Category Archives: arts and culture

Gina Barreca: Why Indie Bookstores Matter

I just love Gina Barreca’s funny and smart take on the world.

On Huffington Post today, Gina Barreca writes a love letter to independent bookstores.

For those who don’t know, Gina blogs for the Chronicle for Higher Education, Huff Post and Psychology Today. She is also a professor of English and feminist theory at the University of Connecticut. Her books, which have been translated into seven languages, include They Used to Call Me Snow White But I Drifted, Babes in Boyland, and It’s Not That I’m Bitter. Her latest book, Make Mine a Double, was published in September 2011 and includes an essay of mine in there called the Park Slope Stroller Wars.

Here’s an excerpt from a piece called Why Independent Bookstores Matter, which will resonate with Park Slopers, great supporters of indie bookstores like the Community Bookstore. Read the rest on Huff Post. 

“Independent bookstores do everything big corporate bookstores do, with only one significant difference: Independents do it better.

“Without independent bookstores — meaning those places not owned by huge corporate chains or multinational conglomerates –there would be three, maybe four, books published a year.

“There would be a blockbuster thriller, a densely detailed romance, a pseudo-science exploration of a catchy phenomena, and a celebrity bio.

“And a diet book — there would be a diet book.

“So eventually, there would be one book issued per year: a densely detailed autobiographical and pseudo-scientific celebrity thriller containing recipes. Denzel Washington meets Stephen J. Gould meets Don Delillo meets The Naked Chef. Yum.”

John Cage’s 12-Hour Empty Words at Roulette on August 3rd

File this under: I went with my family to see John Cage perform Empty Words at the Hunter College Auditorium when I was a kid. I was bored out of my mind but somehow I understood that we were seeing something amazing

On August 3, at 8PM at Roulette I will have the chance to experience all 12 hours of Empty Words again.

Varispeed, a group of composer-performers, will perform Part I of their 12-hour arrangement of John Cage’s Empty Words, a landmark text-based work from the mid-70s that transforms speech into music and brings to light the beauty and power of the human voice.

Performing this piece is quite an undertaking.

In Part I, Cage’s text “establishes a distinctly non-syntactical speech rhythm with words and phrases arranged through chance operations from Thoreau’s journals.” The vocalist-performer-arrangers of Varispeed (Aliza Simons, Dave Ruder, Paul Pinto, Brian McCorkle, & Gelsey Bell) and special guests augment their voices with a bevvy of electronics, “while spatializing sound and action into a Cagean feast for the senses.”

Varispeed is a newly formed collective of composer-performers from experimental theatre group Panoply Performance Laboratory, ensemble thingNY, and Why Lie? that creates site-specific, sometimes-participatory, oftentimes-durational, forevermore-experimental events. Their new arrangements in Perfect Lives Manhattan made Time Out New York and New York Times’ critic Steve Smith’s “Best of 2011” list.

Empty Words will continue in three more installments during the evening. Parts II & III will be performed at nearby Exapno (33 Flatbush Ave, 5th floor) at 11 PM and 2 AM, respectively.

And the final installment occurs at 5AM in the morning on the Brooklyn Bridge:

Part IV will be a sound walk across the Bridge at 5 AM. All parts are free and open to the public.

Peripatetic Weekend: Animation Festival, The Head & the Heart, Breaking Bad

As usual there’s loads to do this summer weekend. This list will grow as the day turns to evening.

MOVIES

Friday-Sunday, July 27-29: Animation Weekend at BAM. Now an annual summer tradition, BAMcinématek presents a weekend with two of North America’s greatest animated film festivals.

MUSIC

Friday, July 27: Official after-party for The Head and The Heart at Freddy’s Bar with Ida Blue at 10:30, Les Sans Culottes at 11:00, (e)motion pictures and Dave’s Tyranny.

Sunday, July 29: New Orleans Grooves with DJ Packrat at 5PM at the Fifth Estate Bar on Fifth Avenue.

TELEVISION

Friday, July 27 at 7:30PM: Opening ceremonies of the London Olympics should be worth a gander.

Sunday, July 29 at The Gate: Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 3 at 10PM. Get there early to order a beer and get a seat. Fifth Avenue and Third Street.

ART

At the Brooklyn Musuem: The Newspaper Fiction: The New York Journalism of Djuna Barnes sounds like an intriguing show of the work of a figure I associate with fiction writing. Barnes spent the period between 1913 and her departure for Europe in 1921 living in New York’s Greenwich Village and working as a writer and illustrator for publications including the Brooklyn Daily Eagle andVanity Fair.

At the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts there’s a student curated show called Afrofuturism Imagining Tomorrow. There’s also a film on display called, An Oversimplification of her Beauty by Terence Nance.

 

Nancy McDermott in Spiked Reviews Amy Sohn’s Motherland

As we in Park Slope breathlessly await the release of Motherland, Amy Sohn’s sequel to her bestselling Prospect Park West, Nancy McDermott has published a positive review of the book in Spiked, a British website. McDermott gives the book high praise for its readability and satire: “Motherland is both lightning-fast beach reading and well-observed social satire. Though the book won’t last the summer, Rebecca Rose and company will stay with you well into the autumn.”

McDermott, a moderator on Park Slope Parents  before she moved to rural Upstate New York, is an excellent writer and a cogent thinker on the culture of parenting in contemporary society. I love her blogs, The Brown House Years and The Parenting Mystique (Why America is Obsessed with Raising Kids).  Here’s an excerpt from her review.  Do read the rest of Park Slope Parents Behaving Badly on Spiked.

“Motherland is the sequel to Prospect Park West, Amy Sohn’s hyperrealist novel set in Park Slope, Brooklyn. In the first book of the series, Sohn used a mix of real and imagined people and events to explore the excesses of modern urban parenting culture. In Motherland, she revisits many of same themes and characters, but this novel is not so much about new parenthood as midlife crisis, two life events which, for the first time in history, are tending to occur around the same time.”

Brooklyn Artists Gym Becomes Brooklyn Art Space

Seven years ago the Brooklyn Artists Gym opened. A resource for studio and exhibition space for local artists, the space has evolved many times to accommodate the ever growing number of members who made use of it.

As of this week, Brooklyn Artists Gym will operate under a new name, Brooklyn Art Space. There are two cogent reasons for the name change. “First, if the staff gets one more inquiry about fitness facilities, they may just lose it!” the new management writes in an email.

Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, Peter Wallace, the founder of Brooklyn Artists Gym, is moving on to other pursuits and will pass the torch to his current staff: Rhia Hurt, Director; Ajit Kumar, Advisor; Mary Negro, Gallery Coordinator; Jannell Turner, Consultant; and Rachael Whitney, Marketing Coordinator.

I remember seven years ago meeting with Peter at the now defunct Perch to discuss his new venture, Brooklyn Artists Gym. Perch must have just opened around that time, too. Peter had a real vision about it and many creative ideas that would come to pass.

“Peter’s vision is what brought everyone here, and the staff will continue to expand upon this vision as Peter moves onto the next phase of his creative process. His insight, enthusiasm, and devotion to the studios will be missed!”

And so it is: Brooklyn Art Space is now christened.

 

Friday Night: The Head and The Heart at Celebrate Brooklyn

Celebrate Brooklyn, one of the great reasons to stay in Brooklyn during the summer months, is presenting The Head and the Heart on Friday night at 7:30.

A Seattle band, the group formed in the summer of 2009 is known for its luscious vocal harmonies and swelling orchestral folk. I don’t know their music but the picture to the left has a decidedly Incredible String Band vibe to it.

Also playing on Friday, Lost in the Trees, who are said to take the listener on a sonic journey that includes stops at American folk melodies, pop and symphonic sound exploration. Sounds like a nice ride.

7:30 at the bandshell. You know the drill.

There’s an “after-party” for the show at Freddy’s Bar, which is now on Fifth Avenue in Park Slope. 

Super Cool Celebrity Sighting at Park Slope ‘Snice: Kiernan Shipka

Yesterday, a very reliable source reports that Kiernan Shipka, who plays Sally Draper on AMC’s Mad Men, was at ‘Snice having lunch. The Park Slope vegan lunch spot is on Fifth Avenue and Third Street. No word on what she ate or drank. We do know that she wasn’t  there with her television parents, John Hamm and January Jones. And her TV stepmother, Megan ,played by Jessica Pare, was nowhere to be found.

No one shouted out: We Love you Kiernan Shipka. But we do.

Brooklyn Brewery Contest: Help This Band Win a Trip to Brooklyn Sweden

A friend sent me this link to a music video by Matthew Meyer about the G-train called G Ode. Of course I was interested. He entered a contest sponsored by the Brooklyn Brewery. They challenged Brooklyn musicians to write a song about the infamous G-train.

The prize: a trip to Stockholm, Sweden this Labor Day weekend for the Brooklyn Sweden Music Festival. Have a look. Vote for it if you think it worthy.

http://www.facebook.com/thebrooklynbrewery/app_269343296512780?app_data=%2Fentry%2F371523&ref=ts

Here’s what he wins if he wins:

– 2 Brooklyn Sweden festival passes

– airfare for 2 from NYC to Stockholm

– lodging at the Story Hotel

– lunch with the bands, hosted by Debaser’s house chef

Together with Sweden’s Debaser, Brooklyn Brewery has created the world’s first all-Brooklyn music festival, happening this Labor Day Weekend, Aug 31 & Sept. 1st.

Here’s the lineup: Blonde Redhead, The Hold Steady, Cults, Crystal Stilts, Phosphorescent, Au Revoir Simone, Dum Dum Girls, DIIV, Twin Sister, Widowspeak, The So So Glos, Telepathe, Maluca, Prince Rama, Caveman, Blonds

So why is Brooklyn Brewery doing this? “Well we’ve been selling beer in Sweden for a while and over the years have gotten to know the folks at Debaser, Sweden’s finest rock venue, pretty well (they sell a LOT of our beer). Turns our Brooklyn and Sweden have a lot in common, including great bands. One thing lead to another and we decided to throw a big party, bringing Brooklyn’s best bands from Sweden. Then we thought, why not send two more people? Hence the contest.”

 

Park Slope Art Curator Opens Show in Manhattan

A summer art opening? A little splashy fun?

Park Slope’s Vicki Sher, a painter in her own right, has curated an art show called Cannonball opening at Frosch & Portmann at  53 Stanton Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side on Thursday, July 26 from 6-8PM.

“It’s a collective jump into the pool. Each artist plunges into her/his subject while feeling the ripple of activity in the room. Each distinct body of work claims a piece of its own, and shared, area,” writes Sher.

Inspired by the iconic call of summer, the swimmers’ cry of “Cannonball!” as they jump into a pool, this exhibition brings together artists who dive into specific territory while maintaining a playful spirit. The show connects driven and deeply pursued paths to the lighthearted attitude behind summer vacation.

Many of the artists connect to the show’s title with strong black shapes that pack a punch. In Don Voisine’s paintings and Lauren Seiden’s dense graphite works on paper, the viewer is drawn into the black surface to consider questions of space, balance and rhythm. Denise Kupferschmidt’s black drawings on tile bring to mind icons and talismans; at the same time they act as a lighthearted reminder of the pool’s edge. Paul Wackers’ still lifes use black for contrast, to emphasize the plant’s strong silhouette and power as a signifier of interior life.

 

Hearing (Not Seeing) Wilco at Celebrate Brooklyn

I nabbed a spot on the hill due east of the stage on the other side of the Celebrate Brooklyn fence, which is covered so that you can’t see through it. Last night’s Wilco show was a benefit at $50 a ticket (supporting Celebrate Brooklyn’s great contribution to Prospect Park summers). There were scalpers at the entrance to the park on 9th Street selling tickets but I decided to just enjoy the show from the outside.

There was a low-key vibe under the trees. Couples, families, kids lying on bed sheets, picnicking. I missed the Lee Renaldo Band and Wilco was already in progress when I attempted to get comfortable on the rocky hill where I was sitting.

A huge fan of the band’s fourth album, Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, I am unfamiliar with Wilco’s other albums. They only played a few songs from Yankee Hotel, as far as I could tell. The parts of the set I heard included I Might, Misunderstood, Side With The Seeds, Pot Kettle Black, Hummingbird, Wishful Thinking, Laminated Cat, Say You Miss Me, I Must Be High and Nothing’severgonnastandinmyway(again).

My blind concert was really pleasant and at times incredible. Sitting outside of the fence it was easy to lose focus because of the activity (toddlers running, people chatting, etc) around me. But some of the songs were so intense and the instrumental work so stupendous, I felt pulled into the concert as if I was sitting in the front row.

Jeff Tweedy joked that Brooklyn smells like bacon. This was a continuation of something he said at the July 23rd show as reported by Brooklyn Vegan. He commented on people walking back and forth across the aisles with food. “It’s like the Ho Chi Minh Trail.” he said. “I should have eaten.”

There was also a running gag about the “nicknames” cities have: City on the Bay, Beantown, the Windy City. “New York City is too great for a nickname. Brooklyn is even better,” he said.

Brooklyn Vegan photos of the set (see one above) reveal a really cool stage design of hanging hankies. What I could see of the light show looked blue, green pretty.

Overheard from a guy sitting behind me: “This is so cool. I love Brooklyn.”

Martin Amis on Living in Brooklyn

“And what do you make of Brooklyn?” David Wallace-Wells asks Martin Amis, who has just moved to Cobble Hill, in an interview in New York Magazine.

Embarrassingly idyllic, really. Like living in the fifties—so philoprogenitive. You know, pregnant women everywhere—prams, kids. I like that. Just a gentle atmosphere. I don’t think I’d like Manhattan anymore. I like looking at it from a distance—it awes me. But it’s too noisy. The city that never sleeps—yeah, that’s right, the city where you never sleep.

The Clock by Christian Marclay at Lincoln Center Through August 1

File this under: must-see art event even though it’s not in Brooklyn.

The Clock is 24-hour work of video art by artist Christian Marclay playing at the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center through August 1. Marclay has miraculously brought together thousands of clips from the entire history of cinema, from silent films to the present, each featuring an exact time on a clock, on a watch, or in dialogue. The resulting collage tells the accurate time at any given moment, making it both a work of art and literally a working timepiece: a cinematic memento mori.

It sounds amazing. If you’ve got a free 24 hours you can see it all.

Marclay also composed the soundscape, driven by a racing and swelling symphony of ringing, ticking, footsteps, laughter, tears, and music.

When it’s midnight in New York, Orson Welles is getting impaled at midnight on a clock tower in “The Stranger.” Twelve hours later, it’s  “High Noon.” Admission is free; Lincoln Center advises checking its website to avoid long lines.

Admission is free. Visitors are admitted on a first-come, first-served basis. It will be at the

New Penguin Chick at the Aquarium in Coney Island

Say hello to the newest addition to the Wildlife Conservation Society’s New York Aquarium in Coney Island is a black-footed penguin chick, the first one to hatch in 15 years at the aquarium.

A penguin chick.

Black-footed penguins are endangered, making the chick’s arrival significant not only for the aquarium, but for the species’ survival.

The female chick was born in February to mom, Boulder , and father, Dassen. Penguin chicks have soft downy plumage that stays with them for a few months until their juvenile feathers come in followed by adult plumage. The black-footed penguins can be seen in the aquarium’s indoor/outdoor Sea Cliffs exhibit.

 

Park Slope’s Olympic Fencer: Race Imboden


Named after a Jonny Quest character, Race Imboden moved to Park Slope when he was 10 and loves the penang chicken curry at Rice Thai on Seventh Avenue.

And he’s on the Olympic fencing team. His passions: fencing, of course, and hip hop. The Daily News has a story about local Olympic heroes today.

Have a look at the video by @radical media which follows Race while he trains for the Olympics, and sheds some light on his unprecedented rise in the world of fencing. It’s a really interesting piece so watch it and learn more about our Park Slope Olympic hopeful, Race Imboden.

Breaking Bad at The Gate

How about a little communal TV watching?

We watched Episode two of Breaking Bad, Season five at The Gate in Park Slope, where they will be screening the show every Sunday night at  10PM for the duration of the season.

Season Five, so far, deals with the aftermath of the mind-blowing (literally) death of Gus Fring. At the start of Episode two, we find ourselves at Madrigal Electromotive, the parent company of Gus’ Los Pollos Hermanos.

It was a little disorienting at first. What are we doing in Germany?

I ordered white wine, Hugh had a beer. We sat at the bar with other Breaking Bad obsessives.

Back in Albuquerque, Walt wants to start cooking meth again now that he has blown up Gus. But there’s a lot that needs to be put in place before he can proceed…

The bartender somehow managed to watch the show, tend bar, and collect glassware from The Gate’s patio with aplomb. He’s a marvel. It was interesting to watch the show with a crowd.

My impressions of the episode: Walt is becoming so evil; Jesse is trapped and guilty; Skyler seems freaked out by who Walt is becoming (see picture).

The woman sitting next to be at the bar learned that The Gate was showing Breaking Bad from OTBKB. She asked Google: Where can I watch Breaking Bad in Park Slope?

She said she’ll be back at the bar next week.

 

 

“Mesmerized” by Piper Theatre’s The Island of Doctor Moreau

Richard Grayson, author of Brooklyn Diaries, I Brake for Delmore Schwartz, And to Think He Kissed Him on Lorimer Street, and other titles, ventured to Park Slope this weekend to see Piper Theatre’s outdoor production of The Island of Doctor Moreau.

I love to read Grayson’s reactions to local culture. He’s smart and very knowedgable about art and theater.

He’s also an interesting guy. I’ve read the Brooklyn Diaries, which is compulsive reading (by a compulsive writer) for those interested in one young man’s college and post-college years in 1970’s and 80’s Brooklyn.

Grayson writes about his cultural wanderings in Williamsburg and other neighborhoods on his blog, Dumbo Books of Brooklyn. Just this week, he’s written about  a zine fest at Pete’s Candy Store, Eugene Mirman in Williamsburg Park and a recent breakfast in Ft. Greene. He also takes pictures.

“Tonight we were mesmerized by a stunning performance of an innovative, visceral, and commanding adaptation of H.G. Wells’ The Island of Doctor Moreau conceived and executed by the amazing Piper Theatre outside the Old Stone House in Park Slope’s Washington Park.”

Obama on Aurora Shooting: Life is Very Fragile, Our Time Here is Limited and Precious

So nice to have an eloquent president at times like these.

“Life is very fragile and our time here is limited and precious, what matters at the end of the day isn’t the small things … it’s ultimately how we choose to treat one another and love one another. It’s what we do on a daily basis to give our lives meaning and purpose… at the end of the day what we will remember is who we love and what we did for others.”

To see the speech go here. 

Anger and Grief About the Aurora Movie Theater Shooting

I feel so sad for the twelve victims of the Aurora, Colorado movie theater shooting. I feel so sad for their families. Dozens more were injured in this horiffic crime perpetrated by a 24-year-old madman.

And I feel so angry. A dark room where people sit together in the great communal rite of movie watching is no place to worry about being gunned down. It is like having to fear that you will be murdered while you are dreaming.

Watching a film is, in a way, a sacred and shared cultural experience. I think of it as a neutural zone where you can trust that people will not act in inappropriate ways. To fear that someone might decide to shoot moviegoers is just so hideous and random.

I am angry because I had to tell my 15-year-old daughter about this violence because it was on the car radio. She was planning to attend The Dark Night Rises this weekend. She’s been watching The Dark Knight (with Heath Ledger as The Joker) in preparation.

I am angry because there are people in America, who are capable of this kind of random violence.

I am angry because we don’t have better gun control laws.

I am angry because something so pleasurable has been tainted by violence. Once again.

 

Tom Martinez, Witness: Buddhist Monk with Open Hands

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ven Bhikkhu Bodhi, who leads Buddhist Global Relief, is a renowned translator of the Pali Canon and frequent contributor to Parabola and many other magazines and journals. Here he poses for a photo after a meeting of Occupy Faith inside the sanctuary of the Fourth Universalist Society (Central Park West and 76th St.).

When I explained I wanted to photograph him for a project having to do with open hands and the UN effort to pass an Arms Trade Treaty he readily agreed.

This image of the Buddhist monk and others will be projected behind live dancers next Thursday, July 26th at 6PM at the Church Center for the UN (E. 44th St. and 1st Ave, directly across the street from the UN).

For info on the Arms Trade Treaty: http://www.controlarms.org/news.php?id=11351

Machel Montano: Spirit of Trinidad Carnival at Celebrate Brooklyn

On Friday, July 20, Machel Montano brings the wild and steamy spirit of Trinidad Carnival to Celebrate Brooklyn’s bandshell in Prospect Park. Doors open at 6:30 PM.

Born in 1974 in Port of Spain, Trinidad, Montano’s career began in 1982 at age seven; at age nine he formed his band, Pranasonic Express. His 1985 debut album Too Young to Soca was an instant hit and at the age of 12, he was the winner of the Caribbean Song Festival

The night begins with an opening set by the socially conscious Creole singer-songwriter Bélo, who has been called Haiti’s musical ambassador to the world.

Creative Activity for Teens & Tweens at Film Biz Recyling in Gowanus

Here’s a fun thing for teens and tweens to do this weekend. Great if you don’t know what else to do with all those special family photos, cards, and random pictures on your wall.

Join Ashley Lucas at Film Biz Recycling this summer to make something super cool with your finds at home + the wonderful recyclables at FBR! Register today for Saturday’s event.

Found Items Collage

Ages 10+ | Great for Tweens + Teens

July 22, 2012 | 1:00pm – 2:30pm

$15 Per Person

 Film Biz Recycling

540 President Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215

Best Fifth Avenue Bar to Watch Louis CK (Community Bookstore Episodes)

Tonight at 10:30pm! Watch the episode of Louie shot at the Community Bookstore with the bookstore crowd at the Loki Lounge (Fifth Avenue and 2nd Street). It’s a screening party!

You’ll get a chance to see the bookstore on TV.

Says the bookstore: “If you can’t make it to Loki (and our apologies for the late notice-it’s not easy finding a bar with TVs that’s not fearful of bookstore rowdies) you can watch “Louie” on FX in the safety of your home. And, with luck and if we behave ourselves, Loki will let us back next week when the second bookstore episode airs.”

Best Park Slope Bar to Watch Breaking Bad: The Gate

The Gate,surely one of the best neighborhood bars ever, on Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope will air Sunday episodes of the fifth season of Breaking Bad.

If you’re into Breaking Bad and you do not have cable television, this will be excellent news.

This is the place to wach the continuing mis-adventures of Water and Jesse played by the great Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul. The show, directed and written by Vince Gilligan,  airs at 10PM Sunday nights in NYC.

This is the fifth and final season and from what I’ve heard the first episode was INCREDIBLE.

 

Food Will Win the War at Union Hall Tonight

Pop quiz: Who said “Food Will Win the War “and what war is it?

Also, the band, Food Will Win the War is performing at Union Hall (702 Union Street) in Park Slope this evening at 8:00 PM. It’s probably their last local show for a couple of months.

“Food Will Win the War explores a space largely unexplored even in Brooklyn’s dense music scene. There’s a delicate balance in this music between the fun of surrealist fantasy and the acceptance of life’s realities.” -Mike Levine, The Deli Magazine

And if you’re into bocce ball, you should come early (and/or stay late) because there are two bocce ball courts upstairs at Union Hall

Louis CK Episode Filmed in Park Slope’s Community Bookstore Airs July 19, Public Screening TBD

http://youtu.be/4Muf6Gl2pHM
This Thursday, July 19, one of the episodes of Louis C.K. shot in the Community Bookstore airs at 10:30pm on FX. So they are going to have a viewing party, of course. But where?

At last report, they were still trying to find a site with cable TV and plenty of space (and alcohol).

I will let you know where the viewing party is when I find out.

Coney Island Talent Show: Cash & Prizes on July 28

The Coney Island Boardwalk: What a great spot for a talent show.

Be part of the 3rd Annual Coney Island Talent Show on the boardwalk (between 10th & 12th street) on Saturday July 28th from 3:30pm-8pm.

Categories for this year’s talent contest are:

Creative kids 9-12 years old

Creative kids 13-17 years old

Circus Freaks & Sideshow Geeks

Song & Dance

Best Drag Performance or Celebrity Impersonator

Over $4000 in cash and prizes!

This years celebrity judges include Dick Zigun of Coney Island USA, Miss Ekaterina, Broadway Brassy and artsy Waldorf kid, Sequoia Harrison!

 

Dancing Under the Stars Tonight in Park Slope

 Tonight is Dancing Under the Stars, the Fifth Avenue BID’s summer music/dance program (every Tuesday evening in July and August).

Coincidentally, I just ran into Irene LoRe, who runs the Park Slope Fifth Avenue BID  at Forty Weight/Sweet Wolf’s on Sixth Avenue and 12th Street.

Tonight DJ Chris Style in Washington Park will be spinning the beats for great dancing.

Starting at 6, of course, Park Slope’s favorite rock band, Rolie Polie Guacamole, will do an hour of music for kids.

At 7, Dj Chris Style will spin the dance beats that will get Fifth Avenue moving!