NY Times
Isaac Goldberg was working on the 2014 re-election campaign of 
Representative Steve Israel, Democrat of Huntington, N.Y., when he 
decided to have a party in his Astoria, Queens, apartment. He sent out a
 mass invite to everyone working on campaigns for Democrats on Long 
Island.
Anna Doré didn’t know Mr. Goldberg, but she was helping 
out with another campaign, heard about the party and decided to go. Ms. 
Doré, who works in public relations, has spent only five months of the 
last seven years working in politics. But that short window of time just
 happened to coincide with Mr. Goldberg’s party. “It was very much 
kismet,” she said.
It was also 90 degrees when she arrived, and 
most of the partygoers were circled around the air-conditioning unit, 
nursing Jell-O shots to keep cool. Campaign posters, an American flag 
and a 1996 Yankees championship poster adorned the walls. “The décor was
 definitely in need of some love and affection,” Ms. Doré said.
Surrounded
 by a mix of memorabilia, election talk and spiked refreshment, she and 
Mr. Goldberg found each other. One spark led to another and, seven years
 later, they are married and living in the same building where they met.
“We
 joke that Anna came to a party at my apartment and hasn’t left since,” 
Mr. Goldberg said. The joke is only partially true: While the couple has
 stayed in the building, they are living in their third apartment there —
 all on the same floor.
It was just a few months into their 
relationship when Ms. Doré moved in with Mr. Goldberg. She had been 
living on the Upper East Side, but fate forced her hand when a 4 a.m. 
fire broke out in her building. “Isaac raced over and came to the 
rescue,” she said, “even though we were just newly dating.”
She 
stayed with him that night, and the next day her building was condemned.
 Sharing the one-bedroom with Mr. Goldberg quickly evolved from a 
short-term fix to a long-term commitment.
“I didn’t want to be burned into living together,” Ms. Doré said. “But it worked out.”
In 2019, after the couple married at the Queens Museum, they 
envisioned themselves remaining in the second apartment for years to 
come. But then, Covid.
With both of them working from home, Ms. 
Doré set up a makeshift office in the bedroom. “I was sharing a wall 
with Isaac in his office,” she said. “As a political consultant, Isaac 
tends to talk on the phone all day.”
Investing in noise-canceling 
headphones helped “preserve our sanity,” she said, but it soon became 
clear that they needed a more permanent fix.
They 
thought the day had finally come when they would move into another 
building. Over a couple of months, they looked at 10 apartments in 10 
buildings, sticking to Astoria for their search.
They are, by Mr. 
Goldberg’s admission, “Astoria obsessed.” For more than two years, Ms. 
Doré ran a locally focused Instagram account, WeHeartAstoria.
“I started to love the neighborhood through that lens,” she said. “We knew we didn’t want to leave.”
For
 his part, Mr. Goldberg is attracted to Astoria’s livability and 
working-class feel: “There’s the joke that the two hardest things to 
find in Astoria are doormen and dishwashers.” 
 Might as well leave this here. Mr. Goldberg happens to work for Berlin Rosen, the consultant lobby that donated robustly to Bill de Blasio's campaign and his illegal 501c4 PAC "Campaign for One New York" as "agents of the city"