Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Dumpster of the day
On Suffolk near Delancey. Hmmm, residual waste!
The dumpster was there alongside the space for lease signs at 128 Delancey that BoweryBoogie discussed yesterday....
Speaking of the Lower East Side: A random photo from the EV Grieve archives
Spina opens
As I mentioned Monday, Spina, an Italian place on Avenue B and 11th Street, opened yesterday... This addition bring the empty Avenue B storefronts total down to, uh, 18. I think it's time for a recount. Lots of comings and goings in recent months...
Labels:
175 Avenue B,
Avenue B,
East Village,
new restaurants,
Spina
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Report: Bogus help wanted ads fill Hoboken with New Yorkers looking for election work
Since I posted this... I found the photo that I took of one of the ads... This ad is on St. Mark's Place and Avenue A... For some reason, people in the neighborhood looking for work were victims of bullshit political escapades in Hoboken...
A flyer touting $200 pay for election work in Hoboken between 3:30 and 8 p.m. caused prospective hired hands from Manhattan to flood the mile-square city of Hoboken Tuesday. A runoff election is being held for mayor today between councilpeople Peter Cammarano and Dawn Zimmer. The flyer, which did not contain any “paid for” language as required by law, was found hanging on the Lower East Side of Manhattan by several men and women who came to Hoboken today looking for work. (The Hudson Reporter)
EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning edition
Slum Goddess has photos from Ray's benefit at C-squat... so does The Biggest Pants....
Hep A scare at Momofuku Ssam Bar and Momofuku Milk Bar (Eater)
Mr. Moss takes in the new High Line (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
And check out Ken Mac's Walking the High Line site.
The EV during WWII (Hunter-Gatherer)
How to get yourself on a Times Square billboard (BoingBoing)
A stretch Hummer on Seventh Street for the wedding party (Esquared)
LES getting a quickie wedding chapel (Daily Intelligencer)
Loud, shitty music brings out the notes from the neighbors (Curbed)
Read about Karate Boogaloo's ephemera (Ephemera)
Sonic Youth's 16th studio album is out today... and this is allegedly the band's first network TV appearance:
"Is Butter Lane turning into a bar?"
Upon hearing the news that Butter Lane Cupcakes is going for a beer and wine license... and that the store is now open to midnight...
...and there has been the recent appearance of a rather harmless looking bench, chair, table and umbrella...
... compelled a Seventh Street resident who lives nearby to ask a simple question via e-mail, "Is Butter Lane turning into a bar?"
...and there has been the recent appearance of a rather harmless looking bench, chair, table and umbrella...
... compelled a Seventh Street resident who lives nearby to ask a simple question via e-mail, "Is Butter Lane turning into a bar?"
When there's no more room in the trash for your trash
Another nice weekend, another sighting of overflowing FroYo cup-topped trash in front of St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery.
Jeremiah has written about this...
...and I don't have anything to add to the discussion...
...but I was curious what people do when they need to discard their trash and there aren't any available trash cans...
Jeremiah has written about this...
...and I don't have anything to add to the discussion...
...but I was curious what people do when they need to discard their trash and there aren't any available trash cans...
"Step Up 3D" is pretty much going to be filming all over the place
Yes! "Step Up 3D" is back in the neighborhood filming Friday. And the crew will need the north side of Seventh Street between First Avenue and Avenue B... BOTH sides of Avenue A between Seventh Street and St. Mark's...BOTH sides of Sixth Street between First Avenue and Avenue A...the south side of St. Mark's between First Avenue and Avenue A... and the south side of 10th Street between First Avenue and Avenue A.
Other than that....
Previously "Step Up 3D" coverage on EV Grieve.
Craigslist ad of the day
Developing website needs models (Lower East Side)
We are looking for promotional models for a developing nightlife networking website. 18+ only. Send two FULL body shots for consideration. Pay is commission based, opportunity to earn 150 - 200 per hour.
------------------------------------------------
Well, I could use the work. Here goes nothing!
We are looking for promotional models for a developing nightlife networking website. 18+ only. Send two FULL body shots for consideration. Pay is commission based, opportunity to earn 150 - 200 per hour.
------------------------------------------------
Well, I could use the work. Here goes nothing!
The Holiday continues with the cheesy promotions
What, no Jagerettes?
I'll say this again:
1) I understand the fact that the beloved Holiday Cocktail Lounge on St. Mark's Place needs to make money to stay open...so why not attract the dreaded free vodka crowd.
2) Stefan never would have gone for this.
I'll say this again:
1) I understand the fact that the beloved Holiday Cocktail Lounge on St. Mark's Place needs to make money to stay open...so why not attract the dreaded free vodka crowd.
2) Stefan never would have gone for this.
Monday, June 8, 2009
The weekend in review
The Post continued its sensitive coverage of David Carradine's death.
The psychics took to the streets!
Street fair!
We read about the passing of the "Mayor of the LES"
Benefit for Ray's at C-Squat. (Perhaps there will be more on this from The Biggest Pants or Slum Goddess.)
This couple got married on Seventh Street.
We learned that big law firms are becoming extinct.
We learned that fewer people are complaining about noise in NYC, except for the people who are complaining more about parties and music.
This Mercedes got towed from Fourth Street... thankfully, the car alarm is working.
The psychics took to the streets!
Street fair!
We read about the passing of the "Mayor of the LES"
Benefit for Ray's at C-Squat. (Perhaps there will be more on this from The Biggest Pants or Slum Goddess.)
This couple got married on Seventh Street.
We learned that big law firms are becoming extinct.
We learned that fewer people are complaining about noise in NYC, except for the people who are complaining more about parties and music.
This Mercedes got towed from Fourth Street... thankfully, the car alarm is working.
The final countdown
As of yesterday, there were eight days left for the Virgin Megastore on Union Square. All CDs and DVDs are now 50 percent off their hiked up prices...
If you look hard enough, then you may find something that you may want... Otherwise, it's grotesque consumerism at its worst...
What remains is the Virgin Overstock Megastore. Things that were shipped in from Virgin Warehouses around the world just for the closing sale. What else could explain, say..... Dozens and dozens of "Hellboy II" action figures. Dozens and dozens of copies of the attempt to make Rick Springfield a movie star in "Hard to Hold." Dozens and dozens of copies of U2's "No Line on the Horizon" limited box set including CD, hardcover book, poster, featurette on the Edge buying a ski cap, a behind-the-scenes look at Larry Mullen Jr.'s First Communion and Bono's photo album of bikini-clad groupies. It's times like these when you realize there have been like 37 versions of "Blade Runner" released. You remember how little respect giant entertainment groups have for consumers.
And so many things whose existence was so unnecessary.
Oh, and the complete series (six seasons!) of "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman" is 50 percent off its $232 sticker price.
If you look hard enough, then you may find something that you may want... Otherwise, it's grotesque consumerism at its worst...
What remains is the Virgin Overstock Megastore. Things that were shipped in from Virgin Warehouses around the world just for the closing sale. What else could explain, say..... Dozens and dozens of "Hellboy II" action figures. Dozens and dozens of copies of the attempt to make Rick Springfield a movie star in "Hard to Hold." Dozens and dozens of copies of U2's "No Line on the Horizon" limited box set including CD, hardcover book, poster, featurette on the Edge buying a ski cap, a behind-the-scenes look at Larry Mullen Jr.'s First Communion and Bono's photo album of bikini-clad groupies. It's times like these when you realize there have been like 37 versions of "Blade Runner" released. You remember how little respect giant entertainment groups have for consumers.
And so many things whose existence was so unnecessary.
Oh, and the complete series (six seasons!) of "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman" is 50 percent off its $232 sticker price.
No anarchy?
For months now, the anarchy graffiti was on the wall of the real estate office on 11th Street and Second Avenue.
And now...
Interpret this any way that you wish.
And now...
Interpret this any way that you wish.
Labels:
11th Street,
anarchy,
East Village streetscenes,
graffiti,
Second Avenue
Another Italian restaurant for Avenue B
I've been keeping an eye on 175 Avenue B at the corner of 11th Street. I've forgotten how many restaurants have been in here. (Uovo? Panificio?)
In any event, Spina opens at this spot tomorrow. It will be a nice Italian place with a sommelier. Paintings by Wayne Moseley will be on display there this month.
I think we will now officially have enough Italian restaurants in the neighborhood.
In any event, Spina opens at this spot tomorrow. It will be a nice Italian place with a sommelier. Paintings by Wayne Moseley will be on display there this month.
I think we will now officially have enough Italian restaurants in the neighborhood.
Labels:
175 Avenue B,
Avenue B,
East Village,
new restaurants,
Spina
Noted
Mayor Bloomberg's youngest daughter, Georgina, provides show-riding outfits to needy people through her program, The Rider's Closet. 'People say I should be changing the world instead of doing this,' Georgina said. 'But I get letters from people all the time saying I've changed their lives by providing them riding clothes they couldn't afford.'" (New York Post)
Labels:
Generation Bloomberg,
humanitarians,
Mayor Bloomberg
Former Waldorf Hysteria space getting the plywood
The long-vacated Waldorf Hysteria space at 165 Avenue B between 10th Street and 11th Street is being renovated...
No word just yet on what this will become... Given recent trends, I'll go with a dry cleaners. There isn't one within 10 feet of this place.
No word just yet on what this will become... Given recent trends, I'll go with a dry cleaners. There isn't one within 10 feet of this place.
Noted
"Famed for its concentration of heavily subsidized 20-something residents — also nicknamed trust-funders or trustafarians — Williamsburg is showing signs of trouble. Parents whose money helped fuel one of the city’s most radical gentrifications in recent years have stopped buying their children new luxury condos, subsidizing rents and providing cash to spend at Bedford Avenue’s boutiques and coffee houses." (The New York Times)
The motorcycle diaries
There was a rather mysterious beeping noise on Fifth Street near Avenue A. Neighbors first started hearing it Thursday night. The source was traced to a covered motorcycle parked by the Con Ed Avenue A substation. As of yesterday, the motorcycle's alarm continued to make the beeps at intervals of 10 seconds or so.
Labels:
Avenue A,
beeps,
East Village streetscenes,
Fifth Street,
motorcycles,
noise
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Fewer noise complaints to 311 -- except for that increase in complaints about loud music and parties
As the Post notes today: "Noise complaints phoned into the city's 311 hot line between January and March plummeted 16.5 percent compared to the first quarter last year -- from 9,292 to 7,755 -- and city officials cited fewer construction projects and slowing commerce for the newfound tranquility."
However!
"Economic misery might be prompting New Yorkers to seek company at raucous parties. Complaints of loud music and parties surged 18 percent in the first three months of this year."
The Times on why NYC corporate law firms are becoming an endangered species
"As the apocalypse on Wall Street ripples out into the larger economy, a thick red tide is lapping at the once-impregnable foundations of New York’s corporate law firms, threatening to turn the industry — and with it, some iconic city characters — into an endangered species." (The New York Times)
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Street fair!
Second Avenue at 14th Street...
And I forgot that Stella's corners the market on some of the food options...
And I forgot that Stella's corners the market on some of the food options...
Meeting for a plan to preserve the Bowery
Click on the image below to read the Bowery Alliance of Neighbor's plan to preserve the east side of the Bowery from Ninth Street to Canal. There's a meeting to discuss the plan on June 16.
Remembering the "Mayor of the LES"
Great story today in The Wall Street Journal about Rudy Mancuso. On Oct. 3, 1951, at the Polo Grounds, Mancuso -- who had one exposure left on his camera -- took what is arguably the most famous photograph in the history of baseball: Giant Bobby Thomson taking an 0-1 fastball from Dodger Ralph Branca over the leftfield wall in the bottom of the ninth. And the Giants win the pennant!
Sadly, though, Mancuso never received credit for the photo. He even lost the negative. As Joshua Prager notes in the Journal, "And so, tragically, the man who shot 'The Shot Heard 'Round the World' was entirely forgotten."
Many years passed. Mancuso's pencil moustache turned from black to white as newswires and then vendors and then Web sites hocked an inexhaustible supply of his photo. He made no money from his shot and held no proof that it was he, an embosser and die cutter living in a Lower East Side walk-up, who'd most famously preserved baseball's greatest moment.
Anyway, you can read the story for yourself to see what became of the negative and to find out what he did at the Hotel Rivington. Mancuso died on May 10 at age 89.
The Times did a piece on photo in September 2006.
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