All posts by louise crawford

To Benefit the Red Hook Initiative: Taste of Red Hook

 
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Red Hook Initiative is a group which works to confront and affect the consequences
of intergenerational poverty through an approach that offers support in
education, employment, health and community development. We believe
that social change comes from within individuals.

The momentum to
improve the quality of life for Red Hook's residents – as well as the
community at large – must come from the people living in the community.
Currently over 95% of our employees live in the Red Hook Houses. We are
creating a model for social change that does not exist anywhere else in
the city.

Presently, they are working
hard to create a new home by spring 2009. And they're getting help from a bunch of Red Hook restaurants who are generously donating each year to their Taste of Red Hook event.

Starting TONIGHT: Tuesday, February
17, 2009, five local restaurants will take part in TASTE OF RED HOOK
TUESDAYS. For the next four weeks, participating restaurants will
donate 10% of their Tuesday night proceeds to the RHI building fund.

 
So come out to
Red Hook for dinner or a drink and show your support by eating at these
great restaurants on Tuesdays: 2/17, 2/24, 3/3, and 3/10. Be sure to
mention that you're there as part of Taste of Red Hook Tuesdays.
 


Think Spring: Brooklyn Botanic Gardens Teams Up With Brooklyn Industries

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Just got word from Kate Blumm at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens that there are a couple of
exciting things going on over there.

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BKI_tropical_med
Seems that BBG is teaming up with Brooklyn Industries on a spring project called Think Spring.

Brooklyn Industries shot their spring catalog in the Steinhardt Conservatory (previewed here). BBG is also cohosting an event in every BI store in the city on Thursday Feb 26th 19th (THIS THURSDAY) with giveaways and refreshments. And there's more: the two Brooklyn biggies are co-designing a special toddler tee.

In other BBG news, BBG's molecular systematist, Dr. Susan Pell, is blogging her incredible research trip to Paupua, New Guinea on their website. (http://bbg.org/blogs/expedition/). 

 .

OTBKB’s CHEAP THIRLLS

I was asked by Brooklyn Based to come up with a list of recession proof activities that are fun, easy and inexpensive.

Brooklyn Reading Works, a monthly reading series at the Old Stone House that happens to be consistently fun and entertaining. Five bucks gets you a stimulating literary show with snacks, wine and some socializing after. Up next: The Memoir-A-Thon on March 12th at 8 p.m.

–Decent regular coffee and bagel (with cream cheese or butter) from the newsstand on 7th Avenue near Third Street.

–Saturday or Sunday Brunch at Grand Canyon on Seventh Avenue between 1st and 2nd Streets.

–Events at the Community Bookstore, including the Non-Fiction Book Group, Books Without Borders and the Modernist Book Group.

Brooklyn Botanic Garden in the winter. Moody, beautiful, inspiring.

Bar Reis at 375 Fifth Avenue near 6th Street in Park Slope. You can't beat the $7 wine and beer, the gypsy violin trio on Wednesday nights, the generally convivial crowd and the great bartenders.

–Park Slope stoop sales come spring can be a great resource for inexpensive clothing and home items.

–Walk the streets of Park Slope looking for boxes of books disposed of by residents. Just this morning I got Invisible Man, Haywire, Marry Me by John Updike and something called My Fight For Sanity with a fabulous pulp fiction cover (copyright 1960).

More to come

Brooklyn Based: Recession-Proof Brooklyn

Brooklyn Based has a great list of recession busters. Here are some examples in the Park Slope area:

The Dweck Center for free music, readings, and cultural events.

–the monthly First Saturday parties at the Brooklyn Museum. Those are awesome free dance parties.

–Bierkraft’s Tasty Tuesdays:
Speaking from experience, these free cheese and beer tastings are
great. Enthusiastic guest speakers, you learn something about what
you’re eating/drinking and it’s totally free.

These two about sushi and donuts came from Fucked in Park Slope:

–Bonus: Yuppie Scumbag Luxuries that FIPS can’t give up (their own Recession-inspired list you must check out too):

Sushi. But you can go to places like Park Slope Seafood and get prepackaged, yummy (but way cheaper) sushi. If you are really Ballin’ it, I recommend the volcano roll at Jpan…it’s
in a friggin’ PANCAKE. Also, it’s not on the menu, so it’s kinda like
one of those super cool bars that doesn’t have a door.

FIPS also mentioned Donuts as a recession-proof eatery.

Ratner Wants Bailout Money for Atlantic Yards

Check out the press release on the Develop Don't Destroy Website about Ratner's efforts to secure some federal bailout money for the ailing Atlantic Yards project. DDDB charges that this would turn Atlantic Yards into "the poster child for misuse and abuse of the recovery bill."

Read this excerpt and go to DDDB for the rest..

Developer Forest City Ratner (FCR) is reportedly lobbying federal and state officials
for a bailout to further prop up its heavily subsidized and massive $4 billion
Atlantic Yards proposal.




FCR is attempting to get a piece of New York State's share of the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act (aka the "Stimulus Bill"). Former New York Senator
Al D'Amato is lobbying
on the developer's behalf; presumably, other lobbyists
are hard at work talking with the Paterson Administration as well.




Bailing out the Atlantic Yards project with federal stimulus funds would turn
Ratner's project into the poster child for misuse and abuse of the recovery bill.
The project, of course, is already subsidized to the hilt at the expense of the
city, state and federal taxpayer, including the developer's effort to secure a
triple tax-exempt arena bond with a federal subsidy estimated to be worth $165
million.




FCR, apparently, is attempting to secure stimulus funds by claiming Atlantic Yards
is a "transit project," since they are obligated to construct a new rail yard.
They are arguing that this work is worthy of prioritization by the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority (MTA), which will oversee the disbursement of
a reported $1.3 billion in stimulus funds
.


Symposium at the Brooklyn Museum: New Feminist Art Scholarship

This sounds interesting. A full day gathering of scholars at the Brooklyn Museum  discussing new feminist art scholarship.

Saturday, March 28, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.

Highlighting the work of emerging scholars,
Feminism Now presents contemporary,
groundbreaking research presented by graduate
and post-graduate students on a wide range of
feminist issues and topics that reflect new
directions and perspectives in feminist
scholarship. Featuring a keynote address by
curator and critic Carey Lovelace and two
consecutive panels moderated by artist
Nayland Blake and art historian Johanna
Burton. Free with Museum admission, but
registration is required via e-mail to:
academic.programs
@brooklynmuseum.org.

Some Place Like Home: Film About the Fight Against Gentrification in Brooklyn

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Fort Green Peace is presenting a screening and discussion of Some Place Like Home, a new documentary about the the fight against gentrification in downtown Brooklyn.

Some Place Like Home tells the stories of community residents and small businesses  that were displaced to make way for high-end retail
and luxury condominiums to the area. Small business owners, who have helped to make that area the third largest retail district in New York City talk about the deferment of their dreams as entrepreneurs.

The Where and When
Wednesday, February 25, at 7pm
Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church
85 South Oxford Street
(Between Fulton Street and Lafayette Avenue)


This Thursday at the Food Coop: Memoir Writing Essentials

Everybody has a story to tell but most people don't know where to begin. This workshop with Paula Bernstein, the co-author with Elyse Schein, of Identical Strangers: A Memoir of Twins Separated and Reunited, will present an overview on the basics of memoir writing, including the technique of character development, description and narrative arcs. Bernstein will also discuss strategies for producing a book proposal and landing an agent.

This workshop is part of Wordsprouts, a montlhy series open to the public organized by PJ Corso for the Park Slope Food Coop.

The Where and When
Thursday February 19th at 7:30 p.m.
Park Slope Food Coop
782 Union Street in Park Slope

Yoga Sole: Light Your Life with Yoga

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A longtime OTBKB reader wrote in to kvell about a new yoga studio in Windsor Terrace. It reminded me that I want to do yoga this year, too.

The reason I’m writing is to mention a new place in the neighborhood, it’s a Yoga studio called Yoga Sole.

I’ve always had some resistance to working out so walking (not nearly enough) had become my main source of exercise in the past few years, but this past fall a yoga studio opened up right across the street from where I live – 11th Ave at Windsor Place -It was just too convenient NOT to check it out.

I have been going, more or less, since it opened and I really love it- the instructors are great (especially Evalena) and it’s an intimate comfortable space. They have great classes for beginners as well as more advanced Yogis.

They offer a Pilates class, which is great and Yoga for kids – which my 7 year old is really into and prices are reasonable if you buy a group of classes.

Full disclosure – part of me wants to keep it to myself so the classes don’t get too big – but for the sake of small businesses everywhere I will gladly pass on the word.

Hello/Good Bye: Little Zuzu Moving in with Big Zuzu on Fifth Avenue

Littlezuzu  
I kind of had a feeling that the recession might mean the end of Little Zuzu, the cute flower shop on Berkeley Place. Indeed, that's what's happening. Little Zu is moving in with Big Zuzu on Fifth Avenue.

I got the news this morning from Fonda, who also wrote to say that Zuzu's customers collectively "flipped the recession a big fat bird?"

In other words, sales were good?

I'm guessing it was good all around for other local shops.

That's good news for local shopkeepers who rely on Valentine's Day to get them through the winter. Here's the note from Fonda:

First, we want to thank all our
zuzushoppers for making this Valentine's Day such a great success.You
collectively  flipped this  Recession a Big Fat Bird!
Nevertheless…
From now until the end  of
February, Little Zu will  be packing  her bags
and by March First will move in with her
Big Sister on Fifth Avenue.
To help lighten her load, we are having a
moving sale.
Right now tablecloths, placemats,
throws
 and drapevine lamps are 15%
0ff.
By Thursday we will mark down other
items.
Some of the furniture will be for
sale.
We will have fresh flowers this week
coming in on Wednesday.
 
So much for the business end….want to
know how we feel?
Sad and relieved…two shops is like two
kids…more than twice the work.
 
We were offered the little shop on
Berkeley in May of 2005…9 months after the fire
on Seventh Avenue and 6 months
after we opened on Fifth. We felt it was a "no-brainer"…a way to
service our client base at that end of the slope…re-claim our
territory.
We had no idea we would fall in love with
the little shop and it would take on a life of its own
as  our sweet "Little Zu".
It was great fun dressing her up with our
pretty things…
she always wore them
well.
Little Zu has her fans, her regulars,her
devotees.
To them we apologize for the loss and the
inconvenience
of having to trek over to The
Big.
Her heart and soul will be
transplanted to Fifth Avenue
and take root there…the same way it was
for us after the fire.
With  slightly heavy
hearts…
Fonda and all the
Zuzus
 

Smelly Trouble on Third Street

A Third Street neighbor just wrote in with news of a rather unpleasant—and mysterious—crime:

usually it's good news, but this times I have a complaint that i hope you can share. 
someone
on our block has been throwing used diapers in the back yard, behind
our building (457 Street) and the abandoned one on 2nd street (address
not readily at hand).  it's a health hazard, and just plain gross.  we
don't know who it is, but someone around here does.  

PS I Love You T-Shirt From Bento Designs

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Isn't this an adorable t-shirt? It was created by Bento Designs, which is located in Park Slope.

A group of friends making stuff inspired by
food, fun and Brooklyn, the Bento designers say that they like making funny faces and eating cool food
from all over the world… a lot.

They ask:

"Do you like to eat, and make funny
faces? Are you awesome and creative? Then come along and join us! It's
fun – and so are we!"

You can reach them at studiobento(at)gmail(dot)com

Smartmom Still Loves Hepcat

Sometimes. Just sometimes. Smartmom thinks marriage is a completely crazy concept.

Just because you love someone doesn’t mean you’re capable of sharing
a cramped, rent-stabilized apartment and raising a pair of iconoclastic
kids.

Just because you love someone doesn’t mean you can share a bathroom, a closet, and a checking account.

Just because you love someone doesn’t mean you’re proficient at conducting the business of your lives together.

In other words, just because you love someone doesn’t mean you’re any good at being married.

Twenty years ago this July, Smartmom and Hepcat got married at the
swank Lotus Club on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. It was a lovely
wedding complete with an African mbira player, a Mexican polka band and
a very angular jazz pianist.

Their friends had a great time. Their relatives had a great time. Even Hepcat and Smartmom had a great time.

But neither of them, for the life of them, can remember a word of
their wedding vows. Maybe it was nerves. Maybe it was because their
flower girl was having a hysterical crying fit during most of the
proceedings.

Smartmom thinks they signed on to love and honor one another. She’s
pretty sure interfaith Rabbi Bert didn’t saying anything about obeying.

Thank goodness.

Whatever they said, they said it in front of a loving community of
family and friends. Then, Hepcat, looking unbelievably handsome — and
young — in his father’s double-breasted tuxedo, stomped on the light
bulb (in place of the customary wine glass) that marks the end of the
ceremony and the beginning of the couple’s life together.

Trouble is no one ever sat them down and told them what to expect.

No one gave them the “Idiot’s Guide to Being Married” for a wedding present.

No one told them that sometimes they’d feel like a set of conjoined twins

No one prepared them for the fact that they’d spend a small fortune
on couple’s counseling. Or that one day, they’d be too tired — and
distracted — to contemplate sex.

Ah, back before their wedding day, it was all so simple. Who cared about hampers, invoices, and middle school applications?

They enjoyed the same East Village restaurants; dancing at the
Palladium and walking through the permanent collection at the Museum of
Modern Art.

And they had sex — and lots of it.

And then life happened. They lived through a high-risk pregnancy, an
economic upheaval or two; the illness and death of relatives and
friends; the continuing adventures of being parents; working too hard,
not sleeping enough, delayed paychecks, COBRAs and all the rest.

They learned that there was more to life — and marriage — than the
giddy fun of being a couple in the first throes of pre-marital love.

This was much on Smartmom’s mind recently in the aftermath of a
heated argument with Hepcat about, er, something — it has already
slipped her mind.

It could have been about cleaning up the living room, or that their
communication skills (even after all these years) are not exactly top
notch.

Smartmom got to thinking how hard it is, sometimes, to be married.

She even wondered why she bothers with the whole enterprise anyway.
Maybe it would just be easier to move to her own minimalist white
apartment with blank walls, white carpets and loads of sunlight.

So Smartmom took a long walk as she often does when she needs to
think alone. It was an icy cold January night and the temperature
outside was bracing. As she walked, she felt the rage dissipate and
some soft feelings return. She even found herself thinking about some
of the things she loved about Hepcat in the first place.

Miraculously, it all came back in a lyrical montage: Hepcat’s
distinctive square chin, intelligent face and wicked sense of humor;
the first time he showed her his family’s California walnut farm; the
hand-painted Ford pickup truck he used to drive around New York City;
the time he asked, just a few months after they met, what she wanted to
name their children; the way he held both of their children after her
C-sections in the delivery room. Singing softly, he stared into their
eyes; the way he … well that’s private. You can’t be a blabberpuss
about everything.

Sure, he drives Smartmom crazy. They didn’t fight over the silliest
things and lose sight of why they got together in the first place.

But it’s all part of the package. Part of that imperfect concept. Marriage.

Rose Marie Hester, Learning Specialist: The Mind’s Eye and Spelling

Pink jacket+Ben
More learning tips from Rose Marie Hester, who runs a monthly Q&A session about learning issu on the first Monday night of the month at the Community Bookstore. She can be reached at rosemariehester(at)mac(dot)com.

Words like said, was, where and they can vex young students.  Here’s a way to draw on the memory potential of the mind’s eye to make spelling easier.

Ask your child about his/her favorite food.  Then have the child close his/her eyes and draw in the air, pretending that the letters are the favorite food. 

Start with a challenging word and say each letter one-at-a-time, as the child draws and names the letter.  “S —- A —– I —– D.” 

You will need to repeat the word several times until the child firmly sees each letter in his mind’s eye and is able to say the letters with you. 

When he/she’s ready, ask the child to “skywrite” the whole word and say the letters one-by-one. 
,
Then, with the child keeping his/her eyes closed, ask, “Which is the first letter?”   “Which is the last letter?”  “Which is the second letter?”  “Which is the third letter?”  “Spell from back to front.”  “Say the letters front to back.”  Repeat the questions a few times. 

Work on only one word at a time and keep it light. Your role is to be a coach and cheerleader.

The next time you work together, review the previous word or words.  Add only one word at a time.  Review is key.  Some days don’t add words.  Just review.  

It’s also important to have a child write the words on paper after visualizing. Putting the word in a sentence and drawing an illustration is also very useful.

Practice sessions can last five to ten minutes and are much more effective in the long run than having a child rewrite the word over and over, as the visualizing method brings ALL the child’s learning channels into play—hearing, saying, visualizing, writing, memorizing, drawing, discussing, emotional connection, creating, using color and associating with food! 

Eventually, ask the child to write three-sentence story using a few of the words that had been challenging. 

These kinds of exercises may seem tedious, but you can make them a party.  In the long run, they will help a child’s growth as a writer tremendously and will also help to stimulate all the learning channels.

Changes on Seventh Avenue

Closed: No No New Orleans is out. Sadly. The restaurant located on Seventh Avenue near 7th Street was, I believe, a transplant from New Orleans, it was a lovely place.

Opening: Cohen's Optical on Seventh between 7th and 8th Streets.

Opening; On the corner of 8th Street and Seventh Avenue a new coffee shop is coming in place of the Laundry Center that was there for years. I hear Donuts was thinking of taking over the space but they're not going to do it.

Nancy McDermott: Resist the Tyranny of the New “Science of Parenting”

My friend Nancy McDermott, is a writer and a moderator for Park Slope Parents. She writes for an British website called, Spiked.

Spike is an independent online phenomenon dedicated to raising the
horizons of humanity by waging a culture war of words against
misanthropy, priggishness, prejudice, luddism, illiberalism and
irrationalism in all their ancient and modern forms. spiked is
endorsed by free-thinkers such as John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx, and
hated by the narrow-minded such as Torquemada and Stalin. Or it would
be, if they were lucky enough to be around to read it.

She sent me this excerpt from one of her articles, Parenting: It's Not Scienc, which should be of interest to OTBKB readers. Read the rest here.

A few months back, I stopped to help a silver-haired lady in my
neighbourhood unfold a stroller. She balanced her granddaughter, a cute
girl who looked to be about a year old, on one hip, while struggling
wildly with her free arm to open a trendy but stubbornly folded
stroller.

Having only recently escaped the stroller ghetto myself, I knew the secret:
that is, the button or lever or clasp hidden in plain sight on every
stroller manufactured in the past five years. The one that, with a
single touch, miraculously transforms 20lbs of metal and
water-resistant canvas into a chariot robust enough to do several miles
a day on the streets of Brooklyn.

She thanked me with a mixture of relief and embarrassment. ‘That’s
okay’, I told her. ‘Strollers are a lot more complicated than they used
to be. I only know about this one because I have one, too.’ ‘It seems
like everything is more complicated’, she sighed. ‘I sometimes feel
like I need a PhD just to babysit. I don’t know how parents today
manage.’

The idea that parenting is more complicated than ever before is an
observation I hear often from my older relatives, and even mothers with
children born only a decade earlier than my own. And though there’s
always something of a ‘generation gap’ between families as childrearing
fads come and go, I couldn’t help but think the silver-haired lady had
a point.

The Mighty Handful of Brooklyn: Pistols and Doves

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Check out the latest song by Brooklyn's The Mighty Handful. Play it loud and dance  around your living room. It's oh-so-exuberant and FUN.

Listen to the original and the remix (one flows into the other I think).

profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=311988556

I happen to know the lead singer and songwriter. But that's not why
it's here for Valentine's Day. It's here because I LOVE it.

Cool photo by Richard Gin

Two Lovers: Gwyneth Paltrow in Brighton Beach

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The New York Times' movie reviewer (and Brooklynite) A.O. Scott liked it and I'm hoping it's going to play in Brooklyn soon. Hello?

Shot in Brighton Beach. Looks interesting. A must-see for me.

“Two Lovers” deals with the romantic ambivalence of a young man in
Brooklyn, a description that might set visions of mumblecore dancing in
your head. But this movie, the director James Gray’s fourth feature
(after “Little Odessa,” “The Yards” and “We Own the Night”), is not
another low-key, closely observed study in bohemian diffidence. It
takes place in Brighton Beach, many subway stops (and sociological
light years) from the northwestern sections of the borough, where the
hipsters roam. And its palette of emotions, like its rich and somber
35-millimeter cinematography, departs from the hand-held, hi-def,
discursive style associated with directors like Joe Swanberg and Aaron
Katz, harking back to an older, artistically more conservative film
tradition of lush, earnest melodrama. — A. O. Scott, The New York Times

Buffalo Plane Crash Kills 50

As reported on WNYC and in the New York Times, a Continental commuter plane from Newark to Buffalo crashed into a house in the town of Clarence, New York. All the people on board the flight and one person in the
house were killed.

My heart goes out to the the families of the victims. The Buffalo News reports that Beverly Eckert, the widow of Sean
Rooney, a Buffalo native who lost his life in the Sept. 11 terrorist
attack on the World Trade Center. She was Co-Chairperson of the group, The Voices of September 11.

Eckert was traveling to
Buffalo for a weekend celebration of what would have been her husband's
58th birthday. She also had planned to take part in presentation of a
scholarship award at Canisius High School that she established in honor
of her late husband.

A team of investigators arrived in
Buffalo on Friday morning.

Valentine’s at Zuzu’s Petals

Buttonheart
Fonda at Zuzu's Ps is getting in the mood for Valentine's Day and planning to serve red wine to Zuzu's Valentine's Day shoppers:

Hello all you zuzufriends and
lovers.
If you aren't prepped and ready for 
a Weekend of Love stop by, have a little red wine on us
and pick out a treat for your significant
other.
Besides an affection-inspiring selection
of Fresh Cut Flowers,we have some special offerings with that
zuzutouch…
Call ahead and order to make sure you
don't miss out.
Big Zu 718 638-0918
Little Zu 718 636
2022