Tuesday, September 3, 2013

132 E. Seventh St. sees the daylight again



On Friday, workers started taking down the construction bondage that had surrounded 132 E. Seventh St. at Avenue A since April ... DOB permits pointed to "facade repair."



We lost Joe Strummer in all this, though just temporarily ...



And Seventh and A is starting to looking a little more gussied up with the recent reveal across the street...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Unattended ladders and new bedbugs at 132 E. Seventh St.

FroYo confirmed for Avenue A


[Via EVG reader Darbi Worley]

Back in July we heard from multiple tipsters that a frozen yogurt shop was opening at 70 Avenue A (part of the storefront that previously housed East Village Pharmacy) ... the new awning is up, and the place is called Twist (not to be confused with the just-opened Twister on Second Avenue.) Not sure if this Twist is any relation to the Twist with locations in New Jersey.

Incoming: The Winslow and The Brazen Fox



The Winslow Public House at 243 E. 14th St. is ready for action... Thursday is the official opening date...


Apparently the British-style pub has been in soft-open mode... which might explain the 4 five-star reviews on Yelp.

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And work continues on Third Avenue at East 13th Street... where an outpost of White Plains-based the Brazen Fox is opening this fall...



Per the Brazen Fox website, the bar-restaurant features promos such as "Ladies Night" on Wednesdays and "Suds for Scrubs," a promotion in which anyone showing a medical ID can get "$5 draughts" ... and "Detention Fridays" for teachers...

The space was previously home to Friend House.

Monday, September 2, 2013

Dog Labor Day afternoon



Photo from Tompkins Square Park via Bobby Williams.

Oh, and we got gypped on a rainbow this afternoon during that rain-sun period.

Today in Tompkins Square Park



Hello! Photo via The Philosophical Zombie.

Did anyone NOT move out this past weekend?



Well, sure seemed like a lot people were coming (but mostly!) going the past few days... seemed like more than the usual end-of-summer exodus... we saw plenty of piles of left-behind crap... like above at East Seventh Street and Avenue C... but this shot by Dave on 7th at East Seventh and Avenue B is the winner so far...

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Protest against 'Paradise: Faith' at the Village East; 'a terrible pornographic attack on Jesus’ crucifix'



A group of protestors are outside the Village East City Cinemas on Second Avenue at East 12th Street this afternoon, per this photo via @RTSNYC.

The film in question is "Paradise: Faith," from Austrian filmmaker Ulrich Seidl. Here's the Rotten Tomatoes recap:

In "PARADISE: Faith" Ulrich Seidl explores what it means to bear the cross. For Anna Maria, an X-ray technician, paradise lies with Jesus. She devotes her vacation to missionary work, so that Austria may be brought back to the path of virtue. On her daily pilgrimage through Vienna, she goes from door to door, carrying a foot-high statue of the Virgin Mary. One day, after years of absence, her husband, an Egyptian Muslim confined to a wheelchair, comes home. Hymns and prayers are now joined by fighting. "PARADISE: Faith" recounts the stations of the cross of a marriage and the longing for love.

(Read the review in the Times here.)

According to Wikipedia, "the film has been named as a favourite of director John Waters, who presented the film as his annual pick within the Maryland Film Festival 2013."

There was a similar protest of the film in Hollywood this past week. According to a blog by the executive director of America Needs Fatima:

The movie Paradise: Faith, by Ulrich Seidl, is a terrible pornographic attack on Jesus’ crucifix.

EXTREME CAUTION

The NY Times (8/22/13) reports: Speaking of the main character in the film, “…Later in the movie, she m*****bates with the same crucifix.” [redaction ours: Ed.] Other press reports contribute… A woman…“m*****bates using a crucifix.” “it is right to show her m********ing using a cross, as she is making love to Jesus,” responds the director Ulrich Seidl when asked about it.

The protest consisted in praying the fifteen decades of the rosary, some other prayers (especially the St. Michael prayer) and the Litany of Our Lady. Our people spread out single to double file to cover the entire front of the cinema.

We were very happy and consoled to be able to offer this public act of reparation against such a terrible pornographic attack on the Holy Crucifix of Our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Meanwhile, there haven't been any protests over "We're the Millers," also playing at Village East City Cinemas, for being billed as a "comedy."


[EVG reader John]

Week in Grieview



A reminder about feeding pigeons in Tompkins Square Park (Tuesday)

Out and About with Angel “Petroleum” Luis Roman (Wednesday)

Grand opening date for Davey's Ice Cream (Thursday)

Plywood message outside Mary Help of Christians (Monday)

Glass truck accident on 10th and B (Thursday)

Amore Bakery will not be reopening on Avenue B (Thursday)

RIP Odessa Cafe and Bar (Monday)

Bike-rack removal on Astor Place (Thursday)

"Ross is not cool" (Wednesday)

Photo Tech leaving East 13th Street (Monday)

The windows work at the Jefferson (Tuesday)

Lyric Diner returning to Lyric Diner space (Monday)

Velvet Cigar Lounge on the move (Tuesday)

The wall that housed the Joe Strummer mural the past 10 years (Monday)

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Step right up....



A good day for Zoltar ... though he did pick UMass to cover the spread against Wisconsin.

Photo by Bobby Williams.

Minor Threat at CBGB 1982



If you're interested... head on over to Dangerous Minds, where they have a (muddy) video from this Minor Threat show at CBGB circa Dec. 18, 1982.

This is the good stuff.

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!



Ahem! Please pause your Saturday. There is a — surprise! — Street Fair ("street fair"?) to report... on Fourth Avenue from East 14th Street down to, oh — who cares! We spotted workers assembling the usual displays of sunglasses, belts and wieners.

Hurry, because you won't have the chance to see this stuff again until tomorrow, when the same people set up on Broadway!



Previously on EV Grieve:
Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Street fair! Street fair! Street fair!

Last call for the Odessa Cafe and Bar tonight

As we've been reporting, the Odessa Cafe and Bar at 117 Avenue A signs off for good tonight. Odessa co-owner Mike Skulikidis has been running the place since 1980. (The Odessa dates here to 1965.)

Skulikidis tells DNAinfo's Serena Solomon that he was hit with a 50 percent rent hike. (Current rent is $10,000 a month.) He will continue to operate the Odessa Restaurant next door.

But he sounds less than optimistic about the future.

Looking ahead, Skulikidis plans to continue working at Odessa seven days a week and said he has no interest in closing it or making major changes — but eventually he will have to move on.

"Everything is for sale at the right price anytime," he said.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Building that houses Odessa Cafe and Bar for sale on Avenue A

Is the end nearing for Odessa Cafe and Bar on Avenue A?

Former GM from Tribeca's Tiny's & the Bar Upstairs part of team to buy the Odessa Cafe

Reader report: Odessa Cafe closes for good after Aug. 15

Reader report: Odessa Cafe and Bar will remain open through Sept. 6