There’s 21 (about the MIT blackjack team. Great book. Not sure about the movie), George Clooney in Leatherheads, The Bank Job, Horton Hears a Who, Stop-Loss, Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, Shine a Light, and a whole bunch of stuff you probably don’t want to see.
The San Diego Independent ran this article a few days ago. It’s by Penny Patterson, who writes an online column about gay life at independent.com/gaygirl.
It’s true that Park Slope used to be known as a lesbian neighborhood. Now it’s stroller central. Which isn’t to say that PS doesn’t have its fair share of gay parents—and plenty of lesbians.
But things have changed.
Last month, my girlfriend, Jackie, and I went on our first vacation together. We went to New York to visit a Santa Barbara friend who moved there to broaden her professional horizons and, for an added bonus, date a few ladies. Despite having lived in Santa Barbara for a good three years, my friend had never really met any dateable gals. The one time she did end up with a girl’s phone number, we were at a club in West Hollywood. After a few pleasant phone conversations, WeHo Woman got a little obsessed and wouldn’t stop calling my friend. Chalk up another failed attempt with the ladies.
But New York would be different. My friend lived in Park Slope in Brooklyn, and practically every travel book Jackie and I read used some variation of the phrase, “Park Slope, or Dyke Slope as it’s referred to because of the high concentration of lesbians, is a lovely brownstone neighborhood …” Plus, two New York natives swore it was lesbian heaven, and one of my coworkers, who lived in the city for seven years, actually said,
“You’ll be in paradise; you won’t ever want to come back.”
Could it be true? Lesbians, in herd-like form, taking over an entire part of an N.Y.C. borough? Its reputation alone would have required Jackie and me to make a stop in Park Slope, but we would be making
it our home base for a few weeks; we couldn’t believe our luck. The first morning we were there, I excitedly wiped the sleep from my eyes, put on my best dangly earrings, and bundled up in my warmest clothes: We were going to our first New York brunch and, to make matters infinitely better, there would be lesbians.
Ah, the pang of disappointment: nary a lezzie in sight. In fact, quite the contrary; we were surrounded by straight couples and sat next to two gay fellas who spent a large portion of their morning trying to get their adopted child to say “Dad.”
That, more than lesbians, turned out to be the theme: families. Everywhere we went there were strollers, toddlers, criers, screamers, snotty noses, and Happy Meal toys. My friend, whose chosen career as a writer must be supplemented by more lucrative jobs like babysitting, is living it up with several well-paying gigs per week. And they’re predominantly heterosexual families, who are well-off and hoping to raise their children in the safe streets and good schools of Park Slope.
Have you ever considered becoming a boarding care parent? I didn’t even know what it was until today when I got this email
Spence-Chapin Services to Families and Children, a highly respected adoption agency serving New York, New Jersey and Long Island, needs families to provide temporary boarding care for infants awaiting permanent placement.
Always like to share emails from Fonda and the Zuzu’s. Sounds like the name of a band.
Hello to you zuzushoppers….what great beautiful days we have been having at The Big. It is so exciting to bring the Gardenshop back to life for our 37th Spring. We have lots of fabulous Pansies….so far it has been too cold to bring out the more tender Annuals.
We brought in a few early Perennials: Heuchera and Hellebore (to die for!)…. and some Pieris covered with thick strands of pearly white bells. We found some wintered over pots of multicolored Euonymous that look as if they dressed themselves to match the fabulous Antique Pansies below.
We have a substantial wedding to do this weekend so i have not had time to take pictures of the garden…you need to use your imagination for the moment .
It will be fine weather for gardening this weekend, not too hot and some refreshing intermittent showers.
We have lots of new zuzutreats just in….summer table cloths and runners, watering cans, kids garden aprons, tools, carrot and tomato totes,and pots of every size and color….sorry no pictures of this stuff either.
you just have to get yourself over to The Big …but don’t neglect Little Zu
She has some new surprises too…garden hats, little kid aprons, kitten and puppy backpacks, and washable coloring dolls…see below.
And Oh! I forgot! We have the first Lilac up from Virginia! Come visit…
Thanks to Leon Freilich for sending these words of warning about this weekend’s 2,3, service:
2 TRAIN
No 2 trains between Atlantic Av and Chambers St
Uptown 2 replace the 5 from Bowling Green to 149 St
Uptown 5 replace the 2 from Chambers to 149 Sts
Apr 12 – 14, 12:01 AM Sat to 5 AM Mon
For more information click on the mta.info link in this e-mail, pick up
a brochure, and read station signs.
3 TRAIN
No 3 trains running, take the 2, 5, or bus instead
Downtown 2 replace the 3 from 135 to Chambers Sts
Uptown 5 replace the 3 from Chambers to 135 Sts
The M7, M102, and free shuttle buses replace the 3 between 148 and 135 Sts
Apr 12 – 14, 12:01 AM Sat to 5 AM Mon
Cool Hunting, a blog dedicated to cool things worldwide, has a post about Brooklyn Modern, a new book from Rizzoli, about Brooklyn’s modern architecture boom. Written by Diana Lind, Contribution by Robert Ivy, Photographed by Yoko Inoue, the book is described as “the first book to explore the connection between Brooklyn’s astounding rebirth and its emerging architecture.”
There hasn’t been a period of such a fervent excitement about Brooklyn homes since the advent of the brownstone more than 150 years ago. In Brooklyn Modern”, Diana Lind examines this architecture and interior design boom through 18 particularly innovative living spaces and the homeowners who designed them. In addition to Lind, the book includes essays by the blogerati, Grace Bonney of Design*Sponge and Jonathan Butler of Brownstoner, who all rhapsodize on some of the exciting new aesthetics within “the new cultural heart of New York.”
Tonight: Brooklyn Reading Works presents: Fiction x 3 with Sheila Kohler, Barbara Ensor and Martin Kleinman.
Renowned author Sheila Kohler will read from her novel of the French Revolution, Bluebird or the Invention of Happiness, a radiant and artful novel based on the life of Lucy Dillon, an 18th-century French aristocrat.
The wildly creative Barbara Ensor will read excerpts from her funny, modern twists on fairy tales, including Cinderella (As If You Didn’t Already Know the Story), Thumbalina; Tiny Runaway Bride, and Little Red Riding Hood.
April 10th at 8 p.m.
Brooklyn Reading Works
The Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope
info; 718-288-4290
louisecrawford(at)gmail (dot)com
Suggested donation: $5 includes wine and light refreshments
It was on this day in 1912 that the R.M.S. Titanic departed Southampton, England, on its maiden voyage across the Atlantic. It was supposed to arrive in New York City on April 15th.
It was the biggest passenger ship ever built at the time at 882 feet long and 92 feet wide. Its hull had a capacity of more than four and a half million cubic feet. The Titanic is generally remembered as a luxury liner, but only 325 of the 2,224 people on board were traveling in first class. Many of the passengers were European immigrants hoping to start new lives in America.
On the fifth night of the ship’s voyage, the weather was clear and windless. There was no moon. It had been an especially warm winter and many icebergs had broken off from glaciers farther north, so the lookout men had been told to keep an eye out for them. At about 11:40, one of the lookouts, Frederick Fleet, saw a huge dark object floating in the water in front of the ship. He yelled, “Iceberg right ahead,” and rang an alarm bell. Many of the passengers awake that night later said that they felt a slight bump.
The sinking of the Titanic was one of the worst maritime disasters in history, and it has been a great inspiration to artists of all kinds. More than 500 songs were written about the disaster, most famously “It Was Sad When That Great Ship Went Down” by Pop Stoneman, with the lines, “Oh they threw the lifeboats out o’er the dark and stormy sea / The band struck up with ‘Nearer My God to Thee’ / Children wept and cried as the water rushed through the side / It was sad when that great ship went down.” The disaster has also been the subject of more than a hundred books and at least a dozen movies.
Presentation Skills for Women workshop, the two-hour class I took with Jezra Kaye last week was probably the most VALUABLE two hours I have spent in ages.
Every woman should take this class if you have to do any kind of public speaking or presentations (sales, meetings, speeches, non-profit, corporate, etc).
What a great workshop for women of all ages.
An interesting group of women gathered at a space on 23rd Street and in two hours Jezra had us writing and presenting short speeches. We also did breathing exercises and learned a bit about the differences between men and women’s speaking styles.
All fascinating.
Jezra Kaye founded Communicate with Power and Ease to bring her passion for speaker coaching to clients in business, not-for-profits and the arts. Before setting out on her own, Jezra worked for 16 years as a writer/creative director and speaker coach working with executives and managers of Fortune 500 companies. A noted speaker in her own right, Jezra lives in Brooklyn NY, where she practices communicating with her husband and their 18-year-old daughter.
Get in touch with me or Jezra if you are interested. Check out the fascinating resources on her site.
First he put the cyclops octopus sculpture in the space that used to be Seventh Avenue Books. Now the multi-talented Mark Ravitz is displaying drawings from his blueprint series on the front window.
The one up now is called: Oh The Libido Now We’re Talking. Other blueprints in this humorous, tongue-in-cheek and smart series include: I am an Island Floating in a Sea of Allness, Emotions are My Enemy Emotions Are My Friend. Physics Six Simple Machines. The Theory of Relative-ity. And more.
You can see them at Mark’s website. Or go to the window on Seventh Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Street. Share in the creative explosion of Mark Ravitz.
And you thought he just did paint drips on the building?
I walked by Barrio at noon on Wednesday and it looked like they were having serious training session for the staff in the outdoor/tented area of that new restaurant on Seventh Avenue and Third Street.
They had printed materials and everything.
Looks like they’re taking things very seriously over at the new place. Bodes well, I’d say.
Toby Pannone, a 4-year-old boy from Park Slope was diagnosed with Stage IV Neuroblastoma just a year ago. Since that time, he and his family have been living a nightmare.
Thankfully, they have received much support from friends and neighbors. Many have cooked meals, baked cookies, or offered words of hope. Now there is something else that people can do for Toby and his parents, Mookie and Stephen. I saw this on Park Slope Parents:
Kids Walk for Kids with Cancer, in Central Park on Saturday, May 10, is an
annual event to raise money for pediatric cancer research at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center! This year’s funds will support research
at MSKCC on Stage IV Neuroblastoma, the cancer that Toby continues to
battle.
We are organizing a TEAM FOR TOBY and I hope that everyone will come
out and show support for this corageous boy and his loving family. The
event starts at 2 pm and will be a 4.5 mile walk, ending with cookies
and socializing. Everyone from babies in strollers to grandparents and
even pets are welcome!
How wonderful would it be to show Mooki and Stephen, his parents, that
we are literally walking with them as they endure this battle that no
parent should ever know !?! And what better weekend can it be than
Mother’s Day to share this gift of support and love…and celebrate our
own children’s health.
Please email me at walkfortoby@gmail.com
and tell me how many will join us for this very important cause. I will
then send you specifics of where to meet on the 10th and how to
designate our team on the sponser sheet. You may also check out the
event’s website for more details. www.walkforkidswithcancer.org .
Helen Cook from BAM sent me this email about Eat, Drink, and Be Literary. I went to one of these and it’s a very interesting experience. You get drinks, dinner, and a little chit chat with the other people at your table (a bit like being at a wedding with Brooklyn literati).
This is followed by an intimate reading and Q&A with a renowned author. I saw Cynthia Ozick, who signed my copy of a book of hers I LOVE called Heir to the Glimmering World. I must check what she wrote in there. I overheard her talking to a teenage writer. She told her to keep going at all costs. It’s good advice.
I’ve been reading your blog and wanted to share information about an upcoming event at BAM with you. A unique series for sophisticated writers, readers, and eaters, Eat, Drink & Be Literary brings major contemporary authors to BAMcafé for intimate dinners, entertaining readings, and engaging discussions.
On April 17th, Paul Muldoon will be reading from his work and engaging in discussion with moderator Edward Hirsch. A native of Northern Ireland , Paul Muldoon has published many poems, his first at age 16. Since then, he has published several collections, including New Weather (1973), Madoc: A Mystery (1990), and Moy Sand and Gravel (2002), for which he won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize.
Muldoon has received international honors that include the 1994 T. S. Eliot Prize, the 2003 Griffin International Prize for Excellence in Poetry, and the 2004 Shakespeare Prize. Muldoon was recently appointed poetry editor of The New Yorker, and he remains chairman of the Princeton University Center for the Creative and Performing Arts.
The evening will begin at 6:30pm with a sumptuous buffet and select wines, and accompanied by live music. Following dinner, Muldoon will read from and be interviewed about his work and take questions from the audience. The event is sure to be an evening of candid glimpses into the creative process and the rich writings it yields. Tickets are $48.
For more information or to buy tickets, visit BAM.org or http://www.bam.org/events/readings.aspx, or call BAM’s ticket services at 718.636.4100.
I hope that you will share my enthusiasm for this event and post this event on your blog. If you have any further questions, please don’t hesitate to contact me by phone or via e-mail. I look forward to hearing from you.
In today’s Dining Briefs in the Times, The Beer Table, on 15th Street and 7th Avenue got a veritible rave from reviewer Peter Meehan.
The list of 25 or so bottled beers, which changes daily, is the focus. It is a fabulously succinct, remarkably reliable document, and most beers on it are not just unusual but unusually delicious.
Instead of organizing the list by country or price or style, Mr. Philips has organized it from “most delicate” to “most rich.” It is a testament to his palate that the organization works, and that his descriptions of the beers are so reliable.
Leipziger Gose, a beer I could drink by the bathtub full, is, per the menu, “super refreshing, herbal, somewhat briny.” Schlenkerla Urbock, a smoky brew from Bamberg, Germany, is “sausage in a glass.”
The Philipses offer few, but worthy, companions to their beers: artisanal cheeses, malt-flavored ice cream and a spread of charcuterie — pork belly rilletes, chicken liver terrine and so on — that a friend makes a few times a week in Beer Table’s nook of a kitchen.
A friend called the charcuterie and beer pairing “the perfect antidote to Bar Boulud.” I’ll call the place a fantastic spot for Park Slopers looking for a civilized way to wind down and a new pilgrimage site for beer geeks citywide.
Bill De Blasio has been holding these blogger get-togethers. I will try to make it to this one.
I am inviting members of the Brooklyn blogging community to join us once again to talk about issues of concern to all of us as Brooklynites. I appreciate the work you have done to inform the community about important issues; many of my constituents rely on your reporting and I am thankful for your voice in the discussion of these issues.
I hope to see you next Monday! Please feel free to spread the word throughout the blogging community.
Event: Conversations with Bill de Blasio, Monday, April 14th at 6:30pm.
Location: The Tea Lounge location on 350 Seventh Avenue, via the F train to 7th Ave
Contact: Please R.S.V.P by April 11th to Jean Weinberg, either via email at jeanweinberg@gmail.com or by phone- 212-788-6969.
“Today is a sad day for New Yorkers and a sad day for New York City. Not only won’t we see the realization of a plan that would have cut traffic, spurred our economy, reduced pollution and improved public health, we will also lose out on nearly $500 million annually for mass transit improvements and $354 million in immediate federal funds.
“I will be speaking with Secretary Peters and will express my thanks for her commitment to innovative solutions to real problems facing large cities today. I will also express my deep disappointment that, sadly, even Washington, which most Americans agree is completely dysfunctional, is more willing to try new approaches to longstanding problems than our elected officials in the State Assembly. It takes true leadership and courage to embrace new concepts and ideas and to be willing to try something. Unfortunately, both are lacking in the Assembly today.
“If that wasn’t shameful enough, it takes a special type of cowardice for elected officials to refuse to stand up and vote their conscience– on an issue that has been debated, and amended significantly to resolve many outstanding issues, for more than a year. Every New Yorker has a right to know if the person they send to Albany was for or against better transit and cleaner air. People know where I stood, and where members of the City Council stood. They deserved at least that from Albany…
In honor of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Cherry Blossom Festival, Park Slope’s Rosewater Restauarant will have a RW-does-Japanese-American menu at a special price. There will be sake, beer and wine pairings for those that want ’em. The special meals will be on: Monday, April 28th through Sunday, May 4th. All the details will be on the Events page of Rosewater website by April 21st.
If you’ve never done the Cherry Blossoms at the BBG, do yourself a favor this year. Go! And, if you can, stop by us and say heyThere’s no clearer evidence that Spring has Sprung in Brooklyn than Hanami – the Viewing of the Cherry Blossoms, under way now at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Hanami culminates each year with Sakura Matsuri, the beloved and astonishly attended Cherry Blossom Festival at the BBG. Sakura Matsuri first came to our attention after we’d gotten our butts kicked two years in a row on the same weekend, early on in our history. Why are we so busy, we asked? We’re a little slow sometimes, but we usually figure stuff out eventually. (Sakura Matsuri will be held this year on Saturday, May 3rd and Sunday, May 4th.)
This time around, for the first time, we’ve decided to do something to honor the flowers and all the folks that come to see them. We remembered that Chef Marcellus Coleman has a deep background in how Japanese cooking dovetails so nicely into the larger mantle of New American cuisine, and asked if he’d like to run with a special menu for a week at blossom time? (Being a Maryland boy, he knows blossoms, too!) His reply was something like, “well, hellyesss!”