Zuzu’s Petals: Yesterday Was Yucky

Here is yesterday’s email from Fonda at Zuzu’s Petals. As she says, yesterday was such a yucky day. But a great day to order spring bulbs. If you have a garden.

EXPLETIVE!!!!!!
"what a yucky day" I thought when i got up.
I reluctantly went out with Bear to keep him company …he gets nervous when there is lightening and thunder.
while he was taking care of business i ran a quick check of the garden.
well!

All my Roses have buds with color,
my wild self seeding cherry tomatoes have fruit AND flowers,
there is new growth on my beloved Nandinas
besides which, best of all, one of my intrepid Foxglove seedlings has a flowerspike 18" tall!

Of course this is why we garden!
To cheer us up on yucky days!
Back inside, i went online and ordered a small but satisfying collection of Spring Bulbs to sell at The Big.
Why not get a headstart on Spring?
Sorry about the tiny pictures…go get your glasses,
i’ll wait.

this is a collection of all white Daffodils,Jonquils and Narcissus that will naturalize.
Next i ordered some of these lovely Giant  Pickwick Crocus.
And finished off the collection with Hyacinth "Woodstock" …for us Boomers.

Not too much…just a little something to invest in gardenjoy for next Spring…you have anything else you think might be a better investment right now?
i didn’t think so…
I will alert you all when they arrive.

This Sunday the 2nd of November, our Todd will put the Garden at the Big to sleep, bury the remaining pots of Trees, Shrubs, and Perennials for the Winter.
If there’s anything you had an eye on, give us a call and stop by  Saturday.
Remember Sunday is the Marathon and I think we have to turn the clocks back…(don’t you just hate that?) if i am wrong, please let me know.
We unpacked the fleece scarves last week…Summer is definitely over.
love to you all…

i look forward to seeing everyone at the polls next week!
fonda

Bill and Tish: Term Limits Law Suit To Be Announced Today

I got this press release from Bill de Blasio and Tish James about their press conference today:

Councilmembers Bill de Blasio and Letitia James, joined
by Comptroller Bill Thompson, attorney Randy Mastro, and other elected
officials, will hold a press conference on last week’s term limits vote. Last Thursday, the Council voted 29-22 to extend term limits to three consecutive terms for City elected officials. State
law, local law, and voting rights guaranteed under the US Constitution,
however, require that a mandatory referendum be held on this issue.

Councilmembers
de Blasio and James have authorized their lawyers to prepare a lawsuit
to challenge the legality of changing voter-ratified term limits by
legislation. The two Councilmembers have also authorized
their lawyers to review the legal infirmities and adverse impacts on
minority participation that will result from this major change by
legislation to the local electoral system, and to continue to pursue
claims that the vote blatantly violated local conflict of interest laws.

The Where and When

Councilmembers Bill de Blasio and Letitia James; Comptroller Bill Thompson; Randy Mastro; Other elected officials
12:00 p.m. Wednesday, October 29th
City Hall Steps

Today is Diwali: Alternate Side of the Street Parking Suspended

Today is Diwali, a major Indian holiday; it also means you don’t have to move your car. Here from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Diwali (or Deepavali) is a major Indian holiday, and a significant festival in Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism, and Jainism. [3] Many legends are associated with Diwali. Today it is celebrated by Hindus, Jains and Sikhs across the globe as the "Festival of Lights,"
where the lights or lamps signify victory of good over the evil within
every human being. Diwali is celebrated on the fifteenth day of the
month Kartika.[4]

In many parts of India, it is the homecoming of Lord Rama of Ayodhya after a 14-year exile in the forest, after he defeated the evil Ravana.[5]
The people of Ayodhya (the capital of his kingdom) welcomed Rama by
lighting rows (avali) of lamps (deeva), thus its name: Deepavali. This
word, in due course, became Diwali in Hindi. But, in South Indian
languages, the word did not undergo any change, and hence the festival
is called Deepavali in southern India. There are many different
observances of the holiday across India.

Jainism marks Diwali as the nirvana of Lord Mahavira, which occurred on 15 October, 527 BCE.

Among the Sikhs,
Diwali came to have special significance from the day the town of
Amritsar was illuminated on the return to it of Guru Hargobind
(1595-1644) who had been held captive in the Fort at Gwalior under the
orders of the Mughal emperor, Jahangir (1570-1627). As the sixth Guru
(teacher) of Sikhism, Guru Hargobind Ji, was freed from imprisonment –
along with 53 Hindu Kings (who were held as political prisoners) whom
the Guru had arranged to be released as well. After his release he went
to the Darbar Sahib (Golden Temple) in the holy city of Amritsar, where
he was welcomed in happiness by the people who lit candles and diyas to
greet the Guru. Because of this, Sikhs often refer to Diwali also as
Bandi Chhorh Divas – "the day of release of detainees."

The festival is also celebrated by Buddhists of Nepal, particularly the Newar Buddhists.

In India, Diwali is now considered to be a national festival, and
the aesthetic aspect of the festival is enjoyed by most Indians
regardless of faith.

RIP: Alejandra Vasquez

Here from the NY Times:

Alejandra Vasquez, the 11-year-old beaten to death, allegedly by her
mother with a mop handle, came to Brooklyn from Mexico about a month
ago but was hidden — never enrolled in school, and unseen by
child-welfare officials who visited her family’s apartment, even as she
suffered repeated abuse, medical records and interviews showed.

Alejandra
was unknown to the authorities until her body was discovered on Sunday
morning, but her story in some ways echoes that of her older sister,
Imelda, 14, who has been in foster care since January.

Imelda
also came from Mexico after years away from her mother and did not
regularly attend school here, records show; she told child-welfare
officials that her mother frequently beat her with toys and a belt,
and, in May, asked never to see her again.

The medical examiner
ruled Alejandra’s death a homicide by blunt force trauma, and found
evidence in an autopsy of ongoing beatings. “There were recent
blunt-impact injuries to the head, torso and extremities” that were “in
various stages of healing,” said a spokeswoman, Ellen Borakove.

      

A BAM Before Time: Exploring Prehistory on Halloween

I just got this email from Helen, who works in the marketing department at
BAM. 

I was doing a little bit of research online, and I came across your
blog.  I couldn’t help but think that maybe your community might be
interested in some information about BAMboo!, BAM’s annual free Halloween
festival.  The festivities take place in front of BAM, on
Lafayette between
Ashland Place and
Fulton Street , from
4—7pm on Oct 31st.  There are games, candy giveaways, costume
contests, wandering performers, and a very popular moon bounce.  This
year’s theme is A BAM Before Time, exploring prehistory; there will be
fossil digs, cave art, and dinosaur treasures for everyone, young and
old. I also
encourage you to visit our website for more information: http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=400

Girl Guides Starting up in Park Slope

Yesterday I heard from Caitlin
Dean, who is starting a non-profit outdoors program, Girl Guides, for sixth through
tenth grade girls.  She is launching a pilot group in Northwest Brooklyn, focused on Park Slope,
and trying to spread the word through as many community networks as
possible. She is hoping that OTBKB’s readers might be interested in the program for their daughters or
other girls they know of! There is a listing of information sessions below.

A bit of background: I graduated from Yale University in 2005 and was most recently
working for Sen. Dick Durbin on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., but I left my job to start
Girl Guides.  For years, my sister and I spent part of our summers in
Belgium, where we have family friends.  There, we participated in
summer wilderness camps with Girl Guides, which is the Belgian
equivalent of Girl Scouts (and actually the name of most countries’
Scouting programs for girls). 

In practice, it’s very different from
Girl Scouts here in America.  For one thing, Girl Guides is a youth
movement, which means that the groups are run by young adults (usually
college-age girls or recent graduates), not parents, and that over
time, the participants learn leadership skills and take on increased responsibility within the
group.  Girl Guides also puts a strong emphasis on outdoor activities
and environmentalism, and it encourages teamwork, cooperation and
communal living over individual recognition (there is no focus on merit
badges, for example).  Activities are held throughout the school year,
usually on weekends (afternoons, day trips and overnights), building up
to a two-week camp in the summer.  Our "camp" is actually just a field
that we transform into a community.  We pitch tents, build our
campsites (literally – the constructions are incredible!), cook over
open fires, hike, play games, sing around the campfire, and learn to
live in nature as a group.  For more information, check out our website at www.girlguidesusa.org.

I have long wanted to make it possible for American girls to
participate in such a wonderful program, and so I have decided to take
on the challenge of starting an American version of Girl Guides.  The
necessary infrastructure for the program is in place, and I am now
looking
for interested girls to participate and schools and community groups to
partner with.  There will be information sessions about the program at
local libraries in mid-November.

Girl Guides was without a doubt one of the best experiences of my
life, and I know it can be a life-changing experience for other girls
as well.  I appreciate your help in getting the word out about this new
and exciting opportunity.

The Where and When

Sat. Nov. 15 10:30-11:30am, Brooklyn Heights Library (280 Cadman Plaza West)
Sat. Nov. 15 2:00-3:00pm, Williamsburgh Library (240 Division Ave.) and
Wed. Nov. 19 6:30-7:30pm, Park Slope Library (431 6th Ave. at 9th St.)

Please RSVP to caitlindean(at)girlguidesusa(dot)org by November 12.

Greensboro: Closer to the Truth at Brooklyn College on November 3

There will be a special screening of Greensboro: Closer to the Truth at Brooklyn College on November 3rd, the 29th anniversary of the tragic event.

In this documentary, filmmaker
Adam Zucker explores the events of Nov. 3, 1979, when Ku Klux Klan
members and American Nazis fired into a Communist Workers Party rally
in Greensboro, N.C., killing five.

Zucker interviews survivors
and families of those killed, as well as with the people who attacked
the protesters, tracing how their lives have evolved since the
incident. Their stories play out against the backdrop of the first
Truth and Reconciliation Commission ever held in the United States,
convened to investigate the massacre, as well as Greensboro itself, a
city that is both regionally progressive and racially conflicted.

The Where and When

Monday November 3 at 6:30
Brooklyn College Tanger Auditorium in the Campus Library

Photo IDS required to enter building and inform the guards that you’re going to the screening. For travel info, http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/pub/visitbc_directions.htm

Brooklyn Cohousing Group Chooses Site

I see on Brownstoner that the Brooklyn cohousing group has chosen a location for their utopian vision of a communal living space. It sounds like a great site: Fort Greene’s former St. Michael’s Church property. Here from Brownstoner:

The 10 member households and 17 associate households of the Brooklyn Cohousing group
have found a site for their social and housing experiment: Fort
Greene’s former St. Michael’s church property. "When our project is
complete, our community will share three buildings surrounding a
7,500-square-foot inner courtyard of gardens, green space and
children’s play areas," they wrote in an email to interested parties.
"In addition, we will share extensive interior common space and share a
process of decision making that empowers everyone in the community."
This will be a more co-operative co-operative, based on the Danish
model of co-housing where folks own individual property as well as some
communal spaces.

Obama Cell Phone Banks at Brooklyn Lyceum and The Grand Prospect Hall

The phone bank at the Brooklyn Lyceum is open every day from noon until 3 p.m, the Lyceum is located at 227 Fourth Avenue. On November 3rd and 4th, they will open at 10:30 am and be open all day.

On Tuesday night, the group will be watching the election returns on the big screen at the Lyceum. Join them.

Another site, The Grand Prospect Hall at 263 Prospect Avenue above Fifth Avenue. has phone  banks going from 11 am until 6 pm every day, including election day.

Adult Education at Union Hall

Once again, Brooklyn Based, the cultural Daily Candy of brownstone Brooklyn, has some good goods on fun events at bars. Read here about a monthly mock lecture series at Union Hall. Find more at Brooklynbased.

Series: Adult Education
Where: Union Hall, 702 Union St., Park Slope
What: Brooklyn lawyer-by-day/comedian-by-night Charles
Star hosts this ongoing lecture series where speakers expound on
tongue-in-cheek topics loosely related to a changing theme, chosen by
Star, his wife Carrie McLaren (who used to publish Stay Free! magazine), and writer Jim Hanas.
The night we attended, “School for Scandal” inspired lectures on “The
Lurid World of Student Gossip Sites” and “The Firing of My High School
Physics Teacher.” As a host, Star is at once self-deprecating
and earnest; he understands people want to have fun while learning
something new.
When: Tuesdays on a semi-monthly basis, 8pm, $5 cover. Nov. 11 theme: “Lies and Liars.”

Support Group for Young Moms in Red Hook

Just got this email about a support group for young moms in Red Hook:

The Red Hook
Initiative
is a not-for-profit organization run by community residents
to improve issues surrounding poverty in our neighborhood. Our Young
Mother’s Support Group is a weekly program for teenage mothers that
focuses on overcoming obstacles and meeting individual life goals while
being a young mother.

Many of these young women need baby items that
they are unable to acquire on their own:RHI serves over 30 young mothers who could use donations of new or gently used
baby clothing, blankets, baby formula/ food/ powder, diapers (all
sizes!), and car seats, cribs or other baby gear as long as all the
parts and pieces are there and it’s in good condition. All donations
are tax deductible.

To donate, drop off at the Red Hook Initiative:
595 Clinton Street (between Centre and Mill), Brooklyn, NY 11231

For more information, please contact Samora Coles

Reproductive Health Coordinator

718-858-6782

Fundraiser for Immigrant College Student Looking for Space

Just got this email from a loyal OTBKB reader who thought I might be able to help. Email her at

I run a small scholarship fund which raises money for a young
lady I know who is an extremely promising student but can’t get
financial aid for college because of her immigration status.  She
attends BMCC, which is out of reach financially for her family, so my
friends and I have been sponsoring her tuition for the last 2 years.
This semester, I’m planning an auction (all products/ service will be
donated by my friends who are artists, photographers, massage
therapists, etc) to raise money for the fund. I am flexible on the date
but am tentatively aiming for some time in the weekend of November 21.

 

I need a space for about 50-75 people for the auction and a
low-key party.  Since it’s to raise money, I don’t want to have to pay
much (or at all) for it, so I’m looking for a generous soul who might
be able to help out.  Do you or your readers happen to know any such
souls, or spaces that might be available? I’ve been making the rounds
of churches, etc. around town but have been striking out.

Imagine Coney: Launched on Monday

Back when my dad was in the hospital in late August, he was visited by a friend, who is a board member at the Municipal Arts Society (MAS).

It was just a few days before he died but he and this friend were trying to come up with a good slogan for what I think is the Imagine Coney campaign.

My father, a great copywriter and wordsmith, used to work with this friend back in the 1960’s. He often called on my dad to come up with headlines, copy, and/or names for races horses.

That day in the hospital my dad came up with All Money, No Coney. So I don’t think that was going to work. I’m sure he came up with some others ideas as well. 

Well, today MAS launched this initiative. It sounds very interesting.

On Monday, October 27, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon at Brooklyn Borough Hall, MAS will launch Imagine Coney, an
initiative bringing together a world-class team of designers,
engineers, producers and economists to develop new ideas for Coney
Island – for amusement rides, structures, events and interim activities.

Coney Island was once one of the most astonishing places on earth –
from the minarets and lights of Luna Park to the water chute rides and
freakish sideshows of Dreamland. However, over the last several
decades, it has declined and the area needs revitalization.

The City has taken several critical steps towards that goal. Last
November, it announced a rezoning initiative, which you can view here,
but it will take more than the efforts of the City alone to restore
Coney Island to its greatness. It will require the focus, creativity
and entrepreneurship of New Yorkers and Coney Island fans like you.

The team MAS has brought together will assemble at Brooklyn Borough Hall on Monday, October 27, 9:00 A.M. – 12:00 noon
to listen to presentations from key stakeholders, and then will return
on November 13 & 14 to participate in a “charrette” – an intense
design workshop – to develop new ideas. The team will present their
work publicly on November 17. The aim is to restore Coney Island to be
one of the world’s most exciting and original entertainment and
amusement destinations once again.

But first the team will need your input. In mid-November, the MAS
will be hosting two public workshops with our local partners, as well
as an online “Call for Ideas”. The details of these meetings and the
website will be announced next week.

So stay tuned, and start “Imagining Coney”!

To read more about MAS advocacy on Coney Island, visit www.mas.org/coneyisland

A Field Guide to Monsters: Googly-Eyed Wart Floppers, Shadow-Casters, Toe-Eaters, and Other Creatures

At the Community Bookstore on Thursday, October 30, at 5:30 there will be a lecture on the subject of Monstrology by world-famous Senior Monstrologist, Johan Olander, the author and illustrator of A Field Guide to Monsters: Googly-Eyed Wart Floppers, Shadow-Casters, Toe-Eaters, and Other Creatures.

The Where and When

October 30 at 5:30 p.m.
The Community Bookstore
Seventh Avene between Garfield and Carroll

Do You Have More Stuff Than Space?

Hey there busy parents, professionals, artists and entrepreneurs, let my friend Eleanor Traubman, a professional organizer, unclutter and organize.

I can tell you from experience: Eleanor is VERY organized and VERY easy to work with. So consider the following:

· Do you have more stuff than space?
· Are you overwhelmed by piles of papers, clothes, or books?
· Would you like more serenity and less chaos in your home or work space

She can help you: Clear your desk. Unclutter your closets
Get your papers in order. Create rooms you and your family love to live and work in.

A professional organizer since 1999, Eleanor assists busy New York women de-clutter and make better use of desks, closets, filing cabinets, and more. She has been featured in Time Out New York, The Brooklyn Paper, Family Circle, The Sun Times Chronicle, and Fitness.

Eleanor is also a writer, educator, culture maven, and community-builder whose passion is connecting people to each other, and connecting people to tools and resources for living an inspired and effective life. Her mission is to bring people together through the arts, creativity, and humor. She is Editor of Creative Times, a blog for artists and entrepreneurs, and also helps convene the Brooklyn Blogade, a monthly gathering of Brooklyn Bloggericle, and Fitness.

Eleanor is also a writer, educator, culture maven, and community-builder whose passion is connecting people to each other, and connecting people to tools and resources for living an inspired and effective life. Her mission is to bring people together through the arts, creativity, and humor. She is Editor of Creative Times, a blog for artists and entrepreneurs, and also helps convene the Brooklyn Blogade, a monthly gathering of Brooklyn Blogger.

917-499-7395
creativetimes.blogspot.com

This Man is Looking for Friends

SecuredownloadWhy would a young man set up a folding table near the entrance to Prospect Park in Grand Army Plaza with a sign that read: Friends?

Is it a performance piece? Desperation? A joke? A magazine project? A sociological experiment? 

A note on the desk asked, "Will you be my friend." The note explained that this 36-year-old writer, who currently works as a proof reader and copy editor, is looking for friends. There was also a sign-up sheet for potential girlfriends.

He listed his interests, which included books and writing. I can’t remember the rest. 

This man, who asked me not to use his name, said that he came to New York City five years ago from Philadelphia to work in finance. But now he works freelance in book publishing. He is looking for a full time job in the publishing business.

He does have friends, he explained. But most of them are in Philadelphia.

"Is this a writing project?" I asked. I was sure that there had to be another reason why he’d set up  this table with the sign-up sheets.

"No," he said. "But I do write."

"What happens if I sign up to be your friend," I said warily.

"I’ll probably call you. We can talk on the phone, have a cup of coffee," he said.

Well, readers. I signed up to be his friend. I guess I signed up for MY writing project: this blog. I told the friend-seeker that I would put his picture on my blog.

"Don’t use my name," he said.

Walking away I wondered if he’d really call. I hoped he wasn’t a serial killer or some kind of nut. Maybe he just wants to make some friends.

Sitting at a table at the entrance to Prospect Park: It’s certainly a novel way to do it.

Neighbors Start Google Group to Discuss Noisy Club in Clinton Hill

I got this email from an OTBKB reader over the weekend:

I have a question. i wonder if you can help me with something. I live on Clinton Avenue behind a noisy club. My neighbors and I have had trouble with the noice coming from the club (crazy loud bass, music and drunk patrons) since they opened…

Councilwoman Tish James has been awesome, but it’s still a persistant problem. Calling 311 doesn’t help, sleeping with 2 fans doesn’t help (three people in my building do this–me, too!). The police suggested that the neighbors form an alliance.

My neighbors and i have created a google group where we can discuss the issue and try to work together to come up with a solution: http://groups.google.com/group/clinton-washington-neighbors-against-noise.

My neighbors and I have made flyers and will distribute them around the area, but any help would be so appreciated.

I’ve lived in the same clinton hill apt for 6 years and brooklyn for nearly 10! i LOVE this borough and am excited about many of the changes in my nabe.

My Father the Bookmark

Dsc00234edit_2A friend told me the other night that she’s been using the picture of my father we gave out at the funeral (left) as a bookmark.

That made me happy. And, of course, it seemed appropriate to me; I was touched, too. How better to memorialize my dad than in a book. I wanted to know what book she was reading silently hoping that it was a book my father loved.

But I didn’t blurt that out. I waited for her story.

She explained that the night I gave her the picture, during the shiva, she was starting a biography of Nicholas Tesla called Man Out of Time. So she stuck the photo in the book.

Immediately I wondered if my father would have read a book about Niklas Tesla, the legendary mechanical and electrical engineer, who’s work formed the basis of modern alternating currents and electric power and has been called the man who invented the 20th century.

Yes, I decided. He’d pick up the book, and even read it. My father’s curiosity was boundless as was a desire to understand things like engineering, not a natural interest of his.

Okay, it wouldn’t be his first choice to read about electrical power—he loved philosophy, literary criticism, art and music history, poetry and fiction—but I decided he’d give it a go.

My friend is still reading that book. She confessed that she’s having a tough time with it: “I don’t like the writing at all.” Still, I had the sense that she intends to finish the book. And in the process she has forged a connection with my dad through that picture.

A talented graphic designer, when my friend was just starting out, she revered the ad creatives of the 1960’s, the golden age of American advertising. Those were her heroes. My father was a copywriter and later a creative director during that legendary time.

In fact, a wonderful pro bono ad he created for National Library Week, while at Doyle Dane Bernbach, is featured in the book, When Advertising Tried Harder, The Sixties. The Golden Age of American Advertising, a book this friend lent me a month ago.

My friend loves that small picture of my dad.

“I took it,” I told her proudly. Only a sometime-photographer, I am pleased that my portraits of my dad came out so well.

“There’s something about that picture,” she said. She struggled to articulate it.

“The book. The blue book.” I said referring to the turquoise book that is on top of a stack of books behind my father in the picture. It’s a nice, inadvertent compositional touch.

“Yes, the book,” her eyes lit up.

“The book,” she said again. “The blue book.”

It’s so interesting the many way my father lives on.

Smartmom and Hepcat Need to Get A life

Photo2editSmartmom and Hepcat had the night off. Sort of. Teen Spirit, as always, was busy with friends and the Oh So Feisty One was iChatting with a camp friend who lives in Massachusetts.

They could have done anything — within reason, of course. They could have gone to the Pavilion to see Oliver Stone’s “W.” or “Burn After Reading.” They could have had dinner at the Stone Park Cafe or gone to Bar Reis for a Scotch.

But no. Smartmom wanted to go to Rock Obama, a benefit show organized by Lily Isadora, a 15-year-old singer-songwriter, with seven local teen bands.

Hepcat was, most decidedly, not in the mood. Napping on the couch, he was in for the night. But Smartmom was jonesing to hang out with a bunch of underaged rockers, who were coming together in support of the next president of the United States. And her son’s band, The Mighty Handful, wasn’t even playing in the show (though, let’s be honest, she knew she’d probably see him there).

“I’m tired,” Hepcat told her. “Besides, we have no business being there.”

Smartmom knew he was right; Hepcat is the sensible one when it comes to giving the kids their own space. Face it, Smartmom really only wanted to go because she knows that in a few years, she’ll have an empty nest — and it already gnaws at her. But of course she didn’t say that to Hepcat. Instead, she made the argument that she really wanted to go to the event because her favorite bands would be playing.

“Radiates! And Calamus! Banzai and Lily Isadora!” she said.

“You’re a groupie,” Hepcat said.

“Yeah, I’m a groupie,” Smartmom concurred. “But it’s for a good cause.”

Hepcat got up from the couch and agreed to come along

When they got to the Lyceum, they ran into their 17-year-old next-door neighbor.

“There are a lot of ninth graders in there,” she said grimacing.

“Ninth graders,” Smartmom whispered. “We really will be the oldest people in the room.”

Once inside, Smartmom and Hepcat were relieved to see some of their middle-aged friends. Lily Isadora’s parents looked exhausted from setting up and chaperoning the crowd. Smartmom’s good friend, Stone House Doyenne was there as was Seaside Diva, who was taking money at the door and stamping hands.

Smartmom went down to the performance space, where kids were moshing to the sounds of Banzai, one of Smartmom’s favorite bands. She couldn’t see a thing and the noise level was oppressive. Then she looked up and noticed that most of the middle-agers were watching the show from the upstairs projection booth (smart kids).

Upstairs it was civilized; the sounds were muted and they had a good view of what was going on below. They even got to sit on comfortable chairs. Good deal. It was like being in a Sky Box at Madison Square Garden and watching a game in style.

Sort of.

Ah yes, the parental booth. Smartmom had a healthy distance on her son who was downstairs enjoying the show.

It gave her a thrill to be able to spy on him — and listen to the bands she is so fond of. Then again, one of his friends told him she was there so he knew he was being spied on.

From her parental Sky Box, Smartmom had a nice overview as she thought about the passage of time. Teen Spirit looked manly wearing his grandfather’s double-breasted suit jacket and black lace-up shoes. He’s even sporting a mustache-less beard these days.

Smartmom saw Teen Spirit’s childhood best friend. They were inseparable when they were students in pre-school, where they promised that they’d always invite each other to their birthday parties. Tall and handsome, he was playing volleyball with a Poland Spring plastic bottle.

Smartmom felt, you guessed it, wistful and sad about the passage of time — but also excited that Teen Spirit and his friends are on the cusp of the rest of their lives.

She wondered if they see it that way. Probably not: they’re so in — and of — their adolescent moment.

By the time she and Hepcat left the Lyceum, Smartmom was glad they’d come. She may be a Brooklyn teen band groupie, but Teen Spirit will graduate from high school next June, his future, as yet, undecided. These are the salad days of his life and Smartmom wants to be around him — even at a distance — as much as she can before he moves on to the next stage of his life.

Whatever that is

Fire at Mura on Fifth Avenue

Just heard from Fonda at Zuzu’s Petals about a fire at Mura, the newish Japanese restaurant the other night.

There was a fire at Mura across the street from us on Fifth Avenue the other night. i have no credible information as to the cause or what their condition is. i think it happened early in the morning thursday.
all the zuzus got a real dose of nostalgic nausea from that post fire stench of wet smokey burned up and broken….our heart goes out to our neighbors…been there, done that.

New Indoor Flea Market To Open in November

Just heard from someone who is starting an indoor flea in Ft. Greene.

I’m launching an indoor Flea Market on Bedford Avenue and Lafayette Avenue in Brooklyn November 2008. The flea market is going to be in an old collision shop that is “L” shaped. The space is approximately 3000 sq feet and we will host 30 plus vendors.
The vendors will be selling vintage furniture, designer jewelry, art, original fashion designers, high-end new and, used clothing to name a few. The market will be open Fridays, Saturdays, and Sunday

.

Tish James On Her No Vote on Term Limits

This from the NY Observer:

Here’s Brooklyn Councilwoman Tish James explaining her vote on the term limits extender bill a few moments ago on the Council floor:

“I believe that this is really all about a legacy—about Moynihan Station, about Willets Point, about the West Side, about Ground Zero, and yes, about Atlantic Yards; and about the displacement of low, moderate and working families in New York City. Let me end by decrying, let the people decide.”
Just in case there’s any ambiguity, she voted “no” on the bill.

Tonight: Benefit Bash for the Old Stone House at the Lyceum

Tonight come to the Park Slope social event of the year: a benefit costume party for the Old Stone House at the Lyceum tonight. It’s only $40 per person and you don’t have to wear a costume—just dance.

What a fun, festive way to support the Old Stone House, which is operated as a historic interpretive center dedicated to its crucial role in the American Revolution and in the evolving histories of Brooklyn, New York and the United States. It also serves as a dynamic community resource through its education programs and events. In addition to historical exhibits open to the public, the House is available by appointment for tours, classes and rentals.

Who can imagine life in Park Slope without the Old Stone House?

–Outdoor Shakespeare with Piper Theater in JJ Byrne Park. Last summer’s Coney Island-themed Midsummers Night Dream was wonderful.

–Shakespeare Camp with John McEneny; parents are still swooning about what a great time their kids had.

–Brooklyn Film Works with films like The Little Fugitive, The Manchurian Candidate, Moonstruck, What’s Up Doc? and other great films al fresco.
–The Harvest Festival last Sunday, where more than 1,000 kids and adults gathered for pony rides, face painting, costume making and MORE.

–Barbara Ensor’s Thumbalina, Tiny Runaway Bride, an art show currently on view with fanciful fairy tale silhouettes and cut outs.
–Poetry Punch, the Memoirathon, the Edgy Mother’s Day event and other great readings at Brookyn Reading Works.

–Concerts, readings, films, theater, gatherings of all kinds. We love the Old Stone House and it DESERVES this community’s support: Order Your Tickets Now!

The Where and When

Saturday, October 25

The First Annual Makin’ History Costume Party Bash (Costumes not required)

A benefit for the Old Stone House @ the Brooklyn Lyceum

8-11 pm. Tickets: $40

Advance tickets: http: www.nycharities.org