ANGER AT PARK SLOPER’S SHORT SIGHTEDNESS

Here’s one Park Slopers response to the recent One Way No Way controversy. I was just waiting for charges of NIMBYism (NOT IN MY BACK YARD). Yes, it’s true. Most Park Slopers stood on the sidelines for the Atlantic Yards debate.  This is in today’s Brooklyn Paper:

To the editor,

The proposal to convert Sixth and Seventh avenues to one way, has made me furious (“7th Avenue Express,” March 17).

My
anger, though, is not directed at the Department of Transportation or
Bruce Ratner, but instead at my fellow Park Slopers. Had the Slope
mobilized in 2004, when Atlantic Yards was in its infancy, we might
never have been at this point.

How clearly I remember the
reaction to those passing out brochures against Atlantic Yards at the
St. Patrick’s Day Parade in 2004. The comments I heard, consistently,
were “It’s so far away from here”; “It’ll be great for our
neighborhood,” and “We don’t live in that part of the Slope.” Instead,
the response in those critical first few months was anemic at best —
“negligence” and “apathy” are more apt terms.

Now that traffic
pattern changes are coming for the arena — as we all knew they would —
people are getting off their arses and starting to notice that Atlantic
Yards is going to destroy our quality of life. Did it need to take
three years to figure that out?

Shame on Park Slope — a place full of smart, vocal and active citizens — for letting it get this far.

Rob Underwood, Park Slope

THE DINNER PARTY HAS A HOME IN BROOKLYN

I just saw The Dinner Party, the landmark 1970’s feminist art piece, at the Brooklyn Museum’s new Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art. It was a press viewing with a walk-through with artist,  Judy Chicago.

I am, suffice it to say, blown away.

The piece depicts place settings for 39 mythical and historical famous women throughout history. It was produced from 1974 to 1979 by a collaboration of many individual women and first exhibited in 1979.

"The Dinner Party was meant to end the ongoing cycle of omission in which women were written out of the historical record," Chicago is quoted as saying. 

The table sits in a large, dark room with large canting glass walls and dramatic lighting. The table is triangular. Each place setting features a placemat / tablecloth with the woman’s name and artworks relating to the woman’s life, along with a napkin, utensils, glass / goblet, and a plate.

The plates all feature a butterfly- or flower-like sculpture, that looks like a vulva.

A collaborative effort of many female artists, The Dinner Party celebrates traditional female accomplishments such as weaving, china painting, embroidery, and sewing which have historically been thought of as craft or domestic work.

The white floor of triangular porcelain tiles is inscribed with the names of 999 other notable women.

1038 women in all. We are blessed in Brooklyn to have this incredibly inspiring, scholarly and artistic work on view. This means a lot to the children of Brooklyn, who will walk past these 39 places settings (and read the names on the tile floor) and begin to learn about the who these women are — diminished and/or erased no more.

I know I can wait to take OSFO.

ALL HAIL ELIZABETH SACKLER

Thank you, Elizabeth Sackler, for giving the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art to Brooklyn.

An exhibition
and education facility dedicated to feminist art, the Center’s mission is "to raise awareness of feminism’s cultural
contributions; to educate new generations about the meaning of feminist
art; to maintain a dynamic and welcoming learning facility; and to
present feminism in an approachable and relevant way."

Sackler, who is a historian and philanthropist, was born in Brooklyn. Speaking at the press preview Thursday morning, she told the overflow crowd of artists, critics, curators, press and photographers that she was told by her parents that the  Brooklyn Museum "was where you went to learn about ancient cultures." She talked about art as a democratic form that was capable of being a tool for change.

She said she looked forward to a time when there would be"equal rights for women artists, as well as equal pay, equal sales prices and equal wall space."

The crowd cheered. 

At the press conference, Judy Chicago spoke of taking the bus to the Chicago Art Institute to visit her childhood friends, Monet, Matisse and Degas. But, she wondered, "Where were the women?"

"It was an art world only men were allowed to populate." From an early age, she believed that women had a history that should be told. That’s why she created what she called "a fitting and sumptuous vast, symbolic history of half of our world’s contribution."

"It’s been a long arduous journey."

The Center’s 8,300-square-foot space encompasses a gallery devoted to The Dinner Party; a biographical gallery to present exhibitions highlighting the women represented in The Dinner Party;
a gallery space for a regular exhibition schedule of feminist art; a
computerized study area; and additional space for the presentation of
related public and educational programs.

JULY SUBLET NEEDED FOR A VERY SPECIAL PERSON AND HIS FAMILY

A dear friend of of MiMa Cat and Groovy Grandpa is looking for a JULY SUBLET in BROOKLYN for his friend, S.  "The word "desperate" appears frequently in your blog; in this case there can be no more accurate adjective," he writes. The following is taken from his email to me.

After years of waiting for his green card, a Brooklyn Heights elder caregiver, is finally a fully documented U.S. resident.

Now his wife and 10-year-old daughter are planning their first trip to the States and urgently need a place to stay.  The requirements are simple and  flexible, but hard to put on a laundry room bulletin board. 

1.  They would need a one-bedroom apartment, since S. will be spending a few nights a week en famille. 

2. They should be reasonably near transportation.   

3. They are arriving on July 1st and leaving on July 31st.  That’s where the flexibility comes in.  I guess the ticket could be changed for a later arrival if essential.  Also, they would be able to vacate the apt. for a night or two should some vacationing owner wish to fly back to NY for a night or weekend in his/her city digs. 

Rent would be negotiable, but, obviously can’t be unrealistically high (whatever that means.) And they are animal lovers, too. 

S. was an MD in Ukraine and his wife is a practicing child psychiatrist.  Olanka, their daughter, would love to have a dance school in the vicinity so she might continue her lessons ,but that certainly isn’t  a requisite.

They are warm and wonderful people. S is one-of-a-kind, an educated, hilariously funny lifesaver,

If you or anyone you know has an apartment/house you’d like to sublet in park Slope, the Heights, Boerum Hill, Carroll Gardens, Ft. Greene or Cobble Hill (you get the idea) please email me: louise_crawford@yahoo.com

LIFE WITHOUT TOILET PAPER — AND SO MUCH MORE

I am impressed with the media blitz that has accompanied NO IMPACT MAN DOT COM in the last couple of days. Wooo. Buzz. Buzz.

I heard him this morning on NPR and saw the article in the Home section of the New York Times.

This guy, Colin Beavan, has a good story at the right time (global warming has reached the tipping point). A writer of historical fiction, he is, of course, writing a book about his year doing without. His wife is a writer at Business Week. He’s also blogging about the experience.

What he is doing is quite fascinating. Inspiring. My friend Red Eft is doing something like this a couple of days a week. Sunday is Power Off Day and Tuesday is No Driving Day.

Here’s what in and out at their West Village apartment a reported in the New York Times:

WHAT’S IN AND WHAT’S OUT

IN: Straight-edge razors, charades, scooters, bikes, string bags, worms, hand-me-downs.

OUT: Toilet paper, spices, olive oil, incandescent bulbs, disposable razors, newspapers, magazines, television, planes, trains, automobiles, elevators, plastic bags, anything new.

HERE ARE THE NAMES OF THE 39 DINNER PARTY GUESTS

Here are the names of the 39 dinner party guests, women from history. Some will be familiar. So will not.

Wing I: From Prehistory to the Roman Empire
1. Primordial Goddess
2. Fertile Goddess
3. Ishtar
4. Kali
5. Snake Goddess
6. Sophia
7. Amazon
8. Hatshepsut
9. Judith
10. Sappho
11. Aspasia
12. Boudica
13. Hypatia

Wing II: From the Beginnings of Christianity to the Reformation
14. Marcella
15. Saint Bridget
16. Theodora of Byzantium
17. Hrosvitha
18. Trotula of Salerno
19. Eleanor of Aquitaine
20. Hildegard of Bingen
21. Petronilla de Meath
22. Christine de Pisan
23. Isabella d’Este
24. Elizabeth R
25. Artemisia Gentileschi
26. Anna van Schurman

Wing III: From the American to the Women’s Revolution
27. Anne Hutchinson
28. Sacajawea
29. Caroline Herschel
30. Mary Wollstonecraft
31. Sojourner Truth
32. Susan B. Anthony
33. Elizabeth Blackwell
34. Emily Dickinson
35. Ethel Smyth
36. Margaret Sanger
37. Natalie Barney
38. Virginia Woolf
39. Georgia O’Keeffe

The names of 999 more are represented in the floor tiles.

NO IMPACT MAN: ON BRIAN LEHRER SHOW TODAY

No Impact Man describes his project thusly: "A guilty liberal finally snaps, swears off plastic, goes organic, becomes a bicycle Nazi, turns off his power, composts his poop and, while living in NYC, generally turns into a tree-hugging lunatic who tries to save the polar bears and the rest of the planet from environmental catatrophe while dragging his baby daughter and Prada-wearing, Four-Seasons-loving wife along for the ride."

From his blog:

First, I’m going to be on WYNC’s The Brian Lehrer Show live at 10:06 AM EST today, March 21, 2007 (you can also listen to the recorded show if
you missed it live). We’ll be taking calls (212-433-9692), so please phone in! I
will not be nervous…I will not be nervous…Well, that’s not working.

Second, there’s a New York Times story about the No Impact
project on the front page of today’s House and Home Section. It’s the result of
reporter Penelope Green following us around for a few days asking all manner of
personal questions about our No Impact lifestyle. 

(One thing I wish I could change in the story is
this idea that we are doing this project  because it "was the only one
of four [book ideas] his agent thought would sell." If I could change
that bit, it would read, "Mr. Beavan had decided that with so many
urgent problems in the world, writing more history books felt
irrelevant. He decided to change the course of his career. When he
presented ten ideas about the environment to his agent, Beavan was
surprised that his agent most liked Beavan’s personal favorite–the No
Impact Man idea.")

APRIL, MAY, AND JUNE AT BROOKLYN READING WORKS AT THE OLD STONE HOUSE

In April, May, and June there’s a whole lot going on at Brooklyn Reading Works at The Old Stone House that you should know about. All events at 8 p.m. at The Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.

April 19th: Autism’s Edges and Autismland, two blogger-moms, who write about life with an autistic child. This should be an incredible evening of honest and powerful writing about a difficult topic. $5 gets you in. Refreshments and books available.

May 10th: SECOND ANNUAL BROOKLYN BLOGFEST featuring Gowanus Lounge, Brooklyn Record, Brownstoner, A Brooklyn Life, Andy Bachman, No Land Grab, AYR Report, Seeing Green, Creative Times, Streetsblog, Shiksa From Manila, Mrs. Cleavage’s Diary, and many more.

May 24: EDGY MOTHER’S DAY EVENT. This is shaping up to be an event you won’t want to miss. Amy Sohn, novelist and columnist for New York Magazine, Tom Rafiel, author of Parallel Play, a smart, funny novel about a reluctant Park Slope mom, Susan Gregory Thomas, author of Buy Buy Baby: How Consumer Culture manipulates Parents and Harms Young Minds, Alison Lowenstein, author of City Baby Brooklyn, Judy Lichtblau, and Louise Crawford (AKA Smartmom). $5 gets you in. Refreshments and books available. 

June 16th: SOUTH SIDE STORIES: A Benefit for the Old Stone House with Capathia Jenkins and Louis Rosen.  $30 gets you in — and supports the Old Stone House. Refreshments and CDs available. This event is on a Saturday night. Meet-the-Performers champagne reception afterward.

June 21: Michael Ruby and Nancy Graham. Park Slope poet, Michael Ruby and Nancy Graham present a collaborative work based on the writing of Samuel Beckett. They are both practitioners of sleep writing.  $5 gets you in. Refreshments and books available.

For information: louisecrawford@gmail.com, brooklynreadingworks.com, 718-288-4290.

SECOND ANNUAL BROOKLYN BLOG FEST: MAY 10TH AT 8 p.m.

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All are invited to the Second Annual Brooklyn Blogfest on May 10th at the Old Stone House at 8 p.m. (fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets). If you are a Brooklyn blogger, please get in touch with me: Louise_crawford@yahoo.com.

There will be special guest speakers, an OPEN MIC FOR ALL NEW BROOKLYN BLOGGERS and lots of time to meet and greet.

Meet all of your favorite Brooklyn Bloggers, including Gowanus Lounge, A Brooklyn Life, Seeing Green, Brownstoner, Creative Times, Brooklyn Record, No Land Grab, AYR Report, Streetsblog, Rabbi Andy Bachman, Pastor Daniel Meeter, Joe’s NYC, No Words_Daily Pix, Mommy 101, Special Focus, Shiksa From Manila, Mrs. Cleavage’s Diary and many more…

Photo on Flickr by Tom L.A.

THE LIVES OF OTHERS AND THE NAMESAKE AT BAM

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Two must-see films at BAM.  I am so there this weekend.

THE LIVES OF OTHERS: an intelligent, absorbing
thriller has garnered critical raves and numerous award
nominations—winning the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar. Set in East
Germany in 1984, The Lives of Others captures the atmosphere of
tension in the East German government near the end of the Cold War,
through an exceptional script and superb performances. The film
revolves around the loyal, stone-faced Stasi agent Capt. Wiesler as he
bugs an apartment shared by a prominent playwright and his actress
girlfriend—two people about whom the Party harbors suspicions. Filled
with plot twists and nerve-shattering suspense, the film’s political
critique, conspiracy themes, and images of surveillance recall classic
paranoid precursors such as The Conversation, Blow-Out, and The Parallax View. In German with English subtitles.
 

THE NAMESAKE combines the intimate pleasures of a family saga with a finely
sustained inquiry into the difficult balance between separation and
integration that shapes the lives of first-generation immigrants and
their children in crucially different ways.

—The Village Voice

The family drama The Namesake
begins in Calcutta with the arranged marriage of Ashoke Ganguli (Khan)
and Ashima (Tabu) then follows the couple to New York where they start
a family and learn to adapt to their new home. In the vein of Mira
Nair’s previous culture-clashing films Mississipi Masala and Monsoon Wedding,
this adaptation of Jhumpa Lahiri’s novel presents an immigrant
experience that many people can relate to. In particular, Kal Penn’s
assured performance has earned critics’ accolades; as Gogol, the
Ganguli’s Americanized son, he captures his character’s ambivalent
feelings as he struggles to balance the expectations of two cultures. The Namesake is a touching film about different generations of the same family, and a delightful combination of humor, drama, and romance.

FUNERAL HELD FOR BROOKLYN SOLDIER KILED IN IRAQ

This from New York 1:

Family and friends gathered in Sunset Park Wednesday morning to bid farewell to a Brooklyn soldier killed in Iraq.

Twenty-two-year-old Army Specialist Michael Rivera was one of three soldiers killed March 7th by a roadside bomb in Baghdad.

Army officials awarded Rivera a bronze star and purple heart and posthumously promoted him to sergeant.

Those close to Rivera remembered his good nature.

"He liked to cook, he’d play, and always helping people, always at
something in the neighborhood," said Rivera’s uncle Augustine Rivera.
"That’s why everybody loved him."

"There were a lot of great testimonials given in Iraq by his
friends,” said General Todd Semonite. “They wrote back and said ‘boy
this guy was a hero, he was out there in front. He was leading the
way.’"

The pall bearers included Rivera’s brother and three cousins who are all serving their country in the military.

"That’s all he did was help people out, my little brother, that’s
all he did. He was always looking to do something right. So I’m gonna
miss that a lot," said Rivera’s brother Lance Corporal Alfredo Burke.

"He was definitely my rock, between all my hard situations he was
always there for me,” said his cousin, Army Specialist Edward Rivera.
“And he always knew what to say."

Rivera’s wife brought the couple’s daughter, Joycelin, who was born in Korea, to New York for the funeral.

"Michael was a very big part of our lives, and there is nothing
that can replace that,” said Carlos Figueroa, Rivera’s cousin. “But the
good thing is that he has his daughter here with us, and she can live
on his legacy."

Rivera received a 21-gun salute before being buried in Greenwood Cemetery.

MIMA CAT THANKS OTBKB READERS

MiMa Cat was deeply moved by all the responses yesterday to my post about her quest to adopt a ginger Tabby kitten to replace her dear cat Rupert, may he rest in peace.

She is following all leads and hopes there will be even more today. Help this desperate housewife, who is desperately seeking a kitty.

For those who missed yesterday’s post here goes: 

Someone I know (okay, it’s MiMa Cat, my stepmother) is desperately
trying to adopt one or two kittens. She has a very specific kind of
kitten in mind as she doesn’t want a Tabby that reminds her too much of
her dearly beloved and now deceased cat, Rupert. Here’s what MiMa Cat
is looking for:

Wanted: All grey or ginger tabby kitten. Male preferred. Age: 2 to 6 months.

And
what a home MiMa Cat and Groovy Grandpa can offer one or two kittens: a
duplex Brooklyn Heights apartment with a NYC harbor view (do cats even
care about views? ). The cat will also enjoy summer vacations in the
country.

Ah, the city life and the country life for this lucky cat. And what
a caring couple: these two devoted cat lovers will cater to every need,
every whim, every desire of this little kitten.

If you know of any kittens in need of a loving home in the city and the country, email her at hillmont@thoughtballoon.com

THIS WEEKEND AT THE BROOKLYN MUSUEM

ARTIST TALKS AND PERFORMANCES
As part of the Global Feminisms exhibit: Friday March 23rd 10:30 until 4:30 every half-hour.
Saturday from 11 am until 5 pm every half-hour. Sunday, March 25th 11 am until 5 pm every half-hour.

CURATOR TALK: Global Feminsims
Saturday, March 24, 1-2 pm.  (Maura Reilly and Linda Nochlin discuss Global Feminisms.

DIALOGUE
On Saturday, March 24th, 3-4:30 pm: Judy Chicago and Elizabeth A. Sackler discuss The Dinner Party and the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art. A book signing follows.

SYMPOSIUM: FEMINISMS WITHOUT BORDERS
SATURDAY, MARCH 31 10 am – 5 pm

MUSES, MADMEN AND PROPHETS: A BROOKLYN WRITER HEARS VOICES

Daniel B. Smith, the husband of OSFO’s second grade teacher at PS 321, has a book coming out today about the history of auditory hallucinations. The book sounds really interesting — and I’m not saying that because I am hearing any wierd voices in my head. Smith, a Brooklyn-based journalist and author, writes for The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, Granta, and n+1

An excerpt from the book will be in Sunday’s New York Times’ Magazine section. Here’s the blurb from the Penguin Books website.

The strange history of auditory hallucination
throughout the ages, and its power to shed light on the mysterious
inner source of pure faith and unadulterated inspiration.

Auditory hallucination is one of the most awe-inspiring, terrifying, and ill-understood tricks the human psyche is capable of. Muses, Madmen, and Prophets
reevaluates the popular conception of the phenomenon today and through
the ages, and reveals the roots of the medical understanding and
treatment of it. It probes history, literature, anthropology,
psychology, and neurology to explain and demystify the experience of
hearing voices, in a fascinating and at times funny quest for
understanding. Daniel B. Smith’s personal experience with the
phenomenon-his father heard voices, and it was the great torment and
shame of his father’s life-and his discovery that some people learn to
live in peace with their voices fuels this contemplative, brilliantly
researched, and inspired book.

Science has not been able to
fully explain the phenomenon of auditory hallucination. It is a
condition that has existed perhaps as long as we have-there is evidence
of it in literature and even pre-literate oral histories from across
all times and cultures. Smith presents the sophisticated and radical
argument that a negative side effect of living as we do in this great
age of medical science is that we have come to limit this phenomenon to
nothing more than a biochemical glitch for which the only proper
response is medical, pharmaceutical treatment. This "pathological
assumption" can inflict great harm on the people who hear voices by
ignoring the meaning and reality of the experience for them. But it
also obscures from the rest of us a rich wellspring of knowledge about
the essential source of faith and inspiration.

As Smith
examines the many incidences of people who have famously heard voices
throughout history-Moses, Mohammed, Teresa of Avila, Joan of Arc,
Rilke, William Blake, Socrates, and others-he considers the experience
of auditory hallucination in light of its relationship to the nature of
pure faith and as the key to the source of artistic inspiration. At the
heart of Smith’s exploration into the many extraordinary, strange,
sometimes frightening and sometimes almost supernatural aspects of
auditory hallucination is his driving personal need to comprehend an
experience that, when considered in good faith, is as profound and
complex as human consciousness itself.

MR. BROWNSTONER REVEALS HIS TRUE IDENTITY

To those of us in the Brooklyn Blog Zone, we knew him as John Brownstoner or Mr. B. Last year at the Brooklyn Blog Fest he came disguised — he looked like a GRUP sort of, and he wore these big sun glasses. It was kinda funny but we all knew that he was serious about being incognito.

It was common knowlege that he had a Wall Street job and that when he quit he’d come out in the open about his identity and it’s happened.

Turns out Mr. B’s real name is Jonathan Butler and he’s a 37-year-old Upper East Side native and Princeton graduate, has been blogging about Brooklyn real estate under the moniker Brownstoner for more than two years

Well, Mr. B. has quit his mid-level job at a large Wall Street brokerage and started working full-time on the site, at brownstoner.com, from a desk in DUMBO.

Here’s an excerpt from the piece in today’s New York Sun:

"He is uncertain of the blog’s future, and of his own. The two are now inextricably linked, with an audience of thousands waiting to see what happens.

“One of the fun things about the blog, especially in the beginning, was the fact that it was a way for me to live out my discovery of the borough online and to share it with people,” Mr. Butler said. He wore a pale green scarf draped over an orange V-neck sweater as he sipped chamomile tea in a Village coffee shop last Friday.

A choppy mantle of dark blond hair swathes his slender face—he calls it his “freedom beard,” and he began growing it after his trips to Manhattan ceased as a daily proposition.

“Most people,” he said, “reacted well to that level of earnestness, where I’m saying, ‘Here’s this wonderful, amazing thing I’m discovering, and you’re kind of along for the ride.’”

The ride, as many things in New York City do, began with a home hunt.

Mr. Butler and his wife of now nearly 10 years—they met through a Columbia classmate of hers—were hunting in Brooklyn, a borough they’d moved to in late 2003, settling initially in Williamsburg with the first of their two children, now ages 2 and 4. Mr. Butler had spent his entire adult life below 23rd Street in Manhattan (except for one ill-fated year, he said, back on the Upper East Side).

A renovations—it had been an S.R.O. before they bought it—and the fireplace repairs fell beyond their budget.
His early online musings about the project planted the seeds of Brownstoner.

Mr. Butler was an associate editor at Worth magazine in the mid-1990’s, writing about stocks. He’d also dabbled in real estate, working on a deal involving 125 Maiden Lane in lower Manhattan in the late 1990’s. And, while earning an M.B.A. from N.Y.U., he raised $250,000 in capital to become a partner in Totem Design in Tribeca. (It has since closed.)

As the great-grandson, grandson and son of architects, Mr. Butler found that the journalism stint didn’t quite match up with his natural entrepreneurial leanings. And as he began to dig into the renovation project between daily C-train commutes to Wall Street, he began to think.

“I realized I had all this excess knowledge and nowhere to put it,” Mr. Butler said, “and I was also anticipating a significant renovation. I was also reading a couple of blogs, one of which was Apartment Therapy and one was Curbed, both of which had started six months before or so. I thought, ‘I can do this.’ I spent a couple of hours one afternoon setting it up.”

He blogged mostly about the brownstone renovations, then embarked on forging Brownstoner’s identity as an arbiter of development and real-estate deal-making in Brooklyn. It was largely virgin territory in the housing boom’s salad days of 2004.

“I look at my role more as someone starting a conversation as opposed to handing down the word from on high,” said Mr. Butler, who starts his days on Brownstoner by 8:30 and blogs one item every half-hour each weekday until noon; thereafter, he blogs sporadically as the spirit moves him.

DESPERATE HOUSEWIFE DESPERATELY SEEKING KITTEN

337949158_ce0c539483_m
Someone I know (okay, it’s MiMa Cat, my stepmother) is desperately trying to adopt one or two kittens. She has a very specific kind of kitten in mind as she doesn’t want a Tabby that reminds her too much of her dearly beloved and now deceased cat, Rupert. Here’s what MiMa Cat is looking for:

Wanted: All grey or ginger tabby kitten. Male preferred. Age: 2 to 6 months.

And what a home MiMa Cat and Groovy Grandpa can offer one or two kittens: a duplex Brooklyn Heights apartment with a NYC harbor view (do cats even care about views? ). The cat will also enjoy summer vacations in the country.

Ah, the city life and the country life for this lucky cat. And what a caring couple: these two devoted cat lovers will cater to every need, every whim, every desire of this little kitten.

If you know of any kittens in need of a loving home in the city and the country, email me at louise_crawford@yahoo.com

Photo by Mahomia on Flickr

MY BROOKLYN: DEADLINE MARCH 30th

Contest for photographers and writers:

The Brooklyn Public Library invites photographers or writers of all
ages to describe what Brooklyn means to them in its sixth annual photo
and essay contest. You can see last year’s winners here and 2005’s winners here. They include some really, really good photos like this one.

Prizes include a $500, $300 or $100 U.S. Savings Bond and the
opportunity for the winning work to be exhibited at the Brooklyn Public
Library.

Applications must be postmarked by Friday, March
30, 2007, midnight, or hand delivered by 5 p.m. to the Programs &
Exhibitions Department located at the Park Slope Branch – 431 Sixth
Avenue.

BROOKLYN MUSEUM’S CENTER FOR FEMINIST ART: OPENS FRIDAY

Remember ‘The Dinner Party, Artist Judy Chicago’s 1979 feminist art piece about the great women in history?

It’s a big piece: a dinner party table set with plates about women in history. Butterflies and vulvas abound. You can’t look at it without thinking Vagina, Vagina, Vagina. (That’s a dig at that Westchester high school, which prohibited three students from reading the word vagina outloud during a reading of Eve Ensler’s Vagina Monologues.)

Well, the Brooklyn Museum is giving it a a permanent home, which opens this Friday. It is the
centerpiece of the museum’s new Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for
Feminist Art.

Sackler, a philanthropist and historian. wanted to creat a museum of feminist art built around the Dinner Party,  which has
been in and out of storage for 30 years. Partnering with an existing museum seemed like the way to go.

She brought the idea to Arnold Lehman and as they say: the rest is history. This is a big deal for women artists, for Brooklyn, for the Brooklyn Museum.

Way to go. I will be attending a press event tomorrow and plan to report back. Very excited.

.

ELECTRONICS RECYCLING DAY: APRIL 21

Electronics Recycling Day

4/21/2007 – JJ Byrne Park, Park Slope Brooklyn
Recycle your electronics at J.J. Byrne Park, 5th Ave at 4th Street in
Park Slope Brooklyn, from 10am – 3pm. Acceptable Items: Working &
Non-working Desktop and laptop computers, keyboards, mice, cables
Printers, Copiers & fax Machines, MP3 Players, and Cell phones. A
contribution of a few dollars is asked for if you drop off more than 4
items. For more information visit www.perscholas.org

UNDERWATER MUSIC VIDEO

This music video, created by Peter Shapiro, for the band, Bob Klein and the Ancestors will help you take a break from this icy winter weather to the inviting blue water of the Caribbean. While you’re at it, enjoy the cool, fresh music of Bob Klein and the Ancestors, who are performing at The Cutting Room on April 13th. Location: 24th Street between Broadway and 6th Avenue. In Manhattan. See you there.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-431997359553433039&pr=goog-sl&hl=en

DINE IN BROOKLYN: THROUGH MARCH 30TH

Now through March 30th, nearly 200 different restaurants in Brooklyn are offering three course lunches and dinners for just
$21.12 as part of a tourism-boosting program called “Dine In Brooklyn."

Wondering why it’s costs $21.12? The last three numbers, 112, represent the first three numbers of Brooklyn’s zip codes.

Check here for participating restaurants. 

OTBKB PICKS FOR DINE-IN BROOKLYN

Here’s a list of the Park Slope restaurants participating in Dine-in-Brooklyn: Lunch and dinner for $21.12. I have made a few picks — places I know and love. Those are in bold with the words OTBKB PICK before them. But you can’t really go wrong at any of these places. Make your reservations soon. Dine-in-Brooklyn lasts until March 30th. D = Dinner. L = Lunch.

12th Street Bar & Grill (D)

1123 8th Avenue

718-965-9526

200 Fifth (D) #

200 5th Avenue

718-638-2925

Alchemy Restaurant & Tavern (D)

56 5th Avenue

718-636-4385

Anthony’s (L/D)
426A 7th Avenue
718-369-8315

applewood (D)

501 11th Street

718-768-2044

Aunt Suzie’s Restaurant (D)

247 5th Avenue

718-788-2868

Bar ToTo Italian Bistro (L/D) #

411 11th Street

718-768-4698

OTBKB PICK: Belleville (L/D)

330-332 5th Street

718-832-9777

Beso (D)

210 5th Avenue

718-783-4902

OTBKB PICK: Blue Ribbon (D)

280 5th Avenue

718-840-0404

OTBKB PICK: Blue Ribbon Sushi (D

278 5th Avenue

718-840-0408

Bogota Latin Bistro (D)

141 5th Avenue

718-230-3805

OTBKB PICK: Brooklyn Fish Camp (L/D)

162 5th Avenue

718-783-3264

Cocotte Restaurant (D)

337 5th Avenue

718-832-6848

KitchenBar (D) #

687 6th Avenue

718-499-5623

Long Tan (D)

194 5th Avenue

718-622-8444

Los Pollitos II (L/D)

148 5th Avenue

718-623-9152

Magnolia Restaurant & Bar (D) #

486 6th Avenue

718-369-4814

Maria’s Mexican Bistro (D) #
669 Union Street
718-638-2344

OTBKB PICK: Melt (D)

440 Bergen Street

718-230-5925

Miracle Grill (D)

222 7th Avenue

718-369-4541

OTBKB PICK: Miriam (D)

79 5th Avenue

718-622-2250

 

OTBKB PICK: North of New Orleans NoNo Kitchen (D)

293 7th Avenue

718-369-8348

OTBKB PICK: Palo Santo (L/D) #

652 Union Street

718-636-6311

Red Café (D) #

78 5th Avenue

718-789-1100

OTBKB PICK: Rose Water (D)

787 Union Street

718-783-3800

OTBKB PICK: Sakura Café (D) #

388 5th Avenue

718-832-2970

Santa Fe Grill (D)

62 7th Avenue

718-636-0279

OTBKB PICK: Scottadito Osteria Toscana (D)

788A Union Street

718-636-4800

OTBKB PICK: Sette Enoteca e Cucina (D)

207 7th Avenue

718-499-7767

Sotto Voce Restaurant (L/D) #

225 7th Avenue

718-369-9322

OTBKB PICK:

Stone Park Café (L)

324 Fifth Avenue

718-369-0082

Tempo Restaurant & Wine Bar (D) #

256 5th Avenue

718-636-2020

Trattoria Mangia (L/D) #

119 5th Avenue

718-636-5259

NEW MORNING SHOW TO BE DEVELOPED BY WNYC, BBC, NEW YORK TIMES AND WGBH: INTERESTING

Public Radio International (PRI) and WNYC, New York Public Radio® are developing a new two-hour national news program. Wow. Something to listen to other than Morning Edition. It’ll be hard to break the habit but I am more than willing to make the switch if it involves all my FAVES at WNYC. I am so there. Here’s an excerpt from the press release:

The show will be created in collaboration with other journalistic
leaders — The BBC World Service, New York Times Radio and WGBH Boston
– and will capitalize on their formidable local, national and
international reach and reputation. It will be produced out of WNYC’s
new, state-of-the-art studios in Lower Manhattan, where WNYC will move
in Fall 2007.

The program will represent an entirely new sound in public radio’s
morning drive time. Departing from the highly-packaged format — with
pre-recorded interviews and long features — that has become the
medium’s hallmark sound, it will bring a wholly live, open, and
unprecedented personality-driven format to public radio’s renowned news
and information programming.

The show is scheduled to launch in early 2008. I think this is very interesting. WNYC is filled with talented reported. WNYC is a New York treasure.

As a obscessive WNYC listener, it is big news that they are developing an alternative to Morning Edition, which certainly got a whole lot less lively after they fired Bob Edwards. For those who don’t remember — Edwards hosted Morning Edition since its inception in 1979. He won a Peabody award in 1999, he was described this way: "Edwards is man who embodies the essence of excellence in radio. His reassuring
and authoritative voice is often the first many Americans hear each
day. His is a rare radio voice: informed but never smug; intimate but
never intrusive; opinionated but never dismissive. Mr. Edwards does not
merely talk, he listens."

In 2004, NPR decided to "freshen up" public radio and replaced Edwards as anchor of Morning Edition just months before his 25th anniversary. That was such a low blow, listeners reacted 50,000 signed a petion to keep Bob Edwards on Morning Edition.

At our house, we loved Bob. His show was lively, it was fun, it was a great way to wake up in the morning. We still listen to Morning Edition, of course, but I am excited to see what WNYC, et all comes up with.

I am guessing that Satirious Johnson is going to be a big voice in all of this.

Up-to-the-minute local, national and global news will be delivered by a charismatic host – to be announced later this year — and a vibrant team of national and international contributors. The breadth and unique capabilities of the show’s media partners will allow in-depth news coverage and live reports from the field from within the US and around the globe, with BBC reporters and analysts joining in on the discussion.

PAY YOUR RESPECTS TO THE ANCESTORS: NEW MUSIC VIDEO

I am so digging this music video by Bob Klein and the Ancestors with its gorgeous underwater footage and cool, beachy soun. It transported me for a few minutes out of these icy winter days.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-431997359553433039&pr=goog-sl&hl=en

More good news: the band is playing at the Cutting Room on Friday April 19th at 7 p.m. They’re opening for the Taylor Barton band with the fabulous GE Smith. Sounds like a great gig.

The Cutting Room is located at 19 West 24th Street between Broadway and 6th Avenue. Manhattan, of course. $10 gets you in.

I will be at the Cutting Room with bells on. Anyone care to join me?


ON BROOKLYN RADIO: THE HISTORY OF HIP HOP

Bambaataa_afrika_bw
With
their famed monthly party at Brooklyn’s Southpaw, The Rub–DJ Ayres,
Cosmo Baker, and DJ Eleven–have ceated one of the most popular parties
in New York City. On Brooklynradio.net,
they bring the same enthusiasm with their weekly show, Rub Radio. With
their love for hip-hop and beats, the three decided to educate and
entertain the masses with a special history of hip-hop, highlighting
each year since 1979. Every week, you can find a year’s worth of hits,
slept on joints, and the genre’s roots. We interviewed them to see how
the project came together.