The song has been embraced as a celebration of
New York City, and is often heard at New York City social events, such as weddings and
bar mitzvahs. Many sports teams in New York City have played this song in their arenas/stadiums, but the
New York Yankees are the most prominent example. It has been played over the loudspeakers at both the
original and
current Yankee Stadiums at the end of every Yankee home game since July 1980. Originally, Sinatra's version was played after a Yankees win, and the Minnelli version after a loss. However, due to a complaint from Minnelli, the Sinatra version was heard regardless of the game's outcome until the 2025 season, when the Yankees retired the use of Sinatra's version after home losses, opting instead to rotate different songs. By the mid-1980s, the song was ubiquitous as the theme in commercials for
Kraft's Philadelphia Cream Cheese. While collaborating with
Queen on the soundtrack to
Highlander, director
Russell Mulcahy begged
Freddie Mercury to record "New York, New York". The singer obliged and his 30-second performance appears in the film just before the climax. Liza Minnelli performed the song live during the July 4, 1986 ceremony marking the rededication of the
Statue of Liberty after
extensive renovations. Minnelli also performed it on September 21, 2001 at
Shea Stadium during the
seventh-inning stretch. It was the first game in New York after the
attacks on the World Trade Center. The
Mets beat the
Braves with a dramatic home run by
Mike Piazza. It is known as the "9/11 game". In 2004, "New York, New York" ranked #31 on
AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs survey of top tunes in
American cinema. In the 2005
Arrested Development episode "Queen for a Day" Tobias Fünke starts singing the song in presence of Minnelli's character Lucille Austero, causing her to roll her eyes and complain that "everyone thinks they're Frank Sinatra." From the 2005 season until 2020, at the
Richmond County Bank Ballpark following
Staten Island Yankees games, the Sinatra version was heard regardless of the game's outcome, and was formerly heard at
Shea Stadium at the end of
New York Mets games after the September 11, 2001 attack. Previously, Mets fans felt it was a "Yankee song", and began booing it when it was played. It first had snippets of the song played after
World Series home runs by
Ray Knight and
Darryl Strawberry during Game 7 of the
1986 World Series. The song is also sometimes played at
New York Knicks games. The Sinatra version is played at the end of every
New York Rangers game at Madison Square Garden. It was played at the opening faceoff of Game 7 of the
1994 Stanley Cup Final at the Garden. The song has also been the post parade song for the
Belmont Stakes from 1997 to 2009, and since 2011. Sinatra's version of the song has been played at the end of all four
Super Bowls that the
New York Giants have won to date, as well as before kickoff of
Super Bowl XLVIII, while Minnelli's version was heard after the Giants'
Super Bowl XXXV loss. Following the
New York Liberty winning the
2024 WNBA Finals,
Nike created an advert featuring the
Statue of Liberty with the song playing in the background. In 2013, the 1979 recording by
Frank Sinatra was inducted into the
Grammy Hall of Fame. The song was the musical basis for Jimmy Picker's 1983 three-minute animated short,
Sundae in New York, which won the
Oscar for
Best Short Film (Animated) that year, with a likeness of then-mayor
Ed Koch somewhat stumbling through the song, with clay caricatures of New York-based celebrities (including
Alfred E. Neuman) and finishing the song with "Basically, I think New York is very therapeutic. Hey, an apple a day is... uh... great for one's constitution!" and burying his face in a big banana split with "THE END" written on his bald head. (Koch used the same
rallentando climax Sinatra used, albeit with one big difference: "A-number one, top of the list, king of the hill..." followed by his impression of
Groucho Marx completing, "...and incidentally a
heckuva nice guy!") In 2013, an organist played "New York, New York" as the final song of Koch's funeral. ==Parodies==