CONTROVERY OVER CITY’S PLAN FOR SLOPE’S MAIN AVENUES

This from New York 1:

Two main avenues in Brooklyn may soon get a makeover as the city
pushes to convert them to one-way traffic. It’s an idea that’s already
stirring up controversy. NY1 Borough reporter Jeanine Ramirez filed the
following report from Park Slope.

Seventh Avenue is a bustling commercial strip in Park Slope with
bus routes, schools and a hospital. There are double parked cars and
traffic gets backed up.

Now to help ease congestion, the city transportation department
wants to make Seventh Avenue one way and do the same to Sixth Avenue.
It’s a plan that’s drawing mixed reaction from residents.

"It’s an unpopular idea because it’s completely unsafe,” said one
area resident. “It’s going to turn Park Slope, which is a residential
community, into one that’s full of traffic."

"I think it’ll ease the flow and I think it’ll be safer for pedestrians. I think it’s a great idea," countered another.

The plan would make Seventh Avenue one way southbound between
Flatbush and Prospect Avenues and Sixth Avenue one-way northbound
between Atlantic Avenue and 23rd Street.

"I’m very worried because you know what this really is? This is
Atlantic Yards coming home to roost in the neighborhood,” said City
Councilman David Yassky…

READ MORE AT NY 1.

BROOKLYN MOMS CREATE RAINBOW BABIES

This from the NY Daily News:

Inspiration came to Crystal Granderson-Reid and Janai Nelson four years
ago during a playdate with their toddlers in the Prospect-Lefferts
Gardens section of Brooklyn, where they both live.

"We were thinking about all the wonderful cultural exposure that our
children get here, and the world we want to create for them," Nelson
said. "We thought that there were just no products that reflect the
diversity of our neighborhood – ethnically, socially, economically,
everything – so it would be a fantastic idea to come up with a product
that represents that."

Encouraged by a television show about mothers with great ideas, the friends decided to embark on a business venture together.

"We thought: ‘This is something we can do. Why not us?" Nelson said. READ MORE AT THE DAILY NEWS.

Q&A

What has been your biggest challenge?

Granderson-Reid: "Our biggest challenge has been finding the right partner. Meeting up with FAO, we definitely got a great start in things."

What would you do differently?

Nelson: "We would have loved to have been on the
market on the market sooner … but we really just operate from a
positive perspective. We learn from each experience."

What was your biggest surprise?

Granderson-Reid: "How creative two people together can be, and how creative we are as a team."

Nelson: "It’s always a new and fresh feeling when people see the product and have such a positive reaction."

Where do you want to be a year from now?

Nelson: "We want to walk down the street and see kids
of all different backgrounds holding a [Brownstone Buddies] doll of
another background … and having a full appreciation of themselves and
every other kid around them."

Granderson-Reid: "We see us being a prominent brand in the marketplace."

PRE-K REGISTRATION AT PS 321

Here's the info that went out about upcoming pre-K registration at PS 321.

Registration for pupils who will enter PreKindergarten (born in
2003); Kindergarten (2002); First Grade (2001) and all other grades
will take place at our school in March.

PREKINDERGARTEN: REGISTRATION WILL BEGIN ON Monday, March 12 THROUGH
Friday March 23 from 9:00-11:00 am. We have three prekindergarten
classes-one full day inclusion program; one half day morning program;
and one half day afternoon program. We generally have over 100
applicants for 48 general eduation slots and so a lottery is
necessary. ONLY CHILDREN ZONED FOR P.S. 321 MAY REGISTER FOR THE
PREKINDERGARTEN.  **To register you must bring PROOF OF ADDRESS IN
THE FORM OF *UNPAID* GAS AND ELECTRIC BILLS. (NO LEASES,
TELEPHONE/CABLE BILLS OR DRIVER'S LICENSES WILL BE ACCEPTED.) The
only alternate proof acceptable is a water bill, house deed, or a
2006 W2 income tax form. You must also bring an original
birth/baptismal certificate or passport and the child's immunization
record along with a XEROXED copy of all of the above items. Proof of
address, birth certificate/passport & immunizations.)

In order to keep registration fast and orderly, we will register
Prekindergarten children according to their last names. Children with
last names beginning with:

A - H      Monday     March 12

I - P      Tuesday    March 13

Q - Z      Wednesday  March 14

OPEN       Thursday   March 15

KINDERGARTEN: NUMBERS WILL BE GIVEN OUT ON THURSDAY, March 8 AND
FRIDAY, March 9 BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 8:00 AND 9:30 AM. You must
present all the above information (see PreK info.) **When this
information has been verified you will receive a packet of forms to
be completed at home along with a date and time to return for formal
registration. At your appointment, we also request that you bring a
XEROXED copy of the proof of address, birth certificate and
immunization records. Teh appointments will be scheduled from Monday,
March 12 through March 23. THE CHILD DOES NOT HAVE TO APPEAR WHEN YOU
COME FOR A NUMBER. However, they must come with you at the appointed
time.

ALL OTEHR GRADES: Registration for NEW First Grade through Fifth
Grade students will start on Monday March 19th through March 23rd.
**All of the above mentioned information will be necessary in order
to get the registration packet as well as XEROXED copies of each.
THESE GRADES DO NOT REQUIRE A NUMBER.

IF YOU MISS THESE REGISTRATION TIMES YOU MAY PICK UP A FORM FROM THE
MAIN OFFICE ANY THURSDAY BETWEEN 9:00 AND 10:00 AM beginning March
26th.) (NOTE: School is not in session on Thursday, April 5th.) You
must bring the required materials, (proof of address, etc.) to be
given an application packet. Please note that ALL zoned students in
grades K-5 will be admitted to school. A lottery is only necessary
for PreKindergarten.


THE L TRAIN TO THE MMMMM TRAIN: FROM BROOKLYN RECORD

Brooklyn Record is just a treasure trove of good Brooklyn events. Check this out:

The Transit Museum presents The L to the MMMMM TrainSaveur
food editor Todd Coleman, a guy who really knows his stuff, will lead a
tour along the L and M lines to some of the best ethnic eateries in
Brooklyn and Queens. On this journey, you can expect to:

"Visit an ancient Sicilian dolceria for crisp-shelled cannoli. Warm your belly Puebla-style with a hot cup of creamy atole de arroz at a Mexican emporium of cookware, hard-to-find comestibles, and antojitos.
Shop for thick ropes of garlicky kielbasa, feast in a taqueria located
in a humming tortilleria where the tortillas are hot off the press, and
finish up among the steins and schnitzels in the vestiges of old German
New York. Wear comfortable shoes and loose clothing, as there will be a
good amount of walking and eating!

LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR BURLESQUE AT BAX

LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR BURLESQUE AT BAX...
CLASS BEGINS TOMORROW - SLOTS STILL AVAILABLE!


BURLESQUE @ BAX

w/ Victoria Libertore aka "Howling Vic"

March 6, 13, 27, & April 3
(no class on 3/20)
7:30-10:00pm
Tuition: $125/4 weeks

Always a BAX favorite, Victoria Libertore is back! Let go of your
inhibitions and get comfortable in your own skin in her provocative
Burlesque workshop. "Howling Vic" will share her unique skills to help you
develop a three to five-minute performance piece that reflects your
individual attributes. Using tools of physical theatre, archetypal energy,
intuition, character exploration and imagery, you'll build a solo
performance incorporating a strip tease and learn how to be comfortable while
doing it! Come and release the Goddess within. Women only.

DEMOLITION PREP TO BEGIN ON ATLANTIC YARDS

This from NY 1:

A dozen buildings in Downtown Brooklyn are being cleaned for demolition
to make way for the Atlantic Yards project, which includes a new
basketball arena for the Nets.

Crews will be on site today to begin removing hazardous materials
like asbestos, which is expected to take two to three weeks to finish.
The entire job is expected to take five months.

The buildings being torn down include five on Pacific Street, three
on Flatbush Avenue, two on Vanderbilt Avenue and one each on Dean
Street and Atlantic Avenue.

Construction of the new Nets arena is set to begin this fall. It’s
the centerpiece of the $4 billion project which still faces lawsuits
and strong neighborhood opposition.

SEEING GREEN: DO WE REALLY HAVE A TRAFFIC PROBLEM?

READ MORE AT SEEING GREEN:

I  lived in Paris awhile in the mid-80’s, having moved there from
California. The contrast in the traffic ethos could not have been more
vivid. California, the land of wide-open spaces where the car is king
and the you are rarely denied the God-given right to get from A to B as
quickly as possible. And Paris with its patchwork of  medieval streets
overlaid by Baron Haussman’s  1860 "modernization," broad avenues which nonetheless maintained a human scale.

I remember the first time I was in a taxi and it turned down one of
those typically narrow (and heart-breakingly charming) streets only to
come up against a large delivery truck unloading. No muss, no fuss
(and, apparently, no hurry either, as the workers sauntered back and
forth smoking and chatting constantly.) The taxi driver stopped, turned
off his engine and announced something to me along the lines of (I was
not too fluent in French,) "Dommage. On peux reste un moment" (Sorry,
there’ll be a wait.)

SEEING GREEN SAYS NO TO ONE WAY SIXTH AVENUE

Seeing Green is appalled at the proposal to turn Fifth and Seventh Avenues into one-way "Eighth Avenues." Here’s an excerpt from his blog.

Walk along Court or Smith streets in Carroll Gardens and you will
notice one salient fact: cars speeding by. The lights are timed to
allow cars to go by without stopping, and although the speed limit is
not very high, it gives the perception that cars rule. With
two lanes of traffic, cars vie for that extra car-length so they can
get faster through the area. That’s more or less the norm in most
places, even our pedestrian-friendly New York.

Contrast that with 5th and 7th Avenues a half-mile away, which are
two-way streets, 5th with bicycle lanes for much of its length. Yes,
trucks double park. Cars bunch up at the non-timed lights (you can’t
time lights in both directions, thankfully.) Yes, you have the slow
parkers and parking cruisers and the occasional SUV from hell, but
what’s different is that everybody has to go slow, exactly because it’s
not setup for free cruising.

ATLANTIC YARDS DEMOLITION WORK SCHEDULED TO BEGIN NEXT WEEK

With the eminent domain lawsuit still pending, Forest City Ratner is scheduled to begin demolition next week. This from NY1:

Demolition work is scheduled to begin
next week on 12 buildings in order to make way for the Brooklyn
Atlantic Yards project and the Nets’ new basketball arena.

The job will begin with the removal of hazardous substances like asbestos, which is expected to take two to three weeks.

Developer Forest City Ratner says the entire job is expected to take five months.

The buildings to be demolished include five on Pacific Street,
three on Flatbush Avenue, two on Vanderbilt Avenue, and on each on Dean
Street and Atlantic Avenue.

Ratner says minority-owned firms are being paid $2 million to handle the demolition.

Construction of the new arena for the Nets is set to begin this
fall, along with thousands of apartments, commercial buildings, and a
hotel.

The city and state have both given the green light for the $4 billion project.

Opponents say this work is premature, since eminent domain lawsuits are still pending.
            
            
       

   
 
 

BABY LOVES DISCO: SOUTH PAW TODAY

Do you wanna dance?  Today (Saturday March 3rd) at South Paw (125 Fifth Avenue in Park Slope), there’s a family dancing event sponsored by Park Slope Parents.

Tickets $12 for all walking humans (non-walking humans free)

DJs, egg shakers, play scarves, "and a chill out space with stuffed animals, pillows, books, toys, and puzzles."

Healthy snacks and open bar (for adults).

MOM DOT COM: FROM THIS WEEK’S BROOKLYN PAPER

by Louise Crawford

Having a kid changes everything. Sure, people have been doing it for
eons, but when it happens to you, it’s like it’s happening for the very
first time.

And when it happens to you — and you live in Brooklyn — everybody needs to hear about it.

Most new parents are content to capture every moment of junior’s life
on film or video. But in  Brooklyn, there are almost as many writers as
there are Bugaboos — and book contracts don’t grow on trees—so many
moms are discussing their children, marriages and lives on their own
blogs.

With hundreds of mommy Web logs in Brooklyn alone, you
have to wonder how healthy it is for parents to tell-all on the
Internet. How will it be for the kids when they discover that mom’s
been sharing their secrets with the world?

But then again, given that we live in a media-driven world, they probably won’t care.

“That’s
where we are right now with everything,” observed Judy Antell, an
editor at Brooklyn Parent. “The whole celebrity culture we have now,
where you know everything about everyone, has moved on to parents.”

Mary
MacRae Warren is a single mother who lives with her 9-year-old son in a
cluttered East New York apartment from which she has run the blog,
“Mrs. Cleavage’s Diary,” since January. A self-described smarty-pants,
the saucy and opinionated former Park Sloper Warren uses the blog as a
creative outlet, as well as a way to deal with the highs and lows of
parenting.

Like many bloggers, Warren likes to live her life out
loud. “My family was always appalled at how open I was about
everything,” said Warren. “My parents argued all the time and I was the
blabbermouth who told the whole neighborhood.”

She still loves to have an audience. And telling stories is a way to get in touch with how she is feeling.

“In
a way, the blog is a homage to my mom,” Warren said this week over
coffee in Park Slope. “It’s a way to sort out what it means to be a
parent.”

Warren, a tall, busty blonde with a penchant for
colorful clothes and bright red lipstick, grew up in North Carolina
with a mother who stayed at home. “She was an artist and a really
creative person, but she was stifled by her kids.”

Still, she
managed to be quite a multi-tasker. “She gardened, she cooked, she
painted, she made cupcakes,” Warren recalled. “It was like I had June
Cleaver to live up to, which is a high standard to meet as a parent.”

After
her divorce in 2005, Warren started her blog as a way to kick and
scream about her life as a sole breadwinner and parent — a far cry from
the model she grew up with.

“I don’t pretend to be super mommy,”
she said. “I let it all hang out: the good, the bad and the ugly. There
are some nice moments with my son and some really crappy ones, too.”

Another
Brooklyn blogger, Sophia Romero, is the author of the critically
acclaimed novel, “Always Hiding,” about a family of illegal immigrants
from the Philippines. On her blog, “the Shiksa From Manila,” Romero has
created an online persona who explores the inter-faith, inter-ethnic
identity of her family, and does so with humor and verve.

Not all
blogs, however, are light-hearted, some deal with challenging aspects
of parenting. For example, Special Focus, a blog written anonymously by
a Brooklyn mom, chronicles the life of the writer, her twelve-year-old
daughter who has Asperger’s Syndrome and ADHD and her son who has
central auditory processing difficulties and, like his sister,
distraction and focus issues. Special Focus takes the reader on a
journey through the maze of special education and medication, as well
as the ups and downs of family life with special needs children.

“As
with most kids with special needs, my child’s constellation of
idiosyncrasies fall sloppily inside and outside of all the boxes of
possible diagnoses,” she wrote.

And it’s not just moms turning to their keyboard for a little relief.

The
Blog Fathers, a group site of some of the best dad bloggers around,
including Laid Off Dad, Adventure Dad, Because I’m Your Father and Mr.
Nice Guy, provides a compelling, funny and uncensored look into life as
a modern dad.

Brooklyn’s Mr. Nice Guy has been blogging since he
found out that his wife was having morning sickness and, even though
now his daughter is nearly three, he’s still going. His funny, snarky
posts cover everything from kiddie bathroom habits to caregivers, the
Brooklyn Target and beyond.

With interest in blogging, and the
popularity of “mom lit” books, on the rise, Families First, a
parent-run, non-profit organization in Carroll Gardens has started
offering a class called “Memoirs for Moms.” Teaching local ladies how
to start writing their own stories of motherhood, instructor Mary
Harmon, helps mothers reach more deeply into “the day-to-day joys and
emotional turning points of motherhood,” according to the course
description.

Harmon’s writing exercises are designed to stimulate
self-discovery, helping students create a “meaningful” snapshot of
motherhood.

While meaningful sounds nice, it’s clear that plenty
of moms are finding their own meaning in blowing off steam for a
community of concurring readers.

Though sometimes it seems that
the blogging can go too far. As Mrs. Cleavage wrote on a recent post:
“I took the kids ice skating one afternoon and filled page after page
of my journal with my cramped scrawl. The children were blessedly
occupied, and I was also.”

She blogged about how she keeps a journal? If that isn’t meta, what is?

 

“Mrs. Cleavage’s Diary” can be found at www.nymetroparents.c….

“The Shiksa From Manila” can be found at www.shiksafrommanila. blogspot.com.

“Special Focus” can be found at www.specialfocusblog.blogspot.com.

“The Blog Fathers” can be found at www.theblogfathers.com.

“Memoirs
for Moms” is held at at Family First Brooklyn (250 Baltic St. between
Clinton and Court streets in Cobble Hill). For information call (718)
237-1862.

SUPPORT GRAY MATTERS: FILM BY PARK SLOPER

Did you know that the new film "Gray Matters" was directed, written, and produced by Park Sloper Sue Kramer. She would appreciate any support anyone in the Slope can give the
film this coming weeken
d.

Kramer says that the The Village 7 in Manhattan (66 Third Avenue at 11th Street) is the best place to see it. She will be there on Saturday night introducing the two screenings (7 p.m. and 9:40 p.m.).

PLOT OUTLINE FROM IMDB: "They finish each other’s sentences, dance like Fred and Ginger, and
share the same downtown loft–the perfect couple? Not exactly. Gray and
Sam (Heather Graham and Tom Cavanagh), are a sister and brother so
compatible and inseparable that people actually assume they are dating.
Mortified, they both agree they must branch out and start searching for
love. He’ll look for a guy for her and she’ll look for a gal for him.
But when Sam finds his perfect mate in Charlie (Bridget Moynahan)
Gray’s life turns inside out."

MC Loews Village 7 – 66 3rd Ave., New York, NY – Map
11:15  1:55  4:20  7:00  9:40

To learn more about the film
go to www.graymattersmovie.com

MURROW HIGH SCHOOL CHESS TEAM TO DEFEND TITLE

This from New York 1:

This weekend, a group of high school students from Brooklyn are traveling upstate to defend their title as the best chess teams in the country. NY1’s Cheryl Wills filed the following report.

Whether you call them geeks, oddballs, or geniuses — this quirky group of teens are to high school chess what Michael Jordan is to basketball: there is no one better.

"It’s exhilarating, I mean you just get to be in the spotlight like this all the time," said Mikhail Furman, a chess player at Edward R. Murrow High School.

And members from Edward R. Murrow High School’s chess team are in the spotlight year after year.

Since 2004, they have successfully defended their title as National High School Champs — beating the best teen chess players in the country.

They are so popular that writer Michael Weinreb has written a book about them. It is appropriately called "the Kings of New York."

“It’s their competitiveness,” said Weinreb. “It’s kind of the heart and that dedication to the game and never wanting to give up."

Murrow High School does not have any athletic teams, but the chess team more than makes up for it. The trophy case can hardly hold all of their awards and honors, including a photo of them meeting President George W. Bush in 2004.

SMARTMOM TAKES ON TIMES’ WEASEL

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper:

Smartmom wants to know: does New York Times Op-Ed columnist David Brooks know anything about Park Slope?

This
Sunday, the neo-conservative writer and enthusiastic supporter of the
U.S. intervention in Iraq (on moral grounds, no less!) ranted against
hipster parents in his article, “Mosh Pit Meets Sandbox.”

In the
process, he insulted an entire generation of counterculture parents,
who buy Ramones t-shirts for their kids, log onto Urban Baby, and
prefer that their kids listen to Dan Zanes and Music for Aardvarks than
Disney fantasy garbage.

As if that wasn’t enough, the author of
“Bobos in Paradise” managed to conflate Brownstone Brooklyn with
Williamsburg and dig his sharp pen into the parents of Park Slope.

“Can
we please see the end of those Park Slope Alternative Stepford Moms in
their black-on-black maternity tunics who turn their babies into
fashion-forward, anti-corporate, indie infants in order to stay one
step ahead of the cool police?” he wrote.

Hold on there! Brooks
may have a penchant for clever coinage, but he also suffers from
out-of-control generalizations. He certainly isn’t talking about the
Park Slope that Smartmom knows and loves (and, yes, sometimes thinks is
ridiculous).

In fact, Brooks is so off the mark, Smartmom wonders
if he even knows the difference between Williamsburg, Park Slope,
Cobble Hill and Fort Greene. (Why he decided to bring up the title of a
1970s movie about desperate and robotic housewives is anyone’s guess).

In
Park Slope, the moms are pretty darn conventional — they care about
good schools, neighborhood sports, and, damn it, they even want their
Bank of America ATMs un-littered.

Park Slopers are probably more
conservative about “child-rearing” than Brooks — except, of course,
Slopers insist on gender neutrality, race diversity, and eco-friendly
toilet paper in the bathroom.

If anything, Park Slope parents are the uber-parents that the hipster parents from Williamsburg love to hate.

Obviously,
there are plenty of reasons for Brooks to rant against Park Slopers.
But turning their babies into “fashion-forward, anti-corporate, indie
infants” isn’t one of them.

The fact is, no one could ever accuse Park Slope parents — or their offspring — of being particularly fashionable or cool.

Everyone knows that Park Slope is the schleppy capital of Brooklyn.

“Most
of the women I see at drop-off are hardly hipsters,” Mrs. Cleavage told
Smartmom over lattes at the Cocoa Bar. “They all need fashion
makeovers. The fashion faux pas are rampant. No lipstick, no make-up.
I’m sorry. Everything is shapeless and drab.”

Smartmom immediately put on some lipstick.

Which isn’t to say that there aren’t fashionistas around here. But they stick out like a Fresh Direct box at the Food Co-op.

Smartmom isn’t knocking schleppy. It’s just that Seventh Avenue isn’t exactly Bedford Avenue, if you know what she means.

Come
on. Williamsburg is where the hipster parents live. If Brooks would
just leave his office at the Times and hop an L-train (it leaves
Manhattan, David, so you may want to grab a map), he could visit groovy
playspaces like Mama Lou’s and hipster tot shops like Flying Squirrel
and Mini Jakes.

It seems that Brooks has really fallen under the
spell of writer Adam Sternbergh, who recycled the not-very-flattering
word, “grups,” to define a generation of New York parents who who look
and act like 22-year-olds.

Why does Brooks rely on the
observations of a New York Magazine writer when he could just read The
Brooklyn Paper or, Buddha forbid, come out to Park Slope himself (don’t
forget your map, Dave)?

Sternbergh took the term from an episode
of “Star Trek” in which the crew lands on an adult-free planet ruled by
children. (It doesn’t stop Kirk from falling in love with one of the
kids, but that’s another story.)

While Park Slope does sometimes
feel like a planet ruled by children, Smartmom doesn’t think the
parents around here are quite that youthful.

But if Brooks thinks she and her contemporaries look and act like 22-year-olds — she’ll take that as a compliment.

Even
when it comes to cyberspace, Brooks gets Park Slope wrong. Contrary to
Brooks’s generalization, no one around here reads UrbanBaby.com, which
describes itself as “a dose of hip info on where to shop, play, eat,
travel and have fun with your kids.”

Park Slope Parents is more like it. Has Brooks even heard of it?

He
even is wrong about the books Park Slopers read. “In a sign that the
hip parenting thing has jumped the shark, the movement gets it own
book, the indescribably dull ‘Alternadad,’ ” Brooks wrote.

That
was the last straw buddy. Park Slope is one of the most literary
neighborhoods in New York City and “Alternadad” is not even in the
window of Community Books. Didn’t he read Smartmom’s take-down of Neal
Pollack a few weeks ago in these very pages? Smartmom thought the Times
had editorial researchers to make sure the columnist didn’t make such
glaring errors of omission.

The funny thing is this: Brooks could have found loads to object to in Park Slope if he’d really done his research.

For
starters, most of the people around here opposed the war in Iraq (from
the start) and are disgusted with Bush’s plans for escalation.

And Park Slopers by and large oppose the Atlantic Yards because they care about contextual architecture and human scale cities.

Thousands
of Park Slopers are willing to work three hours every four weeks as
members of the Food Co-op to shop for inexpensive organic food and
green products.

Instead, he falsely blamed Park Slopers for leading the gruppy brigade. And that’s just plain wrong.

It
reminds Smartmom of Brook’s support of the war in Iraq. Like Bush, he
picked the wrong enemy — Iraq — as responsible for 9-11.

As for
his other criticism that hipster parents are turning their offspring
into “miniature reproductions of their hipper-than-thou selves,”
Smartmom had one comment: Isn’t that what parents do?

Whether
they’re living in Brooks’s halcyonic 1950s suburbia, a hut in the
Sudan, or an apartment in Bensonhurst, parents everywhere try to make
their children just like them.

It’s up to the kids to reject
their parent’s values — and whether they’re rejecting Lawrence Welk or
Patti Smith — what’s the difference?

Yes, Park Slopers do so many
things that would make a conservative like Brooks go ballistic. But why
are they getting blamed in the New York Times for being hipster parents
when they’re not really that hip at all?

You just can’t win.

NEW BLOG ON THE BLOCK: MOM AFTER HOURS

Sophia Romero, author of the novel, Always Hiding and the blog, The Shiksa from Manila, has a new blog at New York Metro Parents called  Mom After-Hours. Welcome to the neighborhood.

I want to
set the record straight: for a mother, I don’t think and behave like
one.  I don’t think of my children constantly (out of sight, out of
mind) and they are not the center of my universe though I love them
dearly.  No, that center is reserved for me and me alone and that’s the
way it’s always been from the get-go.  My children know this and my
husband of 20 years knows this even better. The running theme in our
household is: When Mommy is Not Happy, the World Sucks.  I am not the
Queen of my domain.  I am the Empress.

But before you accuse me
of being a cold-hearted witch whose children and spouse deserve way
better, and question the wisdom of having someone like me participating
in a wholesome website such as this, you should also know that I nursed
each of my kids for at least two years (their lips were unsullied by
formula); we had a family bed (king-size) until the dog came along and
took over; I’ve never laid a hand on either of my kids, not even when
my then 9-year old son called me something unspeakable (and
unprintable) and even then I made him spell out the words (he couldn’t)
rather than administer corporal punishment which is what my mother
would have done. 

UKULELE LESSONS: FOR YOU OR YOUR KIDS

Jack McFadden from Union Hall told me about Michael Leviton, who’s teaching ukulele to kids. Thanks Jack. This from is from Leviton’s website.

I’ve decided to officially offer ukulele lessons in the New York area!

I’ve been giving ukulele lessons here and there for years now, just whenever someone asked me (there aren’t many ukulele teachers around, apparently). But now I’ve realized that I really truly love giving ukulele lessons and want to have many students.

I’m especially excited about teaching ukulele lessons for kids! Children are among the most fun people to make music with– I’ve had numerous experiences writing songs with kids and performing with kids and it’s always amazing. And I think it’s so unfortunate that most music lessons for kids are like school rather than recess; they learn classical pieces, scales, reading music, things they’re "supposed" to learn, rather than what they want to learn: how to play their favorite songs, and how to write their own songs! And worst of all, most children are forced to start on instruments clearly made for adults, way too large for them!

I find that most children have never even attempted to write a song before– children get to draw and dance and make up stories, but not songs? Why not? Children love music more than anybody! They are given crayons; they should be given ukuleles as well!

Anyway, I guess I’m ranting a bit…but if you want to hear a song I wrote with a bunch of kids helping me with the lyrics, you can hear a live performance of my song "Would You Like to Go to Boring Island?" on youtube here…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hDCo1yZIrmM

And if you want ukulele lessons, write me at mleviton@gmail.com!!!

CHILES & CHOCOLATEL NEW EATS ON SEVENTH AVENUE

You know those tiny shops on Seventh Avenue between St. Johns and Lincoln? Where Olive Vine is located? Well, there’s a tiny new restaurant that’s got people excited. It’s called Chiles & Chocolate, where they serve "comida mexicana not tex-mex, cal-mex or any other am-mex."  They call it authentic Oxacan cooking. Here’s what they have to say in the menu:

"Chiles and chocolate have been an integral part of the cuisine of southern Mexico for thousands of years. The recipes here are a mix of those passed down from generation to generation as well as new interpretations and popular street food items. The flavors, smells, and textures here are those that we grew up with and we are excited to share them with you!"

Chiles & Chocolate is tiny — there can’t be more than ten tables. They also do take-out and delivery (I think). I ordered a chicken quesadilla and fire roasted corn on the cob. Both were delicious — and decidedly different from your typical Mexican restaurant fare.

The menu looks great. Give it a try — if you can get in. The restaurant, which is owned by the by the owners of the Artisanna furniture and jewelry stores (two locations on Seventh Avenue) has been getting very crowded at dinner time.

While very tiny, the decor is lovely with brown walls with green trim, rust metal mirrors, and ornate, dark wood tables and chairs.

Try their special Hot Mexican Chocolate with essence of chipolte.

They also have Cafe Chiapas — coffee with a hint of cinnamon. 

And for dessert: Pastel tres Leches, the most popular dessert in Mexico, a Mexican Tiramisu. Or how about: Sweet carmelized baby bananas served with chocolate sauce (I am so ordering that next time).

Open Mon. to Thurs: 11 am until 10 pm
Saturday: 10 am – 11 pm
Sunday: 10 am to 10 am

54 Seventh Avenue
718-230-7700

SUPPORT PARK SLOPE FILMMAKER

Sue Kramer, Writer-Director-Producer of the new film “Gray Matters” responded to my post about her movie.

Thank you so much for the mention of my film “Gray Matters. I can’t believe we have never met–now it’s our destiny to certainly do so! I would appreciate any support anyone in the Slope can give the film this coming weekend. The Village 7 is the best place to see it. I will be there on Saturday night introducing the two screenings. To learn more about the film
go to www.graymattersmovie.com

FEDS BLOCK STARRETT CITY SALE

This from New York 1:

Saying they had “numerous concerns” with the arrangement, federal housing officials have reportedly blocked the sale of Starrett City.

Starrett City, in Brooklyn, is the nation’s largest federally-subsidized housing complex.

A high-level government official told NY1 Thursday that a letter was sent from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development to the potential owners to tell them the sale is not taking place.

Federal Housing Secretary Alphonso Jackson said that Clipper Equity, the prospective buyer of the complex, failed to explain how it would remain an affordable community after the proposed $1.3 billion sale.

Citing similar concerns, the state attorney general’s office met with federal officials to talk about the sale’s impact on affordable housing.

Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has enforced a state Supreme Court injunction blocking the complex’s sale to Clipper Equity.

“We look forward to the opportunity of correcting certain underlying misinformation and to providing the secretary with the appropriate assurance he seeks,” said a spokeswoman for Clipper Equity in a statement.

The company has said they would continue to provide affordable housing

DULANEY BANKS AT SUPERFINE

Catch DULANEY BANKS, the young blues guitar and vocal duo that’s turning heads ears. They’re playing at Superfine on Sunday, March 11th at Superfine.

DULANEY/BANKS will be performing two sets, starting at 7pm on Sunday, March
11th at Superfine restaurant in DUMBO.
 
Come enjoy the music and have dinner or hang out at the cool
bar.
 
DULANEY BANKS is a blues and folk duo with Kane Balser and Julia Harris.
For more info: http://myspace.com/dulaneybanks

 
 

TONIGHT AT 7 p.m.: THE STOOP SERIES AT THE ROTUNDA

New York magazine and BRIC’s Rotunda Gallery Present
THE STOOP SERIES
with
Writers Jonathan Lethem and Stephen Wright
featuring music by DJ Rekha
Thursday, March 1 at 7 pm
33 Clinton Street in Brooklyn Heights
Guest Moderated by
Boris Kachka, New York magazine contributing editor

New York, NY – New York magazine, in conjunction with BRIC’s Rotunda Gallery, presents the fifth installment of The STOOP Series on March 1 featuring a discussion with writers Jonathan Lethem and Stephen Wright. New York magazine contributing editor Boris Kachka will moderate the free public talk.

Jonathan Lethem, who was raised and still resides in Brooklyn’s Boerum Hill, is the author of several novels, including New York Times bestseller and “Editor’s Choice” pick The Fortress of Solitude and Motherless Brooklyn, for which he received the National Book Critic’s Circle Award. Lethem is also the author of the short story collections Men and Cartoons and The Wall of the Sky, The Wall of the Eye, and an essay collection, The Disappointment Artist. His new novel, entitled You Don’t Love Me Yet will be on sale March 13.

Stephen Wright, a New York City-based novelist, is the author of The Amalgamation Polka, Meditations in Green, and the road novel Going Native. Educated at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, Wright has taught writing classes at Princeton, Brown, and The New School and has been called “a bright star in the literary sky” by the San Francisco Chronicle.

The STOOP Series discussion will be followed by the monthly STOOP SLAM, featuring music by DJ Rekha. Complimentary drinks from Brooklyn Brewery and Johnnie Walker Blue Label will be served. DJ Rekha (Rekha Malhotra) was born in London and raised in Queens and Westbury, Long Island, and is one of the pioneers of New York’s South Asian music scene. She founded Basement Bhangra and continues to be instrumental in introducing the sounds of Bhangra and British Asian music to North America. Rekha has been featured in the Village Voice, New York Times, Times of India and Daily News, in addition to magazines like Billboard, New York, and Stress.

WHAT THE READERS OF BROWNSTONER MAY NOT KNOW

Reading some comments on Brownstoner, Lumi Rolley, of No Land Grab, noticed that some folks at Brownstoner who read Jennifer Egan’s historic Op-Ed
didn’t believe her assertion that, if built, Atlantic Yards would be
the densest residential community in the nation.  But then it
dawned on Rolley, The New York Times has never published that fact in it’s
reporting on the project. Here’s what she had to say on her blog:

Commentary, from "Anonymice" on Brownstoner, regarding Jennifer Egan’s Op-Ed in the Saturday Times, made us realize that Egan’s piece was the very first mention in The NY Times that Atlantic Yards, if built, would be the densest residential community in the nation.

Two commenters posting on Brownstoner found that hard to believe; one even accused Egan of "creating ‘facts’ out of whole cloth."

This incredulity made us realize that unless these readers were receiving the DDDB newsletter, or were regular readers of NoLandGrab or Atlantic Yards Report, they had no clue.  How could they?  The New York Times never told them.

.

PIMPS, PROSTITUTES, AND PIGS: AT BAM

Pimps, Prostitutes, and Pigs: Shohei Imamura’s Japan: I’ve seen some of these films and they are incredible! For more info: BAM.org

A leading force behind Japan’s New Wave and one of only five directors to win the Cannes Palme d’Or twice, Shohei Imamura (1926—2006) rebelled against the classical themes of his mentor, Yasujiro Ozu. Instead, he embraced the darker side of Japan that simmers beneath the manners, order, and ceremony—focusing on the carnality, squalor, and violence within his country’s social periphery.

Imamura’s striking Cinemascope images can barely contain the creative anarchy unleashed within them. In fact, Imamura was famously quoted as saying, "I like to make messy films," but this quote belies the meticulous research, intricate design, and visual precision that went into his work. His films are rarely screened in North America; so don’t miss this chance to discover one of Japan’s great visceral filmmakers. Here’s the one I want to see:

Pigs and Battleships
(Buta To Gunkan)
(1961) 108min

 
Fri, Mar 9 at 2, 4, 6:50, 9:15pm
Sat, Mar 10 at 6:50, 9:15pm


› Buy Tickets

With Hiroyuki Nagato, Jitsuko Yoshimura
An allegory with clear parallels to today’s international situation, Pigs and Battleships
is set within the brothels and teeming alleys of a small port town
under US occupation. Amidst the black market, which supplies the
American sailors, a young street tough makes his way by selling hogs
(Imamura’s equating of animals to human beings has never been more
evident), but soon gets caught up with the yakuza. Imamura elevates
this simple gangland tale with an astonishing damnation of American
imperialism.

PROPOSED ONE WAY STREETS FOR SEVENTH AND SIXTH AVENUES!!!!

Streetsblog says the Department of Transportation has plans to turn Seventh and Sixth Avenues into one-way streets. OMIGOD. That’s big, I mean, BIG Park Slope news.  Streetsblog, Aaron Naparstek’s blog, broke the story yesterday. Here’s a response from the DOT.

DOT has proposed changing 6th and 7th Avenues to one-way streets which
we believe will have many benefits including simplifying the turning
movements at intersections to make it safer for pedestrians crossing
the street and narrowing the travel lanes on 7th Avenue to encourage
vehicles to travel within the existing speed limit. DOT also proposes
making these changes in conjunction with a plan that would remove a
travel lane in each direction on 4th Avenue (between 17th and Dean
Streets) using this space to improve the existing left turn bays.

If you are interested, plan to attend a presentation and discussion of a proposal by the Department of
Transportation for improvements designed to enhance pedestrian
mobility, access and comfort at the Grand Army Plaza.

Presentation
by the Department of Transportation of a plan to install two-way Class
II bicycle lanes and roadway markings for left-turn turning lanes along
9th Street between 3rd Avenue and Prospect Park West.

Presentation by the Department of Transportation of a plan to install Class III bicycle routes in Red Hook

Thursday, March 29, 6:30 pm.
Old First Reformed Church
729 Carroll Street
(Corner of 7th Avenue)

Serving Park Slope and Beyond