Category Archives: Civics and Urban Life

EDIBLE BROOKLYN: AIN’T IT GRAND?

I’ve started to look forward to every new issue of Edible Brooklyn. It comes out quarterly and keeps getting better and better (and it was pretty cool to begin with). Reading this magazine nmakes me feel like Brooklyn is the epicenter of the epicurian universe.

Maybe it is.

The magazine, edited by Gabrielle Langholtz, is really finding it’s voice. It’s gorgeous, too.

Find out what’s in Jonathan Lethem’s fridge.

If you’re really interested, go to an old issue to find out what’s in David Yassky’s fridge.

I absolutey LOVE LOVE LOVE the Brooklyn Fridge feature and want them to do ME. They’ve done Dan Zanes, Jonathan Ames, Mark Morris, David Yassky, and now Jonathan Lethem. What women don’t have fridges?

Find out about a new general store that’s going in to the Picnic House in Prospect Park.

Find out about great burgers at The Farm at Adderly and The Flatbush Farm.

Find out about meat balls Frankie’s on Court Street.

Find out what’s in season, what local and wonderful recipes to boot.

Find a great listing of Brooklyn’s fabu restaurants from Greenpoint to Coney Island.

WE LOVE TEMPO PRESTO ON SEVENTH AVENUE

The food is delicious and interesting. The ingredients are FRESH. The service is very friendly and fast. We are so lucky to have TP on our corner.

5 OTBKB’s for TEMPO PRESTO

10 Reasons to Love Tempo Presto

The Greek salad

The snickerdoodle cookies

The roast beef with horseradish mayo sandwich

The caesar salad

The green salad with chicken

All the grilled sandwiches (the veggie lasanga looks great, too).

The ruben

The self-serve soda machine

30% off on left-over salads and sandwiches after 5 p.m.

CUP CAKES!

SMARTMOM: POST-VACATION RE-ENTRY IS BRUTAL

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from this week’s Brooklyn Paper, which is chock full of Brooklyn news and views.

Caution. Do not spend eight days alone on Block Island at the idyllic Sea Breeze Inn with its sunrise view of the ocean and salt ponds, a hammock, and a delicious breakfast of fresh fruit and muffins if you ever plan on coming home.

Re-entry is brutal.

The Sea Breeze’s manager, Gabby, had to peel Smartmom out of there.

“Should I call you a cab?” Gabby asked when it was close to time for Smartmom to catch the ferry to the Connecticut mainland.

“I guess,” Smartmom said, wanting her to do anything but.

Smartmom prayed, “Maybe the cab won’t come. Maybe I’ll miss the boat. Maybe I’ll have to spend another night. Maybe…”

But it wasn’t to be. The driver showed up promptly and delivered Smartmom to the New London high-speed ferry dock.

Standing on the ferry’s top deck, the wind blew Smartmom’s hair in all directions and none of the other passengers could tell that the tears in her eyes were tears of regret for having to leave her island paradise.

The Amtrak station in New London was just steps from the ferry. Smartmom lifted her heavy bag onto the train and spent much of the ride deep in thought about the delicious week she spent in utter solitude, finishing her novel holed up in a room right out of an Edward Hopper painting.

On the train, Smartmom daydreamed about riding her rented Raleigh seven-speed bicycle to the tip of the island.

She daydreamed about her daily four-mile run to the Southeast Lighthouse on a hilly road next to the ocean.

She daydreamed about writing daily postcards to OSFO at camp and Teen Spirit at home.

She daydreamed about the hours she spent reading, meditating, eating fresh seafood at Eli’s Restaurant and walking on the beach.

Mostly Smartmom daydreamed about being beholden to no one. She didn’t have to answer to anybody, she didn’t have to make dinner or pick up after anyone.

When the conductor called out, “New York–Penn Station,” Smartmom’s stomach clenched as she braced for her return to real life.

With her big suitcase, computer and gifts for the family, Smartmom hailed a cab to Brooklyn, which took practically as long as the train ride from New London.

No kidding.

The cabbie took the longest and most-inane route to Brooklyn that Smartmom has ever seen.

He took the FDR.

“Took much traffic in Manhattan,” he told Smartmom, mistaking her for a clueless tourist on her first trip to Brooklyn.

There was congestion a-plenty on the FDR, and the cab was stopped dead in its tracks on the Brooklyn Bridge ramp while a work crew slowly packed up.

Arriving on Third Street, the meter read: $36, an unheard of fare from Penn Station to Park Slope.

Smartmom tried to be very Zen about the whole thing; she tried to summon come of her Sea Breeze calm and joie de vivre.

The site of her beloved Hepcat waiting for her at the Third Street Café (the so-called umbrella table in front of their apartment building) was cheering.

She was very touched by his “Welcome Home” sign and the Clay Pot bag waiting for her.

Sadly, things got worse before they got better. Smartmom snapped when she saw that he’d added a new table to his office in the living room for his flat files and photographic equipment.

“So I guess, we’re just living in your office now,” Smartmom screamed, her eyes smarting with tears. “Why don’t you just take over the entire apartment?”

Smartmom is known for hyperbole.

She yearned to be back in that husbandless white room of her own with its view of the ocean.

There was some yelling. Mean things were said. Smartmom even walked back out of the apartment with her suitcase, fully intending to…

Standing in the hallway, contemplating a return to Penn Station, Smartmom wondered if Gabby had a room at the Sea Breeze.

She breathed in and out deeply and sheepishly wheeled her suitcase back into the apartment.

The living room didn’t look THAT bad. What had she gotten so crazy about? Hepcat looked depleted sitting on the red chair in living room.

Smartmom lay down on the couch. She had a bad case of Block Island withdrawal, but she was also sitting across from the man she loved the most in the world.

Still, she understood something about her own need to be alone from time to time.

That night they had dinner at the Stone Park Café. Afterwards they brought a blanket and a bottle of Chardonnay to J.J. Byrne Park and watched Mae West and Cary Grant in “I’m No Angel,” on the big outdoor screen.

Watching Mae West felt like a spirited validation of Smartmom’s need for independence. She reveled in all the great one-liners by this strong and sexy heroine.

Block Island was starting to recede into the distance. Mae West’s guttural growl was beginning to replace the sound of the ocean waves.

“Beulah, peel me a grape,” Mae West says famously to her on-screen maid. Smartmom knew she could love her husband and miss her solitude on Block Island.

“When I’m good, I’m good and when I’m bad I’m better,” West tells a very young Cary Grant.

Smartmom will always be Hepcat’s wife and OSFO and Teen Spirit’s mother. But she’s also a self that needs nurturing and time alone.

A LA MODERN BOOK CLUB AT THE COMMUNITY BOOKSTORE

Josh Millstein, who runs quite a few of the book groups at the Community Bookstore, sent an email about the store’s “A la Modern” book group:

The suspense is building and building…. People are waiting in line, dying to find out…. Strangers are stopping me on the street, cornering me in the subway car, and they have only one question on their minds….

What will the à la Modern book club be reading next? The answer: Graham Greene’s The Quiet American. We’re planning to discuss it on August 29th at 7:30. Perfect beach material, no?

We had another really lovely meeting last Wednesday. Some new faces were there, too, which is always nice to see.

I’ve also been thinking about adding a certain structure to the group, in the sense of creating a broad “curriculum” that we can use as a reference guide. Of course I’d only be thinking about doing this if the group wanted it. But I’m curious about what facets of literary modernism you may be interested in exploring; whether your interests are geographical (i.e. do you want to study European modernist literature, or perhaps just the novels from a particular country), chronological (a certain time-period) , or thematic. If you are interested in thinking about developing a curriculum, please email me your responses to the questions above or anything else you are thinking about. My email is: joshua.milstein@ gmail.com. You could also just save your responses for our next meeting.

BYSTANDER STOPS ABDUCTION AT BROOKLYN AQUARIUM

This from New York 1:

Police are searching for a man who they say tried to abduct a nine-year-old girl from the New York Aquarium Thursday evening.

Police say the man approached the girl in the aquarium’s parking lot in Coney Island as she was walking to her family’s car, grabbed her hand and then started to walk off to another area. He was disrupted by a bystander and the girl was able to run away unharmed.

The suspect then ran off. Police are describing him as being between 18 and 23 years old, 5’6” tall and weighs 135 pounds.

They say his hair was in dreadlocks, and he was last seen wearing a red shirt, black jeans and a red earring.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS.

A DISABLED RIDER’S MORNING COMMUTE

What happens when the head of the TA and a Brooklyn Assemblyman join Michael Harris, head of the Disabled Riders Coalition, on his morning commute?

They traveled from Michael Harris’ home in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn to Manhattan. Their nearly two-hour-long trip involved a long walk to a bus stop, a bus ride to an accessible subway station, and travel on five subway lines.

The same trip would take any other person about a half-hour. Both Roberts and Harris see today’s trip as the beginning of an new dialogue between disabled riders and the TA.

READ THE REST AT NEW YORK 1.

ALTERNATIVE FILMS FOR KIDS

It’s summer and sometimes that means too much TV and DVDs.

But there’s an alternative to TV crap.

Check out my friend’s blog, Alternative Films for Kids, a browser’s guide to some independent films, world cinema and animations that will add welcome variety to a Disney-based diet.

Not all were produced with children in mind, but all may be enjoyed by children. If your store doesn’t carry it, ask them to order it! Quick searches should lead to online rental options.

There are recommended age ranges here, but please pre-screen for your sensitive young viewer!

SAVE HEPCAT’S RIGHT TO TAKE PICTURES OF NEW YORK CITY

I got news of this from PICTURE NEW YORK. It’s nuts. Save Hepcat’s right to take pictures!

You can make a movie on a cell phone, but what if you want to use a tripod, or stay in the same spot for more than 30 minutes? New regulations from the Mayor’s Office on Film set absurd restrictions that would require even casual photographers and filmmakers to have a permit, and a million dollar insurance policy. No doubt it would be selectively enforced, AND who needs that kind of law on the books in the first place?

Not you, not us, not anyone that wants to take some pictures at any random time they have a few hours. We bet not even the Mayor’s Film Office actually wants to process thousands of requests from shutterbug tourists, wedding photographers, and school groups.

Yes, the rules are written THAT broadly. A film school grad standing on a corner with a camcorder, four friends and a dream will now have to pay as much as HBO or Fox to make anything that takes more than two people and lasts half an hour. The new Bernice Abbott or Diane Arbus or WeeGee might not ‘get the shot’, because they were forced to move along, or were arrested for refusing to leave until the light was just right.

That’s nuts. A love affair with New York City happens in pictures. The history of the city – its summer hydrants, its rainbow children, its aching splendor – is etched in our minds by images so vivid we no longer know whether they’re photographs or our own memories – or perhaps they’re our own memories of photographs.

The Daily News and The NY Sun have both written editorials ridiculing the new regulations. You can read the eleven page brick of regulations here.

We need to fight back. With enough public outcry we can stop these regulations from becoming law. There’s a recent precedent: a ban on photography in the subways was successfully fought off in 2004-2005.

The all-too-brief period for public comment ends Aug 3. Please make your voice heard now:

1) Click here to sign our petition.

2) Click here to email comments to the Mayor’s Film Office and the City Council committee that oversees them.

3) Make a Video or Photo Public Comment.

Post videos or photos commenting on this issue to YouTube or Flickr.

+ Tag the video or stills “”PictureNewYork”” and “”CameraWars””.

+ Send the links to jcho@film.nyc.gov and to us at info@picturenewyork.org

Spoken word artist Juliana Luecking has already posted her response to the proposed rules.

Picture New York is an ad hoc group of working artists, photographers and filmmakers joined together to fight these dumb rules.

http://www.picturenewyork.org

ARTISTS BAND TOGETHER TO FIGHT RESTRICTIONS ON STREET PHOTOGRAPHY

Some of my favorite artists have banded together to fight restrictions on street photography in New York. Albert Maysele (Grey Gardens, hello?), Patti Smith, Amy Arbus (daughter of and a good photographer in her own right, REM’s Michael Stipe, Jem Cohen (who photographed Teen Spirit when he was one week old for a REM music video: REALLY). On Friday, July 27, 2007, there will be a First Amendment Rally with Reverend Billy north end of Union Square Park. That’s TODAY>

NEW YORK CITY: Picture New York WITHOUT pictures of New York. The most
photographed city in the world is about to be shut down visually by
proposed regulations which would basically make it illegal to film or
tape in NYC without a permit and a million dollars of insurance.

An overnight, massive grassroots fight against these proposed
regulations has sprung up under the name ‘Picture New York.’ Fighting
back with YouTube videos, petitions, handwritten letters, a website,
Flickr space and a rally and press conference this Friday in Union
Square, this ad-hoc group of working artists, photographers and
filmmakers vow to stop the regulations going into effect as scheduled
in September from the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre, and
Broadcasting (MOFTB).

Albert Maysles, Patti Smith, Michael Stipe and Amy Arbus are among the
celebrated artists who have already signed on to demand the MOFTB
extend the period of public comment, currently ending August 3, and
eliminate the proposed regulations: 11 pages of single-spaced rules
where none existed before.

Jem Cohen, the critically-acclaimed filmmaker whose alarmed e-mail
prompted the first formal meeting of concerned filmmakers, says,
“Because street photography is, by its very nature, inextricably born
out of free and random movement through the city, street photographers
cannot know exactly where and when they intend to work, or for how
long. One cannot regulate an art form or activity by negating its very
premise. The proposed rules, in refusing to recognize the spontaneity
which is at the core of street photography, are untenable for that
reason alone.”…

MORE INFO:
For Immediate Release
Contacts:
Lisa Guido (917) 573-2282
Julie Talen (through July 31) (212) 226-4651
www.picturenewyork.org
info@picturenewyork.org

LISTEN TO MY MUSIC: BALKAN BEAT BOX

I get a lot of emails about new music. My new policy is this: Write to me about your music and why OTBKB readers are gonna love it. I like to read it in your own words. Here’s something from Inaya of Balkan Beat Box.

Balkan Beat Box creates music that is derived from a mixture of culture (Arabic, Jewish, Gypsy, and American) fused together to form harmonious sounds. They are a unique group. Its different. They blend in electronic music with hard-edged folk music from across the globe inclusing Middle East, Eastern Europe and the Balkans (hence the name).

They have established a more elaborate and natural sound. Sometimes they would use odd sounds like horses but still make it work. Check it out. :)

Their bio and music is available on their Myspace o page. It sounds great.

THE BIG BLUE HOUSE ON NINTH STREET: SLOPE MUSIC

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You know the house. It’s on 9th Street between Fifth and Fourth Avenues and it houses something called Slope Music.

The house is bright blue and has a few flowers painted on it.

I’ve walked past dozens, maybe hundreds of time over the years. It aroused my curiosity. Sure, I wondered what went on in there. I guess I knew it was a Music School. But I just didn’t know what to make of it.

It had kind of a cool Charles Addams vibe. I wasn’t sure if it was spooky or fun.

That is, until today, when Charles Sibirsky, who programs jazz shows at the Brooklyn Buger Bar, mentioned in an email that he lives there.

I thought: he lives in THAT house. A French Second Empire house. On Ninth Street. WOW.

According to Sibirsky’s website, the house was built in 1850 "before brownstones, before Prospect Park, before the Brooklyn Bridge."

Sibirsky and his wife, Vita, moved to the house in 1981 and opened Slope Music, which has a staff of a dozen teachers.

The studios at Slope Music feature Steinway Grand pianos. According to the website: "the 9-foot piano is the same model that graces the stage at Carnegie Hall. All keyboard students have the opportunity to play these fine instruments. Voice students have the thrill of being accompanied by the finest pianos in the world."

Vita teaches piano to her students in a magical room at the top of the building:

Vita’s studio is the cupola at the top of the building. When the afternoon light filters through the 13 windows, one feels like they are momentarily suspended above the building. Vita tries to create a warm, welcoming space for the students. The unusual setting encourages people to relax and be open to learning. The unique space makes every lesson special.

I’ve never known anyone to study there. But hey, it looks like a great place to play music. Call 718-768-3804 for information or to set up an appointment if you’re interested.

 

McCARREN POOL GETS LANDMARK STATUS

This from New York 1:

The Landmarks Preservation Commission has granted landmark status to four historic houses and three city pools.

Amongst the buildings given landmark status are two townhouses on 56th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues constructed at the start of the 20th century for financiers on that block, which became known as “Bankers Row.”

Two Federal-style, brick-clad row houses on Greenwich Street between Spring and Canal Streets were also granted landmark status. The houses were built nearly 200 years ago.

The landmarked pools include the McCarren Pool in Williamsburg. It has been closed since 1983, but plans are underway for a $50 million renovation.

The Thomas Jefferson Play Center in East Harlem and the Sunset Play Center and Bath House interior in Brooklyn will also become landmarks.

BROWNSTONE BRIDE IS BI-POLAR?

I had a feeling that the Brownstone Bride story was going to be a sad one. The Brooklyn Paper did some investigation and came out with a story on their website yesterday.

The Brownstone Bride, who was holding a teddy bear and a box, was taken to the hospital for psychiatric evaluation. According to a Brooklyn Paper quote from a policeman: the bride’s father lives on Fourth Street.

A police source at the 78th Precinct told The Brooklyn Paper that the ring was indeed genuine. Cops called the Fifth Avenue gem merchant with the ring’s serial number and were given the name of the man who purchased it.

The man later told cops that the woman had indeed been his fiancee, but that he had dumped her because “she was bi-polar and wouldn’t take her medicine,” the police source said.

The woman was later released from the hospital and is in the custody of her father, who lives on the block, the source said.

After being reported in The Brooklyn Paper, the story of the mystery bride was covered nationwide.

READ MORE AT THE BROOKLYN PAPER.

CHARLES SIBIRSKY PLAYS PIANO AT THE BURGER BAR: HE PROGRAMS JAZZ SHOWS, TOO

Longtime Park Sloper, Charles Sibersky, has lived on 9th Street since the 1970’s. He lives in that wild blue house called Slope Music. He says it’s the oldest freestanding house, not moved from another neighborhood like the Old Stone House, in the neighborhood. But not to digress, he’s programming jazz at the Brooklyn Burger Bar.

The Brooklyn Burger Bar
499 9thStreet( at 7th Av)
No Cover. No Minimum.

Every Thursday and Saturday from 9-1

8/2 Anders Nilsson guitar, Isaac ben Ayala piano, Dan Shuman bass

8/4 Mike Kanan piano, Ben Street bass, Eliot Zigmund drums

8/9Bob Arthurs trumpet, Charles Sibirsky piano, Ray Parker bass

8/11Christiana Drapkin, vocals, Charles Sibirsky piano, John DeCesare bass

8/16 John Merrill guitar, Charles Sibirsky piano, Ray Parker bass

8/18 Jan Leder Trio

8/23 Eric Pakula sax, Charles Sibirsky piano,Ray Parker bass

8/25 Bob Arthurs trumpet, Charles Sibirsky piano, Dan Shuman bass

8/30 Charles Sibirsky , Robert Weiss drum, Ray Parker bass

9/1 Charles Sibirsky piano, John DeCesare bass, Robert Weiss drums

FEEL THAT 1970’S VIBE AT BROOKLYN FILM WORKS TONIGHT

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What’s Up Doc?
  With Ryan O’Neal and Barbara Streisand and Madeline Kahn. What could be more fun on a beautiful summer night? It’s playing tonight in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue at Third Street in Park Slope.

There will be a Bugs Bunny short, a hot dog concession by Willie’s Dawg’s (which made New York Mag’s Best Cheap Eats list) and a funny movie directed by Peter Bogdanavich from one of the greatest eras of American filmmaking: the 1970’s.

Come in your very best Charivari dress.

Wear a little Jean Nate perfume.

Put on some tan wedgie sandals.

Pack a Blimpie picnic (or have a Willie Dawg).

Remember a time before cell phones and Wikipedia (how did we live without you?):

What’s Up, Doc? is a screwball comedy from 1972, directed by Peter Bogdanovich and starring Barbra Streisand, Ryan O’Neal, and Madeline Kahn (in her first full-length film role). It was intended to pay homage to comparable motion pictures of the 1930s, such as Bringing Up Baby,[1] as well as the Bugs Bunny cartoons—which, like this film, were made by Warner Bros. Pictures.

The film was a huge hit in theaters, and became the third-highest grossing film of 1972. The film won the Writers Guild of America 1973 "Best Comedy Written Directly for the Screen" award for writers Buck Henry, David Newman and Robert Benton. It was placed number 61 on the list of 100 greatest comedies published by the American Film Institute.

A SUMMER OASIS: BAM ROSE CINEMA

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Look what’s  there now: Three first run films you’ll want to see:

Hairspray: 4 OTBKBs. Really fun, funny, entertaining.
Rescue Dawn: 5 OTBKBs. Very gripping, very intense.
Sicko: OTBKB hasn’t seen it.
Plus: their Leading Ladies of Italian Cinema series is a sublime selection of some gems of international cinema.

Check out the schedule…

Rating system:

5 OTBKBs: Run to the theater and see it now!
4 OTBKBs: Well worth a trip to the theater.
3 OTBKBs: Get it on Netflix.
2 OTBKBs: Get it at Hollywood Video sometime.
1 OTBKB: Don’t even bother

TODAY ON THE BROOKLYN NESTER

Brooklyn Bitch, the writer behind Brooklyn Nester, is girl after my own heart. She writes today about CLEANING HER BEDROOM.

Nesters, today is a difficult day. Today begins the horrible, horrible task of launching the The Brooklyn Project.

Today Brooklyn Bitch motivates to take on the war zone that is my bedroom.

With this wretched, awful, and fuckin’ disgusting task, begins the 5 stages of death as we know them here at The Brooklyn Nester:

PARK SLOPER IS HARRY POTTERED OUT

Seeing Green is sick of Harry Potter. Find out why in one of Seeing Green’s best posts ever….

You see, I say to D., when you read a non-serialized book (or see such a movie,) you’re like an empty slate (a tabula rasa,
I say, always eager to nudge his vocabulary,) and you let the author
work his/her magic on you as you immerse yourself in the writing. A
good author brings something fresh to every chapter, something new is
revealed, something old is borrowed.

But a serial, by definition, is constrained, which is why so many of
Volume II’s are so disappointing. Rowling avoided the disappointments
magisterially, and was constantly inventive, constantly juggling the
many, many balls of her plot, constantly tying up or connecting loose
ends from previous novels. In this she was masterful and it worked well
through five books. VI and VII?…well…

I tell D. to avoid cliches in his nascent writing (which he does a
lot of,) because cliches are like the wormholes in that apple, empty
but assertive. And, I continue, in an epic spanning, oh, what, some
3,500+ pages, how could an author not create her own cliches?
You start noticing these. I mention that, inevitably, the freshness
disappears, like taking another bite of the apple you’re saving for
some reason from the day before. Inevitably you see constructs seen
before, plot lines mentioned two volumes before, conceits you noted
three books ago. Formulas emerge…

READ MORE AT SEEING GREEN

A T-SHIRT TRIBUTE TO PARK SLOPE

Slopeuni
These look like nice t-shirts designed by local Brendon Manwaring. You can order one in chocolate brown or slate here.

Note from the designer: This design is a tribute to my neighborhood home, Park Slope. It
depicts the area’s urban complexity and natural simplicity; the unique
beauty of classic Brooklyn that is Park Slope.
On the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch, a landmark at the northern
entrance of Prospect Park, I’ve overlapped an aerial view of the Park
Slope Historic District. According to the New York Landmark
Preservation Commission, it is "one of the most beautifully situated
residential neighborhoods in the city." With this, I’d have to agree.-Brendon

Star76 is a Brooklyn-based t-shirt company. Here’s what they have to say about themselves:

As
all good tales begin, ours started with a back-of-the envelope business
plan, scribbled out on the 4th of July 2006.

The plan became Star76:
a collective dedicated to creating imaginative clothing and accessories
through collaborations with local emerging artists.
 

Our
passion for fresh art and ideas coupled with our desire to change the
world (or at least make it a little more livable), also led us to
create the Ad Astra Initiative, Star76’s t-shirt driven program
dedicated to raising public awareness of and supporting causes near and
dear to our hearts.

EBERHARD FABER PENCIL COMPANY HISTORIC DISTRICT

I like the sounds of that.

The City Room Reports that landmark status is being considered for the Eberhard Faber Pencil Factory in Greenpoint. 

The yellow pencils, roughly 10 feet tall and still sharp after 83
years, adorn the facade of 61 Greenpoint Avenue, once part of the
Eberhard Faber factory in Greenpoint, where No. 2 Mongol pencils were
made until 1956. Together with structures on West and Kent Streets, the
building is part of the proposed two-block Eberhard Faber Pencil
Company Historic District. Read more at The City Room.

HOW DOES YOUR SUBWAY LINE RATE?

Check out the State of the Subways Report from NYPIRG’s Straphanger’s Campaign. It’s a very interesting report. Here’s why the people at Straphangers do what they do:

First, riders are looking for information on the quality of their trips.
The MTA has, unfortunately, resisted putting detailed line-by-line
performance measures on their web site. In June 2003, the MTA did begin
posting its quarterly performance data on its website, www.mta.info.  However, none of this information is broken down by line.  Our profiles seek to fill this gap.

Second, our report cards provide a picture of where the subways are headed.  This
report card paints a picture of a stalled system:  Subway cars break
down a little more often, a troubling trend at a time when hundreds of
new technology subway cars have been coming on line.  The subways have
shown no improvement in regularity of arrivals or in making accurate
and understandable subway car announcements. On one measure we found
there was significant improvement: subway cars became cleaner.

Continued
progress will be a challenge.  The MTA is struggling to obtain all the
planned funding for its current rebuilding program, including rising
construction costs, a weak dollar and realizing $1 billion dollars from
the sale of its assets, such as its valuable Manhattan rail yards.

Lastly, we aim to give communities the information they need to win better service.  We
often hear from riders and neighborhood groups.  They will say, “Our
line has got to be worst.”  Or “We must be on the most crowded.”  Or
“Our line is much better than others.” 

For riders and
officials on lines receiving a poor level of service, our report will
help them make the case for improvements, ranging from increases in
service to major repairs.  That’s not just a hope.  In past years,
we’ve seen riders — including on some of the lines we found the worst —
win improvements, such as on the B, N and 5 lines.

For those
on better lines, the report can highlight areas for improvement.  For
example, riders on the 7 — once the best in the system — have pointed
to declines and won increased service.

This report is part
of a series of studies on subway and bus service.  For example, we
issue annual surveys on payphone service in the subways, subway car
cleanliness, and subway car announcements, as well as give out the
Pokey Awards for the slowest city bus routes.

Our reports can be found at www.straphangers.org/reports.html, as can our profiles.

   
   
   
   

A BROOKLYN LIFE LOVES PO

After a day at the Siren Fest, ABL had dinner at Po. How Civilized.

Po is a Cornelia Street Italian eatery started by Mario Batali that now has a post on Smith Street.

ABL enjoyed her meal immensely. Especially the appetizers.

Read more here. She knows her restaurants and she knows Smith Street. She’s a great blogger who’s been around for a long time. I love her take on things.

FARM ON ADDERLY KEEPS GETTING THE RAVES

This Corteylou Road favorite made New York Magazine’s Cheap Eats list. Props to you.

The Farm on Adderley
1108 Cortelyou Rd., nr. Stratford Rd., Ditmas Park, Brooklyn; 718-287-3101
Some restaurants are instantly embraced by their famished neighborhoods, and so it was when this casually rustic spot opened last summer in Ditmas Park, a corner of Brooklyn where the Victorian fixer-uppers attract the sort of Manhattan expats who expect to find Cowgirl Creamery’s Mt. Tam on the cheese plate and crispy tofu with sweet corn on the kids’ menu. And so they do at the Farm, where seasonal ingredients are duly worshipped in preparations like housemade fettuccine with peas and pea shoots, and bluefish with corn and okra. To the place’s credit, there is also a serene little garden, a nice long bar where the “local and organic” motto extends to some of the beer and wine, and a respectable English-muffin burger that’s overshadowed by its world-class fries.

KUDO’S TO WILLIE’S DAWGS: NEWBIE GETS BEST CHEAP EATS

Willie’s Dawgs makes New York Magazine’s Cheap Eats list.

351 Fifth Ave., nr. Fifth St., Park Slope, Brooklyn; 718-832-2941
You would expect to find pedigreed hot dogs made from grass-fed cattle in a place like San Francisco, where the sustainable-agriculture movement is practically organized religion. In Nathan Handwerker’s backyard, it’s a little less likely. But as it happens, Park Slope’s bright, cheerful Willie’s Dawgs is the sole local purveyor of Let’s Be Frank, the brand started by Chez Panisse’s own “meat forager.” It’s top dog on a menu of alterna-franks like the skinless “Pedigree,” the poultry dog, the tofu dog, and the carrot dog, a whole root marinated in hot-dog spices. The best of the bunch is the homegrown “Mutt,” a Karl Ehmer all-beef number that comes swaddled in a house-baked challah bun. Excellent onion rings, too.