Seventh Avenue Bus Culture

I’m becoming a member of the Park Slope bus culture. Most mornings I take the B67 bus to the Bergen Street stop of the 2/3 train. Never in all my years in Park Slope did I take the bus to a subway. I’ve always been a big walker. But since taking a course at 9AM Monday through Friday in Manhattan, I catch the bus on Third Street and Seventh Avenue.

Some days I catch the bus that goes to Downtown Brooklyn. Other days I catch the bus that goes to Ditmas Avenue.

Either way I can catch the same subway just at different station. The bus that goes to Ditmas Avenue stops at Flatbush near 8th Avenue just a hop, skip and a jump to the Grand Army Plaza Station. The bus that goes downtown stops near the Bergen Street subway station.

Some days I time it perfectly and there is one bus (sometimes two) just crossing Third Street to the bus stop. Some days I have to run like crazy to catch the bus. A few times I’ve had to wait a long time. If I leave early enough the bus isn’t too crowded. But as it gets closer to 8AM, the more crowded the bus with students, parents and commuters.

One day I ran into Rev. Meeter on his way to Old First Church. Today I talked to a woman who gets on at Third Street. I think she was freaked out when I asked her where she goes in the city. Just making conversation. She changed seats (then again she may have just been switching to a more comfortable seat).

On the Seventh Avenue bus, people read books, Kindles, iPhones, newspapers. People talk on their cell phones and talk to their children. Strangers smile at children. Stranger strike up quick conversations. Sometimes people are grumpy like the other day when a woman got very impatient to get off the bus and slammed into someone.

I like being part of Park Slope bus culture. I like taking the bus every morning.

OTBKB Music: Hear R.E.M.’s New Album Today; NYC Music Calendar Updates

R.E.M. has a new album, Collapse Into Now, coming out tomorrow, March 8th.  The reviews I’ve seen uniformly call it the best album by the band in 14 years (which, if you do the math, makes the last critically appreciated REM album New Adventures in Hi-Fi).  NPR is offering you the chance to listen to Collapse Into Now today only in its entirety or on a track by track basis; all you need do is to go here and click the appropriate link near the top of the page.

Over at Now I’ve Heard Everything, nine more shows for March have been posted; five by Julia Haltigan, two by Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds and one each by Li’l Mo and The Monicats and Lelia BroussardSee those additions here.  The entire Now I’ve Heard Everything March Calendar is here.

–Eliot Wagner

Spring is Near

Bob Goldberg is playing his accordion on Third Street

Serenading the neighbors with his favorite tunes

Walking up and down the street

Playing his favorite tunes

Bob Goldberg is playing his accordion on Third Street

Park Slope Eatery Declares Bankruptcy

According to Crains New York, Park Slope Eatery, a deli-style restaurant on Seventh Avenue and Fourth Street in Park Slope, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Thursday. They’re still open but the clock is ticking.

I was aware that there were problems with the investors in the venture. I knew the place was struggling and it was just a matter of when they were going to pull the plug.

According to Crains, Ataka Taka Taka Inc., the company that owns the eatery owes nearly $95,000 to 18 creditors. They also received a number of sanitary violations from the Department of Health. The restaurant’s letter grade is still pending but that’s a moot point now.

Yet another business on Seventh Avenue bites the dust.

Park Slope Eatery Closing

If you blinked you might have missed it.  Park Slope Eatery, a deli-style restaurant on Seventh Avenue at the corner of Fifth Street, is closing. They were in the space vacated by the enormously successful La Bagel Delight, which moved two blocks south.

In case you missed it, PS Eatery had steam table fare, breakfast in the morning, bagels, deli sandwiches, salads with your choice of toppings, rotisserie chicken, daily entrees, mashed potatoes, mac and cheese and the like.

I got wind of the fact that their business was terrible a few months ago. Apparently it was owned by a group of investors and many of them walked away quite early on. Some of the remaining investors tried to keep it going.

Look, they had a decent location, decent food (basics, nothing fancy) and nice people working there —  but no atmosphere or character at all.

No surprise.

Report From Cheeburger Cheeburger

This is a report, not a review.

Yesterday for lunch Hepcat and I went to Cheeburger Cheeburger, the new franchise on Seventh Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope. Just open for two days, I was dying to try it. Hepcat was resistant to the bright pink interior but that wasn’t a problem for me. He liked the big windows facing Seventh Avenue, which are good for taking pictures of the street.

The waiter was very friendly, very nice. He brought us our drinks in jam jars that said Cheeburger Cheeburger on them. After studying the menu for well over 10 minutes — there’s a lot to look at, lots of choices, and toppings and ways that you can customize your hamburger (peanut butter?) — we ordered.

The calories are listed next to the items on the menu so I decided against the hamburger and ordered a turkey burger instead. Hepcat ordered a blue cheeseburger with onions.

While we waited some of the staff presented a customer with a cloth sculpture of a cheeseburger because he finished a One Pounder, their 20 ounce burger. In the menu it says, “If you can finish this monster, we’ll take a picture of you and put it on the wall with the other Wall of Famers.”

You’ve been warned: if you ever eat one of those the staff will come out and embarrass you.

While we waited Hepcat wondered about the music, all fifties, sixties and seventies.

“It sounds like everything is speeded up. It’s weird.”

“The place has a real American Graffiti vibe,” I said.

We then tried to remember all the restaurants that have been in that spot. Rex, Nam, Miracle Grill…many escape my memory.

We waited for our food for quite awhile. Hepcat noticed a neon sign that said Same Day Service and kept joking about it.

“It says same day service…”

Our burgers arrived in those plastic baskets they used to have at diners. My turkey burger was very tasty. Hepcat seemed to enjoy his blue cheese burger.

Chee Chee seems to be attracting a big lunchtime crowd. Doctors and nurses from Methodist Hospital were definitely in attendance.

We’ll be going back to try other items on the menu for sure.

OTBKB’s Weekend List: March 4-6

The weekend is near. Either you’re booked or it’s time to start thinking about what to do. There’s a “knock your socks off reading” at Sunny’s in Red Hook, the St. Petersburgh Ballet at Kingsborough Performing Arts Center, and Treasure Island, a must-see production at the Irondale Ensemble in Ft. Greene. Click on read more for more and all the essential details.

Continue reading OTBKB’s Weekend List: March 4-6

RIP: Warren Fox

Many days of the week I walk up Lincoln Place from Seventh Avenue to Eighth Avenue to my office at The Montauk Club or to the subway at Grand Army Plaza.

Many, many of those days I see Warren Fox, the tall, stocky, white haired man who smokes a pipe. I’ve never actually spoken to Fox, the owner of the red brick building on the southwest corner of Seventh Avenue and Lincoln, that houses the Tibetan store on the corner and three small storefronts, but we always nod politely to one another as I pass.

Two of those small storefronts (Paper Love and Fashion East) are vacant now and today I noticed a picture of Warren Fox standing on a rock smoking his signature pipe. It was taped to the front window of the empty Paper Love storefront.

In magic marker it said: Warren 5/39-2/11.

I stared at it incredulously and then noticed a black and white portrait of a much younger man, a slimmer man, with a goatee. It said: Warren Fox 1939-2011.

I was stunned because I feel like I just saw Warren last week. Or was it the week before. He was a constant presence, hovering over those small shops and often creating wood planters with customized wood embellishments for each shop.

Warren was an artist with wood, a neighborhood fixture, a landlord always tinkering with his building — painting this, fixing that.

I said to an older man, who happened to be walking by with a dog: What happened?”

“He died. Last month. Died in his bed. He’s been here for a long, long time.”

Strange. One minute here, gone the next. That’s the way of life, eh?

Fire on Park Slope’s Fifth Avenue Leaves Woman Critically Injured

We woke up around 6AM to the sound of helicopters flying overhead.

“it’s either police helicopters or news helicopters,” Hepcat said.

“I think it’s news helicopters,” I said.

I was in the city most of the morning but found out just now from PS Patch that there was a terrible fire in a brownstone on Fifth Avenue at Carroll Street around 6AM, which left a 60-year-old woman critically injured. She’s now at Methodist Hospital.

According to Patch, 60 firefighters were on the scene and they had the blaze out within an hour. The cause of the fire is still unknown.

OTBKB Music: See The Best Rock Band Out There Tonight

Tonight is one of those nights when there are a number of good bands playing, any one of which I might have recommended.  But the band I suggest, make that urge, you to see is Steve Wynn and The Miracle 3 (guitarist Jason Victor, bassist Dave DeCastro and drummer Linda Pitmon).  You won’t see a better live show anywhere else this evening, or the rest of this year for that matter.  They’re playing on the Lower East Side, just a short F train ride away.  Get all the details here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

However, if you insist on not leaving Brooklyn, you have a very good show over at The BAM Cafe, with Julia Haltigan and her band.  BAM notes that “singer and guitarist Julia Haltigan’s musical world is made from equal parts Americana, indie eclecticism, and Tom Waits.”  Details of this free show are here at the BAM Cafe website.

–Eliot Wagner

The Doctor is In: Mothers, Daughters & Birth Control

by Amy Glaser

A mother called me yesterday wanting to schedule a pelvic exam for her 15-year-old daughter. The girl had confided to her that she was having sex with her boyfriend. The mom wanted her daughter to have birth control. The mom’s voice was low and hesitant. She seemed sorry that the time had come. She was also conflicted about whether she was doing the right thing. She feared she might be encouraging her daughter to have sex.

When it comes to their sexually active teen, many parents do not want to stick their heads in the sand. They want to be sure that when their children begin having sex, it is safe. Many want their children to avoid their own adolescent experience of anxious days visiting free clinics, hiding birth control pills or living with the fear of pregnancy. However, the opposite approach can seem risky. Willingness to provide birth control may seem to make light of sexual activity or even encourage it.

Sensing the mother’s concerns, I reassured her that studies demonstrate that offering birth control does not increase the likelihood of sex. Her daughter’s willingness to reveal her sexual activity was a manifestation of the strength of their relationship. The door was now open for the mother to discuss her feelings about sex, the role of sex in a meaningful relationship, the risks of sexually transmitted disease. Adolescents, who feel ready for sex but don’t have this kind of relationship with their parents, are potentially in a more risky situation.

Unfortunately this mother’s relationship with her daughter remains uncommon in my practice. Regarding matters of sexual reproduction teens are emancipated minors and can get birth control and treatment for sexual transmitted diseases without parental consent. They are most often choosing birth control methods based on what their friends are choosing. There are many good methods including safer pills with less estrogen and lipid friendly progesterone, the Nuvareen ring and of course the condom for both pregnancy and infection protection. And as a last resort there is the “ morning after pill” ,or Plan B. This is simply a pill containing adequate progesterone to induce shedding of the uterine lining before a potentially fertilized egg can become implanted and start to develop.

Perhaps this teen will use her mom’s support in making her decision. In any case the head in the sand approach is not very effective in protecting children from adverse outcomes related to sexual activity.

OTBKB is thrilled to feature The Doctor is In, a regular weekly column by Amy Glaser. Born in Brooklyn, Dr. Amy Glaser of Slope Pediatrics received her undergraduate degree from Smith College, her medical degree from Mount Sinai School of Medicine and completed her pediatric residency at Montefiore Hospital. She started in Park Slope 25 years ago with a special interest in teens, after completing a fellowship program in Adolescent Medicine at Mount Sinai. She has brought her expertise in that area into the community during her career at the Door, El Puente, Elmhurst Adolescent Center and Barnard. Dr. Glaser has been named by NY Magazine as a “top pediatrician” and as one of the “Best Doctors in America”. She recently started a part-time practice for ages 13-22 called “Adolescents Only.”

Must be Coming Down With Something

I went to class until 2PM but slept the rest of the day. Actually I’m feeling better now and am off to see Treasure Island at Irondale (read my review in the Brooklyn Paper next week). And then tomorrow: I am participating in a panel discussion presented by the Park Slope Civic Council at the illustrious Montauk Club: Growing a Business in Park Slope.

Sorry for the dearth of content. Hugh is away briefly but just noticed he gave me a NWDP to put up. Yipee. Thanks to Eliot and Now I’ve Heard Everything for posting about MUSIC.

OTBKB Music: March Calendar and Teeth of Champions

The March music calendar is now posted at Now I’ve Heard Everything.  Just click here to see it and begin planning what you’ll see this month.  March is very busy at the beginning and the end, with fewer shows in the middle of the month.  Not surprising as the SXSW music festival will be held then, drawing many bands down to Austin.

One local band that I’ve been following is Brooklyn’s Madison Square Gardeners.  They have a new 5-song EP about to be released called Teeth of Champions.  Read the review of this wonderful record posted at Now I’ve Heard Everything by clicking here.

–Eliot Wagner

What Matters to Park Slope?

This week in Park Slope Patch I explored what matters to the people of Park Slope.

There are many assumptions about the priorities of those who live here. According to the stereotypes, we like our babies, our organic food and our progressive politics. And we really like arguing about our bike lanes. But what is really on the minds of the locals and what do they think needs fixing to make this a better place for all?

In the spirit of an unscientific survey I consulted an interesting assortment of neighborhood leaders and locals.

Eric McClure, who runs Park Slope Neighbors, a local advocacy group that supports the Prospect Park West bike lane, is concerned about the cost of housing and neighborhood diversity.

“People can’t touch a halfway decent house for under $2 million, ‘mid-priced’ apartments and good rentals are in short supply, and there really is no lower end of the market anymore.  That is causing Park Slope to become increasingly less diverse, and diversity is a big part of the reason that we gentrifiers (speaking for myself) moved here in the first place,” he wrote to me.

For McClure education is also a big priority. He believes that the Brooklyn Millennium situation has been a real eye-opener.

“Of course people would love to have a great high school in the neighborhood.  On the other hand, the community’s lack of engagement and effort in trying to improve the schools that already existed in the John Jay building is a major issue.”

It is McClure’s hope that the advent of Millennium Brooklyn can serve as a catalyst for making all the schools better.

Speaking of schools, Nancy McDermott, a journalist who writes the Park Slope Parents blog and lives in the neighborhood with her husband and two young sons, thinks that a big pre-k for the district “where everybody gets a spot and is ideally located” would be a win-win for local parents. She thinks this would also create space in our already over crowded elementary schools.

Daniel Meeter, the minister of Old First Dutch Reformed Church on Seventh Avenue in Park Slope, writes a blog called Old First (oldfirst.blogspot.com) where he posts his weekly sermons and thought provoking pieces on civic issues. A resident of Kensington, he is member of the Park Slope Civic Council, and is currently chair of a committee to improve communication between the John Jay High School Complex and the Park Slope neighborhood.

Like McClure, for Rev. Meeter, housing affordability and availability are also important issues. He also cited the need for health care and other benefits for the “service class” (i.e. nannies, food service, etc.).

Gilley Youner, who lives in Park Slope with her husband and teenage son, believes that educational infrastructure is a primary concern. A vice president of the Park Slope Civic Council, senior associate architect at Kutnicki Bernstein Architects and a board member of Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn, she is passionate about land use issues and the re-zoning of Fourth Avenue, as well as land marking and the preservation of historic streets in Park Slope and elsewhere.

For Youner, affordability and diversity are key when it comes to housing because that’s the only way to maintain a “diversely ethnic, creative, wide age-range community with sky-high housing costs,” she wrote.

Andy Bachman, the senior rabbi of Congregation Beth Elohim in Park Slope, writes insightful essays on secular, moral and religious issues on his blog, Water Over Rocks (andybachman.com). He is concerned about the lack of affordable child-care for the neighborhood’s burgeoning population. He also believes there should be adequate low and middle income housing for those being squeezed by gentrification.

Finally, he wrote, “there needs to be a true community-wide response to helping nannies and caregivers take advantage of their residencies in the United States with educational and vocational job training programs.”

Quite a few residents voiced concern about vacant storefronts piling up on Seventh and Fifth avenues…

Read the rest on Park Slope Patch…