Park Slope Art Studio Tour: Visit My Third Street Neighbor

Visit my friend Bernette Rudolph at 357 Third Street between 6th and 7th Avenue in Park Slope. She’s having an open studio today and Sunday (May 18 and 19) and you should make a point of checking her work out and even writing a check to buy some.

What a gorgeous day to explore the work of local artists.

She works in an apartment just like mine. She’s taken over the entire living room and dining room for her studio. Hepcat is so jealous. He’s only taken over half of our living room for his photo/computer studio. She’s got half the apartment (Hepcat’s dream).

It’s a creative wonderland.

Her artworks are on display all over the apartment.

She’s a wonderful artist, who makes prints and constructions of goddesses, as well as New York City related artwork. Colorful, graphic, FUN, stuff.

An inspiring woman, she’s eve older than me and she’s been a working artist her entire life. She inspires me with her approach life.

Edgy Moms Outedged Themselves Last Night

Ooooh. It was quite the night at the 2nd Annual Edgy Moms Reading. This year it was edgier than ever—and the gift bags from Babeland were quite a coup. The Montauk Club was a perfect—and elegant setting, too.

Christen Clifford, who’s show Babylove is running Off Broadway at the 45 Bleecker Theater, started the show with an excerpt from her one-woman show about motherhood and sex.

Amy Benfer, an editor and staff writer at Salon, Paper and Metro lives in Park Slope, read an honest and  vivid piece about having a child at 16. Her daughter, who is now 18, was in the audience and many in the audience were moved to tears by her story.

Michele Madigan Somerville, an OTBKB fave, read two poems that I loved.

Louise Crawford was up next with a Smartmom column called, Smartmom’s Little Mushroom.

Amy Sohn read a funny piece about trying to get her daughter into Brooklyn Heights Montessori School and all the raw, competitive feelings entry into private school arouses.

Sophia Romero, read a wonderful excerpt from her blog, The Shiksa From Manila, which was followed by Louie Sloan’s story of getting knocked up from her book, Knock Yourself Up.

Last but loads of fun was Lenore Skenazy, reading her famous New York Sun piece about letting her 9-year-old ride the subway. It was great to finally meet her.

Saturday: It’s My Park Day Eco Fair at the Old Stone House

A day of learning, fun, games, music and action at The Old Stone House in JJ Bryne Park.

Join Brooklyn Parent, OSH, Park Slope
Parents, Park Slope Civic Council and

Recycle
This!
, sponsors of for It’s My Park Day Eco
Fair

This Saturday, May 17,
2008 at the Old Stone House at
J.J.
Byrne
Park from 11 am until 4 pm.

At the Urban Bird
Event at the Old Stone House from 11:00 – 12:30, learn
to identify local birds by sight and sound with Dan and Claudia Joseph,
sponsored by the Cornell Lab for Ornithology.  There will be
a music and bird song identification activity inside OSH starting at 11,
and  a bird walk and art activity outside.

FUN:

11:00 – 4:00  Face
Painting and Assorted Crafts

2:00 – 4:00 Monster
Making with Kathy Malone

GAMES:

11:30 to 12:30 Classic
Games on the Lawn

1:00 – 4:00
Ping Pong at the Old Stone House –
3rd Street
side

1:45 – 2:15
Bend and Bloom Yoga with
Amy Quinn

MUSIC:

12:30 – 1:30 Royal
Pine

3:00 –  4:00
Sign-A-Song

ACTION:

Freemeet
– 4th
Street cul de sac, sponsored by Recycle This
NYC!

ADVOCACY:

Brooklyn
Center
for the
Urban Environment – Composting

Brooklyn
Greens

Freegans

Gowanus
Canal

Conservancy

Grow Baby
Grow

Ellen Honigstock RA,
LEED AP

Holistic Moms
Network

No Spray
Coalition

Park Slope
Greens

Parents for Climate
Protection

Wetlands

Requiem For a Third Street Elm Tree

Image_00020_2
Yesterday an elm tree was removed from Third Street between 7th and 8th Avenues.

Old First’s Pastor Daniel Meeter, who seems to have had a special relationship with that tree, was there.

On his blog you can read his requiem for that tree, which was five stories tall. He describes it this way: "Its cloven trunk was
wonderfully vertical, in the manner of a deep forest tree. Urban elms
more typically have great spreading limbs, torquing and twisting like
great dancers in their places." Here is an excerpt:

"This spring it barely budded at all. And so they came to take it down. Today, Thursday.
 
The
tree surgeon was up in his bucket when I got there, but he asked me not
to take his picture. As they lowered him I thought of a preacher in an
old high pulpit, not least because of how loudly and confidently he was
declaiming to all the people standing round, both workers and watchers.
He announced that the tree had not died from Dutch elm disease. He said
it died from what "someday will happen to me, and to you, and to you,
and to you, and to every other living thing: old age." He knows a lot
more about trees then I do, but I don’t believe it died from old age. I
wonder how much of what I say my parishioners do not believe?
 
"Thank
you tree, for the wonderful beauty you gave us while you lived. Thank
you God for this tree. The birds thank you, and so do the bugs."
.

Nancy Nancy Closing: Online Shop is Up and Running

Friday May 23rd marks the end of an era: Nancy Nancy, Fifth Avenue’s smart and funny gift and card emporium, is closing.

Nancy Nancy was one of the first shops to open on the new Fifth Avenue. They were pioneers back in the day (1998) when only the brave and adventurous had the guts to open a shop on Fifth.

And now they’re leaving.

They will begin selling off items from the shop in front of the store all day Sunday May 18th during the Fifth Avenue Fair. The good news is that Nancy Nancy will continue to sell her cool wares on line at their website, which will be updated contantly. Here is a note from Mary, the owner of Nancy Nancy, with some news about what’s on the horizon.

The good news is that Nancy Nancy will be selling her cool products on line at www.nancynancy.com, the site will be
updated constantly! Here’s a note from Mary, the owner of Nancy Nancy, with some news about what’s on the horizon for Nancy Nancy.

I am still blogging at the Nancy Nancy Blog. There
is a possibility that we will be opening at the beach, pioneering again, in
Mastic Beach; it’s a great little beach town with a bad reputation. Much like
5th Avenue was when we opened
here 10 years ago!!

Sunday: The Fabulous Fifth Avenue Fair

The Fabulous Fifth Avenue Fair
Sunday May 18 all along Fifth Avenue from Sterling to 12th St. 11 am – 7pm
some highlights:
 
Local Crafts & Artists (Berkely – 3rd Sts.)
 
Dine outside with Fabulous food from your favorite 5th Ave. Restaurants
Puppetry Arts Theatre – make fun puppets ( 2nd & 3rd sts.)
 
Antique Car Show – come vote for your favorite (1st & Garfield)
 
M.S. 51 Flea Market & Talent Show ( 4th & 5th Sts.)
 
Kiddie Rides (3rd & 4th Sts.)
 
Shop your favorite Stores for Antiques, Gifts, Apparel, Jewelry and more
Enjoy Live Music throughout the Fair
AN ENTIRE NEIGHBORHOOD OF FUN!

I Read It In The Brooklyn Paper: Blogfest

Here’s the Brooklyn Paper’s kitchen sink on Blogfest:

Park Slope: The third-annual Brooklyn Blogfest at the
Lyceum on Fourth Avenue was lots of fun for the 400 or so people and
bloggers who attended. Sure, our editor put his foot in his mouth with
some poorly received comments about the downside of blogging, but he
was still feted like the star he is. Also, one of our favorite
bloggers, Katia Kelly from Pardon Me for Asking, was having such a good
time that she even admitted that she’d like to have dinner with her
bitter rival, 360 Smith St. developer Billy Stein! And our pal Robert
Guskind of Gowanus Lounge was revered as the blog-o-giant he is. …

Must Love Dogs: Help Wanted at Zuzu’s Petals

Just got this missive from Fonda at Zuzu’s Petals. Seems that a longtime employee has left the fold. Sad as they are to say goodbye to that person, they do need to find someone new. Anyone know anyone who might be interested?

we always hate when there is a staff change…we like our disfunctional family to remain intact. that said, we are looking for the next new zuzu.

we need a person experienced in floral design, with a working knowledge of garden plants and retail BUT we are not looking for an " end all and be all" designer, just an assistant….and not just for the summer…

we need a full fledged new member of the zuzufamily.
know anyone?

oh, by the way…MUST love dogs

MTA Set To Announce Music Under New York Winners

The Metropolitan Transit Authority is set to announce the winners of the Music Under New York auditions. On May 1, 55 musicians and musical groups auditioned for the chance to
perform in the subway.

From this group, a panel of judges selected 23 ensembles, whose names were announced yesterday but I can’t seem to find that list.

The winning acts are supposed to represent a variety of styles, cultural bacgrounds and instruments. They will be able to perform on the subway legally.

Looking for the MTA list, I did, however, find this cool blog, Saw Lady’s Blog, which documents the life of a NYC subway musician and musical saw player.

Go to her blog to read about the musicians at the audition. There are great pictures, too. Here is an excerpt:

The annual Music Under New York audition attracts a lot of media – many newspapers and TV news shows have reported on it.

One reputable newspaper reported that:

“…was among 200 people who applied for this spring’s auditions, about 70 of whom were selected to play Thursday before a panel of 40 judges that included music industry professionals and transit employees. The judges were looking for perhaps 20 people to add to the subway soundtrack’s current roster…”

Actually, it was 230 people who applied, 55 of whom were selected to
audition in front of a panel of 20 judges. 25 to 30 people will be
chosen to join Music Under New York

Of course the exact details in reporting on the Music Under New York
audition are not important, but it just makes me think how many details
newspapers get wrong in other subjects, and we believe everything they
say because they are a reputable newspaper…

Musicians who have passed the preliminary audition, which is by
recording, are invited to audition live at Grand Central Station. The
usual venue for the audition, Vanderbilt Hall, was unavailable due to
construction, so the audition took place at the North East balcony
instead (which is actually where I auditioned more than a decade ago).

Edgy Mother’s Reading: Lenore Skenazy, Smartmom, Amy Sohn and More

From the New Yorker’s Readings and Talks column:

“THE EDGY MOTHERS READING”

The writers Lenore Skenazy, Louise Crawford, Amy Sohn, Louise Sloan,
Christen Clifford, Michele Madigan Somerville, and Sophia Romero share
their jagged takes on motherhood. (The Montauk Club, 25 Eighth Ave.,
Park Slope, Brooklyn. No tickets necessary. For more information, call
718-638-0800. May 15 at 7.)

Here are more ‘tails:

The Second Annual Edgy Moms Reading

Tales of Motherhood without Sanctimony

Join eight notable and notably edgy mother-writers for a fun reading 
over a much-needed cocktail, just a few days after Mothers Day.  From 
single moms to sexy moms to moms who let their kids ride the MTA 
alone, these writers will shock and entertain you, and they won’t 
make you eat your vegetables before you get dessert.  They are:

Amy Benfer, essayist and Salon writer

Louise Crawford, Brooklyn Paper’s Smartmom and editor of Only the 
Blog Knows Brooklyn

Christen Clifford, writer/star of Off-Broadway’s hit show Babylove, 
true stories about sex and motherhood

Michele Madigan Somerville, poet and blogger, Fresh Poetry Daily

Sophia Romero, blogger, The Shiksa from Manila

Lenore Skenazy, controversial New York Sun writer

Louise Sloan, author of Knock Yourself Up:  A Tell-All Guide to 
Becoming a Single Mom

Amy Sohn, novelist, Run Catch Kiss and My Old Man

The Montauk Club

25 8th Avenue between Lincoln Pl. and St. Johns Pl. in Park Slope, 
Brooklyn

Thursday May 15th – TOMORROW!

7 p.m.:  Cocktails (cash bar)

7:30 p.m.:  Reading

Free and open to all (adults)

718-638-0800

The Oh-So-Prolific-One: Leon Freilich/Verse Responder

THREE JEERS FOR THE CUBICLE
    ON ITS 40TH ANNIVERSARY

Who put up the first cubicle?

Let’s agree it wasn’t Rubikle.

But we do know the fuzzy date,

Sometime in nineteen sixty-eight.

That’s when half a fence arose

Separating some from those

Ready and willing to distract

Workers from their working act,

Cutting production, sinking quotas,

Bringing joy to rival gloatas.

That at least is what the bosses

Told themselves would limit losses

Unaware their production troubles

Stem not from conversational bubbles

But rather from the office medium

Bringing on unending tedium.

What then has the demi wall

Accomplished? Really nothing at all.

Fences that are six feet high

Are as redundant as "pizza pie."

Better to cover mouths with gags,

Bosses, and cover heads with bags.

That’s the direction you need to go–

Build another Guantanimo.

Take That J.K Rowling

Hepcat sent me this interesting tidbit of information about children’s books this morning from the Washington Post:

Children have welcomed the Harry Potter books in recent years like free
ice cream in the cafeteria, but the largest survey ever of youthful
reading in the United States revealed today that none of J.K. Rowling’s
phenomenally popular books has been able to dislodge the works of
longtime favorites Dr. Seuss, E.B. White, Judy Blume, S.E. Hinton and
Harper Lee as the most read.

So if you thought the Harry Potter books are the most popular children’s books of all time you’re WRONG.

The classics still hold sway. Yay for the perennial childhood faves: Charlotte’s Web, Stuart Little, Green Eggs and Ham, The Outsiders, Tales Of A Fourth Grade Nothing and To Kill a Mockingbird.

Union Hall Wins: Real All About It

For those of you sitting on the edge of your seat about the outcome of last night’s Community Board 6 meeting at Borough Hall, here’s the latest: Union Hall will have its bar/venue license renewed. Brownstoner writes:

Bumpershine reports that last night Community Board 6 dismissed the motion
brought forward last week by its landmarks/land-use committee saying
Union Hall shouldn’t receive a liquor license renewal. Instead, the
board introduced a new motion in favor of the bar/venue’s license
renewal that was overwhelmingly approved. Nearby residents charged that
noise from Union Hall was destroying their quality of life, while Union
Hall supporters argued that the business was a boon to Park Slope. "CB6
has dealt a blow against the residents they’re meant to protect," says
Jon Crow, one of the organizers of the anti-Union Hall faction, in an
email statement.

Read these blogs for more in depth information:

Union Hall Yays Have It on Brownstoner
Union Hall Wins on Bumpershine
Union Hall Wins Over the Board on Gothamist

Earthy Tuneful Art Songs says the New York Times

Stephen Holden, the music reviewer for the New York Times, heaped praise on Louis Rosen and Capathia Jenkin’s show of songs set to the poems of Nikki Giovanni at Joe’s Pub (through May 26th). Read the review but here’s an excerpt.

"Monday’s show heralded the release of Ms. Jenkins and Mr. Rosen’s
second album, “One Ounce of Truth” (PS Classics), a collection of songs
based on Ms. Giovanni’s verses. The music is notable for its modesty
and its care not to impede the conversational rhythms of the poetry.
You might describe Mr. Rosen’s uncategorizable, continually shifting
musical patchwork of blues, folk, jazz and pop as earthy, tuneful art
song. He is from the South Side of Chicago, and the polyglot influences
show."

Holden also had praise a-plenty for Capathia Jenkins, the multi-octave vocalist beloved by Park Sloper’s who have heard her perform Rosen’s Maya Angelou songs and his Southside Stories at the Old Stone House. 

"Ms. Jenkins, familiar from Broadway (“Caroline, or Change”) is not a
vocal showoff. She dramatizes Ms. Giovanni’s poetry only to the degree
that the language calls for it. For the most part, the songs are sly,
playful observations that take an off-center, positive view of life and
love. “I Wrote a Good Omelet (After Loving You)” is a mischievous
celebration of nurturing sex.

Even the more cosmic numbers, like
the album’s title song, a meditation on the life cycle, refrain from
outright declamation. As Ms. Jenkins sang the words “Remember my smile
when I’m gone” in a sweet, sunny voice with an undertone of resolve, a
poet in touch with her life force smiled through the music."

Park Slope Civic Council Grants

Browsing around the Park Slope Civic Council website, I discovered that in 2008 the Park Slope Civic Council awarded 18 grants for 2007-8, totaling $9,878. The grants help fund
projects at schools, charities, cultural institutions, and other
organizations at work in Park Slope.

The grants are funded by money raised at the
annual Park Slope Civic Council House Tour, which will be held on May 18th from noon to 5 p.m. starting at the Berkeley Carroll School. For more
information, contact house.tour@parkslopeciviccouncil.org.

Here are the 18 grants approved by PSCC Trustees at their February 2008 meeting:

Park Slope Geriatric Day Center: Early Memory Loss Program.
The grant will buy kits, tools and supplies for the Center’s clients,
including its Early Memory Loss group, who will build doll houses that
will be donated to children’s programs in Park Slope.

Groundswell Community Mural Project: Department of Environmental Protection Water Mural.
In partnership with the Garden of Union and the Department of
Environmental Protection, the Groundswell Summer Leadership Institute
will create a large-scale mural exploring the water cycle and the
importance of green spaces in New York City on the site of the new
community garden planned for the water substation at 4th Avenue and
Sackett Street.

Spoke the Hub: Miles of Tiles Continuing Mosaic Project.
The grant will help buy material that people of all ages will use to
re-create mosaics lost in the renovation and expansion of this
multifaceted neighborhood arts center.

Reel Works Teen Filmmaking: Friday Movie Night at Reel Works.
This teen-curated series exposes young filmmakers to classics to
inspire their own creative cinematic journeys. Funding will be used to
purchase a movie screen, speaker set, and DVD player.

P.S. 321: Adopt-A-Tree-Well.
P.S. 321 classes will care for trees around the edges of the school,
encouraging children to appreciate the environment in their own front
yard. Children, parents, and staff will benefit from the improved
aesthetics of the trees in their environment. Consultants from Trees
NYC will teach the children how to care for the trees. Funds will be
used to purchase gardening tools for the project.

M.S. 447 Math and Science Exploratory School: School-Wide Recycling Program.
Although it’s the law, few New York City public schools actually
recycle. Our grant will help launch a school-wide recycling program at
MS 447, administered by students and led by a teacher who successfully
implemented a similar program at a Bedford Stuyvesant middle school.
Recycling will be integrated into the 6th-grade math curriculum.

Brooklyn Conservatory of Music: Civic Sounds. Our
grant will help fund the Civic Sounds summer community concert series,
Friday afternoons outside the Conservatory.  Genres will include Jazz,
Classical, World, Rock, Pop, and R&B.

Old First Reformed Church: Club Loco.
The year-old club, founded with the help of PSCC’s first Community
Builder grant, provides a venue for teen musicians and a place for
teens aged 14-20 to hang out in a safe environment away from parents
and authority figures. Our grant will be used to increase Club Loco’s
visibility and to increase the diversity of the teens that come to the
club.

Brooklyn Arts Exchange: Opportunities for Teens in the Arts.
The BAX Teen Arts Conference is celebrating 10 years of development and
support for young artists. Funding will help expand BAX’s Higher
Education Opportunities in the Arts program, which offers teens insight
into educational and vocational trajectories in dance and theatre.

Old Stone House: Education Program. The
Old Stone House is participating in a National Endowment for the
Humanities grant to examine the African and African-American experience
in New York in the years 1660-1875. Our grant will help develop a
drama-based curriculum for 7th graders exploring that subject.

Council on the Environment of New York City: Park Slope Computer and Recycling Day. Our
grant will help the Council on the Environment conduct an electronic
recycling day coinciding with our Spring Clean Sweep on April 19.
Electronic gear will be given to Per Scholas, which reconditions usable
equipment and recycles the rest in an environmentally responsible
manner.

Park Slope Senior Center: Park Slope Senior Center’s “Recipes from the Heart.”
The Center’s creative writing class will create a cookbook melding
memories and cultures through the sharing of traditional recipes. Our
grant will help with printing costs.

The Garden of Union: Sunday Afternoon Music Series.
Our grant will help fund live musical performances in the community
garden on Union Street between 4th and 5th Avenues (tentative dates:
May 31, June 21, and October 19).

P.S. 39: P.S. 39 Parent Involvement. Our
grant will help pay for the printing of handouts at a series of parent
involvement workshops ranging in subject matter from “How to Better
Communicate With Your Child” to “Discipline without Punishment.”

Park Slope Christian Help: Soup Kitchen and Pantry Program.
Funding will be used to purchase essential supplies for the CHIPS soup
kitchen, an honored Park Slope Institution serving 200-300 meals a day.

The Green-Wood Historic Fund: Serving Educators to Better Serve Students.
Our grant will help pay for lesson plans and guides for neighborhood
elementary schools that come to the cemetery for tours and instruction
from the cemetery’s Director of School Programs.

Prospect Park Alliance: Bartel-Pritchard Square Planting Project.
With help from our grant, an invasive species, Japanese Barberry, will
be replaced with native shrubs. The plantings will also beautify the
square and its World War I monument.

M.S. 51: The Partnership Gardens Program. Our
grant will be used to purchase plants and gardening materials for four
areas at M.S. 51 and four areas in J.J. Byrne Park that will be cared
for by M.S. 51 students.

Members
of the Grants Committee include: Chairperson Greg Sutton, Nathaniel
Allman, David Alquist, Nelly Isaacson, Ann Kalkhoff, Robert Levine,
Eric McClure and Lauri Schindler. Any community school or group is
welcome to apply for a grant. The guidelines may be read on our web
site, and downloadable applications for the 2008-9 cycle will be posted
in the fall. 

May 18: 49th Annual Park Slope House Tour

May 18th is the 49th annual Park Slope House Tour sponsored by the Park Slope Civic Council.

I’ve done the tour a few times and it really satisfies those voyeuristic tendencies of mine. You get to walk around in beautiful houses and see beyond the bay windows.

What fun!

The 2008 tour showcases nine beautiful and historically fascinating homes in the northern part of Park Slope, plus the famous Montauk Club and performances at the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music.

The funds raised by this self-guided walking tour are returned to the community as grants to local schools, charities, cultural institutions and other organizations.

You can purchase tickets online until 8 pm, Saturday, May 17. Your ticket(s) will be held for you on Tour Day, Sunday, May 18, at our starting point at The Berkeley Carroll School. You may also purchase tickets the day of the tour at the starting point, for $25.

Sunday, May 18, 2008
12:00 PM to 5:00 PM

Starting point: The Berkeley Carroll School
181 Lincoln Place
Brooklyn, NY 11215
Between 7th and 8th Avenues

What Will IKEA Bring?

Yesterday, I got a press release from IKEA USA about the Swedish company’s first store in New York City. The 346,000-square-foot IKEA Brooklyn in Red Hook opens on June 18th. Here’s a quote from the PR:

“We are thrilled that our plan to make IKEA Brooklyn accessible for our many customers is now set to go for the variety of planned alternative transportation options,” said Mike Baker, store manager of the future IKEA Brooklyn.  “Now we are focused on hiring and training new coworkers, as well as on transforming the building’s interior into a furnished IKEA store.”

I am not sure how many Red Hook residents have been employed by IKEA thus far but the store says that it is making an effort to hire up to 500 residents. IKEA has a good reputation as an employer. It has been ranked in FORTUNE’s annual “100 Best Companies
to Work For” list for three years in a row. They are, apparently, offering full health benefits to part-time employees.

IKEA is also on Working Mother magazine’s annual list of “100 Best Companies for
Working Mothers” (four years in a row) and Training magazine’s annual
“Top 100” ranking of companies that excel at human capital development (whatever that means).

Hopefully they will be a positive force for
employment of Red Hook residents

Transportation to and from Red Hook is famously limited. Perhaps IKEA will bring about some much needed changes in this department as well.

The Red Hook IKEA, which is located on 22 acres along the Erie Basin waterfront in Red Hook, south of the BQE/Gowanus Expressway and southeast of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel. Expanded transit options to the store include:

Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) Bus – The routes of both the MTA B61 and B77 bus lines have been extended to stop in front of IKEA Brooklyn.  Customers can consult regular bus schedules for designated times.  Bus stop locations at IKEA will be marked with signs.

IKEA Shuttle from Subway Stations – IKEA will operate a free shuttle every 15 minutes from subway stations at 4th Avenue / 9th Street and Smith/9th Street for visitors riding the F, G, M, or R trains.  A similar service on a different route will be offered to visitors taking the 2, 3, 4, 5, M, N or R trains to Court Street/Borough Hall.  All routes will have signage, indicating a stop for the shuttle to IKEA Brooklyn, and will run every day from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

And then there’s the IKEA Water from Pier 11. The good news ist hat  IKEA has contracted with New York Water Taxi to provide free water taxi service from lower Manhattan ’s Pier 11 across the East River to IKEA Brooklyn.  This service is available every 40 minutes, seven days a week, from 10:00 a.m. – 8:30 p.m.

For shoppers, there will also be a range of delivery options. IKEA Brooklyn will offer same-day or next-day courier service (for smaller items) and home delivery (for larger items) options so customers can transport their purchases to their home.  There also will be Enterprise rent-a-van service available on-site, as well as Zip Cars and approximately 1,400 parking spaces.

.

Teen Spirit Has Cocoa Puffs for Breakfast

There. I said it.

Last night on Brian Lehrer Live on CUNY-TV , Peabody Award winner radio/TV talk show host asked OTBKB if she blogs about her son’s breakfast cereal.

"Maybe I should," was OTBKB’s reply.

OTBKB and Gowanus Lounge were guests on Lehrer’s show. A lively discussion ensued about the Brooklyn Blogfest; the future of blogging; whether there’s money in blogging; and more.

Hanging out in the green room at CUNY-TV, Gowanus Lounge and OTBKB had a chance to catch up and talk shop. They were the second of three segments. The first was about whether John McCain’s has an conomic policy. The blogging segment was followed by one about Greenmarkets in NYC.

You can find that show here.

I thoroughly enjoyed my second appearance on the show, a live, hour-long weekly television program on CUNY TV. Check out the show’s new blog: Discuss the show.
   
   
      

I’m a big fan of Lehrer’s morning radio talk show on WNYC. He describes his TV show this way: 

Just like my WNYC show, we’ll be trying to get at the truth about life
and politics in New York City, and give regular New Yorkers a voice
through live call-ins and e-mail,” says Lehrer.  “We’ll be providing
direct access to mayoral hopefuls and other major newsmakers, and doing
New York television’s only ‘open phones’ call-ins.  We’ll also invite
people to send in photos and original videos that say something
meaningful about life in New York today.  And, as on the radio, we’ll
find our ways to sneak in some fun!”

      

The program is
cablecast in New York City on Wednesdays from 7: 30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.,
and is simulcast live and archived online at www.cuny.tv.

What is a Charter School?

For the answer to this and other frequently asked questions, the Brooklyn Prospect School website has all the answers. But not all of them, like:

Where will this school be located?

What is the curriculum? Specifics, please.

While we don’t know the answer to the above questions yet, here’s a definition of a charter school and how it’s funded. 

1. What is a charter school? A charter school
is a public school that is freed from some of the bureaucratic
regulations of the public school system in exchange for accepting
higher degrees of accountability. Catering specifically to its student
body, a charter school has greater flexibility in scheduling,
curriculum design, teacher development and retention, and
administrative procedures. Students are selected from Community School
District 15 by a lottery. Brooklyn Prospect is in the approval process
for a charter through the State University of New York Charter School
Institute.

2. How are charter schools funded? Because they are
public schools, charter schools are funded by the New York State
Department of Education based on student enrollment. Funding from the
state follows children as they choose their middle school. Brooklyn
Prospect will receive approximately $12,000 per every student (more for
low income students and students with special needs), yet additional
funds must be raised because this per student stipend is less than that
expended for a student enrolled in non-chartered public school.
Additional fundraising will support Brooklyn Prospect’s facility needs
and the expanded academic programs that will allow Brooklyn Prospect to
best serve Community School District 15.

Keep checking the website and OTBKB for updates.

A Brand New Charter Middle School in Park Slope

First you give us a vacation from alternate-side-of-the-street parking rules. Now we get a new public charter middle school. What is going on? Park Slopers have really won the lottery this week.

Big news. Big news for parents in District 15: There’s a new public charter school called Brooklyn Prospect will open in September 2009. A Community School District 15 school, it will strive "to create
a school population that reflects the diversity of the community." 

Brooklyn Prospect will be recruiting,
training and supporting educational professionals who model lifelong
learning and collaborative learning. 

The website states that the school will "serve students with a
broad range of academic and social competencies. Classes will be taught
so that each student is challenged where appropriate, and supported as
necessary, with the goal to maximize the success of each learner."

Differentiation of instruction will be emphasized, as will an effort to
ensure that the students have experiences that are complementary and
inclusive.

Nice NOT to hear the words: only for gifted and talented students. Sounds like this school can accommodate a wide range of learners.

That’s a relief. No one can deny that we need more middle schools in District 15 so we parents are curious, curious, curious about this brand new effort in our midst.

Thankfully, the Brooklyn Prospect website is quite informative. Here’s an excerpt from the mission statement.

Brooklyn Prospect  Charter School
students will achieve world class standards and participate, along with
their teachers and parents, as full members of a thriving model
learning community that prizes compassion, knowledge, and reflection.
Brooklyn Prospect Charter School seeks to prepare students in grades
6-12 from the diverse neighborhoods in Community District 15 with the
skills, knowledge, and habits of mind necessary for success in higher
education, the workplace, and life in the twenty-first century.

The school’s core values include:

Building foundational literacy and numeracy,
students will participate in collaborative curricular activities
designed to develop the skills and habits of mind necessary to
contribute to the global economy. Students will develop 21st
Century skills which include: innovation, inquiry, creativity,
expression, critical thinking, problem solving, reflection and
teamwork. In order to maintain world class standards, Brooklyn Prospect
Charter School will become an accredited International Baccalaureate
school, and every student will complete the International Baccalaureate
Middle Years Programme, preparing them for success in the International
Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.

Interesting that the school will be an accredited International Baccalaureate Middle Years Program. They’re going for world standards not just NYC ones.

I’m wondering what that means specifically in terms of curriculum. Language requirements, higher level of math and science training? World history? 

The planning team’s bios are on the website. The names include James Bernard, who was on the Park Slope 100 and is the founder of the Source Magazine and a member of Community Board 6. Here are the names of the Board of Trustees:

Daniel Kikuji Rubenstein (ex-officio)
Executive Director, BPCS

Luyen Chou
Chief Product Officer, SchoolNet

James Bernard
Founder, The Source Magazine
Member, Community Board 6

Anne Burns
Executive Director, Harlem Day Charter School

Elizabeth Varley Camp
Managing Director, HealthpointCapital

Roger Fortune
Senior Vice President, Downtown Brooklyn Partnership

Pearl Rock Kane, Ed. D.
Director Klingenstein Institute
Teachers College, Columbia University

Candice Olson
Founder, iVillage

Eliza W. Swann, Esq
Partner, Shearman & Sterling

Continue reading A Brand New Charter Middle School in Park Slope

Seeing Green Sees Meryl Streep

Several Carroll Streeters, including Seeing Green, who work at home spent Wednesday watching the filming of Julie and Julia on Fifth Avenue and Carroll Street. Read Seeing Green’s terrific report. Here’s an excerpt:

I couldn’t resist hanging out on Carroll Street in front of my house yesterday to take in the shooting of the film Julie Julia
at Cafe Moutarde next door. Starring Meryl Streep and James Tucci,
Streep was shooting a scene with Jane Lynch, suitably decked out in
50’s garb and painfully high heels.

Of course, expecting any excitement at a film shoot is about what you
get watching paint dry. After checking out the mountains of equipment
and trying to watch the video monitors for any sign of activity for
what seemed an hour, I gave up and went in.

Then came out again, of course…had to have coffee from Tempo next door.

Several of us Carroll Streeters who work at home (or don’t work)
were lounging outside the restaurant Al-Di-La and talking loudly in a
Brooklyn-esqe way. Since we had identified Streep’s trailer, we pointed
it out, helpfully, to curious passers-by. Finally Streep’s burly
bodyguard stared balefully at us, and one of my neighbors shouted out
"Don’t worry, we’re not stalking her!" As if that would be calculated
to soothe him. But he merely continued to keep a watchful eye on us and
did not come over.

Julie and Julia Shooting on Fifth Avenue

Hey, were they shooting last night at South Paw? I saw a big movie light out front as I walked uptown from The Chocolate Bar.

Julie and Julia is a memoir that started as a blog. Blogger Julie Powell cooked all 524 recipes in Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume  I, in a period of 365 days and blogged about it daily.

A friend told me that Julie was a temp at an office in Lower Manhattan. My friend said it was fun while Julie was doing the blog because she’d bring in the food she was cooking for her friends at the office to enjoy for lunch.

The blog became a successful book and now it’s being made into a movie written and directed by Nora Ephron and starring Meryl Streep as Julia Child.

Not bad.

It sounds like the story has been really fleshed out. According to Velvet Sea, they were shooting at Moutarde and there were classic cars outside. Sounds like a little Julia Child bio-pic thrown in for good measure.

Here’s the report from  Velvet Sea, a New York City photoblog with words:

Today they were filming Julie and Julia in Park Slope.  The movie is based on this book about a woman who tries to cook all of Julia Child’s recipes from Mastering The Art of French Cooking, Volume One
in one year in order to change her life. The film is based in the 50’s
in Paris and Cafe Moutarde was apparently a stand in for a French cafe-
hence the classic cars. The movie has a bunch of stars in it, most
notably Meryl Streep as Julia Child. I spotted Meryl today walking to
her oversized trailer (it looked like she had an entire huge trailer to
herself whereas the other "stars" had like 1/5th of a trailer each).
She was wearing a plaid suit with her hair tucked under a matching hat
and striped very high wedge shoes- at least 3-4 inches

Does Union Hall Still Have a Liquor License?

Last night there was a meeting at Borough Hall about the fate of Union Hall’s liquor license. A small group of Union Street want to see that bar/music space closed down.

Union Hall says they’re doing their best to keep the noise at an acceptable level for local residents. Yesterday they printed signs that said. Union Hall is Park Slope: I Support Union Hall.

I wasn’t able to be at the meeting and there’s no news out there yet.

Can someone who was at this meeting please send a report?

Residents React to Alternate Side Parking Vacation

Starting May 19th, alternate-side-of-the-street parking will be suspended in Park Slope until the end of the summer and Park Slopers feel like they’ve won the lottery.

So why is the Department of Transportation giving this gift to Park Slopers? The city is replacing street signage.

Throughout the Slope, this news is being met with cheers and tears. Long regarded as one of the worst neighborhoods in New York City for parking will, for a few brief months, be one of the best.

"My husband will be so thrilled," one friend told me. "He plans his day around moving the car."

Outside of New York City, it is probably hard to understand the joy that this brings Park Slope residents. But parking and moving one’s car from one side of the street to the other is a daily torment for New Yorkers, as is the interminable search for a parking space.

Park Slope drivers drive from one street to another – going in circles – on the hunt for legal parking spaces; a space where they won’t have to move the car in the morning.

"We’ll  be able to leave our car parked when we go to Germany this summer," another friend told me. Usually when they go away they have to leave their car at an expensive garage.

The downside of all this is that there will be no street cleaning this summer. This could be a smelly prospect in the neighborhood next to Prospect Park. Another friend wondered if people all over Brooklyn will leave their cars in Park Slope for the whole summer.

"Park Slope will become a gigantic parking lot for people all over the city." she said.

But let’s not get all negative. Rejoice: there’s no alternate-side-of-the-street parking for an entire summer.

Halleluah.

Eloise At The Condo

WNYC reports that Eloise, the feisty 9-year-old resident of the Plaza Hotel immortalized in the Kay Thompson children’s book of that name, is back at the plaza. Her painting, that is.

Yesterday the painting was returned to its place of honor near the Palm Court in the lobby. The hotel has been undergoing a major renovation and reinvention as a high end condo building and boutique hotel.

The Palm Court, an ornate and historic lobby restaurant, has been preserved.

Serving Park Slope and Beyond