BUSH: NO CHANGE IN STRATEGY IN IRAQ

The Bush administration said Monday there are no plans for shifts in policy or for ultimatums to Baghdad to force progress.

Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers are calling on President Bush to change his war plan.

"We’re on the verge of chaos, and the current plan is not working," Sen. Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina ssaid in an Associated Press interview. U.S. and Iraqi officials should be held accountable for the lack of progress, said Graham.

Asked who in particular should be held accountable — Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, perhaps, or the generals leading the war — Graham said: "All of them. It’s their job to come up with a game plan" to end the violence.

Bush, in a CNBC interview, said, "Well, I’ve been talking about a change in tactics ever since I — ever since we went in, because the role of the commander in chief is to say to our generals, `You adjust to the enemy on the battlefield.’"

In other news: Bush has decided not to use the phrase "Stay the Course" in his speeches about Iraq policy anymore.

MEDITATION IS HELPFUL: NEW STUDY SAYS

This story from the New York Times about meditation. Does it help people feel more focused and energetic, but are the benefits measurable?

 

A new study suggests that they
are. When researchers tested the alertness of volunteers, they found
that the practice proved more effective than naps, exercise or
caffeine. The results were presented at a recent conference of the
Society for Neuroscience.

The researchers, led by Prashant Kaul of the University of Kentucky, took 12 students who did not meditate and taught them the basics in two short sessions.

Then,
over a series of weeks, the students were asked to come in and take a
test devised to measure skills like reaction time. The tests involved a
series of visual cues on a display screen that the volunteers had to
react to by pushing the correct button.

The students were asked
to take the tests in mid- to late afternoon, when people tend to be
sleepiest. They did so before and after 40 minutes of meditating,
napping or exercising, or after taking caffeine. Napping produced poor
results, presumably because of “sleep inertia,” the researchers said.

Caffeine helped, and exercise was unpredictable.

Earlier
studies have found that people are awake while meditating but that
their brains undergo changes similar to patterns found in sleep. Some
studies have found that people who meditate a lot report sleeping less,
so the researchers were curious to see if meditation could serve the
same function as sleep. The results support the idea that it can.

In
fact, when some of the students were asked to skip a night’s sleep and
then take the test, the researchers said, meditation was even more
helpful.

They said they did not know if caffeine and meditation combined would be even better.

Then,
over a series of weeks, the students were asked to come in and take a
test devised to measure skills like reaction time. The tests involved a
series of visual cues on a display screen that the volunteers had to
react to by pushing the correct button.

The students were asked
to take the tests in mid- to late afternoon, when people tend to be
sleepiest. They did so before and after 40 minutes of meditating,
napping or exercising, or after taking caffeine. Napping produced poor
results, presumably because of “sleep inertia,” the researchers said.

Caffeine helped, and exercise was unpredictable.

Earlier
studies have found that people are awake while meditating but that
their brains undergo changes similar to patterns found in sleep. Some
studies have found that people who meditate a lot report sleeping less,
so the researchers were curious to see if meditation could serve the
same function as sleep. The results support the idea that it can.

In
fact, when some of the students were asked to skip a night’s sleep and
then take the test, the researchers said, meditation was even more
helpful.

They said they did not know if caffeine and meditation combined would be even better.

STINKY CHEESE ON SMITH STREET

343
I’ve been wondering about this shop at 261 Smith Street that sells cheese. It is owned by the same people who own Smith and Vine. Here’s Sara Holn’s thumbs-up review from the blog, Until Monday — OTBKB

Zoning out to the Jimi Hendrix and staring at a gorgeous display of
European and North American cheeses, I wouldn’t have been surprised if
someone at Stinky didn’t just offer me a chair to sit down and relax.
Are you deterred by a reeking roquefort? Do you feel an uncomfortable
stinking sensation when you need to select a cheese? At Stinky (and its
sister store Smith & Vine) owners Michelle Pravda and Patrick
Watson take products that can sometimes seem unapproachable to people,
like wine and cheese, and make them accessible and fun.

When
we stopped in, Pravda was running back and forth between her two shops.
Like the best restaurant industry veterans, she is friendly and
composed, even when things are busy. What we like best about Stinky is
the way they cross-pollinate with restaurants in the neighborhood. The
owners have formed close personal and professional connections with
local restaurants and offer their house favorites for sale at Stinky.
They carry savory blue cheese cakes and duck rillettes from Applewood,
charred long beans from Taku, pickles from Chestnut and focaccia from
Savoia. Locals who patronize these restaurants are delighted when they
come into Stinky and find their favorites are available here as well.
Stinky is proud of these relationships with restaurants and should be.
Not only does it speak to the mutual supportiveness of these Brooklyn
businesses, it gives restaurants a chance to expand the audience for
their food.

If you want to put together a picnic, Stinky carries more than just
cheese and continues to expand their grocery selection. In addition to
de facto cheese plate accompaniments such as cornichons and quince
paste, Stinky carries packaged snacks, farmers’ market produce, and
fudge from Red Hook-based CaryMo Chocolate.
Cheese devotees who like to try small amounts of lots of different
cheeses will appreciate that Stinky prices items by the quarter pound.
There’s only so much Epoisse Berthaut, a delicious superstinker, that
one can put away in a sitting.

Visit Smith & Vine
across the street for suitable fermented accompaniments. While Stinky
is great for letting you try before you buy, we hear they are planning
on hosting more formal cheese tastings and seminars starting this fall.

 

IPODs AND HEARING DAMAGE

In today’s Science section, a study gauges the risk to hearing posed by use of iPods.

The key to avoiding hearing damage, the researchers say, appears to
be limiting not so much how long one listens to music but how loud it
is played. The study was presented at a recent conference on
noise-induced hearing loss in children.

The researchers, who are
audiologists, concluded that the average young person could listen to a
player at 70 percent of full volume for four and a half hours without
much risk. They also said that if people used the earphones that come
with the devices they could listen to music at an 80 percent level for
90 minutes a day without great risk.

But listening to the music full blast for just five minutes can affect hearing, they said.

FILMS MADE IN BROOKLYN: OCTOBER 23-26 AT BAM

BAM is presenting a selection of Brooklyn-made indies: to help celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Mayor’s Office of Film,
Theatre, and Broadcasting, as well as the publication of "Scenes from
the City: Filmmaking in New York, 1966-2006 (Rizzoli)"

Letter from Greenpoint with Williamsburg, Brooklyn 95min
Mon, Oct 23 at 7pm
Directed by Jonas Mekas
Arriving in Brooklyn after WWII, Mekas began shooting film diaries that would make him New York’s resident cinema-poet-laureate. This program spans his life in the borough, from 1949 Williamsburg streets scenes shot on 16mm to his recent move to Greenpoint, shot on newly embraced digital video.

She’s Gotta Have It (1986) 88min
Tue, Oct 24 at 4:30, 6:50, 9:15pm
› Buy Tickets
Directed by Spike Lee
With Tracy Camila Johns, Tommy Hicks, Spike Lee

“Lee’s first feature posed him as a rival to Woody Allen, nearly equaling him in psychological authenticity, perhaps bettering him in virtuosity and sheer creative glee.”—Chicago Reader

Lee’s breakthrough remains a touchstone for New York film, and the street humor and Brooklyn flavor come through in every frame. Johns plays Nola Darling, who must choose between three distinctly different suitors.

Love & Diane (2002) 155min
Wed, Oct 25 at 7pm*
*Q&A with Jennifer Dworkin
Directed by Jennifer Dworkin

“immerses you so intensely in the problems of the Hazzards, a troubled New York family living on public assistance, that by the end of its two and a half hours you feel almost like a member of the household.”—The New York Times

An epic documentary, filmed in East New York, that centers on three generations: Diane, a guilt-racked mother whose daughter, Love, was placed in foster care, and Love’s own newborn son Donyaeh. Dworkin’s film probes the emotions of this family, while also presenting a harsh view of race, class, and government bureacracy. Q&A with Jennifer Dworkin.

Blue In the Face (1995) 83min
Thu, Oct 26 at 7pm
Directed by Wayne Wang, Paul Auster
The flipside to Wang and Auster’s Smoke, Blue in the Face is a free-form tribute to the joys of Brooklyn. Filmed off-the-cuff for a week after Smoke wrapped, the film weaves together a string of vignettes and characters, including appearances from Harvey Keitel, Lou Reed, Madonna, Lily Tomlin, and Jim Jarmusch. NOTE: Q&A with Paul Auster has been cancelled.

BISCUIT SCOOP: THE REAL STORY

8166411_8d6b3a4c3c_m_1
Night and Day has this note on their website.

We are delighted to discover that our new chef, Josh Cohen, owned the late lamented, much praised Biscuit BBQ on Flatbush. Barbecue is much needed in Park Slope, which as we discovered to our cost, another French, Italian, or American bistro, however beautiful, is not.

Josh was featured on the Al Roker show, named best Barbecue buy the New York Times, lavishly praised by Time Out.

Accordingly, we have decided to adopt Josh, his menu, and the name of his restaurant.  This requires retooling the kitchen and making some adjustments to signage, menu and so on. Our beautiful back room remains the NIGHT AND DAY ROOM and is available for quieter dining, parties, and some of the less raucous presentations.  We aim to reopen the week of October 30.

So there you have it. A note from Night and Day, written I would guess, by the very literary owner, Robin Hirsch, a former Fullbright scholar and author of The Kempinki, a book of poetry written with his kids called, "F.E.G. Stupid Poems for Intelligent Children."

Anyone who has spent time at his West Village restaurant, the legendary Cornelia Street Cafe, knows that Robin can write. I, for one, am happy he came out with this nformation before more rumors and misinformation spread.

Pix from Flickr:   flickr.com/photos/shannonholman/show/

                                                               
               

BROOKLYN FREE SCHOOL: OPEN HOUSE

Lily_1
Found this in my Inbox from someone I know from my son’s pre-school. Her son is now in high school at the Brooklyn Free School.  YOU MUST SEE THEIR FANTASTIC WEBSITE.

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
 

DDDB WALKATHON RAISES MORE THAN $100K

This from Atlantic Yards Report:

The Walk Don’t Destroy 2 walkathon
fundraiser for Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn (DDDB) yesterday raised
more than $100,000 toward legal battles over the Atlantic Yards plan.
The event at Prospect Park generated nearly double the amount raised at
the first walkathon last November. Organizers said that some 1100 people contributed, with more than 300 participants.

That
money should (presumably) help build a legal fund sufficient to get
fights against eminent domain and perhaps other issues off the ground.
But lawyers are expensive, so fundraising undoubtedly will continue.

I
missed the walkathon, so when I arrived at the corner of 9th Street and
Eighth Avenue–a block from the park bandshell–many people in yellow
DDDB t-shirts were making their way down the block to catch trains,
walk home, or go to a restaurant. So I missed the person who dressed up
as a Brooklyn bride–in a wedding dress–a commentary on Frank Gehry’s
planned "Miss Brooklyn" tower. A crew from the Castle Coalition, which takes a hard-line view against eminent domain abuse, showed up with t-shirts saying "Blight me."

(Top photos by Amy Greer. Castle crew photo by Daniel Goldstein.)

BISCUIT: YOU ARE THE ONE

From a reliable source: The owners of Night and Day are opening BISCUIT in their space on Fifth Avenue and President Street. They found out the hard way that one more bistro on Fifth Avenue just wasn’t going to cut the mustard. So they threw in the towel on bistro fare and are switching over to BBQ — I’m guessing in collaboration with the old Biscuit crew from Flatbush Avenue. (Perhaps the former cook/owner at Biscuit will be a part owner?)

It didn’t sit right with me that the owners of N&D would close after just over a year.

Also: They plan to move the performace space to the front so that passersby will know that there’s KULTURE inside.

They plan to continue to call the back room NIGHT AND DAY and will continue to have KULTURE in there (see above post).

YAY to Night and Day for not completely giving up. Pick yourself up, dust yourself off, start all over again.

I admire that. Three cheers for BBQ night and day.  It’ll be opening SOON.

AT PS 122: A TALE OF TWO CITIES

I like the sounds of this. I found it on the DDDB website. But I saw something about it in the Village Voice or was it the New York Times?

Tuesday, October 24, 8pm. Heather Woodbury’s
Tale of 2Cities: An American Joyride on Multiple Tracks

Tale of 2Cities is a collision of life-stories from New York and Los Angeles spun into an epic mix by a young Echo Park DJ mourning his grandmother’s death. Flashing back to 1957 when the Brooklyn Dodgers abandoned one neighborhood while in LA another was lost to make way for the transplanted team’s new stadium, Tale creates a live séance among generations of interwoven characters on both coasts. From the rise of Senator McCarthy to the fall of the twin towers. Tale swoops through cities and drops into the minds of a mini-series worth of major and minor characters.

"Once again, Ms. Woodbury has built a sweet and sweeping play with breathtaking range"
-The New York Times

"Breathtakingly enthralling… bears comparison to the titanic undertakings of Anna Deavere Smith and Tony Kushner."
-The L.A. Times

"A triumph of unfettered creativity" – Variety

Heather Woodbury, winner of the inaugural Spalding Gray Award,
crafts an ambitious and touching journey animating the American Dream
and the immigrant

Tale of 2Cities is seen in two parts:

Part I "Grifters, Drifters and Dodgers"

Tuesdays and Thursdays:
Part 1 at 8 p.m.

$20, $15 (students/seniors),
$10 (members)

For Tickets:
www.theatermania.com or call 212-352-3101

More information:
www.ps122.org or 

www.heatherwoodbury.com.
PERFORMANCE SPACE 122
150 First Avenue

New York, NY 10009

TOP BROOKLYN RESTAURANTS SAYS ZAGATS

This was in the Daily News. How did I miss this? I’m only human. But still…–OTBKB.

While Brooklyn’s trendy new restaurant scene sizzles, the borough’s old standards are still drawing top honors.

Williamsburg’s pricey Peter Luger Steak House was voted the fifth best
restaurant in the city in the just-released 2007 Zagat Survey.

The secret to their success?

"We put our heart and soul into it," said Marilyn Spiera, whose family owns the eatery, which opened in 1887.

"Being in Brooklyn makes it possible to take the money we save and put
it on the customer’s plate," she said, comparing overhead costs to
those at Manhattan’s steakhouses.

Zagat rates restaurants based on a survey of restaurantgoers. This
year, the survey’s 28th, more than 31,000 diners participated, and not
all the borough restaurants that received top marks are expensive.

Midwood’s Di Fara’s pizza scored near the top, ranking just below
trendy Smith St.’s Grocery and Saul, and Prospect Height’s Garden Cafe.

Di Fara’s, where a slice costs $2.50, is touted in the Zagat guide as "da best pizza in Noo Yawk."

"I’m very proud," said pizza shop owner Domenico De Marco, who has been
tossing dough for 42 years. "It’s all over the world. Everybody reads
Zagat."

Di Fara made the iconic red book’s top 50 list for the second year in a
row – along with some of the borough’s top spots, like Park Slope’s
elegant Al Di La, and DUMBO institutions Grimaldi’s and River Cafe.

Many of the top restaurants are expensive, but their owners defended the high prices.

"It’s not inexpensive, but it’s not outrageous," insisted River Cafe
owner Michael (Buzzy) O’Keeffe of his famously romantic restaurant.

"It’s something people should experience once in a while," he said.
"It’s like going to the Metropolitan Museum or like taking a trip to
see the leaves change."

While eight Brooklyn restaurants – two more than last year – ranked
among the best citywide, the slim red book also listed what survey
respondents consider the best restaurants in some Brooklyn
neighborhoods.

In Bay Ridge, the list was topped by Areo, which serves up "old-world" Italian.

"It doesn’t surprise me at all," said real estate agent Naya Jeladze.
"They have good food, service and atmosphere – I go there as much as I
can."

Bay Ridge newcomer Agnanti, a Greek restaurants with roots in Queens, was noticed.

"We already had established customers who came from Brooklyn to
Astoria," said manager Fay Lambrianidis. "It was their idea to open
here."

Staten Island’s Denino’s Pizzeria got a nod from Zagat, as did
Bensonhurst’s L&B Spumoni Gardens, which opened in 1939 and
"screams Brooklyn" according to the guide.

Some of the borough’s newer and trendier restaurants also made the grade.

Prospect Height’s Franny’s, which opened two years ago, scored higher than some longer established places.

"We work very hard," said Franny’s manager-owner Francine Stephens. "We never serve bad food. That is not what we do."

With Denise Romano

Originally published on  October 18, 2006

GREEN BROOKLYN: CHECK OUT SEEING GREEN

I like Seeing Green’s weekly feature: Green News of the Week. Check it out. He also had a listing for these events:

Green Events in the next few weeks:

  • Green Brooklyn 2006: The Sustainable City

Thursday, Oct 26, 2006, 6:00 – 8:00 pm
AIA Center, 536 LaGuardia Place, Mnhattan

The lecture will pose the question as to what extent the pioneers of
“Organic Architecture” have anything to teach us in our present
strivings for ecological building for a sustainable future? It will
give a brief account of current ecological building experiments in
Sweden such as a residential settlement in Gothenburg with no
conventional central heating device. More

  • Green Brooklyn 2006: The Sustainable City

Thursday, Nov 9, 2006, 11:30 am – 5:30 pm
Brooklyn Convention/Conference Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment.

20th ANNIVERSARY OF HOWARD BEACH ATTACKS

October 19th was the 20th anniversary of the Howard Beach attacks. This from NY 1 about an memorial ceremony.

An emotional ceremony was held Wednesday night to mark the 20th
anniversary of one of the city’s most notorious racial attacks, the
1986 Howard Beach attacks.

Jean Griffith – mother of one of the victims, Michael – could
barely keep her composure as people prayed for peace at the service
held at a Brooklyn church.

A gang of white men chased Griffith, Cedric Sandiford and Timothy
Grimes with baseball bats, beating them. Griffith died trying to cross
the Belt Parkway.

Jason Ladone, Scott Kern and Jon Lester were convicted on manslaughter and assault charges

JANE WYATT, MOM ON FATHER KNOWS BEST, DIES

I used to watch "FATHER KNOWS BEST" when I stayed home sick as a kid. I can still remember the feeling of lying on the couch with a brown crocheted blanket watching television in our den, settling into a day of television watching and Campbell’s chicken noodle soup.

The show was on after Donna Reid show around 9 a.m. in the morning. I also watched  "Leave it to Beaver," "Hazel" and other old time sitcoms.  Jane Wyatt, who played the mom and wife of the dad, played by Robert Young, died at the age of 96. The obit is from the NY Times.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jane Wyatt, the lovely, serene actress who for
six years on ”Father Knows Best” was one of TV’s favorite moms, has
died. She was 96.

Wyatt died Friday in her sleep of natural
causes at her Bel-Air home, according to publicist Meg McDonald. She
experienced health problems since suffering a stroke at 85, but her
mind was sharp until her death, her son Christopher Ward said.

Wyatt had a successful film career in the 1930s and ’40s, notably as Ronald Colman’s lover in 1937’s ”Lost Horizon.”

But it was her years as Robert Young’s TV wife, Margaret Anderson, on ”Father Knows Best” that brought the actress her lasting fame.

She
appeared in 207 half-hour episodes from 1954 to 1960 and won three
Emmys as best actress in a dramatic series in the years 1958 to 1960.
The show began as a radio sitcom in 1949; it moved to television in
1954.

”Being a family show, we all had to stick around,” she
once said. ”Even though each show was centered on one of the five
members of the family, I always had to be there to deliver such lines
as `Eat your dinner, dear,’ or `How did you do in school today?’ We got
along fine, but after the first few years, it’s really difficult to
have to face the same people day after day.”

The Anderson
children were played by Elinor Donahue, Billy Gray and Lauren Chapin,
and all grew up on the show. In later years critics claimed that shows
like ”Father Knows Best” and ”Ozzie and Harriet” presented a
glossy, unreal view of the American family.

In defense, Wyatt
commented in 1966: ”We tried to preserve the tradition that every show
had something to say. The children were complicated personally, not
just kids. We weren’t just five Pollyannas.”

”In real life my
grandmother embodied the persona of Margaret Anderson,” said grandson
Nicholas Ward. ”She was loving and giving and always gave her time to
other people.”

It was a tribute to the popularity of the show
that after its run ended, it continued in reruns on CBS and ABC for
three years in primetime, a TV rarity. The show came to an end because
Young, who had also played the father in the radio version, had enough.
Wyatt remarked in 1965 that she was tired, too.

”The first year
was pure joy,” she said. ”The second year was when the problems set
in. We licked them, and the third year was smooth going. Fatigue began
to set in during the fourth year. We got through the fifth year because
we all thought it would be the last. The sixth? Pure hell.”

The
role wasn’t the only time in her 60 years in films and TV that Wyatt
was cast as the warm, compassionate wife and mother. She even played
Mr. Spock’s mom in the original ”Star Trek” series and the feature
”Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home.”

She got her start in films in
the mid-’30s, appearing in ”One More River,” ”Great Expectations,”
”We’re Only Human” and ”The Luckiest Girl in the World.” When Frank
Capra chose her to play the Shangri-la beauty in ”Lost Horizon,” her
reputation was made. Moviegoers were entranced by the scene — chaste
by today’s standards — in which Colman sees her swimming nude in a
mountain lake.

Never a star, Wyatt enjoyed career longevity with
her reliable portrayals of genteel, understanding women. Among the
notable films:

”Buckskin Frontier” (with Richard Dix), ”None But the Lonely Heart” (Cary Grant), ”Boomerang” (Dana Andrews), ”Gentleman’s Agreement” (Gregory Peck), ”Pitfall” (Dick Powell), ”No Minor Vices” (Dana Andrews), ”Canadian Pacific” (Randolph Scott), ”My Blue Heaven” (Betty Grable, Dan Dailey) and ”Criminal Lawyer” (Pat O’Brien).

”Father
Knows Best” enjoyed such lasting popularity in reruns and people’s
memories that the cast returned years later for two reunion movies. She
also remained active on other projects, such as ”Amityville: The Evil
Escapes” in 1989, and in charity work.

When Young died in 1998, Wyatt paid tribute to him as ”simply one of the finest people to grace our industry.”

”Though
we never socialized off the set, we were together every day for six
years, and during that time he never pulled rank (and) always treated
his on-screen family with the same affection and courtesy he showed his
loved ones in his private life,” she said.

Wyatt was born in
Campgaw, N.J., into a wealthy family in 1910, according to McDonald,
her publicist. Her father, an investment banker, came from an old-line
New York family, as did her mother, who wrote drama reviews. They gave
their daughter a genteel upbringing, with her schooling at the
fashionable Miss Chapin’s school and Barnard College.

She
left college after two years to apprentice at the Berkshire Playhouse
in Stockbridge, Mass. For two years she alternated between Berkshire
and Broadway, appearing with Charles Laughton, Louis Calhern and Osgood Perkins.

While acting with Lillian Gish
in ”Joyous Season” in 1934, she got a contract offer from Universal
Pictures. She agreed, on condition she could spend half each year in
the theater.

During college, Wyatt attended a party at Hyde Park, N.Y., given by the sons of Franklin D. Roosevelt. There she met a Harvard student, Edgar Ward. In 1935 she married Ward, then a businessman, in Santa Fe, N.M.

The family will gather for a funeral mass Friday, followed by a private interment, family members said.

Wyatt
is survived by sons Christopher, of Piedmont, California and Michael of
Los Angeles; three grandchildren Nicholas, Andrew and Laura; and five
great grandchildren.

ITCHY HANDS AND FEET: ALLERGIC REACTION IN THE HAMPTONS

The strangest thing happened to me last night after dinner at East Hampton’s Della Femina restaurant (this was after screening of Margarete Von Trotta’s film "I Am The Other Woman at the Hamptons International Film Festival).

I had a weird allergic reaction and I have no idea what caused it. My hands and feet itched under the skin. My right eye got swollen and my nasal passages got stuffed up. I had a hard time swallowing and was generally very uncomfortable.

The itching on the palms of my hands and soles of my feet was probably the worst part of it.

Here’s what had for dinner:

A delicious three mushroom and broccoli soup with cheddar cheese

A pork chop with apple compote, celery root slaw and swiss chard

Two glasses of a French red wine

Then my hands started to itch. It got worse before it got better. I slept fitfully. Took a Claritin. Thankfully, when I woke up I felt fine. The whole thing was so mysterious.

THE BEAUTY OF THE SPOKEN WORD AND KIND WORDS

The fun of Brooklyn Reading Works is that I never know how it’s going to go, or who’s going to show. It’s always a bit of an adventure.

Last night’s reading was serendipitious fun. The authors were great. We had a small, extremely friendly crowd. We even auctioned off a signed copy of one of the books. Judd Lear Silverman, playwright and author was in attendance. He has his own blog and he wrote up a nice piece about last evening, which I include here. JUDD LEAR SILVERMAN’S BLOG IS being added to my BROOKLYN BLOGS TO KNOW ABOUT list  on the right side of this blog. I want to personally thank Judd for such such a great post – OTBKB

THE BEAUTY OF THE SPOKEN WORD

There’s
nothing quite like hearing an author read from their own work — except
perhaps listening to composers playing their own compositions! It’s not
that all writers are brilliant actors–some are quite into performing,
while others are rather self-effacing and still others downright
disappear when reading in public. But in hearing well-chosen words
emanating directly from their original source, you get an emotional
connection combined with a sense of the inspiration that brought the
author (and you) to this very location, this point in time. It becomes
a uniquely intimate moment — not unlike the times when your folks
would read you a bedtime story and you would share a common enjoyment
of an image, a phrase, or maybe just a moment together.

Brooklyn Reading Works, curated by Louise Crawford (Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn),
provides just such a pleasure. The series takes place on a regular
basis at the Old Stone House on 5th Avenue, a charming historic
landmark building which provides a cozy atmosphere for an intimate
evening by the hearth. (The Old Stone House is located in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Street in Park Slope. To learn more information, visit http://www.theoldstonehouse.org.)

Last night, the first second reading of the season featured Richard Grayson, author of AND TO THINK THAT HE KISSED HIM ON LORIMER STREET, and Leora Skolkin-Smith, author of EDGES: O ISRAEL, O PALESTINE.
Grayson, who has lived all over the country but is a Brooklyn native,
read from his book about the dearly departed cinemas that once graced
the borough–and his particular connection with each. It was a clever
organization
of
nostalgia, cherishing the locations and experiences of movie-going as a
way of tracking his own personal history. When reading from his work,
Grayson was never flashy, but his shy asides and self-deprecating humor made for a gentle and amusing trip down the Brooklyn boulevard of time travel.

Skolkin-Smith also dealt in the intermingling of location and personal history, reading a chapter from EDGES that recalled a trip with her Israeli-born mother to Jerusalem in 1963, when (under Jordanian rule) Jews were not welcome in the Holy City.  Frightening, tantalizing and seductive, it was
a beautiful piece of writing — no doubt a pleasure to read on one’s
own, but the pleasure here was surely heightened by the sensitivity and
emotional recall Skolkin-Smith brought to the evening. (It is the sign
of a good reading that the moment you’ve heard a selection, you run out
and buy a copy of the book!)


Crawford,
who also served as the "Alistaire Cooke" of the evening, assured us
that many more such excellent evenings lay ahead in the coming months,
featuring such authors as
Elissa Schappell, Ilene Starger,    Darcy Steinke.  (Light refreshments are served as part of the literary soiree.  At $5, the evening is quite a bargain!)

For more information and a schedule of events, go to http://www.brooklynreadingworks.com.  As for Richard Grayson and Leora Skolkin-Smith,
visit their web sites to find out more about their writing. (Just click
on their names here–or else look for their books on Amazon.)

   
       
            
 
       

THANKS FOR FINDING MY MOLESKIN NOTEBOOK

Intro_mid
A lovely person found and returned a Moleskin notebook I lost a couple of years ago. My name and address were in the front of the little black book. I received the notebook in the mail today with a short note. Here it is:

Hi there

I saw this notebook when I was cleaning out the Lost and Found at Bar Toto. So I thought I would send it along to you.

P.S. Will the $1,000,000 dollar reward be paid in installments or in full?

I just looked in the notebook and  under reward I did write: $1,000,000.

Bar Toto is a restaurant/bar on Sixth Avenue and 11th Street. I was there maybe two years ago on a Tuesday night with two friends from Writer’s Group. In fact, the last note in the notebook says; "Sideways, Aviator, Montepulciano D’abruzzi"  (that must have been the wine we were drinking that night).

Thank you, Bar Toto friend. A small reward is forthcoming. I am very happy to have this Moleskin back.  There wasn’t much in the way of personal information or introspective poetry. But it’s chock full of reminders of what I was doing about two years ago, including:

Some really random thoughts, an accounting of all the money we spent while vacationing in Northern California; notes from an October trip to San Francico for a cousin’s wedding, information about writing for the OpEd column of the New York Times and the City section, phone numbers and emails I am happy to have, notes from a Community Bookstore meeting after the 2004 elections (adopt a red state, red state/blue state Penpals), drawings by OSFO, lots of lists, notes about high school admissions, sketches for handmade antidepressant cases I was planning to design and manufacture — man this notebook is a time capsule — and these words jotted down:

Pink clouds above Altamont Pass. High tech windmills spin like ballet dancers. Flying alone felt like an advenutre. Just me. Excitement. Freedom. A view different from Third Street. A break from teenage angst and needy children (love them as I do. I too need a little independence, a little space).

Hugh takes pictures out the car window. We’re caught in rush hour on the 580 to Tracy. One hand on the wheel, he clicks with the other capturing the light, the tilt up architecture, the suburban sprawl…

Someday you will see the farm (in pictures or for real) and you’ll understand the grip this part of the world seem to have on me, Brooklyn girl than I am.

SEEING GREEN SAYS: WALK DON’T DESTROY THIS WEEKEND

I took this from I’m Seeing Green.

Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn is having a number of events this weekend. The Walkathon is on Saturday at noon. You can show up and walk (or not walk and contribute to DDDB’s legal fund.

Just in case you’re in the dark about DDDB it is one of the organizations leading the fight against Forest City Ratner’s Atlantic Yards behemoth. They need money to fund the legal challenge against Ratner.

In other news, Ron Shiffman (a former member of the City Planning Commission, and who was long-time head of the PICCED, Pratt Institute for Community and Economic Development,) cited an enormous development–more than 300 acres–in Hamburg, Germany that has tried to draw on the example of BPC and other projects. "The first thing they did was engage the public in a discussion about the principles of what they want developed," he said. contrasted Hamburg’s effort with two projects at home. “What we’re seeing at Atlantic Yards, and at Columbia today, is the public facilitating a private development without any prediscussion as to what would benefit the public as a whole, what social infrastructure, environmental infrastructure, and economic infrastructure we should be turning over to the city," said Shiffman, who has joined the advisory board of Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn. "It’s basically how to facilitate the goals of the private developer.”

However, Gubernatorial frontrunner Eliot Spitzer yesterday said that he considers the promised 8% reduction in the Atlantic Yards project a "reasonable compromise," thus suggesting he has no idea that the cutback would bring the project back to the square footage originally proposed.

Walk it off on Saturday!

SMARTMOM: WHO NEEDS HOMEWORK

Here is this week’s Smartmom from the Brooklyn Papers:

Smartmom
was in one of her rages after attending Tuesday night’s discussion at
the Seventh Avenue Barnes & Noble with the authors of The Case Against Homework: How Homework is Hurting Our Children and What We Can Do About It.

And it wasn’t
just because she forgot to take her anti-depressants for a couple of
days (though that didn’t help — just ask Hepcat).

Smartmom was in
a rage because the book’s authors, Nancy Kalish and Sara Bennett,
confirmed something that Smartmom has felt for a long time: homework is
ruining everyone’s life.

There is almost
no evidence that homework helps elementary students achieve academic
success, and there is little evidence that it helps older students. The
authors draw on academic research, interviews with parents, educators,
kids and their own experience as parents at a Park Slope private school.

So what gives? If the research is so convincing, why do the schools persist in assigning super-sized amounts of homework?

In a word: parents.

Most parents are
unaware of the research and blindly believe that it’s good for their
children because the teachers and administrators say so.

But that’s not
the only reason. Parents want bang for their buck. From the Apgar to
the SAT, Slopers want high scores and high achievement from their
overscheduled kids.

For many
parents, the amount of homework their kids do is a badge of honor. Read
the subtitles: “My kid spent the whole weekend doing homework”
translates as “My kid is going to Harvard.”

But guess what?
If the research is correct, your kids can be super-achievers without
homework. In fact, one of the best predictors of academic success is
the family dinner table, which many local kids rarely have time for
because they’re, you guessed it, too busy doing homework.

But not all
family dinner tables are created equal. Sure, Smartmom’s family loves
to discuss string theory over pasta primavera. But some dinner
conversation is just not all that elevated.

A teacher did
speak up during the discussion at Barnes and Noble and defended
“well-thought-out homework” as beneficial for kids who won’t find
enrichment at home. And many parents, she said, think scads of homework
is a great way to limit the amount of television their kids watch.

But what’s so
bad about television, anyway? Less homework would mean that Teen Spirit
and OSFO could watch multiple episodes of “The Simpsons,” where they
can learn just about everything they need to know about western
civilization. And who can disagree that “House” offers a top-notch
education in medical ethics and cell biology?

So who’s right?
A teacher on the front lines or Kalish, a journalist, and Bennett, a
lawyer, who have spent the last few years trying to debunk an activity
that they said is detrimental to family relationships?

Since first
grade, Smartmom and Teen Spirit have had nightly battles about
homework. Buddha knows, she is not proud to admit that when Teen Spirit
was in third grade, she slapped (yes, slapped) him in the face when he
refused to write about a memory in his writer’s notebook.

“I don’t have any memories,” he said.

“Of course you have memories,” she said.

“Not any that I want to write about for homework.”

For those who
are familiar with these kinds of homework battles, the book offers
practical advice about how parents can change homework policies at
their schools.

At the
Berkeley-Carroll School, a private institution in Park Slope, Bennett,
a criminal defense appeals attorney, challenged the school’s homework
policy after discovering that her children were doing four hours a
night. And she wasn’t afraid to be dubbed a troublemaker when she
organized a parents group to discuss the situation.

After the
reading, Smartmom felt like throwing out every bright red homework
folder, marble notebook, homework organizer, and reading log in the
apartment. Especially, the ubiquitous reading log, where students are
required to document the name of the book and author, as well as the
number of pages, they read.

The whole idea
of making kids accountable for what they’ve read is a surefire way to
turn kids off to reading altogether. And that’s not a good thing, when
reading is the single homework activity that is associated with
academic success.

Smartmom found
herself very excited, even agitated, as she discussed Bennett and
Kalish’s book with Hepcat, who had also been at the reading.

“Parents of Park Slope, unite,” she shouted out as if processed by the revolutionary spirit of the anti-homework book.

“You have
nothing to lose but your children’s homework folders and years of
fighting about something that is useless and stupid!”

Standing on the green leather couch with her finger in the air, Smartmom suddenly heard Teen Spirit’s voice.

“Mom, Does this mean I don’t have to do homework anymore?” he asked softly.

“What are you kidding?” Smartmom replied.

“But you just said homework is useless and stupid,” Teen Spirit said.

“I said no such thing, buddy,” she replied. “No such thing.”

      

 

NEW RESTAURANT IN DITMAS PARK

Farminterior3
There’s a new restaurant in Ditmas Park (actually it’s been there since the summer) and Brooklyn Papers says that it’s darn good, just what the neighborhood needed. It’s called THE FARM ON ADDERLY here’s what wwners, Gary Jonas and Allison McDowell, have to say about the name — OTBKB

The Farm on Adderley comes from an expression that Gary’s family used when something was a long shot. They would say, "If that ever happens, I’ll buy you a Farm on Adderley." Adderley is a busy, commercial street in Cape Town, South Africa where having a farm is impossible. For Gary, this restaurant has always been a dream, something he never thought would happen…but finally its here "The Farm on Adderley"

By drawing ingredients from local and sustainable sources, The Farm on Adderely is bringing back "the farm" to Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, which was once occupied by farmland. Chef Tom Kearney’s seasonally inspired menu features ingredients from Shelbourne Farms, Golden Ridge Cheese Co-op, Sheldon Farms, local Green Markets, and others..

New Bar and Restaurant
1108 Cortelyou Road
Brooklyn, NY 11218
Click here for map.
(718) 287-3101
Contact Us

Open for Dinner 5:30 to 10:30
Bar open until 1:00
7 Days a week
Brunch served Sundays 11:00-4:00
Reservations for 6 or more

ANNIE LEIBOVITZ COMES TO BROOKLYN

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The media, including bloggers like me, was invited to the Annie Leibovitz show at the Brooklyn Museum Thursday morning. When I got there, a woman handed me a press packet and said excitedly, "Annie is walking the reporters around the show."

Surrounded by dozens of hungry reporters and camera people, there she was, this tall, unglamorous, real looking person — the person behind all those Vanity Fair and Rolling Stone covers and spreads — talking graciously about her life as a photographer.

Her mentor, Robert Frank, taught her that "You can’t get every pictrure," back when she was shooting for Rolling Stone. She said she was dumbfounded and then relieved. "I was only as good as my last picture back then."

She never thought of herself as a rock and roll photographer, who lived for the music. "It was always about the photographs," she said. But all those Rolling Stone covers taught her about portraiture. Later at Vanity Fair, she got tired of showing up at shoots and having to figure out what to do with the subject on the spot. "That’s when the work got conceptual," she said.

The portraits she did for Vanity Fair, whether it’s Scarlet Johansson looking like an underaged hooker, Karen Finley showing off her curvacous backside, Julian Schnabel in his ubiquitous pajamas, with paint on his shoes, or a nude and pregnant Demi Moore exuding a powerfully maternal vibe, come across as   as a knowing collaboration between two people — celebrity and photographer.

Make no mistake, these are two experts engaged in the art of image making.

It would be true to say that  Leibovitz is an instrument in the star making machinary of our celebrity culture. The show is, at once, a celebration and a critique of it. One of the last portrait images in the show is a grotesque shot of Melania Trump posing naked and pregnant in a gold bikini on the steps of a private jet (in all of its phallic grandeur), with Donald Trump practically hidden nearby in a sports car.

An obvious perversion (or progression) of the photographic gesture that began with the nude shot of a pregnant Demi Moore with a big diamond ring, the Trump shot is a crass display of money, power, and the trophy values of our commercial culture (including the cache of having one’s picture taken by  Leibovitz).

The show ends with a display of enormous black and white landscapes, Walking in, I said to myself, the critics are really going to nail her for these because they set off pretension alarms.  And yet, they are like  Leibovitz’s other work about power and fame. In this case, portraits of monuments of nature that have the same recongizablity and star power as the human celebs,  Leibovitz  compared them to the group shots she became famous for at Vanity Fair. "I don’t like groups, they’re anti-photography, really. But in this context they’re like a time-line of where I’ve been."

The show includes a large number of personal snapshots of her family and her life partner, Susan Sontag. These seemingly off-hand snapshots of Susan and Annie on vacation, in cancer wards, in hotel rooms, with Annie’s children are displayed right next to the big, commercial work. But they are also shown as small prints and tear sheets on pin up boards.

The family shots are, ultimately, about the decay of the body. Her mother’s flabby, unapologetic figure in a bathing suit, her father on his deathbed, Susan Sontag in a unflattering hospital gown, Annie posed a la Demi Moore big and pregnant, Susan Sontag layed out after her death in funeral home wearing a Fortuny dress looking like Gertrude Stein. There is, of course, beauty in these shots, but beauty of a different order: it is unadorned and real.

Ultimately, there is a continum between these two strands of  Leibovitz’s work.  “I don’t have two lives. This is one life, and the personal pictures and the assignment work are all part of it," she writes. Whether she is trying to make the most out of high-end, overproduced encounter with a celebrity or snapping gently in the homes of her family and friends, Annie Lebovitz’s work is much more personal than anyone ever expected.

That’s because her life as a celebrity photogarpher and her personal life are one and the same. "I had no life when I was younger. I was so wrapped up in the shoots," she told the reporters. Ultimately she created an unorthodox family in her late forties, which became her inadvertant muse. At the time, Susan Sontag told her that she’s the only photographer she knows who doesn’t take pictures all the time. I guess  Leibovitz took her advice.

It must have been great to have one of the world’s foremost theorists on photography around for constant comment and critique.

By taking on a real life,  Leibovitz takes on the big stuff: birth, illness, death, more death.  Leibovitz  lost her lover, Susan Sontag and her father within weeks of each other. Real life, it turns out, is about as unglamorous as you can get (even if they did travel to incredible places).

The personal pictures, shown in serial form, are not as bold and beautiful as her famous work. But they do pull you in – partially because they satisfy certain voyeuristic tendencies (mine) I got to see the screen of Susan Sontag’s Apple computer and what her handwritten notes look like. I saw what famous people look like when they are on vacation, with their families, in hospital beds.

We are all so ordinary and the same in hospitals.

Susan Sontage in a tiny NYC-style bathtub covering her mastectomy scar is breathtaking in its ordinary power. It also reminded me of the many famous pictures Leibovitz has done of celebrities like Whoopie Goldberg and Bette Midler in the bathtub.

"You only get one shot for a magazine cover," she told reporters. But real life is abut multiples, about what happens before and after "the picture."

And for these photograph, she didn’t have to bring any props to the shoot.

They were pictures just waiting to be told.

ANNIE LEIBOVITZ & PATTI SMITH AT THE BROOKLYN MUSEUM

10_2 Look what I missed? Brooklyn Beat sent me this report about the Annie Leibovitz opening at the Brooklyn Museum. I was up at 3 a.m. when HC’s cell phone rang with a wrong number and read it. I was at the museum earlier in the day. But I really missed something here. I CAN’T BELIEVE PATTI SMITH PERFORMED FOR THE CROWD. NOW THAT’S SOMETHING I WISH I’D SEEN. DANG.

I got home from the Office,  left my better half at home with a cold,  she was all cuddled up with our 11 year old twin daughters, and  Guinevere the Corgi, watching Dogs and Cats (or was it Cats and Dogs) and  I lit out to the Brooklyn Museum to see the Annie Liebovitz members opening  exhibition.

Unusual for me to be out solo in the evening, but here I was in the BM  parking lot, strolling to the entrance. The AL show was part mega media event,  seeing these remarkable photos that have graced books and magazines, only blown  up, printed exquisitely. Plus the enormous collection of her work, snapshots  really, works in progress, under glass. Some that have made their way into the  major show, others that reflect the artist and her process at work..huge  photos of Venice and Vesuvius were likewise fascinating.

I thought, I must come back to see this again for a leisurely perusal since  the opening was very crowded.. at the exit, we all crowded into the 5th floor  space (where the Rodins were previously on display..)

After a few minutes, the crowd roared with  appearance of Annie  Liebovitz and family. They moved backstage, but then reappeared, with Ms  Liebovitz casually sitting on the floor, leaning against the wall with a  daughter on her lap and family and friends nearby..

A second roar and Patti Smith appeared with her band (including Lenny  Kaye (guitar) and Jay Dee Daugherty (drums) (both members of the original  ensemble that played on Horses, her seminal 1975 album), Tony Shanahan (bass,  keyboards) and they proceeded to enthrall the audience with 5  songs..concluding with Because the Night, the Bruce Springsteen tune that Patti  Smith made famous, it was an unexpectedly lovely, soulful and energizing set..  Ms Liebovitz dancing, and Patti Smith introducing Because the Night as the song  that the late Susan Sontag liked to dance to..

I understand that the Brooklyn Museum is going through institutional  changes (ain’t we all?), and maybe it was an evening that was too pop for some  tastes and sensibilities,  but this was an exciting evening that made me  glad to belong to the Brooklyn Museum and, once again, glad to live in  Brooklyn. Peace Out.

P.S. – I brought Chinese soup home for the sniffling troops and later read  Twin 2’s essay on the day we brought Gwen the Corgi home.

–Brooklyn Beat

 

BISCUIT IN, NIGHT AND DAY OUT

This week’s mystery closing: NIGHT AND DAY at 230 Fifth Avenue. An OTBKB reader said the store looked boarded up. I was disbelieving. How is it possible, I said. Two professional restaurant owners: He from Cornelia Street Cafe, she from the Lion’s Head. Sure, there were ups and downs until they got that great chef from New Orleans last year. But hasn’t the back room been a much needed cultural space in the nabe? So what gives? I am utterly SHOCKED that they didn’t give it more than one year and a little more. I think the owners owned the building so maybe they just decided: who needs the bother of running a restaurant, be landlords instead. Maybe Robin Hirsh will still run the backroom. Do I know what I am talking about. Nah.

But I do know this: a reader wrote to say the Biscuit (formerly of Flatbush Avenue) is going in. One door closes another door OPENS. It seems that people have lots of OPINIONS about the old biscuit. Check out the Daily Heights message board to hear it all.

The new BISCUIT is “opening soon” at 230 5th Avenue.

PAN LATIN BISTRO TUCKED INTO A BROWNSTONE ON UNION STREET

From the New York Times: Palo Santo

652 Union Street (Fourth Avenue), Park Slope, Brooklyn; (718) 636-6311.

BEST DISHES Fish and grits; pupusas; rabbit stew; tamales; asopado (soupy rice); conch stew.

PRICE RANGE Appetizers and small plates, $2 to $12; lunch entrees, $6 to $12; dinner entrees, $14 to $26; desserts, $6.

CREDIT CARDS Cash only.

HOURS 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday to Friday; 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; 6 to 11 p.m. Wednesday to Sunday.

Serving Park Slope and Beyond