All posts by louise crawford

OTBKB Music: Stay in The Neighborhood Monday and Tuesday Nights

Rebecca Pronsky SmallRod Alonzo No need to leave Park Slope the next two nights as there are shows
worth your attention Monday and Tuesday.

On Monday, the July show of
The Brooklyn Songwriters Exchange will be held a Union Hall.  Here's
what they say about tonight's bill: "This show with be an in-the-round evening lead
by Rebecca Pronsky and
featuring local artist Rod Alonzo, plus
southern belles Shannon Wurst 
(from Fayetteville, Arkansas) and Rebecca Loebe (from Atlanta,
Georgia).  The four     Shannon Wurst Small Rebecca Loebe songwriters will perform solo, each sharing a song,
then onto the next and so on, and back round again."

Brooklyn Songwriter's Exchange, Union Hall, 702 Union Street (just east
of 5th Avenue) Monday, July 20, 7:30PM doors, 8PM show, FREE

On Tuesday, Robbie Fulks and Jenny Scheinman return to Barbes for what
will your next to last chance of catching them together, probably
ever.  Here's what Robbie has to say about this:

Robbie Fulks Jennyscheinam Small "Gimme just one more last chance! Jenny Scheinman and I did the 'last' of our Barbes (9th St. and 6th Ave., Park Slope, Brooklyn NY) duo
series a couple weeks ago. Turns out we jumped the gun. The other day
as we were sitting at her apartment, staring morosely at each other,
separated only by a moldering bowl of granola and a heaving sack of
amniotic fluid, it came to us of a sudden — before long one of us will
be living in another town and the other toting a howling homunculus in
a papoose and probably done with music altogether, and in the meantime,
here we sit with hands under buttocks, scanning each others' distended
stomachs, adrift in pointless envy of Ryan Adams. Why not 'put our
hands to good use,' to quote Arturo Gatti's trophy bride?

"To
summarize: fiddle and guitar, very pretty singing music, hipster
nightspot, no cover, all remaining Tuesdays in July at 7PM."

Robbie Fulks and Jenny Scheinman, Barbes, 376 9th Street (just east of
6th Avenue), Tuesday, July 21, 7PM, No cover but $10 suggested donation.

 –Eliot Wagner

Smartmom: Teen Spirit’s Graduation

Smartmom_big8 Smartmom dressed carefully the morning of Teen Spirit’s high school
graduation. She put on her Spanks and a pretty blue and black patterned
dress paired with a smart J. Crew jacket. She wanted to look just
right. Not too middle aged, not too hip.

The Oh So Feisty One wore a dress she’d bought the day before at
4-Play, a stylish dress shop for tweens and teens in Park Slope.

“I bet I’m going to be more dressed up than Teen Spirit,” she told
Smartmom, looking absolutely scrumptious in a strappy floral dress.

“It doesn’t matter what he wears,” Smartmom told OSFO. “He’ll be in a cap and gown.”

But Smartmom hoped that Teen Spirit would don one of his
grandfather’s ties and a clean white shirt for the occasion. Even
Hepcat decided to dress up in one of his Hawaiian shirts that he saves
for special occasions.

It was, after all, a very special occasion. So special that the
family could barely contain its excitement. There were times when they
never thought they’d see this day. Teen Spirit’s high school career
wasn’t anxiety-free. There were twists and turns and more cliffhangers
than “The Perils of Pauline.”

After all was said and done, Teen Spirit was set to graduate from
the Institute for Collaborative Education on June 23 at the Great Hall
of Cooper Union — and Smartmom and Hepcat were proud.

When Smartmom got to Cooper Union, she saw ICE principal, John Pettatino.

“What are you doing here?” he said.

Her heart fluttered in panic until she realized that he was joking.
He quickly switched gears and gave Smartmom a big, warm hug. He’s big
on hugs. In fact, he’s famous for standing in front of ICE on East 16th
Street in Manhattan and welcoming the kids every morning.

Smartmom savored the atmosphere of the Great Hall, where Abraham
Lincoln addressed a crowd in 1860. Abe Lincoln, Teen Spirit’s
graduation — this was a historic place, no doubt about it.

She looked around for both her mother and her stepmother. Smartmom
was pleased that two of Teen Spirit’s three grandmothers were able to
attend this momentous event. Bro-in-law was also on hand, although
Diaper Diva was unable to be there due to a work commitment that she
couldn’t get out of.

Smartmom warned her relatives not to expect a typical graduation
because ICE is not your typical high school. A progressive school with
a creative approach to education, the staff is unusually passionate
about and dedicated to its students. And it’s just not your typical
“High School Musical” kind of place.

She also warned them that it might be long.

“Bring a book,” she told her mother.

Smartmom was surprised when she heard the strains of “Pomp and
Circumstance” as the graduating seniors made their way down the aisle.
Expecting something a bit more avant-garde, she thought back to her own
graduation from Walden, a small private school on the Upper West Side,
more than 30 years ago. The 30 seniors in her graduating class walked
down the aisle of the gymnasium to a recording of Papa John Creach
playing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” on the violin. That version of the
song still makes her cry. In lieu of a commencement speaker, she and
her fellow students were each allotted one minute to speak their minds.

That’s when Smartmom read from the last page of “The House at Pooh
Corner,” the part her Dad loved: “But wherever they go, and whatever
happens to them on the way, in that enchanted place on the top of the
forest, a little boy and his bear will always be playing.”

But Teen Spirit’s school out-Waldened Walden. When it was time to
give out the diplomas, ICE teachers spoke about every single student —
that’s 50 kids — for three-to-five minutes.

Teen Spirit was lucky that Roy Nathanson, the school’s superlative
music teacher, a jazz musician and the founder of the Jazz Passengers,
was chosen to speak about him.

“Who the hell did you think they’d get to talk about you?” Nathanson apparently told Teen Spirit after the graduation.

Nathanson talked about Teen Spirit’s strong identity as a singer,
songwriter, performer and musician. He called him “a scientist” in the
recording studio and said that he “knew more about that stuff than just
about anyone in the school.” He was proud that Teen Spirit had met all
his graduation requirements and managed to graduate on time. That means
that “you have the discipline to keep your car on the road.”

Smartmom got teary. But that’s what’s supposed to happen at your son’s high school graduation, right?

Smartmom watched incredulously as Teen Spirit in his black cap and
gown walked across the stage to receive a hug from Principal Pettatino,
a yellow rose from the assistant principal and an envelope from the
guidance counselor.

After the ceremony, Teen Spirit disappeared for a bit to hang out
with some friends. Later, they found him outside. He was already out of
his cap and gown and set to begin his life as a high school graduate.
And he was wearing a white button-down shirt and a tie. One of his
grandfather’s.

It was, indeed, a very special day.

Sunday Night: Roy Nathanson at Sycamore!

Roy Nathanson03-01 Roy Nathanson and Sean Sonderegger are playing a gig on Sunday, July 19 at Sycamore, a great newish bar on Cortelyou Road.

Nathanson, who is a co-founder of the Jazz Passengers, occupies a musical orbit that encompasses jazz, spoken word and new music. Roy on alto sax is not to be missed.

The Sycamore show is a double-bill featuring a stripped down version of Roy Nathanson's
Sotto Voce and Sean Sonderegger' s Warrior Circle will be performing some new originals as well
as old favorites. Here are the 'tails.

7:00 PM Roy Nathanson's Sotto Voce
Roy Nathanson-Alto Sax, Voice
Sam Bardfeld-Violin, Voice
Tim Kiah-Bass, Voice

8:00 PM
Sean Sonderegger' s Warrior Circle
Sean Sonderegger- Tenor Sax, Flute
Ezana Edwards-Trumpet
Isaac Darche-Guitar
Greg Chudzick-Bass
Alex Wyatt-Drums

Sycamore: 1118 Cortelyou Road,  Brooklyn, NY 11218

Tidbits: City Council and Public Advocate

CITY COUNCIL

The Biv, that is, Doug Biviano, one of the 33s, accuses candidate Stephen Levin of backroom dealing in an email press release sent out today from his press office.

"Doug Biviano’s City Council campaign took an
important step forward today, as the deadline to challenge ballot petitions
passed. With this important procedural hurdle in his rearview mirror, “The Biv”
continues his progressive campaign to improve our public schools, promote responsible
real estate development, build infrastructure and express transit capacity,
create environmentally sustainable communities, and make healthcare affordable
and uniformly accessible for every New Yorker. 

At the same time, political
opponent Steve Levin, with support from Albany politicians, has challenged two
other potential candidates. Rather than encourage an open, democratic debate
and election, Levin instead is playing politics as usual.

“I’m disappointed that Levin is
resorting to the strong-arm tactics and backroom dealing that has defined the
broken politics in our City Council and up in Albany,” said Biviano. “These
challenges show that he is more concerned with serving the narrow political
agenda of his bankrollers than the communities of the 33rd
District.  We don’t need another puppet in office.”  

Jo Anne Simon, one of the 33s, wrote her supporters a big thank you note for the $100,000 in contributions she received and the 3,000 (approx.) petition sigs. She says she didn't take any developer money.

Because of you, we were able to surpass our goal and submitted nearly four times the amount of signatures required.

Because of you,
we have raised over $100,000 dollars. We are the first in our race to
cross that milestone and we did it without taking money from developers.

Mole 33, who seems to really have it in for Brad Lander has a piece in the Daily Gazette witht he terribly misleading headline "Ratner Puts a Downpayment on Brad Lander" He the

PUBLIC ADVOCATE

There's a Public Advocates' candidate's forum on July 27th at 7:30 sponsored by Brown Memorial Baptist and Brooklyn for Barack.

 Each candidate will remain for
the full 90-minute program.  3 of the 4 candidates are confirmed to
attend.

WHO:    City Council Member Bill de Blasio
              City Council Member Eric Gioia
              Attorney Norman Siegel
              Moderator Jonathan Hicks
              Reverend Clinton M. Miller
              Brown Memorial Baptist Church
              Brooklyn for Barack

WHAT: Public Advocate Candidates Forum

WHEN:  Monday, July 27th, 7:00-8:30pm

WHERE: Brown Memorial Baptist Church, 484 Washington  Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11216
               (Entrance on Gates Ave between Washington and Waverly)
               (Subway: C,G toClinton/Washington)

 

Richard Grayson Goes Back in Time to the Summer of ’69

On Thursday, Richard Grayson went to the Seaside Summer Concert Series at Asser Levy/Seaside Park and came back with a fascinating report and a reminiscence about his summer of 1969. The rest with pictures is at his blog, DUMBO Books of Brooklyn.

Tonight we went to Coney Island for the inaugural event in the Seaside Summer Concert Series at Asser Levy/Seaside Park and went back in time to when we turned 18 in the summer of '69.

We joined thousands of the borough's other ex-rockers and alter kockers
for Brooklyn's Salute to the fortieth anniversary of Woodstock, with
Creedence Clearwater Revisited, John Sebastian, and Mountain featuring
Leslie West and Corky Lang.

Our friends Linda and Howie drove up to go to Woodstock with some pals, but if we remember correctly, they were freaked out by the traffic on the Quickway and so appalled by the mud and lack of bathrooms, they left after the first day.

In the fall of 1969, we were in group therapy sessions run by our psychiatrist, Dr. Abbott Lippman, on Albemarle Road off Coney Island Avenue. John, one of the kids in the group had been to Woodstock, and whenever there were long silences in group therapy or someone said something Dr. Lippman thought was irrelevant or self-deluding, he'd turn to John and say, "So, John, was there much mud at Woodstock?"

Sunday: Join the Walk to Bring Liberty Home to Brooklyn

Debi Ryan, manager of Vox Pop, just wrote in to say that the cafe in conjunction with One If By Land, Two If By Sea
restaurant in Manhattan, will be hosting Bringing Liberty Home on
Sunday, July 19, 2009 at 1:00 pm.  We will assemble at 17 Barrow
Street, at the One If By Land, Two If By Sea restaurant. I won't be in town but I'd love to be there. Luckily OTBKB Witness photographer Tom Martinez will be on hand to snap photos.

The
purpose of this event is to pick up the Statue of Liberty that has been
given to Vox Pop from One If By Land, Two If By Sea restaurant to
replace Vox Pop’s stolen statue.  The 8 foot replica of Lady Liberty
will be placed on a specially made dolly and walked from One If By
Land, Two If By Sea located at 17 Barrow Street, through lower
Manhattan and over the Brooklyn Bridge.  This walk will symbolize the
bridge between the two restaurants, the bridge between the two
boroughs, the bridge between people working together for a common cause.

The
original 8-foot fiberglass replica mysteriously vanished from the front
outdoor garden of Vox Pop Café, 1022 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn where it
had resided for years, in the wee hours of the morning on June 21.

On
July 4th it turned up in a minute-long clip posted on YouTube showing a
faceless vandal destroying the statue and the slogans “We Don’t Want
Your Freedom” and "Death to America."

The
footage shows a blindfolded Lady Liberty being brutally decapitated
with a saw and then smashed.  The head is then held up to the camera,
reminiscent of real terrorist videos.  The Police are investigating the
video, which has been reposted multiple times and drawn more than
100,000 hits.

Media
coverage of the theft and debasement of the statue caught the attention
of Tom Kirk, floor manager of One If By Land, Two If By Sea, the
restaurant located in the heart of The West Village.  The restaurant
was so moved they offered their Lady Liberty statue as a replacement. 
Recognizing that we are all in this together, they took this
opportunity to make this generous gesture of support.  It is this
connection and support that is being celebrated.

Everyone
is invited to join us at this great event to Bring Liberty Home.  Take
a beautiful 2.5 mile walk through the village and across the Brooklyn
Bridge and be part of this celebration of community.


OTBKB Music: Siren Fest in Coney Island

Siren2009-slice1 The big deal this weekend in Brooklyn is Siren Fest (officially the Siren Music Festival) in Coney Island,
which the Village Voice has been producing since 2001. There are 14
bands on two stages; here's the schedule:

Main Stage (West 10th Street and The Boardwalk)

    1:00 Tiny Masters of Today
    2:00 Micachu & The Shapes
    3:00 Japandroids
    4:00 Frightened Rabbit
    5:00 Grand Duchy
    6:00 The Raveonettes
    7:30 Built To Spill

    DJ between sets: Justine D

Stillwell Stage (Stillwell Avenue and The Boardwalk)

    1:30 The Blue Van
    2:30 Bear Hands
    3:30 Thee Oh Sees
    4:30 Future of the Left
    5:30 A Place To Bury Strangers
    6:30 monotonix
    8:00 Spank Rock

    DJ between sets: Deadheat DJs

Although I haven't seen The Raveonettes live, I really liked their last
album (and just for the record, even though the Raveonettes' guitarist
and I have the same last name, we're not related).  And when I ran into
my high school classmate and music critic Billy Altman in Austin this
past March, he had just seen Brooklyn's Tiny Master of Today and was
quite enthused about them.

Siren Music Festival, Coney Island: D,F,N or Q Trains to Stillwell Avenue or F or Q Trains to W. 8th Street; 1-9 PM, Free

 –Eliot Wagner

20th Anniversary in Williamsburg: Dressler and K&M Bar

1 Love is sweet at 20.

My sister suggested we try Dressler on Broadway in Williamsburg for our anniversary dinner and it was a great idea. The restaurant (pictured left) has an elegantly lush decor and is festive without being overly formal. The service is excellent and the food: absolutely wonderful. Especially the Warm Artichoke Heart Salad with fresh cranberry beans, arugula, parmesan and vinagrette.

We didn't try it but they have a tasting menu which is a great deal at $45 for five courses from Monday to Thursday.

I ordered the Grilled Hangar Steak and Braised Short Rib with creamed spinach and potatoes. Hugh had the Halibut, also a great choice with heirloom tomatoes, Kalamata olives and pine nuts but we shared fifty fifty.

We even had cocktails. I had the best Cosmopolitan I've ever had and Hugh thoroughly enjoyed his martini which came with 4 green olives.

The dessert was also excellent. Hugh said his black pepper pound cake with berries was like a great piece of music.

Kandm After dinner walking up Bedford Avenue to get the L train I remembered this great bar I went to the night of the New Kings Democrats candidates forum. So we stopped into the K&M Bar on North 8th and Roebling Streeton, watched Betty Boop movies projected on the back wall, drank Sailor Jerry's rum and listened to a great mix of funk music.

Hugh and I toasted each other. Continually. I asked him for the secret to a longtime marriage.

"Choose carefully," he said ever so wisely.

Tidbits: Mayoral and City Council

MAYORAL:

City Comptroller Bill C. Thompson was mentioned by President Obama during his speech at the NAACP centennial in NYC yesterday: 

“"We know that even as our economic crisis batters Americans of all
races, African Americans are out of work more than just about anyone
else – a gap that’s widening here in New York City, as detailed in a
report this week by Comptroller Bill Thompson."

Rev. Billy Talen,  the Green Party candidate for mayor, is outraged that the Working Families Party didn't include him in their mayoral forum along with candidates Mike Bloomberg, Tony Avella and Bill C. Thompson on July 2nd. Tallen had this to say:

There is one mother of all issues. Democracy is it. Bloomberg
arranged with his money to flout public votes for term limits and is
now running against Democracy itself. His corruption of our right to
free elections will be judged harshly in history, as a modern Tammany
Hall. We must oppose his $90 million campaign not just to oppose his
leadership as a person, but to show future generations that we had the
guts and energy to rise up against big money’s imitation of democracy.

CITY COUNCIL:

The Democratic petitioning period is now over and the candidates are kvelling about  the number of signatures they were able to gather.

I heard from a pal on Seventh Avenue that Josh Skaller, one of the 39ers has 10,000 signatures on his ballot petition. Here from Mole 333 in Gotham Gazette, a Skaller supporter: Skaller running for City Council in the 39th district in Brooklyn, claims more
than 10,000 signatures (he needed a minimum of about 1000 with about
3-5000 to play it safe) and more than $161,000 fundraising (more than
enough to qualify for public matching funds).

Gary Reilly, also one of the 39ers wrote to say that "with the aid of a volunteers and staff I collected the last of
our petitions and bound them for delivery to the Board of Elections.
 The final tally was 1,389 signatures, or 50% more than the required
900.

He also said that he's thrilled because "my
plea for help was met with such an amazing response that I actually
felt like George Bailey at the end of my favorite film, It's A
Wonderful Life.  Thanks to your generous support we raised the
necessary contributions to qualify for city matching funds of $39,000.
 Amazing!  I was beaming when I turned in my paperwork to the Campaign
Finance Board yesterday."

You gotta love Gary!

Also according to Mole 333 in the Gotham Gazette, Ken Diamondstone, one of the 33s, has 5,000 sigs. "We collected more than 5,000 signatures without institutional support
or backing from the big political clubs or party insiders," said
Diamondstone, a Democrat from Boerum Hill…"

Brad Lander turns 40! Well, he turned 40 on July 8th and his parents wrote a sweet note on Lander's website:

Forty years ago this month, as the nation prepared for the launch of
Apollo 11, there was excitement in the Lander household as well, as our
son Brad was born on July 8th, 1969.

We worked hard to raise our kids with some basic values: Treat
everyone fairly.  Read a lot, study hard, and ask a lot of questions. 
Be a good listener.  Try to bring a bit more kindness and opportunity
into the world.  

We hoped these values were embodied in our own lives as well.  At
the time, David was the director of Legal Services of Eastern Missouri,
helping tenants facing gas shutoffs and family farmers facing
foreclosure.  Carole was a public school teacher (she later went on to
a career as an elementary school guidance counselor).  

Check out:  "A Liberal Operator Runs Against the Brooklyn Machine", an informative profile of Evan Thies, one of the 33s, in the Politicker

OTBKB Trivia: We Have a Winner!

Triva Shot And the answer is: The 36th Street R Train Station.

The winner is: BVIB (Best View in Brooklyn)

BVIB had this to say: "It's been a while since I've been in that station since I'm a bus and local train rider now."

Congrats BVIB. Please email your address to me at louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com so that I can send you your $5 gift certificate to Snice.

Photo by Tom Martinez

Today is our 20th Wedding Anniversary: Reception

486773380_FwJX9-L This photo by Jamie Livingston was snapped during our wedding reception at the Lotos Club in Manhattan. I am wearing my pretty off-the-shoulder wedding dress, actually a debutantes' dress by Victor Costa from Bergdorf Goodman. Hugh is wearing the double-breasted tuxedo his dad wore to his own wedding. We were married by Rabbi Bert Sigal, the inter-faith rabbi in front of a group of 75 family and friends. Singer Amy Burton and pianist John Musto played music by Schumann during the ceremony. An African umbira player serenaded guests quietly during cocktails. Joel Forrester played his very angular piano jazz during dinner. Later guests danced to the exuberant sound of a Mexican polka trio.

It was a truly great summer night 20 years ago.

Today is our 20th Wedding Anniversary: Emergency Room

 486773374_ydNVK-L-1 

This is a picture of us snapped by Jamie Livingston the night before our wedding (July 15, 1989). From left: Betsy, Louise, Teddy and Hugh. It is the middle of the night and we are in the
Emergency Room of Beth Israel Hospital because Hugh was in a car
accident two days before and he thought that "maybe my neck is
broken."  Pre-marital jitters?

He attended the wedding in a neck brace.

NYC Food Banks Need Food: Help Babeland and Others

The cupboards are close to empty at many food banks around the city because in these economic times the need is greater than ever and contributions are down. Babeland is doing a food drive. I also heard that the Church of the Gethsemane in Park Slope is in need of canned goods and other food items. Here's what Babeland is up to.

For 25 years Food Bank For New York City has been the city’s major
hunger-relief organization by procuring and distributing food to a
network of approximately 1,000 food assistance programs citywide that
help to feed the approximately 4 million New Yorkers in need. Babeland
is teaming up with neighboring retailers to help out and reward your
effort! Bring 5 or more cans of food to any Babeland store July 17-19
during our Semi-Annual Sale and get up to 25% off everything at
Babeland as well as discounts and deals at neighboring retailers like Ed Hardy, Dermalogica, Lazaro, Montauk Sofa, Vivienne Tam, and Antique Garage in SoHo and The Dressing Room, Roni-Sue’s Chocolates, 20 Peacocks and Tropical Salon
on the Lower East Side. In Brooklyn, take your philanthropy to the
Bergen Street Stoop Sale to get 25% off at Babeland and 20% off at Bump, Eponymy, Ride Brooklyn, Private Stock and Bergen Street Comics and enjoy select discounts on food and drinks at Fish and Sip, Melt and Organic Heights.




Even without a donation, you can shop Babeland’s Sale and enjoy 20%
savings on everything in the store! But the more you give, the more you
get off.


 


For complete details on participating businesses, visit babeland.com/summersale.

New Statue of Liberty Donated to Vox Pop by West Village Restaurant

Soon there will be a new Statue of Liberty gracing the front yard of Vox Pop. Here's a note from Vox Pop manager Debi Ryan:

At
last some wonderful news about the Statue of Liberty.  While many
offers have come in from all over to replace our statue in one form or
another, we have decided to accept the Statue that resided in the
garden of the Village restaurant, One If By Land Two If By Sea (www.oneifbyland.com) located at 17 Barrow Street in NYC.  It was the support of one restaurant to another that resonated so strongly.


We
are currently working out the details to have our new Lady transported
here to Cortelyou Road and building the right base to display her
properly and keep her secure.  We are also making plans to refit her
with a solar powered torch so that she can once again illuminate our
neighborhood and serve as a beacon for freedom and democracy.


As
soon as we have an exact date, I will let you all know.  We plan to
hold a rally of unity to welcome her to her new home.  This is truly a
cause for both reflection and celebration and any and all input is
welcome and encouraged.


Our sincerest thanks to everyone for your ongoing support and love during this long and interesting journey.


So Much To Do This Summer Night: Newman/MacLaine, Philharmonic, Irondale Benefit

What-A-Way-To-Go-01 For starters: Movies under the stars with Brooklyn Film Works. Tonight they're presenting a film that Hugh just loves. It's called What a Way to Go directed by J. Lee Thompson. With Shirley MacLaine, Paul Newman, Robert Mitchum It's part of their Downturns & Destiny film series and it's al fresco in JJ Byrne/Washington Park tonight beginning at 8:30.

Parks_alan2_0809 To complicate matters: the New York Philharmonic is in Prospect Park this evening. Tonight Alan Gilbert conducts: Mozart Symphony No. 41, Jupitar and Mozart Symphony No. 7. But can you bring your dog?

An OTBKB reader wrote in with this query:
Do you know if I can take my small dog to the NY Philharmonic in Prospect Park
tonight?  I used to live in Manhattan and loved going to the Central Park
version where I'd bring my dog and a bottle of wine, but wanted to find out if
that was also true in Prospect Park tonight.  Any insight?

SummerBash_sponsors And to really make this a difficult choice: there's also a Mid-Summer Evening's Bash in Fort Greene, a joint benefit for the Irondale Ensemble Project and Theater for a New Audience's Brooklyn's Dreamers at Irondale on 35 South Oxford Street at Lafayette from 6:30 until 10 p.m. It should be one heck of a fun party for two VERY worthy and fabulous institutions. Enlarge poster to your left for more details.

Breakfast-of-Candidates: Comptroller Bill C. Thompson (Running for Mayor)

09thompson.190 My breakfast-of-candidates (BOC) with Bill Thompson, the NYC Comptroller who is running for mayor, was more like a mid-day series of disjointed phone calls than a friendly breakfast at a divey Brooklyn coffee shop. Still, I appreciated the time he took to talk to me on the phone. 

The comptroller/mayoral candidate was scheduled to call me at 10 am on Saturday morning. I was told that he'd be calling from a car on the way to Brooklyn Borough Hall for the kickoff to his 5 Borough Tour. At 10 am I sipped coffee at my desk in the dining room with a sharpened pencil, a couple of working pnes and a digital sound recorder and waited for his call.

And waited reciting my mantra: the candidate is always late. 

It was closer to 10:30 when the candidate called and I launched into my usual line of BOC opening questions about birth, childhood and school days. This seems to loosen up the candidates—and the reporter—and creates an easy rapport.

"Hey, you're Brooklyn-born, aren't you?" I asked right off the bat.

"I've lived in Brooklyn all my life," Thompson told me.

Born in 1953, Thompson grew up in Bedford-Stuyvesant. His mother was a Chicago-born public school teacher and his dad, who is from St. Kitts, was an attorney who later became the first African American state senator and later an Appellate Court judge.

Thompson attended PS 161 in Crown Heights and Hudde Junior High School and grew up in a 4-story brownstone on Vanderbilt Avenue that was purchased by his grandparents in 1939.

A self-described average kid who did "well enough in school", Thompson's parents and grandparents placed a high value on "education, working hard and earning the things you get. 'How did you do in school today?' That was always the question. They were very focused on achievement," he told me.

Thompson attended Tufts University where he majored in political science. "I wasn't the greatest college student," he told me. For him, the  most important aspect of his college experience was the opportunity "to meet people from all over the world and other backgrounds."

At Tufts, he says, he also learned how to take care of himself. In college he realized that "if you make the wrong choices, you pay."

Straight out of college, Thompson was hired to work on the congressional campaign of Fred Richmond and lived in various apartment in Park Slope (on 6th Avenue between Lincoln and St. Johns and on Carroll Street between 7th and 8th Avenues), which he describes as "a great place to live." 

Thompson eventually served as Congressman Richmond's chief of staff. It was this job that convinced him that he wanted to work in politics. "I liked constituent relations, policy, and dealing with health issues."

Somewhere in this chronology,  Thompson got married and had a daughter, now 30, who attended The Berkeley Carroll School, a private school in Park Slope, where she was "a lifer."  He also bought a brownstone on Vanderbilt and Prospect Place. He has since remarried and now has two stepchildren: 11-year old twins.

In 1983 Thompson became Deputy Borough President for Howard Golden. "I'm very proud of the work we did—if I do pat myself on the back,"  he told me. "It was important time for Brooklyn. I'm proud of the development of Metrotech, new housing, the professional focus. The Borough President's office had more authority then in terms of city-wide budget, land use and development contracts."

After ten years in the Borough President's office, Thompson went into the private financial sector "to do something different but I still had my hands in municipal finance." He says that another reason he left the Borough President office was because it was stripped of its power in the 1990's.

But public service beckoned. In March 1996 Thompson became head of the Board of Education (BOE), a part- time position, and stayed until 2001. Certainly it's a dubious distinction to be chairman of a famously dysfunctional boards. But Thompson manages to sing the praises of his time there. "There are many generalizations about how dysfunctional the BOE was," he told me. 

"During my time there: we got rid of decentralization that had been going on from 1960-1996. Now that was totally dysfunctional. Local boards selected principals, budgets, everything. The chancellor basically ran the high schools. Decentralization had to end; what we did was a pre-cursor to mayoral control, which I believe in."

In 2001, Thompson won the comptroller's seat and has been there ever since. He ran as a "fiscal activist" and was sworn in as the city's first black comptroller on January 1, 2002, by his own father.

Education?

At this point in the conversation I could tell that we were running out of time andI quickly asked him to elaborate on his education plan:

He listed his top five factors that contribute to a good school

Thompson: 1. The principal; 2. Teacher collaboration; 3. A collaborative environment; 4. A welcoming environment for parents and parental involvement; 5. Nutrition for kids. 

Mayoral Control of the School?

 "I support it but it  needs to be changed. The parents have been shut out and that's a problem. There needs to be better oversight over contracts and there's a need for independent information gathering about test scores," he told me. 

When I asked Thompson if he thought an educator should be the Chancellor he said: "I would get rid of Klein. People confuse structure with education. There needs to be an educational vision.”

Thompson did say that Bloomberg and Klein have created change and that's a good thing with one caveat: "They benefited from great press. Their "success" speaks more to how they sold this. Math scores for instance. The tests are easier. The NAEP (Nation Assessment of Educational Progress) scores have been flat for four years." 

At this point in our conversation, Thompson, who is extremely friendly, smart, polite and easy to talk to, told me that he had to get out of the car. "I'll call you back in an hour. At 12:30 or so." 

I waited around for a couple of hours and eventually concluded that he'd gotten busy too busy to call.  A member of his campaign staff emailed me a day later to say that the candidate would call back at 4 p.m. on Monday.

Two days later

"Sorry that one hour turned into three days," Thompson told me by way of hello. Knowing that our time was limited I jumped right in.

What makes a great mayor?

"A great mayor understands New York and its people. He has a  vision of what the city should be. But it’s about understanding the city," Thompson said.

Thompson's Favorite NYC Mayor?

"You need to pick pieces or part of mayors. Ed Koch was a great mayor during a very difficult time. His spirit: he was a great leader and had some really creative ideas.

"David Dinkins was great because of his humanity.

"Giuliani, not for his humanity. But he's remembered for crime reduction and proving that government can work.

And Bloomberg?

"Bloomberg did positive things during his first term. Restoring confidence after 9/11, he helped to calm things and convince people and businesses not to move out of the city. But I don’t think Mike understands the people and what they do on a regular basis, their struggles. There's a gap in his understanding.

 "For instance the MTA fare increases. He said he felt sorry for the riders but also sorry for the MTA.

"The minimum wage increase. He said no-one in the city make minimum wage. But 20% of the people in this city earn minimum wage.  He is not understanding the life of the people here."

Does Thompson understand the people?

Thompson says he understands ordinary New Yorkers. I thought about his brownstone in Prospect Heights and the fact that his daughter was a lifer at Berkeley Carroll. He's had well-paying jobs in city government and even a stint in the private financial sector.

 "I’ve gone through a lot of struggles. This is my home. I'm a native New Yorker," he told me. He didn't elaborate on this and I let it slip (dang) but he did go on:

"Money helps to separate Bloomberg from the people. That much money creates a different outlook. When Obama came to the city and it cost $400,000 Bloomberg said: "'that’s not a lot of money.' But it is a lot of money."

Unemployment among African Americans?

I asked Thompson to comment on the Bureau of Labor statistics that showed an unusually high rate among African Americans. It was the comptrollers office that brought this analysis to the attention of the New York Times in a press release.

"It's frightening when you look at rate of increase. Last year it was 5.7% now it’s 14.7% among African Americans. The Hispanic unemployment rate is 9.3%. We can't have this kind of inequality. At this rate there will be 400,000 African Americans unemployed by 2010.

I asked Thompson if this will be top priority if he becomes mayor. He hedged a bit but then said: "We have to take what we have: job training, upgrading of skills, programs we have but they’re not tied together." Rather than talk about ideas and real solutions, Thompson seemed more comfortable with broad statements: "You can’t have a city where 14.7% of the population is unemployed. This goes to issues of opportunity and inequality. There needs to be opportunity for all New Yorkers.

Campaign Finance?

Skipping around, I asked Thompson to respond to Bloomberg's comment during the Working Families Party forum that "There is no such thing as a totally fair campaign: 

"That was just an attempt to excuse the $115 million he is spending on this campaign," Thompson told me clearly exasperated by the disparity between his spending and what the mayor can afford. "Is it his money? Yes. Did he earn the money? Yes. But it affects the structure of the campaign. Finance distorts things dramatically. It pollutes government. We have campaign finance laws so that government isn’t just for rich people," Thompson said. 

Race, class and electoral politics?

This seemed a natural segue into issues of race and class. Thompson seemed to waver.

"You can govern fairly, everyone brings a separate outlook to the table. All of our backgrounds and what we've experienced help to craft how we see things," he told me.

I knew we were running out of time and I still had a long list of issues of concern to Brooklynites. But first I wanted to k
now: What does the Democratic Party stand for?

"It stands for working people, middle class Americans. There is a huge contrast between Democrats and republicans. That said, the party is not monolithic and there’s a great deal of variation."

Issues of Concern to Brooklyn

I must say, I found his answers to Brooklyn-specific questions to be a bit lackluster. And that surprised me. Or maybe it shouldn't have. He's been endorsed by all the Democratic clubs from Greenpoint to Coney Island and maybe he wants to remain vague on issues that Brooklynites are passionate about to stay out of the fray.

Atlantic Yards?

" I did initially support it. I have real concerns now. I will continue to re-evaluate it, meet with individuals, have a conversation. I plan to sit down to talk and evaluate," he said. 

My reaction: You lived in Prospect Heights and initially supported the Atlantic Yards???? Yikes. And why aren't you more outraged now? Many Brooklyn Democrats are. 

What about Superfund for the Gowanus?

At first I think he misunderstood my question.

"I would be collaborative. Listen to residents rather than tell them what the Gowanus area should be. It has been discussed for decades. Should it be open space, commercial, housing…" he said.

Then he made a correction:

"Oh you’re talking about Superfund. The mayor is supporting an alternative plan to try to have more control, to do it in a faster period of time. I would work in conjunction with the community and I'm not as concerned about Superfund stigma. I would look for input from community.

My reaction: He's not that familiar with the issue.

Community based development?

"I like to talk about smart growth, fair growth. Don’t destroy communities, involve them in planning. The last few years there has been a top down approach. I would work with the community to see how we should approach development.

My reaction: Vague answer without much passion for the idea.

Vision for Coney Island?

"What the people want there is affordable housing. The developers are not talking to the community. City Councilman Recchio is trying to involve the community. It's important to maintain flavor and bring people in. But what they want is affordable housing.

My reaction: Affordable housing is not the only issue on the table in Coney Island. What about the hotels? The recreation areas? What about the mayor's plan, the developer's plan, the Municipal Arts Society plan? What about the history of Coney Island?

Condos for Affordable Housing?

"I think the affordable housing for luxury condos equation needs to be rethought. The problem is that affordable housing is treated as an afterthought.

My reaction: Affordable housing treated as an afterthought is a good line.

Small Business?

In answer to this question, I sensed a bit more passion. Thompson told me that one of the things he loves about Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope are the small shops. "I used to love to go to a bread shop on Court Street," he said. I wondered if it was Caputos but I forgot to ask. I have the feeling that a small business platform may be in the works for the campaign.

"I've been meeting with small business people over a period of time to get their opinions. Just had a meeting today. We discussed tax abatements, retail retention zone, a number of ideas. How to protect what is great about our neighborhoods is important. I want to collect ideas going forward and have a round table.

Big Ideas?

I knew we were just about out of time. I asked if he had any big ideas to add sparkle to his campaign. His answer was disappointing and lackluster.

 "We have a few ideas rolling out over the next few weeks in the areas of small business, job creation, education."

My reaction: His "I'll get back to you" answer was disappointing.

City Budget?

I asked Thompson how bad the city budget really is. Critics of Bloomberg are saying that this year's budget was a pre-election Band Aid solution; the cuts weren't so bad but trouble lies ahead…

"Next year will be much worse. After the election they'll be closing down senior centers, childcare vouchers will be reduced and more," Thompson said. 

My reaction: The fact that he said "they'll be closing down senior centers" suggests that Thompson doesn't think he's going to be the mayor. That said, Thompson suggests that Bloomberg is waiting until after the election to make the cuts. This is a big issue for Thompson and one that he can potentially be passionate about.

And what about reform of the City Council?

"The City Council has lost its independence. It isn't an independent institution. Every mayor wants to work with the City Council…(he trailed off).

My reaction: No talk of reform to the way the City Council works was disappointing.

How are you framing your concerns to the public?

"When you ask New Yorkers if their future is brighter than before they say no. I will make them aware of the flaws in the city: the rise in homelessness, unemployment,

And Finally: Overturning of term limits?

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. The candidate 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 the issues that matter to New Yorkers.

And the Neighborhood Acheievement Award Goes to: Heart of Brooklyn

Heart of Brooklyn, a partnership of the leading cultural institutions located near
Grand Army Plaza, including Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn
Children’s Museum, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn Public Library, Prospect
Park, and Prospect Park Zoo just won a nice award from NYC.

The mission of this group is to encourage tourism and learning by making its
world-class collections and historic treasures more visible and
accessible.


Yesterday they were awarded t
he 2009 Neighborhood Acheivement Award from the NYC Department of Small Business Services in the partnership category.

OTBKB sends its most hearty congratulations to Heart of Brooklyn.

The award was presented by Mayor Bloomberg and Robert Walsh, Commissioner, NYC Small Business Services, at Gracie Mansion. Heart of Brooklyn's efforts on Washington and Vanderbilt Avenue were specifically cited:

  • Reformation of a Washington Avenue-Prospect Heights merchants association
  • Business attraction
  • District marketing and holiday lighting
  • Publication of Wash Ave, a bi-monthly newsletter highlighting the businesses and events along Washington Avenue
  • Participation in NYC Clean Streets and streetscape beautification
  • Publication, distribution and marketing of the Extraordinary Places in the Heart of Brooklyn coupon booklet