Category Archives: Postcard from the Slope

Free Trick or Treat Bags from the Park Slope Civic Council: Get One!

The Park Slope Civic Council in cooperation with the Buy in Brooklyn team are giving away FREE Reusable Trick or Treat Bags for this Halloween season.

The Trick or Treat Bags are IN STORES NOW and supplies are limited! They have coupons from and information about our very generous sponsors.

The PSCC and BIB folks are asking everyone to patronize these businesses (and buy local) because they are making the Halloween Parade bigger and better this year!

Ask for the bags when you go into these stores:

        Little Things Toy Store, 145 7th Ave   (718) 783-4733

        Tarzian Hardware,194 7th Avenue (718) 788-4213

        Warren Lewis, 123A Seventh Avenue 718 638-6500

        Lion in the Sun, 232 7th Avenue  (718) 369-4006

        Community Bookstore, 143 7th Ave (718) 783.3075

        Slope Sports, 70th 7th Ave (718) 230-4686

        Willie’s Dawgs, 351 5th Ave (718) 832-2941

        Boing Boing, 204 6th Ave (718)398-0251

        BAX, 421 5th Ave  (718) 832-0018

        3R living, 276L 5th Ave(718) 832-0951

        La Bagel Delight, 252 – 7th Avenue 718.768.6107

        Aunt Suzie’s, 247 5th Ave (718) 788-AUNT

        Park Slope Fitness Collective, 366 7th Ave, 718.499.1849

        Big Nose, Full Body, 382 7th Ave

        Roberto Falck, 217 6th Ave  718.230.07

Gossip Girl: Brooklyn Development Theme

Love that Gossip Girl. We love it so much that there’s plenty of shrieking with joy around our house because it is SO bitchy—some of the characters on that show are oh-so-nasty.

But we love the outsiders: Rufus, Dan and Jenny Humphrey, the Brooklyn Family that lives in the big DUMBO loft. They have good values and are so cooooool.

And we love love Vanessa, the home-schooled Brooklyn girl, who wants to be a film major at NYU. She also has a political consciousness—Brooklyn style—and is working to save a Brooklyn bar called the Brooklyn Inn from the wrecking ball.

Landmark status is what she wants for this venerable old pub. So she uses the scandalous picture of Catherine and Marcus to blackmail Blair
(Leighton Meester) into being a nicer person and helping to save the Brooklyn Inn.

Then Blair seeks revenge by
enticing Chuck (Ed Westwick) to seduce Vanessa by pretending to be a good person and using his family’s vast fortune to buy the place.

But something happens. Chuck’s trip to Brooklyn actually changes him. He makes a promise to the Inn’s owner that he wants to keep the bar alive. Things don’t work out that way. But something’s happening to Chuck.

Could it be he has a Brooklyn heart?

Music by Steve Reich, Dance by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker

I have always been a fan of Steve Reich’s music so this caught my eye. His piece, Distant Trains, is a fave. I also like Tehillim. This dance work by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker uses Four Orgns and Eight Lines. It’s at BAM.

Choreographer
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker returns to BAM with a program that
celebrates her evolving relationship with the music of Steve Reich, one
of our most inventive and iconic modern composers. Working from a
divine logic—often expressed as exalted permutations on a single
theme—they each invest their work with an emotional heart, creating
pieces that transcend definition as they challenge our notions of sound
and movement.

Reich’s globally-inclusive mix of Western
vernacular, classical, and non-Western influences, performed live by
Brussels’ percussion ensemble Ictus, dovetails perfectly with De
Keersmaeker’s formal, richly expressive choreography. Two new dance
works, set to Reich’s Four Organs and the subtle, harmonically intriguing Eight Lines,
shimmer with the choreographer’s signature rigor and appetite for
space. Every step, every phrase, reflects De Keersmaeker’s delicate mix
of minimalism and sensuality; a transfer of weight from one foot to the
next feels both matter-of-fact and momentous. The effect is of great
suspense, a slow build rife with drama.

Also on the program are Piano Phase from the four-part Fase, a riveting women’s duet performed along an invisible, unwavering line, and Part 1 of Drumming, a rush of semaphoring limbs, frenetic pairings, and rapid shifts of direction.

The Where and When

Oct 22—25 at 7:30pm
BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
Running time: 105min, no intermission
Ticket: $20, 40, 55

CMJ Music Marathon at The Bell House

Bell_logo_final_2
As they say on their website, The Bell House , a new Gowanus/Park Slope club is in the shadow of the "famous and brooding Kentile Floors
sign." It’s a gorgeous new music venue and lounge, located at 149 7th Street
between 2nd & 3rd Avenues, "crafted out of an old 1920’s
warehouse once used as a printing press, but more recently used as a
fly-by-night shipping company."

FYI: They have a TWO for ONE Happy Hour in the front lounge every day until 8pm. They open at 5 p.m.

And it’s one of the venues fro the CMJ Music Marathon starting tomorrow: Go here for the full schedule.


Brooklyn Indie Market: Steampunk-themed Festival

Not exactly sure what that is but it sounds interesting.

The Brooklyn Indie Market is putting on "The Grand Chrono’nauts Tea," a
steampunk-themed festival on Saturday with Victorian refreshments, a
reading and steampunk talk, a fashion show and many crafty vendors.
Also: tarot readings, a saw player, and hopefully lots of crazy outfits!

(co-sponsored by Brooklyn Based and BUST magazine)

http://brooklynbased.net/everything/circus-of-the-steampunks/

Yes! Change Thru-Ways to Two Ways in Park Slope

Today in the  Brooklyn Paper online edition I saw this: Park Slope: Change Thru-Ways to Two-Ways.
It’s a good headline and a good rallying cry. I’m all for it. I HATE the traffic on 8th Avenue and Prospect Park West. Hate it. This is a good proposal. And the fact that it was motivated by the death of Joanathan Millstein’s make it even more powerful for me. He was  a friend of a a group of friends of mine from childhood and high school. So I feel really sad about his death. Here’s an excerpt. 

A group of Park Slope residents is urging the city to convert the
one-way speedways of Prospect Park West and Eighth Avenue into two-way
streets in hopes of avoiding the kinds of car-bike conflicts that
killed a cyclist last month.

At a neighborhood traffic forum on Wednesday, Slopers argued that
reconfiguring Prospect Park West and Eighth Avenue — where Jonathan
Millstein was killed in a Sept. 10 collision with a school bus at the
corner of President Street — would slow traffic and allow pedestrians
and cyclists to reclaim a share of the road.

“You don’t have safe streets when you have cars barreling through in
a disorderly way,” said Michael Cairl, who argued during the meeting at
Park Slope Community Bookstore that one-way traffic often moves faster
and more erratically than two-way traffic.

The cycling advocacy group Transportation Alternatives came to the
same conclusion, determining in a 2007 study that one-way traffic on
Eighth Avenue regularly travels 40 miles per hour (10 miles per hour
above the speed limit), while two-way traffic on Seventh Avenue does
not exceed 25 miles per hour.

Three Brooklyn Boys Drown on Fishing Trip

Three young men drowned yesterday on a fishing trip in Smallwood, a small Sullivan County town. Their boat capsized, the police said. A fourth man from Brooklyn was able to swim to safety. Here from the NY Times.

      

The men
were fishing on Mountain Lake, in Smallwood, N.Y., about 10 miles west
of Monticello, when their boat capsized at about 1:30 p.m., the police
said.

A woman walking her dog along the shore heard the boaters’
screams for help and dialed 911, the Sullivan County sheriff’s office
said.

Gianfranco Generoso, 20, the survivor, managed to swim to
shore, where a passerby helped him from the water, the police said. The
passerby told them he had seen the other men in the water but lost
sight of them.

Michael Schiff, the Sullivan County sheriff, said
the victims and Mr. Generoso were related and were visiting family in
the area.

Mr. Generoso was taken to Catskill Regional Medical Center, where he was treated for hypothermia and released, the police said.

About
4:30 p.m., with State Police helicopters hovering over the lake, and
with rescue workers searching the water, divers from the Sullivan
County Dive Team pulled the bodies of two of the men from the water.

Benefit at Sycamore for Theater Workshops for Homeless Kids

Here’s a note from Talia, a member of The Actors Theater Workshop, which
is a not-for-profit organization that houses an after-school education
program for homeless children. They are holding a fundraising event on October 25th.  

In support of the Builders of the New World, a Theater and Education
Program for Homeless Children and At-Risk Youth.  Created and Produced
by the Actors Theater Workshop, Inc. 

Live Music from Noon to Midnight.  $20 all you
can drink (beer and wine) sponsored by TB Ackerson Wine Merchants.  For
Info Contact: EventInfo@actorstheatreworkshop.com

The Band List is:
Golden Bones, Holding Back Entirely, BHive, Dave Strumfeld Group,
Olivia Quillio, Dawn Landes, Ever Blu, Robert Bettega, Jessica Vosk

The Where and When

October 25th
Sycamore
1118 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn

Did You See Sarah Palin on SNL?

It was really her. I missed the opening, when she did “Live From NY it’s Saturday Night.” I thought it was Tina Fey on Weekend Update but it was really Sarah Palin. I think I was kinda sleepy. Now I watched both segments again. Here’s the link:
The Opening if you missed it like I did:
www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/clips/gov-palin-cold-open/773761/
Weekend Update:
www.nbc.com/Saturday_Night_Live/video/clips/update-palin-rap/773781/

Thirty Something and Grew Up in Park Slope?

17bigcity_600a
I love it, love the idea of it. And I saw it on Gothamist.

Facebook has been stealing the attention of MySpace for quite some time, and today The NY Times
takes a look at just how the 30-somethings are white-knuckling on to
the past through the social networking platform. Check out the group Thirty Something and Grew Up in Park Slope, it’s like a time machine back to the salad days for some, and 17bigcity4_190
for
spectators it’s a faux-nostalgic look back on a neighborhood they
didn’t know at the time.

Here’s the actual verbage from the Thirty Something and Grew Up in Park Slope FB page:

Did you grow up or go to school in Park Slope in the 70’s and 80’s?

Did
you live for a trip to Al’s Toyland, Danny’s candy store, or the
original Little Things? Did you eat from the salad bar at Snooky’s and
buy your first tape at Soundtrack?

17bigcity2_190
If you attended PS 107, PS
321, IS 88, JHS 51, 282, Berkeley Carroll street school, or even a
random private school outside of Park Slope, you definitely belong here.

The
only other requirement for membership is that you help reach out to and
invite anyone you know who qualifies as a member in this group.

H&M Coming to Fulton Mall

Phew. Now my son can pick up those H&M jeans he likes. But this is big news. An H&M in downtown Brooklyn. Okay. Here’s the Brooklyn Paper with the story:

Swedish cheap-chic clothing store H&M will come to Fulton Mall
by next spring — and could be one of the first tenants in a giant new
glass-walled mall at Bridge Street.

The high-fashion/low-priced
store confirmed that it would open by spring, 2009 — and a real-estate
source told The Brooklyn Paper that reclusive Fulton Mall developer Al
Laboz will be the store’s landlord.

That makes sense, given that
Laboz owns the landmark Conway building at 505 Fulton St. and plans a
glass mini-mall next door — and Laboz has said for years that H&M
is exactly the kind of retailer he wants on a diversified Fulton Mall.

Bill Evans: A Poet Writes About Teaching English to 8th Graders

Poet and teacher, Bill Evans, was one of the readers last night at the Poetry Punch. I loved his poetry and wanted to read more online. Then I found this blog post he wrote for Lesson Plans, Learning to Teach in a Complicated World, a New York Times education blog. Bill teaches 8th grade English at Trevor Day School. That won my heart. The Trevor Day School is in the same building where my high school, Walden, used to be. Bill sounds like one heck of a teacher.

I’m supposed to come back to school
with a goal for the year written on an index card. I think the card
itself may even be included in one of these inspirational end-of-summer
packets that have been piling up around my writing table. This is the
kind of thing teachers do when there aren’t any kids around, and though
I’m totally a team player, teacher-training activities tend to fill me
with, shall we say, dread. Even after almost 20 years of teaching, I
hate the thought of going public with my strengths and weaknesses.
Well, actually, I don’t mind a bit of praise for the good stuff, but
I’m truly leery of excess honesty when it comes to the bad. But there is no “bad,” as teachers are aware, only “challenges” and “areas for growth.”

So I need to come up with an intellectually sound and educationally
relevant goal that doesn’t blow my cover and expose me as whatever it
is I’m afraid I am in secret (fraud? misanthropic iconoclast? big
loser?). This is pretty much what it feels like to be a kid in school
as well, as far as I can tell, and perhaps my goal should be simply to
remember that. Does that count? I just found the index card; it was included with a letter!  Already I’m making progress on this assignment.

A few days ago I went up to school — from the East Village to the
corner of West 88th Street and Central Park West — to pick up some TransitCheks,
and as I suspected the place was packed. One week before we even had to
report for teacher training and the place was already filled to the
brim with teachers skittering about. And I’m not counting
administrators; they never leave.

All the earnestness and energy left me feeling a bit stunned. What are all these people doing
here already? And am I supposed to be here doing it with them? No kids,
though. The kids are still off like Mr. Evans – poeting, swimming laps,
going to yoga class, writing blogs for The New York Times — all the
myriad social and private niceties that make up the backbone of a
Living Culture. But my teacher colleagues are serious. And
that goes for my public school colleagues, too. I happen to know
because I am in the unique position of being both an eighth grade
English teacher in a private school and the parent of an
eighth grade student in a New York City public school, so I’m rather
intimately connected to both worlds. And I tell you, both are loaded
with excellent, hard-working true believers. They’re out there, ladies
and gentlemen. The real problem is keeping them there and into it
across Time — because energy is wonderful, but being present is
everything, and truly it takes ten years to hit your stride and begin
teach really well.

The secret weapon in this business is consistent, long-term human
connection. That’s where values come from, and that’s where context and
meaning are imparted. Ideas and ambition are great, but absolutely
nothing beats experience, and sadly, or gladly, no one stays 24 years
old for very long. We need grownup teachers who are in it for the
duration, and to become that one has to be able to survive the job. So
we should all add survival to our personal goal anthologies. I’d like
to do my job this year with some amount of grace, skill, tact, and yes,
even joy. Oh yeah, joy is good. That definitely goes on the card.

Big News: Vietnamese Sandwich Shop Confirmed

It’s, like, the biggest news in Brooklyn. A Vietnamese sandwich shop is going into the space that used to be the Tea Lounge on Seventh Avenue and 10th Street. The Brooklyn Paper confirmed the story that Gowanus Lounge reported from a rumor on the Brooklynian. Got it?

Here from the Brooklyn Paper:

“After looking at that the area, [we saw that] there is no
Vietnamese food over there and we just want to bring something to the
neighborhood,” manager Michael Ting told The Brooklyn Paper.

The shop will have an expanded tea selection, and Ting said they are
considering opening a coffee bar. But the main attraction will be the
banh mi, that delectable French-influenced Vietnamese sandwich that
comprises spicy pork, pickled vegetables and a mayonaise-like spread
piled high into a baguette — a remnant of France’s one-time dominance
in Indochina.

Hanco’s has signed the lease, though some details remain to be
worked out. But neighbors were excited to hear that a storefront empty
since July — and one that was so popular a spot with Wi–Fi-surfing
freelancers — would again come to life.

Healthy Harvest for Brooklyn High School Students

Eugene Patron, he-who-knows-all-about-Prospect-Park, sent this cool story about the students of the Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment, who harvested healthy food for the school cafeteria.

Who says young adults don’t like to eat their vegetables?  The “locavore” food movement doesn’t get more local than across the street!

The Sustainable Agriculture class of the Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment (BASE) – Brooklyn’s first environmental high school –- grew organic vegetables that were offered last week during lunch to their BASE schoolmates, along with students of three other local high schools, serving almost 1,000 enthusiastic diners in all.   All this season, BASE students grew, then harvested the vegetables in Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s (BBG) world-renowned Children’s Garden.  The special luncheon also gave members of the sustainable agriculture class the opportunity to explain to their peers about the farming techniques they used to grow the delicious, organic vegetables.

The special “Garden to Cafeteria Harvest Day” at BASE coincided with the New York State’s Department of Agriculture & Market’s “New York Harvest for New York Kids Week” (www.prideofny.com/farm_to_school.html).

The BASE Sustainable Agriculture class aims to expose students to basic agricultural topics such as soil science and botany, as well as explore issues of food production: natural versus industrial cycles, environmentally sustainable practices and perspectives, and food justice themes such as food systems and accessibility. Students receive a hands-on learning experience at BBG’s Children’s Garden where they learn agricultural skills such as how to prepare crop beds, protect their crops and use drip irrigation. The Sustainable Agriculture class is indicative of the kind of “real world” research students at BASE experience by working not only with the school’s own faculty, but also through frequent interaction with Brooklyn Botanic Garden scientists and Prospect Park naturalists.

Identical Strangers in Paperback!

The paperback edition of
"Identical Strangers" will be released by Random House today. It’s the story of twins separated at birth and finally reunited. The twin authors, Elyse Schein and Paula Bernstein, live in Brooklyn and have written a beautiful memoir about their separate childhoods, the experience of discovering the existence of one another in their 30’s. It’s quite a story.

FYI: my sister and I were interviewed by the twins and are featured in the book.

If you
loved the book, now’s your chance to spread the word!  Your friends can
pick up a copy at the Community Bookstore. Here’s the note I got from author Elyse Schein:

During last year’s book tour you welcomed us into your
communities and homes as we shared our story. We hope to see you again
as we travel across the country promoting the paperback.    

 
Exploring issues of family, identity and psychology, "Identical
Strangers" makes a great choice for Book Clubs.    The handy Reader’s
Guide can be found here:

http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl/display.pperl?isbn=9780812975659&view=rg

You can follow us at twitter:
http://twitter.com/twinstrangers

or be our facebook fan:
http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/Identical-Strangers-A-Memoir-of-Twins-Separated-and-Reunited/36493912227?ref=ts

Eviction of Longtime Sloper: Publicity Nightmare for Berkeley Carroll.

Ella Taliercio moved into her Park Slope two-bedroom on Carroll Street in 1958, the year I was born. She’s been living in that apartment for as long as I’ve been alive and has raised three
kids there. Two of them died and are buried in Green-Wood Cemetery.

Now the Berkeley Carrol School, which bought the building a few years ago, wants Taliercio out so they can turn the building into classrooms. Why do they need classrooms so far away from the school buildings on Carroll Street and Lincoln Place? The whole things sounds fishy to me.

According to Gothamist: "The
apartment is rent-stabilized—Taliercio paid $33 a month in ’58 and
$147.08 today—but Berkeley Carroll has non-profit status, enabling the
school to evict the couple. Taliercio tells the Daily News through tears, "It’s my home. How do you just shut the door on something where you’ve been for so many years?" Don’t worry, Ella, Berkeley administrators will have the eviction marshal help you with that."

This is a publicity nightmare for Berkeley Carroll, portrayed in various local newspapers as a fancy school that charges more than $25,000 per child a year. There must be a better way to handle this. Is Berkeley Carroll  finding Taliercio a new home in the Slope. I heard they offered her $20,000 but that doesn’t sound like enough to me.

There must be a way that Berkeley Carroll can handle this situation with grace and humanity.

How Do You Feel About Term Limits?

If you’re against them, you might want to join our City Council guy Bill Di Blasio at City Hall.

The fight to stop Mayor Bloomberg from overturning the will of the
people has been gaining momentum. Make sure your voice is heard – the
voters established term limits, and should not be cut out of the
process. We need extensive public debate and discussion about this
issue before considering such fundamental changes to the government of
New York City.

JOIN BILL AT THE CITY COUNCIL HEARINGS ON TERM LIMITS TOMORROW AND FRIDAY.

Thursday, October 16 at 1:00 p.m.
Council Chambers – City Hall
AND
Friday, October 17 at 10:00 a.m.
Committee Room – City Hall

More information, including directions to City Hall and how to submit testimony can be found on NY1 at: http://www.ny1.com/content/top_stories/86874/where-they-stand–council-split-over-term-limits/Default.aspx

Art D’Lugoff is Back

As a child, the violin ensemble I was in played a Sunday afternoon concert at the Village Gate so I’ve always had a soft spot for that Bleecker Street club. I’ve also been hearing about  Le Poisson Rouge a new club that’s been having some great shows, including a record release show for Simone Dinnerstein’s new CD back in August. Turns out it’s the Village Gate reborn. Here from the Times:

Half a century after he opened the Village Gate — and 14 years after he reluctantly closed it — Art D’Lugoff is back at the legendary club. The old sign is still there on the corner of Thompson and Bleecker Streets, even if the old club has been remade into Le Poisson Rouge.

An aquarium is suspended in front of a portrait of the composer Philip
Glass at Le Poisson Rouge, where the goal, its owners say, is the
eclecticism in music and art that was characteristic of the Village
Gate.

But Mr. D’Lugoff, 84, is very
much in the house — this time as a consultant — ready to book the kinds
of double and triple bills that made the Village Gate the site of
unforgettable performances by musicians like Gillespie and Coltrane
(and comedians like Cosby and Seinfeld, too). On Monday, he revived one
of his oldest and most popular concoctions, the Salsa Meets Jazz series, hoping to attract the kind of mix on stage and in the audience that can  happen only in New York.

“This
is what’s most needed artistically,” Mr. D’Lugoff said. “So many people
had been asking me if I would ever bring that back. I like the
crossover that happens here, and that’s crucial. It’s two great types
of music that have a lot in common and bring people together.”

This Thursday: Drink Punch at Poetry Punch

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Poetry Punch, a festive, fun,
celebratory group reading by poets curated by Michele Madigan
Somerville.

And, yes, there will be punch. Lots of it.

This year’s reading really packs a punch with Bill Evans, Jeff
Wright, Joanna Sit, Ilene Starger, Will Nixon, Louise Crawford and
Michele Madigan Somerville. Says Michele: "The poets on the bill are
all very high interest, high energy poets: juicy, libidinous, good
performers, not dry."

Yes, there are a bunch of poets (seven in all) but each one will read for ten minutes. Meaning you won’t be there all night. Books will be on sale.

Bill Evans: "I always think if God were a New York
poet he’d sound like Bill. Bill is funny and speechifying in a
philosophical yet embracing way," Michele writes.

Jeff Wright: "He used to call himself a "new
romantic" came up as a boy wonder among New York School and Beat
legends, edited Cover Magazine for a long time, has a bunch of books
and chap books out, and writes lush, sexy, surreal and funny — he’s a
latter day troubadour! In sillier moments I have referred to Jeff as
"The Dean Martin of the Downtown Poetry Scene" That’s Michele again.

Joanna Sit: "Chinese born Medgar Evers Professor Joanna Sit is a middle-aged knockout who writes like an Irish woman high on Absinthe," says Michele.

Ilene Starger: A New York-born poet whose work has
appeared in such publications as Folio, Georgetown Review, Paper
Street, Oyez Review, Oberon and Ibbetson Street. Ilene’s brand new
chapbook Lethe, Postponed will be published in August 2008 by Finishing
Line Press. She is currently putting together her next collection of
poems.

Michele Madigan Somerville: The author of Wisegal
from Ten Pell Books: "A multilingual hardrock reverie…going upside
your head to whisper whipsmart secrets about cracked-out big-city
survival.” She runs the Ceol Poetry Series at the Ceol Pub on Smith
Street.

Louise Crawford: Louise runs OTBKB and Brooklyn Reading Works
and is the Smartmom columnist for the Brooklyn Paper. She will read
from her unpublished collections, Therapy and Anarchists Don’t Return Phone Calls.

Will Nixon: His book, My Late Mother as a Ruffed
Grouse (FootHills Publishing), offers poems inspired by his experiences
growing up in the Connecticut suburbs, then living in Hoboken and
Manhattan as a young man, and finally moving to a Catskills log cabin.
His previous chapbooks are When I Had It Made (Pudding House) and The
Fish Are Laughing (Pavement Saw). His poems have also appeared in many
journals, including Rattle, The Ledge, Slipstream, Wisconsin Review,
Tar River Poetry, and others. His work has been nominated for a
Pushcart Prize and and listed in The Best American Essays of 2004. He
now lives in Woodstock.

The Where and When

Thursday, October 16th at 8 p.m.
Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
It’s the stone house in JJ Byrne Park
$5 donation appreciated. Punch and light refreshments will be served.

Music for Obama: At the Lyceum and The Bell House

Just got an email from my friend David Konigsberg, the guy who dreamed up Art Obama, and guess what? He’s at it again. Well, his daughter Lilly is. She and some musical friends are putting on a show at the Brooklyn Lyceum for Obama.

Yessirs, we’ve helped this crew of young local musicians get an Obama fundraiser off the ground.

When:  Friday, Oct 17; doors open at 6:30.  Show 7-11

Where: Brooklyn Lyceum, 4th Ave at Union Street

8 great acts for only $10.  All proceeds go to Obama.

Great Lineup: Lilly, Calamus, Radiates, Banzai, Rainbow Party, Le Rug,
Psycho Thriller, PERHAPS Kate Ferencz..but I don’t know. Proceeds for
Obama so come all

FYI: There’s also an Obama benefit called Obamarama at The Bellhouse on Friday, October 17th. Doors open 7pm

Featuring: Anti-Pop Consortium, Dirty on Purpose, Dragons of Zynth, Takka Takka and more…

DJ sets by: French Kicks, Cassettes Won’t Listen

Hosted by: Eugene Mirman

Silent auction items by: Albert
Watson, Another Magazine, Anthem, Art Streiber, George Pitts, Gravure,
Inhabit, Lewis Cho, Mariah Robertson, Me Magazine, Mike Perry, Monocle,
Other Music, Patrik Ervell, Paul Davis, Philip Crangi, Rachel Comey,
Rachel Mason, Soma, Stanley Donwood, Sunshine & Shadow and many
more….

Minimum donation: $25
Cash/Credit accepted at the door.
After party to follow.

21+ only, ID required.

Advance donations can be made at:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/outreach/view/maingroup/CreateChangeNYC

The Where and When

Friday October 17, 2008
The Bellhouse
149 7th Street  between 2nd and 3rd Avenues
Brooklyn (take F, R, M to 4th Ave and 9th St)




Being Your Own Pied Piper: How the Song of Local Business Will Save NYC’s Economy

Here’s another really interesting event from the Center for the Urban Environment that will be of interest to those who believe in local businesses and those who want to promote their own local businesses.

Being Your Own Pied Piper: How the Song of Local
Business Will Save NYC’s Economy
 at CUE’s first "Third Thursday" forum at 6pm on October
16th
to discuss the current economic crisis and
how businesses can use strong community relations and environmentally
responsible practices as capital. The event will feature Carl Hum, Brooklyn
Chamber of Commerce; Michael Muyot, CRD Analytics; Jennifer Stokes, Myrtle
Avenue Brooklyn Partnership; and Park Slope’s very own Catherine Bohne, Park Slope Community
Bookstore. For more information, click here.
 

The event will feature Carl Hum, Brooklyn
Chamber of Commerce; Michael Muyot, CRD Analytics; Jennifer Stokes, Myrtle
Avenue Brooklyn Partnership; and Park Slope’s very own Catherine Bohne, Park Slope Community
Bookstore.
For more information, click here.

The Where and When

October 16th at 6 p.m.
The Center for the Urban Environment
168 7th Street between 3rd and 2nd Avenues in Park Slope

 

Transit Work with Large Crane on Seventh Avenue on Wednesday

Just got this helpful heads-up from Craig T. Hammerman from CB6 about transit work involving a large crane that will be on Seventh Avenue tomorrow.

Crane Operation Summary:

Transformer removal and installation is scheduled to take place on Wednesday, October 15, 2008 between 7am and 4pm.

Bus stop on east side of 7th Avenue near Sterling Place (between Sterling Pl. and Park Pl.) will be discontinued for the day.

Northbound bus will stop at the next stop on Flatbush Avenue which will still be convenient for bus to subway transfers. Southbound bus stop on 7th Avenue between Flatbush Avenue and Park Place will remain in use.

Work will start at 7am

From 7am until 9am – establish barriers and remove equipment hatch cover

·        Maintain two travel lanes (one in each direction) on 7th Avenue (Sterling Pl. to Park Pl.)

·        Close east sidewalk to through traffic (not possible to provide 5ft sidewalk between hatch and building)

From 9am until 2pm – setup crane and remove/install transformers

    * Maintain one 11-ft travel lane on 7th Avenue (Sterling Pl. to Park Pl.)
    * Single lane will be used for bi-directional bus and emergency vehicle traffic.
    * Northbound traffic will be detoured.
    * Close east sidewalk to through traffic (not possible to provide 5-ft sidewalk between hatch and building)
    * From 2pm until 4pm – removal of crane, reinstallation of hatch cover, reopen full width of roadway

            Reopen full width of 7th Avenue

            Reopen east sidewalk

Work will end at 4pm

Good Bye Waterfalls!

Today’s the day that The NYC Waterfalls will be removed from their site-specific locations. The project, commissioned by the Public Art Fund and presented in collaboration with the City, is on display featured four 90- to 120-foot-tall waterfalls installed along the
East River: one at Pier 35 in Manhattan, north of the Manhattan Bridge;
one on the Brooklyn anchorage of the Brooklyn Bridge; one between Piers
4 and 5 in Brooklyn adjacent to the Brooklyn Heights Promenade; and one
on the north shore of Governors Island

Today: Red Hook International Film & Video Festival

The Second Annual Red Hook International Film and Video Festival, juried competition for traditional and experimental Videos & Films.

Today is the final day; Screening Schedule and Participants in this years festival.

The Where and When

See schedule above
Second Annual Red Hook International Film And Video Festival

at the Brooklyn Waterfront Artist’s Coalition
   


             

Filmmakers, Videographers,
                Animators and Video Artists,
                have submited their work and were selected for Second Annual Red
                Hook
              International Film And Video Festival.

Ocean Parkway: A Suggestion of the Old Country Flavor

Nice article in the Times’ New York today about Ocean Parkway. I’m not sure I knew that Olmstead and Vaux designed that, too. Wow. Those guys were awesome.

I love that stretch of Brooklyn from Kensington to Brighton Beach. I go that way often on my way to Coney Island. Here’s an excerpt.

Elegant and sketchy, welcoming and insular, the striated band of
roadway, trees and people called Ocean Parkway both reflects Brooklyn
and divides it with a thick green line. It was designed about a century
and a half ago as a place to promenade, to socialize, to pleasure-drive
or to settle, on a street that looks like a park. The architects Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux were inspired by the grand tree-lined boulevards of Europe, like Avenue Foch in Paris and Unter den Linden in Berlin.

In
an 1867 report to the Brooklyn Parks Commission, the architects talked
about the kind of person who might live on the parkway, a country boy
of “superior caliber” drawn to the city by an “irresistible magnetic
force.” But the metropolis and success would not be enough for such a
man. “Day by day,” they wrote, “his life needs a suggestion of the old
country flavor to make it palatable as well as profitable.”