Women Owned Businesses and the Stimulus Package

I just got this press release about an event sponsored by Yveltte Clark (I think) for women who own their own businesses. And this line shot up at me: "Congresswoman Yvette Clarke is making women-owned businesses a priority."

A priority.

That's cool. I am so going to this meeting.

Congresswoman Clarke is holding an event for Women-Owned Businesses on
March 23 from 2-4 pm at Ceol Pub and Restaurant on Smith Street.

The speakers will include the District Director from the Small
Business Administration, the Womens Business Outreach Center and the
Executive Chief for the State Liquor Authority.

They will discuss the importance of women-owned businesses and how the stimulus will affect
them as well as the loans, grants and person-to-person services that are available to them through the SBA and the BOC network.

The SLA will talk women through the State licensing process for various business types.

Congresswoman Clarke is making women-owned businesses a  priority,

Please R.S.V.P  to  the Brooklyn District Office of U.S.
Representative Yvette Clarke, Ph: 718-287-1142  Fax: 718-287-1223 or
Email: Deanna.Bitetti@mail.house.gov

Revert War on Park Slope Wikipedia Site

Have you ever looked up Park Slope on Wikipedia? I have. It's a fairly generic description of our neighborhood with some good local history. It includes sections like: early history, 19th century development, baseball, crash of United Flight 826, blight and renewal, etc. The first paragraph section like this.

Park Slope is a neighborhood in the western section of Brooklyn, New York City's most populous borough.
Park Slope is roughly bounded by Prospect Park West to the east, Fourth
Avenue to the west, Park Place to the north and 15th Street to the
south, though other definitions are sometimes offered.[1][2] It takes its name from its location on the western slope of neighboring Prospect Park.
Seventh Avenue and Fifth Avenue are its primary commercial streets,
while its east-west side streets are populated by many historic brownstones.

Park Slope is characterized by its historic buildings, top-rated restaurants, bars, and shops, as well as close access to Prospect Park, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, the Brooklyn Museum, the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, and the Central Library (as well as the Park Slope branch) of the Brooklyn Public Library system. [3]

The neighborhood had a population of about 62,200 as of the 2000 census,[4] resulting in a population density of approximately 68,000/square mile, or approximately 26,000/square kilometer.

In December 2006, Natural Home magazine named Park Slope one
of America's ten best neighborhoods based on criteria including parks,
green spaces and neighborhood gathering spaces; farmer’s markets and
community gardens; public transportation and locally-owned businesses;
and environmental and social policy.[5] Park Slope is part of Brooklyn Community Board 6.

But today a tipster wrote in to say that he's been  following a bizarre "revert war" going on over at the Park Wikipedia article for the past week, and he thought OTBKB readers should know about it. Some guy keeps putting this bit of self-promotion:

"'''Jonatan Ramos Baizan'''" or as he likes to be called "[[Junior]]"
is the next big thing comming up in the media industry and is also a
resident of the streets of [[Park Slope]]. He is known as "'''The Talk
Of BK.'''"

Whoever this is is being
extremely persistent. I also find it interesting that this tipster follows what goes on at PS's Wiki site. I must ask him. So I did ask him and our tipster had this to say:

When you make a change to an article in Wikipedia, it offers to add the
article to your watchlist. It's just a matter of checking the box. I
don't remember ever editing the Park Slope article but I must have at
some point. I look at the watchlist maybe once a day to see what's
going on.

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Park_Slope%2C_Brooklyn&diff=277650479&oldid=277644951

Author Lynne Greenberg: Why I Wrote This Book About Chronic Pain

Body Broken Jacket
The Body Broken: A Memoir by Lynne Greenberg (Random House, 2009).

 Why I Wrote This Book:

At 19, I went off a thirty-foot cliff in a car and broke my neck. I recovered fully, and for twenty years lived a full and rich life as a professor and mother here in Brooklyn.

In one day, however, seemingly out of nowhere, I found myself in excruciating pain that started at my neck and shot through the center of my skull. Months of visits to doctors revealed that my neck was still fractured and that I had permanent nerve damage.

I spent a year and a half as an invalid, trying seemingly everything I could to get better: fusion surgery, nerve injections, medications, pain-killers, acupuncture, massage, and physical therapy. Nothing helped.

One in every five adult Americans lives in chronic pain. I am therefore not alone. Desperate for cures, patients resort to all sorts of options to get better. Lonely, furious, scared, isolated, their lives fall apart. The Body Broken describes this descent and my life three years later, as I am out of bed, back at work and able to parent again.

I wrote this memoir with chronic pain patients and their families as my intended audience. I wanted to reach out to them, let them know that they aren’t alone and that somehow there is a way to regain hope and one’s life.

–Lynne Greenberg

Nurses Protest at Methodist Hospital

I just got a tip that nurses at Methodist Hospital are protesting outside the Seventh Avenue hospital this morning. There was a live shot on Channel 11. My friend Gilly, who sent in this tip, believes it's about the nursing shortage.

According to another tipster, the nurses are saying that the hospital isn't scheduling enough nurses to cover shifts. This tipster had heard
this independently (except she can't now remember from where).

If anyone knows more before I get over to the hospital let me know.

Brooklyn Optimist: A Tale of Two Greenpoint Newspapers

Here's an excerpt from Brooklyn Optimist's interesting posts about the two newspapers of Greenpoint:

Now that the Greenpoint Courier has gone the way of the New York Sun, the Optimist wanted to take the opportunity to recognize his neighborhood's two remaining newspapers: The Greenpoint Gazette and The Greenpoint Star.

The Optimist is a regular reader of both these papers and even coughs up 35 cents to buy the Star
each week at his corner deli, even though getting it for free doesn't
require inordinate ingenuity. As a former weekly newspaper editor, I
enjoy these local papers, even though by the time they hit the stands,
I've generally read all of their stories on blogs like New York Shitty, Greenpointers, and Brooklyn 11211.

CasaCara: Hanging Gardens of Brooklyn

Today on CasaCARA: Pictures and text about a healing garden in a Brooklyn Heights backyard that was once a dog run, with a broken stone patio and a canopy of ailanthus trees.

Now, with the help of garden designer Nigel Rollings, who teaches the popular Urban Garden Design course at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, it’s a verdant oasis on several levels, with one bold, theatrical stroke: a circular wall fountain.

And look out for Brookyn Voyeur every Thursday, a joint project of OTBKB and CasaCARA.

Save the Date: Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 on May 7th at 7 p.m.

 blogfest logo save the dateFind
out why Brooklyn is the bloggiest place in America at the Fourth Annual
Brooklyn Blogfest on May 7, 2009 at powerHouse Arena in DUMBO.

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009, an exciting, idea-filled
event for bloggers, blog readers and the blog curious is where you'll
find: Insight. Advice. Inspiration. Resources.

Here's your chance meet your favorite bloggers; learn about blogging; be inspired to blog.

"Where
better to take the pulse of this rapidly growing community of writers,
thinkers and observers than the Brooklyn Blogfest?" ~ Sewell Chan, The
New York Times

This year's event will take place on May 7, 2009 at 7 p.m. at the powerHouse Arena in DUMBO.

In addition to a WHY WE BLOG panel, this year Brooklyn Blogfest introduces BLOGS-OF-A-FEATHER, special small-group sessions, where you can meet with bloggers who share your interests.

Once again, there will a VIDEO TRIBUTE TO BROOKLYN'S PHOTO BLOGGERS and the annual SHOUT-OUT: a chance to share your blog with the world!

Whether
you live to blog, blog to live or are just curious about this thing
called blogging, you won't want to miss Brooklyn Blogfest 2009, the
best Blogfest yet.

For more information or to register, visit the  Brooklyn Blogfest website.

To
find out about sponsorship opportunities for Brooklyn Blogfest, contact
Louise Crawford (e: louise_crawford@yahoo.com, c: 718-288-4290).

The Details:

Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest
May 7, 2009
Doors open at 7 p.m.
powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Admission: $10

Brooklyn Blogfest after-party
Galapagos Art Space
16 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
(right across the street from powerHouse Arena)
Cash Bar and refreshments

About Brooklyn Blogfest 2009:

Whether
you live to blog, blog to live, or are just curious about this thing
called blogging, you'll want to attend the premiere annual event for
bloggers in Brooklyn and beyond.

At Brooklyn Blogfest 2009: listen to some great speakers; shout out about your blog; and network
with fellow bloggers during special breakouts. Meet your favorite
bloggers; learn about blogging; be inspired to blog at Brooklyn
Blogfest 2009.

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009
Insight. Advice. Inspiration. Resources

Tomorrow: Brooklyn Songwriters Exchange at Union Hall

Onseat
It's a monthly thang: the Brooklyn Songwriters Exchange. And on Monday,
March 16th they present another free night of great songwriters,
featuring Jen ClappEthan Lipton, and Rebecca Pronsky at Union Hall.  

Monday, March 16
702 Union Street
Brooklyn, NY
7:30PM
Free show.

It could be worth a trip to Union Hall on Monday because these performers are garnering quite a bit of buzz:

About Jenn Clpp:

“Masterful new album…graceful and often majestic.” – Kingston Daily Freeman
"Absolutely beautiful." – Dar Williams

About Ethan Lipton
"Hilarious,
dark, sophisticated, schleppy and sad all at once… songs that take the
mundane of life and twist it." – NPR's Weekend Edition
"A sardonic voice that offers an unlikely kind of comfort against the vagaries of everyday life." – Popmatters

About Rebecca Pronsky:
"Pronsky's tunes are literate, passionate, and wry." – Time Out NY
"Songbird. With a brutal, cutting lyricism and a jazz trained voice, Ms. Pronsky is an act worth catching." - Ithaca Times

Kinderzenen: Performance by Robin Hirsch Tonight

22
Park Slope's Robin Hirsh performs Kinderzenen, Scenes from Childhood, his solo performance piece tonight in the basement of the Cornelia Street Cafe.

He says that reservations might be critical to see this one-night-only performance: "You might want to call (212) 989-9319."

The Village Voice called this work, which was written by Robin Hirsh and is performed by him as well: "Completely glorious!" The Boston Globe weighed in with "Marvelous." And the The Jewish Week: settled for: "Mesmerizing."

The Where and When
Kinderzenen
Sunday, March 15 at 8:30 p.m.
Cornelia Street Cafe
29 Cornelia Street

What Happens on Facebook Should Stay on Facebook

SmartyHere's this week's Smartmom from the  Brookyn Paper:

When Smartmom walks down Park Slope’s Seventh Avenue, she often
notices — out of the corner of her eye — someone she’s “friended” on
Facebook.

While it may not be a good friend, it’s probably what she calls a
good acquaintance. She might know the person from one of her kid’s
schools or through a mutual friend. Maybe she runs into him or her at the
Community Bookstore or at Dr. Edna Pytlak’s office.

But now she knows way more about her “friends” than ever because
she’s read their “25 Random Things About Me,” their list of favorite
words and has a running sense of their daily status. She’s pretty sure
it’s not appropriate to talk in-person about what’s been posted on
Facebook. But she’s not totally sure.

For instance, now she knows that Craig Hammerman, district manager
of Community Board 6 and one of the candidates running for Bill
DeBlasio’s seat in the City Council, thinks that Astrud Gilberto has
the most beautiful voice ever. He has a head for trivial information
and logic; was a member of Mensa once upon a time; and loves to put on
socks straight out of the dryer.

She read it on Hammerman’s “25 Random Things.”

So should she go up to him the next time she sees him in front of
ConnMuffCo and say, “Is it true that you periodically crave marble cake
made from Duncan Hines mix?”

That would be crude and rude, right? Suppose someone was standing
nearby; a mere mention of Hammerman’s Duncan Hines obsession could lose
him a vote.

Sometimes Smartmom sees one of her Facebook friends on the way to
the subway and she sort of knows where he or she is going because the
“friend” posted about it; or she runs into people at Sweet Melissa’s or
’Snice, and she finds herself curious how something or other turned out.

But it’s not really appropriate to say anything. Or is it? Is it rude not to? What’s the etiquette here, Emily Post?

They call it “social networking,” but who knows if it will lead to a
tighter sense of community or a community of people who nervously avoid
each other when they’re out on the street because, like, now they’ve
studied each other’s high school class pictures.

They’ve seen each other’s hairstyles from 1977.

They’ve looked at each other’s baby pictures and wedding albums.

Facebook is like a really cool party at an artist’s loft, where
you’re free to check everybody out and talk to anyone you want. You see
your friends, your friends’ friends, even teachers from the Oh So
Feisty One’s elementary school.

For instance, Smartmom “friended” OSFO’s beloved second-grade
teacher and found out that she’s moving to Portland, Oregon, after the
school year. That was a shock. But it wasn’t nearly as controversial as
what happened when Eighth Avenue Mom friended her second-grader’s
teacher — only to discover that all the teacher does online is complain
incessantly about her students.

Now that’s a major breach of etiquette, kind of creepy and very
unwise. Everyone knows you should keep your posts on Facebook generic
and bland. You should never ever reveal any of your secrets; and never
ever utter an unkind word about anyone other than a Republican.

That’s because you can never undo what you do on Facebook and that’s
pretty scary. It could cost you a job, a friendship or a chance to get
invited to someone’s 50th birthday party.

The trick on Facebook is to keep it light. Fave books, fave movies. Silly thoughts for the day. That sort of thing.

Light. Smartmom learned that Warm and Funny’s favorite books are
“Timbuktu” by Paul Auster, “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” and “Eat, Pray,
Love.” And get this: her favorite activities, besides sleeping, are
eating and sex. Very telling — yet not so telling at all.

And Smartmom’s friend, Gluten Free, is secular Moominist, whatever
that is. And that her top five favorite words are: cobble, swift,
tender, gentle and friend.

Smartmom was very touched by that last one.

After Smartmom posted that she and OSFO were trying out the family’s
new panini press, quite a few Facebook friends posted their favorite
panini recipes. She even heard from a boy she kissed in high school
that he uses “tuna in olive oil with whatever cheese floats your boat.
Basically a tuna melt.”

Thanks for that, she thought. He was a good kisser, though. Very.

Smartmom really appreciated when her new Facebook pals offered their
favorite cold remedies when she was feeling like crap. They even took
the time to send get-well greetings.

So it’s really fun — and helpful — to have these “friends.”

Nonetheless, Smartmom has decided to keep her Facebook life separate
from her life in the real world. Seventh Avenue isn’t the place for a
clarification, a further explanation or a “Hey, how did things work out
with your daughter’s tantrum?”

In other words: what plays on Facebook, stays on Facebook. There should there be some kind of secret handshake or wink.

This problem is only going to get worse because everyone she knows
in Park Slope will, inevitably, join Facebook. The ones already using
it discover quickly that they can’t get enough of it; they love posting
status reports and sending funny messages to their friends.

Some of them even devote their columns to it. Huh? Who? Oh yeah.

Smartmom is … writing her column about Facebook.

Better start working on that secret handshake.

Book by Lenore Skenazy Coming Soon: Intro Downloads are Free

37086085
New York Sun writer, Lenore Skenazy, who last year wore the "Worst Mom in America" crown because she let her 10-year-old son ride the subway alone just came out with a book, Free Range Kids: Giving Our Children the Freedom We Had Without Going Nuts with Worry.

You can download the introduction on Scibd, a way of reading books online. The original article, "Why I Let My 9-Year-Old Ride the Subway" by Skenazy in the Sun is here. 

Tonight: Macbeth for Anyone With a Love of Theater, An Open Mind and a Sense of Fun.


Chandru Murthi enjoyed last night's unusual, and experimental performance of Macbeth at the Old Stone House. It will be playing there again tonight and he urges you to go. Here's an excerpt. Go to Seeing Green for the rest and a picture.

I'm somewhat
of a Shakespeare purist at heart, so I approached the Old
Stone House
(, where I was to see "Dzeici Makbet" ("a
Wicked Work in Progress") last night with some trepidation.  But from
the very enthusiastic reception I got at the entrance, being greeted by cast
members, to the thoroughly enjoyable hour-and-a-quarter of the show, I'm glad I
my fears were far from coming true.

To give you an idea of what the performance was like,
consider these points:

Instead of a program with the usual notes on the actors and
the obligatory notice praising Actor's Equity, we're handed a "Rules of
Engagement…" which says, among several points, that all Actor must know
the entire text, and that each is "encouraged to play a Witch, Makbet
(Macbeth), and Lady Makbet at least once per enactment."

Working Families Party Also Endorses Bill deBlasio For Public Advocate

The Working Families Party announced yesterday their endorsements of Brad Lander for Bill deBlasio's seat in the City Council's 39th District and Bill deBlasio for Public Advocate, a position currently held by Betsy Gotbaum.

“Bill has spent his life taking on and winning the tough fights,” said
Bob Master, Working Families Party Co-Chair. “Whether it is making
sure our schools get their fair share of funding, workers have the
right to join a union, or big developers build affordable housing,
Bill de Blasio has always been there for working families when it
counts.”

Master continued: “There are a lot of great candidates in this race,
but Bill de Blasio is a cut above when it comes to sticking up for
regular New Yorkers – and that’s what the Public Advocate job is all
about.”

Marisa Palma-Muller: The Last of a Disappearing Breed, The Local Pharmacist

It was just a simple note on a yellow piece of paper on the door of Palma Pharmacy, on the corner of Garfield Place and Seventh Avenue.

But that's how Park Slope learned of the loss of a trusted member of the community. Pharmacist Marisa Palma-Muller, age 48, died of a heart attack on Wednesday. Since then word has been trickling into my in-box with remembrances.

One OTBKB reader wrote in to say: "She was the last of
a disappearing breed: the neighborhood pharmacist who knew all her
customers, had a nice word for everyone, tried to help customers
baffled by insurance regulations…"

Like that OTBKB reader, I am a Palma Drug Store customer. I choose to go there because I like to know my pharmacist and deal with people like Marisa, Frank
Calandriello and Marisa's husband, Peter Muller, who know me by name and are familiar with my family, our prescriptions and our health insurance.

I was always aware of Marisa when I'd go in there for my prescriptions. She was the person working hard in the back who would determine how long I needed to wait for whatever prescription I requested.

She was the one who called my doctors with a question or a clarification. She was the one I'd ask to recommend an over-the-counter solution for acid reflux or a common cold.

Frank
Calandriello and Peter Muller are really the faces of Palma Drugstore, the men who greet the public, read our doctor's illegible handwriting, locate our white prescription bags, and man the cashier. But Marisa was the sometimes unseen voice that was making it all happen. She was the expert who worked long hours bringing medication to the people of Park Slope. Marisa's father, Dominick Palma, also a pharmacist, founded the shop in 1962. Dominick died in 1999 and passed the shop on to his daughter, who had worked by his side for many years learning the ropes.

Many in the neighborhood are just starting to learn of Marisa's death. I heard from Community Bookstore owner, Catherine Bohne, who wrote to say: "I thought you should know that Marisa Palma died unexectedly of a
heart attack this week.  She was 48.  As a member of our community for
a long, long time, her loss is felt deeply, if quietly, by many."

The OTBKB reader quoted above wrote this remembrance:

"My family has used
Palma for fifteen years and always feel that small-town feeling when we
go there.  I am sorry about her death and sorry about the direction the
pharmacy profession has gone: I know many fine pharmacists who have
been forced out of their business by chain-store pharmacies and health
insurance regulation of the pharmacy industry.  I'd rather pay a few
dollars more to know a pharmacist personally than deal with an
anonymous pharmacist by mail."


I agree. This neighborhood, like many, used to have more local pharmacies. Rite Aid, which came to Seventh Avenue a few years ago, put at least one pharmacist, the one that used to be on the corner of 6th Street and Seventh Avenue across from Methodist Hopsital, out of business. Now the neighborhood has more than its share of drug store chains.

But Palma is the real deal: a pharmacy that, at times, feels like a neighborhood center. It is certainly a place I spend an inordinate amount of time waiting for prescriptions, listening to the latest flu symptoms spiraling around the neighborhood, and stealing a piece of the free hard candy that's always next to the cash register.

Please send your remembrances of Marisa Palma-Muller to louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com and I will post them.

Weeksville Video: 19th Century African American Brooklyn Community

G17
Go here to see a video
produced by Channel Thirteen's The City Concealed, an online video series exploring the unseen corners of New York. This show is about Weeksville houses, an interesting piece of Brooklyn history. Here from Bijan Rezvani, producer for The City City Concealed:

"The Hunterfly Road Houses of Weeksville are the discovered remnants
of a free African-American enclave of urban tradespeople and property
owners.  The community provided safety for fugitive slaves and those
later fleeing the Civil War draft riots of lower Manhattan.  By the
time of the Emancipation Proclamation, Weeksville was a thriving area
with its own doctors, teachers, publishers, and social services.

"The Houses help fill a  historical gap between slavery and the civil
rights movement of the 1960s.  The Weeksville staff clearly promote the
idea of a successful African-American project that can be remembered
with pride."

A $3 million restoration of the Hunterfly Houses was completed
in 2005. You can take a tour of these  historic houses and attend lectures, preservation workshops, children’s
programs, cultural events and other programs rooted in the Center's
history and objects.

Working Families Party Endorses Brad Lander

Brad Lander, who is already being called the front-runner for City Council Member Bill deBlasio's seat in the 39th district, told me this might happen during our breakfast a couple of weeks ago, one of my Breakfast with the Candidates stories that I am working on and planning to post next week. He said he was hoping to get the nod from the Working Families Party, an important endorsement i these parts.

A senior fellow at the Pratt Center for
Community Development, Brad is considered one of the city’s leading advocates for
affordable housing and sustainable communities.  Previously, he was the director of the Fifth Avenue Committee, a not-for-profit community
development group in Brooklyn that creates and preserves affordable
housing, good jobs, and livable neighborhoods.  He is also the Housing
and Community Development Chair of Brooklyn’s Community Board 6.

Here's what the Working Families Party had to say about Brad:

“Brad
Lander is a smart, strategic, hardworking fighter who has a great track
record of results on the issues that matter to working families,” said
Dan Cantor, executive director of the party.  “He has already been a
leader in so many efforts – creating and preserving tens of thousands
of units of affordable housing, making sure our tax dollars create good
jobs, fighting for a fair share approach to funding our public schools,
and helping to create the green economy.  To tell the truth, we’ll be a
little sad to be losing him as one of the city’s leading progressive
policy advocates … but he’s exactly the kind of candidate we want to
see in the City Council.”

Here's what Brad had to say:

“I’m honored to have the support of the Working
Families Party.” said Lander.  “The WFP has led the fight on so many
critical issues in our community – for a fair share approach to stop
devastating cuts to our public schools, subways, buses, and hospitals,
and against Mayor Bloomberg’s extension of term limits without a public
vote.  I’m thrilled to be part of the best progressive team in the
state.”  This is the WFP’s first endorsement in a regular 2009 City
Council election.  

Lander is campaigning for the seat currently held by  Bill de Blasio, who is running for Public
Advocate. Brad has also been endorsed by State Senators Daniels Squadron and Liz Krueger, City
Councilmembers Rosie Mendez and Melissa Mark-Viverito, UFCW Local 1500,
Community Board 7 Chair Randy Peers, and dozens of community leaders.

Buy in Brooklyn: Local Shop Buzz

Here's a great opportunity to let 10,000 Park Slope shoppers know something you wish they knew about your store. 

Park Slope Parents, Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn (that's me) and the Park Slope Civic Council have all agreed to post regular messages from the "BiB Buzz," about what local businesses do to be more successful. 

Did you know:

Divine Taste bakes fresh bread on an hourly basis?  Challah on Fridays, and Chocolate Croissants on Saturdays — hot out of the oven, get 'em while they last.

Back to the Land has a shopping Rewards program — a $10 coupon for every $100 spent.

Tarzian Hardware delivers daily.

Write in and tell the Chamber of Commerce (and Catherine Park Slope knew about your business that makes you competitive. 

They'll pass the word on to over 10,000 local shoppers, as part of the BiB Buzz.  Send to:  cat_bohne(at)yahoo(dot)com

Film Set in Coney Island at Anthology Film Archives (With Rip Torn)

Coming up tomorrow, Saturday March 14 at 7:15pm
at Anthology Film Archives in the East Village, NYC

 Anthology Film Archives is thrilled to present a special sneak-preview of the new film by Angelica and Tony Torn, a Coney Island-set drama featuring a special appearance by the filmmakers’ father, Rip. A chance encounter with her childhood sweetheart leads Virginia (Angelica Torn) to discover hidden truths about her boyfriend and her neighborhood that she has chosen to ignore.

Over the last explosive weekend of the summer she must decide whether to abandon everything she’s ever known to the wolf-pack of developers buying up and tearing down the Coney Island boardwalk, or to sacrifice herself to the world that’s been created for her. Angelica Torn’s luminescent performance beautifully carries the film, which casts a beguiling spell in the manner of Alan Rudolph’s early work.
(2008, 103 minutes, video.

 With Angelica Torn, Federico Castelluccio, Luke Zarzecki, Will Patton and Tony Torn.)
Directions: Anthology is at 32 Second Ave. at 2nd St. Subway: F or V to 2nd Ave; 6 to Bleecker.
Tickets: $9 general; $8 Essential Cinema (free for members); $7 for students, seniors, & children (12 & under); $6 AFA members.

Andy Newman of The Local Says Park Slope is Boring

Note: I posted this on Thursday afternoon but I was in a rush and barely got all my thoughts down coherently. I had to stop for a Brooklyn Blogfest planning meeting and then my daughter' s piano lesson followed by drinks with a friend and then Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House. This morning I had to attend to some business at my son' s high school. So here goes again.

This blogger has the wrong attitude

I am talking about reporter cum blogger, Andy Newman, the editor of The Local, the New York Times' local Fort Green blog. He and Brownstoner's Jon Butler were guests on a recent Reporter Roundtable hosted by the Brooklyn Paper's Gersh Kuntzman.

Officials at the Times' asked him originally to do the blog in Park Slope, where Newman lives. "There's money there, rich people. We could get some advertising," he remembers the executive saying. "But I would never want to do a blog in Park Slope," Newman told Kuntzman. "Everything that is going to happen has already happened."

What does that mean? And what does that have to do with telling hyper-local stories?

Indeed, how does Newman define a good story? Do Newman's stories have to have the "this is important stamp" or the imprimatur of "this is a story about a place that is in the process of "happening."

Sounds like Newman already knows what kinds of stories he wants to tell and what kinds of people he wants to profile. Sounds like he's covering an idea rather than a place. Which is all well and good. But it doesn't make for good blogging, which requires walking-the-walk, keeping your eyes and ears open, developing a voice that resonates with your readers.

Obviously, he's talking about gentrification and covering a neighborhood in the process of gentrification. And that's an interesting topic.

But I don't know why he has to go putting down another neighborhood in Brooklyn in the process. This show hasn't aired yet but it's available for viewing on the Brooklyn Paper website.

Salaam Sabena: Thank You Slum Dogs!

Slumdog2
Salaam Sabena is a new OTBKB feature written by Sabena Khan, who discovered her passion for writing about 10 years ago and
has not stopped since.  She writes for various magazines, websites and
companies.  She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and 5-year old son.

Born and raised in Midwood, Brooklyn with parents hailing from Pakistan , it is interesting to see how far we have truly come. 

 Growing up, I never felt torn between the worlds of where I lived and where my family came from.  My
parents managed to provide us with a balanced foundation where our
Pakistani culture never felt forced and the American lifestyle never
felt inaccessible.  Whether
my mom roasted chicken or cooked it Tandoori-style, it all seemed normal to us.  Our weekends consisted of museum visits, park picnics and lots of family events.          
 
In
fact, it was usually other people who would see me as different and
over the years, I have noticed a shift in their perception towards the
South Asian region.  Since I was a little girl, people always asked me where I was from.  I guess my brown skin assured them I could not be from “ America ”.  Adding to their confusion would be my reply of “I’m from Brooklyn !”  I’m not certain what people from Brooklyn look like but surely, they could not have looked like me.   

That
was then, and this is now: Hot on the heels of the success of Slumdog
Millionaire, it seems everyone is talking about Bollywood; India ’s
film industry.  For me, my background has always been a source of pride and has enhanced my character and personality.  However,
I think back to my childhood and high school days and remember how my
peers felt conflicted and confused because of their culture.  Undoubtedly, this film has given them instant validation and the coolness factor. 

 
The
initial buzz surrounding the movie; coupled with eight Oscar wins; has
created its unprecedented success here in the U.S. The rags-to-riches
storyline set in the slums of Mumbai definitely captivated me from the
very beginning.  This movie tackled gritty
subject material and complemented it with an underlying theme of
optimism. Although the film is a reality for many impoverished
populations, the universal principles of hope, inspiration and love
struck a chord with all types of audiences. 
 
Slumdog
Millionaire joins the ranks of other atypical Bollywood sensations such
as Monsoon Wedding, Bend it Like Beckham and The Namesake.  These
movies successfully managed to blend the West and East through its
stories and characters; connecting viewers who hail from either sides
of the globe. The crossover appeal of such films has been so powerful
that people who had never heard of Bollywood, are now obsessed with
this cultural phenomenon. 
 
New York has been Bollywood-friendly for quite some time since this city comprises of various cultures and ethnicities.  Being
on the cutting edge of all things popular, New York is well-acquainted
with bhindis, henna and bhangra music; which is why Bollywood fits in so naturally.  Suddenly, the peasant tops and beaded sandals in my closet are the most-sought after items in department stores.  Ultimately,
it is nice to see South Asians finally being recognized and
appreciated; even if it took a few fine slumdogs to make it happen. 

Events at Beth Elohim: Religious Cults, Inclusivity, Rabbis for Human Rights and The Cold War

Film Park Slope, March 15, 7:30pm.  "All the Ships at Sea" with director Dan Sallit

   
All the Ships

 


Evelyn Bell, a Catholic professor of theology, and her younger sister
Virginia are reunited after many years when Virginia returns home in a
depression after being ejected from a religious cult. At a lakeside
retreat in Northeastern Pennsylvania, the sisters try to reestablish
their relationship, talking about their very different systems of
belief, and about the oppressive childhood that still hangs over
them….

For more information about Film Park Slope please contact, Benjamin Resnick.

What is an inclusive Jewish community?  A conversation with Edgar
M. Bronfman, Rabbi Andy Bachman, and Beth Zasloff, March 18, 7:30pm

hopenotfear

 

In Hope, Not Fear,
internationally renowned philanthropist and community leader Edgar M.
Bronfman and his co-author Beth Zasloff propose a new direction in
Jewish life for the open societies of North America–a direction in
which Judaism will not merely survive but will in fact flourish. 
Arguing that the Jewish future cannot be grounded in fear of
anti-Semitism and intermarriage, Bronfman reexamines important texts
and interviews Jewish leaders to identify a new course for revitalizing
the faith and community. 

For more information about the book, please click here .

Come Learn with Rabbi Rachel Kahn-Troster of Rabbis for Human Rights, Sunday, March 22, 11am

Rabbi Troster


 

 What does Judaism have to say about human rights?
Are the values of human rights Jewish values? How do we balance the
rights of others with the need to protect ourselves? Rabbi Rachel
Kahn-Troster, Director of Education and Outreach for Rabbis for Human
Rights-North America will lead us through a discussion of Judaism and
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the limits of self-
defense, and the Jewish role in the discussion of human rights around
the world. She will teach about RHR-NA's recent work to end U.S.-
sponsored torture and ongoing human rights campaigns, and help us get
involved with these critical issues as individuals and as a community.

For more information, please contact Rabbi Bronstein

khalidi



Sowing Crisis: Rashid Khalidi at CBE, April 5, 7:30 p.m. Come hear Columbia University's Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies discuss his new book, Sowing Crisis: The Cold War and American Dominance in the Middle East.

Mr.
Khalidi, one of the world's leading scholars of the contemporary Middle
East, has written over a hundred articles on aspects of Middle East
history and politics, as well as pieces in The New York Times, The Financial Times,
The Boston Globe
, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune
and The Nation.  He has also been a guest on numerous
radio and TV shows including All Things Considered, Talk of
the Nation
, Morning Edition, News Hour with Jim Lehrer,
The Charlie Rose Show,
and Nightline, and on the BBC, Radio
France Inter, the CBC and the Voice of America.