Steve Levin Wins City Council Seat in the 33rd District

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28-year-old Steve Levin won 90% of the vote last night in the race for City Council in the 33rd district.

While last night was a sweep, the Democratic primary race for David Yassky's City Council seat in the 33rd was a contentious one. Steve Levin, former Chief of Staff for Assemblyman Vito Lopez and a cousin of Senator Carl Levin and Congressman Sandy Levin, ran against Evan Thies, Jo Anne Simon, Ken Diamondstone, Doug Biviano, Ken Baer, and Issac Abraham.

During the summer, he got Chuck Schumer's endorsement and later won the September 15th primary. Tonight he won the  general election.

Say hello your new City Council member in the 33rd: Steve Levin.

Dear Friends and Family:

Thank you all so much for your steadfast support, heartfelt
encouragement, and incredible effort for the Levin for City Council
campaign. At the end of the day, we were victorious due to your
support. And it was truly a collective effort, with over 150 volunteers
who collected petition signatures, stood at subways stops in the
morning, and knocked on doors in the evening. I owe a deep debt of
gratitude to everyone who gave up their valuable time and energy to
help out.

I want to especially thank Assemblymember Vito Lopez, my mentor and
friend, for all of his support, guidance, and effort throughout the
years and throughout this campaign.

I also want to give a special recognition to Debby Feinberg and my
staff (Hope, Olivia, and Michelle) for working so hard day and night
all summer.

We ran this campaign to give a voice in City Hall to those who have
not been heard. Throughout this campaign, I heard from residents in
need of affordable housing, parents in need of decent child care
services and health care for their families, and seniors in need of
dignity in their retirement years. I pledged then, and I am committed
now, that I will be their voice in City Hall.

Thank you all for believing in me and believing in this campaign. We
will face great challenges in the next four years. I promise to work
with the community to confront these challenges with a spirit of
cooperation and determination.

Now, let’s get to work.

All the best,

Steve

Brad Lander Wins City Council Seat in the 39th

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After a seemingly endless election season, the race for City Council in the 39th is finally over.

Brad Lander was the winner last night in the race to replace Bill DeBlasio, who was elected Public Advocate.

Lander claimed 70% of the vote. His Republican opponent Joe Nardiello got 16.6% while Green Party candidate David Pechefsky’s got 7%.

The Democratic primary was an intense 5-way race between Lander, Josh Skaller, Bob Zuckerman, Gary Reilly, and John Heyer.

Say hello to Brad: your new City Council member for the 39th!

Bloomberg Wins By Much Smaller Margin Than Expected

And the pundits are saying all kinds of things, including:

–If Bill Thompson had been able to articulate his vision for New York maybe he could have beat the billionaire mayor.

–If President Obama had endorsed Thompson more directly or even made an appearance with him that could have made all the difference.

Bloomberg won with 557,059 votes to Thompson's 506,717. That's 51% of the vote to 46%. Very close.

What Ever Happened to OTBKB’s Makeover?

It's happening but not without agita and delays.

–Who knew my web designer would disappear for weeks at a time?

–Who knew that Hepcat would end up having to finish the new site even though we thought it would be a good idea to separate husband from web designer.

–Who knew that it would be harder than I thought to redesign this thing.

–Who knew how much I like it the way it is?

–Who knew I'd actually have stage fright about showing the new site?

–Who knew how patient my new advertisers were going to be. THANKS SO MUCH!

–Who knew that I'd be scared that you all will hate it?

–Who knew that everything takes longer than you think it will. I knew that but you know, you forget.

That said, I am very grateful to Elizabeth Reagh of Good Form Design who created the new logo in a creative and timely fashion. I can't wait for you all to see it. It's cool.

Change is hard. Change is good. Change is scary. Change is challenging and important.

Hi Lo Brooklyn: Blog About Indie Craft & Design Scene

Stay up to date on the happening indie craft and design scene in Brooklyn with Sylvie Meyerson's new blog Hi Lo Brooklyn, which I just heard about today. The blog has really interesting posts about fashion, food and indie crafts and design. You're gonna love it a lot.

The latest post is about a video doc by Liza de Guia:

Videographer Liza de Guia is working on
a series of mini-docs about local food artisans and the project is
turning into her own online version of the food network. I watched her
two part series on Matthew Tilden's SCRATCHbread
and was completely floored.  I love it when people are passionate about
food but I have to say I had never heard anybody use the word "sexy" to
refer to a lump of dough. Tilden's intensity is fascinating and just a
little bit unsettling. This video will make you look at breadmaking in
a whole new light.


Tonight: Adult Ed at Union Hall

The Useless Lecture Series: Tuesday, November 3, 2009 – 8 pm (doors at 7:30)
Union Hall in Park Slope
702 Union St. @ 5th Ave
$5 cover

THE YES MEN
"Doing it Outside In: Breaking the Bank with the Yes Men"
One half of the infamous New York duo presents strategies for infiltrating
business conferences, masquerading as corporate execs, and successfully lowering
blue-chip stock prices.

TIM HARROD
"You Are Dumb: How the Media are Pranking You Even as You Read This"
The Onion's history is riddled with occasions where the newspaper's satirical
stories were accepted as fact by individuals and large groups. Tim Harrod
discusses.

PATRICK DI JUSTO
"The Day I Gave My Brother Appendicitis"
Mr. Di Justo presents lessons gleaned from a high school prank gone awry.

STEPHEN BRUCKERT
"Don't Feed The Trolls: Life Lessons From The Internet's Most Popular
Blood Sport"
People all over the world are playing a game on the internet, and the
object of the game is to make strangers waste time and emotional energy. What
are the rules of the game? What strategies do trolls use to win? And why are
trolls so important?

Hosted, as always, by the inimitable Charles Star

Tonight at Barbes: Los Cenzontles

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My friend Jill Eisenstadt recommends Los Cenzontles playing at Barbes tonight at 7 PM:

LOS CENZONTLES.
The Bay area Mexican Roots music effortlessly mix electric bass and
drums with traditional Mexican instruments – jarana, vihuela, requinto,
pandero and quijada (jawbone) – creating a powerful contemporary sound
infused with the gutsy soul of Mexico’s rural roots music. The group,
directed by Grammy-nominated producer Eugene Rodriguez has performed
and recorded alongside Los Lobos, Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano,
Grupo Mono Blanco, Los Tigres del Norte, Lalo Guerrero, Flaco Jiménez,
and Santiago Jiménez Jr. Their new CD "American Horizon" with Taj Mahal
and David Hidalgo will be released on 11/03.

I Finished Middlemarch. Finally.

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And I am very sad that it is over because I have become so involved with George Eliot's living, breathing characters and her engrossing tale of life, all of it, including love, anger, money, death and deceit. 

Oh, how I will miss the earnest, outspoken and sometimes impulsive Dorothea and her lovely sister Celia. And Mary Garth, the opinionated and sometimes sharply critical one. And Dr. Lydgate and Mr. Ladislaw. Oh and the underachieving Fred Vincy and the revolting Mr. Casoubon.

I truly recommend this book to everyone despite it's 888 page length.

Alas, now I am alone without my Middlemarch, my companion for so many weeks. I will miss the weight of it on my chest as I fell asleep reading it late into the night. I will miss its almost constant psychological insight and power.

And here are Ms. Eliot's final lines about our heroine Dorothea:

…But we insignificant people with our daily words and acts are preparing the lives of many Dorotheas, some of which may present a far sadder sacrifice than that of the Dorothea whose story we know.

Her finely-touched spirit had still its fine issues, though they were not widely visible. Her full nature, like that river of which Cyrus broke the strength, spent itself in channels which had no great name on the earth. But the effect of her being on those around her was incalculably diffusive: for the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, its half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisted tombs.

Finishing Funds Needed for “Battle of Brooklyn”

For the past 6 years local filmmakers have been shooting the film "Battle of Brooklyn," documenting the efforts of local community activists to stop the Atlantic Yards Project.

With the exception of some small grants the group has self-funded the production. Now they need your help to finish it. They are partnering with the site http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/rumur/battle-of-brooklyn to try and raise $25,000. The plan is to pre-sell 1000 copies of the DVD for $25. If they can reach their goal, they've lined up a matching grant which will provide us the funds that we need to finish and distribute the film.

Here's the idea: use the power of crowd sourcing to get this done. That's why they are asking you to make the simple step of pre-buying a DVD of "The Battle of Brooklyn" for $25 AND to help get at least 10 of your friends to do the same. This small gesture on your part can have a profound impact on our ability to get this done. 

Here's the catch: with http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/rumur/battle-of-brooklyn it's all or nothing. If we don't reach our goal of $25,000 in 30 days we'll get nothing, and everyone's money will be returned.

The producers write:

We believe deeply in the potential of this film to get people to stand up and fight for what they believe in – even when it seems all hope is lost and there's no way that they can win.

You can view the trailer at http://www.rumur.com/battle

This 30 day fundraising campaign begins next Wednesday, November 4th.

In addition- if you, or others you know, want to make a tax deductible contribution to the project donations can be made through our fiscal sponsor Moving Pictures Institute  (MPI).  Checks should be made out to MPI with "Battle" in the subject line-

MPI
375 Greenwich Street
New York, NY 10013

Here is some recent press on this film project.

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/brooklyn/2009/08/25/2009-08-25_atlantic_yards_saga_put_into_focus.html

http://netsarescorching.com/2009/10/13/nas-interview-battle-for-brooklyn-filmmaker/

http://fort-greene.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/08/06/the-day-get-informed-on-atlantic-yards/

http://www.brownstoner.com/brownstoner/archives/2009/07/battle_of_brook.php

Final Thoughts from Candidates Lander and Pechefsky

I got these auto-emails from two candidates for City Council in the 39th district: Democrat Brad Lander and Green David Pechefsky.

FROM BRAD:

Louise —

Three months ago, I wrote you an early morning e-mail
from Foley Square in Lower Manhattan, where I was sleeping out as part
of a vigil to end homelessness.

This morning, at home in Brooklyn, I'm restless again, waiting for Election Day.

Back
in July, I wrote: "My campaign is based on the belief that when New
Yorkers come together, when we take collective action, we can make a
profound difference on the issues we care about. We won't end
homelessness by sleeping out tonight, of course.  But I believe
strongly that our actions together do make a difference."

We
won't solve the problems we face simply by voting today, either. The
road ahead is a hard one, with more neighbors losing jobs or having
their hours cut. With more New Yorkers losing their homes, and yes,
more sleeping on the streets or in shelters. With more worries about
keeping our streets safe, our schools and subways and parks and
libraries funded, our locally-owned small businesses open, our
neighborhoods vibrant.   

But I believe — as fervently as I did
three months ago in Foley Square, as hopefully as I did a year ago
before that truly momentous election day, as optimistically as I did
when we launched this City Council campaign more than two years ago —
that by voting today we will put ourselves in a better position to try.

On Wednesday, I hope to wake up early again and get busy
working with groups who are organizing to get us through the tough
times ahead and to build a NYC rooted in our shared vision.  With
parents organizing for better schools, neighborhood watch groups,
tenant associations, and community-based sustainability efforts.  With
workers, small business owners, and freelancers looking to create a
better and fairer economy. With civic organizations and community
groups that are the true measure of neighborhood strength.     

For today, please come out and vote. 

Polls open in just a few hours, at 6 am, and stay open until 9 pm.

Thanks,

Brad

FROM DAVID:

Thanks once again for all your support.  No matter the outcome tomorrow, we've made an impact and the campaign has been a good step in pushing our political system to be better.
 
Remember to vote and please remind all your friends – email them, call them, or use whatever other method you can think of.
 
Thanks,
David

Three Ways of Looking at Park Slope With Francis Morrone

On Sunday, November 15, 2:00 PM:

Three Ways of Looking at Park Slope: Park Slope Northwest

This is the first of three tours (others to follow in 2010) looking at
different areas of Park Slope and aspects of the neighborhood’s
history. The first walk looks at Park Slope’s western edge and its
relation to the Gowanus Canal. We will discuss the history of the canal
and its bridges, cross over for a brief peek at Carroll Gardens, and
return to touch down in the Park Slope Historic District. Leader: Francis Morrone,
architectural historian. Meet in front of the Old Stone House in J.J.
Byrne Park, just off 3rd St. between Fourth and Fifth avenues.
(Transit: R train to Union St. and walk south on Fourth Ave. six
blocks; F train to Fourth Ave. and 9th St. and walk north on Fourth
Ave. six blocks). $15, $10 MAS members. Reservations and prepayment
recommended. Call 212-935-2075.http://mas.org/tours/#threeways

Stitch Therapy Moves in With Brooklyn Mercantile

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Great news for fans of Stitch Therapy and Brooklyn Mercantile. They're co-habitating on Fifth Avenue.

I saw Stitch Therapy owner Maxcine DeGouttes today in Brooklyn Mercantile, which is located on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Street in Park Slope. 

"So here's where you're moving," I said.
"it's been three months in the works," she said.
"I was afraid you'd gone out of business," I said.
"No I was just waiting for my lease to run out," she said.

Indeed, I'd noticed that she was vacating her spot on Lincoln Place and I worried that the recession was taking its toll on another local business.

Phew. I am so relieved.

Looks like DeGouttes has created a cozy, attractive space in the back of Brooklyn Mercantile just like she did in 2004 when she opened Stitch Therapy, a fine yard shop, in one of the little shops on Lincoln Place.

Ever since, Stitch Therapy has been a busy hive of creativity, inspiration and support for Brooklyn's ever growing community of knit, crochet and weaving lovers.

I know because I've walked by her shop almost daily on my way to my office for years. Her shop really was a busy bee hive of creativity.

Inside the shop, Maxcine creates a warm, welcoming atmosphere and the feeling that you're in a friend's
cozy living room. It is Maxcine's mission to share her knowledge and enjoyment of knitting.

Seems like there could be a lot of synergy between the two shops. Brooklyn Mercantile is also a hive of creativity. Their aim is to help people make their homes a true personal expression. As they say on their website: "we specialize in the hand-made, the
hand-selected, and the must-have."

They also offer specialty home décor, custom upholstery
and fabrication, gifts, fabric by the yard, sewing notions and craft
essentials.

We’re here to make those new slipcovers you’ve been
dreaming of, re-upholster Grandma’s chair in a fresh fabric,
custom-make curtains and window seats. How about a new table, bench or
built-in cabinet? We are ready to create that new look just for you!

Sewing. Knitting. Supplies. How to. Making. Doing. Creating.  It's all happening in the store that is now Stitch Therapy AND Brooklyn Mercantile.

A warm welcome to Fifth Avenue, Maxine and may you be very successful in your new location.

Was The Halloween Parade Shorter Than Usual?

Doing my usual morning reading on Park Slope Parents I noticed some posts about the Halloween Parade being too short. I certainly didn't think so watching the parade from our front stoop on Third Street.

One mom wrote:

Don't Blink or you'd have missed it!

was it just us or did it seem like the
parade was ridiculously short?  in the past we'd meet up at 14th around
6:15, trick or treat, watch the parade, join the parade, trick or
treat, stop for pizza, trick or treat, watch the parade, join the
parade and end up down by first street what seemed like hours later…

last
night, the street sweepers where outside of the Methodist by 7:18, and
we hadn't had pizza, or done much trick or treating. it was kind of a
surprise.  7th was opened up to traffic shortly after that.

anyone else notice?

DOT To Implement Improvements to the Brooklyn Bridge Exit Ramp

Craig Hammerman District Manager of Community Board 6 sent this my way about scheduled changes to the Brooklyn Bridge (from State Senator Daniel Squadron's office). Thanks to Craig who likes to keep bloggers abreast of the latest news.

Anyone who has ever
tried to get on the Brooklyn Bridge from the FDR knows how frustrating
that exit can be – cars merging late into the exit lane cause
disruptive back-up on the FDR. Concerned about these unacceptable
conditions, Senator Squadron called on the State Department of
Transportation to review the situation, and is pleased to report that
the New York City Department of Transportation has agreed to implement
some important improvements to the exit ramp before the end of the
year.

 
The changes include:
 
·         Refreshing all the pavement markings, making them clearer and easier to read.
·        
Replacing the current broken white line between the right and center
lanes with a shorter-spaced dotted line, making it clearer much earlier
that the merge is approaching.

·         Adding two repetitions of the words EXIT ONLY to the right lane.
·        
Replacing the current sign that reads, "Bklyn-Battery Tunnel" with a
new sign that reads, "Exit 1 / Battery Pk / Staten Is Ferry."

 
The
changes are scheduled to be implemented before the end of the year. In
addition, the NYPD has committed to regular and vigilant traffic
enforcement at this location. As always, you can reach out to the
Senator's office with any concerns or feedback, at (212) 298-5565 or
via email at admin@danielsquadron.org

Photo Essay on Bensonhurst Fire From the Red Cross

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I just got this email from the Red Cross.

"Hi there, we recently published a photo essay about what the
Red Cross does in response to a fire in Bensonhurst here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/30084374@N02/sets/72157622689720764/

"Please advise your readers on the importance of being
prepared for household fires like the one above (there is on average 8
disasters a day in NYC) and how they can be better prepared by following safety
tips at www.nyredcross.org.

"Let me know if there’s any other Red Cross related
content we can provide for your site and if there’s any way we can
collaborate together to raise the awareness on emergency preparedness among New
Yorkers. Thank you."

Chi Kong Lui
Assistant
Director, Web Services


Props to the Good Fairies on the Prospect Park Spook Walk

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Kudos to the person whose idea it was to have some good fairies on the Prospect Park Spook Walk. And much appreciation to the good fairy pictured to the left who consoled my niece when she got scared by the actors dressed as ghouls, goblins, witches, and headless horsemen. It may have been the vampire popping out of the cardboard coffin that really got to her. It scared the bejesus out of me. 

"Are you a psychologist or something?" I asked the young woman who said all the right things to a frightened little girl (the ladybug at left).

"No, I'm a high school student," she said.

"You did a great job," I told her.

pix by Caroline Ghertler

The Hardest Working Candidate in Brooklyn: David Pechefsky

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David Pechefsky, Green Party candidate for City Council in the 39th district, is the hardest running candidate in Brooklyn. With a tiny staff and limited funds, he has made himself a household name in parts of the district and has earned the respect of many locals.

So how'd he do it?

Pechefsky, who was virtually unknown before the race, did it with creativity, a sharp mind, indefatigable energy, humor, a rickshaw bicycle, a fun web site, great t-shirts, events like documentary film screenings, debates, and a croquet match. Again and again, Pechefsky was willing to be out there and audible about reform and democracy in local government.

A few weeks back, it was Pechefsky's idea to enlist Republican candidate Joe
Nardiello and Democrat Brad Lander to sit at school desks outside of MS 51 on Fifth Avenue and Fifth Street and take a standardized test. It was a creative way to protest the Campaign Finance Board
(CFB), which printed an error in their Voter’s Guide that
identified Democratic nominee Brad Lander as the only parent in the
race with children in public school.

Since the spring, Pechefsky has proven that he has the determination and the stamina to run a creative campaign that educates voters about the need for reform in the City Council and a more democratic approach to city government in general. He has reached out to the other candidates consistently to engage them in substantive discussions and debate. All part of an effort to give the voters a larger perspective.

That said, it hasn't t been easy convincing citizens in the 39th district to take seriously the candidacy of a Green candidate. Even one with ten years experience as a general staff member in the City Council.

And nothing irks Pechefsky more than the fact that the winner of the Democratic primary in the 39th district is considered the defacto winner of the general election. That's been the prevailing wisdom and it serves to derail what could be a more democratic (i.e. multi-party) race for a local seat.

Indeed, the air went out of Brad Lander's campaign after he won the primary.  And that's when the Pechefsky campaign really heated up. Pechefsky and his supporters, in their green t-shirts with a caricature of Pechefsky on them, have been on the streets for the last month educating voters rather than attacking the other candidates.

In the process, locals have learned that Pechefsky is a very smart, likable progressive with a good heart and excellent ethics. He knows the ins and outs of the City Council and understands a great deal about local government. When he's not running for City Council he's a legislative adviser to governments around the world.

In other words, Pechefsky is no slouch and he should be applauded for for bringing grassroots and imagination to a local campaign.

When I interviewed him back in the spring for Breakfast-of-Candidates I was very impressed. And I learned a lot from our conversation. All these months later I'm even more impressed by David's accomplishments in this campaigns.

Like many voters, David was outraged by Mayor Bloomberg's decision to overturn term limits as he says on his website:

The Mayor and the Council acted in an entirely unprincipaled way  in passing legsialtion to undo the two term limit imposed by voter referendum to allow themselves to run for a third term.  Bloomberg's arguments about the City needing him in a time of fiscal crisis are an affront to democracy.  This kind of logic is employed by dictators and tyrants all over the world who claim that they and only they can save their country from whatever threatens it. 

David is also irked by the shape of the 39th district:
Redistricting for Council Districts occurs after the census.  It’s a political process run by a commission composed of representatives of the Mayor, the Speaker of the Council, and the Minority Leader of the Council.  It has to comply with the federal Voting Rights Act, the City Charter, and no doubt some arcane state law; and then the districts have to be almost equal in population – no easy feat.  I don’t know the whole history of  the 39th District, but I think its peculiar shape is an issue.  Why shouldn’t Park Slope be in one district?  Why shouldn’t Borough Park be in one district?  Of course, once you start looking to move things around you quickly run into a whole series of thorny issues – political, ethnic, religious, legal, technical.

About the Atlantic Yards, Pechefsky doesn't mince words:
The project proposed by Forest City Ratner should never have been supported by the City and State to begin with.  In general, public subsidies for sports stadiums are a bad idea and this is just one of the issues in this case. When I was working at the City Council, I looked at the numbers on the affordable housing component of the project and they didn't add up then, in 2006.  Even with just a cooling down of the real estae market let alone the kind of downturn we are experiencing,  based on the information I had it looked like the affordable housing was unlikely to get built without additional and wasteful public subsidies.  The fact that a rigorous real estate investment analysis was never done, or least not made public, is part of the problem.

On other issues like education and transportation, Pechefsky has interesting and thoughtful views. Before you vote on Tuesday take a good hard look at Pechefsky's website (where the above quotes are taken from) and see if he's the person you want to represent you in the City Council.

Photo of Pechefsky at the Halloween parade by Don Wiss: http://donwiss.com/pictures/Halloween-2009/

Candidate Joe Nardiello Angers Locals with Fake Parking Tickets

Looks like Joe Nardiello, Republican candidate for City Council in the 39th district, pissed off a lot of people this morning with the fake tickets he put on their car windshields in an attempt to spread the word about his candidacy.

Note to Joe: You probably don't want to cause apoplexy when trying to get people's attention about your campaign. Or do you?

The feedback I'm hearing on Brian Lehrer show is that people were really annoyed, still don't remember your name and found it to be downright offensive!

Nardiello, a former advertising executive, really bombed with this so-called creative concept!

Vote Tomorrow: Read About the Candidates, Again

You can read up on some of the candidates in the upcoming election on November 3rd. I conducted these interviews prior to the Democratic primary on September 15th. 

For Mayor: Thompson was the only candidate I was able to interview. I wanted to interview Rev. Billy but wasn't able to make that happen. And no go with Mayor Bloomberg.

Breakfast-of-Candidates: Bill Thompson I asked Thompson how big a deal he's going to make out of the fact that Bloomberg overturned term limits: "New
Yorkers are upset and frustrated by what he did. He said he would never
go against what the voters wanted. And then he did. He lied to the
people. And that resonates with them." And those are fightin' words. Thompson, who has been called the stealth candidate by the New York Times, has plenty to run on. He just needs to get his juices flowing and find
some passion about other  issues that matter to New Yorkers.

For City Council in the 39th:
Breakfast-of-Candidates: Brad Lander, Lander has two master's degrees and
a BA from the University of Chicago. He made his mark running
community organizations like the Fifth Avenue Committee and Pratt
Center for Community Development, advocating for affordable housing and community sustainablility.

Breakfast-of-Candidates: David Pechefsky. The Green Candidate, Pechefsky worked for 10 years in the central staff of
the New York City Council. With a master's degree in public policy and
experience advising local governments in Africa, Pechefsky knows how the
City Council works from the inside out and has ideas about how it could
better serve the people of New York City.

Breakfast-of-Candidates: Joe Nardiello  He doesn't look like a Republican. I was expecting
someone clean cut, non-ethnic and very middle America. But Nardiello, born and bred in Brooklyn, has dark eyes, dark hair and strong Italian good looks. He
had the Brooklyn childhood of legend and is a very intriguing guy:  "All we needed was a ball. My
life was constantly filled with sports, resourcefulness, spending time
with friends."

For City Council in the 33rd:

Breakfast-of-Candidates: Stephen Levin.  A classics major at Brown University,  Levin has wonky good looks and a boyish, disarming
manner. His father's cousins are Michigan's Senator Carl Levin and
Congressman Sander Levin and he currently works as Vito Lopez's chief of staff. Lopez,
who is often portrayed as a Darth Vader figure in Brooklyn politics
taught the 29-year-old Levin about "knocking on doors, talking to as
many people as possible, the
importance of having a command of the issues, and having empathy for
the people," Levin told me. A pragmatist, Levin believes "that for for
every problem there is a solution that is not readily apparent."

OTBKB Music: Get Out Your Calendars

There are a number of shows coming up this month that are worth marking on your calendar.  Here's a preview of four of them:

November 7 – First Saturday at Brooklyn Museum:  Taking the lead from
the just opened Who Shot Rock and Roll exhibit, Grass Widow, The Beets
and Crystal Silts will play from 5-8:15pm.  If that doesn't suit you,
catch Prince in Purple Rain at 7pm.

November 12 – Zevon-A-Thon at Banjo Jims: Warren Zevon may have only
lived to 56, but he left behind music that was savage, tender, funny,
noir and romantic. A collection of singers, songwriters and musicians
will perform both Warren's well known and more rarely heard material
from 8pm until late.

November 24 – Acoustically Related at Southpaw: Catch three artists
performing acoustically in Southpaw's monthly series. This time out,
you'll get to see Jim Boggia who is not only a great songwriter but who
also knows almost every song written in the last 50 years and is really
funny on stage, OTBKB Music fave Leslie Mendelson, another great live
performer with her piano based adult pop and rock and Benyaro who are
new to me.  The show starts at 8:30pm.

November 27 – Chuck Prophet at 92Y Tribeca:  Based in San Francisco,
Chuck and The Mission Express don't get to these parts all that often,
so take this opportunity to see this tight soul tinged rock band who
know how to get you moving.  This is the the Friday of the Thanksgiving
Day weekend, so you may not be in town, but if you are this is the
place to be.  8pm.

 –Eliot Wagner