Category Archives: Postcard from the Slope

HOW THE STREETS, PARKS, BRIDGES IN BKLYN GOT THEIR NAMES

Here’s an interesting new book for all those interested in NYC (and specifically Brookyn) history, Learn lots of neat facts that’ll impress your friends. Reminds me of a book my father wrote but never published called; Who Was Major Deegan? also about how streets, parks and bridges got their names. It’s the kind of thing you wonder about every now and again. Usually you take the names for granted. Don’t think twice about them. But then you do and you wanna know. This book sounds like a must have for Brooklyn afficianados.

We wanted to share with Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn the fact that our
new book is out. Entitled Brooklyn by Name: How the Neighborhoods,
Streets, Parks, Bridges and More Got Their Names
, and with nearly 600
entries, it is the first compendium of its kind. Hope you (and your
readers) might enjoy. Thanks much and best, Leonard Benardo and
Jennifer Weiss

There will be a book celebration on July 13 from 6-8 p.m.   at the beautiful:
Brooklyn Historical Society
128 Pierrepont Street
at the corner of Clinton
in Brooklyn Heights

A THIRD STREET BRIDE

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Our friend on Third Street is getting married today. For the second time. They sent out a wonderful invitation that included photo booth pictures of the couple’s teenage daughters. It said:

Have you heard? A certain mom… and a certain dad…(you know who we mean.) are getting married!

We couldn’t be happier for our friend who has been divorced a long time now. We’ve known her through the pain of her divorce; watched her rise to new heights in her career; seen her beautiful daughter evolve from pre-school to tweendom; rejoiced when she met the man she will marry (and we’ve gotten to know him and like him a lot).

Now this. They announced their engagement a few months ago. They planned the wedding quickly but certainly with great taste and pizazz. Did I mention that she is the chic-est woman in Park Slope, a woman of great style and joie de vivre. We wouldn’t miss this event for the world.

It was supposed to be an outdoor wedding but judging by the flood warnings and the weather I am seeing outside the window, it will be in the restaurant owned by the groom on Long Island.

They don’t want gifts. "We’ve got everything we need," she told me. But they do want people to donate to their honeymoon fund. All of the photographers who have been invited, and there are many, have been asked to give a photograph of the wedding as a gift.

The pressure’s on. The bride is a connoisseur of photography. Hepcat will want to make one great picture for our friends on their wedding day.

DON’T RAIN ON MY PARADE

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The Coney Island Mermaid Parade begins today at 2 p.m. If you want to be in it, you must register at 10 a.m. Here’s the info from the organizers:

The Mermaid Parade is a completely original creation that is that nation’s largest art parade and one of New York City’s greatest summer events.

Founded in 1983 by Coney Island USA, the not-for-profit arts organization that also produces the Coney island Circus Sideshow, the Mermaid Parade pays homage to Coney Island’s forgotten Mardi Gras which lasted from 1903 to 1954, and draws from a host of other sources resulting in a wonderful and wacky event that is unique to Coney Island.

Mermaid ParadeThe Mermaid Parade celebrates the sand, the sea, the salt air and the beginning of summer, as well as the history and mythology of Coney Island, Coney Island pride, and artistic self-expression. The Parade is characterized by participants dressed in hand-made costumes as Mermaids, Neptunes, various sea creatures, the occasional wandering lighthouse, Coney Island post card or amusement ride, as well as antique cars, marching bands, drill teams, and the odd yacht pulled on flatbed.

Each year, a different celebrity King Neptune and Queen Mermaid rule over the proceedings, riding in the Parade and assisting in the opening of the Ocean for the summer swimming season by marching down the Beach from the Boardwalk, cutting through Ribbons representing the seasons, and tossing fruit into the Atlantic to appease the Sea Gods. In the past, David Byrne, Queen Latifah, Ron Kuby, Curtis Sliwa, Moby, and David Johansen have graced our shores, presiding over the assembled masses.

The Parade is followed by the Mermaid Parade Ball, a post-parade gathering where costumed parade participants can get together with each other and parade spectators to listen to live music, purchase raffle tickets, and watch burlesque and sideshow acts performed by some of New York City’s hottest burlesque stars. Buy your tickets NOW!

Come on out and join us on one of Coney Island’s best days of the summer! We can’t wait to see you there!

WALKER HIT BY BIKER IN PROSPECT PARK

There was a serious collision between a walker and a biker in Prospect Park yesterday.

A woman walking to an event at the Picnic House in Prospect Park was hit by a biker yesterday near 3rd Street on the drive in Prospect Park. A group of PS 321 third graders, teachers and parents were walking by just after it happened. One of the mothers told me that the walker was unconscious for quite a wahile and there was a great deal of blood on the scene. I later heard that the victim, who is recovering in a Brooklyn hospital, is an employee of the Department of Education and a member of an organization which helps educate teenage mothers.

Does anyone have more information about this accident? Know how the walker is doing? How’s the biker?

Last Night at the Old Stone House

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Last night’s blogging extravaganza was quite a success. I certainly didn’t expect so many people to show up. I’d say there were 75 people there and the room was packed.

I liked the geekiness of it. There was a video projector, a slide projector, numerous lap tops, a microphone, amps, speakers. Bloggers brought PowerPoint applications to show photographs and speech support. There was even Live blogging demonstrated by Daily Heights.

No Words Daily Pix (pictured left) was the AV guy: y’know the guy who plugs things in, adjusts, fixes, figures stuff out…

He did a fantastic job. Thank YOU!

Just before the show, he even figured out how to get the Old Stone House’s wireless working. "I used to work for Cisco, you know."

Everyone wore name tags: Hello My Name Is_____. That helped. Non-bloggers wrote things like reader, wanna be blogger, etc.

In addition to those who spoke, there other bloggers, too: the Gothamist, Sunset Parker, 431 Smith Street, Weird Nylon, Callalillie, Lex’s Folly. The editor of the Brooklynyte was there, as was a reporter from the New York Sun.

After the formal presentation, a party like atmosphere prevailed. Bloggers and others stayed around until almost 11 p.m.

Here is a list of those who spoke and a brief blurb about what they said:

A Brooklyn Life started her blog as an excuse to write. Her husband is the webmaster, her sister writes the Subway Reading column and a friend makes the music podcasts.

Atlantic Yards Report (Norman Oder) talked about the need for an alternative to the paltry coverage of Brooklyn in the mainstream media. His web site offers in-depth, comprehensive coverage of the Atlantic Yards Project.

Brownstoner, in disguise, talked about his new blog Brooklyn Record and the beginnings of Brownstoner, a real estate blog which is read by thousands every day.

Brooklyn Views showed PowerPoint views of the Atlantic Yards project.

Creative Time’s Eleanor Taubman said the song that summed up her blog is "Funkytown." "My passion lies in revealing the creative brilliance of people everywhere and in connecting those people to one another," she writes on her blog.

Daily Heights revealed that he is actually moving to, of all places, Philadelphia. He is hoping that his great community blog will continue.

Dope on the Slope delivered a hilarious history of blogging complete with a PowerPoint speaker support.

Design Sponge charmingly discussed her blog, which has caused quite a stir in the design world. It all started because she was always telling her boyfriend about this nice chair, this nice pillow and that table. Finally he said, "Why don’t you start a blog?" The rest is history. In addition to blogging, she writes a column for House and Garden and has a book coming out.

Gowanus Lounge is a longtime journalist and the Brooklyn corespondent for Curbed. He started a blog to showcase the gorgeous photographs he takes on weekends. His writing is good, too.

Joe’s NYC presented a stunning slide show of his photographs, which, he said, depict places that will soon be gone.

Lost and Frowned projected slides found on the street and told a hilarious story to go with them "Gabor Cooking School." Her blog is also quirky and fun.

No Land Grab spoke passionately of the importance of blogging about the Ratner project.

OTBKB read an excerpt from the Thomas Wolfe story, "Only the Dead Know Brooklyn."

No Words Daily Pix spoke!  It was wonderful to hear him talk about his amazing photos that grace the pages of OTBKB every day.

Travis Ruse projected many of the photographs he takes every day on his subway commute. He said he started this project as a way to show people around the world the way New Yorkers really live.

Not Only Brooklyn talked about his weekly e-mail newsletter which features listings of the best music, theater, film, literature, and art in Brooklyn and elsewhere.

DO THE RIGHT THING: ANSWER THIS QUESTION

I got this email from someone in Baltimore. If you know the answer to his question please post it in the comments section. Thanks.

I
was wondering if you knew on which street in Bed-Stuy that "Do the
Right Thing" was filmed?  I will be visiting Brooklyn on Sunday, and I
wanted to (respectfully) walk around the neighborhood, as DTRT is one
of my favorite movies ever.
 
I do not wish to go walking around Bed-Stuy asking the locals a
question they’ve probably heard a billion times. :-)  Exhaustive
Googling has produced nothing.
 
Any advice you can provide is appreciated.
 
 

ABOUT NEW YORK: BLOGFEST TONIGHT

Wendy Zarganis is About New York’s Brooklyn "guide." She called me up today to talk about the Brooklyn Blogfest. We had a nice chat. I may get to meet her next week at opening night of Brooklyn Film Works. She wrote the following about tonight’s Blogfest. She thinks my name is Judith. Oh well.

Tonight at 8pm: Some of Brooklyn’s best bloggers (and loyal/curious readers) will be attending the First Annual Brooklyn Blogfest.  Spearheaded by Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn, a.k.a., Judith Crawford, Blogfest looks to be a celebration of Brooklyn bloggers and their love for our favorite borough.

"People
nationwide are interested in Brooklyn," Crawford said, "Brooklyn is in
the zeitgeist. It’s a place, but it’s also a state of mind. So much is
going on politically and culturally, it’s a passionate place."

The
Blogfest will be the first time many of these bloggers will meet
face-to-face, so Crawford has arranged the evening in two parts: from
8pm-9ish there will be a formal presentation with 20 or so key Brooklyn
bloggers speaking on a blog-related topic of their choice for 2-4
minutes. Then afterwards for a more social setting and to give
participants time to swap blogging successes and woes, Crawford has
arranged tables to be set up for each blog, trade show-style. Bloggers
will have handouts, souvenirs and other items related to their blog to
give away.

Participating bloggers include Crawford’s Only
The Blog Knows Brooklyn, Brownstoner, Brooklyn Record, Design*Sponge,
Daily Heights, Dope on the Slope, A Brooklyn Life, Calla Lillie, Lex’s
Folly, Joe’s NYC, Travis Ruse, Develop Don’t Destroy, No Land Grab,
Atlantic Yards Report, Lost and Frowned, Gowanus Lounge, No Words Daily
Pix, Left Behind, Creative Times,
and Smith Street

Crawford comments, "The whole Brooklyn blog movement has really progressed.  We didn’t know what it was, until it was."

According Technorati,
there are about 75,000 new blogs a day and there are about 1.2 million
posts daily, or about 50,000 blog updates an hour. And on NYC Bloggers,
there are 1,885 local bloggers listed with more being added constantly.
While Crawford, who also writes the Smartmom column for the Brooklyn
Papers, is impressed how much press and popular attention local blogs
have received, for tonight, she is focused on more practical matters.
"I’m interested to hear what they [the bloggers] have to say on a
practical level," says Crawford, "like how are you getting ten thousand
readers!"

The First Annual Blogfest, The Old Stone House.
Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. 8 pm. Free. Drinks and snacks
provided. For more info: Call Louise Crawford 718-288-4290.

Continue reading ABOUT NEW YORK: BLOGFEST TONIGHT

BOB BUILDS A SCREEN FOR BROOKYN FILM WORKS

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OUR SCREEN IS AMAZING thanks to Bob Usdin of Showman Fabricators who donated his time, his ingenuity, his supplies to our outdoor film series. He assembled it this evening in JJ Byrne Park.

It was so great to see it all come together. We’d talked about it on the phone. And he delivered the pipes yesterday. But it was still very abstract to me.

Yesterday he showed me the sketch. On a piece of lined yellow paper, Bob designed a really ingenious, simple aluminum frame put together with key clamps for our 12 x 15 ft. white muslin.

Tonight at our "dress rehearsal" Bob quietly went to work.

It took him over two hours to put it together; he mostly worked alone. His daughter, OSFO and Teen Spirit helped a bit.

I finally found out what webs are gromits are. They are the holes and ties that make it possible to attach the screen to the frame. OSFO and Bob’s daughter did quite a bit of the gromit/web tying. There must be 20 on each side of the screen.

Bob labeled all the pieces and it should be quite easy to take apart and put back together.

We are indebted to Bob for creating this incredible frame and screen. Thank you so much. Next Tuesday night when we attach Bob’s screen to Greg’s truck it will be a great moment.

I can’t wait. Brooklyn Film Works. Movies Alfresco in JJ Byrne Park. June 27, July 11, July 18, July 24. First up: Little Fugitive by Morris Engel and Ruth Orkin. Made in 1953, the story of a little Brooklyn boy who runs away to Coney Island. 8:30 p.m. Bring lawn chairs, picnic blankets, pillows. Watch movies under the stars.

picture of a drive-in in Saskatoon at sunset by Darryl Mitchell.

 

 

TOUR OF GRAND ARMY PLAZA WITH FRANCIS MORRONE

Thursday, June 29, 6:30 p.m.
TWILIGHT TOUR OF GRAND ARMY PLAZA
The turn-of-the-20th-century City Beautiful movement sought to bring classical grandeur to all the neighborhoods of the city. Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn may be New York’s fullest realization of City Beautiful ideals. Henry Hope Reed said of the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch that it was “the second greatest triumphal arch of modern times, after the Arc de Triomphe.” Its sculpture, by Brooklyn native Frederick MacMonnies, ranks with the best ever produced by an American artist. We will look closely at the arch, at the other superb statuary and design elements of the plaza, at the part of Prospect Park that the plaza is a gateway to, and at the Park Slope “Gold Coast” that the plaza is the climax of. We will be joined by Brooklyn-based artist Bridget Regan, whose photographic exhibition, Grand Army Plaza: Soldiers, Gods and Angels, is on view at the Urban Center through July 31. Leader: Francis Morrone, architectural historian. Meet at the corner of Eighth Ave. and St. John’s Pl. (Transit: #2, 3 trains to Grand Army Plaza; B, Q trains to 7th Ave.)

GREG’S EXPRESS RUBBISH REMOVAL

Forget U-Haul . Greg’s Express Rubbish Removal is graciously providing the truck that will secure our Brooklyn Film Works movie screen.

Kim Maier, director of the Old Stone House, called Greg Wednesday night during the Brooklyn Film Works "dress rehearsal" and he came right over to JJ Byrne Park. He has trucks as big as Fresh Direct trucks that’ll be perfect to hold up the 12 x 15 ft. screen.

Greg is our hero. He will drive the truck up to the Old Stone House on Tuesday night and take it back after 11 p.m. Thank you so very much.

Check out his web site. It’s really cool and fun:

"We’re trashy. We love trash, in fact, we take what the Sanitation Department won’t.  Give us your trash. Please.

WE RENTED A TRUCK

Intown500We’re renting a truck from U-Haul. It’s only $29.95 per day. The guy on the phone kept asking how many rooms we were moving. I explained that we were just parking the truck and leaning a screen against it. He still asked if we needed moving pads or boxes. And how many rooms are you moving?  The good news is: Problem solved. On to the next one. Thank you all who responded.

rooklyn Film Works: Movies Alfresco in JJ Byrne Park NEEDS TO BORROW A TRUCK – at least 16 feet long.

We won’t be driving it. We just need to park it outside of the Old Stone House and tie our projection screen to it. We need it on Tuesday night June 22 at 6 p.m. or so until 11 p.m.

If it has your name on it: it’s great advertising. If it’s just a plain white truck: you’re a mensch.

A 16′ box truck would be ideal.  A 14′ would work.  Larger is also okay, but would be hanging out more.  Most important thing is the height.  Any of these trucks that are 11′ tall or taller will do the job.

Reasons to lend your truck to Brooklyn Film Works:

1. The film festival is a service to the community.

2. If your name is on the truck: it’s great advertising!!!!

2. You’d be making a contribution to the arts in Brooklyn.

3. We will adore you.

4.  We will ply you with wine and food.

5. Helping others feels good.

6. You’re a mensch

7. We’ll look like idiots if we can’t figure out how to get this screen up.

8. Get your picture on OTBKB and a story about your heroic and generous gesture.

Continue reading WE RENTED A TRUCK

DIONNE MACK-HARVIN TO RUN BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY

In the wake of the announced departure of Executive Director Ginnie Cooper to lead the District of Columbia Public Library, Dionne Mack-Harvin has been named the interim executive director of the Brooklyn Public Library, effective July 7. "I’ve worked closely with Dionne and know that she will bring a strong commitment to managing the organization during this transition," said Cooper. Mack-Harvin, who has served as BPL’s Chief of Staff for the past year, will officially assume the interim post on July 7. She began her career at BPL in 1996. Prior to becoming chief of staff, she was the director of the Central Library. Meanwhile, Janet Kinney, who had been deputy director for public service and had worked with Cooper at the Multnomah County Library, OR, has resigned. Mary Graham, director of neighborhood service, will be the interim deputy director for public service and Linda Cohen, currently assistant director of neighborhood service, will be the interim director for neighborhood service, effective June 25.

BROOKLYN FILM WORKS: THE BACK STORY

Brooklyn Film Works, which opens next Tuesday night (June 27th) with Little Fugitve, has it’s own quasi dramatic backstory.

It all started months ago when Kim Maier, director extradonaire of The Old Stone House, proposed the idea of a summer film festival in JJ Byrne Park. I loved the idea right away and got to thinking about Brooklyn-related films to include in the festival.

But there were a few technical details that needed to be worked out. Kim said she’d be happy with a bed sheet and a home projector. I guess I had something bigger in mind.

I decided to get in touch with an old friend of mine from my video production days, who now works for Scharff Weisberg, providers of audio, video, and lighting technology. I told him we had no money, that we were doing the project as a community service very much on the cheap. He was game to try to help us out.

My friend came to JJ Byrne Park to scope out the site and offered us advice about where to put the projector and screen. A few days later, he emailed us an equipment list that was a tad more ambitious than what we had in mind.

Kim said she’d be happy with a bed sheet and a home projector. I guess I had something bigger in mind.

My friend did say, however, that Scharff Weisberg would be willing to loan us a video projector for the four screenings. Somewhere along the way it was decided that we would project a 12 x 15 ft. image.

But what would we project the image on? Good question.  My friend at Scharff Weisberg suggested I have a screen made at Rosebrand, a company that specializes in theatrical drapes, scrims and screens. When I called Rosebrand, the sales representative asked me all kinds of questions…what size, what material?

We decided on white seamless muslin with a black duvatine back. Then the sales representative asked: Do you want gromits and webs?  I didn’t have a clue what gromits and webs were.

So I called my friend Bob at Showman Fabricators, who lives in Park Slope, and told him I was having a screen made and I wondered if he could help me figure out a way to frame the screen so that we could project a movie on it.

And by the way what are gromits and webs?

He said he could make a frame for the screen out of aluminum pipes. He’d deliver five pipes that could be made into a 12 x 15 ft. rectangle with key clamps or speed rail.
And then he called the sales representative at Rosebrand and told them what kind of webs and gromits we’d need because that’s how we were going to attach the screen to the pipes.

I still didn’t know exactly where we were going to put the screen – between the trees on the north side of the house or against the fence in front of the house?

I figured we’d figure it out.

Well, tonight Bob from Showman Fabricators delivered the pipes and walked around the site and said that it might be impossible to tie the screen to the trees or to put it against the fence in front of the house. Wind would be the big problem. The frame with a 12 x 15 ft. fabric screen was like a sail. And if a big gust of wind came along…

Kim said she’d be happy with a bed sheet and a home projector. I guess I had something bigger in mind.

So there we were — me, Kim, Bob from Showman, Bill the projectionist, standing outside of the Old Stone House trying to figure out what to do. For a moment I thought we might have to get a bed sheet and a home projector. Maybe what we were trying to do was impossible, too ambitious, too BIG.

Then I remembered something that Hepcat suggested a few months ago: we could get a truck and tie the frame and screen to the truck.

Bingo. Everyone seemed to like the idea. We talked about calling U-Haul and other truck companies. When I got home I told Hepcat all about our screen problems, the truck. He sighed a bit. Did some thinking. Sighed again.

"I’ve got it," he said. "I can put the old roof rack on top of our Volvo station wagon and I will clamp two pieces of pipe horizontally to the roof rack and attach that to key fittings,,,"

"Are you sure it’s going to work?" I asked gently.
"Look who was raised by engineers and who was raised by an advertising executive?"
"In other words, have faith in you, right?"
"Right."

And I do. So tomorrow night Hepcat will test out his idea.

On June 27th, not only will you get to see Little Fugitive directed by Morris Engels and Ruth Orkin, the film that inspired Francois Truffaut and John Cassavetes and was nomiated for an Academy Award, and won a Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival…

But you get to find out the ending of the "screen drama." Will Hepcat’s Volvo plan work out. Will there be enough power to run the projector. Will anyone show up to the show…

You’re just going to have to wait. Whatever happens, it should be interesting.

June 27th Little Fugitive about a boy who runs away to Coney Island.
July 11: Coney Island: The American Experience a documentary by Ric Burns
July 18: Moonstruck, the Carroll Gardens Classic with Cher
July 25: The Long Good Bye with Brooklyn native, Elliot Gould. Directed by Robert Altman.
All Tuesdays. 8:30. Food concession by Stone Park Cafe. Made possible with the generous support of Methodist Hospital, Scharff Weisberg Inc, and Showman Fabricators.

RECYCLED BOUQUET

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Dope on the Slope has a post about a collage made by Berkeley Carroll second graders called "Recycled Bouquet" that was made out of recycled grocery product packaging. Click here  for a close-up view of one section of the work." He says it is installed on the north wall of the Key Food on Carroll Street and Seventh. I think he must mean the exterior wall…It must be big like a mural. Can’t wait to take a look…

SWINGLES FROM STEVE’S KEY LIME

Omigod, omigod. Now this is exciting. Steve of Key Lime fame left a comment on the post I wrote about him last week. He liked it, he liked it. Here are the facts about his ice cream bars. YUM. I’m wondering if the Park Slope Food Coop will have them.

Thanks for the mention, actually we’re calling these things "Swingles",
after the botanist who catalogued the key lime (Citrus aurantifolia
Swingle). We switched to a great Belgian chocolate and are using an
organic coconut oil as a thinner (the chocolate must be thinned for
dipping) and the results are positive all around. Only complaint we get
is when someone is asked to share. Again, thanks for the mention!

FAMOUS BLUE RAINCOAT?

I already knew that Cafe Regular was the coolest cafe in Park Slope. I go in there on Mondays before and/or after therapy. But now it’s proven. I left my raincoat there two Mondays ago. I finally went back to the cafe yesterday and it was hanging on a  coat hook close to the front. I told the barista that I’d left it there. "You can leave it here if you want. We don’t mind," he said. Then I ordered a light iced coffee from another barista. As she carefully prepared the drink in the perfect coffee/milk ration we talked. "We never throw things out. You don’t have to worry about that," she said.

Truly the coolest cafe in the Slope. It’s a tiny place. Did I mention that it’s the best looking with the best coffee, too? And a great atmosphere.

Cafe Regular. They don’t throw out blue raincoats.

11th Street between fifth and fourth Avenues.

MARTY MARKOWITZ IN HOSPITAL

Breaking news from Newsday about our borough president, Marty Markowitz:

NEW YORK (AP) _ Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz had two stents inserted his arteries over the weekend after feeling some physical discomfort and checking himself into the hospital, his office said Monday.

Markowitz checked into Maimonides Medical Center on Saturday. After an evaluation, he underwent a procedure in which the stents, which are small tubes, were put into two of his arteries to help keep them open.

His office said Markowitz was resting comfortably and was expected to leave the hospital on Tuesday.

"I want all Brooklynites and New Yorkers to know that I’m doing great and feeling fine, and can’t wait to get back to work for Brooklyn," Markowitz said in a statement. "I guess I’m now a member of one of the largest 60-plus groups in America _ the stent club."

HOT HOT SEVENTH HEAVEN

Incredibly HOT weather for Seventh Heaven, Seventh Avenue’s annual street fair.  It seemed to me that it was less crowded than usual. The heat was probably the main reason. OSFO and I were out there at high noon and each have a sunburn to show for it. For some reason, this year we found ourselves going from 3rd Street to 16th Streets. Never made it below 3rd Street. OSFO enjoyed the space walk "ride" and the big slide up on 16th Street.

Here’s what we noticed:

Jed Parish performing in front of Slope Cellars
–Interesting world music in front of John Jay High School
–Skirts from Fofolle
–Cool key rings and jewelry from Bonbon Oiseau
–Gorgeous dish towels from India
–Rides up on 16th Streets
Rare Device’s sale table
–Bird and Baby Bird’s sale table
Naidre’s cupcakes and stuff
–Boxing and Tai Chi demo in front of Slope Fitness Collective
–Hepcat bought a super bright flash light
–Pink Corvette model car for Dad
–Chinese dragon painting for Grandpa
–Sand in a cat-shaped bottle for Grandpa
–Lots of jewelry
–Lots of bags
–Lots of Andean stuff
–Lots of Chinese buddhas

DAD’S DAY

Dad’s day definitely got short shrift around here. Not because anyone has anything against Hepcat. It’s just that Teen Spirit and OSFO know that Hepcat doesn’t think much of Hallmark holidays. Maybe they’re embarassed to pay too much attention to it. They know that the best way to celebrate it is to ignore it in Hepcat’s case.

OSFO did make Hepcat scrambled eggs and bacon for breakfast. She did NOT give him a card. Teen Spirit had a card but he never got around to signing it.  Hepcat appreciated OSFO’s tasty breakfast.

I managed to drum up some enthusiasm for the day. Got Hepcat a nice card and a small gift. But Hepcat seemed bent on ignoring it.

We did have a combo Father’s Day/June birthdays party at our house. My dad came and he appreciated the attention from Teen Spirit and OSFO who did have gifts for grandpa. I guess they know that he, unlike Hepcat, appreciates that sort of thing.

OSFO gave him a Chinese dragon painting painted by a guy at the Seventh Heaven street fair. She asked him to write "Grandpa" in calligraphy. She also gave him a sand bottle in the shape of a cat because he likes cats. Teen Spirit gave him a cool key ring with a horse on it (Granpa is a big horse racing guy).

It was Bro-in-law’s first Father’s Day. He’s been dad to Sonya since last August. Happy Father’s Day to you and many, many, many more to come.

TEEN SPIRIT’S SUMMER VACATION

I’ve been thinking a lot about what Teen Spirit is going to do this summer. As usual, we will go to Sag Harbor for a week and Northern California for much of August (visiting Hepcat’s family farm). But I’m worried about July. Teen Spirit has never gone to sleep away camp. He loved Park Explorers, a local day camp in Prospect Park, but he’s too old for that now. He talked about being a C.I.T., which I thought was a great idea but now he’s not sure.

He says he wants to hang loose. He’s talking about getting a job. Anyone have some work for 15-year-old Teen Spirit? He’s smart, interesting, into music, well read…likes computers. The only work experience he’s had is babysitting for his sister and a boy who lives a few blocks away. He once distributed flyers for the Shangri La store and he’s had stoop sales.

I found this on Callalillie. She doesn’t have kids but she was musing on what she’d like her kids (when she has them) to do on their summer vacation.

How would I like my children to spend their summer vacations?

I am not really sure, though I would love to be able to give them
experiences like those that I had. Usdan Usdan Center for the Creative and Performing Arts exposed me to some incredibly
smart and creative people. Experiencing college campus life
(quasi-college) in high school was invaluable for me. But mostly, I
want my kids to have fun and smile and not worry about things, because
that is what summer vacation is traditionally for. And when they are
old enough, their lazy butt needs to get a job.

Anyone have ideas for Teen Spirit this summer?  Maybe I should look into that Usdan Center.

MOJO SCOOP: WHAT’S GOING IN ON 3rd And 7th AVE

OTBKB’s got the scoop. Tempo Presto is going into what was the Mojo Cafe. Tempo, a well-reviewed restuarant on Fifth Avenue has a take-out shop right next to the restaurant. The shop going in on Seventh Avenue will have cafe seating, gelato, coffees, and "lots of desserts" says owner Michael Fiore, who encouraged OTBKB to spread the word.

The arrival of Tempo Presto is good news for Third Street. Now three corners have restaurants:
Sette, Miracle Grill and now Tempo Presto.

Tempo Presto – cafe, ice cream, goumet Italian food – sounds great.

I LIKE HELLO BROOKLYN DOT COM

DOES EVERYONE KNOW ABOUT HELLOBROOKLYN.COM? THAT’S WHERE I FOUND THIS. IT’S AN AMAZING BROOKLYN RESOURCE AND, MOST IMPORTANTLY, WHERE I GO FOR MY BROOKLYN MOVIE TIMES.

CIRCUSundays in June returns to the Waterfront Museum and Showboat Barge (June 4, 11, 18, 25) at 1:00PM and 4:00PM.

                     

                     

CIRCUSSunday
brings the circus to Red Hook every Sunday in June featuring
professional performers from around the globe who will dazzle, mystify
and make you laugh.

                     

CIRCUSSundays is presenting an unprecedented variety or performers this summer and every Sunday features an entirely new show. Click Here for this season’s schedule.

                     

The Museum Walls will showcase the art exhibit: FLOATAGRAPHS: From a CIRCUSunday

                     

Peter Angelo Simon debuts a new body of photographs from a 2005 visit
aboard the Waterfront Museum and Showboat Barge. Artist Reception: June
18th from 6:30 – 8:30 PM.

                   

Purchase tickets online or call our tickets hotline (877) 238-5596 to place your order. Two shows daily.

THE GHOURDS

I heard a band on Weekend Edition and coulda sworn it was The Band but it was a band called The Ghourds. The Band is one of my fave bands EVER. Maybe the The Ghourds are good, too. Here’s what they had to say about their music, which they describe as music for the unwashed and well-read.

Many have attempted to personify, lablefly, quantify, verbalize and sanctify the concoction of musical quilts these here gourds have somehow knit together. In a saucepan of slow roasts they have conjured tempo’s, tango’s, waltzes, zydeco, old timey, two step, lowgrooved, long winded, short tailed, tiny, phat, stompin gizmo’s of tunes tripped out of lonely, solid teeth and wet green earth. Bugs all bedazzled with this comic tear soaked golden throated close harmony caved in a corner with hat drippin’ rain. Lo and behold lo and behold they was just lookin’ for they lo and behold.

With obscure references to everything from desmond dekker, black adder, folk mythology, Oregon motels, baby gramps, Curtis Mayfield songs, Spanish poetry, u.s. currency, leadbelly, isopropyl alcohol, various controlled substances, sex, food, arachnids, insects, archetypal psychology, NFL, liquid gold, Sufis, preachers, old testament bible stories, mud, betrayal and masturbation’s, The Gourds seem to let their music fry just long enough before they turn it over and brown it on the other side.

There is just absolutely no way to categorize this music, these songs, without tearing up the English language. On any given night, in any given bar, somewhere out in Eugene or Amarillo or Jacksonville or Lincoln. In new York city, Chicago, Dallas, San Francisco, Seattle or Austin. One can sit listening to a gourds show without a clue as to where in the hell it’s gonna go. They are quilters in the true sense of the word. Scraps, fragments, leftovers, images strung together in a continuous scrabble of sheets draped over old wood like charm. This is first and foremost a music of joy. From there itís anybody’s guess what the friggin’ hell it is.

One thing is for sure though. They know what it is. But damned if these bunch of loblolly’s can tell you anything about it. They just do what they do and it comes out all gourd-like and silvery and wood-like and watery.

PAUL McCARTNEY TURNS 64 TODAY

When I get older, losing my hair, many years from now,
Will you still be sending me a Valentine, birthday greetings, bottle of wine?
If I’d been out ’till quarter to three, would you lock the door?
Will you still need me, will you still feed me,
When I’m sixty-four?

Hmm——mmm—mmmh.
You’ll be older, too. Aaah, and if you say the word, I could stay with you.

I could be handy, mending a fuse, when your lights have gone.
You can knit a sweater by the fireside, sunday mornings, go for a ride.
Doing the garden, digging the weeds, who could ask for more?
Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I’m sixty four?

Every summer we can rent a cottage in the Isle of Wight if it’s not too dear. We shall scrimp and save.
Ah, grandchildren on your knee, Vera, Chuck, and Dave.

Send me a postcard, drop me a line stating point of view.
Indicate precisely what you mean to say, yours sincerely wasting away.
Give me your answer, fill in a form, mine forever more.
Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I’m sixty four?

by John Lennon/Paul McCartney

RESTAURANT ROW BTW LINCOLN AND ST. JOHNS

Just noticed today: The pizza shop between Lincoln and St. John’s on Seventh Avenue is OUT of business and something called The Park Slope Grill is IN. The store was dark but they have a nice display in the window and there was a counter. It made me think of Bonnie’s Grill (wishful thinking?).  Curious what it’s gonna be like. Anyone know. 

Now there’s Olive Vine Cafe, Park Slope Grill and Mango. A little restaurant row.

YAHOO WORM NO LONGER A THREAT BUT STAY ALERT

Yahoo says Yamanner worm is no longer a threat but for Yahoo Mail users to stay alert.

Following a security investigation made by the world’s largest anti-virus company Symantec, it appears that the most popular email service on the Web, Yahoo Mail, has been affected by a silent and devious attacker, an Internet worm named Yamanner. According to Symantec this is a type of worm with a highly dangerous potential, since in order to infect a machine the users only need to open the rogue message, not the usual attachement.

Symantec added that JS.Yamanner@m is a JavaScript worm and its potential victims are only those who have an e-mail address ending in @yahoo.com or @yahoogroups.com. Users of Yahoo! Mail Beta are not to be concerned with the worm. The spreading of the worm is very efficient: JS.Yamanner takes control by exploiting a vulnerability which enables scripts embedded in HTML e-mails to be run by the user’s browser. It then sends the e-mail addresses he finds to a remote server on the Internet.

At the time of the announcement made by Symantec, there were potentially 100 million victims, all of them users of Yahoo Mail portal. Yahoo! Mail Beta users were not affected because for security reasons Yahoo! Mail blocks malicious scripts. This is the reason for which Symantec included the JavaScript worm JS.Yamanner in a category of threats of Level 2 (on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being most severe).

Additionally, if users mistakenly open an infected e-mail, they will also see that their browser window is re-directed to display the Web page associated with the URL: http://www.av3.net/index.htm. According to Symantec, the worm, containing JavaScript, has the words "New Graphic Site" in the subject field of the e-mail.

Following Symantec’s warning, Yahoo announced on Tuesday that "a very small fraction" of its more than 200 million e-mail accounts were infected Monday when the problem was first signaled. "We have taken steps to resolve the issue and protect our users from further attacks of this worm," Yahoo spokeswoman Kelley Podboy said. "The solution has been automatically distributed to all Yahoo Mail customers, and requires no additional action on the part of the user."

Nevertheless, Yahoo is urging its e-mail clients to stay alert and keep their anti-virus and firewall active and up-to-date.

FRIDAY IS BLOOMSDAY!

If you can’t make it to Symphony Space on 95th Street and Broadway in Manhattan on Friday at noon (or anytime during the day, you can listen to it  live on WBAI (on radio or Internet.

Starting at 10:00 pm, FIONNULA FLANAGAN reads the Full Molly; the complete, uncut, Penelope episode

Bloomsday on Broadway XXV: Passion! Politics! Plus Samuel Beckett Centennial Celebration!

This
Bloomsday marks a quarter century of annual Joycean reveling at
Symphony Space, and will celebrate the life, language, lusts and
literature of James Joyce’s Ulysses over twelve-plus hours.
This year’s focus is on Mr. Leopold Bloom’s spiritual son, Stephen
Dedelus (aka James Joyce), with readings from Ulysses, Portrait of the Artist and Dubliners.
We will also celebrate the centenary of Joyce’s spiritual offspring,
Samuel Beckett, with readings from his work.  The marathon concludes
with Fionnula Flanagan reading the complete uncensored monologue of Molly Bloom until the wee hours of the morn.

Bloomsday on Broadway XXV can also be heard live on WBAI 99.5 FM or www.wbai.org

Bloomsday on Broadway XXV – RUNDOWN
(Program  and Artists Subject to Change)

12 Noon – Telemachus – The Complete Text
MIA DILLON
ROBERT MACNEIL
CIARAN O’REILLY
TERRY MORAN
FRANCES SCANLON

1 pm – The Christmas Dinner Scene, from A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
HELEN-JEAN ARTHUR
MAC BARRETT
ROGER H. SIMON
GEORGE STACK
DELPHI HARRINGTON
JOHN SPINKS
JUDY ZABAR

1:30 pm – Stephen’s Defiance, from A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
DONNA MITCHELL
CIARAN O’REILLY
JOHN TIGHE
LISA FLANAGAN

 

Continue reading FRIDAY IS BLOOMSDAY!

KATHERINE MCPHEE FANS: I KNOW WHO YOU ARE

For all you OTBKB readers who are also American Idol and Katherine McPhee fans (I KNOW WHO YOU ARE), this should come as good news. A new cruise ship. Yet another reason to visit Red Hook. The National Anthem sung by our girl, the American Idol runner up. This from New York 1.

A new cruise ship is set to make its maiden voyage out of Brooklyn.

The Crown Princess luxury liner will set sail for the Caribbean from its new home in Red Hook on Wednesday.

The floating hotel is the length of three football fields and can hold 3,000 passengers.

Among the tons of food on board is a meal known as the Brooklyn
Balcony Nosh, which consists of Junior’s cheesecake, Nathan’s hot dogs,
and Brooklyn Lager to wash it all down.

"Princess being famous for our balconies, we wanted to take
advantage of the beautiful Manhattan skyline with Lady Liberty in the
background, so we put together a little package to honor the Brooklyn
traditions," Jonathon Wilson of Princess’ culinary operations said
Tuesday.

During the inauguration ceremony, Martha Stewart will christen the
ship, and “American Idol” runner up Katherine McPhee will sing the
national anthem.

STEVE’S KEY LIME IS NOW AN ICE CREAM BAR

I’ve been a fan of Steve’s Key Lime Pies since forever. He used to sell them out of his cool 1930’s truck on Seventh Avenue. You never knew when you might find him. I had the feeling he was delivering pies to neighborhood restaurants and would sell them if he had some extras. He always gave customers a key lime – to prove that there’s real lime in there, I guess.

You can get the pies at the Food Coop (one of the truly great reasons to be a member) and I assume you can now get them at the Red Hook Fairway and at Steve’s Key Lime Pie in Red Hook. But Brooklyn Record and the Gothamist bring news of a new Steve’s creation and I am just floored and so excited. Hello Steve’s Piesicals.

The streets of Red Hook, Brooklyn are practically bustling these days. The massive new Fairway Supermarket has opened its doors, traffic can seen bumping along the once desolate cobblestones, and yellow cabs (including mine) cruise the streets with increasing frequency.

So if the smell of salt water and the breeze off New York harbor isn’t reason enough for a journey under the Gowanus Expressway to Red Hook, maybe a piesicle is. Steve’s Authentic Key Lime Pies can be found in a civil war era warehouse on the waterfront just beyond a sign that reads “Pies Here.” Their specialty is, naturally, fresh made key lime pies.

But they don’t sell pie by the slice, so during the sticky summer days to come, the thing to order is the chocolate-dipped piesicle. This unique delicacy is served out of the freezer as a whole miniature pie, complete with a round crust of Graham crumbs and smooth key lime filling. And it isn’t rock hard like that Frozefruit bar the vendors sell in the park. On a hot day, this tasty, tart treat coated in a crunchy frozen chocolate shell could be more refreshing than a snow cone or an Italian ice

Steve’s Authentic Key Lime Pie, Pier 41 Red Hook Brooklyn 888-450-5463

Stonehenge or Manhattanhenge

CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS:
Smudge Studio invites you to participate in a simultaneous collaborative
event with dozens of people across New York City.
Manhattan Stonehenge:� The Grid Becomes Else needs your participation
anywhere throughout the five boroughs of New York on any or all of the
evenings of July 12, 13, and 14th, 2006.� On those days between 8:15-8:30
p.m., the sun fully illuminates cross streets on Manhattan’s street grid
(except the curved or angled ones) as it sets on each street’s centerline.
The phenomenon has been called Manhattan’s Stonehenge, or Manhattanhenge.
(Find out more on NPR:
We invite our collaborators to:
� � � � observe the sunset on any of these three days,
� � � � take a digital photo that responds to your experience of the sun’s
flow of light as it interacts with the city’s built environment,
� � � � email your photo to us for display in an exhibition,
� � � � release the city’s street grid to be experienced as else.
We will include your work in an exhibition in a Lower Manhattan Cultural
Council Work Space, and give you full credit as an artist collaborator on
all promotional materials.
To take part, please RSVP to gridbecomeselse@gmail.com with the date or
dates you will participate and the location you intend to photograph.
To learn more, email us at smudgestudio@gmail.com and visit
www.smudgestudio.org.
This project is supported by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council.
SUBMISSIONS:
When submitting you photographs, please send HIGH resolution images
minimally sized to 300 DPI at 5×7 for quality reproduction. Send submissions
to gridbecomeselse@gmail.com no later than July 15, 2006.