All posts by louise crawford

Brooklyn Blogfest Would Like to Thank Its Volunteers!

BLOGFEST_LOGO_1920_1080 Blogfest on May 7th at 7 p.m. could not be doing it without the following wonderful volunteers. THANKS TO YOU ALL!

Joyce Szuflita  (Volunteer Co-Coordinator) – NYC
School Help

 

Alice
Crawford

Amanda Wiss – Urban
Clarity

Ameet Maturu – Rice of
Life

Brenda Backer – A Year
in the Park

Casey Fitzpatrick – Out About
Brooklyn

Cathryn Swan – Washington Square Park

Chandru Murthi – Seeing
Green

Claude Scales – Self
Absorbed Boomer

Elizabeth Palmer – Midnight
Cowgirls

Hyatt Michaels – F.O.K.U.S.

Julio Barros – E-String
Technologies, Inc.

Joyce Hanson – Good Girl
Blog

Kim Maier – The Old Stone
House

Martie McNabb – Memories
Out of the Box

Michael Szuflita

Morgan Doninger – Puzzling NYC

Neil Carlson – Brooklyn Creative League

Peter Solomita  (Music), Groovalicious in Brooklyn

Robin Lester – Clinton Hill
Blog

Tuey Connell

Yvett
Velazquez

Thursday Night: Don’t Miss the Brooklyn Blogfest

BLOGFEST_LOGO_1920_1080 Brooklyn Blogfest is gonna be so cool.

–The panel, WHY WE BLOG, moderated by Megan Donis is going to be very interesting.

–There's a raffle with great prizes, including a Casio digital camera, a Casio watch, a framed photo by Hugh Crawford of Coney Island in the snow, a Babeland goody bag, a framed Ork Design Brooklyn poster donated by Brooklyn Frameworks and MORE.

–There's going to be lots of tasty food and drink at the after-party. Galapagos is inventing a special Brooklyn Blogfest drink.

At Powerhouse there will be iced tea courtesy of Yelp. Bottled water courtesy of Outside.in, and snacks courtesy of Peeled Snacks and Whimsy & Spice Brooklyn Confectioners .

You're gonna love the videos: 20 photographers contributed to the Tribute to Brookyn's Photobloggers edited by Adrian Kinloch of Brit in Brooklyn. All your favorite photobloggers will be represented.

The Blogs-of-a-Feather,  small group sessions led by notable bloggers, will be a chance to network and get insight and advice.

What else: The Shout-Out a Blogfest tradition, will be like a groovy open-mic at Galapagos Art Space MCed by Rob Lenihan of Luna Park Gazette.

So come one, come all and find out why Brooklyn is the bloggiest place in America at the Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest on May 7, 2009. Doors open at 7 pm at powerHouse Arena in DUMBO. 

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 is an exciting, idea-filled event for bloggers, blog readers and the blog curious, where you will find: Insight. Advice. Inspiration. Resources. 
 
Here's your chance to meet your favorite bloggers; learn about blogging; be inspired to blog.  

"Where better to take the pulse of this rapidly growing community of writers, thinkers and observers than the Brooklyn Blogfest?" ~ Sewell Chan, The New York Times

 This year's event is dedicated to Robert Guskind (1958 – 2009), the founder and editor of Gowanus Lounge.
 
WHY WE BLOG is the theme of a panel discussion moderated by Brooklyn Independent Television's
Megan Donis and featuring Jake Dobkin of Gothamist, Anne Pope of
Sustainable Flatbush, Tracy Collins of Freakin' Blog, Bed Stuy Banana,
and Melissa Lopata of Hip Slope Mama.
 
This year Brooklyn Blogfest introduces BLOGS-OF-A-FEATHER,
special small-group sessions led by notable bloggers in a wide variety
of blog categories, where you can connect with other bloggers who share
your interests.

Also on the agenda:  A VIDEO TRIBUTE TO BROOKLYN'S PHOTO BLOGGERS by Adiran Kinloch of Brit in Brooklyn, WHY WE BLOG VIDEO SPOTS by Blue Barn Pictures, THE ROBERT GUSKIND VIDEO, and the annual SHOUT-OUT: a chance to share your blog with the world!
 
Whether you live to blog, blog to live or are just curious about this thing called blogging, you won't want to miss Brooklyn Blogfest 2009: the best Blogfest yet. 

For information, interview and sponsorship opportunities for Brooklyn Blogfest, contact Louise Crawford (e:louise_crawford(AT)yahoo(DOT)com, c: 718-288-4290).
 
Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest

May 7, 2009
Doors open at 7 p.m.
powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Admission: $10  ($5 for students and seniors) 

Brooklyn Blogfest After-Party
Galapagos Art Space
16 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
(right across the street from powerHouse Arena)

A Funny Thing Happened at the Forum (39th Edition in Park Slope)

So I'm getting to know the candidates. We've progressed from the first date (or first breakfast) stage and are now becoming better acquainted. I've even had a chance to see them in action.

Last night was my second 39th candidates forum and it was interesting to see how the six male candidates for City Council are shaping up as the campaign heats up. It is only May 6th and the winner-takes-the seat primary is September 15th (there is no Republican candidate in this democratic district. There is, however, a Green candidate). 

It seems that Park Slopers haven't woken up to the campaign yet. I think citizens in Carroll Gardens are a bit more aware of this election because of the many hot button issues in that community at the moment.

In Park Slope, many are even unaware that Bill deBlasio and David Yassky are moving on and that the deadline for ballot signatures is coming up. 

Wake up neighbors: your closest link to government, your city council members (deBlasio and Yassky) are running for new positions (public advocate and comptroller) and a bunch of white guys and one woman (in the 33rd) are running for their seats.

For me the forums are like theater. How will the candidates behave? Will there be ANY conflict? Who's relaxed, who's not? Will anyone be stumped?

Last night was relaxed and convivial and a great opportunity to take a look/see and a hard listen. My husband attended and I grilled him afterward. Who'd you like? Who'd you trust? Who would you vote for? It was interesting to hear his first impressions, which I don't think I will reveal at the moment.

And sometimes the forums are even funny: Josh Skaller made a joke about his proposal for streamlined garbage trucks; there were numerous good-natured jokes about Zuckerman's Zuckmobile and Ken Freeman kept forgetting which district these guys are running in (it's the 39th).

OPENING STATEMENTS

Most of the candidates haven't figured out how to do this. Or they try a different approach each time (depending on the venue). They suffer for it. I think it's important to set the tone right up front and present a strong picture of who they are:

–Bob Zuckerman was too rambling as he conveyed a stand-up vibe, but he does come across as an approachable and friendly person.

–Brad Lander is expert at words that work for the audience he is speaking to; he's good at conveying his longtime experience with affordable housing and community empowerment but he talks too fast.

–Josh Skaller is getting better at presenting a strong, clear message about government reform, and his belief that citizens can govern.

–John Heyer makes a good connection with the audience but needs to present his commitment to constituency politics and neighborhoods more clearly.

–Gary Reilly should lead with his passion for transportation and infrastructure.

–David Pechefsky too often sounds like he's mid-conversation but he is clear about government reform and the core values of the Green party.

YES AND NO QUESTIONS
I loved the yes/no questions because they make the candidates squirm and really put them on the spot. The questions elicited super brief answers that were informative and fun. And many came up with interesting ways to hedge the question and bring in some shades of gray. It was like speed dating.

Here's the tally of yes/no questions:
–Mayoral control of the schools: most said yes "but not how it stands now," Skaller said no).
–Superfund for the Gowanus: all except Heyer and Zuckerman said yes),
–Eliminate cars in Prospect Park: mostly no except for yeses from Reilly and Pechefsky, strong bike proponents)
–Residential parking: all yes.
–Congestion pricing: all yes except Heyer.
–Tolls on East River bridges: all yes except Heyer.
— 2-way traffic on Prospect Park West: all yes, except strong no from Pechefsky.
–Term limits: all yes except Pechefsky who said no. 
–Bloomberg for a 3rd term: All no

ABOUT PUBLIC EDUCATION
I was pleased that there was a real discussion of public education, which all the candidates are, of course, strong proponents of. Lander, Skaller and Pechefsky are public school parents so they have a more detailed understanding of the issues and the schools in the district.

Those who aren't parents do come across as vague though Heyer knows more probably because his wife, Maria, is a public school teacher in Kensington. While Reilly needs to bone up on local schools, he seems like he could be very smart on the issue (hey, he's a smart guy). "There's nothing more important to people than their children," he said simply at one point; he's a strong supporter of universal Pre-K. He and his wife plan to start a family in the next year or so, he said.

Skaller has the tendency to bring all issues back to his core message, which is a strength in a campaign I guess.   "There is a remarkable lack of urban planning. When you build dense and build high, there has been little concern for what resources are required."

John Heyer talked incongruously about Catholic schools as a solution to public school overcrowding.

Lander mentioned his support of a new bill called the Smart Development Bill that would REQUIRE developers to identify classroom space as part of their planning process.

Zuckerman talked about federal stimulus money for schools. "You hear talk about bridges and tunnels. But what is more important than to build more schools?" he said at one point.

Pechefsky, uncharacteristically, tossed out a pie-in-the-sky idea about turning the House of Whimsy, that derelict building on 2nd Street and Seventh Avenue that used to house the Landmark Cafe, into an annex for PS 321.

But I think that represents the kind of thinking that needs to take place. While I don't think that building is possibility what about some of the half-finished condos on Fourth Avenue, the condo towers that the city may need to buy back from bankrupt developers? How about pre-schools and elementary and middles school annexes?

WHAT IS THE BIGGEST REAL ESTATE BOONDOGGLE
The candidates love this question. It's Atlantic Yards, of course as it is now thoroughly safe for politicians to cite this as the big fiasco that it is. I think this question only went to Lander.

Lander cited filmmaker Isabel Hill, who was in the audience, and suggested that everyone watch her documentary, Brooklyn Matters, "to find out everything that was wrong with that project, which collapsed under its own weight. But now the question is: how do we rescue control back of Atlantic Yards, that gargantuan albatross of the state?" .

LOCAL BUSINESS
Lander, who is expert at picking an example germane to the crowd he is speaking to (a good skill), mentioned Park Slope's Buy Local campaign as a great approach to that problem. "There are two scales. The Shop Local campaign proves that if we invest time, money and resources we can do a lot together. But there also have to be policy proposals…"

Zuckerman floated a good idea about tax incentives to landlords willing to sell their storefronts as condos to shop owners.

Pechefsky bemoaned the fact that if want to buy a lamp nearby you can't go to City Lighting or Pintchik anymore but have to go to Target because of tax incentives to big box stores and not to local businesses.

Heyer, whose father owned a trucking business, said, "NYC is not business friendly. It's Wall Street friendly but it needs to make life palatable to small business."

CONFLICT
There were two moments in the forum that were curious and interesting. And the conflict wasn't between candidates but in response to pointed questions f
rom the audience (written on a file card).

There was a question from the audience for Heyer about why he's running in the 39th if his home is actually in the 33rd.

Heyer handled it well and said that he is close to closing on a house in the 39th district (on Summit Street) and that his family home ("where five generation of Carroll Gardeners have lived) is three blocks out of the district. Someone is trying to turn this into an issue; I don't think it will go anywhere if his residency is resolved before a certain date.  "That was really off the wall," John Heyer said good naturedly.

Brad Lander was asked about the City pension fund scandal and its connection with a Park Slope resident and neighbor of Lander's,  whose name I haven't confirmed. Lander looked really mad (the only time I've ever seen him mad) and he called the question "slander." He told the person who asked the question to stand up, which he/she did not. He defended his friend as a very ethical person and a good friend who's only mistake was "giving accurate information."

Whoa. It was cool to see Lander angry. He handled the question really well and showed fire and passion in defense of his friend.

QUESTIONS FOR EACH OTHER

Someone suggested that the candidates ask one question to one of their opponents. They were also given rebuttal time and it was a fascinating section.

As the first one, Reilly was taken off guard but he asked Lander what his top priorities would be in the first year. Lander: "I'm trying to choose between the economy and education."

Skaller asked Zuckerman what exactly were his reservations about Superfund status for the Gowanus ("It's very complicated and I'm just not sure yet.).

Pechefsky asked Heyer if he would approve a City Council budget that included huge cuts to the public libraries.

Brad asked Reilly about why some people opposed an express train for the F-train.

PERSONALITIES

It's interesting to see these personalities in action. As I've said, they display different styles and leadership potential. All seem to agree, for the most part, on issues and core values. But who's the one who will be the best City Council member? Too soon to call but here are my thoughts-in-progress about these men. I'll start with Gary.

Gary Reilly: As the new kid on the block, his local politics and community activism are fueled by a real passion for his newfound home and the ways it could be more livable. In answer to a
question about future goals beyond the council he said he wouldn't have
the stomach for a city-wide election for mayor, but he needs to
have more stomach for this campaign and come on stronger.

Unasked for advice:  Lose the deceptively low key style and come on strong about your wonky passion for public
transportation, infrastructure and livable streets.

David Pechefsky: I call him the insider/provocateur because he's got ten years of experience working in the central office of the NYC City Council under his belt but he he also understands intimately what's wrong with the system and thinks he knows how to fix it. He's smart, provocative and good at framing the argument for reform. He comes across like a great thinker/teacher who has a lot to bring to the table in terms of thoughtful ideas and progressive values.

Unasked for advice: Give the voters a keener sense of small picture solutions and demonstrate your leadership qualities and your passion for local government.

Josh Skaller: He's garnering quite a few impressive endorsements and has the support of those who actively opposed the Atlantic Yards (Daniel Goldstein, State Senator Eric Adams, Norman Sigal, Major Owens, and others). He's obviously working hard on focusing his message: his belief that citizens can govern.

Unasked for advice: A few more detailed ideas would help give the voters a sense that you are really interested in their communities and not just ideological about out-of-whack development and the autocratic policies of Mayor Bloomberg. 

John Heyer: A fifth-generation Carroll Gardener, Heyer, at 27, is probably the closest thing to a Republican in the group. A devout Catholic, he opposes same-sex marriage but thinks that all couples deserve the rights you get from being married. His idea: The State should get out of the marriage business (an idea with merit but not a very realistic one at this juncture). Candid by nature and very articulate, he's been in politics since the age of 14 and obviously knows how to walk the walk with an admirable ability to connect with an audience about his belief that politics is about presence and constituency.

Unasked for advice: Refine your stump speech so that you quickly convey your commitment to the character of neighborhoods.

Brad Lander: His good nature and years of experience creating affordable housing Brooklyn bodes well for his future in the City Council. Just watching Lander interact with the other candidates at the forum, you can tell that he's a pleasant person to work with and a very fair guy. He combines deep smarts, great communication skills, and the ability to listen and learn from others.

Unsked for advice: You talk too fast and sometimes come across as a tad too sure of your front runner status.

Bob Zuckerman: The menchiest of the candidates, Bob isn't afraid to float out-of-the-box and sometimes wacky ideas. His proposed Zuck-Mobile, a mobile office made from a rehabbed Bookmobile, is taking on iconic stature in the campaign; many like his proposal to offer tax incentives to landlords to sell their storefronts as condos to local business owners.

Unasked for Advice: Your good natured, stand-up approach sometimes takes away from the seriousness of your out-of-the-box ideas.

Candidates Forum (39th Edition) Poorly Attended

Last night's City Council Forum for Candidates in the 39th district had a decidedly more laid back vibe than the  Dazzle Me Forum in Carroll Gardens.

The mood between the candidates in the auditorium at John Jay High School was convivial and even goofy as they answered questions from Ken Freeman, President of the Park Slope Civic Council. He also read lengthy questions from audience members written on file cards.

This is a smart, articulate, thoughtful and impressive group of candidates. They've got a few of these candidate's forums under their collective belts and they're relaxed, friendly and very respectful of one another.

The Dazzle Me Forum, held in a small room at the Carrol Gardens branch of the Public Library, was well attended and intense. A neighborhood in transition, Carroll Gardens activists have been trying to down-zone the neighborhood, address affordable housing issues, and fight real estate developers who have run wild for years.  Add in the Gowanus Superfund controversy and people are very much on edge.

That forum had real fire and passion.

I was hoping for some of that fire and passion in Park Slope. But the rain and general apathy about this election didn't inspire many Park Slopers to come out to see the candidates on parade.

And it's not like Park Slope isn't facing hot button issues: it's the worst
economic crisis in decades; local schools are over-crowded; traffic and
parking are a disaster; local businesses are suffering and on the verge of going
under; Fourth Avenue is a run-a-way development zone lacking the infrastructure or classroom space to support it; the mayor and the City Council voted themselves
a third term (a real slap in the face to the democratic process); the nearby Atlantic Yards is the biggest boondoggle in NYC development history.

We got issues. But this event didn't reflect that at all and it was poorly attended.

That said, the candidates put on a decent show and are are evolving and honing their messages.
While most of them are quite similar in terms of their core values, they are very
different in terms of personality and style. Clearly they are having an
influence on one another and it's interesting to see the cross
pollination of viewpoints and ideas.

The event might have had a different feeling if it had been held in a smaller space. The candidates sat on folding chairs on a procenium stage and the audience was spread out in the huge auditorium. Also the moderator didn't take questions from the audience so there wasn't that feeling of give and take.

I will say this: the event was well run and well paced. It started on time and ended, to the minute, when it was supposed to end. Not like that 3-hour marathon in Carroll Gardens.

More on the candidates in another post.

 

Tonight: Teach-In & Fundraiser for Green Candidate for City Council

David_pechefsky Put a Green candidate on the ballot for the City Council Race in the 39th District and find out why that helps to reform NYC government and enhance local democracy.

At the  Community Bookstore TONIGHT, May 6, 2009 from 7-9 pm, there's a Teach-In & Fundraiser with David Pechefsky, Green Party City Council Candidate for Dist. 39.

He's screening the PBS documentary "Please Vote for Me" (documenting an election in a third-grade classroom in China) followed by a discussion on democracy led by David.  Drinks/refreshments provided.
 

David is a former Assistant Director in the New York City Council Finance Division, a former Assistant Commissioner in the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development and has consulted on democratic governance in Nigeria, Sier ra Leone, and Jordan.   He lives with his family in Park Slope.
 
 

Suggested Contributions: (Please make checks out to “Pechefsky for City Council”)
  o   $15  David, Please Bring Democracy to NYC Council  
o   $50  REALLY Bring Democracy to NYC Council
o   $100 NEED a NYC Council Dedicated to Democracy, Wise Use of Resources, Green Living
RSVP (not necessary, but helpful):  Sonal@pechefskyforcitycouncil.com or   (718) 369-8959

OTBKB Music: Midweek Recommendation – Sasha Dobson

SashaDobson-300 I don't know this for sure, but it seems to me that Brooklyn's Sasha Dobson plays
more gigs in New York City than any other musician.  Sasha comes out of a
jazz background but her 2006 album, Modern Romance, was a unique combination of Brazilian
rhythms, rock, folk and jazz.  She reworked both the Yeah Yeah Yeah's
Modern Romance and Duke Ellington's Mood Indigo, the latter with a banjo as the lead instrument.

Lately, Sasha has been working with Brooklyn guitar ace Steve Elliot
and her more recent material has a more rock bent to it.  But all
through he work, you'll find Sasha's amazing vocals.

Sasha plays tonight at 9pm at The Living Room, 154 Ludlow Street (F
Train to Second Avenue; use the First Avenue exit).  If you'd prefer
not to leave Brooklyn, you can catch her this Sunday, at 8:30pm at
Pete's Candy Store, 709 Lorimer Street, Williamsburg (G to Metropolitan
Avenue or L to Lorimer Street; exit from the Lorimer Street platform).

******

If you're attending The Brooklyn Blogfest tomorrow, please stop by and say hello.  I have a surprise for the first ten of you who do.

 –Eliot Wagner

7:15 Tonight: 39th City Council Candidates Forum at John Jay

As you know I am following the local City Council races so I plan to
make it over to the Park Slope Civic Council's two Candidates Forums
for Local City Council Races, May
5th and May 12th!

Thanks to Park Slope Neighbors for sending out this information. The first Park Slope candidate's forum is tonight, which will feature the candidates running for
the 39th District seat being vacated by Bill
deBlasio.

Next Tuesday, the forum will feature candidates for the 33rd District seat being vacated by David
Yassky

These forums will be a great opportunity to
hear from the candidates in their own words, and to ask them about
their positions on the issues that most matter to you.

TONIGHT'S 39th District forum will take place on Tuesday, May 5th, between
7:15 p.m and 9:15 p.m at:
–the
Secondary School for Law,
Journalism & Research (the former John Jay
Campus)
, 7th Avenue between 4th and 5th
Streets

The following Tuesday, May 12th, from 7:00
p.m. to 9:00 p.m., the 33rd District forum will be held
at:
–P.S. 282
, 6th Avenue between Lincoln Place and
Berkeley Place

–Both events are free and open to the
public.
  Come with your questions.

Tonight: Spring Fling at Lincoln Place Shops (Paper Love, Stitch Therapy)

Totes Drop by tonight at Paper Love, Stitch Therapy and One-of-a-Find otherwise known as the Lincoln Place Shops! Those are the tiny shops on Lincoln Place just east of Seventh Avenue. Sometimes they don't get noticed because they're off the Avenue. But I know them well because I walk on that street just abotu every day.

Great gifts for mom: cards and paper goods from Paper Love, knitting materials from Stitch Therapy and resale clothing. Plus special treats like cup cakes and champagne. Fun.
                               
SPRING FLING a
t Lincoln Place Shops! 7-9 pm. 20% off everything.
Spring butter cupcakes, champagne next door.

                               

Poetry Reading at BookCourt: A Stellar Group

Jessica Greenbaum,  a poet I admire a great deal, is presenting an evening of incredible poets from issues 4 and 5 of Upstreet Magazine. at the expanded BookCourt in Cobble Hill. What a group of poets! This is an event poetry lovers (and those new to poetry) will not want to miss.

Greenbaum, who unfortunately won't be reading, is the poetry editor at Upstreet and author of a collection called Inventing Difficulty, which includes a lovely poem called Brooklyn Aubade. Recently she had a great poem in the New Yorker called The Two Yvonnes.

–Nicole Cooley
The Afflicted Girls
–Alan Feldman
Sail to Great Island
–Jeffrey Harrison
Incomplete Knowledge
–Michael O’Brien
Sleeping and Waking
–Jean Valentine
Little Boat
–Bill Zavatsky
X Marks the Spot

The Where and When

Poetry Reading
Thursday, May 7, 2009   *   7pm
BookCourt, 163 Court Street, Brooklyn

Silent Art Auction to Support Metaphor Gallery on Atlantic Avenue

AUCTION BIDDING STARTS MAY 6, 6am

Starting on May 6, 2009, Metaphor Contemporary Art will be auctioning off over 100  exceptional artworks at very affordable prices! Your favorite Metaphor artists and guest artists have generously
  Berger David Hovey 87360806.150.150 

offered exceptional works in support of the
artists' run gallery that gave them a significant show at an early or crucial stage in their careers.

Metaphor
was founded in 2001 as an artists' run social sculpture and labor of
love. Over the years Metaphor has become known as an incubator for
talent inspiring an artist to feel the freedom to create a special new
installation or series, often times their first major NY show.

Expert
at presenting a museum quality experience on a shoestring,  many
collectors, curators, critics, and art lovers have been delighted to
discover exceptional new talent at Metaphor.

Here you see some OTBKB faves that are included in the silent auction at Metaphor. Red abstract by Emily Berger, clouds by David Konigsberg, green and yellow abstract by Hovey Bock, water photograph by Hugh Crawford.

A Bar-Restaurant Near A School? Heavens!

3024723626_9ec76983cb_m What a bunch of teetotalers on Park Slope Parents.

I heard that there was a new brouhaha brewing on that Park Slope list-serve because Bar Toto, a restaurant that serves, gasp, wine and beer was opening a location not far from PS 107.

Heavens to Betsy. Can you imagine a restaurant that serves wine and beer (and possibly alcohol) opening near a school in New York City? 

Think of the moral fiber of those poor children. They might see someone drinking a glass of wine. That could be so damaging to their tender sensibilities.

Come on, folks. Let's be reasonable. It's Bar Toto for christ's sake, a very popular local eatery. It's hardly a place to worry about your children being exposed to. It's a bistro. A restaurant/bar. Think steak frites, paninis, Caesar salad and yes, wine.

Those who got their knickers in a knot can rest assured. The New York State Liquor Authority has regulations about these sorts of things. You can't even get an on-premises liquor license if you are within 200 feet of a school. But you can get a restaurant beer and wine license. The distance is measured from the nearest entrance to the school actively used by students to the restaurant/bar.

Do you think one of those Puritanical PSPers actually got a ruler out and measured the distance from the entrance of the school to the new Bar Toto. I can just see it.

Why am I picturing a member of one of those turn-of-the-century groups like the Temperance Union or the Anti-Saloon Society out there with a prim hat and a measuring tape?

Apparently Bar Toto is going into the space that used to be Pumpkins Market (now that was an morally  appropriate establishment). Quite a few people who live near to the school—and Bar Toto—are thrilled about the new establishment. One PSP member could not for the life of her see a problem with a first grader seeing her having a sandwich and a glass of wine at a late lunch. She also wrote that this popular restaurant "chain" is not some raucous sports bar but a lovely, child-friendly eatery.

Another member made the point that during these tough economic times, many restaurants are under so it's nice to see a new place opening.

Still another member reminded the group that she and her child actually pass many bars, restaurants, and businesses walking
home from school and her child doesn't seem to be damaged by the exposure.

"The only thing my 7-year-old cares about going and coming home from school is whether we can
immediately go to playground or if she can talk me into impromptu play
dates she arranges during her day in school behind my back."

Okay. So is everybody okay about the new Bar Toto?

Photo by Natasha T on Flickr

.

     

Tuesday Night: “A Hidden Life” Author Reads at Barnes and Noble

Reiss_hiddenlifeI

Johanna Reiss, author of the powerful new book, A Hidden Life, a Memoir of August 1969 (Melville House Publishing). will be reading at Barnes and Noble in Park Slope on May 5th at 7:30 p.m. 

Johanna Reiss writes:

I seem to deal with
grief by writing about it. I did it with The Upstairs Room, the story
of my time in hiding as a Jewish child living in Holland during the
Holocaust.

And now there is my new memoir in which I "look" at
what happened on August 24, 1969, the date and the year my husband
killed himself here, in New York, while I was in Holland to talk to the
family who  had sheltered me during WWII.

Excerpt: 
How do you tell children that life is one continuous goodbye, that with
each day the end comes a little nearer, each step, each touch, each
sound, whether you're around to hear it or not, cars tooting, trains
whistling, boats hooting; how do you explain that people you're close to, or thought you were, can just vanish?

Tentative MTA Deal Reached: 10% Fare Hike and No Service Cuts

A deal is in the works and it's good news for millions of subway and bus riders, who were facing a much more extreme fare increase starting in July.

And the service cuts are out. In other words, there will be no service cuts to subway and bus services.

Fare increases will be 10% down from 23% and there will be NO service cuts because the Democratic leadership of the New York State senate announced that there's a deal afoot for money for the MTA.

According to the Daily News, "Sen. Majority Leader Malcolm Smith emerged from a closed-door meeting saying he believes he has the final two Democratic votes necessary to pass an MTA bailout plan over a wall of Republican opposition.

This could mean that commuters can expect fare and toll hikes of roughly
10 percent—down from the projected 23 percent expected previously.

According to WNBC: "The
rescue package does not include funding for MTA capital improvements
and repairs, nor does it address the additional $621 million shortfall
MTA executives announced last week."

Adult Education at Union Hall on Tuesday: Ambivalent Parenting 101

This sounds really fun and hysterical.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009 – 8 pm (doors at 7:30)
Union Hall in Park Slope
702 Union St. @ 5th Ave
$5 cover

Adult Education is a Brooklyn-based useless lecture series. Each month is
devoted to a given theme, and 4 or 5 speakers address some aspect
of that theme using visual aids. This month we present a primer on Ambivalent Parenting.

GREG ALLEN, "TV, Education, & Kids: Three Of These Things Belong Together?"
Forty
years ago, researchers created Sesame Street to tap the vast
educational power of television for the benefit of "ghetto kids." How's
that working out? A brief, illustrated history.

GARY DREVITCH, "Widespread Abuse of the 'Put the Oxygen Mask on Yourself First' Metaphor Among Contemporary American Parents"
Drevitch
discusses how a small but critical piece of the standard
airplane-safety lecture has been expanded upon and embraced as the
foundation of a popular parenting philosophy. But will Mommy really be
a better Mommy after she has her daily glass of merlot?

ILANA GLAZER: "Upper-Class Upbringing as Seen Through the Lens of a Middle-Class Jew"
This
presentation will explore the upper-class attempted anti-snob movement
in Manhattan compared to the culture vacuum that is growing up in the
suburbs of Long Island. We will also discover the inadequacies of
trusting a college student with your children.

ANDREW HANELLY AND MIKE MCCARTHY: "The Guilt-Free Guide to Parenting"
Raising
a child can be a stress on one's social life, physical fitness and
emotional well-being. But, the speakers argue, parenting, done right,
can be a blissful experience and allow you to focus on the truly
important aspects of life, such as yourself.

DANIEL WRIGHT: "Mothers of Invention: A Brief Guide to Child-Rearing Devices"
A survey of American patent literature reveals parents' desire not to be parents.

With your host, CHARLES STAR

Blogfest Isn’t Just for Bloggers

I keep hearing from people who are wondering if it's okay for them to come to Blogfest. And I tell them: Of course it's okay for you to come to Blogfest.

Blogfest is not just for bloggers. It's for people who are interested in blogging, blog readers and those with a passion for Brooklyn. So I urge all of you who are thinking about coming to come on down to the Brooklyn Blogfest on May 7th at 7 p.m. (details below).

It's a really fun, festive, social event that you won't want to miss.

Find out why Brooklyn is the bloggiest place in America at the Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest on May 7, 2009. Doors open at 7 pm at powerHouse Arena in DUMBO. 

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 is an exciting, idea-filled event for bloggers, blog readers and the blog curious, where you will find: Insight. Advice. Inspiration. Resources. 
 
Here's your chance to meet your favorite bloggers; learn about blogging; be inspired to blog.  

"Where better to take the pulse of this rapidly growing community of writers, thinkers and observers than the Brooklyn Blogfest?" ~ Sewell Chan, The New York Times

 
This year's event is dedicated to Robert Guskind (1958 – 2009), the founder and editor of Gowanus Lounge.
 
WHY WE BLOG is the theme of a panel discussion moderated by Brooklyn Independent Television's
Megan Donis and featuring Jake Dobkin of Gothamist, Anne Pope of
Sustainable Flatbush, Tracy Collins of Freakin' Blog, Bed Stuy Banana,
and Melissa Lopata of Hip Slope Mama.
 
This year Brooklyn Blogfest introduces BLOGS-OF-A-FEATHER,
special small-group sessions led by notable bloggers in a wide variety
of blog categories, where you can connect with other bloggers who share
your interests.

Also on the agenda: VIDEO TRIBUTE TO BROOKLYN'S PHOTO BLOGGERS by Adiran Kinloch of Brit in Brooklyn, WHY WE BLOG VIDEO SPOTS by Blue Barn Pictures, THE ROBERT GUSKIND VIDEO, and the annual SHOUT-OUT: a chance to share your blog with the world!
 
Whether you live to blog, blog to live or are just curious about this thing called blogging, you won't want to miss Brooklyn Blogfest 2009: the best Blogfest yet. 


For information, interview and sponsorship opportunities for Brooklyn Blogfest, contact Louise Crawford (e:louise_crawford(AT)yahoo(DOT)com, c: 718-288-4290).
 
Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest

May 7, 2009
Doors open at 7 p.m.
powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Admission: $10  ($5 for students and seniors) 

Brooklyn Blogfest After-Party
Galapagos Art Space
16 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
(right across the street from powerHouse Arena)

Cash bar and refreshments

May 17: Bone Marrow Drive for Tribeca Boy with Leukemia at 9th Street Y

Kai+anderson+family I just heard from someone named Tine who is trying to help to spread the information about
Kai. She wrote: "Maybe you have heard about the boy already. There will be a donor
drive in Brooklyn on May 17th on the Prospect Park YMCA. Any help is
highly appreciated. Would you email this press release or the attached
flyer to the people who signed up for the newsletter and also post it
on the web? Thank you so much."

Four year-old Diagnosed with Rare Form of Leukemia Needs Your Help
DKMS and Friends of the Family Hold Life-Saving Bone Marrow Donor Drive

Just
a few weeks ago, four-year-old Kai Anderson was diagnosed with a rare
and aggressive form of leukemia (Philadelphia Chromosome-Positive Acute
Lymphoblastic Leukemia). Kai's only hope for a cure lies in a bone
marrow transplant.

DKMS, the world’s largest bone marrow donor
center, and friends of Kai’s family, are holding a life-saving bone
marrow donor drive at the Park Slope YMCA, on Sunday, May 17th, to help
find a match for Kai and thousands of others just like him who are
battling this life- threatening blood disease and depend on you for
survival.

Kai was diagnosed on April 6, 2009, exactly one year
after his father and buddy, David, was diagnosed with Mantle Cell
Lymphoma, also a rare and complicated form of cancer. Dealing with one
cancer is hard enough, but trying to cope with two family members with
two different and rare types of cancer is extremely trying.   

The
general public has the power to give hope to the Anderson family and
other families going through the same heartache and pain by attending
the drive: Hope For Kai Bone Marrow Donor Drive, Sunday, May 17, 10:00
am – 2:00 pm, Prospect Park YMCA, 357 Ninth St. (Between Sixth Ave and
Fifth Ave), Brooklyn.

“We are overwhelmed by the enormous outpouring of support from our friends and the
community.
It gives us strength and hope in this difficult situation to have the
help of so many people,” Kai’s parents Birgit and David.

“Seventy
percent of patients depend on a complete stranger to give them a second
chance at life,” stated Katharina Harf, EVP, DKMS Americas. “Today, a
stranger like you can save Kai or someone like him. Tomorrow a stranger
might help save you or someone you love.”

Leukemia and other
blood cancers touch kids and adults of all ethnic backgrounds and from
all walks of life.  Therefore, there is a need to continue to diversify
the pool of donors so that all patients have a fair chance at finding a
donor match.   

Registering to become a bone marrow donor is
more than a cheek swab; it is a commitment to help save a life. When
you register with DKMS, you will be listed on the national registry and
can be found as a donor match for any patient in need of a transplant.
Learn more about your commitment and check if you are eligible.

When
a registered donor is identified as a match for a patient, a DKMS
representative contacts the donor and guides him/her through the entire
process.  There are two possible ways a donor could be asked to donate:
peripheral blood stem cell donation (requested about 80% of the time)
and marrow donation (requested about 20% of the time). The donation
method is determined by the patient's doctors, so it is important to be
comfortable with both types of donation. Learn more about the bone
marrow donation process.

As a non-profit organization, DKMS
relies on the generosity of individuals to help finance the $65 cost
DKMS pays to tissue type each bone marrow donor who registers. 
Donations are voluntary. 100% of your donation will be used to register
donors and add them on the national registry.

About DKMS

DKMS
was founded in Germany in 1991 by Peter Harf and Professor Dr. Gerhard
Ehninger, after Peter lost his wife, Mechtild, to acute leukemia.
Today, DKMS is the world’s largest and most successful bone marrow
donor center with nearly 2 million registered donors. Since its
founding, DKMS has facilitated more than 16,000 transplants.

DKMS
is committed to the fight against leukemia. We strive to give every
blood cancer patient and equal chance by recruiting donors from every
race and ethnicity. We inspire hope and healing by helping to match our
donors with patients in need of a bone marrow transplant.

DKMS Americas is a 501 (c)(3) non profit organization. 

For more information about DKMS and to learn more about registering as a bone marrow donor, please visit http://www.dkmsamericas.org/

May 16: Away We Go by Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida, Directed by Sam Mendes

Download Just heard from Sarah Pollock, director of development at 826NYC about this screening at BAM of a new film directed by Sam Mendes and written by Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida. It's a benefit for 826NYC, which runs the Brooklyn Superhero Supply Store and tutoring space on Fifth Avenue.

You may have seen this already, but I thought I'd share. It's going to be a great event for a great cause on May 16th at 7 p.m. at BAM. Tickets $30 or $150 (which includes VIP after-party).
This
is a fun, huggable kind of movie starring John Krasinski and Maya
Rudolph as a couple expecting their first child, going in search of the
perfect place to raise their family. Director Sam Mendes and husband
and wife screenwriting team Dave Eggers and Vendela Vida will be on
hand for a Q&A and Cocktail Reception at this Pre-Release Screening
at BAM. 
All the proceeds of ticket sales will go to supporting the free creative writing programs for kids 6 – 18 at 826NYC

OTBKB Music: Complete Celebrate Brooklyn 2009 Schedule!

Here is the full schedule for the 2009
Celebrate Brooklyn
season.  Check the official schedule for more information.

Opening Night, June 8th: David Byrne, “The Music of David Byrne and Brian Eno”

June 11: Balkan Music: Goran Bregovic & his Wedding and Funeral Orchestra

June 19:David Rudder / Samantha Thornhill

June 20: Music and Movies – Mexico Tourism Series

Ethel and Gutbucket play original score for Mexican Science Fiction movie

June 25: Femi Kuti & Positive Force / Melvin Gibbs’ Elevated Entity

June 26: Mexico Tourism Series: Blonde Redhead

June 27: IndieRock: Dr. Dog / Phosphorescent

July 1: MGMT – Benefit (SOLD OUT)

July 2: Obie Bermudez / Rebel Diaz / Cucu Diamentes

July 9: Dance: Streb

July 10: Los Amigos Invisibles / Aterciopelados

July 11: Family Show: They Might Be Giants for kids / Reader: Claudia

July 16: Kronos Quartet / Luminescent Orchestrii

July 17: Robert Cray / The Sweet Divines

July 18: African Festival: King Sunny Ade / Mandingo Ambassado

July 21: Jackson Browne – Benefit

July 23: Dance – Stephen Petronio Co.

July 24:
Buckwheat Zydeco and The Holmes Brothers

July 25:Kailash Kher / Electro Morocco

July 30:Burning Spear/ Naomi Shelton & The Gospel Queens

Aug 1: Mexico Tourism Series: Dean & Britta’s 13 Most Beautiful

Aug 6: Sing along Purple Rain / Escort 

Aug 7: Grace Potter & The Nocturnals / Deer Tick / The London Souls

Aug 8: Lyricists Lounge: Big Daddy Kane / Special Guests

Aug 11: TV on The Radio – Benefit

Aug 12: Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal – Benefit

August 14 and 15: Animal Collective – Benefit

See you in Prospect Park!

 –Eliot Wagner

May 5th at 7:30: A Hidden Life Reading at Barnes and Noble

Reiss_hiddenlifeI
In this installment of OTBKB's recurring feature, Why I Wrote This
Book, author Johanna Reiss shares with OTBKB readers why she wrote her
powerful new book, A Hidden Life, a Memoir of August 1969 (Melville House Publishing).

Reiss
is the author of The Upstair's Room (a Newberry Honor), a young adult
classic about a hidden child during the holocaust. In the new book, she
writes about the suicide of her husband.  Unlike The Upstairs Room, A
Hidden Life is for adults.

Leslie Garis, in an enthusiastic review in the New York Times Book Review,
writes "Reiss handles this difficult material by probing her memory for
clues, putting facts and suppositions together in ferverish prose
jutting back in forth in time…" The book was also selected as a
Editor's Choice in the NY Times Book Review. 

Johanna Reiss will be reading at Barnes and Noble in Park Slope on May 5th at 7:30 p.m. 

Johanna Reiss writes:

I seem to deal with
grief by writing about it. I did it with The Upstairs Room, the story
of my time in hiding as a Jewish child living in Holland during the
Holocaust.

And now there is my new memoir in which I "look" at
what happened on August 24, 1969, the date and the year my husband
killed himself here, in New York, while I was in Holland to talk to the
family who  had sheltered me during WWII.

Excerpt: 
How do you tell children that life is one continuous goodbye, that with
each day the end comes a little nearer, each step, each touch, each
sound, whether you're around to hear it or not, cars tooting, trains
whistling, boats hooting; how do you explain that people you're close to, or thought you were, can just vanish?

OTBKB Music: Celebrate Brooklyn 2009

Here is a partial schedule for the 2009
Celebrate Brooklyn
season.  This is not complete but should give you a good start on planning your summer outings to Prospect Park.

Opening Night, June 8th: David Byrne

June 11: Balkan Music: Goran Bregovic

June 19: Calypso: King David Rudder

June 20: Ethel and Gutbucket play original score for Mexican Science Fiction movie

June 26: Femi Kuti and Melvin Gibbs

June 27: Indie Rock: Dr. Dog and Phosphorescent

July 1: MGMT – Benefit (SOLD OUT)

July 2: Obie Bermudez

July 10: Los Amigos Invisibles

July 11: Family Show: They Might Be Giants for kids

July 17: Robert Cray

July 18: African Festival: King Sunny Ade

July 21: Jackson Browne – Benefit

July 24:
Buckwheat Zydeco and The Holmes Brothers

Aug 1: Dean and Britta with scores for short Andy Warhol films

Aug 6: Sing along Purple Rain

Aug 7: Grace Potter & The Nocturnals and Deer Tick

Aug 8: Hip Hop: Lyricists Lounge

Aug 11: TV on The Radio -Benefit

Aug 12: Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal – Benefit

August 14 and 15: Animal Collective – Benefit

More information to come.

  –Eliot Wagner

Reporter Roundtable: Superfund for Gowanus Discussion

Today’s episode of Brooklyn Independent Television’s
Reporter Roundtable features the controversial proposed EPA Superfund
for Gowanus Canal. The EPA is considering the infamous Gowanus Canal Area for
its special Superfund status. While this may help the environmental issues in
the area, it will potentially take several hundred million dollars and over 30
years to complete. Host Brian Vines is joined by Gowanus resident Lizzie Olesker,
environmental lawyer David
Yudelson
and Joshua
Verleun
with Riverkeeper to discuss the many angles of the
Gowanus Canal controversy. The episode premieres tonight at 9:30pm on Time
Warner 56, Cablevision 69, RCN 84 and Verizon 44.

You may watch the entire episode on their blog: http://briccommunitymedia.wordpress.com

Daily News: Outdoor Movies in Brooklyn

The NY Daily News has a story on outdoor movies in Brooklyn this summer. Nice quote from Kim Maier, director the Old Stone House.

Moviegoers can enjoy a film with a view at Brooklyn Bridge Park.

Looking for cheap thrills, romance and comedy this summer? It's all out there under the Brooklyn sky.

Free or cheap movies will be playing in borough parks and on rooftops this summer for Brooklynites on a budget.

Projectors
and wide screens will stretch from DUMBO to Bay Ridge from May to
August, showing flicks as diverse as "Paper Moon," "Toy Story," "Dr.
Strangelove" and "Fame."

"Rich or poor, good times or bad,
people love to be entertained," said Kim Maier, executive director of
The Old Stone House, which runs free outdoor movie screenings in Park
Slope's Washington Park.

"When the money is tight, going to the
movies can be a $50 evening," said Maier. "This is very easy on your
wallet because it's free."

Not only are the movies free or
low-cost, but viewing locations are among Brooklyn's most beautiful,
from the waterfront to some pretty borough parks.

At the
Narrows Botanical Garden in Bay Ridge, three movies will be shown in
July and August, including the classic Audrey Hepburn thriller "Wait
Until Dark."

While the Bay Ridge screenings usually attract up
to 500 people, things may be different this year. "I expect we'll have
a better turnout because of the economy," said garden president Joan
Regal. "But we have 4.5 acres of land."

Over in Prospect Park, two movies will play in June and August, featuring a live music score and a sing-along.

Meanwhile,
Brooklyn Bridge Park's Movies With a View program, which is in its 10th
year, will show classics such as "Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid"
and "The Return of the Pink Panther" Thursdays from July 9 to Aug. 27.

"We
get 3,000 to 4,000 people an evening. Every seat is a waterfront seat,"
said Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy Executive Director Nancy Webster.

This year's theme is "Stolen Summer," featuring eight films
dealing with capers and thievery, from stolen cash in "Catch Me If You
Can" to a stolen heart in "Edward Scissorhands."

The films were
chosen by a group of borough film committee volunteers who vote on
which flicks make the final cut. "There's 10 of us on the committee and
we battle out ideas," said committee member Howard Leibowitz, 60, of
Midwood. "It's not easy to pick eight films out of the millions that
are out there."

In Williamsburg's McCarren Park, the Summer
Screen series will show six films from July to August and will feature
appetizers from local restaurants for under $2.

The borough's
priciest option is the Rooftop Films' program, showing all independent
films. The sites are on the roofs of Brooklyn Tech and Automotive High
and on top of the old American can factory in Gowanus. Although this
ticket costs $9, it also comes with a live band pre-show and an open
bar following the movie.

"It's a really good deal and people are still going to see films and music," said Rooftop Films' Danielle Courtesis.

"It's a really good option for people on a tight budget."

May 4-6: Scene: Brooklyn Film Festival at Galapagos Art Space

BolexH8 I just got an email from one of the organizers of Scene: Brooklyn, a cool sounding NEW film festival this week. It is being launched by the Brooklyn Arts Council and it celebrates the borough's thriving film community, and features a seminar for filmmakers, a panel discussion, and screenings. 19 films, from
fantastical animations, to thought provoking shorts, and eye opening documentaries
about local issues are brought to the screen

I know its last minute, but I wanted to give you some information on Scene: Brooklyn, a film program focusing on Brooklyn's most exciting new filmmakers presented by the Brooklyn Arts Council.

The festival features two evenings of film screenings, and a panel featuring some of Brooklyn's biggest filmmaking stars:
Ramin Bahrani (Goodbye, Solo) Tia Lessin (Trouble the Water) Cruz
Angeles (Don't Let Me Drown) and Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden (Half
Nelson, Sugar) at 7pm on Wednesday the 6th of May
.

The festival will be celebrating the thriving Brooklyn film community each night at Galapagos Art Space
in DUMBO. Screenings of short films, artist profiles and documentaries
shot in Brooklyn or made by Brooklyn based filmmakers take place at 7
and 9 o'clock on the 4th and 5th of May (Monday and Tuesday).

Its a really great
program, and its our first year, so we're trying to get the word out.

Our schedule is posted here – http://scenebrooklyn.bside.com/2009/

This Thursday: Brooklyn Blogfest at Powerhouse Arena

6a00d8341c5fb353ef01156e3ab6b5970c-320wi.jpg

Find out why Brooklyn is the bloggiest place in the US at the Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest on May 7, 2009. Doors open at 7 pm at powerHouse Arena in DUMBO. 

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 is an exciting, idea-filled event for bloggers, blog readers and the blog curious, where you will find: Insight. Advice. Inspiration. Resources. 
 
Here's your chance to meet your favorite bloggers; learn about blogging; be inspired to blog.  

"Where better to take the pulse of this rapidly growing community of writers, thinkers and observers than the Brooklyn Blogfest?" ~ Sewell Chan, The New York Times

 This year's event is dedicated to Robert Guskind (1958 – 2009), the founder and editor of Gowanus Lounge.
 
WHY WE BLOG is the theme of a panel discussion moderated by Brooklyn Independent Television's
Megan Donis and featuring Jake Dobkin of Gothamist, Anne Pope of
Sustainable Flatbush, Tracy Collins of Freakin' Blog, Bed Stuy Banana,
and Melissa Lopata of Hip Slope Mama.
 
This year Brooklyn Blogfest introduces BLOGS-OF-A-FEATHER,
special small-group sessions led by notable bloggers in a wide variety
of blog categories, where you can connect with other bloggers who share
your interests.

Also on the agenda: VIDEO TRIBUTE TO BROOKLYN'S PHOTO BLOGGERS by Adiran Kinloch of Brit in Brooklyn, WHY WE BLOG VIDEO SPOTS by Blue Barn Pictures, THE ROBERT GUSKIND VIDEO, and the annual SHOUT-OUT: a chance to share your blog with the world!
 
Whether you live to blog, blog to live or are just curious about this thing called blogging, you won't want to miss Brooklyn Blogfest 2009: the best Blogfest yet. 

For information, interview and sponsorship opportunities for Brooklyn Blogfest, contact Louise Crawford (e:louise_crawford(AT)yahoo(DOT)com, c: 718-288-4290).
 
Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest

May 7, 2009
Doors open at 7 p.m.
powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Admission: $10  ($5 for students and seniors) 

Brooklyn Blogfest After-Party
Galapagos Art Space
16 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
(right across the street from powerHouse Arena)

Cash bar and refreshments