Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Things are falling at AIG HQ
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition
All Dolled up again: New New York Dolls record coming in May (Hunter-Gatherer)
Free 40th anniversary Woodstock shows this summer...one small detail: there's no NY venue just yet (Brooklyn Vegan)
U2 Way in play; key to Earth next? (Gothamist)
Finding the elusive hybrid Civic taxi (NYC Taxi Photo)
Jeremiah catches a peep of old Times Square (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
The skinniest ad on First Avenue (Scouting NY)
"Watchmen" PR team needs viral marketers with better spelling skills (Flaming Pablum)
A Woody Allen brooch. Or maybe: A Woody Allen brooch? (BuzzFeed)
The hole at Houston and Mulberry (BoweryBoogie)
No more "Life on Mars"
Variety (via NY Mag's Vulture) has the news:
ABC has decided to end the show after a single year -- but in an unusual move, the net will keep the show on the air through the end of its full run.
That will give the series a rare opportunity to sign off with a proper finale, wrapping up the series' core mystery.
Network insiders said they were fans of the show and pleased with its creative chops -- but that the ratings ultimately didn't warrant a second season. The most recent seg of "Life on Mars" averaged just a 2.0 rating/5 share among adults 18-49, as well as 5.5 million viewers.
The show had been filmed, in part, around the neighborhood going back to last summer. We liked the premise -- time-traveling cop returns to 1970s NYC. And we championed the show until we actually watched it. Oh, it was fine. But I stopped watching after the second or third episode.
Here's our complete "LIfe on Mars" coverage.
The last American Virgins to close
You probably saw the news last Friday that the two Virgin Megastores in New York (Union Square, Times Square) will close in the coming months. (It was previously reported that just the Times Square location would shut.) Then late yesterday, Billboard reported that all of the remaining Virgin stores in the United States were being shuttered.
This has certainly been discussed somewhere...but! Are there any chain record stores left in NYC? I've lost track. The F.Y.E. on Sixth Avenue near Radio City is long gone, right? And I don't count those combo chains like Best Buy or Barnes & Noble that may sell music...or locals like J&R.
Anyway, I'm no fan of Virgin or any national chains...And Alex expressed exactly how I feel about all this in a post from this past January:
I don't honestly believe the Virgin Megastore is all that great. Sure, it's convenient, but it's ultimately just an arguably soulless chain store that caters to the lo.com.denom-addicted masses. That said, it's yet another place to buy music that is vanishing, and I find that rather sad.
So maybe this is a little good news for the remaining indie record shops around town? Otherwise, like everything else, it's a bad time for music...including Mondo Kim's, Etherea (a new record shop at this spot is in the works with a different vibe)...Strider Records maybe... Vinyl specialist Malachi Records quietly closed after just six months. They were in a rather obscure second-floor location at Fulton and Nassau in the Financial District....What else am I missing? Oh, and not to forget what's happening to Music Row.
Related:
In case you haven't seen Ben Sisario's "The death and life of great Manhattan record stores" piece from last April.
Speaking of record stores...
The former Bondy's on Park Row still sits vacant...it closed in early 2007, as I recall. (Love that they had "Walkmans" on their sign...)
What do Kermit the Frog and Lou Reed now have in common?
Meanwhile, Supreme unveiled its latest model last week....Here's Lou on some plywood on East Seventh Street near First Avenue.....
[Kermit photos via Allen AKA]
Related:
Supreme's Lou Reed Campaign Gets a Touch-Up (Gothamist)
Happy birthday, Lou Reed (Flaming Pablum)
Top that, Kermit
Today's time sucker: PadMapper
I was reading about PadMapper on LifeHacker...and started playing around with it for no good reason. (Oh, what's PadMapper? As Adam explained at LifeHacker: It "maps Craigslist's apartment listings on a Google Map for an at-a-glance look at available offerings.")
Anyway, I came across a "recession" discount sublet -- $125 for a room on Avenue A and 10th Street. Huh? Is that for a day? A week? I went to look at the actual listing on Craigslist...and it had been removed.
Labels:
Craigslist,
East Village apartments,
PadMapper,
sublets
Monday, March 2, 2009
EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition
Former LES resident Richard Boes, a regular in the early films of Jim Jarmusch, died on Feb. 21. In recent years he had self-published several acclaimed books. (DWX)
Let's not repeat the mistakes of Nassau Street (New York Post)
...but they do have that new free store (New York Post)
Manitoba's turns 10 -- and launches new Web site (This Ain't the Summer of Love)
The hand signals of the Stork Club (A Continuous Lean via Grub Street)
Rev. Billy's bid for mayor (Gothamist)
Remembering Music Row (Jeremiah's Vanishing NY)
A rundown on LES car services (BoweryBoogie)
Someone had the balls to eat a granola bar in the Pee Pee Phone (Slum Goddess)
New Yorkers cutting back on cable (Bits)
Exclusive: It snowed
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