Category Archives: Postcard from the Slope

KIWI RAZOR SERENE ROSE BLUE

Kiwi Razor
Serene Rose
Blue ____

Okay it sounds like beat poetry or a mis-guided attempted a a haiku but it’s the latest rag trade real estate news on Seventh Avenue.

Serene Rose and Razor of Fifth Avenue are adding a new shop called, Blue ____(I forget the second word – duh). The women’s and men’s clothing shop will be in the space  vacated by Lion in the Sun on 4th Street just east of Seventh Avenue.

Kiwi is moving from its spot on Seventh Avenue between Union and Berkeley Place to where Soundtrack used to be on Seventh Avenue between Carroll and President.

CHOCK FULL OF NUTS: COMING TO SEVENTH AVENUE

More real estate rumors: Chock Full of Nuts may be taking over the space vacated by Cinematique on Seventh Avenue between Union and President Streets.

It is the heavenly coffee. And I grew up with a CFON on Broadway between 86th and 87th Streets. We spent a lot of time there eating raisin date nut bread and cream cheese sandwiches and butterscotch brownies.

Ah, that really brings back memories. That place really was chock full of nuts. It won’t be the same without all the weird Broadway types circa 1960’s and ’70’s, who used to nurse a cup of Joe for hours on end. When they weren’ there they were sitting on the benches on the Broadway median.

Wow: dueling coffee corporations on Seventh Avenue. CFON, DD and S. Is there room for all of them?

WHAT A SCOOP AND A DONUT, TOO

This may be a rumor but let me the first to rumor it: Peek-a-Boo Kids on Seventh Avenue, the nice children’s shop with the fantabulous selection of high-end European shoes and Stride Rites, may be vacating their shop on Seventh Avenue between Union and Berkeley Place. And here’s the really juicy, "there goes the neighborhood" part:

Dunkin Donuts (and maybe Baskin Robins because they seem to be joined at the hip these days) is coming in.

First I’d like to thank my friend who is really OTBKB’s unpaid, all-about-the-Slope reporter. She’s constantly tipping OTBKB off to great stuff. Thanks, Friend (you know who you are and I don’t want to reveal your identity so that people will continue to tip you off).

I told Daniel Meeter, Pastor of Old First Church, a reader of OTBKB, and, like me, a person who actually likes Dunkin Donuts coffee ("I don’t drink Starbucks," he said) He thinks we should meet with them and suggest that they give the place a slightly slopey feel. Maybe they’d like our opinion as to how to fit into the neighborhood.

It worked with Commerce Bank to an extent. Praise the lord and Aaron Naparstak that there’s no drive thru bank there.

But all of this is putting the cart before the horse. Here’s the rumor: Peek-a-Boo is out. Dunkin Donuts is coming in (on the same block as a Bank of America, no less).

The rent must be going sky high.

The neighborhoods is going to the donuts.

THE END: THE 13th AND FINAL LEMONY SNICKET BOOK

Today is the official release date of the 13th and last book of the Lemony Snicket book, THE END. Here’s an excerpt from the back cover of the new book.

Our friends, Red Eft and Dadu, are having a party on Sunday. Red Eft’s brother, a supernumerary at the Metropolitan Opera, was going to come in make up and costume as Count Olaf but he had to decline. We’re hoping someone else will dress up as the Count.

Dear Reader,

You are presumably looking at the back of this book, or the end of the
end. The end of the end is the best place to begin the end, because if
you read the end from the beginning of the beginning of the end to the
end of the end of the end, you will arrive at the end of the end of
your rope.
This book is the last in A Series of Unfortunate Events, and even if
you braved the previous twelve volumes, you probably can’t stand such
unpleasantries as a fearsome storm, a suspicious beverage, a herd of
wild sheep, an enormous bird cage, and a truly haunting secret about
the Baudelaire parents.
It has been my solemn occupation to complete the history of the
Baudelaire orphans, and at last I am finished. You likely have some
other occupation, so if I were you I would drop this book at once, so
the end does not finish you.
With all due respect,

HOUSE GUESTS

Hey, did ya hear? E and M are coming down to the Slope. For the weekend, that is. They used to live on Third Street. But then their PARENTS moved the family to a small town in Massachusets (okay it’s a really cool town) but they took them away from Third Street.

Teen Spirit was devastated when E left. He was in a real funk for months afterward about it. That about four years ago. He doesn’t say:  "I’m going down to E’s" anymore.

E doesn’t live here anymore.

E came to visit last year. He’s a big, teenager now. He shaves. He was very polite and sweet, as always. It was great to see him.

Now M is coming. M IS COMING. I am so psyched. She was like ten years old when she left. She’s a teenager now. She was always such a cool kid.

E and M are coming to visit. Did ya hear?

They’re coming down for TEENS FOR THE PHILLIPINES at the Old Stone House. Teen Bands for a good cause. Saturday October 14 from 6-9 p.m. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.

TEEN BENEFIT FOR A GOOD CAUSE

Come to the show. Saturday. Tell your kids. Come along with them: rock concerts are a great opportunity for parent/child bonding.

Great bands: Zach Fine and Aman on sitar and tabla, Cool and Unusual, Tetsuwan Fireball, Somewhere’s There’s a Fix and RAPR.

For a good cause: Homeless kids in Manila

Nice location: The Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. Go here for
directions: theoldstonehouse.org

For Tickets and donations:

http://www.nycharities.org/event/event.asp?CE_ID=736
 

LITERATURE AND LULLABIES FROM THE “AXIS OF EVIL”

Bookcov200
Literature from the "Axis of Evil"
, gathers short stories and poems
from three countries that once received that label from President Bush
— Iraq, North Korea and Iran. Additional material in the collection
comes from Syria, Cuba, Sudan and Libya.

On Thursday’s Morning Edition on NPR, Steve Inskeep spoke with Azar Nafisi, an Iranian-born writer and author of Reading Lolita in Tehran. She says that writing can offer insights into a country that aren’t part of the official government line.

"The
governments might be considered quote unquote the enemy, but definitely
not the people," Nafisi says. "These stories and poems offer an
alternate view, which is very different from the politicized and
polarized view of these nations."

She says that Iranian writers, for example, use a subtle approach to criticize their own government.

"Because
subtlety is in fact a way of resistance — the brutal obviousness of an
authoritarian state. [Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad] is very
obvious… but these writers are subtle because they are trying to also
shape the mind of the readers" with nuance and playfulness.

There’s also a CD of lullabies from the AOE. Producer  Erik Hilstadt recorded lullabies sung by women from countries deemed
U.S. enemies. "Lullabies lead us to the deepest and most fundamental
way of communication between human beings," he says in the CD’s liner
notes.

YES AND NO THANKS: RESPONDING TO THE LUBAVITCH

OTBKB got a lot of great comments on her post about the Lubavitch guys on Seventh Avenue, who ask: "Are you Jewish?"

Back in the early ’70s, the Lubavitchers would have their
mitzvahmobile outside Hillel Gate at Brooklyn College every afternoon.
Those of us walking on or off campus used to try to come up with more
creative ways to deny our religious heritage when asked the "Are
you…" question than just doing the thing Nancy Reagan would later
advise.

Some of the responses I remember best:

"Certainly not!"

"Are you making fun of my looks?"

"G-d forbid."

–posted by Richard

My friend (who shall remain unnamed,) who is Jewish and has no love
for the Lubavitchers, responds to the question "Are you Jewish?" with
"Yes, I am, but you’re not!"

Posted by: chandru

Now Rabbi Bachman, the new rabbi at Congregation Beth Elohim, weighs in on the debate on his own blog at Brooklyn Jews.

It’s
not every day you get to talk theology with your kids, but the usual
Festival nuisance of having Chabad missionize outside your home
provides just the right framework to talk about who is God and who
isn’t.

Flatbush Avenue is enough of a cacaphony without
phoney Jewish music and the quick, alienating, shame-inducing question
“Excuse me, are you Jewish?” being added to the din of Central Brooklyn
aural ecology.

“Yes, and no thanks,” is what my kids decided to
say when encountered by the Happy Warriors for the Resurrection of
Their Bearded Idol. A very polite response, and one to be proud of. I
on the other hand, stew at their presence. The whole premise makes me
nuts.

There’s the theological affront: you shake lulav (if
you’re Jewish) you bring Messiah (who converts the rest of the world.)
It’s every bit as disdainful and reactionary as the Rightest of the
Christian Right, yet somehow, dressed as Tevye (which is an insult to
Sholem Aleichem) our hearts sing like a violin at the encounter. “How
nice that they’re getting Jews to perform mitzvot,” we blather on.
Yeah, yeah.

Somehow it escapes us that they are allied with the
most intransigent settler forces in contemporary Israel; that
politically in the States they advocate not a broad Jewish communal
agenda but strictly their own; and in our own neighborhood, don’t play
ball with the whole team but field their own brand–even fighting among
themselves (right now, it’s the Prospect Heights Chabad v. the Park
Slope Chabad–more Jewish infighting, boys, well done! I guess Moshiach
isn’t here yet). So what’s a mensch to do: Chase down every last
unaffiliated Jew in order to bring a False Messiah. It is NOT to get
Jews to do more Mitzvot. It’s to bring their dead rabbi back to life
because he’s God. The greatest heresy there is.

It would be
easy to ignore if, like Jehovah’s Witnesses, they quietly went about
their business. But they don’t. And it points to a great achilles heel
of the Jewish condition: we’re so alienated from Torah on our own terms
that we accept such agents on our behalf, even if there is at the very
core a heresy so great that none other than Moses’ burial place is not
known to this day.

At a grave in Queens, the hopefuls daven
away for his return while the world burns. And the sentimental sounds
of a clarinet blare in my ear on my street corner, or maybe we’ll say
someone plays the fiddle while not just Rome but the whole world is in
flames.

As Sukkot draws to a close, let me offer a prayer for a
Sane Judaism; for a Responsible Judaism; for a Humble Judaism; for a
Judaism concerned with humanity’s well-being; for a Judaism that
doesn’t ask, “Excuse me, are you Jewish?” but asks, “How can we work
together to bring peace to the world–you believing your God, me
believing my God–with both of us admitting that ultimately there is One
God–and he is not rising from a grave in Queens.

PLANE CRASHES INTO UPPER EAST SIDE APARTMENT BUILDING

A small plane crashed into an Upper East Side apartment building at 2:45 this afternoon.

Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle was on
board the small aircraft that crashed into a residential building at
524 E. 72nd Street.

FAA records
show the plane was registered to Cory Lidle and he was scheduled to return
home today. He was on the plane with his flight instructor. His passport was found on the sidewalk.

Lidle, 34, was recently acquired by New York from the Philadelphia
Phillies with Bobby Abreu at the trade deadline. He pitched in Game 4
against Detroit on Saturday. He leaves behind a wife and
a six-year-old son.

The Belaire Building between York Avenue and the
FDR was struck by the plane shortly before 3 p.m. Eyewitnesses describe
“huge pieces” of debris raining down on the street below as several
apartments were engulfed in flames.

The Fire
Department had the flames extinguished in about 80 minutes.

Residents of the condo and the building next door were evacuated as
thick black smoke wafted above the city skyline, and flames shot from
the apartments where the plane crashed.

As of 5:45 residents of the apartment building were being allowed back in.

      

15-YEAR-OLD MISSING

I don’t usually do this sort of thing. But this email arrived in my inbox this morning and these parents could use our help.

Dear Friends,

We have very troubling news in our synagogue community today. Zachary Manning, 15, is missing.

His parents, Lawrence and Phyllis and his sister Kelsey are desperate to find him. They want him home. They want him to know that they love him and they want him to call.

NYPD Det. Angel Martinez at 845-820-8435 is on the case (number 4089). You can also call the private detective Gil Alba is also working on the case, and can be reached at 914.646.1302. The NY Post blotter has already picked his story up. http://www.nypost.com/news/nypdblotter/nypdblotter.htm. Those of you with media connections — please think about putting this story out.

The family is asking help from AC members in one practical and one spiritual way:

1. We have several hundred missing persons flyers with Zachary’s picture. Please come to Ansche Chesed, take a handful and paper them everywhere you can. In particular: if a few people have a little time to volunteer, the Mannings need people to paper the subways. Can you ride the 2/3 train line into Brooklyn or the 1 train line up and down, or go into Grand Central and Penn stations to paper the areas there? Millions of people will see these flyers and may see Zachary. This is of the utmost importance.

2. Larry and Phyllis ask for your hearts in prayer for their family and for Zachary, whose Hebrew name is Reuven ben Pesyel. You might say Psalm 63 on his behalf, said by King David while lost in the desert, about having faith in returning home, or Psalm 84, about the strength needed to walk through the valley of tears. Or say this verse, from the end of Lamentations: Hashivenu Adonay eylekha ve’nashuva. Hadesh yameinu kekedem. Return us toward you God, and we will return home. Renew our days, as before.

REPORT ALLEGES DISCRIMINATORY SALES PRACTICES BY CORCORAN IN BROOKLYN HTS.

A report by the National Fair Housing Alliance, a consortium, which is working against housing discrimination, said yesterday that the Corcoran Group in Brooklyn Heghts had engaged in
discriminatory sales practices, including racial steering and
withholding information from African-American clients. This from the New York Times.

   

“During
our 16 years of existence, the National Fair Housing Alliance has never
seen such a literal and blatant example of sales steering,” the group
wrote in a report detailing its allegations. In that particular
instance, the report said, an agent “produced a map of Brooklyn and
drew a red outline of the areas in which the white home seeker should
consider living.” The agent used arrows to indicate neighborhoods that
were “changing.”

“This racial steering tactic is reminiscent of
discriminatory conduct from the 1970’s, when real estate agents would
go into white neighborhoods with the specific intention of triggering
white flight by showing on a map where an African-American family had
bought a house,” the alliance wrote. “This Corcoran Group agent applied
a new trick — he used a map to tell whites instead where they should
‘flee to.’ ”

Pamela Liebman, president and chief executive
officer of Corcoran, said in an interview yesterday that her firm “has
always been devoted to fair housing” and recently required all of its
agents to undergo four hours of training in fair housing law and
practices.

She said, “I have never been given the specific
charges as they relate to the Corcoran Group and I anxiously await them
as we intend to defend ourselves vigorously.”

She said she could not comment further on the allegations because she had not seen them

LOCAL NOVELIST MAKES A MOVIE

Friend and Park Slope neighbor, Jill Eisenstadt, writes acclaimed novels, hilarious articles for the New York Times’ City section and other magazines, and has three children and a novel writing husband (Michael Drinkard).

She’s also a filmmaker. With her sister, she wrote a film called, THE LIMBO ROOM, and it’s making its way to a film festival near you.  I am SOOOO IMPRESSED.

THE WOODSTOCK FILM FESTIVAL:
OCTOBER 13th – Fri. 10pm UPSTATE FILMS – RHINEBECK NEW YORK-
OCTOBER 14th-  Sat. 9:45pm – WOODSTOCK TOWN HALL-

VISION FEST NYC- CLOSING NIGHT FILM:
TRIBECA CINEMAS
(Laight & Varick)
Sunday, Oct. 29th @ 8pm

THE MUSEUM OF THE MOVING IMAGE
THE QUEENS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
November – times tba

THE LIMBO ROOM written by jill eisenstadt & debra eisenstadt, directed by debra eisenstadt, produced by alessandra gatien, brett morgen, debra eisenstadt, dir. of photography- jay silver editing- debra eisenstadt, jen lilly with- andrea powell, melissa leo, jonathan marc sherman, zack griffiths, roger raines, richard vetere, cathy curtain, peter dinklage, & many more….

for info. and reviews about the limbo room
go to www.withoutabox.com then go to THE LIMBO ROOM’s audience page

CAT SITTING: JETHRO AND PHOEBE

On Monday we finally opened the e-mail sent by the cat owners. Somehow it slipped my notice. In the email, the cat owners included names, pictures, and some personality details about the cats.

The cats even have names: Jethro and Phoebe.

We did everything right even though we never saw the formal instructions artfully drafted by the cat owners.

"Pet and talk to them. Jethro was a feral cat and still is skittish. He may not let you pet him but don’t take it personally. He meows more than any cat we’ve ever known and sometimes it sounds like he’s saying "batman" or "mama." Phoebe loves to be petted."

CAT SITTING

A friend asked if Teen Spirit would like to make some money feeding cats over the weekend, while she and her family went on vacation over the Columbus Day Holiday.

I told her that I wasn’t sure about Teen Spirit’s plans but I knew OSFO would LOVE to do some cat sitting.

She loves taking care of pets. And this would not be the first time that she’s been enlisted to take care of cats, guinea pigs, birds, and turtles.

Of course, as OSFO is only nine, I knew I’d be going along, too. So these pet sitting jobs are kind of a mother/daughter affair. And they’re always a bit of an adventure for both of us.

Saturday morning; We have to go feed the cats. We have to feed the cats. OSFO loves using keys to open doors so that was big fun, too. Once in, we had to figure out how to unlock the gate on the second floor landing ("DO NOT LET THE CATS GO DOWNSTAIRS, THEY’LL WREAK HAVOC," my friend warned).

Putting food in the bowl was a cinch as was refilling the water bowl. Dealing with the poop in the litter box was a bit more, shall we say, complicated. But OSFO was game and made sure to wash her hands thoroughly afterward.

OSFO asked if my friend was an artist and I said yes. "I thought so because there are so many paintings." Indeed, it is a very artistic house with interesting mid-century furniture, Japanese lamps, perfectly placed paintings, cool vintage objects, a unique color palette, interesting books. Okay I checked out their CD collection, too and it was an eclectic blend heavy on the Bob Dylan and the Glenn Gould: but that was just a quick look).

The house looks completely effortless and simple. Not showy, not "designed." It’s just a very comfortable, aesthetic place to be.

We did however have trouble finding the cats. I believe there are two of them but we only found one sitting on top of an unmade bed on the third floor. OSFO pet the cat a bit but she seems like a very private cat, a majestic cat, a cat that VANTS TO BE A ALONE.

She couldn’t be bothered with a couple of cat sitters.

The other cat — we never saw. Maybe we’ll find the other one tomorrow.

SHADOW PUPPETS AT COMMUNITY BOOKS

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OSFO and I were walking down Seventh Avenue puttting up signs about Teen Spirit’s benefit concert next week (October 14th at 6 p.m. at the Old Stone House) when my friend, Barbara Ensor, author of Cinderella (As If You Didn’t Already Know the Story) called and asked if we were busy.

She needed help with her shadow puppet show.

Why not, I thought. We were planning on being at the reading anyway. And I knew it would be fun to help Barbara carry out her ultra-creative vision of a children’s book reading and puppet show.

In the cozy and whimsically decorated children’s section Community Books, Barbara set up her homemade shadow puppet theater — a grocery box with a shower curtain screen and a halogen lamp from Ikea. She handed me a paperback copy of the book with numbered cues and showed me all of the flat black puppets. It took a little practice but after the while I got the hang of it.

After a quick rehearsal, Barbara asked OSFO to do some directing. "Tell your mom how the puppets look. Tell her how to make them look better," she said.

For the show, OSFO was enlisted to sit alongside Barbara and pretend to read an oversized copy of the book while Barbara read excerpts outloud to the audience.

The reading was originally organized because Barbara got a fan letter from an 8-year-old girl named Ali who lives in Santa Diego.

Ali and family were shocked when Barbara actually wrote them back!!

Turned out that Ali’s family was planning a trip east for a baby naming ceremony at the Old Stone House. What a coincidence, they were making a trip to Park Slope of all places. So Barbara thought it would be fun to have a reading in Ali’s honor.

Sure enough, Ali and family arrived at the bookstore at 3:30 sharp. A small crowd packed the  back room of Community Bookstore and the short show went without a hitch. We did it twice when others wandered in who missed the show the first time around.

At the second show, OSFO got to be the puppeteer—and she did a great job. She even played the red spinet piano at the beginning and end of the show.

The book is great and is gathering up some great reviews, including one in the New York Times Book Review. There will certainly be more readings and workshops and OTBKB will keep you posted. In the meantime, pick up the bright orange chapter book (with the groovy black and white illustrations) at a bookstore and see what all the fuss is about.

It’s a really, really fun read. For excerpts from the book and examples of the illustrations, check out Barbara’s really cool website: barbaraensor.com

TRACY CONNOR INVESTIGATES ATTITUDES ABOUT PUBLIC BREAST FEEDING

Tracy Connor, a Daily News reporter, has a great story in Sunday’s Daily News. She happens to be the daughter of Park Slope hero, Jackie Connor, who died last Spring and now has a street named after her on Seventh Avenue and Carroll.

Now, she’s armed and dangerous (i.e.: she’s breastfeeding). I noticed that she was pregnant at Jackie’s memorial. She had a tiny baby at the dedication of Jackie’s corner in September. Now Tracy weighs in on the great breastfeeding debate. With baby on her breast, she went out to public spaces in New York City to find out how people really feel about it.

The Daily News put the issue to a test by dispatching reporter Tracy
Connor and her 3-month-old daughter, Charlie, to nurse at humble and
posh locations around town. Here’s her account of who is hip to NIP
and, perhaps surprisingly, who is not.

There’s even a picture of Tracy  discreetly nursing her daughter on the steps of the Metropolitan Museum. The story was in Sunday’s Daily News. Here’s her story.

When a Brooklyn mom claimed she was harassed for breast-feeding her baby at the Toys "R" Us store in Times Square, her story brought forth complaints from other mothers with similar tales of woe.

A state law, enacted in 2002, says that any mother can breast-feed a child in any place, public or privately owned, where she is otherwise authorized to be.

But to hear some mothers tell it, there are still stores and restaurants hostile to women who nurse in public – or NIP, the shorthand used on breast-feeding Web sites.

The Daily News put the issue to a test by dispatching reporter Tracy Connor and her 3-month-old daughter, Charlie, to nurse at humble and posh locations around town. Here’s her account of who is hip to NIP and, perhaps surprisingly, who is not.

The Apple Store – Inside the gleaming white Mac mecca on Fifth Ave. and 59th St., where workers in identical T-shirts rush to straighten iPods knocked askew, I’m certain my baby and I will be a spectacle.

On a low circular concrete bench facing a busy bank of computers, I pick a spot between two guys – a businessman and a hipster glued to their laptops – and in full view of a dozen sales associates.

Out comes the nursing pillow, down goes the baby, up comes the shirt and I toss a coverup over my shoulder. Twenty minutes, we’re done – and no one has said a peep. My benchmates never look up.

All in all, I would have created more of a stir if I’d announced my home computer is a Dell.

"I don’t know if we have a policy that you can or can’t do it, but breast-feeding is natural," one employee tells me. "Now, we do have people who come in and log onto certain sites on the Internet and take out certain body parts – that we don’t allow."

Crosstown bus: We board a M79 at midday, taking a seat opposite the driver. At the next stop, the bus starts to fill up and we get down to business.

The baby wriggles around, exposing a few inches of skin – and all around me, riders develop the kind of glazed-eye look usually reserved for panhandlers and the mentally ill.

Finally, one passenger pipes up, "Can you do that someplace else?" But she’s not talking to me – she’s barking at a man talking loudly on his cell phone.

When we get to the end of the line, the driver tells me I’m his first breast-feeder passenger. He’s not sure what the Transit Authority’s policy on nursing is, but he has his own. "I don’t see no objections to it," he says.

Babies "R" Us: After Toys "R" Us was the target of a high-profile "nurse-in" protest and warned by the New York Civil Liberties Union, I expect that employees at its corporate partner will politely ignore my breast-feeding. In the back of an aisle at the chain’s Bay Parkway, Brooklyn, store, I feed my child quietly for five minutes – until a worker spots me.

"Excuse me, ma’am," she bellows. "We have a room where you can do that."

I explain that I had checked out the "mother’s room" and found the sofa dirty, but she’s undeterred.

"It’s not good in the open like this…for the other people who can see," she presses.

When I remind her that I can legally breast-feed wherever I want, she changes her tune. "I just think you would be more comfortable," she says. "If you’re comfortable here, that’s fine."

Moments later, another clerk sees us and says, "Oh Lord!" She scurries off, perhaps to speak to a manager, and I brace for a new confrontation. But when she returns it’s with the offer of a chair to use in the aisle and when I refuse it, she leaves us in peace.

Corporate spokeswoman Kathleen Waugh said the first worker broke store policy. An internal review is under way, and the chain may revamp its training.

"Any mother may breast-feed her child in the place of her choice in any of our stores," Waugh says.

Metropolitan Museum of Art – The airy wing that houses the Temple of Dendur looks like it would make an artful lactation lounge, so we settle on a stone wall right across from the ancient Nubian monument.

Throngs of tourists, mostly foreign, pay us no mind. A security guard issues stern warnings to every visitor using a video camera or cell phone, yet somehow misses the baby at my bosom.

But later he says that if he had seen us, he would have thrown us out. Why? "There’s no eating or drinking in the galleries," he explains.

When I raise an eyebrow, he tells me to check with the information desk, where a woman consults a supervisor and confirms the guard was incorrect: "This is New York City, and a mother may feed her baby wherever she feels comfortable."

Le Cirque – A slightly chilly reception at the restaurant’s front desk – an admonition about crying babies – makes me think nursing in the lap of luxury will turn some stomachs. But it’s quite the opposite.

There is a little buzz among the wait staff and a few older diners as Charlie noisily tries to latch on several times from an awkward position on the banquette next to the kitchen.

But then everyone acts as though the suckling is as natural as a $100 lunch tab. Servers smile as they deliver bread, and one acknowledges the breast-feeding when I pull the baby off as my appetizer arrives.

"She’s saying, ‘Mommy, I want some more,’" the server says.

General manager Benito Sevarin tells me I’m hardly the first woman to breast-feed over four-star cuisine.

"In fact, a few days ago we had a woman – a very famous woman, I won’t tell you her name – nursing her baby," he says. "There’s nothing wrong with it."

FRIENDLY FIRE: SEAN LENNON’S NEW ALBUM

Sean Lennon’s CD is the one new album I’m curious about this week. This is from NPR.

The latest release from singer and songwriter Sean Lennon tells a very personal story of love, friendship and betrayal.

Friendly Fire, the second album from the son of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, is accompanied by a DVD of short films, one for each song.

The
largely autobiographical project is dedicated to Lennon’s lifelong
friend, Max LeRoy, who died last year in a motorcycle accident.

Lennon
explains how he, LeRoy and Lennon’s then-girlfriend, Bijou Phillips,
were involved in a love triangle. LeRoy died before the two men were
able to reconcile. Lennon says that Friendly Fire explores the profound effect LeRoy’s death has had on him.

Despite
growing up in the spotlight, Lennon says it’s very natural for him to
express such personal feelings in his art and music.

What
strikes him as unnatural, Lennon says, is when people think of him as a
"cardboard figure" onto which they project their ideas of what John
Lennon’s son should be like.

LOVE AND DEATH FROM ANNIE LEBOVITZ AT THE BROOKLYN MUSEUM

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Annie Lebovitz’s show at the Brooklyn Museum is coming on October 20th. This from the New York Times:

IN the days after the death of Susan Sontag in December 2004, Annie Leibovitz began searching for photographs for a small book to be given out at the memorial service. She started with other people’s photographs of Ms. Sontag, then turned to her own, taken during the 15 years they spent together. That exercise turned into what she has described as an archeological dig: an unearthing and sifting of a decade and a half of work, love, family life, illness, deaths and births, adding up to “my most important work,” she said in an interview this week. “It’s the most intimate, it tells the best story, and I care about it.”

The photographs, published earlier this week by Random House in a book titled “A Photographer’s Life 1990-2005,” will be shown at the Brooklyn Museum in an exhibition opening Oct. 20. The collection interweaves the professional and the personal, the public and private, in startling ways. It includes many of the bold, often carefully composed portraits of celebrities, musicians, artists and presidents for which Ms. Leibovitz became famous at Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair. There is Sarajevo in 1993, ground zero in September 2001. And there is previously unseen “personal reportage” on her big and exuberant family, her parents, her life with Ms. Sontag, the births of her three daughters, Ms. Sontag’s illnesses and death, and the death of Ms. Leibovitz’s father six weeks later.

BENEFIT FOR HOMELESS YOUTH: SAT. OCT. 14TH

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Last year at this time, Teen Spirit’s band, Cool and Unusual Punishment, organized a  benefit for the victims of Hurricane Katrina at the Old Stone House called "Teens for New Orleans."

That show turned out great. More than 200 kids and adults showed up and it was a blast for a great cause.

This year the band is planning another benefit. This time, it’s "Teens for the Philippines" and they’re reaching out to street children in Manila. This benefit will support a home that is being built for these kids.

The show is on October 14th from 6-9 p.m. Here’s the line-up: Zach Fine on sitar, RAPR, Tetsuwan Fireball, Somewhere There’s a Fix, and Cool and Unusual Punishment.

TICKETS ARE $10 dollars for adults and $5 dollars for kids.

There will be food for sale as well as information about St. Martin de Pores, which is a home for kids and teens rescued from the
streets of Manila. Though many of them are not technically orphans,
they effectively are as living on the streets is often safer than
living at home. Many are abused by their parents, who more often than
not are crippled by their own addictions to drugs and inability to deal
with the pressures of extreme poverty. So at very young ages, children
head out to the streets to beg, collect plastic garbage to sell, shine
shoes, and scrape out a very meager living. They sleep wherever they
can and eat by scavenging through the garbage at outdoor markets and
picking through the dump. Not surprisingly many end up falling in with
gangs, resort to petty thievery and prostitution, and sadly many don’t
survive past their teens.

To help these kids, a priest born in the Philippines, Father Boyet,
has founded a home for them outside Manila, which my foundation, the
John D.V. Salvador Foundation, is raising money to expand. Not only did
he create a safe loving place for them to live, he and the house
parents and volunteers transport them to a local school, where they are
all learning and acquiring skills that will allow them to break free of
the cycle of homelessness and poverty. The proceeds from Teens for the
Philippines would go toward the construction of a dormitory for the
home’s teen boys, who have been sleeping in a former Manila city bus
that’s been outfitted with bunk beds. The dormitory is nearly completed
and construction set to begin in the spring on the girls’ dorm.

To buy tickets or donate even if you can’t make it go here:

http://www.nycharities.org/event/event.asp?CE_ID=736 

STEVE KEY LIME ON NORTH OF NEW ORLEANS RESTAURANT

Steve of Steve’s Key Lime Pies, Steve’s INCREDIBLE Key Lime pies, knows the chef who is opening North of New Orleans, the new Cajun food outpost on Seventh Avenue. Here’s what Steve wrote to OTBKB:

I know Greg (the chef) from his years at Delta Grill in Manhattan, great to see him headed out on his own. From what I recall speaking with Greg (Delta has been buying my pies for many, many years, and we’ve been doing the 9th Ave. Food Fest together as well), he worked for and trained under Paul Prudhomme. I’m looking forward to their opening, pie sales aside.

THE BROOKLYN APARTMENT

You can become immersed in someone else’s apartment – dirty dishes, laundry, clutter and all.

The Brooklyn Apartment is a digitization of Brooklyn. It is an expanding virtual tour of mine and my friends apartment. All environmental details are included, including dirty sink, weird 100-year old bathtub, the toilet, and views of brooklyn streets as well.

The whole point of this is to allow anyone to be immersed in the same environment as the one me and my friends inhabit. Recently, we have also been using the virtual tour as a platform for our art work and the second apartment in the tour(the one you take the city bus to) is primarily an art gallery.

Updates to this project are planned to occur once a month. Each month the territory will expand to include more of this area. Future updates will include digitizations of the East River waterfront, the basement, the subway and more.

If you link to us, we thank you, but please include a link to our the main site which houses all of our projects: Poland-Korea Relations by EmilHiri (http://www.polandkorearelations.com/)

BREAKING NEWS: THAT BUILDING ON 2ND STREET IS FINALLY FOR SALE

                              

Thank you, Daily Slope. Thank you. I thought I saw some photographers out there yesterday. This is BIG NEWS: The building across from PS 321 and the Second Street Cafe — ON THE CORNER OF SECOND STREET AND SEVENTH AVENUE. THE EYESORE. The place that used to have the FUNKY/CRAZY cafe/club (if you could call it that). IT’S FOR SALE for $5.75 million!!!

It’s a wreck for sure. The woman who owns it has a daughter or two  who lived there for a while and had a used clothing store in there.

More, including the full real estate listing, on the Daily Slope discussion boards.

 

                           

NEW JERSEY BLOG FEATURED IN NEW YORK TIMES

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Baristanet, the Montclair/Glen Ridge, NJ blog that inspired and mentored OTBKB, made it into the New York Times. A new feature charts the town’s changing architectural landscape. Here’s an excerpt from the New York Times piece.

On Sept. 22, the Web site started a new feature to chart the town’s
changing architectural landscape — an interactive map that shows
teardowns, homes with historic designations and recent construction.

“Maybe
something like this will give people pause,” said Ms. George, 39, in
her office at her gracious 100-year-old home. “Knowing you’re having
your house on the teardown map, knowing it will be part of this trend,
I don’t think it has a positive implication.”

The teardown
issue has taken on a sense of urgency here after a developer bought the
blue-shuttered Colonial-style house, on North Mountain Avenue, for
$870,000 last fall and demolished it this summer with plans to build
six town homes. The action led town officials to rezone about 200 lots
— including the North Mountain Avenue property — from a designation
that allows up to eight units on a single lot to a designation that
allows only two. The developer has since dropped his plans and has put
the empty lot up for sale.

“The fear is that teardowns, in a
long-established community with little space for new development, are
slowly changing Montclair’s character and ambiance,” Ms. George wrote
on the Web site.

“Longtime residents often say the Montclair
they knew has changed,” she continued, adding that she envisions the
online map as serving as “an evolving document chronicling change in
Montclair.”

A similar interactive map on WestportNow, a news Web
site in Westport, Conn., inspired the Montclair site, Ms. George said.
On that site, the “Teardown of the Day” feature includes photographs of
construction equipment razing Cape Cods, ramshackle ranches and
architectural gems.

IN HER OWN WORDS: SMITH STREET HOSTAGE VICTIM

In this Daily News exclusive, writer and editor Phyllis Fine describes what it was like to be at the center of Saturday’s Brooklyn hostage drama – an ordeal that began with a psycho’s knife to her head and ended with a single shot from a cop with deadeye aim. Here, in her own words, is her stunning story:

No, my life didn’t pass before my eyes.

But I found myself thinking, "It must be a dream, please let this be a dream. …"

Your thoughts sound like a cliche when your life is being threatened. That’s what I found when I was taken hostage Saturday morning by a man who kept shouting, "Kill me!" to the cops surrounding us.

Okay, I thought, maybe you want to die, but I don’t. Why do you have to take me with you?

It all started with a simple morning errand to the supermarket two blocks away.

I was almost at the entrance when I saw people running from the opposite direction. I paused, confused, and that’s when my attacker, Joseph Bernazard (whose name I only learned later) must have grabbed me.

It took a minute to feel the menace and realize what was going on. I felt a tug to my hair, something against the back of my head – the knife.

Bernazard never spoke directly to me.

From what he was saying to the cops – "After what they did to me … Carlos told me …" – I thought I had interrupted a drug bust and the perp had glommed onto me to keep from being arrested.

But that was the standard "Law and Order"-style narrative, one that I could have been watching on TV – helped along by the police saying, "She’s innocent, don’t hurt her."

The other, more compelling narrative was the threat of the guns facing me and the knife behind me. I have to prepare for death, I thought. In the months after 9/11, like many New Yorkers, I’d reminded myself that death could come at any time, and that was okay.

But I was out of practice with such thoughts. I’m not a religious Jew, but later, I wished I had memorized the Hebrew prayer, the Shema, that Jews are supposed to say before dying.

I think it would have been comforting to me, as if I were my own priest giving myself last rites.

Then I heard the shot that set me free. I don’t remember him letting go of me, but he must have. My first thought was, had the shot hit me? Then I ran quickly away from the circle of danger without looking back.

I’ve learned two things from my ordeal: Life can be interrupted at any minute, so you have to enjoy it while you can. And if you see a group of people running wildly – and it’s not the marathon – don’t stop to figure out what’s going on.

Just run like hell.

LANDMARK SUGAR

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The Domino Sugar sign next to the Williamsburg Bridge may become a New York City landmark if preservationists get their way. This from the New York Times:

Now, the sign may point the way to the borough’s next big historic preservation fight.

Last
month, the Waterfront Preservation Alliance of Greenpoint and
Williamsburg formally asked the city’s Landmarks Preservation
Commission to consider the old sugar factory for landmark status.

A
plan for a project combining market-rate and low-income housing at the
site is being drafted by the partnership that bought the property
shortly after the factory closed in 2004. It consists of the Community
Preservation Corporation, a nonprofit organization, and Isaac Katan, a
private developer.

   

The preservationists, supported by the
local City Council member, David Yassky, want any development to
conform with the factory, a hulking brick Romanesque Revival structure
that dates to the late 19th century and recalls an era when New York
was the nation’s leading sugar producer.

Mr. Yassky angered
local preservationists last year by helping to override the landmark
designation of a nearby warehouse. The Domino plant, he said, is more
significant. “It’s an icon,” he said. “It’s a landmark in the popular
sense of the word. When I talk to people in Queens or Manhattan about
that part of my district, I say it’s right by the Domino Sugar factory,
and they know where that is.”

Picture from Flickr: flickr.com/photos/mireille/

READINGS AT NIGHT AND DAY

This fall’s readings at Night and Day, which is really shaping up to be quite the cultural center here in Brooklyn.

SUNDAY OCTOBER 8
LAUNCH PARTY: Hardboiled Brooklyn
Detective fiction in New York’s finest borough.
Featuring: Peter Blauner, Gabriel Cohen, Reed Farrell Coleman

Sunday Oct 15
6 pm
LAUNCH PARTY: Heliotrope issue release
for the Heliotrope launch party, add these names as the readers:
Barbara Elovic, Linda Susan Jackson, Richard Levine, Constance
Norgren, & Jessica Stein

Monday Oct 16
6 pm
Playwrites: BARBARA WIECHMANN & RICHARD FULCO

Monday Oct 23
6 pm
Sackett St Writers’ Workshop
Featuring faculty & students from the Brooklyn writing workshop.

SUNDAY OCTOBER 29
6 PM
Fiction
Edie Meidav, author of CRAWL SPACE
& Emily Barton, author of BROOKLAND

Set in eighteenth-century Brooklyn, Brookland is the story of a determined
and intelligent woman who is consumed by a vision of a bridge: a
gargantuan construction of timber and masonry she devises to cross the
East River in a single, magnificent span. With the help of the local
surveyor, Benjamin Horsfield, and her sisters-the high-spirited,
obstreperous Tem, who works with her in the distillery, and the
silent, uncanny Pearl-she fires the imaginations of the people of
Brooklyn and New York by promising them a bridge that will meet their
most pressing practical needs while being one of the most ambitious
public works ever attempted. Prue’s own life and the life of the
bridge become inextricably bound together as the costs of the bridge,
both financial and human, rise beyond her direst expectations.

Thursday Nov 2
6 pm
FICTION. Hosted by Kristan Ryan of Behler Books

Sunday, Nov 5
6 pm
Sarah Langan & Victor LaValle

Monday, Nov. 13
6 pm
Sackett St Writers’ Workshop
Featuring faculty & students.

Wednesday, Nov. 15
6 pm
Sackett St Writers’ Workshop
Featuring faculty & students.

Thursday, Nov 16
6pm
Book-Launch Party & Reading!
JOHN HIGH
reading from his new novel, Talking God’s Radio Show

Monday, Nov. 27
6 pm
Sackett St Writers’ Workshop
Featuring faculty & students.

SMARTMOM: BREAST IS BEST

Here’s this week’s Smartmom in the Brooklyn Papers

So, it’s okay for mothers to spend billions of dollars a year at
Toys “R” Us, but they’re not allowed to breastfeed on the premises —
it’s offensive, too sexual and not appropriate for children.

No wonder hundreds of breastfeeding women and their supporters
gathered outside of the Times Square Toys “R” Us for a rally last
Thursday in support of Chelsi Meyerson, a breast-feeding mother who was
allegedly harassed by store employees for breastfeeding her 7-month old
son.

Smartmom wanted to go out and join them: she longed to rip off her
shirt, pull down her bra, and nurse right in the middle of Times
Square. “Latch On. Latch On,” she’d scream, her fist held high.

Trouble is: she hasn’t lactated since 1999, when the Oh So Feisty One decided she’d had enough at the age of 2.

But Smartmom was there in spirit, recalling the relief and pleasure of giving her children the most nutritious food imaginable.

Smartmom still misses being a nursing mother, one of the most
meaningful experiences a mother can have. Which isn’t to say that it
was easy, painless, or always enjoyable.

In the days after Teen Spirit’s birth, Smartmom could not figure out
for the life of her how to do it. Hepcat eventually took matters into
his own hands.

“I was raised on a dairy farm,” he said. “I know all about lactation.”

Sure, she felt like one of the cows on Hepcat’s family’s farm, but
it was a miraculous sensation and a wonderful way to bond with her baby
and keep the crying to a minimum. It even helped him sleep; which meant
more sleep for mama.

Of course, it also made Smartmom feel like she’d been transformed
into a gigantic breast with an unending supply of milk and a child who
wanted to do nothing but suck, suck, suck.

Early on, she tried to discreetly cover breast and baby with a
receiving blanket or a shawl, but after a while, all modesty went out
the window and her breasts were exposed for all to see. Sometimes,
she’d even walk down Seventh Avenue breastfeeding, convinced that Teen
Spirit’s head was covering her bulging boob.

By all reports, Chelsi Meyerson was far more discreet during her
nutritional gambit. She says that employees of the Toys “R” Us flagship
store demanded she stop breastfeeding or move to the basement because
they considered it inappropriate around children.

Toys “R” Us, like many retail stores, provide “nursing rooms” and
mothers are sometimes asked to move to those locations for fear of
offending other customers.

Offending other customers? Offending children? Since when is it offensive for a woman to nurse a baby?

According to the World Health Organization, “Breastfeeding is an
unequalled way of providing ideal food for the healthy growth and
development of infants; it is also an integral part of the reproductive
process with important implications for the health of mothers.”

It’s not like it’s some kind of pornographic sideshow (and there are
still a few such things in the vicinity of Toys “R” Us). For Buddha’s
sake, you’re feeding a baby! What could be more natural than breasts?

Breasts are the original multi-taskers. Their primary function is to
nurture the young. But they are also a source of eroticism for women
and men in some, but not all, cultures.

Sure, there were times when Smartmom was breastfeeding in public
when men (and women) looked at her like they were being turned on. If
you’re turned on by breasts, so be it. It’s only human. You can’t
expect people to deaden their sexual desires. But they can act
appropriately in public and differentiate between a sexual act and a
maternal one (even if Freud thinks they’re one and the same).

Sigmund the Great suggested that a child’s first erotic object is
his mother’s breast. So it’s no wonder that the breast persists as an
area of arousal. (He also said the breast is a substitute for a penis,
but that’s a topic for another column.)

Still, this does not mean that nursing mothers and children should
require parental guidance like an R-rated movie. Women should be able
to nurse in full view of the public because there is no better way to
normalize breastfeeding and teach children and others about its health
and emotional benefits.

You can even quote the World Health Organization.

The reverberations of the Toys “R” Us incident echoed through
Brooklyn, of course, so naturally there were legions of posts on Park
Slope Parents (PSP). As usual, a lot of opinions were bandied about.

One even came from a New York Magazine editor who is known to troll
the Web site for story ideas (so don’t be surprised if there’s soon yet
another article about those “crazy,” “neurotic” Park Slope moms.
Admittedly, PSP is a treasure trove for cynical magazine editors
interested in the neurotic mommy zeitgeist.)

Even the features editor, Faye Penn, weighted in on the debate.

“Breasts are always sexy and sexual — and, yes, like our other
sexual organs, multi-functional,” she wrote. “Why do you have to negate
their erotic nature in order to justify nursing? If someone thinks it’s
hot to see you breastfeed in public, what can you really do about that?
Mace him? Lecture him? Throw a pamphlet at him?”

Given what she knows about her Park Slope neighbors, Smartmom’s
guess is that some moms will do all three. But she digresses. Penn
continued:

“What healthy straight guy isn’t turned on by the sight of a new
pair of breasts — even if there is a baby attached to one of them?”

Don’t be fooled (and don’t write Dumb Editor hate mail — it’s not
his fault). Most likely, editor Penn was probably just fanning the
flames. After all, her comment set off a groundswell of more comments —
and more quotes for that possible New York Magazine story that will
probably portray those puritanical milkmaids in Park Slope who refuse
to think of their breasts as sexual.

Well, sometimes a boob is just a boob, Faye. And sometimes it’s the erotic epicenter of the world.

Just because some people on PSP are offended by the idea that
someone would be turned on by a milky breast is no reason to generalize
about Park Slope mothers.

And it doesn’t mean magazines need to blow this up like a life-sized
erotic doll. No more Amy Sohn–style mommy rants turning Park Slope
mothers into unpleasant stereotypes, please.

Let them nurse in peace. And let Park Slope mothers be the
individuals they really are without judgment from New York Magazine’s
cliche-making editors.

 

JAZZ FOR KIDS AT OLD FIRST ON SATURDAY

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Chocolate Chip Chamber Music, the brainchild of local music dynamo, Helen Richman, has its season premiere on Saturday September 30th with KIND OF TWO:  THE ANDREW RATHBUN JAZZ QUARTET.

JAZZ for kids at OLD FIRST REFORMED CHURCH ON SEPTEMBER 30, 2006. Shows at 10 a.m. and 11 a.m.

TIckets are just five dollars and available at the door for this engaging and interactive mini-concert for the very young (toddler to six-year-olds, even older).

OLD FIRST REFORMED CHURCH
Upper Hall
126 Seventh Avenue (corner of Carroll Street aka Jackie Connor’s Corner)
Park Slope
For more info: www.chocolatechipmusic.org

photo by cathzilla at Flickr