Info

DATE: 10/28/04
DESK: METRO
SLUG: CAYNE

Marco, left, a D.J. has lunch with his girlfriend of two years, Candis Cayne, right, at The Tomato Restaurant on 6th Avenue and 21st Street in Manhattan, where Cayne performs her one-woman The Candis Cayne Show each Saturday night. Asked about whether he thinks about how other people see their relationship, Marco says, "At 37, I've always been someone who doesn't care what anyone thinks. Even as a kid, I grew up being anti-religion and anti-government, sorta. Teachers thought I was spawn because I didn't believe in the system. So it fits into the kind of person I've always been, kind of outside the box, quite a bit."

photo by Angela Jimenez for The New York Times
photographer contact 917-586-0916

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Filename
DSC_4033.JPG
Copyright
Angela Jimenez
Image Size
3008x2000 / 2.5MB
Contained in galleries
2004-11-Candis Cayne
DATE: 10/28/04<br />
DESK: METRO<br />
SLUG: CAYNE<br />
<br />
Marco, left, a D.J. has lunch with his girlfriend of two years, Candis Cayne, right, at The Tomato Restaurant on 6th Avenue and 21st Street in Manhattan, where Cayne performs her one-woman  The Candis Cayne Show each Saturday night.  Asked about whether he thinks about how other people see their relationship, Marco says, "At 37, I've always been someone who doesn't care what anyone thinks.  Even as a kid, I grew up being anti-religion and anti-government, sorta.  Teachers thought I was spawn because I didn't believe in the system.  So it fits into the kind of person I've always been, kind of outside the box, quite a bit."  <br />
<br />
photo by Angela Jimenez for The New York Times<br />
photographer contact 917-586-0916