Only the Blog Links

$8 traffic fee gets nowhere (NY Times)

Block Association calls for moratorium on AY demolitions (Atlantic Yards Report)

The conversion of subsidies into philanthropy (Atlantic Yards Report)

2008 Pulitzer Prizes announced (NY Times)

Guggenheim Fellowships Announced (Guggenheim Fellowships PR)

Lessons of the little red hen (Brooklynometry)

How’s this idea for congestion parking (Pardon Me for Asking)

Back when the Green-Wood gravediggers were mordant and rude (Pardon Me for Asking)

Getting thrown out of Frankie’s on Court Street (Pardon Me for Asking)

Marty to The Daily News: Placemat Story is “a Little True”

Murakami_mat_040408_fresh_2The Daily News picked up the story, first featured on Radaronline.com, about Brooklyn’s First Lady stealing 8 placemats from the Brooklyn Museum’s swank Murakami opening last Thursday night.

Jamie Markowitz, the wife of Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, scooped up eight pricey fiberglass place mats – works of art by pop artist Takashi Murakami – set aside for guests at a glitzy Brooklyn Museum gala.
The limited-edition Technicolor mats, which have sold for $1,000 on eBay after a similar event, were included in a grab bag of pricey freebies for guests celebrating the opening of the artist’s three-month exhibition last Thursday.

“It’s a little true,” Markowitz laughed Sunday when asked about an item on RadarOnline.com that painted her as a tad greedy.

Radar reported that when several guests who didn’t get a mat asked for one of her eight, she replied, “You guys really should have acted faster. This is Brooklyn!”

To another, she said, “You snooze, you lose, buddy. Forget it.”

Brooklyn Flea Time Lapse Photos

It was a cold and unsunny day for the first Brooklyn Flea but that didn’t stop thousands from checking out the brand new Brooklyn Flea in Fort Greene.

The Flea will take place every Sunday from 10am to 5pm—rain or shine—at Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, on Lafayette Ave. between Clermont and Vanderbilt Ave. The Flea will feature 200 vendors of vintage furniture, clothing and antiques alongside new designs by local makers of everything from jewelry to textiles

Brownstoner, who is running the Flea, wants feedback from those who were there about the vendor mix and other suggestions. Here’s what he had to say about yesterday.

By some miracle, it didn’t rain and the day went off without a hitch. While some of them were double-counts to be sure, the security guard at the door clicked off 20,000 entries into the market throughout the day. Insane. We’ll have more candids up later in the day. If you took photos, please put them up on Flickr and tag with “brooklynflea”; if you a post a big Flickr set, please email us with a link. We also want to hear your feedback about vendor mix and other suggestions. Obviously we need more food; unfortunately dealing with the Department of Health isn’t exactly a simple and transparent process, but we’re working on it. Personally, we want to see more furniture and classic category-killers like antique silver and old watches; maybe a little less new jewelry and arts-and-crafty stuff. This first month will be a gradually tweaking and culling process, so please throw in your two cents.

Streetsblog: What Your District Loses Without Congestion Pricing

The deadline is midnight for the legislature to decide about congestion pricing. Here’s Streetsblog on what will be lost if it doesn’t go though:

The Campaign for New York’s Future has some handy fact sheets on the transit upgrades outlined in the MTA 2008-2013 Capital Plan, broken down by city and state electoral districts. Since many of these projects will be threatened without the hundreds of millions in annual revenues expected from congestion pricing, some legislators may need to be reminded of what’s at stake.

Take Hakeem Jeffries. The Brooklyn assemblyman reportedly has no position on pricing at the moment, but not so long ago he stood with Richard Brodsky in support of the Westchester pricing foe’s $6.50 taxi drop charge “alternative.”

This Thursday: Barbara Ensor at Brooklyn Reading Works

You won’t want to miss the wildly imaginative Barbara Ensor at Brooklyn Reading Works’ Fiction x 3 (with Shelia Kohler and Martin Kleinman).

Ensor will read excerpts from her highly unusual takes on Cinderella, Thumbalina, and Little Red Riding Hood.

Fiction x 3 at The Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope
Thursday April 10th at 8 p.m.

Here’s a bit about Ensor’s Cinderella book:

I know, I know. You’ve heard the story a million times before. Mean stepmother. Lots of sweeping. Fancy ball. You remember.

Or do you?

Did you remember that Cinderella was such a nice girl—so smart and funny? You probably would’ve liked her. Did you know that “Cinderella” was just a nickname? And that her handsome prince loved Jell-o and was a wonderful dancer?

Readers will delight in following Cinderella through all the usual happenings, presented in a most unusual way. And they’ll finally see what becomes of her after she marries the prince. So maybe you should hear the story one last time. Because it’s actually way different than you might have thought. . . .

Kids who have outgrown picture books and are ready for something longer—but still love illustrated texts—will gravitate toward this Cinderella. Black-and-white silhouettes of everything from the ugly stepsisters to Cinderella’s slipper (actual size) are intermingled with Cinderella’s letters to her recently deceased mother in this totally original package, written and illustrated by an exciting newcomer to children’s books.

Barbara Ensor has written for New York Magazine, Entertainment Weekly, Family Life, The Village Voice, and numerous other publications and Web sites. Her illustrations have appeared in the New York Times, Harpers, Self, Child and elsewhere. This is her first children’s book. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Death by Blogging

An article in the New York Times on Sunday about the hazards of blogging following the death of two bloggers.

Two weeks ago in North Lauderdale, Fla., funeral services were held for Russell Shaw, a prolific blogger on technology subjects who died at 60 of a heart attack. In December, another tech blogger, Marc Orchant, died at 50 of a massive coronary. A third, Om Malik, 41, survived a heart attack in December.

Other bloggers complain of weight loss or gain, sleep disorders, exhaustion and other maladies born of the nonstop strain of producing for a news and information cycle that is as always-on as the Internet.

To be sure, there is no official diagnosis of death by blogging, and the premature demise of two people obviously does not qualify as an epidemic. There is also no certainty that the stress of the work contributed to their deaths. But friends and family of the deceased, and fellow information workers, say those deaths have them thinking about the dangers of their work style

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Congestion Pricing is Dead

From the Associated Press: More at Streets Blog

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Lawmakers rejected a proposal on Monday to charge Manhattan motorists an extra fee to drive in the city, a plan advocates hoped would reduce traffic and curb pollution.

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver announced the decision after a survey of Democratic Assembly members in a private conference. The decision comes after days of closed-door negotiations, and means the city will forfeit $354 million in federal funding for trying to kick-start the plan.

Pictures from the Parade

7th_ave_parade_sml2_2 Download_2
Thanks to Eugene Patron, who keeps me up to date on all things Prospect Park, here’s a pix of the annual baseball parade on Seventh Avenue. Nearly 1000 Little Leaguers and their families marched up Seventh Avenue with the UniverSoul Circus, the Pan American and the Approaching Storm Marching Bands. Tupper Thomas, Prospect Park Alliance president was there, as were Yassky, De Blasio, Markowitz, and  79-year-old, John Cortese, Umpire-in-Chief for the Prospect Park Baseball Association. A field is being named for him.



 

Brooklyn Reading Works Presents: Fiction x 3

This Thursday, 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. Her intelligence, beauty, and lack of pretension made Lucy a favorite of luminaries like Talleyrand and Germaine de Staël — and equipped her to survive the “Terror” that swept France in the wake of the Revolution. Possessed of considerable wit and practicality, Lucy manages to keep her beloved husband and small children safe while all her former circle, including King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette, are guillotined.

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.

Martin Kleinman will read from his new fiction.

Brooklyn Reading Works
The Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope
info; 718-288-4290
louisecrawford(at)gmail (dot)com

Who Was J.J. Byrne?

The City section has an article by Alex Mindlin about the community effort to change the name of JJ Byrne’s namesake park (at Third Street and Fifth Avenue) to Washington Park. Kim Maier, director of The Old Stone House is, of course, quoted.

“It’s always ‘Who was J. J. Byrne?’ ” said Kimberly Maier, executive director of the Old Stone House, a historical center in a 17th-century farmhouse in the little park.

Like many other local residents, Ms. Maier has supported a move to strip the park of the name of Mr. Byrne, a Brooklyn borough president elected in 1926 who died in office four years later. Instead, the park would be named Washington Park, as it was in the 1880s, when it was home to the baseball team that would become the Dodgers. That name is a nod to the 1776 Battle of Brooklyn, in which British and American forces fought for control of the farmhouse.

Only the Blog Links

Toxins in NYC school buildings (NY Daily News)

Letter from the Health Commissioner about toxins (NY Daily News)

Home economics from four US regions (Times Op-Ed)

Bee on the apricot blossoms (Brooklynometry)

Subway super facial (Brooklynometry)

The great Brooklyn burger hunt (Brooklyn Skeptic)

Epic murals in Bed-Stuy (Bed-Stuy Banana)

All that glitters is silver (Creative Times)

Carbon/Silicon, high school, and the Toll Brothers (Found in Brooklyn)

Charlie Sahadi and the spices of his life (The City Section)

Bathing suit shopping: a close call at the mall (The Love We Make)

Brookyn Flea: Today in Clinton Hill

Check out Brooklyn Flea today. Here are the ‘tails:

Brooklyn Flea will take place every Sunday from 10am to 5pm—rain or shine—starting April 6, 2008, at Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, on Lafayette Ave. between Clermont and Vanderbilt Ave. The Flea will feature 200 vendors of vintage furniture, clothing and antiques alongside new designs by local makers of everything from jewelry to textiles

Here’s Brownstoner’s blog post from Friday:

Garbage cans? Check. Orange “Flea Staff” caps? Check. Insane amounts of media attention? Uh huh. (Signore Flea is about to do an interview with an Italian journalist for La Repubblica’s weekly magazine, D. Molto bene!)

So a few things before ze Flea takes flight. The food court we’ve been touting so highly will be only halfway complete by this Sunday. Choice Market and Wafels + Dinges will be in the yard, plus all the cookies, cupcakes, and ricotta cheese. (OMG alert: Salvatore Bklyn Ricotta will be debuting their heavily researched cannolis on Sunday.) And we’re hopeful that within the month our BBQ dude, soup gals, Mexican ices chica, and Cuban empanadas hombre will join them. (A little red tape has held us up ever so briefly.)

Bring dough. There are ATMs within a block or two, but not at the Flea itself. We’re not set up to take credit cards (yet), although many vendors can handle them manually, or by Paypal via wireless internet. But for the first few weeks it’s safer to assume you’ll be paying cash. And finally, enjoy yourself.

I want reports. I want pictures. Did anyone go? What’s it like. What did you buy?

7 pm Sunday: Simone Dinnerstein on WNYC Radio

Sometime between 7 and 8 tonight, there will be a segment about Park Slope’s Simone Dinnerstein on WNYC’s Studio 360. She will perform a few of the Goldberg Variations and talk about what it means to play the piece.

The segment about Simone is already on their website:

34-year-old pianist Simone Dinnerstein scraped together the cash to record Bach’s “Goldberg Variations.” The album was picked up by a major label, and reached #1 on the Billboard classical charts. She performs live and tells Kurt why that piece never goes out of style.

Opening Day in Prospect Park and A Year in the Park Was there

Leafbud_405There was the baseball parade, loads of activities, buds on the trees and more in the park yesterday. Here’s an excerpt (and a lovely Picture) from Brenda’s A Year in the Park Coverage.

Rain was forecast, but there were blue skies instead for Prospect Park’s “Opening Day.” As I biked around the East Drive, the calliope music of the Carousel floated through the trees, and life was absolutely good.

How to Get to Brooklyn Flea

Brownstoner had this to say about getting to Brooklyn Flea:

Just a quick note to check the weekend subway changes on the A/C and G lines this weekend at the MTA site before heading out to Fort Greene. Seems like the F is running on the A/C line from Hoyt-Schermerhorn to the Flea (use the Lafayette Ave. stop, 5 minutes away), and buses are replacing the F/G from Bergen St. to 7th Avenue. The G is stopping normally at Clinton-Washington Ave., which is literally a block from the Flea (use Clinton Ave. exit).

Your other subway option is any train that goes to Atlantic Ave.-Pacific St., which is at the intersection of 4th Avenue and Flatbush Avenue. The 2/3, 4/5, B/D, M/N/Q/R and Long Island Railroad all stop there–the Flea is a lovely 10-15 minute stroll from there.

Check out this map to find your way. It shows all the subway stops mentioned above.

Smartmom: No One Has Dibs on the Ugly Red Chair

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from the award winning Brooklyn Paper:

Last month, when Smartmom decided to get rid of the red, ultra-suede club chair in her living room, Teen Spirit was fit to be tied.

“How dare you throw away that cornerstone of my childhood,” he screamed.

Then the Oh So Feisty One chimed in. “Say it: ‘I will not throw away, give away, or sell the red chair. Say it!’”

Despite their protestations, Smartmom, with great difficulty, single-handedly moved the chair from the living room into the dining room to further await a decision on its fate.

At first, she put it on its side so that it wouldn’t take up too much space. Then OSFO put it right side up so that she could sit on it at dinnertime. You see, OSFO likes to eat in that chair — that’s one of the reasons it’s so dirty.

Smartmom should have put the kibosh on eating in the living room — on the red chair — but she never did.

But it wasn’t only the dark stains on the ultra suede that bothered Smartmom. The chair took up too much space in the family’s living room. It was like a black hole swallowing up all the room’s sunlight and blocking the windows.

It was just too big.

Still, Smartmom knows how attached her children are to that skuzzy old chair. For Buddha’s sake, that’s where Teen Spirit watched Pokemon videos and “Beauty and the Beast.” OSFO was breastfed in that chair, where she did spin art and ate snacks (hence the paint stains and the caked-on food).

When she got older, OSFO watched “The O.C.” and “Gossip Girl” in that chair. Teen Spirit played his guitars there; his friends used it as a bed when they slept over.

Smartmom knew that she was probably a cruel, insensitive mother to get rid of that chair. Think of the memories embedded in it. It’s like a Proustean Madeleine.

Memories, schmemories. The springs are coming out of the bottom; it smells. Years ago, she hired Macy’s Upholstery Service to clean it and even they couldn’t get the stains out.

Sure, it’s a fancy chair. It had been custom made for Manhattan Granny by a snazzy upholsterer in Soho. But as soon as she saw how much space it took up in her minimalist living room on the Upper West Side, she had it shipped to Park Slope.

That was 13 years ago. And it’s been in Smartmom’s apartment ever since.

“You’re always changing things,” Teen Spirit told Smartmom. “When you’re upset you move the furniture.” Smartmom was stricken. But she knew he was right. When she’s upset, she rearranges, tidies piles of paper, folds clothing.

After a few days, Smartmom decided to try to find a new home for the chair. That way, her children wouldn’t feel like she’d just tossed it away. A young married couple came over to look at it. They seemed to like it. The guy said it was probably too big, but the woman seemed to want to make it work. Smartmom measured the chair for them.

Later, the young woman called to say that the chair was too big. Smartmom was disappointed, but soldiered on. She asked Mrs. Kravitz, her downstairs neighbor, if she wanted it. Her living room is big and she’s been wanting to get rid of what she calls her yellow “grandmother chair.”

Smartmom reasoned that it would be nice to have the chair in the building not too far away. That way Teen Spirit and OSFO could visit it.

Mr. and Mrs. Kravitz came up one night to look at the chair. Smartmom plied them with a $20 Cabernet (which is a lot for her!). But that didn’t help. They didn’t want that big chair in their living room either.

Smartmom is still trying to find a home for the chair. If no one wants it, she’s going to call Housing Works and they’ll come and cart it away. In the meantime, it sits quietly in the corner of the dining room next to the entrance to the kitchen.

Secretly, Smartmom fantasizes about taking it downstairs on big garbage day. Teen Spirit is still p.o.’ed. The other night, he pointed angrily at the white plastic Eames chair that Smartmom put in its stead in the living room and said, “You don’t expect us to sit on that do you?”

So the chair waits. Smartmom waits.

Anybody want a nice, big red chair? It’s free.

Think Art Gallery at ‘sNice in Park Slope

I noticed the other day when I was having coffee with Rachel of the Center for the Urban Environment that there was new art on the walls at ‘sNice, the new vegan sandwich, salad, soup, dessert, tea and coffee shop on Fifth Avenue at Third Street in Park Slope

Gone were the wild graffiti style paintings on the walls. Instead there was a mixed bag of artwork by various artists.

Turns out it is a group show of affordable art sponsored by the Think Gallery. The opening is Saturday night.

Did Marty’s Wife Really Take the Placemats?

Murakami_mat_040408_fresh_2Hepcat read about it on Radar, which may not be the most reliable source. But here’s the story anyway:

Our Borough’s first lady, Jamie Snow (the wife of Marty Markowitz), attended Thursday night’s fancy, $1,000-a-plate dinner and ball at the Brooklyn Museum (where Bruce Ratner was being honored and protesters were demonstrating outside) and is said to have swiped eight valuable placemats designed by the artist Takashi Murakami, meant as party favors for the guests (one per customer).

Radar had this to say:

Without a doubt, the person who got the most out of Thursday night’s Takashi Murakami retrospective opening at the Brooklyn Museum of Art was Jamie Snow, the wife of Brooklyn borough president Marty Markowitz. She grabbed eight of the limited-addition Murakami technicolor fiberglass place mats that were being given out as gifts to party-goers—mats that fetched up to $1,000 on eBay after similar events. And she was wasn’t about to give even one of them up.

If the story is true: shame on you Jamie Snow.

Did you think you were at a wedding where it’s sometimes okay to grab the flower arrangements at the end of the night?

Or were you being like greedy kid at a birthday party, who takes more than one goody bag. I mean, what were you thinking? As far as I’m concerned, you’ve got a lot of explaining to do.

According to Radar:

The mats were intended to be taken by seated guests, but after wolfing down dinner, the enterprising Snow, perhaps sensing a business opportunity, rounded up eight of the mats and rushed over to Murakami to have them signed. When party-goers who ended up placemat-less asked her if she would kindly relinquish one, Snow snidely remarked, “You guys really should have acted faster. This is Brooklyn,” and skulked away.

This is Brooklyn?

And what did you mean by that? Your husband may be Brooklyn’s number one booster, but you’re giving the borough a bad name.

“Just try being married to her,” was all Marty Markowitz would say.