Saturday, August 19, 2017

So now you're thinking about getting a pair of solar eclipse glasses

Several people have asked if I knew anyplace in the East Village where one can buy solar eclipse glasses.

You need a pair of the special glasses, of course, to safely view the big event Monday afternoon. In NYC, we'll have a partial solar eclipse — about 70 percent of the sun will be covered when the moon passes directly between the sun and the Earth, as I cut and pasted.

Anyway, I have no idea where you can buy glasses here. (You're welcome!) This list of reputable vendors via NASA mentions 7-Eleven as an authorized nationwide dealer, among many others, such as Best Buy. For the sake of research, I stopped in the Avenue A 7-Eleven. The clerk had no idea what I was talking about.

Other articles mention that public libraries nationwide have them. Perhaps, but not around here...

We are very sorry, dears, but we have no eclipse glasses. 😎😎 #avagardner #solareclipse #libraries

A post shared by Tompkins Square Library (@tompkins_square_library) on


Has anyone seen a store selling the glasses in the East Village? This article at Curbed lists several places in NYC with glasses, such as B&H (the photography shop on Ninth Avenue, not the diner on Second Avenue) and Adorama on 18th Street.

As for particulars on Monday, via the NYC Parks Department:

The best time to view the eclipse is between 1:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. (weather permitting). The actual event occurs at 2:44 p.m. The eclipse will last only three minutes, so be prepared!

And etc. etc.: The last time the United States experienced a coast-to-coast total solar eclipse was 1918. After Monday, the next coast-to-coast total solar eclipse is due on Aug. 12, 2045, which coincides with Webster Hall's reopening.

In closing, please protect your retinas if you view the eclipse in any of these recommended Parks.


[Spurgeon Tanner!]

And because there are so many good songs with "sun" in the title...

Limb down in Tompkins Square Park



This branch fell last evening during the storm...



I believe it's part of a Red Oak tree from No Elm Island...



This is the second time in two weeks that a storm brought down a large branch in the Park.

Last Saturday for Summer Streets


[Last Saturday around 8 a.m. on 4th Avenue]

You know the drill ... until 1 p.m. today... from the Brooklyn Bridge to Central Park, along Lafayette and Fourth Avenue for part of the route ... with a pit stop at Astor Place for Citi-branded events. Details here.

Have posted this before, but it's worth noting again just how far Summer Streets have come, from its early days on Broadway...

Friday, August 18, 2017

Moment in the 'Sun'



Prepping for Monday's solar eclipse (but not without the proper eye wear please!)... from 1990, it's Ultra Vivid Scene with "Staring at the Sun."

[Updated] Workers place tarp over flags on 8th Street and Avenue D


[Reader-submitted photo]

This afternoon, workers dropped a black tarp from the roof over the windows on Eighth Street displaying the Confederate and Israeli flags.


[Photo via @zmack]

It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the tarp — building management or concerned neighbors. Both the property manager and the NYPD had reportedly asked the tenant to remove the flags.

As of now, one of the Confederate flags is still in view. Not sure if workers plan on adding another tarp. [Updated: See below]

The flags had been on display here at Avenue D for months, according to various published reports. (The amount of time varies from five months to a year, depending on the source.) As The Daily Beast noted, "It was only after a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, last weekend that the whole neighborhood took notice of Confederate flags across from their homes."

Multiple sources in published reports described the tenant, a 43-year-old male, as mentally ill.

Per the Daily News:

The head of an East Village block association says the clamor to evict a local resident for displaying two Confederate flags is completely misguided.

“This is not someone whose intent is to inflame passions or anything like that,” said Michael Schweinsburg, president of the Eight B C D Block Association. “He is a mental health concern. So no, eviction is not something I would welcome or support.”

And The Daily Beast: "The flags, according to several neighbors who know their owner, might be as much a product of mental illness as they are of racism."

Police have been on the scene since a man threw rocks at the windows on Wednesday morning.

Updated 3:15 p.m.



Updated 4:45 p.m.

DNAinfo reports that the top-floor windows "showcased a pair of the German Naval flags emblazoned with the cross for roughly a decade before they were replaced by the Confederate flags." A neighbor also said that the tenant "routinely shouted racial slurs out his window several times a week until about four years ago."


[Reader-submitted screengrab from Google Street View]

Updated 8/19



There's an unconfirmed reader report that a man was arrested last night for tossing a rock or some projectile through one of the windows...

Updated 2 p.m.

The flags have been removed.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Anger over Confederate flags on 8th Street and Avenue D

EV Grieve Etc.: The money behind bad landlords; an apology from Cornerstone Cafe


[Photo on 2nd Avenue this morning by Derek Berg]

The money behind New York’s worst landlords (Public Advocate's Office)

Cornerstone on Avenue B apologizes, fires staffer for using Asian slur on customer's to-go check (NBC New York)

Does gentrification really displace New Yorkers? (Crain's)

Cyclists steal wallet from motorist on Second Avenue and 14th Street (New York Post)

Christo continues to reduce the rat population in Tompkins Square Park (Laura Goggin Photography)

Some great titles in the Anthology's "This Is MiniDV (on 35mm)" series this weekend, including "Inland Empire," "Dancer in the Dark," "The Gleaners & I" and "24 Hour Party People" (Anthology Film Archives)

Preview of Martina, opening tomorrow on 11th Street (Eater)

Two Bridges tenants continue to push for judicial review over Mega-Towers (The Lo-Down)

Op-ed: Is there a double standard at CB3 when it comes to liquor licenses for Chinatown-based establishments? (BoweryBoogie)

"Empire City," an NYC documentary from 1985, is now streaming for rental on Vimeo (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

Surkusa is a "new app you’re about to hate that helps businesses manufacture an instant cool factor" (Grub Street)

Fun with bubble tea at The New York Times (Eater)

When Bowie was in Iggy Pop's band (Dangerous Minds)

Kung-Fu film fest at the Metrograph this weekend (Official site)

From the Twittersphere ...


... and a free show tonight at Otto's, 14th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B...

New ownership taking over the Alphabet Lounge space on 7th and C


[Photo from Tuesday night]

New operators are planning to open a bar in the current Alphabet Lounge space on Avenue C at Seventh Street.

CB3's SLA committee approved the application for a new liquor license during their monthly meeting on Monday night.

In an interesting twist, the main applicant, Jennifer Shorr, used to live in the building at 104 Avenue C. She and her fiance, Brian Powell, are planning to open a neighborhood bar in the space. (This is a sale of assets.)

There was a lot of love for the applicants in the room: Four longtime residents of either No. 104 or a nearby building spoke out on their behalf. The residents talked about what a horror show Alphabet Lounge is, and that an approval here would replace a bad, disruptive business with good operators.

However, committee members said that the applicants needed to better articulate their method of operation, which seemed to be "it will be better than what's there now." Said one committee member: "You are asking us to approve something because you're really nice people." (The PDF of their application is here.)

Powell, who said he has served as a consultant on many bar-restaurant openings in NYC and Southampton, most recently owned Grange, an American bistro in Westwood, N.J. (He said they decided not to renew the lease this summer after six years in business.)

The still-unnamed venture will offer a limited food menu, though Powell emphasized that they will be a bar first and not a restaurant. "We're not trying to hide anything," he said. One of the first orders of business will be to remove Alphabet Lounge's ample sound system. Shorr said that they may have an occasional performance featuring acoustic musicians.

In the end, the committee members signed off on the application.

Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen will be open the next 2 Sundays



Streecha Ukrainian Kitchen, the basement cafe that serves as a fundraising arm of the St George Ukrainian Catholic Church nearby on Seventh Street, is winding down its customary summer break.

The proprietors have announced that they will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the next two Sundays here at 33 E. Seventh St. between Second Avenue and Cooper Square... no word yet on an official opening day this fall...

Hi there🤗! As we have promised we keep you posted about our opening. So, we are open next 2 Sundays (August 20th and August 27th) from 9 am to 5 pm. So far it's just Sundays. We'll let you know when we are open full time. See you Sunday 😉! Great day to everyone!🌸 . Всім привіт 🤗! Як ми і обіцяли, повідомляємо Вам, як буде працювати Стріча. Поки що ми будемо відчинені наступні 2 Неділі (20 і 27 Серпня) з 9 ранку до 5 вечора. Слідкуйте й надалі за нашими новинами, ми повідомимо, коли ми відчинемось"на повну". Побачимось цієї Неділі😉! Всім гарного дня!🌸 . #streecha

A post shared by Streecha🇺🇦Ukrainian kitchen NY (@streecha) on


Updated 8/20

Here's the menu...



Dojo Noodle House closed for now on Avenue B



Dojo Noodle House, which recently changed its name from Dojo Izakaya, went dark earlier this week on Avenue B near Third Street, according to a tipster, who shared these photos...



Someone added a "until September" with a frowny face under the closed sign on the door...



There's no mention of a temporary closure on the restaurant's website. The phone just rings without any recorded outgoing message.

The closed-until-September notice also coincides with the arrival of the space in a retail listing this week (asking rent is $5,800 for 350 square feet).

Dojo Izakaya opened to great fanfare in November 2014. The small space was an offshoot of chef David Bouhadana's Sushi Dojo on First Avenue between Sixth Street and Seventh Street. (Bouhadana reportedly parted ways with the Dojo camp the following year.)

In any event, perhaps the landlord will fix the hole in the sidewalk outside Dojo Noodle House before they reopen...

Thursday, August 17, 2017

I Am a Rent-Stabilized Tenant

East Village resident Susan Schiffman has been photographing the apartments of rent-stabilized tenants living in the East Village for her Instagram account, I Am a Rent Stabilized Tenant. She will share some of the photos here for this ongoing EVG feature.



Tenant: Linda, since 1972.

Linda contacted me after seeing my first post on EV Grieve.

She said that her mother recently passed away. Her apartment is almost vacant.

"I will be returning the keys to the landlord in a couple of days," said Linda, who wanted a record of the place she had spent her whole life.





Although the apartment was almost completely empty of furniture and personal items, it was filled with strong emotions and memories. Linda's grandparents had lived and died there. So too had her father and now her mother.

"I have spent years fighting for this apartment," she said. "I am not in a relationship or have a family. Do you think I should stay and fight for this place?" [Ed note: Linda was not evicted, and decided to leave on her own to start anew somewhere else after living in this space her entire life.]

One of the earlier fights Linda had to win was proving that her mother was a resident there. Linda's mother did live in the apartment, confined to a hospital bed.

Linda said that it took "thousands of pages to prove this."

Her mother loved that the apartment was close to church and her favorite stores on 14th Street, such as the Stuyvesant Stationery shop She especially missed La Isla, the inexpensive Latin restaurant between Avenue A and Avenue B that closed in 2012.







If you're interested in inviting Susan in to photograph your apartment for an upcoming post, then you may contact her via this email.