All posts by louise crawford

July 8: End of Superfund Comment Period

Tomorrow is the end of the Superfund comment period. That means if you haven't weighed in at the EPA website it's time to do so. This was sent to me by CORD, the Coalition of Respectful Development, an activist group in Carroll Gardens that is in favor of Superfund for the clean up of the Gowanus Canal.

The Sunday edition of the Daily News (7/5/2009) featured an article on
the Gowanus Canal clean up entitled, "Mud Flies over Gowanus" by Erin
Durkin (page 30).
 
It began with:  "It's the battle for the Gowanus Canal."
 
Federal Superfund Director Walter Mugdan was quoted as saying: "I"ve never seen a campaign like this ever, anywhere."
 
Further, "I've never heard of one anywhere."
 
As
CORD has been posting, the Bloomberg administration has been stepping
up "anti-Superfund status" efforts in the past two weeks along
with with a weak, and ill-conceived clean up plan that will ultimately
cost the cash strapped NYC tax payers rather than the polluters who
will be rewarded rather than punished.  (The EPA will demand that the
polluters pay).
 
PLEASE write to the EPA and tell them how you
feel about the Gowanus Canal getting Superfund status.  At CORD, we
feel that this is by far the best thing that has happened to Carroll
Gardens in a long time. There are just two more days until the last
public comments will be accepted by the EPA.
 
As we wrote at
our blog last Friday: The City is sending their comments and their
suggestions to the EPA. You should send yours. Please join us and
proudly tell the EPA, “SUPERFUND ME!”

We
all have the right, no, the RESPONSIBILITY, to demand that our
environment be as healthy as possible! Superfund designation provides
the will, the means ,the tools and the experience to make this a
reality.

If you have
not already done so, please go to. The comment period has been extended
to July 8th. For instructions to submit comments go to http://www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/npl/pubcom.htm or contact Dennis Munhall, Region 2 NPL Coordinator at (212) 637-4343 or munhall.dennis@epa.gov Note Docket #EPA-HQ-SFUND-2009-0063

 

Madarts: New Gallery Space on 5th Avenue and 10th Street

Pic On
Wednesday, July 8th, Madarts Studios will celebrate the grand opening of their new Park Slope art gallery with the
exhibition: INTRO.  All forty artists of Madarts are featured in the exhibition to christen their new
permanent gallery in the heart of Park Slope: 461 5th Avenue (right on
the corner 5th Ave. and 10th Street).

At the exhibition, which opens at 6 pm will continue with a "meet the artists" after-party at Commonwealth Bar just down the street at 5th Ave. and
12th St. 

INTRO gallery hours will be Thursdays through Sundays from noon to 6pm, closing Sunday, August 9th.

 For
six years running Madarts Studios has put on shows in the giant
warehouse of art studios just south of their new gallery, which is an airy new gallery venue at Fifth Avenue and 10th Street.

Painting by Madarts artist Rebecca Aidlin

Robin’s Nest: A Teeny, Tiny Shop in the Laundromat

Hugh and I were walking down Seventh Avenue after the Breakfast-of-Candidates interview with Tony Avella when we saw something akin to a stoop sale in front of the Laundromat near 4th Street. 

On closer look, I saw that it was a new shop within a shop at the Laundromat that spills out neatly onto the sidewalk.DSC04053

Owner Robbin Farrell teaches Bikram Yoga at two Park Slope studios. A former Peace Corps volunteer she's a well-travelled collector who is selling (or "releasing" as she calls it) merchandise from her trips to Niger, Jamaica, and the Marshall Islands ( where she taught and developed yoga curriculum for the past two years).

Her shop, Robin's Nest, features a various and sundry collection of merchandise, including clothing, pottery, leather bags and more.

"I will be here as long as I'm able in this economy. Hopefully things can work…I'm starting with this nice phase and will transition into yoga merchandise. Releasing things from the past and transition into the future…That's the nesting idea, the image, the logo, three little eggs that will grow," Farrell told me. 

"I am also a longtime Park Sloper. Worked my way through college on 7th Avenue at an art supply store…the one under the drips," she said. 

I Want to Interview William C. Thompson (The Stealth Candidate)

DSC03990

This morning I met with Tony Avella at Donuts Coffee Shop, one of my favorite spots in the Slope. He's running against William C. Thompson in the Democratic mayoral primary on September 15th. During our Breakfast-of-Candidates interview, we talked about this article in the Times' today:

He is rarely on television. He has not begun to advertise. He is far behind in the polls, yet seems in no rush to get going.

The all-but-invisible mayoral candidacy of William C. Thompson Jr., the city’s comptroller, is baffling even to those who wish to see him elected. He has raised $5 million but has been so low key, some Democrats wonder if he is actually running.

And often, when Mr. Thompson travels, he hears the same question: Where have you been?

The incumbent, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, is everywhere: on television, with a $12 million barrage of ads touting his re-election bid; in mailboxes, with a constant stream of glossy literature; and online, with ads popping up on Web sites from Facebook to local blogs.

A woman approached Mr. Thompson in the Bronx not long ago and asked if she would be receiving campaign literature from him.

"Not anytime soon,” he said.

Now I really want to interview him for my Breakfast-of-Candidates series. I've been in touch and his campaign people say he's interested…

Register to Vote So You Can Vote on September 15th and November 3rd

Here's some info from the League of Women Voters about registering for the upcoming election:

You can register to vote at any time during the year, but the last day to register for the September 15, 2009 primary election is August 21, 2009; and the last day to register for the November 3, 2009
general election is October 9, 2009.

To vote you must be
a U. S. citizen, a resident of New York City for 30 days by Election
Day, 18 years of age by Election Day, and you must be registered.

You can register in
person, or mail your completed Registration Form. Your registration is
permanent unless you move, change your name, or have not voted for 5
years. You may register at your borough Board of Elections (or any
agency participating in the National Voter Registration Act) on any
business day throughout the year. Forms are available from your borough
Board of Elections (see addresses below), town and city hall, post
office, political parties, various state offices, and the League of
Women Voters. Click here to print a blank Registration Form. If you are registering for the first time you must provide a valid photo ID.

Green Party Ballot Petitioning Begins July 7

_MR17823 Supporters of Green Party City Council candidate David Pechefsky will be all over the 39th City Council district in an effort to get the 2500 signatures needed to get Pechefsky's name on the ballot.

If you haven't already signed one of the Democratic petitions and you want to see the Green Party on general election ballot, sign Pechefsky's petition.

You can only sign one petition.

Your signature on the petition doesn't mean that you have to vote for Pechefsky in the general election (although you are more than welcome to do so).

Pechefsky's name will not be on the primary ballot on September 15th because that election is for the Conservative,
Democratic, Independence, Republican, Working Families parties.

OTBKB Music: Sydney Wayser at City Winery Monday Night

Sydney Wasyer320 Most people just describe Brooklyn's Sydney Wayser as indie or
indie-pop.  That mainly tells you what she doesn't sound like
(mainstream music).  So I'll try to describe her music for you. 
Sydney's main instrument is piano and her band consists of electric
guitar, upright bass, drums and toys (toy piano, toy xylophone and some
others).  Her songs combine elements of classical, show music, rock and
chanson française (Sydney's father is French and she spent some time in
Paris growing up).  But the most impressive instrument in Sydney's band
is her voice.  Extremely expressive and perhaps a touch breathy, it is
the hook that ultimately pulls you into her music.

Sydney's been on my radar for a while now, so I made it over to The
Living Room
a while back to see her roll out the songs from her new
album, "The Colorful."  Among the standouts played before the
appreciative crowd  were "La Di Da," "Bells," and a rousing version
"Drive In Not Drive Through" (which sounds like it should have the
title 1953).

Sydney Wayser, City Winery, 155 Varick Street (between Spring and
Vandam Streets), 1 Train to Houston Street or Canal Street; C or E
Trains to Spring Street, 8pm, $10.

 –Eliot Wagner

A Morning Dove Laid An Egg On My Air Conditioner: What Do I Do?

I found this in my inbox yesterday. The subject line read: Eggs and Air Conditioner. I was intrigued. It's from the NYC Bird Club list serve sort of a Park Slope Parents of local bird lovers. To read more or to respond go here: http://forums.manhattanbirdclub.com/post?id=3548966

Yesterday a morning dove laid an egg on top of a towel that I rest on my air conditioner

The towel is very small and only keeps the drops of other air conditioners from making a loud noise on mine.
I called the bird volunteers and at the time there didn't appear to be
a mate and there was no nest so they told me she would most likely not
succeed w/ this first egg.

Lo and behold, after a while, a mate appeared and he began to build a nice nest.

HERE'S MY QUESTION.  If I turn on my air conditioner will I hurt the
baby egg?  I have been surviving with the fan but my apt is HOT and I
can just go buy another AC for another window in another room.

Please send me your thoughts about using the air conditioner.

Katha Pollitt at Bookcourt on Tuesday

 

Katha-Pollitt-190 On Tuesday July 7th at 7pm Katha Pollitt will read from her new collection of
poetry, The Mind-Body Problem at Bookcourt (163
Court Street in Cobble Hill.

Her first collection of poetry in 27 years, the book is a follow-up to the acclaimed
"Antarctic Traveller", which won the National Book Critics Circle
Award for Poetry in 1982.

Pollitt, a Brooklyn Heights native, is perhaps best known for her column "Subject to Debate" in The Nation
magazine. She has also published work in The New Yorker, Harper's
Magazine, Ms. magazine and The New York Times.

Her essays have been published in collections including, Learning to Drive; And Other Life Stories,  Virginity or Death!: And Other Social and Political Issues of Our Time and Reasonable Creatures: Essays on Women and Feminism, nineteen essays that first appeared in The Nation and other journals. Here is the title poem from her new poetry collection

Mind-Body Problem

by Katha Pollitt

When I think of myself I feel sorry not for myself

but for my body.  It was not so direct

and simple, so rational in its desires,

wanting to be touched the way an otter

loves water, the way a giraffe

wants to amble the edge of the forest, nuzzling

the tender leaves at the tops of the trees.  It seems
unfair, somehow, that my body had to suffer

because I, by which I mean my mind, was saddled

with certain unfortunate high-minded romantic notions

that made me tyrannize and patronize it

like a cruel medieval baron, or an ambitious

English-professor husband ashamed of his wife—

her love of sad movies, her budget casseroles

and regional vowels.  Perhaps

my body would have liked to make some of our dates,

to come home at four in the morning and answer my scowl

with "None of your business!"  Perhaps

it would have liked more presents: silks, mascaras.

If we had had a more democratic arrangement

we might even have come, despite our different backgrounds,

to a grudging respect for each other, like Tony Curtis

and Sidney Poitier fleeing handcuffed together,

instead of the current curious shift of power

in which I find I am being reluctantly

dragged along by my body as though by some

swift and powerful dog.  How eagerly

it plunges ahead, not stopping for anything,

as though it knows exactly where we are going.

New: G Train from Park Slope to Williamsburg, Greenpoint and LI City

Here's the word from OTBKB fave Richard Grayson author of I Hate All of You On This L Train.

This morning I was able to get from Williamsburg to Park Slope
with only the G train.  Previously I could do that only on weekends
when the F service was disrupted, but they put up the "To Church Ave."
signs here, replacing the "To Smith/9th St" signs this week, and
starting today, people in Park Slope can take one train to
Williamsburg, Greenpoint and Long Island City.
 
On Friday night coming home, I saw the G train signs next to the F train ones on the platform on Seventh Avenue.
 
For some of us who travel between the neighborhoods a lot, this is a big deal and a real pleasure.

Chestnut Defeats Kobayashi at Coney Island Hot Dog Contest

OTBKB turns to the Brooklyn Paper for its stellar coverage of yesterday's hot dog-eating contest at Nathan’s Famous in Coney
Island. Here's an excerpt. Go here for more.

America continued its dominance at that most-American of sporting
events — the world hot dog-eating contest at Nathan’s Famous in Coney
Island — as defending two-time champ Joey “Jaws” Chestnut stunned the
world by defeating former champ Takeru Kobayashi by a huge margin today.

When all the hot dogs, buns and dog/bun detritus was counted at the
end of the 10-minute contest, Chestnut had eaten an all-time record 68
HDBs to Kobayashi’s 64-1/2 HDBs.

The champion was his humble self.

“I have to credit my mom,” he said. “She helped me every night as I was training.”

First Father’s Day Without Monte

Smartmom_big8 Smartmom’s first Father’s Day without her dad wasn’t easy. They
always did something special on that night. Usually, her dad — aka
Groovy Grandpa — and Mima Cat came over for dinner. While Hepcat
cooked risotto or lamb, she and her dad would stand in the kitchen, and
he’d tell tales of his college days at U.C. Berkeley, or working at
Papert, Koenig and Lois, that 1960s advertising firm where he wrote ads
for Robert Kennedy’s Senate campaign, Quisp and Quake Cereals and the
New York Herald Tribune.

Groovy Grandpa would gingerly sip from Hepcat’s collection of Scotch
(some Oban, Balvenie or Laphraiog) and compare them, like the
connoisseur he was. He always gave Hepcat a bottle for his birthday.

Smartmom loved those evenings with her dad at the apartment,
especially when her father would sit down at the Casio piano and play
his free-form jazz. He had no formal training and couldn’t read music,
but somehow he managed to bang out tinkly renditions of some of his
favorite Cole Porter songs.

For a Father’s Day gift, Smartmom would usually go to the Community
Bookstore and buy him a book on one of his favorite topics like
philosophy, jazz, bird watching, or horse racing.

He’d immediately start reading it and confirm that it was a very good choice.

“How’d you know I’ve been wanting to read this?” he would ask.

A couple of years ago, Groovy Grandpa told Smartmom that he wasn’t a
big fan of the Father’s Day holiday, but he appreciated the fact that
she and Diaper Diva made such a big deal about it. Now Smartmom wonders
why he wasn’t a big fan. Or maybe he was just kidding.

Last year, Smartmom didn’t write a column about her dad for Father’s
Day because when he first got sick, he asked her not to mention his
illness in her column. She thought a Father’s Day column would be too
maudlin, sad and elegiac.

About a week later, Groovy Grandpa said, “I thought you’d write a ‘Smartmom’ about me for Father’s Day.”

Smartmom was startled and stricken. There was something so poignant
about hearing him say that. So this Father’s Day, she kept flashing on
that conversation and feeling guilty and sad.

Truth is, she never wanted to admit to him that she knew he was
dying. Now Smartmom feels bad about all the conversations they didn’t
have. And terrible that she didn’t write about him last Father’s Day.

Not a day goes by when Smartmom doesn’t think of her dad. There’s so
much she never got around to saying. That’s life (or death).

But it still doesn’t make her feel any better.

Smartmom found herself feeling low energy on Father’s Day. In the
quiet of Sunday morning, while Hepcat and the kids were asleep,
Smartmom went through a box of old letters that her lovable and funny
dad wrote to his parents just weeks prior to the birth of Smartmom and
Diaper Diva in 1958:

Dear Folks,

Birth is expected in a couple of weeks, and I am pretty nervous
about it. Up until now, the idea of a baby (babies) has been pretty
much taking them to their first ballgame, dressing them in Eton suits
and listening to their first gurgles of gratitude.

But now, the day-by-day reality becomes clearer, and I wonder
how we’ll handle such things as squalling nights, plastic ducks all
over the bathroom and shelves full of those terrible picture books. To
say nothing of colic, uninhibited bowel habits and stubborn refusal to
eat. In addition, the idea of pacing the hospital waiting room for
hours, without knowing what’s happening to Edna, doesn’t strike me as
better than going to the movies.

Oh, well, it will all be over soon and the joy of having them
will, I suppose, put the doubts away. Did you like me at first, or did
it take a few years?

Smartmom wonders how long it took her dad to like her and her
sister. From the black-and-white photos, it looks like he was
quite fond of his twin newborns quite early on. But who knows?

There is so much children don’t know about the inner lives of their
parents. When you’re young, you can’t even imagine them having a life
before you were born. Finding letters, notebooks, and journals is such
a powerful way to learn more about the parents you think you know.

The night of Smartmom’s first Father’s Day without her dad, there
was no standing in the kitchen hearing vintage stories. There was no
jazzy tinkling of the plastic Casio keys. There was no tasting of
Hepcat’s special Scotch.

But there were memories. Plenty of them. And the letters. They're no substitute for the
man but they offer a coveted insight into what was going on in his head.

Starts July 4th: Fifth Avenue Art and Photo Walk

I was involved in an early planning meeting about this and I'm just really impressed that this group pulled it off so quickly.

The 5th Avenue Business Improvement District (BID) has teamed up with
artists from across the borough to sponsor the first annual Art and
Photo Walk in Park Slope.

As part of the
walk, art installations will be exhibited along Fifth Avenue from Dean
to 18th Street and feature a variety of artists. “With computer art,
oil paintings, mixed media, ceramic tile, and photography,” explained
participating photographer and BID Board Member Erika Clark, “the walk
offers a range of artists an opportunity to exhibit their work in
non-traditional settings while bringing more people to neighborhood to
support the local economy.”

There are over 70 participating merchants, 40
artists and approximately 200 pieces. Artists include Third Street photographer Stanley Cohen, Bernette Rudolph, and Jonathan Blum among many, many others.

 The walk will officially launch on the 4th of July and last
until Labor Day. With art as dynamic as the Avenue itself, the public
installation promises to bring unique energy to an Avenue long
accustomed to setting new trends.

For a map a detailed map of the Artwalk, click here (please note, some details are subject to change).

Are Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick Moving to Park Slope?

Just got this email from my pal, Verse Responder Leon Freilich:

If, as the Post says, Sarah Jessica Parker (SJP) and family move into the limestone mansion on Prospect Park West; and if her HBO series is brought back with new episodes, will it be called Sex and Park Slope?

Then I read in Curbed that Jennifer Gould Kalin in the New York Post speculates that Sarah and Matthew Broderick may be the "mystery buyers" of Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany's limestone on Prospect Park West and Carroll Street. That house sold for $8.45 million but nobody has moved in yet.

But look out for the moving trucks and get out the welcome wagons. Sounds like they should be home soon. I happen to know that SJP has been working on a film with Hugh Grant in NYC and on location in New Mexico. And she and her hubby have been waiting for a surrogate to give birth to their twins.

And there's more: Omigod: Curbed also reports that Parker's production company optioned Amy Sohn's book, Prospect Park West, which is a fictional treatment of the celebrity life in Park Slope.

Truth. Fiction. The lines are getting mighty blurred these days.

;

Back By Popular Demand: The Peacock Dress From Dalaga

174 Dalaga, a 2-year-old boutique on an interesting stretch of Greenpoint's Franklin Avenue, is owned by designer Michelle Mangiliman. The shop features an affordable selection of designer women's and men's clothing, shoes and
accessories.

Back by popular demand is the peacock dress, which is $65 and available in black, white and turqoise. They also have pretty floral dresses, black linen shorts and coin medallion necklaces.

The shop is located on 150 Franklin Street in Greenpoint (718-389-4049). And it's open on the fourth of July.

You Gotta See The Wrestler

We rented Darren Aronofsky's The Wrestler from Netflix: I didn't expect a movie about wrestling  (and pole
dancing)  to be so poetic and lyrical. Mickey Rourke, who looks like he's bionic, plays an unexpectedly
gentle (and sad) character named Randy the Ram.

A loser on so many levels, Rourke is a "one trick pony," who needs to figure out how to survive once he retires from the sport. He tries to resuscitate his relationship with his grown daughter played by Rachel Evan Rachel Wood, who hates him for being a consistent no-show. The scenes with Wood are powerful and poignant.  A scene where they dance in an abandoned Jersey Shore ballroom bordered on the corny but managed to
be anything but.

Marisa Tomei plays an unexpectedly complex stripper/pole dancer who wants to make something more of her life for herself and her son.

The wrestling scenes are graphic and brutal. Hard to take at times, they are also incredibly interesting.

Subtextually, the movie also tells Mickey Rourke's own
life story of a guy who screwed up big time and wants to come back is
fascinating and definitely blurs the line between fiction and life.

The Unanimous Declaration of the Thirteen United States of America

When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one
people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with
another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and
equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle
them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they
should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created
equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of
Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted
among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,
— That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these
ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to
institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and
organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely
to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate
that Governments long established should not be changed for light and
transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that
mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to
right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed.
But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably
the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute
Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such
Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. — Such
has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the
necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of
Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a
history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct
object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To
prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

Continue reading The Unanimous Declaration of the Thirteen United States of America

The 4th of July in Brooklyn

2515378136_8f5a3afe54_m Loads of cool cultural things to do in Brooklyn this 4th of July Weekend:

 1. Let's start with BAM, that bastion of culture in Ft. Greene:

BAMcinematek Repertory is presenting a festival of films by Spike Lee, in honor of the 20th anniversary of Do the Right Thing.

–In the first run department: BAM Rose Cinema is showing:  Away We Go, Food Inc. and the new Woody Allen: Whatever Works.Check their website for times.

The AfroPunk Festival is
a-happening at BAM on July 4-6 and it is described thus: "Power to the
people! BAMcinématek and Afro-Punk celebrate five years of
rejoicing in the revolutionary spirit of July 4th with six days of
film, music, and other events that feature themes of Black power,
rebellion, and equality."  There's also a skate park: the parking lot
by BAM will be
transformed into a killer skate park, complete with live music, skating
and biking demonstrations, and more. For full details on the Afro-Punk
skate park, the Nike SB skate clinic, and the URBANX Battle for the
Streets BMX/skate competitions.

2. Now for a little culture on Eastern Parkway: Target First Saturday at the Brooklyn Museum on the 4th of July:

Alex Battles and the Whisky Rebellion
perform a roof-shaking, joyful medley of country, jump blues, and rock
‘n’ roll. Rain Plan: Rubin Glass Pavilion, 1st Floor. The legendary Mandingo Ambassadors
play authentic Guinean music, using their rich melodies and funky moves
to get you dancing. Rain Plan: Rubin Glass Pavilion, 1st Floor. Stitch
together your own patchwork quilt with fabrics and designs inspired by
the diverse cultures of Brooklyn. Free timed tickets (380) are
available at the Visitor Center at 5:30 p.m., The Namesake
(Mira Nair, 2007, 122 min., PG-13) follows one family as they adjust to
life in North America. Gogol, the American-born son of Bengali parents,
struggles to find balance between his family’s traditions and his own
path. Free tickets (340) are available at the Visitor Center at 5 p.m, Samba Nation takes the musical energy up a notch with its Latin grooves. Rain Plan: Rubin Glass Pavilion, 1st Floor. Cristina Garza, a Student Guide, gives a Sign Language–interpreted talk on Yinka Shonibare MBE.
And there's a dance party, too: Brooklyn-based indie rockers The Shondes
keep the evening hot with high-energy, politically savvy rock’n’roll
with Yiddish and classical influences. Rain Plan: Rubin Glass Pavilion,
1st Floor.

3. Think Swimming. Think Pools.  About Brooklyn has a nice list of Brooklyn's public pools:

Swimming pools in Brooklyn are open from
late June through September 1 (with a few open year-round). Hours are
generally from 11am to 7pm, and swimming is free.

4. And what would the 4th of July be without Coney Island's 94th annual Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest? You
can watch this crazy, only in Brooklyn event. But get there early
because there's always a big crowd. Festivities start at noon on the
corner of Surf Avenue and Stillwell Avenue.

5. Vox Pop on Corteylou Road in the Ditmas/Flatbush neighborhood is having an all day Fourth of July Bash, a full day of music and
mayhem. Beginning at 3 pm with younger, up and coming musicians,
the event will continue through the evening with some wonderful,
explosive music. Line up will include Paul Decosta, Syndey and Mack
Price, Jake G and Friends, In One Wind, Eric Godoi and the Templates
and many more.

6. Music and dancing is the name of the game on July 5th at the BKLYN Yard on the banks of the Gowanus: "From Memorial Day weekend to Labor Day weekend, Eamon Harkin, Doug
Singer and Justin Carter will return as resident DJs. Each weekend,
they are joined by incredible guests while we get busy eating
huaraches, drinking sangria, and dancing it all off.

7. Yes, the Brooklyn Flea is open on July 4th in Ft. Greene and on July 5th in Brooklyn Bridge Park.

8. The Park Slope Farmers Market (Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets) presents a live jazz trio from noon until 2 p.m on July 5th. Little Triumph is a virtuosic Brooklyn based trio that specializes in
improvisational
Americana music with undertones of jazz and
country. The band features Kirk Schoenherr on guitar, Nick Anderson on
drums/percussion and Spencer Zahn on acoustic bass.

9. Barbes is chock full of great music programming on July 4th and 5th, including on the 4th at 8 pm: Lucia Puludo A Colombian singer who specializes in a Pan-Latin-American repertoire and classic songs of "broken love": tangos,
waltzes and boleros. And on the 4th at 10 pm: The Stagger Back Brass Band presents one hundred and thirty eight years after the Commune, and twenty years
after Tiannamen square, come see how a brass band arrangement of
l'internationals sounds on Independence day – and then dance to the
Coceks, cumbias, waltzes and circus oddities. And on the 5th: French virtuoso Guitarist Stephane Wrembel channels the technique and the fire of Django Reinhardt. He studied for years
with the manouche (the French Gypsies) but has also gotten deep into
American vernacular musical styles. His weekly sets will mix up the
traditional Django repertoire along gypsy swing re-interpretations of
standards.

10. 38th Annual International African Arts Festival is all weekend in Commodore Barry Park Navy St, between Flushing and Park Aves,
Brooklyn: Hundreds of performers, artists and vendors gather for this
weekend-long festival celebrating African art and culture.

11. And here's something in Manhattan: On the 4th in Battery Park (State St, at Battery Place), the River-to-River Festival presents Conor Oberst with Jenny
Lewis as his opener. This event is not ticketed, but space is
limited and will be available on a first-come, first-served basis. The show starts at 3:30. 

Tell me this isn't the awesomist list of stuff to do?

Photo by Brit in Brooklyn

Richard Grayson’s New Book: I Hate All of You On This L Train

I HATE with subway people The Brooklyn-based indie publisher Canarsie House has announced the
publication of a new book of selected stories by OTBKB fave Richard Grayson, I Hate All of You on This L Train. It features some of the best stories from five previously published
Richard Grayson books from the '70s, '80s, '90s and 21st century. This 94-page collection of selected stories is available online for $7.00 plus shipping and handling. Or, for those who don't want to carry it on the subway, the book is available for free downloads and online reading at Scribd.

Park Slope’s Fifth Avenue on the Fourth of July

On All About Fifth, the new Fifth Avenue blog produced by the Fifth Avenue Business Improvement District, there's a list of things to do on Fifth:

Fifth Avenue is not just home to amazing restaurants, clothing
boutiques, jewelry stores, toy stores, and so much more, but it is a
burgeoning location for exciting events, like live music, public
readings, and community building activities. Naturally, everyone is
excited about celebrating the Fourth of July in style with a little
barbecue with the family, but don't forget about the exciting list of
events that are taking place Thursday and Friday nights. And,
definitely be sure to keep visiting the businesses along the avenue
that are participating in the 1st ever Fifth Avenue Art Walk. What
other avenue in New York would turn businesses into one-long art
gallery?