EXPLORING BROOKLYN BY BUS: THE B-24, THE BROOKLYN BOOMERANG

Once again, Richard Grayson takes us on a wild ride on a bus line in Brooklyn.

One of the weirdest bus routes in Brooklyn stops around the corner from
me.  It’s the B24, officially the Greenpoint/Kingsland Avenue route,
and it’s the only bus line that connects two adjoining Brooklyn
neighborhoods with an incredibly roundabout route through Queens over
an interstate highway.  It’s a pretty short ride from its beginning in
Williamsburg to its end in

Greenpoint, about 35 minutes – and today I discovered that I can
actually walk it faster because the bus route resembles a boomerang.

When I got on at the Williamsburg Bridge Plaza bus station on Broadway,
I asked the driver if anyone in their right mind actually takes this
bus from here to Manhattan Avenue.
He smiled and said, “Yeah, you can get there much more directly if you
just transfer for the B43, but some people do prefer the scenic route.”

"Okay,” I said.  “I just didn’t want you to think I was crazy.”
I needn’t have worried, because that role was taken by one of the other
passengers who got on at the first stop: a group of about fifteen
middle-aged whites and Hispanics, with one young Hasidic man.  We had
barely gone up the few blocks of Rodney Street, along one side of the
highway where Moses parted Williamsburg when a male voice shouted out:
“FUCK DISNEY!”

After we turned on Metropolitan Avenue, the same voice shouted out: “FUCK THE DEMOCRATS!”
I couldn’t discern who it was and braced for the next shout, wondering
who else would be singled out for opprobrium.  But it never came.
Whoever it was – and I thought the Hasidic man was staring at me as if
he assumed I was the theme park-hating Republican – for the rest of the
ride this person remained as quiet as a mouse (presumably not Mickey).

Continue reading EXPLORING BROOKLYN BY BUS: THE B-24, THE BROOKLYN BOOMERANG

COMMUNITY BOOKSTORE: HARRY POTTER PARTY PREPARATIONS IN FULL SWING

The preparations have begun for another Harry Potter release extravaganza at the Community Bookstore. The team there is trying to top their last party two years ago. That will be a tough one to top. But it sounds like they’re taking this one to the moon. Here’s the news straight from the store’s owner, Catherine.

Greetings & Salutations, Everyone!
 
Just
so you know, the battle plans are progressing nicely.  It’s going to be
an ABSOLUTELY AMAZING party.  I, and my dimunutive (sp?) helpers,
started planning a couple of months ago, with the result that — not
what you might expect (that everything’s totally prepared way ahead of
time) — everything’s gotten exponentially more extensive and
over-the-top.
 
If you’ve been to the last
three parties, you’ll know that we’ve added something every time.  But
let me be the first to tell you, that this time we’ve gone seriously
NUTS.  The pre-party party of lining up should be utterly wonderful.
We have, not ONE, but TWO horses coming, and J.W.’s driving
to PA tomorrow to secure a motherload of sparklers and other
child-friendly pyrotechnics.  And that’s just the beginning.
 
And for AFTER midnight, well —
the store’s going to be incredible.  We’re adding a Dark Arts Center, a working Quidditch Pitch (well, our version — seriously crazy and fun — flying balls.  No really.) . . . and lots of other stuff.  But I mean lots of other stuff (battling wizards — REALLY!!!)  Well, I think it will all work.  As ever, it’s all home-made, so you’ll bear with us if some of it is a little bonkers?
 
ANYHOW
— the subtext reason for writing this is to say a couple of things:

Number One — I wanted to make sure you all know that because we have
so many reservations for the book, we’re sadly limiting attendance to
people who’re getting the book (with their attendant guests/handlers/
house elves).  It’s going to be a squeeze getting everyone in here, and
it just doesn’t seem fair for the people who are paying full whack for
the book not get first shot at enjoying it all.  I, of course, wish
everyone in the world could come, because it’s going to be the most
magical thing I can imagine . . . but there just isn’t room.  It’s
going to be a squeeze, as it is.

 
Secondly,
it’s looking like we could still use some extra help, so if anyone
wants to volunteer to be part of making all the magic, please call the
store and talk to me.  We can always use more people with performing
abilities to entertain the line, we could use a couple extra bodies to
set up inside, and there’s one or two things we could use help with,
after midnight, during the party inside (anyone want to dish up Potions
in Snape’s Dungeon?).
 
Finally, if anyone out
there knows (or are) journalists, we’d kind of love for the party to
get covered.  It should be amazing, and it seems a pity not to have it
reported.
 
Okay.  That’s it for now.  Thank you so much for your excitement and
enthusiasm.  It’s great to have such support and encouragement for the unleashing of our imaginations . . . .
 
See you then!
 
Much love,
Catherine.

                                       

 

AN IMPORTANT NOTE FROM ISSUE PROJECT ROOM

Dear Friend.

I am writing to you today  to ask your help in establishing a permanent
home for ISSUE Project Room.
In its brief history, ISSUE Project Room,
has become one of the most respected  art and performance spaces  in
New York City. Programs like Theremin Society,  Points in a Circle, The
Independents, and Littoral, have earned us a reputation of presenting
new and artistically challenging work. Our programming is our greatest
strength.

After two years of performances in its silo on the Gowanus Canal, ISSUE
is ready to move  to larger, centrally-located permanent home.To
successfully undertake such a move, ISSUE’s board has recently
announced a $350,000 capital campaign.,

I am asking for your support! I want to stress the urgency  of my
request, with the hope that you will write a check or make an online
donation as soon as you receive this letter.
The urgency stems from a
unique  and  wonderful opportunity for ISSUE to move into a new, rent
free space in one of the most beautiful buildings in downtown Brooklyn.

ISSUE is one of two finalists for this architecturally significant 
property, but it must demonstrate the financial capability to develop
the space if it is to secure the lease.

To meet  this goal we are raising money by several means: donor
solicitations, grant requests and fundraising benefits, To kick off the
campaign, there will be a drive to meet a generous $25,000 matching
grant made by an anonymous donor.

In support of this opportunity to secure the best possible space  for
experimental performance in Brooklyn, this  donor has made a $25,000,
one -for- two matching grant to be met by August 1st.  For every dollar
we raise, up to $50,000, between now and August 1st, ISSUE Project Room
will receive 50 cents.  If we raise $50,000 by August 1st, ISSUE will
get the entire $25,000 match.  Following announcement of the match last
week, ISSUE has already received $10,000. My goal is to raise another
$25,000 this coming week.

ISSUE will be meeting with the property’s developers on July 24th. It
is crucial to our success that we have this money in hand in time for
this meeting. Nothing could better help ISSUE in making its case to the
property’s developers than to be able to walk into the meeting saying
we have met the match!  Successfully closing this first phase of the
campaign before the deadline will inspire large  donors, corporations
and foundations.

I know  you understand the importance of helping places like ISSUE
Project Room, one of the few vibrant spaces supporting experimental
performance.  I am particularly appealing to you because you are our
artistic community. It’s especially important that our audience and
supporters who have participated in helping to make ISSUE the
outstanding place that it is show their support at this time. If
everyone who has enjoyed ISSUE over the last 4 years gives  just $25 we
will raise over $15,000. Write a check for whatever you can as soon as
you receive this e-mail.  Every bit  helps, and we want ISSUE’s new
home to be a place infused with the love and energy of many supporters,
whatever their financial capability.

I’d also like you to call five friends, send them copies of this
letter, and ask them to support ISSUE as generously  as you have.  If
you or your friends would  like to know more  about ISSUE, I’m happy to
speak with you. You can contact me at 718-812-1129, or
suzanne@issueprojectroom.org. What would New York City be without 
experimental art?  I’d rather not think about it!  So, please become an
ISSUE donor, and  help us meet our match today.

Sincerely,

Suzanne Fiol
Founder and Artistic Director

WHEN BROOMSTICKS WERE KINGS

Jason Cusato,  Brooklyn filmmaker
and founder of Park Slope
Films
, is a finalist
in
the Independent Features Film
Festival
.
 

The
Independent Features Film Festival, the first hybrid online/theatrical film
festival of its kind, started with over 200 films online, where film fans from
across the world voted on for their favorite films. The finalists, including
Cusato’s film and 20 other finalists, will be screened at a theatrical festival
taking place at Tribeca Cinemas from July 27-29. At the festival, attendees
will have a chance to vote on which of the 20 films they think is the best.
The winner (along with online winner- Alleyball) will receive a
theatrical distribution in several independent movie theaters across the
nation.

Here
is some info on Cusato’s film and the time it will premiere:

Friday,
July 27, 2007

7:30
pm- 
When
Broom Sticks Were Kings
(27 min) Directed by Jason Cusato

Stickball,
A sport born on the streets of Brooklyn, Street teams competing only for glory
and bragging rights.

“When
Broomsticks were King” is a tribute to Brooklyn Stickball and the
hero’s who played. Told in a documentary style, this comedic tribute
relives this forgotten sport in all its glory.

PROBLEM WITH PET STORES SELLING PUPPIES

I got this email from Hillary, my favorite blue haired cashier at Shawn’s Liquors. She is one of the Park Slope 100 and a passionate lover of animals.

I’m sending out a mass email to everyone I know who has pets or
doesn’t but loves animals. A new pet store at 255 Flatbush right before
6th Ave (where Yaba used to be) has just opened.

Most people know that
pet stores get their puppies from puppy mills or backyard breeders.
These dogs are kept in deplorable conditions, no genetic testing is
done to ensure healthy puppies which leads to sick puppies. It came to
the attention of some members of Brooklynian.com,
after much debate one member went in to speak to the owner.

She
approached the owner very politely and was treated terribly. The owner
told her he didn’t care where the puppies came from and she didn’t look
like she could afford to buy a dog anyway.

He also told her he already
called the police about the "harassment" of people discussing his store
on a public forum. There is much more information on the Brooklynian
website, I’ll put the link below. I’m hoping to get the word out to as
many people as possible about this store. Ethical breeders do not sell
their puppies to pet stores.
I’ll include a few links that I posted on
the thread so everyone can see why I (and many others) have a problem
with a pet store selling puppies. Thanks for reading, you guys are all
great!

Take care,

Hillary
(Blue/purple haired cashier)
 
P.S. Hope no one thinks I’ve crossed the line by emailing, but I
think you all know how crazy I am about animals. Sorry if it’s not cool!

LIBERTY HEIGHTS TAP ROOM HAS NEW OWNER AND NAME

BREAKING NEWS: Sounds like Steve Deptula has sold Red Hook’s famed Liberty Heights Tap Room to the owner of Rocky Sullivan’s in Manhattan.

I’ve heard about Rocky Sullivan’s over the years. In addition to being a bar, it’s thriving literary showcase, as well as a music club.

The Manhattan location of Rocky Sullivan’s  will be closing.

The location of Rocky Sullivan’s Tap Room is 34 Van Dyke Street at Dwight in Red Hook.

Steve will stay on to run the Rockin’ Teens Showcase about to begin it’s fifth season. Here’s the news straight from Steve.

I’m writing you today to tell you that I have passed LHTR on to new owners. I am now enjoying my new role as landlord only. The new name of the establishment is Rocky Sullivan’s Tap Room. The new owner is Chris Byrne formerly of the Irish rock band Black 47. He has a bar/music venue in Manhattan also called Rocky Sullivan’s that will close in August and Rocky Sullivan’s Tap Room will take over. Not much at all has changed with transfer of ownership as the menu is still the same and RSTR is still family and kids friendly, and will be open six days a week with a vibrant live
music scene. Even better news is that I’ve been asked to stay on as organizer and conductor of the monthly Rockin’ Teens events resuming this September 15th for an unprecedented 5th season!

Those of you that want to play the Sept. 15th show please let me know ASAP.
Have a great summer!

 
               
               

 

OPEN MIC WITH A SOUL: ALL SOULS BETHLEHEM CHURCH IN KENSINGTON

Got this from my friend Pastor Tom Martinez:

Hey Friends,

We’ve started an "Open Mic with a Soul," which is open to everyone 
with a poem or a song or a comment
that touches on spirituality or has a justice message.  Everyone’s 
welcome.
We hold it at my little house church (All Souls Bethlehem Church, 
www.asbc.org), which is located at
566 E. 7th St. between Cortelyou Rd. and Ditmas Ave (also between the 
Q train and F trains).
Call if you want more info.
And please help spread the word.
We’d love more interfaith energy!
Peace,
Tom
718-915-2600

PARK SLOPE BRIDAL DRAMA: NO GROOM ON 4TH STREET

It happened on 4th Street between 8th and 9th Avenues. On Sunday morning around 9 a.m. A friend lives on the block. She happened to be away but she heard the story from her neighbors.

A woman, dressed in a beautiful and elaborate bridal gown, sat on a ledge above the door an old house on 4th Street.

It wasn’t her house. She owners are elderly, from what I understand.

She just sat there and refused to leave. She was holding a box (a wedding gift?) She was asked to leave repeatedly. The police were on the scene, as were reporters from the Brooklyn Paper and many neighbors, some taking pictures.

I believe the Fire Department finally had to take her down on a ladder .She resisted and screamed at this point. But did come down.

These are the details I have pieced together from my friend’s account. She wasn’t even there Do you know more? Do tell.

Continue reading PARK SLOPE BRIDAL DRAMA: NO GROOM ON 4TH STREET

YOU CAN’T GET TOO FAR FROM BROOKLYN: CLAIREWARE

Bowl2j_2
The first day I was on Block Island I had to kill an hour before checking into my room. So I wandered around the historic, touristy section of town and went looking for lunch.

I went into a cool shop call Lucky Fish and right up front on display there were beautiful plates and bowls by Park Slope’s own Claireware.

It warmed my heart. Claire’s work is unmistakable, colorful. She calls it urban folk pottery. I almost wrote urban fold poetry.

"I know the woman who makes those," I said proudly.

"Some friends of her came in here once and told us about her," the shopkeeper said. "We have other work by RISD artists."

Oh, that’s the connection. She probably went to the Rhode Island School of Design. And I’m in Rhode Island.

I wandered around the shop and admired many things.

"Hey, I love your taste in things," I told the shopkeeper. "Where should I have lunch?"

She told me about a place called Froozies. Order the Pond-something sandwich. It’s great, she said. I’m getting hungry just thinking about it…"

I did. And it was soooo tasty.

The next morning at my Inn, in the breakfast breakfast, there it was, again. A Claireware mug.

You can’t get too far from Brooklyn

IT’S ME, AGAIN

I had to change rooms at the Inn where I am staying so I lost the wireless I was stealing from someone in the house next door.

I tried and I tried to get it in the other room — but the room just wasn’t oriented right. But I took it as a sign.

No Internet for a few days. It’s always a good thing.

Then the old room was vacant for a few hours, so I snuck back in. Checking email. Checking on the blog.

How it everyone? Do tell.

GARDEN WALK IN DITMAS PARK TODAY

Flatbush Gardener reports that today there is a garden walk in Ditmas Park that you won’t want to miss. Rain or shine.

Ditmas Park Garden View on Sunday, July 15. The strolling tour is from
4-6 pm, rain or shine, and will feature approximately a dozen gardens
in private homes along East 16th to East 18th Streets, between Newkirk
to Dorchester. The final garden stop will also include drinks and
refreshments. A raffle drawing for three hand-held, battery operated
sprayers (hot weather essentials) completes the event.

THE BLACKOUT OF 1977: SEND ME YOUR RECOLLECTIONS

Today is the 30th anniversary of the Blackout of 1977. I emember it like it was yesterday. Except I wasn’t even in New York City. I was in Paris reading about it in the Herald Tribune.

I was on a two-month cycling trip through England and France with a friend. It was an amazing trip through gorgoues scenery. What an experience.

We’d finally made it to Paris and were living it up in a modest hotel near the Luxemborg Gardens. Food. Art. Walks around the city. It was my first time in Paris and I was enthralled.

But when word hit Paris of the Blackout, I felt conflicted, I felt split. I felt like I should be back home with my family and friends.

The pictures in the French  newspapers of the city of my birth were frightening and strange: the city was exploding with looting and rage. It was a defining moment, something I wanted to witness for myself. There is something exciting about a crisis in New York; the way people come together and come apart.

I was a kid during the blackout of 1965. My sister, mother and were visiting friends in another apartment in our building when the lights went out. We waited with our mothers for the
fathers to walk home. The apartment lit by candle light was magic. As kids, it was a night of play in the darkness with an undercurrent of: Will everything be alright?

 

The City Room has amazing pictures of that day in 1977 when the lights went out and the city sunk into darkness and mayhem.  Take a look. It will take you back to a completely different and time.

Thirty years ago tonight, the lights went out: building by building,
block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood. Officially, the 1977
blackout lasted only 25 hours. But it left devastated neighborhoods and
hundreds of millions of dollars in damage. It quickly became a symbol
of New York’s malaise, arriving as it did when the city was just
starting to climb out of near-bankruptcy.

I also missed the more recent blackout a few summers ago. I was in a dentist’s office in Modesto having emergency root canal. The dental surgeon said: "Do you know what’s going on in New York City?"

My heart took a nose dive. This was just a couple of years after 9/11 and my thoughts went immediately to Ground Zero and the devestation of that day.

If you have recollections of the blackout of 1977, do tell. I will post them.

THE GREAT HOT DOG COOK OFF: JULY 28TH

Got this in my in-box this evening. It’s a fundraiser for BARC, the animal shelter in Williamsburg. OSFO and I visited there a few months ago. It’s a great place.

I’m a fan of your site (and your column) and thought you and your site might be
interested in a culinary event I’m running this month, July 28th in my
backyard in Fort Greene. It’s a hot dog cookoff competition
that also doubles as a fundraiser for BARC Animal Shelter in Williamsburg.
Its my second annual cookoff and its shaping up to be quite an event.
It’s a goofy event, but people seem to really get into it. Last year
people brought deep fryers, smothered dogs in pesto, topped dogs with
buffalo wing sauce, all sorts of creative takes on the classic hot dog.
Details on the event are up at www.thegreathotdogcookoff.com

We’re still accepting entries for chefs, and selling tickets online (no
tickets will be sold at the door.) A $15 ticket/donation gets a guest
all you can eat hot dogs and beer, and proceeds will go to the shelter.
It’s a family and vegetarian friendly event too! Any help in promoting
this event would be great! And if would be wonderful if you wanted to
come to the event… and even compete!

OTBKB EXCLUSIVE: WHAT “WALKING BROOKLYN” HAS TO SAY ABOUT THE UNDERBLOGGED NABES

Catch_of_the_day_for_sale_sheepshea
Here’s another great idea for a Brooklyn walk from Adrienne Onofri, author of WALKING BROOKLYN.

Last Sunday’s Times story about Brooklyn blogs, which prominently featured OTBKB and its founder, Louise Crawford, discussed the “underblogged” neighborhoods of our very bloggy borough. To give these communities a little blog coverage, let me tell you about some sights on the Walking Brooklyn routes. What’s mentioned here are just a few of the things to discover and enjoy while walking in these neighborhoods.

13th_regiment_armory_closeup_top
Bedford-Stuyvesant: New York City’s only landmarked tree, the
Magnolia Grandiflora…the statue of Robert Fulton that used to lord over
the ferry landing…a block of Hancock St. with several residences by
Montrose Morris, Bed-Stuy’s preeminent architect of the Gilded Age…the
Alhambra and Renaissance, Morris’ stunning apartment houses
side-by-side on Nostrand…a “medieval castle” built as the National
Guard’s 13th Regiment Armory.

East New York: New Lots Reformed Church, built by Dutch farmers in 1823, with a graveyard full of names now found on Brooklyn street signs (e.g., Van Siclen)…the onion-domed Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Church, dating to 1835…colorful block-spanning murals with such themes as social justice and neighborhood history.

Sheepshead Bay: a landmarked Spanish Mission-style building constructed for the largest restaurant in America (the original Lundy’s, which seated about 2,800, was best known for its bargain-priced “shore dinner,” and closed in 1979)…docks where you can buy the freshest fish in the city—right off the boats, just caught (see photo)—around four in the afternoon.

Bushwick: the intersection of Bushwick Ave. and Grove St., with handsome late-19th-century mansions at every corner—a reminder that this avenue was once the prestigious address (known as “the Boulevard”) of brewing magnates, other tycoons and, from 1918 to 1925, the mayor of New York, John Hylan…St. Barbara, a massive, elaborately ornamented, twin-towered white church akin to something you’d see in Europe.

Canarsie: jutting into Jamaica Bay, Canarsie Pier, where in centuries past Rockaways-bound vacationers would disembark train for boat and commercial fishermen hauled in clams and oysters…Paerdegat Basin, where boat owners dock their babies and the public can canoe for free, courtesy of Sebago Canoe Club.

Flatbush: suburban splendor (as I call it in the book), in the form of large, beautiful turn-of-the-century homes—with lawns but no fences—many of them built for early planned communities like Prospect Park South whose aesthetic-minded developers designed streets with landscaped medians and set rules barring any two houses from being alike. The area’s known as Victorian Flatbush, though the houses are not strictly Victorian in style.

NEW STEVE BUSCEMI MOVIE

The film is called Interview and it is based on a film by Theo Van Gogh, who was murdered by an Islamic extremist in Holland in 2004.

In the film Buscemi plays a political journalist who is asked to write a fluffy profile of a movie star played by Sienna Miller.

Steve Buscemi co-wrote and directed this film, which had a staged reading at Issue Project Room a couple of years ago.

“Interview,” opens today at the Landmark
Sunshine, 143 East Houston Street and Lincoln Plaza
Cinemas, Broadway, at 62nd Street.

AU CONTRAIRE: GUEST BLOGGER PETER LOFFREDO

Super BRAVO! to Judith Warner on this one today. Some excerpts follow from her Domestic Disturbances column in today’s NY Times called: "Visiting Day."

By the way, as a psychotherapist and parent, I have been screaming about the over-involvement of parents in their kids’ lives, especially in places like Park Slope, and lazy and unrealistic collusion of local schools in the problem by insisting in excessive parental involvement in school activities (not to mention homework!). Here’s Judith:

  "I’ve had it with a culture that willfully refuses to face up to the fact that almost 80 percent of mothers with children beyond pre-school age – and, of course, a much greater percentage of fathers – work. This refusal to face facts, coupled with the ideology of “parental involvement” as a panacea for all social ills, has created a situation in which not only guilt-ridden parents, but children are needlessly suffering.

"It doesn’t need to be this way. It only takes a quick look across the Atlantic to see that many other countries have done what’s necessary to grow up and embrace the 21st century. They provide kids with a longer school year, a longer school day and subsidized summer activities.

"We need to push back against the trend toward excessive and inappropriate parental involvement that weighs so heavily upon families in certain [middle class] communities. We should start by requesting – ever so politely – that school events requiring parental participation be scheduled in the evening. Or on weekends. And not too often at that.

"Let’s get parents out of their school-aged kids’ 9-to-3 lives. It’s a cost-free solution to one of the major sources of family angst today. And, more globally, let’s grow up as a culture and face reality – so that our kids can grow up less stressfully."

     Yes!
Peter Loffredo

JUST WHAT CONEY ISLAND NEEDS: A FUEL TANKER RUNS AGROUND

This from NY1:

A tanker carrying nearly half a million
barrels of low sulphur fuel oil and aground in the Ambrose Channel
about two miles off Coney Island Thursday morning.

The Coast Guard says the ship is not leaking and no one has been hurt.

Officials say "The White Sea" has deployed a boom to contain any
oil that leaks out. The Coast Guard says something went wrong with the
steering and the 800 foot long tanker got stuck in the channel’s sandy
bottom.

The boat was moved to the side where tug boats are now working to free it.

            
            
       
   
 
 

   

EXPLORING BROOKLYN BY BUS: THE B-24, THE BROOKLYN BOOMERANG

More from Richard Grayson, who knows Brooklyn like no other.

One of the weirdest bus routes in Brooklyn stops around the corner from me.  It’s the B24, officially the Greenpoint/Kingsland Avenue route, and it’s the only bus line that connects two adjoining Brooklyn neighborhoods with an incredibly roundabout route through Queens over an interstate highway.  It’s a pretty short ride from its beginning in Williamsburg to its end in Greenpoint, about 35 minutes – and today I discovered that I can actually walk it faster because the bus route resembles a boomerang.

When I got on at the Williamsburg Bridge Plaza bus station on Broadway, I asked the driver if anyone in their right mind actually takes this bus from here to Manhattan Avenue.
He smiled and said, “Yeah, you can get there much more directly if you just transfer for the B43, but some people do prefer the scenic route.”

“Okay,” I said.  “I just didn’t want you to think I was crazy.”

I needn’t have worried, because that role was taken by one of the other passengers who got on at the first stop: a group of about fifteen middle-aged whites and Hispanics, with one young Hasidic man.  We had barely gone up the few blocks of Rodney Street, along one side of the highway where Moses parted Williamsburg when a male voice shouted out: “FUCK DISNEY!”

After we turned on Metropolitan Avenue, the same voice shouted out: “FUCK THE DEMOCRATS!”
I couldn’t discern who it was and braced for the next shout, wondering who else would be singled out for opprobrium.  But it never came.  Whoever it was – and I thought the Hasidic man was staring at me as if he assumed I was the theme park-hating Republican – for the rest of the ride this person remained as quiet as a mouse (presumably not Mickey).

Metropolitan Avenue between the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway and Graham Avenue is my current stamping grounds, so I pretty much ignore the sights I see every day: my 24-hour laundromat, the Korean grocery where I shop when I’m too lazy to walk to the supermarket, the Brick Theater Company (I enjoyed some of the productions in its recent Pretentious Festival – no, that’s not a criticism, that was its name).  We pass a car on whose back window is written with whatever that white stuff is: RIP GRANDMOM 1917-07/10/07.  A lot of people get on and off by the Graham Avenue L station.  Presumably some of them are transferring to the B43 bus for the shorter, non-scenic route to the hub of the Greenpoint shopping district.  Of course there’s plenty of shopping right on Graham here, in the heart of gentrifying Italian Williamsburg.  (On Sunday I kept walking back and forth between the hipster-filled concert at the McCarren Pool and the Giglio Festival closer to my house; the crowds at each event were quite different, but after awhile Jerry Vale and the Octopus Project began to sound rather alike to me.)

A few blocks east of Graham (also called Via Vespucci over here) on Metropolitan Avenue we make a slight turn onto a short stretch of Maspeth Avenue, for two blocks that probably win the prize in the highly competitive category of Brooklyn’s Ugliest Collection of New Luxury Condo Buildings.  One of the monstrosities under construction appears to be complete but so structurally unsound that outside girders have recently been erected to hold the building together and keep it from falling down.  I knew we couldn’t get that lucky anyway.

The Hasidic man, realizing we’re not going down Metropolitan Avenue to Jamaica, gets off at the next stop.  The bus driver explains that at the bridge he should have gotten on the Q54 and tells him where to transfer.  “Lots of people make that mistake,” the driver says.

We turn on Kingsland Avenue, alternatively named for a few blocks Grandparents Avenue.  Huh?  We pass the hulk of the long-abandoned Greenpoint Hospital and the Cooper Park Projects.
There’s a great documentary by Christine Noschese called Metropolitan Avenue originally shown two decades ago on PBS’s P.O.V. series that shows the decline of this part of

Williamsburg/Greenpoint – the Northside – as budget cuts and racial tensions exacerbated ongoing decay.  It’s hard for newcomers to trendy “East Williamsburg” to imagine that this neighborhood appeared to be dying not all that long ago. Noschese’s film shows how the area’s working class women of different ethnic backgrounds – Italian, Polish, African Americans from the Cooper Park Projects and others – joined forces to lead the fight to save this community.
On the film you can briefly spot Agnes Grappone, who stands with her daughter and son-in-law Phil and Diana Mule when, in a roll call of neighborhood groups, they call out “Conselyea Street Block Association.”  Agnes was the grandmother of my lifelong friend Nina Mule, and I am now living in what was Agnes’s house, in the apartment where I visited her in the 1970s.

Not that many years ago I was with Agnes at the Long Island nursing home as she lay dying a few months short of age 100.  My dear landlady and friend, her daughter Diana or “Dee,” passed away rather suddenly at 84 last month, and we’re all still bereft.  A beloved local elementary school teacher, Dee had over 350 mourners at her funeral at the church she attended all her life, and condolence cards are still coming in as I collect the mail every day.   She was born in the house I now live in, and every time I open the front door I still expect to smell her delicious Italian cooking.  An extraordinarily generous person, she will also be missed by the various charities and environmental, civil rights, civil liberties, feminist and liberal groups which still send her an average of two dozen letters a day.

Kingsland Avenue runs north to Greenpoint proper, but the B24 turns right at Meeker Avenue, the street running alongside the elevated Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, at this area’s only suburban-style fast-food joint, a freestanding McDonald’s with a parking lot.
And in a few blocks we enter onto the BQE, one of the few examples of a non-express city bus going on a highway, in this case officially I-278, but basically just the short hop over the Kosciuszko Bridge to Queens, with Newtown Creek below us.

But what a view of the Manhattan skyline.  In the foreground Long Island City’s odd lone skyscraper, the 58-story Citi Tower looking directly across to its corporate sister on Lexington Avenue, the iconic Citi Center.

For me, this thrilling panoramic view of Oz-like Manhattan from south to north beats any other in the city.  This is indeed the scenic route, about the only place you can have clear views of the Williamsburg, Queensborough and Triborough Bridges in one spot.  On the south side of the expressway is a flatter but still interesting vista of extreme eastern Brooklyn and western Queens.

We get off the highway just over the bridge and go down 48th Street, filled with brick two-families.  I always enjoy the signs at the corner of 48th Street and 48th Avenue, and then not long after, at the corner of 47th Street and 47th Avenue.  This is Sunnyside.  I usually get off, as most people do, just before we make the left turn onto Greenpoint Avenue, a block away from Queens Boulevard and the 7 train’s 47th Street/Bliss Street station.

Signs warn pedestrians trying to cross the Boulevard of Death to be careful or they’ll reach heavenly bliss before they make it to Flushing or Times Square.  A secret: the B-24 to here and then two stops on the 7 train to Woodside can actually be the fastest way from Williamsburg to the Long Island Rail Road, swifter than a subway ride to Penn Station or Flatbush Avenue.

There’s a Starbucks here I sometimes dawdle at, as well as some cool South American and Central American restaurants and bakeries.  Sunnyside is a terrific neighborhood worth exploring, although when I was younger I came here only for boxing matches at Sunnyside Gardens and a 1977 blind date with a guy I met through a personals ad in Aquarian Weekly.  He was nice but, like another guy I’d dated a few years before, seemed offended that I was a teetotaler and made a futile attempt to “teach” me to drink.  Both of these guys later turned out to be alcoholics although one became a Jesuit and the other a Franciscan.

Across Greenpoint Avenue we go, past many stores with Spanish signs.  A Colombian diner offering a $5.95 midday buffet featuring sopa, carne, arroz, pasta ensalada y bebida seems to be doing a booming business.

The Greenpoint Avenue Bridge (everyone calls it that rather than the J.J. Byrne Memorial Bridge), built in 1987, is basically a low bascule containing a four-lane city street between Hunters Point and Greenpoint – yes, it’s Kingsland Avenue again, and then through the same Greenpoint north-south streets we saw the other way when we went east.  To the right looms a zoom-in view of the Manhattan skyline we saw before: more intimate, but a little scarier somehow, like midtown is a monster that could crush us in this corner of little Brooklyn.

As we make our way to Manhattan Avenue, there are mammoth factories on either side of the street.  I feel like I’m in Pittsburgh or Youngstown circa 1956 before the term “Rust Belt” was coined.  I don’t think there’s any stretch of Brooklyn that feels so industrial.

And then we’re at the end, at Manhattan Avenue’s bustling strip of bargain stores, chains from Starbucks (the only one in the world with a marquee, it was the old Chopin movie theater) to Radio Shack, and endless Polish signs, products and people.  I love this street.  Last week I got 6 pair of socks here for $3.

The trip’s taken a little longer than half an hour.  I make it back home, two stops on the G train, in about five minutes.  Later in the day I walk from the Williamsburg Bridge Plaza, the start of the bus route, to its terminus near Manhattan and Greenpoint Avenues.  I basically walk straight alongside the BQE and then up Manhattan Avenue and I’m there about ten minutes faster than I got there with the B24, but then again, it certainly isn’t the scenic route.

MR. BERGER, ONE OF THE GREATEST ENGLISH TEACHERS EVER

I love this. Just love it. Longtime Brooklynite, Richard Grayson, a born and bred, Brooklyn boy puts something on my blog. It gets read by his 8th grade English and homeroom teacher from Meyer Levin Junior High School, Mr. Berger. He writes into OTBKB and Grayson reads it. VOILA: This from Richard Grayson, author of "I Break for Delmore Schwartz" "And To Think He Kissed Him On Lorimar Street," and more.

My old eighth grade English and homeroom teacher from Meyer Levin JHS! 

Having just taught "Twelfth Night" last week to college students who
said it was too hard for them to read, I told them, "Well, we read it
in Mr. Berger’s class in eighth grade back in 1964 when I was twelve."

I remember once seeing you outside the classroom for the first time.
On Saturday morning my father took us to get haircuts at George’s
Barbershop and Beauty Salon (men in front, women in back) on Church and
Troy Avenues. And while George was cutting my hair, you — wearing not
a shirt and tie but a sweatshirt, jeans and sneakers like me — sat
down in the next chair with Jack, who I recall asked you if you thought
"Catcher in the Rye" was too dirty for his son in high school to read.
You said no, of course.

It was a wonder in those days to see our
sainted teachers outside the school in normal clothing, as we assumed
you just disappeared into the blackboard after 3 pm and reappeared at
8:30 am the next day. After my haircut, I met Billy and Eugene
Lefkowitz, also from 8SPE, at Buddy’s Fairyland arcade and fast food
place a few blocks from my house at the intersection of Flatbush,
Fillmore and Utica. I excited told them, "I saw Mr. Berger getting a
haircut! Like a regular person does!" We had burgers and fries, played
skeeball, and when I refused to go on the roller coaster, Billy said I
was a neurotic scaredycat. He threw up twice walking the seven blocks
to my house.

Mr. Berger was one of the greatest English teachers I ever had.  Certainly a lot better one than I’ve ever been.

IT’S OFFICIAL: TRADER JOE’S COMING TO ATLANTIC AND COURT STREET

Our friends at Gowanus Lounge tells us that his friends at Racked have the goods on the annoucement by Trader Joe’s of their first ever Brooklyn store (their second in New York City).

Hep and I are big Trader Joe’s afficianados out in California. We eat nothing but bean chips, ginger granola, and other TJ specialties when we stay at Hep’s mom’s place in Northern California. We always stop there on our way to the farm from the airport.

Great as this is, I don’t think our friends at Sahadi have a thing to worry about. Brooklyn is getting big enough for everybody, it seems.

GUEST BLOGGER: GILLY YOUNER

Since the Supreme Blogger is out of town, doing the opposite of
hibernating (summering?-simmering, cooking up those succulent scoops
she ladles into the ethernet) at the Oracle’s cave on Blog Island, I
jumped at the chance to put up a post or two…then I jumped back.

What
on earth was I thinking? This blogging business takes: 1. time, 2. the
ability to sit and type your thoughts fluently on the glowing screen,
3. a lot of gathered information, or heartfelt musings, or just plain
something to say to the next unsuspecting straggler into the blog…

The next thought was "What the heck, it’s going to be buried shortly in
the long scroll of daily info, people can skip boring bits and find the
exciting headlines that Hepcat will strategically place next to
his on-the-mark photos"

The first thing that reminded me why this OTBKB blog is so vital, is
that some of our favorite things about Park Slope are changing, as they
are wont to do, and LC, AKA Smartmom, is usually one of the first
people to pick up on the significance of these ongoing transformations
and events, and bring them to our notice.

Walking down Ninth Street from
an early morning workout at the Y, I saw that the nearly-secret
discount clothing store Scene, has finally finished it’s going out of
business sale…

I for one will miss the colorful skirts and funky
window displays on headless mannequinns… and that the Paris bakery is
still having its show-down with the overly cranky city HD.

Thank
goodness it’s still possible to pop into Perch for a little bit of
heaven on earth–the awesome Veggie Reuben…for avocado and sauerkraut
fans everywhere.

Originally I was thinking to describe how when my boyfriend/husband and
I moved (back, for me) to Brooklyn from Manhattan 19 years ago, we felt
like we had arrived in adult summer camp: walking down Seventh Avenue
in shorts and sandals in the summer, stopping in at Soundtracks to hear
Thom or Carlos play the latest records then cds…and seeing everyone
out strolling, eating, biking, doing whatever it is Slopers do in the
summer.

It was all we could do not to look for the camp counselor to
see if we could get candy from the canteen.

Now our son is doing the camping-enjoying the awesome Berkeley Carroll
summer camp run for the 25th year by the amazing Marlene Clary–how
does she keep this thing getting better year after year???

And Kim
Maier, at the Old Stone House in J.J. Byrne Park, hosting plays, films,
concerts, speeches, blogfests… how did we get so lucky, to have so
many fantastic people contributing so much to one little
neighborhood-OTBKB’s top 100 must have been so hard to put
together-where do you set the limit for the list?

O.K. time to jump back to the real world….Louise, your blogging shoes are way, way big, or as Webster’s now has it–ginormous!

Love, Gilly Youner