If It’s Tuesday: Jenny Scheinman at Barbes

Jenny Scheinman will be playing tonight at Barbes, Park Slope’s eclectic music space on 9th Street near Sixth Avenue.

For those who don’t know, she is a violinist/composer, who works with a variety of performers
including Norah Jones, Bill Frisell, Madeleine Peyroux and John Zorn.

She is in residence at Barbes most Tuesdays with an almost infinite variety of
lineup. This week, with steve cardenas (guitar).

Scheinman currently has two new CD releases: Jenny Scheinman (her vocal debut) and Crossing the Field (an instrumental extravaganza).

Later in the evening: Northeastern Brazilian Dance Party is Brooklyn’s first Brazilian brass band, will play the music of
Pernambuco such as Coco, Forro, Ciranada and Maracatu. Sounds fun.

In Park Slope The Farmer Is Your Friend

There’s an interesting article in New York Magazine about Amy Hepworth, the farmer who supplies the Park Slope Food Coop with 111 varieties of vegetables and 53 types of fruit, including Winesaps aplles, Ginger Golds, swee CandyCrisps, and plums. She’s a real superstar in these parts.

The meet-the-farmer mania is characterized by a desire for personal
connection. “In the past, people would call me and ask, ‘Where can I
pick apples? Where can I pick pumpkins?’ ” says Coop produce buyer
Allen Zimmerman. “The thought of a farm being ‘our’ farm is new.” Our
farm. Meet your farmer. I went to hear Hepworth speak at the Coop
because I really had come to consider her my farmer: It was like a
brand preference; I’d buy anything she grew, from a purple cauliflower
to a doughnut peach. I liked the idea that I was buying from an actual
person, from an Amy. “Farming for the most part is a man’s world,” says Zimmerman. At the Coop, “Amy is a legend. People meet her and they swoon.”

"When Hepworth gave the community a shout-out—“I love the Coop so
much!”—I almost expected to hear the audience respond with a whoop,
like when the lead singer says the name of your town. Amy Hepworth
feeds Park Slope, where the children are organically grown, the parents
are locavores, and—as I realized that night—the farmers are rock stars."

Brooklyn’s Greenest Block: And The Winner Is

The suspense is killing me: On Wednesday at 10 am the winner of the 14th annual Greenest Block in Brooklyn award will be announced. The ceremony will take place on the winning block. So obviously they cannot reveal where the ceremony is taking place until…

Mum’s the word. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Greenbridge program hasn’t spilled the beans yet. So we’ll all have to wait until Wednesday to find out which block in Brooklyn has the prettiest stoop gardens, the nicest window boxes, the loveliest trees.

Will it be in Park Slope, Bed-Stuy, Ft. Greene, Cobble Hill, Ditmas Park…???

It must be soooo hard to pick. Initially there were over 200 blocks entered in the competition. The most ever. Fourteen years and this contest has become a big deal in Brooklyn.

Now the winner is…

First place winner gets a prize of $300 bucks. Runner’s up get $150-200. Loads of politicians should be on site for the festivities on Wednesday, as well as the judges (horticulturalists, journalists, gardeners, etc.) and the interested public.

See you there wherever THERE is.

You Can Help Victims of Prospect Lefferts Fire

Here’s a way you can help some victims of the Friday night fire at Prospect Lefferts Gardens.

Our friends lived in the apartment building in
Prospect
Lefferts Garden
where the fire occurred on Friday night and they lost all of their belongings
and their home. We are trying to raise money to get them back on their feet.
We would greatly appreciate it if you could let people know about our site http://csurics.com/helpjj where we are
currently collecting donations.

Wednesday: Union Hall Curates Music At The Bridge

Now that I’ve been to an event at Brooklyn Bridge Park I am a real booster for events over there. Last week’s Movies With A View showing of Billy Wilder’s Ace in the Hole was a fabulous night of cinema and views.

Wedneday night is the last of the Music at the Bridge series. A great concept:  Get some major venues in Brooklyn like Barbes, Zebulon, Issue Project Room, and Union Hall to curate a night of music associated with that venue.

Last week’s Issue Project Room event was a veritable who’s who’s of the New York avant garde music scene. And the Union Hall show not only features a very Union Hall music line-up but will also have The Secret Science Club, a much loved act at Union Hall.

Get there
early to get a seat for what is sure to be a packed show, featuring:

The French Kicks
Headlights
Tiny Masters of Today
The Secret Science Club
hosted by comedian Dave Hill

All shows are in Brooklyn Bridge Park, in the historic Tobacco
Warehouse. Enter at 1 Main St. Doors at 6pm, show starts at 6:30pm.

New Groundswell Mural on Fourth Avenue And Sackett

Groundswell Community Mural Project is working on five murals around Brooklyn – all created by teens working
with local artists. You may have seen some of this group’s work along Fourth Avenue or on Washington Avenue.

The group is eager to spread the word about two of the new murals: one
in Park Slope, the other on 23rd Street in Sunset Park.

On Fourth Avenue and Sackett Street, teens are hard at work on a monumental mural about the importance of protecting and conserving the water
supply in New York. This group of teens, who are part of Groundswell’s
Summer Leadership Institute, have met with the Department of
Environmental Protection and visited key sites of importance for the delivery of safe, clean drinking water to the city.

Under the auspices of this program, 80 young people, ages 14-21, are right now
working with professional artists to transform walls in Brooklyn with a message
of environmental protection and respect.

Atlantic Yards Eminent Domain Case Filed on Friday

On Friday nine property owners and tenants—with homes and businesses New York State wants to seize for developer Forest City Ratner’s Atlantic Yards project—filed a petition with the Appellate Division of New York State Supreme Court seeking an order rejecting the Empire State Development Corporation’s (ESDC) findings and determination to seize their homes and businesses by eminent domain. The case will probably go to court in January 2009. Here’s the press release from  Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn:

"New York Courts have a proud history of interpreting the New York Constitution as providing greater protections for individual rights than the federal constitution.  This case presents an opportunity to continue that tradition by declaring that the New York Constitution prohibits the government from seizing private homes simply to turn them over to a developer who covets them for a massive luxury condominium project," said lead attorney Matthew Brinckerhoff of Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP.  "We are confident that the court will see this for what it is:  government officials bending to the will of Bruce Ratner, allowing him to wield the power of eminent domain for his personal financial benefit."

Facing the seizure of their homes and businesses, the petitioners have alleged five claims against the ESDC— the condemning authority utilized by Forest City Ratner to take the petitioners’ properties and give them to Forest City Ratner. The five claims are that the ESDC’s determination to forcibly seize the properties should be rejected because:

1. It violates the public use clause contained in the Bill of Rights of the New York Constitution.
ESDC’s claims of public benefit are a pretext to justify a private taking.

2. It violates the due process clause contained in the Bill of Rights of the New York Constitution.
The public process was a sham.  The outcome was predetermined in a back room deal between Ratner, Pataki and Bloomberg.

3. It violates the equal protection clause contained in the Bill of Rights of the New York Constitution.
By singling out the petitioners, for unequal, adverse, treatment, and selecting Ratner as the recipient of irrational largess, the ESDC violated the petitioners’ right to equal protection under the law.

4. It violates the low-income and current resident requirements of the New York Constitution.
The New York State Constitution provides that no loan or subsidy shall be made to aid any project unless the project contains a plan for the remediation of blight and the "occupancy of any such project shall be restricted to persons of low income as defined by law and preference shall be given to persons who live or shall have lived in such area or areas."
The Atlantic Yards project is not "restricted to persons of low income" and no preference has been given to "persons who live or shall have lived in such area."

5. It violates the "public use, benefit or purpose" requirement contained in New York’s Eminent Domain Procedure Law (EDPL).

ESDC’s determination that petitioners’ homes and businesses will serve a "public use, benefit or purpose" has no basis in fact or law.

The petition to the Court for the case, Goldstein et al. v. Empire State Development Corporation, can be downloaded at: www.dddb.net/eminentdomain

Brooklyn’s Greenest Block to Be Announced on August 6th

Fifty-nine semifinalists have been selected in the 2008 Greenest Block
in Brooklyn Contest! Contest winners were selected through a rigorous
process by an expert panel of judges that included professional
horticulturists from Brooklyn Botanic Garden, metro area horticulture
professionals, gardening journalists, and other New York City greening
organizations.

For a list of the semi-finalists go here.

On Wednesday, August 6, 2008 the press conference will be held at 10 a.m. at
the winning block—stay tuned for notification on Tuesday, August 5,
2008.

Remarks will be made by Scot
Medbury, President of Brooklyn Botanic Garden; Marilyn Gelber,
Executive Director of Independence Community Foundation; and Brooklyn
Borough President Marty Markowitz
.

Committed to helping improve the urban landscape, Brooklyn
GreenBridge promotes neighborhood gardening programs, classes,
workshops, and events. Working with block associations, community
gardens, businesses, and social service organizations, Brooklyn
GreenBridge extends Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s resources in order to
connect people with plants, and to engage Brooklyn communities and
residents in a unified greening effort.

The Contest is coordinated in cooperation with the Borough President Marty Markowitz and sponsored by the Sovereign Bank Endowment Fund at Independence Community Foundation.


 

Gross: Rats on the Southwest Side of Prospect Park

I just got this email about rats in Prospect Park.

I don’t want to start any panics but this might be important especially to parents. The past week or so I have come across three rats in Prospect Park on the Prospect Park Southwest side in the vicinity of the children’s playground off of Vanderbilt. Each encounter was not in the playground but some 25 to 50 yards (as best I could guess) away on the inside path.

I reported this to the parks department via 311 after my last encounter. That was the most chilling as I literally walked into one. I was “speed” walking on the interior walk and it was fairly dark from the shade and I wasn’t looking at the ground. So I don’t know if it was just standing there or if it had run across my feet. But I did see it scramble away . . .

Smartmom: The Empty Nesters of Park Slope

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper.

Sleepaway camp has really changed since the days Smartmom was a camper at various northeastern summer getaways.

As a kid, she went to camp for eight weeks every summer, a nice long
stretch of time to adjust to a change in scenery, a new cast of
characters and a healthy taste of self-reliance.

At the same time, Smartmom’s parents got a major vacation from being
parents. They came to visit on visiting weekend, took her out to lunch
and dinner and that was that. They had eight blissful weeks to
themselves.

Smartmom remembers crying her eyes out on the last day of her
favorite camp. She actually didn’t want to go home and it took a few
days to get back in the swing of things on the Upper West Side.

She never really found out what her parents did while she was away.
But she sort of assumed they weren’t exactly pining for her return.

So it was an even trade. Smartmom loved her time away at camp, and her parents loved their time to be alone.

While plenty of Park Slope kids go to camp for eight weeks, most
go away for two or four. Many parents don’t admit
to needing a vacation from their kids. That would be sacrilege: a form
of child abuse. Not wanting to be around your kids 24/7? Why, that’s a
sign of bad parenting.

But parents do need the break — and need to stop feeling guilty about it.

Since the beginning of July, Smartmom has run into more than a few
summer empty-nesters tooling around the Slope, having romantic dinners,
catching a first-run flick or just holding hands on a nighttime stroll
through the neighborhood (remember those?).

1328821789_22b1707305
t’s not that these parents don’t miss their kids. It’s just that
they enjoy taking a break from being parents. Smartmom likes it
so much that she booked a week at the Sea Breeze on Block Island to
revel in alone time (she takes a break from Hepcat, too).

Smartmom was lucky that Hepcat was willing to stay home to supervise Teen Spirit while she was writing fiction at the beach.

Some parents are clearly enjoying their kid-holiday, but some look
bereft. They miss their kids and can’t wait for their return. In a
sense, summer camp is empty-nest practice, a stage of life that
terrifies many. It’s as hard for some parents to be
away from their children as it is for their kids to be away from them.

But it’s not like you can’t e-mail your kid as many times a day as you want. At the Oh So Feisty One’s camp, parents can e-mail their kids on a password-protected Web site. The kids, however, cannot e-mail back.

Whatever happened to sending a heartfelt letter or postcard? I miss you. Please write. Hope you’re having fun.

The problem with e-mail access is that Smartmom feels remiss if she
doesn’t send OSFO one, two, even three electronic updates a day (after
all, The Brooklyn Paper is now posting news stories every single day!).
Smartmom can just imagine the dining hall debacle. Some kid gets pages
and pages of e-mails. Poor OSFO looks up hopefully. “Nothing for you,
kid. Sorry.”

It just breaks Smartmom’s heart.

And it’s not just e-mail. Nowadays, you can literally obsess over
your child’s experience in camp. Some camps post photos on the camp Web
site. Other camps actually have a video camera in the dining hall.

Smartmom has to admit that she spent way too much of her alone time
on Block Island checking to see if there was a picture of OSFO on her
camp’s Web site. When she couldn’t find something for days, she
considered calling the camp and telling the organizers to put something
there. Or else.

Finally, Smartmom found two photographs of her OSFO
participating in a camp-wide Olympics. From what Smartmom could tell.
OSFO looked very engaged and even (dare she say it?) happy.

It was a huge relief to see that picture. Especially as it came just a day after OSFO’s first letter arrived by snail mail.

“Dear Mom and Dad, I like camp — sometimes. I have to take swim classes and I really hate them. The food is bad!”

OSFO’s white stationery was covered in frowning faces. And in teeny
tiny letters near the bottom of the page it said, “I am kinda homesick.”

Talk about writer’s block on Block Island! Smartmom could barely
type a word after Hepcat read her that letter over the phone. Sure, the
letter was written on the second day of camp (what kid isn’t miserable
on day two?), but it certainly put a damper on Smartmom’s creativity
(insert Smartmom’s creativity joke here!).

When Smartmom got back from Block Island, she found another letter
in the mailbox. It was written a full four days after the last one. In
big block letters, OSFO wrote:

“NEVERMIND. Camp is fine.”

And there were loads of smiley faces.

Relief and happiness coursed through Smartmom’s veins. That night,
she and Hepcat spent their first night of freedom together. They tried
Park Slope’s new Five Guys Burgers and later had margaritas at the
Miracle Grill, where she saw some summer empty-nesters.

“Your kids are in camp?” she asked.

“Yes, but we just got a call that our youngest son is homesick,” the mom said. “We’re about to talk to him.”

She saw their cellphone on the table, and Smartmom felt a pang in her heart. She remembered that first letter from OSFO.

“Give it a few days,” she told her friends. “He’ll be fine.” And she
meant it. Before they know it, the kids will be back. Summer
empty-nesting season will be over and life as a family will resume.

Until next summer, that is. Might as well enjoy your romantic dinner for two.

Photo by La Tartine Gourmande on Flickr

E. Williamsburgers Save Their Businesses

The following is by verse responder Leon Freilich. He saw the story in the New York Times.

Brooklyn food sellers win again. First in Red Hook, now in East Williamsburg, where vendors have triumphed over city bureaucrats and saved their business. Inn this case it’s the Moore Street Retail Market.

New York City’s Economic Development Corporation, which controls the early-20th Century public market, had planned to close close vendors’ stalls, displace them and raze replace the building to make way for new housing.

But the vendors collected 25,000 signatures, including those of local bigs Rep. Nydia Velazquez and Assemblyman Vito Lopez, on a petition. Also helping them keep their businesses running in the Latino community was none other than President. Bush.

His contribution was tilting the national economy toward the collapse point, leaving little money for new construction.

Every cloud has a Bush lining. If only.

Comings and Goings on Seventh Avenue

2702047410_575c30c109_m
A quick walk around Park Slope reveals that summer has wrought some changes on Seventh Avenue.

Applewares is vacating its space at 548 10th St., nr. Seventh Avenue. Not so long ago I announced its opening by running this blurb from New York Magazine:  " lTo
save themselves a trip into Manhattan for every new kitchen gadget,
Applewood’s David and Laura Shea opened a tiny kitchen-supply shop last
week, stocking everything from side towels to “a cheap plastic peeler that really works.”

It was a lovely shop but I think the location—just off Seventh Avenue—probably did them in.

Diana Kane is vacating her Seventh Avenue space near Berkeley Place. I think the location, the limited selection (and sizes) of merchandise, and the price point probably doomed that location. Her very successful shop on Fifth Avenue, will, of course, stay open. There she features a broader selection of jewelry, lingerie, clothing, bags, beauty items and more.

As for shops going in, OSFO noticed that the For Rent sign is no longer on the space that was Seventh Avenue Books. It’s been vacant since last summer, when that used book store went out of business. No sign of what’s going in. Yet.

Kids Rx, as everyone now knows, is going into the Second Street Cafe space on Second Street and Seventh Avenue. Kids Rx has a branch on Hudson Street in Manhattan and will carry all manner of children’s
health items and that’s a broad term. In addition to being a pharmacy,
they carry baby products with an emphasis on organic and natural,
homeopathics, vitamins, skin care, hair care, dental care, household
items, gift baskets, gifts baskets and a baby registry.

Flipsters is a new burger joint at 444 9th Street.  It used to be the Brooklyn Burger Bar so I hear that’s there’s a new owner and a completely new menu, which includes, burgers, sandwiches, and shakes. Would you like fries with that?

Five Guys Burgers is off to a successful start across from Methodist Hospital on Seventh Avenue between 6th and 7th Streets. It’s got a clean, bright red and white look. They give out free peanuts. You get to choose from, like, 20 toppings to put on your burger. The service is fast and the burgers are good. What can I say? I enjoyed myself except that the air conditioning is way too cold. Hepcat says it’s the closest thing on the east coast to In ‘N’ Out Burger, a big Hepcat fave only in California. (Photo above by Slice on Flickr.)

Carmen’s Exclusives for Children has been open for about a month now. That shop, which features slightly old fashioned and expensive looking children’s clothing isn’t hopping with business yet. I’m guessing they have a successful web  business. Remains to be scene whether the nabe will take to their style of clothing—and prices. 

Urban Environment: NYCSustainability Beat

Here is a snapshot of sustainability issues that faced the borough and the city in the month of July. The links were compiled by Rebecca Welch Associate Director of Public Affairs, at the Center for the Urban Environment. To Learn more about the Center, go here. www.bcue.org

Report:
Small Downtown Brooklyn Retailers Being Forced Out
[ Brooklyn
Daily Eagle]

Bike-Friendly
Businesses Honored By Advocates
[NY 1]

Report
Rates Orchard Beach City’s Most Polluted
[Daily News]

Reading
the River and Its Contents, With an Eye on Its Health
[NY Times]

Paterson
Approves Law on Risky Gas Drilling
[ Albany
Times Union ]

Urban
Environmentalist NYC: Tri-State Biodiesel
[Gowanus Lounge] *

Maybe
Beloved Shops Don’t Have To Disappear
[City Limits]

Survey
Shows Parks Deteriorating
[ Brooklyn
Eagle]

17
Projects Honored by Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce
[Brownstoner]
*    

Helping
Building Owners Go Green
[CityRoom]

Federal
Help Sought for Newtown Creek
[Daily News]

Bike-Share
Coming to NYC? DOT Says It Will Test the Waters
[streetsblog]

How
the City Has Reduced Soot
[ Gotham
Gazette]

Keeping
City Beaches Safe and Clean
[ Gotham
Gazette]

Is
‘Green’ the Place to Look for Job Growth?
[City Limits]

A
Locally Grown Diet With Fuss but No Muss
[NYT]

IS
‘Green’ The Place to Look For Job Growth?
[City Limits]

Bloomberg
Proposes Plan for City to Make Eco-friendly Upgrades
[Daily News]

The
Unanticipated Impacts of Rezoning and Development in Downtown Brooklyn
[Report-Pratt] 

Green
State Lawmakers
. [Report-Environmental Advocates of
New York ]

 

Not Only Brooklyn Says: Lots To Do On Saturday

Thanks to Neil Feldman, who writes the Not Only Brooklyn, I  have the following info. I strongly urge you to sign up for his wonderful free newsletter about free cultural events in Brooklyn but not limited to Brooklyn.

Email Neil directly, with the message "Subscribe to NOB" and your first and last name, so it is legal for him to add you to the subscription list. And now, here’s what Neil has planned for you this Saturday.

You may see Neil at one of these events. He gets around on a bike and tries to make it to a lot of the things he’s so passionate about. This is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Neil’s newsletter.

At 4 p.m. on Saturday, Neil says Celebrate Brooklyn is the place to be when they celebrates the life and art of Ezra Jack Keats the prize winning artist and children’s books author and illustrator.

He is considered the first children’s author to place his diverse characters in urban environments, an unknowing pioneer of the multi-culturalism he saw growing up in Brooklyn decades before the concept had a name. He also used collage to illustrate his beautiful books. Performing in his honor are adults who understand children. Jamaican reggae and ska singer Rankin Don, who has come to Brooklyn and become Father Goose is perhaps the only children’s entertainer who uses the Caribbean musics. The Sippy Cups are California parents of pre-schoolers who have learned to entertain from their own children. Brooklyn singer-songwriter star Joan Osborne totally rocked out the Celebrate Brooklyn show she headlined last summer, but today she will read from Keats’s books between music sets, as will actor James McDaniel, probably best known for playing Lt. Arthur Fancy on NYPD Blue. Born in 1916 as Jacob Ezra Katz at 438 Vermont St in East New York, he felt compelled to legally change his name after serving in WW II due to the anti-Semitism he encountered in the publishing industry. FREE, but $3 at the gate keeps it great. Prospect Park Bandshell near 9th St & Prospect Park West.

From 5-11 p.m. follow Neil to the Brooklyn Museum’s Target First Saturday:

This is this month’s edition of the best, most heterogeneous FREE! party in NYC will have a distinct Caribbean accent, in honor of the annual world famous West Indian American Day Carnival on September 1, which will be sponsoring steel pan music, stilt walkers and more outside the Museum beginning at 3. Explore the weblinks for full details of the dance groups, film, author reading, gallery talks, Cuban film Life is to Whistle and outdoor dance party with Reggae Retro and Judah Tribe.

From 7 p.m. until midnight, Neil is off to Coney Island for some roller skating fun:

Dreamland Roller Rink celebrates its opening with a blow out party on wheels, with
DJ Julio, Gotham Girls Roller Derby, skate dancers, burlesque and more! You may recall NOB recommending the June fund raisers to help designer Lola Staar, who had a dream of transforming the former Childs Restaurant in Coney Island into a people’s rock rink. She did it!
$10, skate rentals $5. 3052 W 21st St on the Boardwalk.

And at 8 p.m. groove on over to Rooftop Films with Neil for some Home Movies:

Every year Rooftop hosts a program of Home Movies. Usually unfiltered, these films reveal feelings or fleeting incidents that might otherwise pass without thought, but when recorded can provide insights. This dozen films between one and 29 minutes long in this year’s program are different. They are less about the immediate moment than about the reflected moment—less web cam and more video diary.

A Night of Music in Park Slope’s JJ Byrne Park

2718992445_9d4a7cd812_o_2 It was a night of great music in Park Slope’s JJ Byrne Park, featuring local performers, as well as a group that harked from the far reaches of Jersey City.

The night also marked the near-end of a culture-filled July in that ever-so-lively park.

The month included: Midsummer’s Night Dream by Piper Theater, Opera on Tap, the Democracy in Action film series (Manchurean Candidate, The Candidate and 1776) and more.

Kudos to the energetic and innovative Kim Maier, executive director of the Old Stone House, for organizing the Shakespeare camp, the Piper Theater performances, Brooklyn Film Works, Music on Tuesday nights and MORE. Props to all the actors, theater tech, A/V tech, and other staff and volunteers who sold popcorn and water night after night.

On Tuesday night’s bill: Hank Crawford, Calamity Sam solo and with and his band (pictured above) and the tuneful and introspective Lily Konigsberg.

The 2-piece Jersey band, Plush Interior, a drummer and 10-string bass player, wowed the crowd with improvised, trippy jazz. Their music reminded Hepcat of Deodato, an Arabic jazz player from the 1970’s.

Perhaps most importantly, photographer Richard Gin was on the scene and he grabbed this lofty shot of Calamity Sam and the band. Gin is working on an impressive photo essay about the youthful Brooklyn music scene. You can see many great shots of local teen bands on his blog. His work as a professional photographer is equally impressive.

The Real Brooklyn Trivia Quiz

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Reclaimed Home was inspired to create her own Brooklyn Trivia quiz after seeing the one I posted about on about.com yesterday. This one is not for amateurs. I think this Brooklyn Trivia quiz thing could become a fad. Or a TV show. Brooklyn Jeopardy, anyone? Have fun!

"After breezing through About.com’s Brooklyn trivia quiz linked by OTBKB,
I decided to create one of my own. I spent hours building a lovely
scored, wrestling with the html, one only to discover it wasn’t showing
up at all in Explorer. So, you’ll have to guess at these and I’ll post
the answers later. In the meantime, feel free to leave your guesses in
the comments section…but no cheating!"

Lunch at Park Slope’s Excellent Scalino

Let me just say, I want to go back again. Today. For lunch. The food was that well prepared and fresh. I get hungry just thinking about it.

Two friends and I met for lunch yesterday at Scalino’s on Seventh Avenue and 10th Street. I’d heard it was a great place from Diaper Diva and she did not lie. It is a great place.

Diaper Diva had the pasta, which she raved about. Since it was lunchtime we had lighter fare. And seafood at that. But it was fantastic. Here are the delicious entrees we tasted:

Grilled calamari with onions and red pepper

Grilled scallops over green salad and white beans

Another table was having swordfish, which looked fantastic, too. I believe our waiter was the owner and he was very friendly and helpful. He was the only one there so the service is leisurely. He said they’ll have a liquor license starting next week. Great news for all. The corner location is extremely pleasant with its lively view of Seventh Avenue street life, Red Hot II and the now  shuttered Tea Lounge. They even have dining al fresco on 10th Street.

Scalino
347 Seventh Avenue at 10th Street in Park Slope
Hours: 11 am until 11 pm Monday through Saturday. 11 am until 10 p.m on Sunday.

718-840-5738

Review of Last Night’s Movies With A View

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Hepcat and I went to Movies with a View last night in Brooklyn Bridge Park to see Ace in the Hole, a dark, funny, cynical Billy Wilder film about a tabloid reporter, played by Kirk Douglas (who was nominated for an Academy Award), stuck at a small New Mexico newspaper, who hooks a big story and makes a lot of trouble.

The Location: Brooklyn Bridge Park has to be one of the greatest spots in the world to see a movie on a gorgeous night. You’ve got views of lower Manhattan, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Manhattan Bridge, the Elliasson’s waterfall, and the old and very dramatic-looking factory buildings next to the park.

You could just sit there and not watch the movie and have a great time. Dsc01434

The Screen: They’ve got a very cool blow up screen that has good visibility from lots of directions. It did cut off some of the picture. But hey. 

The Sound: Not so great considering the roar of the two bridges and the sound of boats on the river.

The Food: They’ve got Mexican style food from Rice, which confused me because I thought it was a Thai place. Hot dogs, corn on the cob, too. And a very tasty ginger lemonade. Not too expensive.

The Speeches: A host of politicans (supporters of the park), ncluding State Senator Eric Adams, a made speeches before the show.  I thought I heard Marty Markowitz’s voice but it was a different Marty, Marty O’Connor, another State Senator.

The event was a little long on the speechifying about development of the park. But I guess that’s what Movies With A View is all about. I thought it was interesting that they never mentioned the name of next week’s movie. It’s Pleasantville, by the way.

The Movie: Absolutely fantastic on a lot of levels. Kirk Douglas’ performance is over the top, hammy, intense, serious, and very funny all at the same time. Amazing. It’s so in your face!

The script, co-written by Billy Wilder, is just jam packed with great lines of dialogue about tabloid journalism, New York, and the lengths newspapers will go for a good story. The movie, made in 1951, is unbelievably prescient. It predicts everything that has happened in the subsequent years in print and television journalism and the public’s appetite for certain kinds of stories.

The Experience: Priceless. I am always so pleased when I actually do one of the things that I blog about.   

LICH Hospital To Close Its Maternity Department

A hospital that doesn’t deliver babies? That’s a bad sign. Clearly LICH is in big financial trouble slowly selling off assets to get themselves out of the mess they’re in. Hospital representatives say that by closing their obstetrics department and selling the buildings, they’ll be able to keep bankruptcy at bay.

For those who didn’t see the article in the New York Times yesterday,
this turn of events will come as news for people who had their kids at this hospital.  In 2007, according to the New York Times, 2,700 babies were delivered there.

According to quotes in the New York Times article, LICH may be shooting itself in the foot by closing their obstetrics division.

Stanley Brezenoff, president of Continuum Health Partners, the
parent company of Long Island College Hospital, said Wednesday that the
obstetrics service was being closed and the two buildings sold in an
effort to pay off tens of millions of dollars in operating and capital
debt that might otherwise force it to declare bankruptcy.

Mr. Brezenoff said that delivering babies was the biggest money loser at the hospital, as at many hospitals,
because of low reimbursement rates and high premiums for malpractice
insurance. “Our decision to take this step is not a happy one,” he said.

While
the financial concerns reflect those surrounding obstetrics at
hospitals nationwide, some doctors said that the closing could be
shortsighted, since maternity wards often bring in patients in
surrounding communities who will return when they or their children
need medical care.

“I think it’s well understood that obstetrical
services are a portal into the hospital,” Dr. John P. Brennan, an
obstetrician who has delivered babies at Long Island College Hospital
for 19 years, said Wednesday. “In many families the women, the mom
makes the health care decisions. If she’s had a baby there, when her
husband needs a procedure 5 or 10 years later, he’ll often go to the
same hospital. So obstetrics feeds all the other services.”

De Blasio Statement on LICH’s Closing of Maternity Ward

I guess Brooklyn Councilmember Bill de Blasio is vexed about Long Island Community Hospital’s decision to close their maternity department and sell off buildings in order to get out from under a $117 million debt. He released the following statement this morning.

“I am extremely troubled by LICH’s plan to close its maternity ward. This closing, coupled with the recent termination of the hospital’s rape crisis center, is part of a disturbing pattern of taking important medical services away from Brooklyn families.

“The possibility of LICH closing is unacceptable. Brooklyn cannot afford to lose the services this hospital provides. LICH must work with the community to create a long-term plan for combating its financial problems, and for serving the needs of the Brooklyn.”

Read the New York Moon

The New York Moon is a very interesting Internet-based publication that describes itself this way:

The New York Moon is an internet-based publication adhered to
the lunar phases of the real waxing, waning moon. It is collection of
experimental, reflective, and imaginative projects that unfold in any
medium.

This month the theme is the desert. Suffice it to say that it has multi-media features called The Singing Sand, Journeys Through Barren Lands and Desert Day: Live Without Running Water. S