The New York Times Hits Home: When Nest Eggs Crack

I just read Michael Winerip's Generation B column in the New York Times about my sister. It will be in the February 8th edition of the paper but it's already online.

I must say I had my misgivings about her going public about the fact that my father, who died on September 7th, was "Madoffed"

But it's hard to keep secrets about something so big.

I've told a lot of people. And not told a lot more people. It's a huge part of my life right now and I spend a good deal of time thinking about it, discussing it with family members, going to see our lawyer, and reading about it in the media. (It's the great IT in my life right now).

But it's also the big elephant in the room that I haven't written about on the blog or in my Brooklyn Paper column.

That's because my life has been such a strange and confusing whirlwind since December 11th, the day  Bernard Madoff was arrested for running the biggest Ponzi scheme in history.

As soon as it happened I wondered if I should write about it. In a way, I felt too close to the story. And there were so many unknowns. At that point, I decided it was best to take a lot of notes, maybe for a book, and sit tight.

A few weeks ago my sister told me that Winerip, was interested in devoting a column to her story. Frankly, it made me a bit nervous. I may be an open book but my sister tends to keep things closer to her chest. Now she was opening up her life for all to see.

In the New York Times no less.

How would this effect her? How would this effect the family?

I gave her some pointers about talking to a reporter.  "Remember, if you don't want him to use some information just say, 'it's off the record.'" I figured there would be pressure to reveal more than she was comfortable revealing.

But I also gave her my blessing. I knew that Winerip was a good writer and that he would probably write with sensitivity and honesty.

Luckily, I was right. I love the piece he wrote about my sister. He really got the specificity of her story, her disappointment, and her resolve to move on. And he wrote it very well.

THERE were some mornings in that awful year of 2008, when she lay half awake in bed, trying to keep track of all the Caroline Jacobsons she would need to be that day: mother to her 4-year-old, Sonya; wife to her architect husband, Jeff; daughter to her 79-year-old dad, dying of cancer; stepdaughter to his distraught second wife; set decorator for whatever TV commercial was being shot that week — Mr. Clean, Verizon Wireless, Bayer aspirin, Giant Eagle supermarkets.

And that was before she’d been Madoffed.

Some days, the 50-year-old Ms. Jacobson handed off her daughter to the baby sitter at 7:30 a.m., raced from their Brooklyn co-op to a production studio in Queens, put in a 12-hour day, then headed to the hospital in Manhattan to see her father.

No matter how fast she ran, she worried she was neglecting someone.

Her father had been a highly successful Madison Avenue ad executive. He had lived well — he loved opera, museums, the racetrack — but had also saved and invested his money and was generous with his two daughters, Ms. Jacobson and her twin sister, Louise Crawford, as well as their families.

Still, like many of his generation, her father had a prudent streak, preferred the subway to car services. When he grew thin from colon cancer, Ms. Jacobson tried to persuade him to hire a food-delivery service. When he wouldn’t, she and her sister would stop by his apartment with the minestrone or tongue sandwiches he loved.

She tried getting him to take a car service to his chemo sessions, but he was stubborn. And then, in mid-August, he called her saying he’d collapsed on the subway and two big men had to carry him up to the street.

Not long after, on Sept. 7, 2008, he died.

It's painful and poignant to read Winerip's opening. My grief over my dad's death trumps my feelings about our Madoff situation. But it's all braided together now. And it's all very public. Last week his name along with 13,000 other names on a list of Madoff clients was released; the list is easily accessible on the web.

Sometime I wonder what my dad would say about all this if he was alive. Sometimes I feel relieved that he didn't live to see this happen. I know it would have made him sick and sad. It was his intention to take care of us after he died, especially my stepmother.

But it also makes me feel his loss more keenly. I sure could use some of his insight and guidance at a time like this. But most of all I miss his sense of humor. He probably would have made me laugh about some aspect of this.

Of that I'm sure.

Sun at Union Temple: Continue the Change Service Fair

5204
On Sunday, Feb. 8, massive volunteer fair will unite grassroots supporters with
local nonprofits and charities

Hundreds of Brooklynites who volunteered for
Barack Obama’s presidential campaign will join together this Sunday, Feb. 8., to make sure change comes
right to their own backyard.

On Sunday,
more than 65 local nonprofits, charities and advocacy groups will take part
in the first-ever “Continue the Change Service Fair.” Organized by the
grassroots group Brooklyn for Barack and the Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats,
the volunteer fair will seek to harness the incredible energy sparked by the
Obama campaign.

From sewing new clothes for women at domestic violence
shelters to stocking
shelves at a local food bank, from mentoring a child to working with abused animals, the volunteer
fair will provide former campaign volunteers with countless opportunities to make
a positive difference close to home.

“The election was
just the beginning,” Brooklyn for Barack co-founder Jordan Thomas said. “This
campaign was not just about bringing change to Washington, but bringing it to
Brooklyn and the rest of New York, too. It is up to us to make the change real.”

What:
Continue the Change Service Fair

When:
Sunday, Feb. 8, 2 to 6 p.m.
Where: Union Temple, 17 Eastern
Parkway (at Grand Army Plaza) 3rd Floor ballroom, Brooklyn
Cost: Free, but a box of dried pasta
for Union Temple’s food drive would be appreciated

To RSVP, please email continuethechange@gmail.com or call 718-757-8572

Participating
organizations include the Arab-American Family Support Center, Bed-Stuy
Campaign Against Hunger, HousingWorks, Marriage Equality New York, New York
Aquarium, Sue Rock Originals Everyone, Transportation Alternatives, Oxfam, the Women's
Prison Association and more than 50 others. The fair will also include
roundtables on Local Environmental Activism, Using Technology to Monitor and
Influence the Legislative Process, Health Care, Voting Rights and Food Justice.
In addition, parents are encouraged to bring their kids for a “make-and-take” craft
table, sponsored by Materials for the Art

illustration by David Choe

Newgeography: Is Brooklyn the Ultimate City???

The editors of Newgeography.com sent me an email about Peter Smirniotopoulos's recently-posted article "Musings on Urban Form: Is Brooklyn the Ultimate City?".

The article addresses the question of whether less-distinguished
"emerging urban forms" can be classified as "real cities" by arguing
that the borough of Brooklyn has the characteristics of a more complete
city than many urban centers in the United States. Smirniotopoulos
compares data on density, diversity, land use and the housing market of
Brooklyn to major and minor cities in the United States in presenting
the constellation of neighborhoods as a significant city in itself.

Follow this link or use the URL below to access the article.

http://www.newgeography.com/content/00573-musings-urban-form-is-brooklyn-ultimate-city

For Rent: That Upper Duplex You Always Wanted in Park Slope


Here it is. That Park Slope upper duplex you always wanted. Space, charm, historical detail, AND A DECK

Charming owner occupied  3 bedroom upper DUPLEX  on lovely block in
CENTRAL PARK SLOPE  (7th street between 6th and 7th Avenues) with
recently added kitchen leading onto enormous canopied south facing
deck. 2 full bathrooms and laundry facilities. Details, closets galore;
storage in basement. Come and take a look!  $4,900 includes all
utilities. Cute pets are always welcome. 6 month rentals considered. Barbara(at)barbaraensor(dot)com 

Leonie Haimson: Schools Need A True Partnership with Parents

Leonie Haimson, executive director of  Class Size Matters sent in this response to an OTBKB post about Learn NY, which she claims is an organization established by
allies of Mayor Bloomberg
"to retain his choke hold on
our schools after the current governance system sunsets in June 2009."

Here is Haimson's take on that organization and what she thinks are the real problems and solutions:Whatever you think of Ms. Haimson's point of view you have to admit that the NAME of her organization is brilliant. 

 The organization’s paid representatives, including Peter Hatch,
Robin Warren, Brian Keeler, and Julie Wood, all claim that their activities
are not funded directly by Bloomberg, but they refuse to divulge who is
paying their salaries.  They also admit to having raised millions of
dollars, and have hired several prominent and well-connected lobbying and
consulting firms to push their agenda with the Legislature in
Albany . 

 The problem is that there are few if any involved public school
parents who trust this administration’s good intentions, after having
witnessed six years of unilateral, strong-arm tactics, in which the Mayor and
Chancellor have ignored their views, and have imposed misguided policies on
our children’s schools.  So Learn
NY is hard at work, trying to
recruit parents
and make them
believe
that they are actually interested in what
parents think.

On the Learn NY website, they may say they have “made open
dialogue with parents a priority”,
but they have turned down several offers to meet with established NYC parent
groups, and have so far refused to speak at any public forum that includes
representatives from groups with opposing views. They also claim to want to
increase parent input and transparency in the current governance system, but
have not made any substantive proposals on how this would be achieved, except
to suggest that there should be more public hearings. 

 Over the last six years, there have been numerous public hearings
held by the Chancellor and/or other Department of Education representatives,
but always after they have already decided what their policies would
be.  Never has
this administration’s decisions been affected by a single comment, suggestion
or proposal put forward by any parent or parent group.
 More public hearings without an administration that actually has to listen to the views of parents and
take them into account before making decisions would be useless.

 The position of Learn
NY on the need to improve
transparency also seems to be hypocritical, since they refuse to be
transparent about who is funding their own operations, and their tactics are
anything but transparent. An anonymous person
left pro-Mayoral control comments on several blogs
,
until he was eventually unmasked as Brian Keeler of
Learn NY .
Moreover, their website includes much distorted data and PR spin, rather than
actual fact.

 Instead of Mayoral dictatorship, we need a system in which the
Mayor would have to forge a real partnership with parents.  Instead of
PR spin, we need the truth. For more information about our concerns,, please
visit the NYC public
school parent blog
. Send us a message at NYCPublicSchoolParents@gmail.com.  And please, testify at the hearings on Mayoral control to
share your views; the schedule is here.

 

 

 

Coraline Opens Today: Review by Nancy O. Graham

06caroline_600
 
My friend Nancy O. Graham reviewed the new Henry Selick 's Coraline, on her blog oswegatchie and Alternative Films for Kids. The film opens today at the Park Slope Pavilion at 2:00, 4:25, 7 and 9:40.
Here's an excerpt from Nancy's review:

My son Ray has been making movies since he was six: stop motion animation, live action, and lately, CGI parodies of Star Wars.
He reads film production books and bios of animators like Chuck Jones,
and loves ‘making-of’ bonus features and little biopics about revered
figures like Ray Harryhausen. One of his ‘mentors’ is Henry Selick, who
has just completed his adaptation (for 3D stop-motion animation) of
Neil Gaiman’s novel, Coraline.

It was our enormous good fortune—mine, my son’s, my daughter’s, my husband’s, and his mother’s—to visit the set of Coraline
a couple of years ago, and a real treat to see a preview screening of
the finished work the other night in Manhattan, with Henry Selick on
hand to answer audience questions.

Ray,
who is 11, wasn’t sure he wanted to see what he called a ‘horror’
movie. His 9-year-old sister, who acts in most of his movies and in her
own monologue-driven shorts, was firm: she wouldn’t go to the
screening. The monstrous Other Mother of the previews, and the prospect
of having her lunge from the screen, were horrors they could live
without.

So, Ray and I headed into NYC with the plan that he
would shut his eyes, pull his jacket up over his face, and hold his
hands to his ears if it all got to be too much. He was willing to
endure, if only for the Q&A portion of the evening.

As it turns out, he didn’t have to worry too much. He only shut his eyes once, and not for long. While the idea of Coraline
is truly terrifying—a girl is left alone to rescue her supernaturally
abducted parents—its creators have allowed the idea to carry most of
the weight of emotion, as with the best fairy tales, and haven’t piled
onto it with 3D shock effects or long, anxiety-provoking suspense
sequences. The Nightmare Before Christmas, with its cast of
characters in varying states of decomposition, is more horrific—at
least to me, and I think my son, who got to an age where he felt too
uneasy to watch it, and wouldn’t go near the undead-dominated Corpse Bride, would agree.

Henry
Selick has done a beautiful job of reconceptualizing the novel for the
screen and for stop motion. From the first moments, when metal hands
sew up a doll-sized version of the title character and cast her into a
void, this is a movie that invites contemplation of the animator and
the animator’s art. Our first view of the hands of the evil Other
Mother, creator and destroyer of the Other World, are bare of fleshly
trappings, primordial armature. We come to find that the energy of
children is what makes the Other Mother’s material other world, and it
is their life force that makes it beautiful, whimsical, and inviting.

If you have watched any of the featurettes about Coraline,
you have seen artist after artist toiling and tinkering away, as
artists always do on these projects, though now, with the Internet, in
less obscurity. They can even blog about their work for Laika Studios.
It’s hard to watch that image of armature hands making the Coraline
doll and not think of all the human hands that have gone into the
making of this supremely hand-made movie, and seeing in these moments a
tribute to them all (certainly they deserve a tribute, including those
several dozen Laika workers, I was sorry to read, who were recently
laid off).

OtherMotherWorld is especially fanciful and so packed
with detail it's hard to imagine not seeing the movie many times to try
to take it all in. Henry S. has ensured that the Other Mother’s
overture to Coraline is suitably seductive. She—and we—are truly
tempted to stay and sample more delights from the animators’ cabinet of
wonders. The wonders really are wonderful; we laughed throughout the
early other world scenes. In the post-screening Q&A, Henry S.
talked a bit about his motivation for shooting in 3D. He wanted the
audience to have more access to the animators' world—2D doesn't really
allow it. So the other world—more colorful, more fanciful—really is the
animators' world. (One could imagine a version that is flat when we're
in Coraline's world and 3D only in the other world, like the sepia vs.
color worlds of The Wizard of Oz.)

Sunday: Continue the Change Volunteer Fair

Obama-creativerescue
On Sunday, Feb. 8, massive volunteer fair will unite grassroots supporters with
local nonprofits and charities

Hundreds of Brooklynites who volunteered for
Barack Obama’s presidential campaign will join together this Sunday, Feb. 8., to make sure change comes
right to their own backyard.

On Sunday,
more than 65 local nonprofits, charities and advocacy groups will take part
in the first-ever “Continue the Change Service Fair.” Organized by the
grassroots group Brooklyn for Barack and the Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats,
the volunteer fair will seek to harness the incredible energy sparked by the
Obama campaign.

From sewing new clothes for women at domestic violence
shelters to stocking
shelves at a local food bank, from mentoring a child to working with abused animals, the volunteer
fair will provide former campaign volunteers with countless opportunities to make
a positive difference close to home.

“The election was
just the beginning,” Brooklyn for Barack co-founder Jordan Thomas said. “This
campaign was not just about bringing change to Washington, but bringing it to
Brooklyn and the rest of New York, too. It is up to us to make the change real.”

What:
Continue the Change Service Fair

When:
Sunday, Feb. 8, 2 to 6 p.m.
Where: Union Temple, 17 Eastern
Parkway (at Grand Army Plaza) 3rd Floor ballroom, Brooklyn
Cost: Free, but a box of dried pasta
for Union Temple’s food drive would be appreciated

To RSVP, please email continuethechange@gmail.com or call 718-757-8572

Participating
organizations include the Arab-American Family Support Center, Bed-Stuy
Campaign Against Hunger, HousingWorks, Marriage Equality New York, New York
Aquarium, Sue Rock Originals Everyone, Transportation Alternatives, Oxfam, the Women's
Prison Association and more than 50 others. The fair will also include
roundtables on Local Environmental Activism, Using Technology to Monitor and
Influence the Legislative Process, Health Care, Voting Rights and Food Justice.
In addition, parents are encouraged to bring their kids for a “make-and-take” craft
table, sponsored by Materials for the Arts.

For a complete list of participating organizations and more information
about Brooklyn for Barack, please visit www.BrooklynforBarack.org

Illustration by Creative Rescue

New Pix of Rescue of Historic Astroland Signage

Rocktheboat
 Lots of new pix on the Coney Island History Project flickr photostream:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/27583836@N08/

Lynn Kowalewski , a
Brooklyn resident and member of the Coney Island History Project,
helped carry the DO NOT ROCK THE BOAT sign from Astroland's Water
Flume. Tricia Vita, Administrative Director of the Coney Island History
Project, holds the REMAIN SEATED – KEEP HANDS IN BOAT sign. The
Astroland Archives, historic signage and other artifacts from the 46
year old park were donated to the History Project by Astroland owners
Carol Hill Albert and Jerome Albert.

Fri: Mimesis Ensemble at Brookyn Conservatory Concert Hall

I just got this email from a soprano living in Park Slope. She is a faculty member of the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music and also
a member of the Mimesis Ensemble, a young energetic classical music
ensemble that champions the work of living composers. 

This
Friday, the Mimesis Ensemble is performing at the Brooklyn Conservatory
Concert Hall in Park Slope.  This is not a Conservatory-sponsored
event, but an event being held there. 

The concert will feature the
works of Mohammed Fairouz, a talented young Egyptian-born, London- and
Boston (New England Conservatory) -trained composer (www.mohammedfairouz.com). 

Friday's performance is in support of an important, ground-breaking
opera Mohammed is writing based on the play, "Song of Death" by
celebrated Egyptian playwright, Tawfiq Al-Hakim.  Mohammed's music is
great and the performers are stellar.

One of Mohammed's mentors, Halim El-Dabh (www.halimeldabh.com),
considered the "father of electronic music" and who is Egypt's formost
living composer (at 92 years old!), is Mimesis's composer-in-residence
this season and his works have been and will be also presented at
future concerts this season.  He will be live on WNYU radio tomorrow
between 12 and 2 pm.   www.wnyu.org   ( http://wnyu.org/2009-01-30_electrickahraba (an archive of last week's show)
This
concert is a benefit concert to raise awareness of and support for the
commission and production of a new opera by Mohammed Fairouz.  The
opera, based on a play by Egyptian playwright Tawfiq al-Hakim, will be
premiered by the Mimesis Ensemble in New York City in 2010.  Please
support this exciting project by joining us for this thrilling concert
of piano and vocal works by Mohammed Fairouz!


Storycorps Wants the Greatest Love Story in Brooklyn

I just heard from a reasearcher at StoryCorps, the national oral history project,
which records the lives of everyday people across the country. The idea
is that people visit one of SC's recording booths and interview one
another. A copy of the conversation is then archived for future
generations in the Library of Congress and you get a copy to take home
with you. http://storycorps.net

This researcher wrote in to to ask if I had any ideas of people she should record an interview with StoryCorps at their booth in downtown
Manhattan.

That got me thinking. There are so many stories around here. Hmmmmm. Ahhhhh. Ummmmm. Do you have a story you want to share or know of one?

StoryCorps is looking for larger-than-life local institutions,
oldest residents, anyone with a disappearing business or skill, but
above all, real talkers, the kind of people you could happily listen to
for hours.

With Valentine's Day coming up, they're especially interested in
finding the person or persons who have the "greatest love story in
Brooklyn". She'd love to know if anyone in your community or beyond fits that description.

(There's even a possibility that the
story could end up being broadcast on NPR's Morning Edition the week of
Valentine's Day.)

For a little context, here's a story with a Brooklyn couple they recorded a couple of years ago:

http://www.storycorps.net/listen/stories/danny-and-annie-perasa

A Fragrance Called Brooklyn

This I gotta smell. The fragrance company, Bond No. 9 (their tag line is "Making Scents of New York) has already created fragrances for Harlem, the Upper West Side, Madison Avenue, Little Italy, NoHo and other parts of NYC. But now, finally, they're doing THE outer borough. And I just got the word from the publicist. And you know what I said: send me some. This I gotta smell.

They say it's a scent that captures the vibe of the fresh and ever changing legendary city within a city.

Brooklyn is a unisex scent with
a desirably masculine attitude. It’s romantic, sexy and distinctive with notes
of cardamom, geranium leaves,
and cedarwood. Grapefruit
and juniper leaves
accelerate the scent, while hints of guaiacwood and leather bring in a tender
touch.

And for the first time we’ve decorated directly onto the transparent glass of
the iconic Bond No. 9 flacon, with the words BROOKLYN and BOND NO. 9 spelled
out in a edgy, urban
handwritten script in a vivid array of colors (think street art).

I will get back to you just as soon as I get me a sample of Brooklyn.

Valentine’s Day All Week on Fifth Avenue in Park Slope

2auntsuzies
Irene LeRoe, who owns Aunt Suzie's, the beloved Italian restaurant on Fifth
Avenue, sent word that the Fifth Avenue BID is celebrating Valentine's Day all
week and offering promotions, prix fixes, and coupons for Valentine's week.
Here's her fun pitch:

–BARS AND RESTAURANTS AND ROMANTIC PLACES FOR
LONGING GAZES AND SOFT WHISPERS

–JEWELERY &  GIFTS ON 5TH
AVE.  TO INSPIRE TENDER KISSES

–CAREFULLY SELECTED SOPHISTICATED
SPIRITS INVITING AMOUROUS KISSES

–.FLOWERS AS TOKENS OF LOVE AND JOY TO
PLEASE THAT VERY SPECIAL GIRL OR BOY

CHOCOLATES *DESSERTS *MUSIC*
CLOTHING*SEXY LINGERIE*SPAS

SO MANY DELIGHTS….IF ONLY YOU’D BE MY VALENTINE
TONIGHT ON 5TH AVENUE, PARK SLOPE!!!

Dozens of participating merchants,
restaurants, bars, cafes and specialty shops will be offering  discounts,
promotions, prix fix dinners and more all  during Valentines Week.
JOIN
THE ROMANCE AND FUN ON 5TH.

Zuzu’s: A Recession State of Mind for Valentine’s Day

Zuzulamp
 zuzus is in a recession
state of mind.

we are discounting some of
your favorite things

and have added our Drapevine
Lamps to the list.

15% off singles or
doubles.

These lamps cast  the
most romantic glow.

On a dimmer,

from cozy reading lamp to
mood altering candlelight.

a very special gift for your
significant other.

Or just call to order that
zuzulove collection of

Valentine
Flowers.

Big Zu 718
638-0918

Little Zu 718
636-2022

Leon Freilich, Verse Responder: Top bank execs and their Daschle-type perks.

This from Leon Freilch, OTBKB's invaluable verse responder:

Is it likely Tom Daschl is unique?  Did no high-flying bank executive
follow his "careless" example and fail to pay taxes not only on
Daschl's limo-&-chauffeur perk but also on, as today's Times story "Goodbye, Goodies?" mentions,
country club dues, gym memberships, home security systems, parking and
private jet service?

There's a good chance that a pool of millions upon billions of unpaid
taxes awaits unearthing.  And with unemployed accountants aplenty,
hiring them as IRS  investigators could pay enormous civic dividends–while
exposing fatcat chiselers from coast to coast and boast to boast.

I'm mad as hell.  Who among us isn't?

Brooklyn in the Catskills?

Kingston
My good friend Nancy O. Graham, who runs Oswegatchie and Alternative Films for Kids, sent this about marketing Kingston, a small upstate city, as a tech hub. She found it on a blog called Kingston Citizens.

Mark Greene, Kingston’s own Emmy winner and founder of Pecos Design,
just submitted a proposal to the mayor that essentially rebrands the
city as a tech hub, a sort of “Brooklyn of the Catskills” where hip,
smart and small-biz savvy folks can relocate and thrive in an urban
setting — yet be strikingly close to assets such as the Catskills, the
Gunks and the Hudson.

“The city has a brand, but it is dormant,” Green said. “It needs to be brought back to life, and this is one way to do it.”

To see his entire proposal, read on…

Marketing Kingston, New York:
Creating A New Digital Tech-Friendly Brand

PART ONE: The Challenge for Kingston

Kingston’s Existing Marketing Brand: Kingston has typically been
branded as an arts city with historic tourist attractions. This
existing brand offers no point of difference from any other town in the
Hudson Valley (or the Northeastern United States) and provides no clear
incentives for potential incoming businesses or residents to choose
Kingston. Furthermore, this brand is inert and vague.

Summary of Current Economic Development Challenges: Kingston is
pursuing a traditional economic development strategy. With limited
success, Kingston is attempting to attract small to medium
manufacturing. Kingston is also also trying to attract national retail
chains to shore up the city’s depleted retail tax base. To this end,
the city of Kingston has undertaken an effort to shift the tax burden
from businesses to home owners assuming that it is the retail tax
burden that is causing small start up retail to often fail.

But this is not the key issue for the lack of healthy retail in Kingston.

Although high taxes do not help struggling Kingston retail
businesses, the primary issue is that a large percentage of the
residents of Kingston are low/fixed income and do not have the
disposable income necessary to drive local retail. When they do spend
money, they buy almost exclusively based on lowest price, which means
they shop at big box discount retailers like WalMart. This makes
creating robust retail activity in Kingston a challenging prospect.

Part Two: The Opportunity for Kingston

The solution: Recruit a new class of resident with a higher income
level and a community minded interest in supporting local businesses.

Proposal:
Kingston should make a concerted effort to attract New York City and
New York State wide web/digital entrepreneurs to relocate and set up
shop in Kingston by branding itself as the upstate digital
tech-friendly city.

Web entrepreneurs will find Kingston attractive due to the price
point of real estate and the slightly more urban quality Kingston
offers.

The benefits of attracting web/digital entrepreneurs to Kingston include the following:
* They have disposable income to fuel retail.
* Their income does not rely on the state or local tax base. (They are
not teachers, city employees, or the product of a city or state funded
jobs initiative.)
* Because they have a range of clients both nation wide and by business
category , they function as “economic shock absorbers” for Kingston
during times of regional or business category specific economic
downturns.
* They purchase property, thereby taking real estate off of the rental roles and potentially eliminating “absentee landlords”.
* They hire local businesses/contractors to renovate property, improving Kingston’s economic outlook and housing stock
* They skew more progressive politically, thereby being mindful of
shopping locally and supporting local retail businesses. (They tend to
shop based on value not just on price.)
* They tend to be more active politically and in terms of their community.

African American Celebration at Brooklyn Friends

Brooklyn Friends' 14th annual African American Celebration
will take place on Friday, Feb. 6 at 6 p.m. in the school. This year's
theme, "Crossroads of History: The Improbable Journey," celebrates the
historic election of Barack Obama as our nation's 44th president.
Equally important, the school is paying homage to the legions of
community activists and orators that paved the well-worn path that made
Obama's election possible.

In that spirit, the program will
focus on words — speeches, stories, songs — that have inspired citizens
to create change. The evening begins with a buffet supper in the cafeteria, and continues with a performance in the meeting house.

New
this year is a special program for preschool and younger lower school
children in the lower gym with artists and a professional storyteller.
A guest gospel choir will take part in the performance. Brooklyn
Friends School is located at 375 Pearl St., one block from Borough Hall
in Downtown Brooklyn, just around the corner from the Marriott Hotel.
For more information, visit www.brooklynfriends.org/aac.

375 Pearl St., Brooklyn, NY, 11201 google map | yahoo map

New Book from Jonathan Baumbach

Squid_and_the_whale
 The following are two events featuring Jonathan Baumbach (www.jonathanbaumbach.com), author of YOU or The Invention of Memory, praised by
The Los Angeles Times as "beguiling… like any gesture of love, deserves your regard."

Jonathan Baumbach is the uber- Park Slope novelist/dad of Noah Baumbach, uber-Park Slope director of the uber-Park Slope film, The Squid and the Whale. A professor at Brooklyn College, the character of the dad/professor/writer in TSATW was openly based on Jonathan. None of the above still live in Park Slope but they're still Park Slope tropes.  

  • KGB Sunday Night Fiction on February 15 at KGB Bar in the East Village. 7PM, FREE.
  • Brooklyn College on Wednesday, February 18, in the Barker Room (2315 Boylan Hall). 6PM, FREE.

The latest buzz:

Tonight: Beth Harpaz at the Park Slope Barnes and Noble

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I will be introducing Beth Harpaz tonight at the Park Slope Barnes and Noble for her reading of her new book, 13 is the New 18 … and other things my children taught
me while I was having a nervous breakdown being their mother
(Crown,
2009) appeared on Wednesday's Good Morning America Now.

In addition,
Harpaz was quoted in Wednesday's  USA Today
article on tweens. I’ve included links to both below:

http://abcnews.go.com/ABCNewsNow/GMANow/
(scroll down to “Highlights from the Latest Show”)

http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-02-03-tweens-behavior_N.htm

Anybody Home? Quick Update from Blognigger

A quick note from Blognigger first thing this morning. Here it is:

Anybody home? Quick update from my side:

1) I haven't taken any
of my legal drugs since 12/30/08 – one day at a time, yaknow, but I
don't want to be one of those AA fags who are obsessed with the program
and lose their sense of humor.

2) My wife is less pissed off now that I've proven to us all that I
could give up the blog for a month and therefore can't REALLY be
addicted.

3) My help/hate mail has all but evaporated.

4)
I'm experimenting with doing one or two posts, and trying to keep it
mellow. It's chill, yaknow – like my good friend who was addicted to
shooting heroin, but now he just uses casually. It's working out great
for him and I'm sure I'll be fine as well…

Anyway, I'd be honored if any of you oldschoolers would drop by from time to time and give me a piece of your mind.

Songs from the Hudson River: Joy Askew and Pulse at Barbes on 2/13

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 One set at 8:00pm:

Joy Askew and Pulse present Songs from the Hudson River. Pulse is a New
York-based composers' federation dedicated to music that bursts through
categories, unconstrained by convention.

Members Joseph C Phillips,
Darcy James Argue, Jamie Begian, JC Sanford, Joshua Shneider and Yumiko
Sunami have chosen as their latest project a song cycle in honor of the
Hudson River Quadricentennial Celebration going on throughout 2009.

Songs from the Hudson River features singer Joy Askew with a 6-person
Pulse chamber ensemble in a dynamic melding of singer-songwriter and
classical chamber music sensibilities. Each original song is inspired
by historical, fictional, and contemporary life and communities on and
around the Hudson River. Joy Askew is an accomplished singer-songwriter
who has performed with Peter Gabriel, Laurie Anderson, Joe Jackson,
Jack Bruce and others, and also leads her own band.

For more information please visit pulsecomposers.typepad.com

Barbes
9th Street and 6th Avenue in Brooklyn
(F train to 7th Ave)
www.barbesbrooklyn.com