WANTED: HIGH SCHOOL STAND UP COMICS

This from Sunset Parker. Read the rest over at his blog:

Ray’s Comedy Club in Bay Ridge has announced Brooklyn’s High School and
College Class Clowns and Funniest Teachers Contest. Starting Nov. 29,
Ray’s will put the best comic talent from any high school or college in
Brooklyn on stage; the winners will land a paid booking at Ray’s Comedy
Club and a big-time gig at the 1,000-seat Borgata Comedy Club in the
$2.2 billion hotel-casino in Atlantic City, where they’ll perform on
the same stage as the world’s comedy

To enter the Class Clowns and Funniest Teachers contest, e-mail rayscomedyclub@aol.com, visit www.rayslounge.com or call (718) 748-6400.

LAWSUIT TO BLOCK THE ATLANTIC YARDS PROJECT

This from New York 1:

A group of Brooklyn property owners filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday in the hope of blocking the Atlantic Yards project.

The suit was announced a downtown rally.

The ten plaintiffs say the state is abusing its right of eminent domain to take their properties for the project.
      
They say eminent domain cannot be used to benefit a private developer, which is being done in the present case with Forest City Ratner.

"This is a textbook case of the government taking a person’s private property – their homes and their business – and giving it a private entity, a private company, Mr. Ratner, so that he can benefit," said plaintiff attorney Matthew Brinckerhoff.  "And that is absolutely forbidden by the Constitution."   

In response, Forest City Ratner released a statement saying "this is simply a sad attempt to delay a project that is supported by over 60% of Brooklyn."

Plans call for creating a 20,000 seat arena for the Nets basketball team and over 2,000 units of affordable housing. 

The demolition of buildings on the site began months ago.                                  

       
                              

HILTON ALS ON SUZAN-LORI PARKS

I love Hilton Als’ writing in the New Yorker and I’m interested in playwright Suzan-Lori Parks, who won the Pulitzer for Top/dog/Underdog, a MacArthur "genuis" grant, and wrote 365 plays in 365 days (soon to open all around the country). This week’s New Yorker has Als’ profile of Parks. The first two paragraphs are here:

Down in the gray-green gloom of the New York City subway system, anything can happen, and frequently does. A bit of hucksterism. Alms for the poor. Sometimes, even unsuspecting critics have to field questions from that rarest of birds, the black female playwright. Late one night in 1987, on the way home from an event at Franklin Furnace, an avant-garde arts center, the writer and theatre critic Alisa Solomon was riding the subway, minding her own business, when a young black woman approached her. “I saw you at the theatre, so I was kinda hoping I could ask you a question,” she said, and sat down next to Solomon, who described the encounter in the Village Voice two years later. The woman leaned in “uncomfortably close,” before adding, “I’m trying to ask anyone who might know. I’m a playwright. Do you know where I can send my scripts? They’re kind of unconventional.”

That young woman—Suzan-Lori Parks—has since become renowned for her audacity, both on the page and in the world. The author of nine full-length plays, most of which are taught at drama schools across the country, and one of the founders of a wave of multilayered, historically aware, and linguistically complicated theatre, she aims to defeat what she calls “the Theatre of Schmaltz”—“the play-as-wrapping-paper-version-of-hot-newspaper-headline.” Parks was the first black woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for drama—for her 2001 play, “Topdog / Underdog”—after having been short-listed for “In the Blood,” her 1999 reimagining of “The Scarlet Letter.” A writer who crosses cultural boundaries, as well as social ones, she has had her work produced everywhere, from the smallest avant-garde stages to Broadway. Her voice is both idiosyncratic and eerily familiar, one of few in the popular theatre to fully exploit the power of spoken black English. (A typical passage from one of her plays reads like this: “In my day my motherud say 16:15 and there wernt no question that it was 16:15 her time. Thuh time helpin tuh tell you where you oughta be where you oughta be lookin and whatcha oughta be lookin at.”)

SINGLE IN THE SLOPE

Yesterday I was walking up Eighth Avenue and a woman asked me for directions. "Am I going the right way, I’m headed for Second Street."

She was coming from Chinatown and was visiting a friend. We walked up toward Second Street and she told me that the person she was visiting was new to the Slope. She’d moved here from Oakland, California and was single. "She’s not having an easy time meeting peopel," she said. She also asked me the names of some good restaurants. Then she asked, "What do single people do around here to make friends and meet people?"

I always think of the Slope as a friendly, community oriented place. But so much of the bonding that goes on is around schools, playgrounds and children.

I told this lovely woman to tell her friend to read OTBKB and I’d run a series for her friend called Single in the Slope. So this goes out to that woman’s friend. Of course, a lot of this depends on this person’s particular interests and personality. I do know that she’s a vegetarian

Book Clubs: The Community Bookstore is sponsoring two book clubs. Community Bookstore is on Seventh Avenue between Garfield and President. No , they don’t have a web site but they are now sending out a PDF newsletter called THE SLANT. You have to sign up for it. So ask Catherine Bohne, the owner of CB, about it. The store is also running a Music Appreciation group monthly in the shop.

Religion: The Old First Reformed Church is a lovely, very community-oriented church on Seventh Avenue and President Street. For Jews there’s Congregation Beth Elohim, Kolot Chayenu, Park Slope Jewish Center and Union Temple.

Food Coop: The Park Slope Food Coop is a great place to meet people. They also sponsor lots of events. Go to an Orientation meeting and see what it’s like.

Bars: The Gate, Union Hall and other bars on Fifth Avenue

Cafes: Cafe Regular on 11th Street between Fifth and Fourth Avenue is a nice, friendly spot.

BAM: BAM has a film club of some sort.

VOLUNTEER: There are plenty of volunteer opportunites at local Museums, libraries, schools, arts organizations and political groups.

PROSPECT PARK: T
he Junior Benefit Committee of the Prospect Park Alliance hosts great
events for Park enthusiasts in their 20’s and 30’s. Their 2006 edition of
Skating under the Stars was a great success, with the highest
attendance yet! You can also help plan future events,  contact Jessie Betts at (718) 965-8988 or jbetts@prospectpark.org.

MEGA SALE ON MONTGOMERY PLACE

This from Brownstoner:

It took some time (almost a year) and a sizeable price reduction (over $1 million) but 45 Montgomery Place has finally sold. The tip we got said that the price was somewhere north of $6 million (compared to the initial asking price of $7.5 million), though nothing has shown up yet in the public records. If this is the case, we’re pretty sure this sets a single family townhouse record for Park Slope, topping last year’s Safran Foer transaction. According to the post we wrote last November, the 31-footer at 45 Montgomery Place has over 7,000 square feet of space with oval rooms that have rounded doors and radiators, a grand center staircase, multiple original fireplaces. Yum.

BROWNIE THE COW: 4TH GRADE TEST CONTROVERSY

There’s a controversy about the 2006 fourth grade ELA tests. Go to Brownie the Cow and learn all about it:

  • The two main essay questions on the 2006 ELA test (including
    the one about “Brownie the Cow” and the even more illogical question
    about "The Stolen Moon") make no sense!
  • Only 1 in 17 NYC 4th graders scored a 4 — down 60% from 2005
  • It’s yet another writing-test debacle for CTB/McGraw Hill, the state’s testing contractor
  • NY State says its tests aren’t all-purpose diagnostic tools – but that’s how Klein uses them
  • NYC
    uses the state’s 4th grade test as an "SAT" for middle school —
    excluding students from selective schools and programs based on their
    scores

If we’re going to let test scores drive everything from
student promotions to curricular adjustments to personnel decisions,
shouldn’t we at least make sure the tests make sense and the
test-makers are competent?

Contact Klein & other decision-makers

BrownieTheCow.org is a loose group of parents and
educators appalled at how bad this year’s New York State fourth-grade
English Language Arts test was – in particular, the writing sections.
We’re also appalled, the more we learn, at the process the state uses
to develop these pseudo-scientific tests, and at how the New York City
schools keep using them as all-purpose diagnostic tools.

None of us believe this is the most important issue in the world, or
even in the NYC schools. We’ve watched, over the last few years, as
test-taking and test-prep have crept ever closer to the center of our
children’s school experience (and even into the curriculum itself) –
and we’ve done nothing. Most of us had decided that the excesses and
occasional absurdities of this new educational world are, on the whole,
tolerable.

But this year’s excesses were, well, excessive. And this moment
seems like a good time to start asking some hard questions about where
we’re going with this. If we’re going to replace the old structure at
110 Livingston Street with a new edifice we call “standards and
accountability”, hadn’t we better make sure the cornerstone of that
whole effort – the state’s testing program – is sound? Before we let
test scores drive everything from student promotions to curricular
adjustments to personnel decisions, shouldn’t we make sure the tests
make sense and the test-makers are competent?

And in the case of writing tests, now that we’ve seen the 2006
model, shouldn’t we be asking the most basic questions: Can a state
bureaucracy and a profit-seeking corporation really be trusted to
competently tell us how well every child in the state of New York is
writing? Why should we believe that could ever work?

BrownieTheCow.org wants to start a spirited debate
about these questions. We want to laugh at a test that is laughably
bad, and then get policy-makers to do better.

BANK OF AMERICA: A BLEMISH ON SEVENTH AVENUE

Yesterday I noticed a woman STRUGGLING to get into the new Bank of America – well, it has no door knob.  It looked even messier over there today. And the number of the building, 94, is written with a sharpie on a piece of paper and taped to the window.

Is it really supposed to be open.

A reader named Mary Lou brought the matter to the attention of the branch on Montague Street:

I went to the Montague branch this morning for something unrelated to
this and mentioned the state of this ATM center and they were
HORRIFIED. Got on the phone right away with the "big boss." It was
explained to me that they outsource the maintainance of these centers.
So maybe someone will actually clean it up quickly!

I too would be horrified. Glad to hear they’re going to do something about it. I guess running a bank without people is a little problematic. It’s not like those ATMs are going to tidy up or anything. The Citibank on President has the nicest guard who sits by the door and wishes everyone well. He’s very sweet.

The B of A looks terrible right there on the corner of Union and President. Hey guys, get your act together.

FREE SCHOOL OPEN HOUSE TONIGHT

Lily_1TONIGHT’S THE NIGHT. The Brooklyn Free School is having an open house. Separate fact from fiction. Find out the real story of this visionary school in our midst. It might not be for every kid, but maybe it’s for YOURS.

Here’s a note from a parent of a high schooler at the school.  Check out their web site. It might inspire you to check out the school   YOU MUST SEE THEIR FANTASTIC WEBSITE.

FROM A FREE SCHOOL PARENT: I’d really appreciate it if you’d post this on your
Blog–especially because it ties in with your running dialog and Smart
Mon column about homework. No homework is just one part of the Brooklyn
Free School’s philosophy of self-directed learning.

 
The Brooklyn Free School will be hosting an open house this
Thursday eve, Oct 26, from 6 to 8 PM. The address is 120 16th Street,
Brooklyn 11215 (between 4th and 5th Avenues). The Phone is
917-715-7157.  The sign in front says Free Methodist Church. Students
will be on hand to talk with visitors.
 
For more information about the Brooklyn Free School, log onto our Web site: www.brooklynfreeschool.org

SO MANY HALLOWEENISH THINGS TO DO STARTING ON SATURDAY…

This list was compiled by Susan Fox, the list-serve dynamo and visionary behind Park Slope Parents.

There is so much, almost too much, to do in the next few days. Just about every kid-oriented venue you can imagine is doing something. And on Tuesday, don’t miss the Halloween Parade. That starts on 12th Street and Seventh Avenue at 6:30 on Tuesday night.

Here’s just one thing from Susan’s insanely detailed list of Halloween happening. Everything else is in the extended body of this post. Click below.

Prospect Park Is Haunted All Over!
Saturday, Sunday: October 28- 29th
Prospect Park celebrates Halloween with good old fashioned fright.
Deep in the Park, where there is no one to hear you scream, the
Woods are haunted by monsters of all shapes and sizes. There’s also
a carnival on the Nethermead, with all kinds of fun, games, seasonal
treats, and a puppet parade. Free. Begin at Prospect Park Southwest
and 16th Street.

Haunted Walk and Carnival
12 – 3 p.m.
Take a scary walk through Prospect Park’s woods, haunted by friendly
gouls and goblins. Explore Lookout Hill and emerge in the Nethermead
for a carnival full of fun, games, and surprises. Free. Begin at
Prospect Park Southwest and 16th Street. October 28 only!
Haunted Carousel

12 – 5 p.m.
Chilling music, ravens, bats, and spiders make a spin on the
Carousel the perfect Halloween treat. $1.50. Also October 29.
Scary Stories from the Past

2 & 3 p.m.
Meet the old ghosts of Flatbush in haunting tales passed down from
Lefferts ancestors. Free. Lefferts Historic House. Also October 29.
Skeleton Scharen-Knippen Cut-Outs

1 – 4 p.m.
Make your own Halloween headbands using a traditional paper-cutting
artform. Free. Lefferts Historic House. Also October 29.
Creepy Crawly Halloween

12 – 5 p.m.
It’s a critter-fest in Prospect Park with lots of spiders, worms,
and other creepy creatures that are sure to make your skin crawl!
Creepy crafts, live critters and hands-on experiments. For families
with children ages 3 to 12. Free. Audubon Center. Also October 29.
Boo at the Zoo
10 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Go batty for Halloween with activities like face painting, craft
making, encounters with "spooky" creatures and a trip throught the
Zoo’s legendary haunted barn. Free with Zoo admission. Also October
29

Continue reading SO MANY HALLOWEENISH THINGS TO DO STARTING ON SATURDAY…

TEMPO PRESTO: FIRST IMPRESSIONS

Tempopresto139Tempo Presto staged a surprise opening—PRESTO—on Wednesday afternoon (pictured left is their shop on Fifth Avenue not the new one on Seventh Avenue).

At 2:30 p.m., the gates were up and—PRESTO—there was a sparkling new restaurant on the corner of Third Street and Seventh Avenue.

OSFO and I went in there at 4:30 and we were not disappointed. Owner Michael Fiore was on hand taking notes, making lists of things like Hot Chocolate that will be added to the menu.
The staff is super friendly and enthusiastic and that’s key on Third Street.

To say that we’ve been eagerly awaiting the opening of our new hang out on Third Street would be a serious understatement.Third Streeters need a place to hang out, get coffee, breakfast, last minute lunch, etc. for kids. We needed an easy place to be.

And we’ve got it now. Tempo Presto is zippy. Bright colors, orange chairs, nice signage, stainless steel tables. It’s high design with lots of fun factored in.

And it’s designed for action. Gourmet fast food made with care, great ingredients, and expert preparation.

The shop itself is super efficient, too. They’ve got an ATM, a self-service soda machine, take-out food, salads and sandwiches at the ready. A clean, efficient milk, sugar, hot water area, an express line, a sandwich and/or dessert ordering area, a gelato line.

And take a look at the menu – Tempo Pesto is so totally about the food. This is not your run of the mill  salad and coffee place. They’ve got some fabulous sounding sandwiches and hot dishes on the menu:

Thanksgiving Day
Grilled skirt Steak
Marinated broccoli di rape
Presto Cuban
Hot and Sweet Sopresatta
Pastrami and Melted Swiss
Corned Beef Rueben
Proscuitto and Granny Smith Apple

OSFO had a delicious and fresh caesar salad with chicken. The dressing (and parmesan cheese) was incredible and it was served on the side so that a kid who doesn’t like dressing can skip it.
The chicken was not your usual dry, grilled chicken. It had herbs in it and was very tasty and moist.

For Teen Spirit, I got the Grilled Skirt Stead with rice noodles, asian mixed greens, bean sprouts, mandarin orange and peanut soy dressing. We haven’t tried it yet but I’ll let you know.
($8.75 each salad).

But the sides are the thing: I got the Chickpea Salad with black olives, roasted peppers, basil and Sweet Corn Fregola Sardanian pasta, roasted mushrooms, garlic and olive oil. ($3.00 each).

Tempo Presto is SO totally about the food. But I think the atmosphere is easy, durable, and fun enough to be a regular hang for Third Street regulars.

EMINENT DOMAIN LAWSUIT

181206358_8edbac028d_m
Today, there’s a press conference at 1 p.m. at City Hall: Brooklyn property owners will announce eminent domain lawsuit.  Here’s the press release:

NEW YORK, NY— At 1pm on Thursday October 26th on the steps of City Hall, Brooklyn property owners and tenants, along with their legal representatives, and supporters will announce the filing of a lawsuit against the abuse of eminent domain and the taking of their properties by New York State for Forest City Ratner’s "Atlantic Yards" development proposal in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn.

WHAT:
Press conference to announce lawsuit against eminent domain abuse stemming from Forest City Ratner’s “Atlantic Yards” development proposal

WHEN:
Thursday, October 26th. 1pm.

WHERE:
The Steps of City Hall in Manhattan
(R/W train to City Hall, 4/5/6 train to Brooklyn Bridge, 2/3 train to Park Place)

WHO:
Brooklyn property owners and tenants threatened by eminent domain abuse, their Attorney’s and supporters

Photo from Flickr: flickr.com/photos/fiveoftoast/181206358/

NAVY YARD GROUNDBREAKING

46061093_960000b206_m
This from NY1:

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other lawmakers were on hand for the ground
breaking ceremony for a new 400,000 square foot, seven building
expansion at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

City officials say the project will create 800 new jobs, add a huge
supermarket to the neighborhoo, and create business opportunities for
local minority and women contractors.

Borough President Marty Markowitz says the Navy Yard project is not
only environmentally-friendly, but also an economic boom for Brooklyn.

"I’m proud to join my colleagues to celebrate this expansion, which
shows that New York City and Brooklyn can still make it big, make it
bold, and even make it green," said Markowitz. "Let’s face it: The more
things say ‘Made in Brooklyn,’ the more Brooklyn’s got it made."

Three of the new industrial buildings will replace a large,
deteriorating structure. First up, will be an 89,000 square foot
industrial building on Perry Avenue.

Most of the new businesses will focus on the fast-growing food manufacturing and processing sector.

 

JAMIE LIVINGSTON: AN ANNUAL CELEBRATION ON OTBKB

071689_thm_2For the last two years, I have run this piece on October 25th. It’s called ON POLAROIDS AND LASTING FRIENDSHIP. Tonight some of Jamie’s  friends are getting together to toast their friend — OTBKB

When Jamie Livingston, photographer, filmmaker, circus performer,
accordian player, Mets fan, and above all, loyal friend, died
on October 25th (his birthday) in 1997 at the age of 41, he left behind
hundreds of bereft friends and a collection of 6,000 photographs neatly
organized in small suitcases and wooden fruit crates.

Jamie took a polaroid once a day, every day, including his last, for 18 years.

This
photographic diary, which he called, “Polaroid of the Day,” or P.O.D.,
began when Jaime was a student at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson.
The project continued when he moved to apartments in New York City
including the incredible circus memorabelia-filled loft on Fulton
Street, which he shared with his best friend Chris Wangro. That loft was the site of
many a Glug party, an “orphans thanksgiving,” a super-8 festival of
Jamie’s lyrical films, and a rollicking music jam.

The picture
taking continued as Jamie traveled the world
with the Janus Circus, the circus-troupe founded by Chris Wangro,
and later when he became a much-in-demand
cinematographer and editor of music videos back in the early days of
MTV. He contributed his talents to the ground-breaking Nike
“Revolution” spot and many other commercials, too. Through it all he
took pictures, made movies, and loved his friends. And the polaroids
reflect all of that: a life bursting with activity, joy and sadness, too.

Jamie brought his camera wherever he went. As one friend
said, “It probably helped his social life because everyone wanted to be
in a photo of the day.” It was always interesting to see what Jaime
deemed worthy of a P.O.D. My husband remembers his own 30th birthday party
in his photo studio on Ludlow Street: “Hundreds of people filled my
loft and the party snaked down Ludlow Street to Stanton. But what did
Jamie take a picture of? A potato chip or something. It was a gorgeous
shot, though.”

But more often than not, the photos were of
friends, family, himself, special places he had visited, or just
something that caught his discriminating eye. And if he’d been to a
Mets Game that day, that was it — a Mets game was always a worthy
P.O.D.

And the pictures are utterly gorgeous miracles of
photographic artistry. The color, the light, the time lapse swirls, the
unerring composition. Whether it was a still life of what he’d eaten
for dinner, an unblinking shot of his beloved grandfather (Pops), or
swooningly romantic portraits of his beautiful wife or ex-girlfriends,
any one of these photographs should be in a museum collection. But
perhaps more importantly, Jamie’s friends and the world need access to
these pictures, which is why his devoted friends have been talking for
years about ways to exhibit this massive body of work.

Back in
September at a bris for the son of a good friend, HC and our friend Betsy, one
of Jamie’s still devoted ex-girlfriends, started talking about the
P.O.D.s:  “Why don’t we finally re-photograph all 6,000 of
them and put them on a web site.” And that’s practically what they did.
They spent many October days digitally re-photographing the picures.
This labor of love was also exceedingly labor intensive and they only
got up to 1990 (the P.O.D.s started in 1978). But they plan to finish the
rest when they have some time again.

A year ago today there was a “Jamie Fest,” a
commemoration of the seventh anniversary of his death, a small group of
friends gathered at the envy-inducing loft of one of Jamie’s oldest,
dearest friends in Tribeca and were treated to a veritable feast of
PODs, films, good red wine, beer, and Chinese food. There was a warmth
in that room, a convivial feeling of purpose, as the friends remembered
their friend who left behind a journal of his life and their’s too.

HC set up a random, non-chronological slide show of these pictures, as
well as a special “computer station” where Jamie’s friends could browse
the well-indexed shots year-by-year, month-by-month, day-by-day.
Hunched over the computer,some pictures made them sad, some made them
reflective, some made them very, very quiet. Others made them laugh or
squeal with recognition of an almost forgotten face, a wonderful
memory, a special time too, too long ago.

Jamie was the best
man at our wedding. He was HC’s treasured co-hort since their
days at Bard College. I met Jamie soon after
meeting Hepcat, probably at the Great Jones Cafe, and always enjoyed
our group adventures, including the annual walk of the elephants down
34th Street when the Ringling Brothers Circus arrived in town, the
trips to photo shows to buy cameras and old photographs, their brunches
at the Cottonwood Cafe, or seeing the Mets, and the Rolling Stones’
Steel Wheels tour at Shea Stadium. I remember when Jamie
visited me at the hospital when I was having pre-term labor with my son
and nearly lost him. I remember how he and Betsy carried a heavy gift
of a vintage toy box to my son’s first
birthday party in Prospect Park.

At the “Jamie Fest” last year in 2004 I located the stunning P.O.D. of our
wedding day and
marveled at how young and thin I was back then (marriage and kids
really ages you). My husband looked so young and
handsome in his father’s tuxedo. I also found the picture from the
night before the wedding when Jaime and Betsy joined at the emergency
room at Beth Israel Hospital because my husband thought he had a broken
his neck in a minor (okay major) car accident a
few days before the wedding (pre-wedding nerves, no doubt).

Jaime
and Betsy sat with us from mid-night until five a.m., while we waited
for my husband’s  neck to be X-Rayed. It turned out that he had a nasty
case of whiplash and had to wear a neck brace at the wedding.
When I suggested that Jamie and Betsy go home to get some sleep,
Jaime refused to budge saying, “I’m your bestman. This is part of my
job.”

On this the 8th 9th anniversary of Jamie’s death:  Thank you, Jamie, for being our bestman. And thanks for
giving us a stunning portrait of our lives. You gave us more than you
can ever know.

A STILL MOMENT FROM EVERY DAY: A JAMIE REMEMBRANCE

Risa Mickenberg, a friend of Jamie Livingston’s, wrote this soon after Jamie’s death in 1997. Risa is a writer and is in the band, Risa Mickenberg, Jesus H Christ & The 4 Hornsmen of the Apocalypse, who will be appearing on PBS on Halloween. Check out their MY SPACE page (link above) for more information.

A Still Moment From Every Day

It’s
strange for someone to leave behind a record of every day of their
life. Or to obsessively follow a project whose only perfect completion
ends with their death.

Our work is always ahead of us. It
starts when we are born and it ends when we die – this work of seeing,
touching and affecting the world.

Jamie spread this collection out every year and examined it – reviewed it.

Our
lives are a flood of images and we are collectors who keep a strange
assortment of images: moments of extreme emotion, pain, beauty, and
fear stand out. Events we’re taught to remember: weddings, graduations,
births, deaths.

Then there are the millions of images that we
can’t shake out of our heads, that come to us at strange times – things
we can’t remember why we remember: the gold threads in an old stereo
speaker, the way the light hit a thousand cars in a parking lot by the
water, the face of a stranger in a restaurant, a friend standing in a
pool – you can’t remember where, slapping the water with the flat of
her hand.

Memory is a sieve that holds curious things. A life is a trail of strange, colorful memories.

Jamie’s
Photo-of-the-Day works like a life. A still moment from every day for
years. Remains of the day, immortalized. It is a selection: what we
choose to remember, what we add to our collection of days.

There was no set time of day.  It was when the mood struck: this is what I will take.

It’s an accumulation, a collection, a life’s work.

AMY SOHN ON THE PLAYGROUNDS OF NYC

For New York Magazine, Amy Sohn went to the playgrounds of NYC and found out if they’re anything like the one in Little Children. Here’s her report from the Ninth Street Playground in Park Slope.

THE PARENTS SAY:
David Strah, 38, full-time dad, and Barry Miguel, 48, fashion executive, and Zev, 8: Do women flirt with you, assuming you’re straight? David: “I probably wouldn’t pick up on it.” Do gay dads flirt with other gay dads? Barry: “I think they do. Guys are guys.” David: “Usually they’re not very attractive.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Harmony Playground
9th Street and Prospect Park West, Park Slope

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

SELECTION
Worn-out stay-at-home moms in fleece sweatshirts; dweeby-preppy or grungy-tattooed Ivy-educated dads.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

VIBE
The Squid and the Whale meets The Cosby Show.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

SIGHTINGS
Kathryn Erbe.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

THE PARENTS SAY:
Sarah Hindsgaul, 28, stylist, with Eli, 2½: Does your husband say, “I saw the hottest women at the playground”? “He says, ‘I saw the oldest women.’ In New York, most mothers are over 40.” Are Park Slope dads cute? “They’re boring. If I were going to flirt at a playground, it would be in Williamsburg.”

MURDER CHARGES UPGRADED IN HATE CRIME CASE

This from New York 1:

The Kings County district attorney said Wednesday that he is upgrading
the charges against three Brooklyn men accused in the death of a
28-year-old gay man.

John Fox, 19, and 20-year-olds Ilya Shurov and Anthony Fortunato,
are now being charged with Murder as a hate crime, as well as attempted
robbery as a hate crime. If convicted, they could serve 25 years to
life in prison.

Police say the men used the internet to lure Michael Sandy to an
isolated parking lot near Sheepshead Bay with the promise of a sexual
encounter.

But when Sandy got there, police say the men tried to rob him and
chased Sandy onto the Belt Parkway, where he was struck and killed by a
car.

THIS YEAR’S HALLOWEEN PARADE: DETAILS

Oct
        31, 6:30pm
Park Slope Civic Council’s Halloween Parade.

        Join the Headless Horsewoman and other Halloween friends on Tuesday, October
        31 at the Civic Council’s Halloween Parade. The parade, for children of
        all ages, starts at 6:30 pm at 7th Avenue and 12th Street and proceeds
        to Union Street. Participants may join the parade at any point along the
        route. Our usual Parade bands – Paprika and The Eternal Buzz Brass Band
        – will be on hand.

Pre-Halloween Parade
        Party,
4:30 to 6:30 pm.
        The Prospect Park YMCA
is once again hosting a party prior to the
        Parade. This event, including pumpkin decorating, dancing and candy treats,
        is free for all children ages 3 through 11. The YMCA is located on 9th
        Street between 5th and 6th Avenues.

DEFINITELY MAYBE

Yesterday crews were setting up at the Montauk Club. There was a lot of loud noise right above my office. A lot of movies use The Montauk Club as a staging area for shoots. The Club is also used as a location.

There were NO PARKING signs on Lincoln Place between Seventh and Eighth Avenue. Cones were on Eighth Avenue.

My friend is the Director of Photography on this film, which is called, Definitely Maybe, so it will be fun to see him in action (if they are shooting out on the street).

The little girl from "Litte Miss Sunshine" has a big part in this movie. Rachel Weisz is in it as well. 

ANTI-WAR WEB SITE CREATED BY TROOPS

This from the New York Times:

A small group of active-duty military members opposed to the war have
created a Web site intended to collect thousands of signatures of other
service members. People can submit their name, rank and duty station if
they support statements denouncing the American invasion. “Staying in
Iraq will not work and is not worth the price,” the Web site, appealforredress.org,
says. “It is time for U.S. troops to come home.” The electronic
grievances will be passed along to members of Congress, according to
the Web site. Jonathan Hutto, a Navy seaman based in Norfolk, Va., who
set up the Web site a month ago, said the group had collected 118 names
and was trying to verify that they were legitimate service members.

NAVY YARD EXPANSION

This from New York 1:

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and other lawmakers were on hand for the ground
breaking ceremony for a new 400,000 square foot, seven building
expansion at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

City officials say the project will create 800 new jobs, add a huge
supermarket to the neighborhoo, and create business opportunities for
local minority and women contractors.

Borough President Marty Markowitz says the Navy Yard project is not
only environmentally-friendly, but also an economic boom for Brooklyn.

"I’m proud to join my colleagues to celebrate this expansion, which
shows that New York City and Brooklyn can still make it big, make it
bold, and even make it green," said Markowitz. "Let’s face it: The more
things say ‘Made in Brooklyn,’ the more Brooklyn’s got it made."

Three of the new industrial buildings will replace a large,
deteriorating structure. First up, will be an 89,000 square foot
industrial building on Perry Avenue.

Most of the new businesses will focus on the fast-growing food manufacturing and processing sector.

SEVENTH AVE. BET. UNION AND LINCOLN

The property where Zuzu’s Petals, Olive Vine, and that Korean vegetable market used to be — where they had a fire in 2004 – it’s been sold. Big sign on it now. SOLD.

Anyone know what’s going in? My guess —  four-story condo with a commercial ground floor. Anything but a real estate office, please.

FROM CORNELIA STREET TO SMITH

274951612_5127495de5_m
A Brooklyn Life reports that they received a tip (a rumor, a hunch) from a reader who says that Po, that great Italian restaurant on Cornelia Street, which was Mario Batali’s first place, is coming to Smith Street.

Batali no longer owns the restaurant but it still serves excellent Italian food. Anyone have more on this. Silly rumor or TRUTH?

It won’t be the first West Village place to open an outpost in Brooklyn. The Cornelia Street Cafe’s owner opened Night and Day (now Biscuit) on Fifth Avenue) a year ago. And before that, Mary’s Fish Camp, which opened Brooklyn Fish Camp on Fifth Avenue.

Is this the Great West Village migration?

Pix by Linda Sandoval on Flickr
 

THAT NEW BANK OF AMERICA ON THE CORNER OF UNION…

…it’s a mess. What gives?

Today I was going to try it out (for bloggy purposes of course). First I noticed that the windows were dirty and there was tons of paper garbage on the floor.

What? N receptacles for paper receipts and the like. Sure enough, there is one but it’s not near enough to the machines. Then I tried to get in the door and I noticed the door handles had been removed — vandalism? something else?

You’d think they’d wanna make a nice impression.

EMAIL FROM AL GORE

First Pete Seeger, now Al Gore. Who’s going to be in my inbox next. Only 14 Days until election day. Support Democrats!


Dear MoveOn members,

If you want to solve the Climate Crisis, if you want accountability for Iraq,
if you want to regain our nation’s moral authority in the world, I have one request
for you—help us win on November 7th.

You can make a difference by supporting candidates who are in neck-and-neck races.
Can you contribute $25?

https://pol.moveon.org/give/keyraces6.html?id=9238-205923-n75tOyYx0vc1XCAVr6CDtA&t=2

After Katrina, after the death of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians and
2,799 of our own men and women in Iraq, after six years of policy failures, and denial
of the climate crisis, it is time to hold the leaders of our nation accountable.

The opportunity for accountability is only 14 days away. If we want to change
course, we need to act right now.

I know firsthand how important your last-minute support can be—especially
to candidates like these who have the courage to say what they believe.  These
are good people and they will serve our country with integrity. By helping elect
them, you can help change everything.

Please contribute to these candidates. Just click here:

https://pol.moveon.org/give/keyraces6.html?id=9238-205923-n75tOyYx0vc1XCAVr6CDtA&t=3

To those who say that the problems we face are too big for us, I say that we have
accepted and successfully met such challenges in the past.

We declared our liberty, and then won it. We designed a country that respected
and safeguarded the freedom of individuals. We freed the slaves.  We gave women
the right to vote. We took on Jim Crow and segregation. We have won two wars in the
Pacific and the Atlantic simultaneously.

This is another pivotal time.  We need leadership that can rise to the demands
of history. That leadership is waiting to serve—but they need our help.

Help us take back our Congress and our country today. You can contribute right
now at:

https://pol.moveon.org/give/keyraces6.html?id=9238-205923-n75tOyYx0vc1XCAVr6CDtA&t=4

The Bible says, "Where there is no vision, the people perish." Together,
we have built a progressive vision—a vision for our country and our world—and
on November 7th, we must make that vision a reality.

Sincerely,

Al Gore

CALLING ALL COWGIRLS AND COWBOYS

PARENTS OF WOULD-BE COWBOYS AND COWGIRLS, OR ANY CHILD WHO HAS EVER CELEBRATED A BIRTHDAY….

 

This Saturday (the 28th) at 3pm, local children’s author David Ezra Stein will give a reading of his book, Cowboy Ned and Andy.
Not only is the book a gem, but Mr. Stein promises that a delightful
time will be had by all–he’s got lots of fun stuff to do with the
kids.  Here is a brief description of the story:
Cowboy Ned and
his horse, Andy, spend a hot, tiring day driving cattle.  That night,
Andy listens as Ned reveals that tomorrow is his birthday and bemoans
the fact that his family is not there to celebrate. Unable to sleep,
the horse decides that the man must have a cake and heads into the
desert to find one. After asking assistance from a singing cricket, a
wide-eyed owl, and a grouchy scorpion, Andy comes upon the lonely house
of an old cowboy. He cannot provide a cake, but he helps Andy to
realize that the best thing to have on your birthday is a friend to
share it with. As the sun rises, the horse gallops back to camp to give
Ned a birthday hug.

 

So
we hope you can take a moment out of your busy weekend and come and sit
and relax and listen to a wonderful story by a talented young writer.
Again, that’s this Saturday, October 28th, at 3pm….

 

Here is an excerpt from a review from the School Library Journal:

 

"Stein’s
language is simple yet expressive. The old cowboy’s voice is described
as soft, like hooves on sand, and owl wings, and the movements of dust.
These images stir the imagination and also evoke the story’s action and
setting. Done in ink and watercolor, the cartoon illustrations make the
most of the Western landscape, depicting a pale gold daytime sky, a
soothingly blue moonlit night, and a multihued sunrise. Thick lines
highlight the characters and background objects, providing contrast to
the fluid colors. Andy is the star here, and his equine features
comically convey concern, dejection, and, ultimately, happiness. A
satisfying tale of friendship."

 

–The Community Bookstore

LAMP SALON: WITH OLIVE DESIGN

I found this on my friend’s blog, Urban Seashell. It’s on Sunday the 29th of October (I know this is such a busy weekend).

I checked out Olive Design’s website, and her lamps looked fun.  What do people do at a lamp salon – talk about lamps? Buy them. I’m willing to find out…

Olive Design 2nd Fall Lamp Salon!
Sunday, October 29th
Brooklyn, NY
Oops there’s no time or address. I will add as I find it.

NOW THIS: BROOKLYN AS A TRAVEL DESTINATION

You’ve seen the double-decker tour buses on Flatbush Avenue.

And last night, I saw a Domino’s Pizza commercial about their new "Brooklyn-style" pizza. The ad is very New Yawk with taxi drivers and heavily accented New Yawkers.

Now this: Travel and Leisure has an article in its November issue about Brooklyn as a travel destination. I saw this excerpt on Gowanus Lounge (who found it via  Dumbo NYC).

I admit the borough’s new cachet comes as some vindication. (Taste it,
212!) And, sure, I love braised squid and fancy cocktails as much as
the next yuppie arriviste. Happy they showed up. But I wonder if
curious visitors aren’t coming with misplaced expectations. If someone
told you Brooklyn is "the next Manhattan," they got it dead wrong.
Brooklyn is nothing like Manhattan. Brooklyn looks and feels and is
like no place else.

The first thing you need to know about Brooklyn
is that it is huge: New York’s most populous borough, home to nearly a
third of its citizens. An independent Brooklyn would be the nation’s
fourth-largest city. Brooklyn is a vast metropolis blessed and cursed
to lie 500 yards from Manhattan.

The second thing you need to
know about Brooklyn is that it is small. Big in breadth and attitude,
but intimate in the height of its buildings, the modesty of its
storefronts, the compactness of its communities. Defined by the stoop,
the bodega, the bocce or basketball court, Brooklyn has an enduring
neighborhood-ness. Come to my block next month and they’ll be decking
the stoops for Christmas; come in June, and the kids next door will be
manning a lemonade stand.

Serving Park Slope and Beyond