October 21: New Plays by Brooklyn Playwrights

Brooklyn Reading Works presents New Plays by Brooklyn Playwrights on October 21 at 8PM. Curated by Rosemary Moore, the evening will include readings of three plays and a musical theater work by Barbara Cassidy, Joseph Goodrich, Lizzie Olesker and Mary Lloyd Butler and C.F. Peters.

Brooklyn Reading Works is a monthly reading series at the Old Stone House in Park Slope, Brooklyn (Fifth Avenue and Third Street). All the readings are at 8PM. Suggested donation of $5 includes wine and snacks. Books are usually sold and there is often a Q&A after the reading.

BRW in November:

I am also excited about the Veterans Day reading on November 11, 2010 that I am curating:  Writing War Fiction by Vets of Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan featuring Juri Jurjevics, Roy Scranton, Matt Gallagher, Philip Klay and Jake Sigal

On the horizon:

December 16, 2010: Feast: Writers on Food. Curated by Michele Madigan Somerville (an annual benefit for the soup kitchen at St. Augustine’s Roman Catholic Church in Park Slope)

January 20, 2011: The Truth and Oral History (the double life of the interview) Curated by John Guidry

February 17, 2011: Memoirathon
Curated by Branka Ruzak

March 17, 2011: Blarneypalooza
Curated by Michele Madigan Somerville

April 14, 2011: In the Year of the Rabbit: Voices from the East
Curated by Sophia Romero

May 19, 2011: Edgy Mother’s Day
Curated by Louise Crawford and Sophia Romero

June 16, 2011: Fiction in a Blender
Curated by Martha Southgate

Public High School Fair Today at Brooklyn Tech

You can catch the second day of the  annual Citywide High School Fair today,  Sunday, October 3,  at Brooklyn Technical High School (29 Fort Greene Place off DeKalb Avenue)

The fair is open to the public from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on both days.

This fair tend to get crowded and is a tad overwhelming and exhausting (for parents, anyway). However, it’s a good opportunity for parents and students to speak with representatives from the City’s public high schools.

There will also be various information sessions related to the high school admissions process. Translated materials and interpretation services will be available. For more information, visit the High School Admissions website.

King of Cupcakes Coming to Park Slope

Coming soon to a space on Seventh Avenue between 4th and 5th Streets in Park Slope: King of Cupcakes. The expensive-looking, well-designed signage has the look of a national chain. Their single-page and uninformative website says they’ve been in existence since 1979.

It does say that they’ll be selling cupcakes, of course, cookies, pies, pastries, bagels, gelato and “the best damn coffee in Brooklyn!”

I like their attitude.

Finks, New Play About Blacklist by Brooklyn Playwright

The Ensemble Studio Theater’s Octoberfest 2010 presents an unstaged reading of a new play called Finks by Joe Gilford on Thursday, October 14th at 7PM.

Directed by Lonny Price, Finks is a drama about New York actors during the dark years of the 1950s blacklist. It is based on true events in the lives of Jack and Madeline Gilford. Admission is by your generous donation. For reservations & information: 212-247-4982 or at the EST website.

Bankrupt Company Willing to Contribute to Gowanus Superfund Cleanup

Interesting story in the Brooklyn Paper about a chemical company with plants in Red Hook that has agreed to help pay for part of the Superfund cleanup. Trouble is: the comapny is bankrupt. So how are they going to pay? Here’s an excerpt from the BP story:

A chemical company with two dirty Red Hook plants agreed this week to help foot the bill for the $1-billion Superfund cleanup of the Gowanus Canal — oh, but there’s one catch: the company is bankrupt.

Chemtura Corporation, a Connecticut-based specialty chemicals maker, agreed on Thursday to pay $3.9 million toward cleansing the fetid waterway, the Department of Justice announced.

No timetable was given for when Chemtura would pay, but the feds cheered the agreement — and said that they expect the sum to be “fully paid in cash.”

OTBKB Music: Norah Jones Secret Show Review and A Great Baseball Song Video

Last night, Norah Jones, Sasha Dobson and Gus Seyffert, a band Norah dubbed The Rams, played a secret show.  I was there and have a review and a whole bunch of photos and set list here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

Just a week ago, I mentioned the song Don’t Call Them Twinkies, an ode to the Minnesota Twins by The Baseball Project and Craig Finn, the lead singer of The Hold Steady.  Now that song has a great video with clips and stills which include Sandy Koufax, Jim Kaat, Kirby Puckett, Jane Fonda, and of course, Twinkies. You can see it at Now I’ve Heard Everything by clicking here.

–Eliot Wagner

The Weekend List: Oct 1-3

Movies

The Social Network, Wall Street Money Never Sleeps, The Town at BAM

The Social Network, Wall Street Money Never Sleeps, The Town, Easy A, Let Me In at the Pavilion

Next Wave Festival at BAM:

Now through October 9 at BAM: Pina Basuch’s Vollmond: “This season, Bausch’s splendid company Tanztheater Wuppertal (Bamboo Blues, 2008 Next Wave; Nefés, 2006 Next Wave) returns to BAM with the arresting Vollmond (Full Moon). The work shimmers—literally—as water runs in manic rivulets over a giant rock, rushes across the stage, and rains down, drenching the dancers. A study in Bausch’s unparalleled mix of abandon and supreme control, Vollmond is at once urgent, athletic, and sensual—channeling the unrelenting energy of its maker.”

Music:

Here is Brooklyn Vegan’s list of what’s going on Friday in the NYC music scene.

Friday, Oct 1 at 7PM at Barbes: Opera on Tap. “Most people don’t seem to realize how much fun it really is. In order to prove it, Opera on Tap has taken its act to barrooms where they found out that beer on tap enhances the operatic experience. The company is made up of young singers and instrumentalists who relish the direct contact with audiences not inhibited in their reactions by the looming menace of giant chandeliers.”

Saturday, Oct 2 at 7:30 PM at The Bell House: Van Dyke Parks. “Besides being Brian Wilson’s collaborator during the Beach Boys’ psychedelic period, he has worked with performers including Grace Kelly, the Byrds, Loudon Wainwright III, Ry Cooder and Joanna Newsom, and has released several of his own records (and a new record is in the works).”

Saturday, Oct 2 at The Rock Shop: Czech Legends Uz Jesme Doma

Stay tuned for more…

Brooklyn Rabbi Reacts to Rutgers Suicide

Here is an excerpt from Rabbi Andy Bachman’s powerful reaction to the suicide of Tyler Clementi, a freshman at Rutgers University. It is a direct address by the Rabbi of Park Slope’s Congregation Beth Elohim, to the  youth of this community (and other communities around the world). You can read the rest at his blog Water Over Rocks.

I’m your Rabbi.  As such, I am occasionally asked to share a few words or thoughts when bad things happen to good people.  In this case, I want to write some words, directly to you, about Tyler Clementi’s tragic suicide last week.  If you haven’t read about it, you can read the story here from today’s New York Times.

Tyler was secretly filmed having a sexual encounter with another guy on the Rutgers campus and that scene was broadcast on-line, to his own humiliation, which authorities think was the major factor in deciding to take his own life.  Rutgers University, where Tyler was a talented, quiet and kind student, and the local police, are in charge of an investigation, the results of which we’ll keep reading about in the coming days.

But I want to address you directly, whomever you may be.  If you’re gay or straight or bi or transgender or you just don’t know, as a Rabbi in the community, I care about you as a person made in the Image of God.  It really truly doesn’t matter what other people think about your struggle to be who you are in the process of becoming.

Tony Roberts & Selected Shorts at Kingsborough

Hey, all you fans of old Woody Allen movies, Tony Roberts, who was in Annie Hall, Play it Again Sam, Stardust Memories and other Allen masterpieces, will be reading short stories as part of a special Selected Shorts program designed for the Kingsborough Performing Arts Center (KPAC).

I listen to Selected Shorts on WNYC radio on Sunday afternoons but it would be fun to see it live.

On Saturday, October 16, at 8:00 p.m. at KPAC, the founder of Symphony Space, Isaiah Sheffer, will take the stage with a program created especially for KPAC.

According to the press release: “Selected Shorts: Funny Food Fictions will serve up a menu of hilarious short stories about food and love. Stories by award-winning authors T. Corraghessan Boyle, M.F.K. Fisher, and “Yinglish” comic book master Milt Gross will be read by Broadway, film, and television star (and frequent Woody Allen co-star) Tony Roberts, the Tony-nominated stage actress Maria Tucci, and Isaiah Sheffer.”

Anna Becker, KPAC’s brand new Executive Director had this to say about the show: “We are so delighted to have Symphony Space in residence with us this season for three unique programs, starting with the brilliantly entertaining Selected Shorts program…There has been great excitement and anticipation on the part of our audience members as we await a wonderful evening of masterful stories, artfully told.”

High School Tour Confidential: NYC iSchool

New York, New York it’s a hell of a town. Or a hellish town if your kids go to public school because they have to apply for school when they reach middle and high school age.

Why you ask?

Because there are no neighborhood middle and high schools (i.e. no Park Slope High or Cobble Hill Middle School, etc) where you can just send your kids as you would in a suburban area. No, they’ve got to apply and then qualify (based on test scores, assessments, portfolios, auditions, etc) to get into a decent (and competitive) school.

New York, New York, isn’t it fun?

It wasn’t always this way. As one woman said today on the tour of the NYC iSchool. “I grew up in New York. When I was a kid you either went to your zoned school or you applied to Bronx Science, Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Tech…”

In my day we could also apply to Performing Arts (of Fame fame), Music and Art and Art and Design. Now there’s LaGuardia and many other art and/or science and math themed schools.

It was necessary to do this because if you lived in a good neighborhood you probably had a good school but if you lived in a poor neighborhood…

Change was necessary and choice is mostly a good thing. The problem is the complexity of the admissions process requires a lot of time, energy and smarts and those with less time and less money can’t always devote the time necessary to help their kids.

Truthfully, it’s a huge hassle for parents and kids to figure out which school to put on their list of twelve and that’s not even counting a separate list, which is for the “specialized” schools like Stuyvesant, Bronx Science, Brooklyn Tech, Brooklyn Latin, and others…

So it’s a lot of tours. The guidance counselor at my daughter’s school said you don’t want to put any school on your list of 12 that you haven’t seen because you don’t want a big surprise if, god forbid, your child gets their 10th choice.

So that’s at least twelve tours and probably more.

This morning we visited the NYC iSchool. Lest you think it’s a school filled with iPhones and iBooks: it’s actually a collaboration between the Department of Education and Ciscso Systems. You can see a video about is here though I think the tour puts it in a better light than this video does.

Inside Schools, the go-to online information resource about the NYC public school system, had this to say about the NYC iSchool: “What’s Special: Imaginative and creative projects combined with computerized test prep. Downside: Rundown building with no gym.”

The good thing about no gym is that kids can do physical education as an independent study and being on a team, taking a yoga or dance class, jogging, biking, works for credit.

Suffice it to say, I was very impressed by this small, rigorous school that seems to be doing things in a very creative and innovative way while still being quite organized and rigorous.

But don’t take my word for it, take a tour.

Next week: Edward R. Murrow High School!

Take Your Man (or Woman) to the Doctor

When was the last time you had a check up? Have you been to the dentist lately? How are you feeling?

I always thought this “campaign” was a good idea, an annual wake-up call for people to remind each other (not just women reminding men) to take care of themselves and see a doctor or some kind of health practitioner.

According to the press release from the Borough President’s office, men are 70% less likely than women to visit a doctor. So that’s why it’s “take your man.” Another disturbing factoid: blacks and hispanics are 10% less likely than whites to have a primary care provider.

On October 6th, Borough President Marty Markowitz will launch his annual “Take Your Man to the Doctor” campaign with a press conference at Borough hall.

Participating hospitals, clinics and health professionals are offering free health screening for blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol, diabetes, glucose, glaucoma, HIV, podiatry and free flu shots.

So if you’ve been putting it off…


Oct 2: Emergency Preparedness Workshop at Spoke the Hub

On Saturday, October 2, 2010, Spoke the Hub (STH) is presenting a FREE program, sponsored by the American Red Cross in Greater New York, on emergency preparedness, to be held at the STH Re:Creation Center at 748 Union Street between 5th and 6th Avenues in Park Slope. The program will last one hour, from 12:30-1:30pm. RSVP required.  Reservations for the free event can be made by calling Spoke the Hub at (718) 408-3234.

It is certainly prudent—and essential—for individuals and families, especially in New York City, to prepare for possible disasters and other emergencies. Both natural and human-caused crises can strike suddenly, anywhere and at any time.  This free workshop will provide participants with the crucial facts they’ll need  – before, during, and after a disaster or emergency situation. Attendees will learn how to create a family disaster plan, build and maintain a supply kit, and keep loved ones safe and informed.

Click on read more to see the topics that will be covered…

Continue reading Oct 2: Emergency Preparedness Workshop at Spoke the Hub

Family Friendly at the Brooklyn Museum

The Brooklyn Museum has a line-up of activities for kids and families that looks good.

On Saturday, November 13, from noon-4 PM, the museum presents its fourth annual Children’s Book Fair, which will feature more than thirty-five newly published stories by Brooklyn-based authors and illustrators.

Meet your favorite Brooklyn authors and engage in hands-on art activities, book signings, and three author/illustrator readings.

This event is part of a wide array of inexpensive and fun  art-related activities for the whole family at the museum. Highlights include a new season of Meet the Museum; the fourth annual Children’s Book Fair, and the special exhibition Norman Rockwell: Behind the Camera.

Ratner Scraps Ten Year Timeline for Atlantic Yards Project

So it seems, the activists were right all along and now developer Bruce Ratner is admitting the truth: the Atlantic Yards project will not be completed in ten years. There is just no way.

Now he’s saying that the 10-year-timeline that was bandied about was just a guess for environmental impact statements. Here Ratner is quoted on WNYC:

“That was really only an analysis as to what the most serious impacts [would be], if all the other planned development in downtown Brooklyn happened right away,” Ratner said. “It was never supposed to be the time we were supposed to build them in.”

That is so much balderdash:

Wasn’t it the economics of the 10-year-timeline that convinced the city and state that it was worth the mega milliions in direct subsidies the project got?

So the longer the construction takes, the longer it will take for the government to reap the so-called rewards in terms of income taxes from people who move in and property taxes.

Sounds like they were had.

Says Daniel Goldstein, an anti-AY activist, who had an apartment in the AY footprint, in press release: “What we have now is a site that was not blighted turning into a dormant site, nearly 20 acres of vacant lots and parking lots for 20, 25, 30, 40 50 years…What was not blighted has become blighted for a very long time.”

Bklyn Bloggage: food & drink

Apple muffins the old fashioned way: A Cake Bakes in Brooklyn

Sweet corn bruschetta: A Kitchen in Brooklyn

Octoberfest on Fifth: All About Fifth

Would the city shut down your kitchen?: NY Times

Buttermilk Channel is a Michelin BIB pick: Eater

Brunch at Broken English: Eat It

Pig roast of the day: Ditmas Park Blog

The best cheap sandwiches in Brooklyn: Brokelyn

Dude, where’s my coffee?: Brooklyn Based

Tools to Fight Tornado Anxiety

The following are facts about tornadoes from the FEMA website:

* They may strike quickly, with little or no warning.
* They may appear nearly transparent until dust and debris are picked up or a cloud forms in the funnel.
* The average tornado moves Southwest to Northeast, but tornadoes have been known to move in any direction.
* The average forward speed of a tornado is 30 MPH, but may vary from stationary to 70 MPH.
* Tornadoes can accompany tropical storms and hurricanes as they move onto land.
* Waterspouts are tornadoes that form over water.
* Tornadoes are most frequently reported east of the Rocky Mountains during spring and summer months.
* Peak tornado season in the southern states is March through May; in the northern states, it is late spring through early summer.
* Tornadoes are most likely to occur between 3 p.m. and 9 p.m., but can occur at any time.

Click on read more to learn how you can protect yourself from a tornado:

Continue reading Tools to Fight Tornado Anxiety

No Tornado, Plenty of Worry

Thankfully there was no tornado yesterday despite word from the National Weather Service that a tornado watch was in effect in the five boroughs. There was, however, plenty of anxiety about the idea of another tornado fresh on the heels of the tornado that left much damage to trees and buildings in Park Slope, Brooklyn on September 16th. Thankfully there weren’t more casualties on that day. Sadly, a Queens woman died when a tree fell on her car.

My sister was in Prospect Park during the September 16th tornado and is still reliving the details of that terrifying afternoon. Her daughter and her first grade classmates and parents were in the park for a class picnic when the storm started. They left the park during the worst of the storm and saw a tree fall not far from them.

Yesterday her daughter’s class was told of the tornado watch during school and when they came out, her babysitter reports, the kids looks terrified and many were crying because they were “scared of the tornado.”

Obviously the kids were traumatized by the experience of being in the park that day. No wonder they were crying when they came out of school.

Other adults I spoke to were nervous about the possibility of another tornado. Some wondered if the National Weather Service was being more cautious this time around — better safe than sorry.

The September 16th tornado definitely gave people a sense of reverence for the power of nature to spontaneously wreak havoc and destroy.

As Rabbi Andy Bachman of Congregation Beth Elohim said during his Yom Kippur sermon just days after the tornado: “We almost died yesterday.”

Indeed, it gave everyone new perspective on a lot of things.

OTBKB Music: October Music Calendar and Multimedia Music and Science Show Tonight

October looks to be a very busy month musically.  Click here to check out the monthly music calendar waiting for you at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

Tonight is the CD release party for the new CD from The Amygdaloids, Theory of Mind.  Not only is this a musical performance, there are science lectures, music videos and magic.  Although I’ve not heard of The Amygdaloids before, the list of musical guests, which include  Lenny Kaye, Steve Wynn and The Kennedys, has sold me on this show.  You find the full details here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner