Category Archives: Civics and Urban Life

ART SALE FOR DARFUR AT ETHICAL CULTURE

A group of Brooklyn artists are selling their work to raise money to be sent to Doctors Without Borders for their work in Darfur. This sale is This is part of the big crafts fair at Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture this weekend. I know one of the artists, Tom Keough, who does masterful paintings of Park Slope streets at night. They are stirringly beautiful.

Saturday, Dec 16
11 am to 4 pm
53 Prospect Park West
between 1st Street and 2nd Street

For information, 718-768-6171 or email tomkeough@tomkeoughartist.comwww.ramonacandy.com

ELLEN FRUDENHEIM

I got so many responses to the Park Slope 100 and many new names. One of the many who should have been on the list was Park Sloper, Ellen Frudenheim, the author of “The Brooklyn Guidebook” (a 500 page guide to Brooklyn). She has a new book out called “Queens: What to Do, Where to GO (and how not to get lost) in New York’s Undiscovered Borough”. She is truly New York City’sguidebook guru. I got this email from her yesterday about a book signing at Community Books on Sunday December 17th.

“I’d like to invite you all to my book signing at the Community Bookstore on Seventh Avenue across from Key Food for my book signing, a glass of wine and holiday cheer! DECEMBER 17, 4-6 p.m.

The new book is Queens: What to Do, Where to GO (and how not to get lost) in New York’s Undiscovered Borough—and I will also have on sale copies of my 500 page guidebook to Brooklyn!

Please tell —or better yet, bring your friends.

TONIGHT AT 8 p.m. BROOKLYN READING WORKS

Come to a special holiday edition of BROOKLYN READING WORKS at the Old Stone House on Thursday December 14th at 8 p.m.

I
am pleased as punch to present an AN EVENING WITH 32 POEMS with
publisher/poet Deborah Ager and poets, Daniel Nester
and Terese Coe.

Deborah Ager is the publisher and founder of 32 Poems and a poet.

Terese Coe, the recipient of two grants from Giorno Poetry Systems, works on the staff of The Alsop Review. She’s written numerous drama reviews for The Rocky Mountain Review, and one of her translations from Ronsard has appeared in Leviathan Quarterly. Her book, The Everyday Uncommon, was published by Word Press.

Daniel Nester is the author of God Save My Queen II: The Show Must Go On. God Save My Queen: A Tribute. His poems have appeared in Slope, jubilat, Can We Have Our Ball Back, and elsewhere.


32 Poems is a semi-annual poetry magazine
published in April and November. Each issue of journal contains 32 poems so you can give intimate,
unhurried attention to each. It’s easy to carry and
inviting to read.

The comfortable size of 32 POEMS
and the superb quality of the work therein provides an alternative
to larger collections and is attractive to new readers of
contemporary poetry.

"32 Poems is portable poetry in its finest hour."
— Literary Magazine Review 

BROOKLYN READING WORKS: THIS THURSDAY

Debchicago02_1

Come to a special holiday edition of BROOKLYN READING WORKS at the Old Stone House on Thursday December 14th at 8 p.m.

I am pleased as punch to present an AN EVENING WITH 32 POEMS with publisher/poet Deborah Ager (pictured left) and poets, Daniel Nester and Terese Coe.

Terese Coe, the recipient of two grants from Giorno Poetry Systems, works on the staff of The Alsop Review. She’s written numerous drama reviews for The Rocky Mountain Review, and one of her translations from Ronsard has appeared in Leviathan Quarterly. Her book, The Everyday Uncommon, was published by Word Press.

Daniel Nester is the author of God Save My Queen II: The Show Must Go On. God Save My Queen: A Tribute. His poems have appeared in Slope, jubilat, Can We Have Our Ball Back, and elsewhere.


32 Poems is a semi-annual poetry magazine
published in April and November. Each issue of journal contains 32 poems so you can give intimate,
unhurried attention to each. It’s easy to carry and
inviting to read.

The comfortable size of 32 POEMS
and the superb quality of the work therein provides an alternative
to larger collections and is attractive to new readers of
contemporary poetry.

"32 Poems is portable poetry in its finest hour."
— Literary Magazine Review 

32 Poems Magazine is "…a journal that in just a few issues has already established a high standard of excellence.

" — New Pages 

BAY RIDGE HIGH SCHOOLER IN NY MAG

Lb061211_338
New York Magazine runs a weekly fashion feature that I love called the Look Book. This week, lo and behold, a friend of Teen Spirit’s was featured there. She’s also the person who took the picture of Teen Spirit that was featured in the Brooklyn Papers last week. Here’s an excerpt from Chloe Dietz’s interview in New York Magazine.

Where would you like to live?
I kind of want to live in
Providence. I kind of want to go to Brown because they have no core
curriculum, and that’s definitely a priority for me. I want to study
photography. I’ve already had a photo published in some Brooklyn
newspaper. I don’t even know which one.

SOCK MONKEYS A HIT AT THE PS 321 CRAFT FAIR

The PS 321 Holiday Craft Fair is an institution on Seventh Avenue. It’s been in existence for years and there is always a great selection of vendors.

This year, Sara Greenfield, a 3rd grade teacher at PS 321, sold sock monkeys in support of an arts organization called Fresh Art. The mission of Fresh Art, a non-profit organization , is to provide epanded artististic and personal development, as well as entrepreneurial opportunities to New York City artists with special needs.

It was founded in 1997 by people active in social services and the arts, who believe that artists with special needs should be recognized for their talent and creativity and not solely for the obstacles in their lives. Fresh art connects these challenged artist wot their communities with the belief that they will benefit in all aspect of their lives from recognition of their cultural contributions to society.

The sock monkeys were definitely one of the hot items at the show. There were a lot of sock monkey personalities in a wide range sizes, shapes, and colors. A sock monkey in a vest and a tie. A sock monkey bride. A hipster sock monkey (“he listens to Phish,” one of the volunteers manning the booth said. There was lounge singer sock monkey with a hot pink boa and a mama sock monkey with an adorable little baby.

Visitors to the fair gathered around oohing and ahhing trying to figure out which one they wanted to buy for $30. Check were made out directly to Fresh Art, so all sales will go directly to that organization.

There’s lots more information about Fresh Art online as well as ways to buy the sock monkeys. Go to www.freshartnyc.com

I also noticed something about a sock monkey circle where people get together and make sock monkeys. I will look into this and post about that ASAP. My daughter has been taking an afterschool sock monkey workshop with Sara and she LOVES IT.

WHAT I GOT AT THE HOLIDAY CRAFT FAIR

Here’s what I bought at the PS 321 Holiday Craft Fair — a nice way to give a shout out to the vendors I enjoyed.

TWO BOXES BY MARLENE’S LOST AND FOUND: She makes jewelry, art and boxes handcrafted from lost images and found objects. One of the boxes is decorated with the cover of an old game called Move-Land Keeno, the other one an old NYC postcard.

Swa2
A SCARF BY SUSAN STEINBROCK (susansteinbrockdesign.com): She skillfully hand-paints silk with a lovely sense of color and design.

A BAG BY ALICE: She makes lovely handbags out of vintage fabrics like bark cloth.

187586818_2377707651_m0
TWO SOCK MONKEYS: Adorable sock monkeys; a contribution to Fresh Art.

CRINGE

Cheryl Burke has a great piece in Until Monday about Cringe, a reading series at Freddy’s Bar & Back Room 485 Dean Street, where folks willingly share their adolescent embarrassments and adventures as recorded in their private teenage journals. I just missed one – it was on December 5th. Can’t wait for the next one.

This series, which began in April of 2005, takes place the first Wednesday of every month at Freddy’s Back Room. Cringe has garnered some major media attention including a segment on ABC’s Nightline and mentions in both Newsweek and Spin Magazine and was recently taped for a television pilot to air on TLC in early 2007.

Cringe creator and curator, Sarah Brown answered a few questions for me about the series and what it’s like to make an audience cringe.

Why did you start a series based on readers sharing their adolescent journals?

Back in 2001, I found my old diaries at my parents’ house, and spent an evening killing a box of wine with some friends of mine, reading them aloud. Their reaction led me to send the most painful excerpts to all of my friends in a weekly email. Eventually that list grew to about 60 people, and I didn’t even know half of them. The response was insane. So when I moved to New York a few years later, it sounded like a fun thing to do live.

How do you find readers for the series?

For the first show ever, I lined up a lot of friends. But since that first one, there’s been no shortage of readers. People will get up and volunteer at the end of the scheduled show, and I get a lot of great readers for the next show that way. It’s a pretty unexhaustive market, since everyone was a teenager. People who admit to me that they burned their diaries break my heart.

Read more at Until Monday

ONE YEAR AGO IN OTBKB: THE DAY JOHN LENNON DIED

31591105mI wasn’t in New York on December 8, 1980, the night John Lennon died.

At 10:15 p.m., the time he was murdered in front of the Dakota on West 72nd Street, I was asleep in a rooming house in London.

A high school friend, who was studying with a famous English opera
teacher, invited me to stay with her for a few weeks at the Repton
House in London’s Bloomsbury section, where she was also working as a
chambermaid.

I was en-route to Israel set to spend a year on a kibbutz. My
planned 2-week stay in London turned into more than a month for reasons
I don’t now remember. Perhaps we were were just having too good a time
exploring that city and being on our own in a foreign country.

Most of the guests at the Repton House were foreigners who, for one
reason or another, were living in London for an extended period of
time. The University of London was nearby and  there were quite a few
graduate students in the mix. The other chambermaids were young Italian
women from Naples, who were studying English in London.

We got friendly with these women who taught us how to curse in
Italian. One of them, Rosaria, used to say: Porco Dio, which translates
as Pork God.  She’d pronounce it dramatically as she railed against the
Repton’s owner who was exploiting the chambermaids terribly.

During my stay at the Repton House, a catastrophic earthquake hit
Naples, and we comforted Rosaria in the chambermaid’s kitchen as she
cried, uncertain of the fate of her family. She finally spoke to her
mother and learned that everyone was okay. She was holding the London
Times, which had a photograph of elderly Italian women in black shawls
mourning the earthquake dead on its cover.

We used to hang out in the chambermaid’s kitchen in the basement of
the hotel, boiling water for tea, which we’d learned to add milk and
sugar to. For dinner, we’d make fried eggs and toast slathered with
plenty of butter and English jam.

Our room was on the top floor with a perfect view of the rooftops of
Bloomsbury. Like an artist’s garret, it felt to me the perfect place to
be an American abroad, keeping copious notes in my journal, writing
letters home, discovering one of the great cities of the world.

On the night of December 8th there was late-night party at the
rooming house. It may have been a party for me as I was leaving the
next morning on a flight to Jerusalem. It was a raucous evening,
running up and down the stairs, going in and out of each other’s rooms.

There must have been wine, food. Surely we played music and danced.
I barely remember anymore what went on. But I do remember there was a
wistful feeling in the air. I wasn’t ready to leave, to go off on my
own to a part of the world I had never been.

We barely slept that night. The party went late and after it ended,
we packed up my things and talked until the first light of dawn.

(Were we awake at the moment of his death? What were we doing? )

On the morning of December 9th, when we went down to the lobby, I
noticed that the woman at the reception desk, a cheerful person who
reminded me of Lulu, the British singer in "To Sir with Love," was
crying. Her dark eye make-up was running; I wondered why she looked so
uncharacteristically sad.

"John Lennon died. He was shot." she said. I thought I was hearing things.
"What did you say? " I said certain that I’d misunderstood.
"John Lennon is dead."

I don’t remember how I found out the rest. My friend and I took the
Underground to Heathrow, where she waited with me to board the plane. A
quiet day at the airport, everyone seemed unaffected by the news. Maybe
it was too early. Little did we know of the crowds in Central Park, on
West 72nd Street, in Hyde Park.

It was the most awful of good byes. Me flying off alone, my friend
returning to a foreign city on her own. John Lennon had been murdered
in Manhattan. What was happening to the world?

We discussed my staying longer. Everything seemed up in the air. But I decided to get
on the plane, to go forward with my plans despite the fact that nothing
was the same.

The flight to Jerusalem passed in an instant; a blur of absence and
regret. I do remember some Hasidic men standing in the aisles praying.
They were davening, moving their upper bodies up and down, while
reciting words from tiny Hebrew prayer books. I remember thinking: Say
a prayer for John.

My first days in Israel, I stayed with a group of counter-culture
Americans who founded a Kibbutz near Jerusalem. They played Beatles
records all day in their one-room houses and wanted to talk to me about
what had happened, what it had been like in London, in New York. I was
a witness from the outside world, but there wasn’t much I could say:

(I woke up in London. Got the terrible news from Lulu. Cried at the
airport. Said good bye to a friend. And flew to Jerusalem in a mournful
daze.)

Weeks later on another kibbutz, I got a letter from my cousin sadly
detailing the
events of the days after John’s death in Manhattan. In her neat, all
lower-case print, she conveyed her loss in words I still remember.
"nothing
seems to matter. john’s dead. a piece of ourselves is gone." My sister
sent me a similarly sad note and clippings from the  Times and
the Voice about John, which I cherished.

In my no-frills room at the kibbutz, I read and re-read those
articles my sister sent and  relived the details of that night.  If I
couldn’t have been there, I still wanted to visualize it all: the taxi,
the street, the hospital, his bloody eyeglasses. Yoko’s look of utter
despair.

(John and Yoko had spent the early part of the evening of December
8th recording Yoko’s single, "Walking on Thin Ice." — "Starting Over:
Lennon’s hit single from his new album, Double Fantasy, had been on the
radio constantly in the chambermaid’s kitchen.)

I wanted, no needed, to know what 72nd Street looked like with those
mournful crowds singing ‘Give Peace a Chance." I tried to imagine those
moments of silence in Central Park when an entire city grieved
together.

All those miles away, all these years away now, it is still so close
— that terrible night. Those awful days after. All these years later
it still hurts.

–written December 8th, 2005

OFFICE OF EMERGENCY MANAGMENT OPENS IN BKLYN

This from New York 1:

Mayor Michael Bloomberg cut the ribbon on a new office for the city’s emergency services Tuesday.

The Office of Emergency Management Headquarters officially opened in Brooklyn. The $50 million facility will house the city’s response units and coordinate activity in case of large scale disasters and emergencies. Bloomberg said the building is just one part in the big picture of keeping New York safe.

“This is not just a one agency project to keep us safe,” said the mayor. “It’s everybody working together and that’s what’s happened in this city. We’ve pulled together and we have every reason to be proud.”

The new building will be staffed 24-hours a day and give operators the ability to communicate information at the touch of a button. The agency’s former home was destroyed in the September 11, 2001 attacks.

TRANS FATS BANNED IN NYC

Good news for the health of everyone: Those artery clogging hydrongenated crap has been banned from New York restaurants. Compliance will be tough to control. Who will, who won’t? Brooklyn customers should demand it from their local restaurants.  This from New York 1:

he New York City Board of Health unanimously approved a measure that would ban trans fats from city restaurants during a meeting Tuesday morning, making New York the first city in the nation to ban the oils.

New York becomes the nation’s first city to ban artificial trans fats, which are linked to an increased risk of heart disease. Artificial trans fats are made when hydrogen is added to vegetable oil, and can be found in everything from french fries, to baked goods, to salad dressing.

"Neither the health department or the Board of Health is telling people what to eat. You will still be able to eat anything,” explained Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden. “All of the food items will be available; they just won’t have an artificial chemical in them that would increase your chance of heart attack, stroke, and death."

The board voted to give restaurants more time to make to switch to healthier oils. Restaurants will be barred from using most frying oils containing artificial trans fats by July 1, 2007 and will have to eliminate the artificial trans fats from all of its foods by July 1, 2008. Restaurants will have a three month grace period after the measure goes into effect.

Originally, restaurants were going to be given just six months to replace the oils, and 18 months to phase out the fatty ingredients altogether.

“We are trying to find ground where restaurants can comply,” said Mayor Michael Bloomberg. “We’ll be accommodating, trying to make food safer. If we can do it without trans fats, it will save about 100 lives a year in New York City.”

The restaurant industry still says that is not enough time to make what they say will be a costly transition to alternative oils, which they say may be hard to find.

"For a lot of the restaurants that have changed over to fat free oils, it has taken two years to test, and talk with their suppliers to find those alternatives," said Sheila Weiss of the National Restaurant Association.

But the ban has the support of the American Heart Association, which initially had some concerns with it.

"We are very pleased,” said Judith Wylie-Rosset of the AHA. “And we are particularly pleased with the support that’s going to be available to the restaurants and the evaluation, because this could set the stage for further restriction of trans fat in other locations."

In another move, the board approved a measure forcing restaurants which already make the caloric content of their food items public, to list that information on their menus. It will effect about ten percent of the city’s eateries, mostly fast food and chain restaurants.

BOARD OF ED NOW CONDOS

673biz1
This story about turning 110 Livingston Street, the building that used to house the Board of Ed, into condos is from the New York Daily News.

Talk about a turnaround. The infamous Board of
Education headquarters in downtown Brooklyn is being redone as luxury
condos — and people who worked there are buying them.

Despised as a symbol of bureaucracy gone wild, 110 Livingston St. was
sold to developer David Walentas when the Board of Ed was dismantled. A
former schools spokesman predicted it would be "the least missed
building in the history of New York City government."

But he was wrong. Just ask Joan Rosenberg.

She and her husband, Neal Rosenberg, have purchased a two-bedroom condo
in the 1920s-vintage beige-brown brick building, which was designed as
an Elks Club by famed architects McKim Meade & White.

"We have fond memories of the building," said Joan Rosenberg, who was
assistant to the director of citywide programs from 1978 to 1983 and is
now a New York University professor. "We developed wonderful programs
for kids who would not have been able to stay in school."

Also, it’s where she met Neal, who was working there as a Board of Ed lawyer.

Apartment buyer Brad Silver’s love of 110 Livingston dates back to his childhood.

His mother, Yaffa Silver, worked there in the 1990s as the head of the
music department. He’d visit her after school, and even sneak in to see
her when he was playing hooky.

An avid amateur photographer, she took hundreds of pictures of the building.

"I’m going back into a part of history that my mom was obsessed with," he said.

The old Board of Ed building is one of a pair of historic
office-to-condo conversions in downtown Brooklyn — closely watched
projects in a nabe that’s been rezoned for denser residential and
commercial development.

The other is the former Verizon building, a 27-story Art Deco landmark
on Willoughby and Bridge streets, known as 7 MetroTech Center until its
sale early last year to landlord David Bistricer. Its new name is
BellTel Lofts.

The two projects are out in front of a wave of condo construction in
the area — including ground-up projects at 75 Smith St. across from the
Brooklyn House of Detention, and the 40-story Oro tower at 306 Gold St.

Despite a citywide slowdown in condo sales, apartments are going fast
at 110 Livingston — where Walentas is adding a modern glass crown to
the building.

There were nearly 1,200 people on the waiting list to visit 110
Livingston before marketing started 11 weeks ago. Since then, sale
contracts have been signed for 162 condos — more than half the
building’s 300 units, said Asher Abehsera of Two Trees Management,
Walentas’ firm.

Part of the appeal is the pricing — which has averaged $678 per square
foot, he said. That’s a deal compared with Manhattan condos, which go
for an average $1,171 per square foot, according to appraisal firm
Miller Samuel.

The smallest apartment that’s been sold at 110 Livingston was a
$340,000 studio. The priciest — a 1,680-square-footer with a
wrap-around terrace — was sold for $1.425 million.

The building’s makeover includes a trompe l’oeil painted on its
courtyard facade by famous muralist Richard Haas. And space that was
the Elks’ grand meeting hall will become a cultural center. Eight
bidders are vying for it; the winner gets it rent-free for 10 years.

The other historic property, BellTel Lofts, has a good architectural
pedigree. The 1920s-vintage tower was designed by preeminent Deco
skyscraper architect Ralph Walker, and built as the Long Island
headquarters of New York Telephone Co.
Apartments at the orange-brick building have been on the market for
five weeks. Contracts have been signed for 13 condos, and drawn up for
another 14 condos, said Hal Henenson of Prudential Douglas Elliman,
which is handling the sales.

Asking prices start at $500,000. Two duplex penthouses will be offered
for nearly $3 million apiece — after most of the building’s 219 units
have been sold.

If things go according to plan, residents will have an upscale place to
grocery-shop right on the premises.
Elliman’s retail-leasing maven Faith Hope Consolo has offered space in
the base of the building to Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s and D’Agostino.

"We’re pushing for a food retailer," she said.

COMMUNITY BOOKSTORE HAS A WEBSITE: YAY

BIG NEWS and I mean BIG NEWS. Community Books has a WEB SITE. Yes, you heard me right. They’ve been working on it for quite while and I keep asking. Now it’s up and running. YAY to  Catherine Bohne and staff.

It’s big news because Catherine is an admitted Luddite. A card-carrying Luddite.  The store only recently replaced their computers—computers they’ve had since the early 1990’s (or earlier).

Luddite or not, she obviously recognizes the importance of having a web site because it’s such a great way to spread the word about a great bookstore, a store which is such an important place for many in this community.

I think the previous owner had a web site — they created it right before Barnes and Noble came to Seventh Avenue. At that time, the store took numerous measures to insure their existence on Seventh Avenue (web site, discounts, a cafe). They survived! Sadly, another Seventh Avenue bookstore, Book Link, fell victim to the economic  pressures caused by the big mega-bookstore invasion.

In this day of mega-stores, I think the small, quirky, interesting stores have EVEN more value. A store like Community Books is a perfect antidote to all the sameness — the McDonald-ization of the world. What’s wrong with quirky, eccentric and unexpected?

So, a web site for Community Books is a great way to get the word out about all the interesting events at the store and elsewhere.

Today, she also sent out her  yearly newsletter in PDF form with gift suggestions—it happens to be a great resource for all you book-buying gifters — BOOKS MAKE SENSATIONAL GIFTS I THINK.

cbjupitarbooks.com is the URL. Better bookmark that one because it’s hard to remember. The site has all sorts of cute illustrations of reptiles and rabbits. I’d say the site really conveys the vibe of the store, in all of its quirky splendor, quite well.

Here are some gift suggestions from the bookstore:

Theories of Everything : Selected, Collected, & Health-Inspected Cartoons by Roz Chast 1978-2006
by Roz Chast (Bloomsbury, $45.00): Everything from “Tuesday Night
Fever” to the “Prozac Mist Air Freshener” by our greatest chronicler of
the anxieties, superstitions, furies, insecurities, and surreal
imaginings of modern life. Yup. Even the “Flying Wall-to-wall carpet.”

          Samuel Beckett : The Grove Centenary Edition
(Grove Press, $100.00): The definitive (and handsome) boxed set, edited
by Paul Auster. Two volumes of Novels, One of Dramatic Works, plus a
Fourth of Poems, Short Fiction and Criticism. Go Bananas.

In the Studio : Visits with Contemporary Cartoonists
by Todd Hignite (Yale, $29.95): Generously illustrated with full-color
reproductions, this unparalleled look at the cutting edge of the comic
medium provides interviews with the likes of Chris Ware, Daniel Clowes,
Art Spiegelman and Jaime Hernandez among others. Rare access to many
who usually decline to grant it.

Beautiful Evidence by Edward Tufte (Graphics Press,
$52.00): The long-awaited new book by the pre-eminent champion of
visual representation theory. “Science and art have in common intense
seeing, the wide-eyed observing that generates empirical information.
Beautiful Evidence is about how seeing turns into showing.” About how
representation can “delight both by the wonder of the spectacle and the
accuracy of expression.”

The Silver Spoon Cookbook (Phaidon Press, $39.95):
Considered the “bible” of authentic Italian cooking, this cookbook has
until recently never been available in English. 2,000 recipes cover the
basics, like the proper way to cook spinach (use just the amount of
water clinging to its leaves) to more difficult recipes, like braised
rabbit with rosemary. All three daily meals are accounted for–actually
four, because you must include dessert!

The Power of Art by Simon Schama (Ecco, $50.00):
“Great art has dreadful manners,” the author observes at the start of
this exploration of the power, and the purpose, of art. “The hushed
reverence of the gallery can fool you into believing masterpieces are
polite things … but actually the greatest paintings grab you in a
headlock, rough up your composure, and then proceed in short order to
re-arrange your sense of reality.” Schama focuses on eight
artists—Caravaggio, Bernini, Rembrandt, David, Turner, Van Gogh,
Picasso and Rothko—who, each in his own way, transformed the way we see
the world.

There are way more books in the continuation of this article:

Continue reading COMMUNITY BOOKSTORE HAS A WEBSITE: YAY

Wanna Buy a Housing Development?

This from NY1:
Less than a month after the
multi-billion dollar sale of Stuyvesant Town in Manhattan another of
the city’s federally-funded apartment complexes is reportedly up for
sale.

Starrett City, which is now known as Spring Creek Towers, is on the
market. The 46-building development in the East New York section of
Brooklyn is home to some 14,000 residents. It’s the largest
federally-subsidized complex in the country.

Experts say the sale could exceed one billion dollars.

Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper village were sold two weeks ago for $5.4 billion.

            
            
       
   
 
 

VA VA VOOM: BUST MAGAZINE SHOPPING SHOW

I think this event has been taking place for a few years. It sounds like fun.  It’s in Williamsburg on Saturday, December 9th, 2006, from 11 am to 9pm. Bust Magazine is a pop culture feminist publication. Founded by Debbie Stoller in 1993 to provide a third-wave feminist perspective, many amous and influential woman have appeared on the cover, including Björk, Cher and Tori Amos.

Join BUST MAGAZINE for a massive holiday shopping bonanza running
all day (and into the night) at the Warsaw in Williamsburg, Brooklyn,
featuring crowds of crafters, cocktails, DJs, and dancing! Plus, a
special celebrity raffle!

Get jiggy with "Jingle Bells" and a gin and tonic
as you browse through hundreds of HANDMADE WINTER WARES from handbags
and knitwear to ornaments, jewelry, and cards. Last-minute holiday
shopping to do? Skip the mall and buy DIY!

COMPLIMENTARY COCKTAILS COURTESY OF Brooklyn Brewery, Sailor Jerry Rum, and Working Girl Wines from

At 6-7pm! And if you need to take a break from shopping, hit the dance floor
while enjoying music spun by DJs Dirty Jean, Amylulita, Lady Byrd,
Peppermintwist, Ultra V, Mahssa, and Miss Modular. Admission is just $1,
which also gives attendees a shot at winning a BUST load of booty in the
Craftacular Raffle! See you ho-ho-hos under the misteltoe!

WHEN: Saturday, December 9th, 2006, from 11 am to 9pm

WHERE: The Warsaw, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, 261 Driggs Ave [at Eckford]
Brooklyn, NY (718) 387-0505

ALBERTS SELL ASTROLAND TO THOR PROPERTIES

This from Bloomberg Media:

Astroland Amusement Park on the Coney
Island boardwalk, which offered rides and thrills to a generation
of Brooklynites, was sold to a developer planning to turn it into
a year-round resort.         

The park will close after the 2007 summer season as part of
an agreement Thor Equities LLC, a New York-based development firm,
according to a statement released by the sellers, the Albert
family. Dewey Albert, father of the current owner Jerome Albert,
opened the amusement park in 1962, the statement said.         

No price was given. The owners said they couldn’t afford to
convert the park to year-round operation. The Alberts will
continue to operate the landmark Cyclone roller-coaster, which
will be 80 years old next year, under a contract with the city of
New York, according to the statement.         

dlevitt@bloomberg.net            .         

      
      
      
      
       

TWO YEARS AGO IN OTBKB: A PALPABLE FEELING OF RELIEF

Memories may be beautiful and yet…There are definitely some things you wish you could forget (so why am I reprinting this?).

Two years ago today, Smartmom, Hepcat, and Teen Spirit completed Teen Spirit’s public high school application. Now he’s a bubbly 10th grader at a small private high school in Bay Ridge. There are certainly many parents and kids going through this process right now. This goes out to them:

They did it: it’s done.

The application is filled out. Signed. Dated

Teen Spirit, Hepcat and Teen Spirit managed to select 12 public high schools and order them according to preference.

The guidance counselor has it.

Hepcat
didn’t sleep a wink last night. Teen Spirit’s high school application
was only part of the anxiety running rampant in his mind. Last week his
hard drive crashed. So in addition to worrying about Teen Spirit’s
future and the family’s money situation, Hepcat was trying to figure
out how he was going to print up 50 pictures or more without a computer
for this weekend’s craft fair.

Smartmom popped up at 6:30 am and saw only OSFO in the bed — Clever Grandma was sleeping in OSFO’s room. No Hepcat.

Smartmom
looked everywhere for him. It’s not a huge apartment so that didn’t
take long. She checked Teen Spirit’s bed twice — maybe Hepcat crawled
in there. Nope. Was he on the green leather couch where he sometimes
ends up? Negative. She checked to see if his camera was in its spot —
was he out taking pictures of the dawn? Nope. Camera on the table in
the living room.

Hmmmm. Where did Hepcat go? It’s time to fill
out Teen Spirit’s high school application. Procrastination time is
OVER. He wouldn’t run out over this, up and leave, end it all…

Finally
the front door opened at around 6:45. Hepcat had to re-park the car
because the city is repaving Third Street and all cars had to be moved.

Mystery solved.

So
they argued. Hey, isn’t that what everyone does when they’re stressed?
The argument didn’t take hold so they moved on. And thus began the
final lap of the high school application process. They started slow,
but gained momentum. By 7:15 they were really going strong.
Insideschools.com was open on the laptop, names of schools were being
bandied about: Ever heard of…what does it say about…what are the statistics on…oh shit, we still need an eleventh choice…

Smartmom
and Hepcat were a walking, talking NYC public high school strategy
machine. And they worked like a team, a smooth, clean high school
machine—two heads better than one. Pencil sharpened, guide book open,
code numbers flying. They were working fast, they were working smart,
they were doing the public school hustle.

And then it was done.
They could hardly believe it. 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12. They’d filled
in all 12 little boxes on the application form and there was nothing
more to do. The silence was truly deafening (no one was up yet). It
felt good, it felt right, it felt scary (hope he doesn’t get his 12th choice…)

Then something akin to buyer’s remorse set in: Did we make the right decision? Why’d we pick that school? Should we re-order them? What the hell are we doing? But
that didn’t last long either. It was time to part ways with that
ominous piece of paper, that hideous reminder of a hideous process that
has permeated their lives these last two months.

Shoo, shoo, time to fly. Be on your way high school application. Be on your way.

They
kissed the sheet of paper, said blessings over it, summoned every
Jewish, Presbeytarian, Buddhist prayer they could think of…

Smartmom walked it over to the guidance counselor’s office.

–written November 2004

And so the waiting begins.

LEGION OF LIT MAGAZINES: SATURDAY AT GALAPAGOS

There are a whole lotta literary magazines in this Brooklyn borough. And a bunch of them are getting together for their yearly shindig this coming Saturday at the ultra cool Galapagos Art Space in Williamsburg. Sounds real interesting for those who are literarily inclined…

THE LEGION OF LIT MAGS event on Saturday, December 2, 5-10pm at Galapagos Art Space in Brooklyn, New York.

Nine prominent literary magazines will team up to showcase the latest issues of their magazines, raffle off incredible prizes, and offer an opportunity to meet and talk with influential literary journal editors in a celebratory evening filled with readings and entertainment. Lit mags, Small Spiral Notebook and Ballyhoo Stories will host the event. Last year’s event was a smash success and we hope to rock out again!

The Legion of Lit Mags includes: Ballyhoo Stories, BOMB, Opium, Pindeldyboz, Post Road, Quick Fiction, Small Spiral Notebook, Swink, and Tin House. Readers at the event include: Noria Jablonski, Irina Reyn, Brian McMullen, Aaron Hamburger, Elizabeth Searle, Salar Abdoh, Brian McMullen, and others. Musical Performances courtesy of Pindeldyboz.

www.legionoflitmags.com

DECEMBER 14: 32 POEMS AT BROOKLYN READING WORKS

Debchicago02_1

Brooklyn Reading Works presents an evening of poetry with 32 POEMS MAGAZINE.

32 Poems is a semi-annual poetry magazine
published in April and November. Each issue of journal contains 32 poems so you can give intimate,
unhurried attention to each. It’s easy to carry and
inviting to read.

The comfortable size of 32 POEMS
and the superb quality of the work therein provides an alternative
to larger collections and is attractive to new readers of
contemporary poetry. Publisher/poet Deborah Ager (pictured left), Daniel Nester and Theresa Coe will read their work.

December 14th at the Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. 8 pm. $5.00 with light refreshments.

Continue reading DECEMBER 14: 32 POEMS AT BROOKLYN READING WORKS

RESTAURANT THANKSGIVING

There is nothing un-American about spending Thanksgiving in a restaurant. It’s not like some weird cop out. It’s not a denunciation of the homey, good smelling preparations of the day. It’s not a thumbing of one’s nose at the traditionality of it all. It’s just another way. And when you’ve been to 48 Thanksgivings — change is welcome.

So eighteen of us gathered at BLT Prime on East 22nd Street, in an elegant downstairs party room that looked like a dining room you wouldn’t mind having in your apartment.

It was spacious, easy to wander around, trade seats, chit chat with family members, including my aunt and uncle, two graduates of James Madison High School back in the day, who told me that they were pleased as punch to be mentioned in an OTBKB piece about the famed high school, alma mater of three current members of the US senate.

Also there were a host of cousins and their children. Their children are articulate, graceful adults.

And it didn’t make me feel old as in I remember when you were born. Or you were only two at my wedding (that sort of thing). It made me feel grateful to have such a cool group of relatives

The children of my cousins are interesting people:

–A is in law school; her husband is a doctor and an opera enthusiast.

–AG is studying slavic languages, will travel to China, and is a delight.

–D is studying psychology in college and wants to go into clinical social work eager to help people.

–M loves Shakespeare and the idea of directing plays. She will to college in a year.

–J, a high school freshman, just made honor roll school, a cause for much celebration.

The food was delicious. FANTASTIC. Served home style, there was lots of variety: turkey, salmon, and prime rib. Incredible mashed potatoes, Brussels sprouts, string beans. I don’t think I saw sweet potatoes. There were carrots.

No sweet potatoes: now that’s un-American.

They served an incredible  butternut squash soup with creme fraiche. Tres tres. 

My children seemed to be holding their own. I was at the other end of the table so I didn’t really see/hear what they were doing. Teen Spirit was dressed to the nines in a spiffy tweed jacked given to him by my father. OSFO wore her most favorite worn jeans with lots of holes, embroidery, sparkles and colorful striped tights underneath.

My mother-in-law joined us all the way from California. A real pleasure. Hepcat talked politics and Wall Street with my cousin’s husband. That’s what they always do.

The upside of the restaurant Thanksgiving: no dishes to clear or wash. No dishwashers to load. No finding space for leftovers in the fridge.

The downside: No leftovers. Maybe four hours later we were hungry again (after seeing The Queen at Cobble Hill) and there was that longing for cranberry sauce, turkey, stuffing, etc.

ROBERT ALTMAN DIES

Robert Altman, one of the great greats of American filmaking died yesterday at the age of 81. Look at the list of his movies (in no particular order): Nashville, Mash, McCabe and Mrs. Miller, the Long Goodbye, Thieves Like Us, Popeye, Three Women, and more recently Shortcuts, Gosford Park, and A Prarie Home Companion, a film in which death was a major character played by the great, Kevin Kline.

"A risk-taker with a tendency
toward mischief, Mr. Altman is perhaps best remembered for a run of
masterly films — six in five years — that propelled him to the
forefront of American directors and culminated in 1975 with what many
regard as his greatest film, “Nashville,” a complex, character-filled drama told against the backdrop of a presidential primary," writes Rick Lyman in theNew York Times.

Genre-bending, free-wheeling and surprising, Altman employed a recurring ensemble of unpredictable  actors in movie after movie. Improvisation was key and sound was his forte: "Mr. Altman was
celebrated for his ground-breaking use of multilayer soundtracks. An
Altman film might offer a babble of voices competing for attention in
crowded, smoky scenes. It was a kind of improvisation that offered a
fresh verisimilitude to tired, stagey Hollywood genres," write TK in the Times.

Last summer at Brooklyn Film Works, an outdoor film festival in JJ Byrne Park, we showed, "The Long Good Bye," a kooky take on the Phillip Marlowe book by Raymond Chandler. It may not have been the best  choice for an outdoor film festival, but many in the audience declared it among their favorite movies for Elliot Gould’s performance and a cast of incredible  actors, including Henry Gibson, Nina Von Pallant, Sterling Hayden, Arnold Schwarzenegger in a small part and others.

Now I’m glad we paid tribute to one of the greats while he was still alive. It isn’t always popular to like Robert Altman’s work but it can’t be denied that he was a creative genuis who left his mark on cinema in a characteristically eccentric way. 

OTBKB HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE: SHOULD I DO IT AGAIN?

Holiday_3

I am trying to decide if I shoud do the gift guide again. Last year, I went to nearly every store on 7th and 5th Avenues
from Flatbush to 16th Street that I thought might have interesting
gifts. I selected at least one gift item per store that caught my eye.
Sometimes I mentioned more. It was an interesting exercise: trying to
zone in on the best and most unique gifts in every shop. In a few rare
cases, it was difficult to find even one thing. Usually it was
incredibly easy because there was so much good stuff to choose from. Question: Should I bother to do this again?

 

TIMES’ STYLE SECTION ON PARK SLOPE TEEN ROCK SCENE

I knew this New York Times’ piece in the Style section was coming. And here it is for all to read (if you missed it during the week. I did. DUH. Thankfully, Teen Spirit told me about it Saturday evening).

I noticed the Times’ photographer at last week’s Rockin’ Teens Showcase at Liberty Heights Tap Room. Steve Depulla, owner of the place, mentioned that the Times’ had interviewed him earlier in the week. The hype for Care Bears and Fiasco is pretty intense — DO THESE KIDS HAVE PUBLICISTS OR JUST FAMOUS PARENTS?

The newly named "Kid-core" scene is no longer just cute — it’s a real scene with managers and coaches and publicists and everything. The fact that it’s one more thing to analyze about crazy New York City parents just adds to its news worthiness for the Times and New York Magazine. Breast feeding, school frenzy, managing your kid’s rock band…

The Times’ piece was heavy on the ‘children of celebrity angle.’ It turns out that the band from Sag Harbor that showed up at Liberty Heights a few months back, Too Busy Being Bored, was fronted by Forrest Fire Gray, 14, whose dad was Spalding Gray. The Times’ also name-drops that Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbin’s son is in another Brooklyn teen band, The Tangents. The Times’ is definitely going for the celeb angle big time.

FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES: THE children whispering and fidgeting in front of the stage at Union
Hall in Park Slope, Brooklyn, looked like any kids awaiting, say, a
storyteller. Then Zora Sicher and Hugo Orozco, the two 11-year-olds who
make up the band Magnolia, climbed onstage and broke into a
hard-driving original song called “Volume.” It was clear this was not
quiet time.

“Wooooo!” a dreadlocked
woman shouted from the back of the room, where a crowd of adults, many
in vintage concert T-shirts and cardigans, looking like kids
themselves, cheered and sipped bloody marys.

A clump of
teenagers looked on appreciatively during the set, part of a showcase
of all-kid bands on a Saturday afternoon this month at the CMJ Music
Marathon in New York. When the Magnolia duo paused to adjust their
instruments — Zora on guitar, Hugo on drums — a babe in arms wailed.
“Are you crying because they stopped, honey?” Mom cooed.

For
this set of performers and audience members, indie rock is as familiar
as a lullaby. “We like punk, classic rock, metal, riot grrrl,” said
Hugo, an elfin-face sixth grader from Brooklyn, who was given her first
drum set at 7.

Magnolia, like other bands on the Union Hall
bill — Care Bears on Fire, Tiny Masters of Today, Fiasco, Hysterics —
is more than a novelty act. It is developing a following on New York’s
burgeoning under-age music circuit, where bands too young for driving
licenses have CDs, Web sites and managers.

“Oh my god, there’s
like a huge, huge kid-rock scene here,” said Jack McFadden, known as
Skippy, who booked the show at Union Hall. “It’s really very indicative
of Park Slope, since so many of the parents who live around here are
hip and have these hip little kids that they dress in, like, CBGBs
T-shirts.”

Continue reading TIMES’ STYLE SECTION ON PARK SLOPE TEEN ROCK SCENE

MENUTOPIA: A COOL IDEA

Got this email in the old InBox the other day. Very interesting! Check it out. I signed up and will be using it frequently for my own dining needs as well as for the blog. It is a FANTASTIC resource as few restaurants in the nabe have websites. And what do you do when you’ve thrown out all the menus from Lemmongrass. Halleluah.

Hey Louise,

I found your blog and thought you would really love this new site that I just launched in Brooklyn: www.
menutopia
.com
.

We have menus and other information for a lot of Brooklyn (and a few other cities, including Manhattan) restaurants
already and we’re just getting started. We’re working on adding
restaurants around the clock so that we can be as comprehensive as
possible, but that’s only HALF of Menutopia.

The other half (the fun part) is customizing and personalizing the
site, really making it YOUR Menutopia. It’s really easy to rate and
review restaurants, save favorites, create lists, add friends, and a
bunch of other stuff.

So, check it out! If you like
it, please tell your friends or even blog about it. You can link
directly to our menus, which is great when you’re writing about a
restaurant and you want your readers to check out the menu.

Dan
Menutopia

PS
We’ll also be providing a link back to all bloggers who mention Menutopia.

LITERARY SALON: BROOKLYN READING WORKS

159175329_74c861d86b_m
Thanks Judd Lear Silverman for blogging about Brooklyn Reading Works on your  blog in such a nice way. I’m gonna put it up here for all to see. Thanks for calling it a literary salon – that sounds so nice.

Literary Salons Live

As mentioned in a previous "blogs," Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House in Park Slope is a wonderful way to meet writers
and have the express pleasure of hearing authors read from their own
works. Curated by Louise Crawford, herself a writer and blogger–click
on the links for Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn–Brooklyn
Reading Works provides an evening of two or three authors’ readings,
followed afterwards by a convivial meet-and-greet with light
refreshments. (Okay, that may sound like Hyacinth Bucket on Keeping Up Appearances,
but it really is charming and fun!) In this fast-paced,
hustle-and-bustle city, it’s a wonderfully civilized way to stop and
smell the literary roses!

This coming Thursday, November 16th at 8 pm, the talented guest writers will be  Elissa Schappell, Ilene Starger and Darcy Steinke. The Old Stone House
is located in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Street
in Park Slope. 8 p.m. $5.00 includes the afore-mentioned light
refreshments. Books are sold at all readings.