO show to the Bronx 
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER, S 30     EPTEMBER 13-19, 2019 BTR 
 Eric Prydz mixing in Gothenburg, Sweden.  Eric Pyrdz/Twitter 
 FAMILY COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK 
 COUNTY OF THE BRONX 
 Docket No. NN-30215-20/18 
 SUMMONS 
 In the Matter of  
 THE BUSANET/PAGAN CHILDREN 
 A Child(ren) Under Eighteen Years Alleged to be Neglected by 
 TASHEMA KNIGHT 
 EDWIN BUSANET 
 Respondent(s) 
 IN THE NAME OF THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK 
 NOTICE: PLACEMENT OF YOUR CHILD IN FOSTER CARE MAY RESULT  IN THE LOSS OF  
 YOUR RIGHTS TO YOUR CHILD. IF YOUR CHILD STAYS IN FOSTER CARE FOR 15 OF THE  
 MOST  RECENT  22  MONTHS,  THE  AGENCY  MAY  BE  REQUIRED  BY  LAW  TO  FILE  A  
 PETITION  TO  TERMINATE  YOUR  PARENTAL  RIGHTS  AND  TO  COMMIT  GUARDIANSHIP  
 AND CUSTODY OF YOUR CHILD TO THE AGENCY FOR THE PURPOSES OF ADOPTION. IN  
 SOME CASES, THE AGENCY MAY FILE BEFORE THE END OF THE 15-MONTH PERIOD.  IF  
 SEVERE  OR  REPEATED  CHILD  ABUSE  IS  PROVEN  BY  CLEAN  AND  CONVINCING  
 EVIDENCE,  THIS  FINDING  MAY  CONSTITUTE  THE  BASIS  TO  TERMINATE  YOUR  
 PARENTAL RIGHTS AND TO COMMIT GUARDIANSHIP AND CUSTODY OF YOUR CHILD TO  
 THE AGENCY FOR THE PURPOSES OF ADOPTION. 
 TO: EDWIN BUSANET 
 A petition  under  ARTICLE  10 of the  FAMILY  COURT  ACT having been  filed  with this Court  
 alleging  that the above-named child(ren) is  a neglected  child(ren),  a copy  of said  petition being  
 annexed hereto:   
 YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to appear before this court 900 Sheridan Avenue, Bronx, New  
 York 10451, Part  5, on OCTOBER  18th, 2019 at  11:30  oʼclock in the fore noon of said  day to  
 answer  the  petition  and  to  show  cause    why  said  child(ren)  should  not  be  adjudicated  to  be  a  
 neglected child(ren) and why you  should not be dealt with  in accordance with  the provisions  of  
 ARTICLE 10 of the FAMILY COURT ACT and why an order of support under Section 235 of the  
 FAMILY COURT ACT should not be made if the final disposition is an order of placement. 
 On your failure to appear as herein directed, a warrant may be issued for your arrest. 
 FURTHER NOTICE: Family Court Act §154 (c) provides that petitions brought pursuant to Articles  
 4, 5, 6, 8 and 10 of the Family Court Act, in which an order of protection is sought or in which a  
 violation of an order of protection is alleged, may be served outside the State of New York upon a  
 Respondent who is not a resident or domiciliary of the State of New York.  If no other grounds for  
 obtaining personal  jurisdiction over the Respondent exist aside from the application of this  
 provision, the exercise  of personal jurisdiction over  the respondent is limited to the issue  of the  
 request for, or alleged violation of the order of protection. Where the Respondent has been served  
 with this summons and petition and does not appear, the Family Court may proceed to a hearing  
 with respect to issuance or enforcement of the order of protection. 
 STEPHEN G. BYRNES 
 CLERK OF THE FAMILY COURT 
 Dated: July 31, 2019 
 BY ALEX MITCHELL 
 One of the most legendary  
 DJs of all time is debuting  
 a show never before seen  
 in North America, and it will  
 be premier in the Bronx this  
 winter.  
 Swedish house producer  
 Eric  Prydz,  known  widely  
 throughout the genre for massive  
 hits  like  ‘Opus’,  ‘Pjanoo’,  
 ‘Liberate’, and of course ‘Call  
 On  Me’  (don’t  expect  to  hear  
 it live), sold out the venue’s  
 capacity  three  consecutive  
 nights at the New York Expo  
 Center in less than a day when  
 tickets went on sale for the  
 Hunts Point show the morning  
 of Tuesday, September 10.  
 While Prydz is no stranger  
 to New York performances,  
 he’ll be bringing a much different  
 kind of show than his  
 American audiences are used  
 to, a much more visual one.  
 Light shows are a bit of a  
 given when it comes to dance  
 and EDM acts, though Prydz  
 is on another level with his  
 HOLO show, which illuminates  
 the tops of concert halls  
 with  legitimately  lifelike,  holographic  
 imagery.  
 Lifelike Swedish astronauts, 
  holospheres that look  
 like part of a Star Wars fi lm,  
 pseudo thunder and rain  
 storms, and electric blue DNA  
 strands are just some of the advanced  
 motion  graphics  that  
 have been displayed  throughout  
 Europe and elsewhere in  
 Prydz’s coveted HOLO shows,  
 part of Prydz’s sixth rendition  
 of his EPIC tours.   
 What’s  equally  as  impressive  
 with Prydz’s holograms  
 are the massive scale that  
 they cover in many a massive  
 venue.  
 As a matter of fact, his  
 HOLO show is the largest of  
 its kind in the world.  
 Prydz has also openly admitted  
 that  he  loses  money  
 on the massive budget for his  
 HOLO shows require and that  
 the performance really serves  
 as a thank you to his massive,  
 worldwide following that’s  
 stuck  with  him  throughout  
 his almost 20-year career behind  
 the decks. 
 The New York Expo Center’s  
 conversion from operating  
 as a processing facility for  
 New York Organic Fertilizer  
 Company to a 60,000 square  
 foot concert venue has made  
 Prydz’s inaugural show possible, 
  since HOLO requires an  
 enormous space and resources  
 that  many  other  venues  
 around the city, specifi cally in  
 Brooklyn,  aren’t  equipped  to  
 provide.  
 The  holosphere  alone  
 weights about fi ve tons, which  
 he’s  teased  on  social  media  
 along with the opening visuals  
 for the show. 
 If you somehow manage to  
 dig up tickets for the sold out  
 shows from Friday, December  
 27 to Sunday, December 29 be  
 prepared for one of the most  
 electric nights of your life. 
 Good luck beating this one,  
 Chainsmokers.     
 The holosphere from EPIC 6.0.  Eric Prydz/Twitter