Saturday, May 24, 2014
East Houston back to its good ol' normal self
[Photo Thursday by @maraaltman]
On Thursday morning, a ruptured pipe dating to 1959 flooded East Houston Street with mucky water. Crews worked overnight Thursday to fill in the sinkhole that formed after the break between Orchard and Ludlow … here is how East Houston was looking earlier today… almost as good as its old self!
Holiday weekend or not, the arrows, pointing to the formerly broken roadway, have to work…
The DEP claims that the break was an anomaly, according to NBC News, and not related to the ongoing East Houston Reconstruction Project between the Bowery and the FDR that is set to wrap up long after we're all dead.
Summer begins with random bags of soil and a note from the East Fifth St. Tree Committee
The official start to the summer season is off to a fine start … especially with a note from the local folk heroes of the the East Fifth St. Tree Committee.
PandaCat passes along these photos from last night on East Fifth Street between Second Avenue and Cooper Square … showing a few bags of soil … now with a note!
"Please don't put this soil into the tree pit because then the soil level will be too high. If the are bags are a gift for the tree committee let us know."
Reasonable!
Also, just a reminder: Please do not attach bikes or carts to the tree guards. Thank you!
Previously on EV Grieve:
The East Fifth St. Tree Committee back in action
The East Fifth St. Tree Committee is alive and well, and they do not mess around
And now, a word from the East Fifth St. Tree Committee
The East Fifth St. Tree Committee reveals its policy about carts
Today at the Loisaida Festival
From the EVG inbox...
2:00 pm-6:00 pm / New Loisaida Center, 710 E 9th Street (just east of Avenue C) / Admission free
The Production of Nabe:
Loisaida’s land-use and environmental activism, past and present
Screenings: 3 vintage documentaries about Loisaida’s sweat-equity, community garden and environmental initiatives since the 1970’s.
“The Heart of Loisaida” by Marcie Reaven & Beni Matais
“11th Street Movement” by Stuart Leigh
“Umbrella House” by Catalina Santamaria
• Real-time Oral Histories: Historians interview old-time activists/players from Loisaida’s urban appropriation movement.
• Talk/Presentation: Contemporary land use issues, recent development and its environmental impacts in the LES by GOLES
• Debut of “Memorias de Loisaida”, a theatrical piece by artists in residence Papel Machete.
Here's the Festival website with more info. You can find the street festival and live music tomorrow on Avenue C from East Sixth Street to East 12th Street.
East Village Radio says goodbye with Johnny Thunders
[Photo last night by @edenbrower]
East Village Radio wrapped up its 11-year run just before midnight last night by playing "You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory" by Johnny Thunders … an appropriate song from the former New York Doll, Heartbreaker, one-time East Village native and subject of a new documentary …
East Village Radio reached out to listeners via Facebook and Twitter for suggestions of the last song … that wrapped up a four-hour sign-off party from the station's tiny First Avenue studio.
EVG reader Double U asked this in the comments of our earlier post:
Anyone recorded the final EVR hour?
Anyone who wants to share this historic recording?
Meanwhile, according to the East Village Facebook page, the station WILL NOT host any audio links to archived programming from the EVR website after this weekend. As they say, "Please follow/like your favorite DJs/show hosts for information on their archived EVR shows."
With various licensing fees, East Village Radio could no longer break even. CEO Frank Prisinzano made the difficult decision to shut down the station earlier this month, as we first reported.
I would like to thank the #eastvillage for being a place where something like EVR could happily exist. #RIPEVR east village radio
— Frank Prisinzano (@TheUnknownChef) May 24, 2014
Updated 5-26
Animal NY has an account of the station's last minutes here.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Exclusive: East Village Radio is signing off after 11 years; final day of broadcasting is May 23
On the phone with Sylvain Sylvain of the New York Dolls
Friday, May 23, 2014
Starting out in the evening
Have a Beachy holiday weekend
Here we have Veronica Falls from 2010 with "Beachy Head."
Anyway, go, have fun! We'll be fine here alone. No, really!
EV Grieve Etc: Mourning Edition
[2nd Ave. & E. 4th St. via Derek Berg]
Search on for skateboarder who robbed this East Village apartment (CBS 2)
Details on the LES Film Festival 2014 (The Lo-Down)
About that black rock in First Park (BoweryBoogie)
Checking out the food at Box Kite on St. Mark's Place (The New York Times)
A Jerry Lewis retrospective at the Anthology Film Archives this weekend (Anthology Film Archives)
A look at the new Dairy Queen on East 14th Street (Eater)
Bar-restaurant Suspenders, an "emotional haven" in the days that followed 9/11, getting pushed out by landlord (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)
Recalling a hotel collapse on Broadway (Off the Grid)
White Castle coming to Coney Island's Luna Park (Amusing the Zillion)
7-Eleven just killed whatever remained of hipsterism (The Wire)
... and EVG contributor James Maher ran into Out and About in the East Village alum Angel Eyedealism the other day...
... and finally, an instant request...
@evgrieve A suggestion for today's video band, perhaps? (@ 9th and 3rd) pic.twitter.com/MV8ThHO6Xq
— Pinhead (@evpinhead) May 23, 2014
Oops. He meant the White Stripes! Next time!
East Village Radio signs off for good at midnight
[Delphine Blue during her last show Wednesday. Photo by Damian Genuardi]
As we first reported on May 14, East Village Radio is signing off after today's programming.
CEO Frank Prisinzano could no longer afford the increasing licensing costs for the 11-year-old Internet radio station with the tiny storefront studio on First Avenue.
Prisinzano and Peter Ferraro, the general manager/head of programming, addressed the issue in a guest column at Billboard.com on Tuesday.
We had opportunities for investors, but we didn't think we'd be given the autonomy to continue on the path we were on. There was never any discussion of selling out. It was always: "Run it properly or shut it down."
We were giving the world access to one of the most important musical neighborhoods on the planet via our live DJs. When you know that, you don't sell it out. You nurture it.
Now the two are deciding what should be the final song as the clock strikes midnight tonight. The pair took to the station's Facebook and Twitter accounts for suggestions.
Here's The Wall Street Journal with a story about the last song ... and the station's end days:
The suggestions were as eclectic as the Internet radio station’s programming — ranging from "My Way," as performed by Sid Vicious, to LCD Soundsystem's "New York I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down."
"It could be anything from the Ramones to the Dolls to the Clash. I have been thinking about all the usual suspects," Mr. Ferraro said while bouncing around First Avenue in a tight East Village Radio T-shirt with the energy of a Labrador puppy.
Mr. Prisinzano, calmly sipping on a mug of beer, added his two cents: "It could be a one-hour John Bonham drum solo," referring to the Led Zeppelin drummer.
"Hopefully, someone nails it," Mr. Ferraro said. "The fans really get us. They will tell us what we should play."
Tough call on a last song.
I'll put in for Richard Hell and the Voidoids with "Time" …
In any event, the East Village Radio sign-off party streams live tonight starting at 8.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Exclusive: East Village Radio is signing off after 11 years; final day of broadcasting is May 23
A Google Glass Feast
Here's a story coming from Feast, the one-plus-year-old restaurant on Third Avenue near East 13th Street.
Feast has enjoyed positive reviews, notching a solid 4 our of 5 stars in the Yelp and Open Table worlds. But last week management noticed 13 recent one-star reviews on Google, which comes up first when you search for Feast.
What happened for this many negative reviews to arrive at once?
Toward the end of last month, Feast said that they had a customer arrive as a walk-in for brunch. She was wearing Google Glass. A few months previously, they had another diner wearing a pair and the restaurant received several comments about privacy from other guests. Restaurant staff asked the person to remove them, and he quickly consented.
So when the other diner came in wearing Google Glass, management asked her to take them off before dining. She refused, and left the restaurant.
"We try to give everyone the best experience possible and she didn't get that," Feast management admitted to us.
On April 20, the diner wrote a post about what happened, which apparently angered some of her 3,000-plus Google+ followers.
Around this time the spate of reviews arrived on Google. Feast looked into this, and discovered that all of the one stars are from people who commented on the diner's original Google+ post. The negative reviews include lines such as: "Ignorant bigots and hateful. Perhaps being illegally discriminate too. The food is irrelevant as the service is less than poor." The reviewer lives in Phoenix.
The Google review of Feast is currently 3.1 out of 5 stars, up from 2.4 the previous week.
"When the first thing that comes up when you search Feast in Google is a 3.1, it can really hurt a restaurant like us. Then you have 13 people, which is about half the total reviews, who have never been to our restaurant let alone live in NYC, leave you one-star reviews … it's malicious and technically a violation of Google's own terms for leaving reviews," the Feast manager said. "Again I can understand her leaving the one-star based on her experience, but 12 others with no experience on who we are or what we do is unfair."
The Feast manager figures this will become an even bigger issue for the food-service industry as Google Glass hits the mainstream.
And for Feast, the restaurant doesn't have a final policy on the matter yet. "The fact is that the policy of asking Google Glass wearers to remove them is based off experience. It's not a policy set in stone so it could very well change."
The overnight work on the East Houston Street sinkhole
Crews worked around the clock to repair the sinkhole that formed after a ruptured pipe flooded East Houston Street with mucky water yesterday morning.
EVG reader Connor Sheets took these photos between 1:30-2 a.m. …
East Houston Street was closed between Allen and Essex after the 20-inch water main dating to 1959 broke.
"When that type of water starts rushing out of a pipe, it's gonna take everything with it," Jim Roberts, the city Department of Environmental Protection's deputy commissioner of water and sewer operations, told the Daily News.
This stretch of East Houston has seemingly been under construction since 1959 … however the DEP claims that the break is an anomaly, according to NBC News.
The DEP said they shut off the water to five adjacent businesses and eight residential buildings. Katz's, who sustained heavy losses after its basement flooded, was able to remain open for business during all this — the deli is connected to an adjacent main. Unfortunately, its neighbor, the Lobster Joint, didn't fare so well.
"We're out of business," general manager Alex Linomontes told The Wall Street Journal. "We still have bills to pay, and there are hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage."
In the basement, workers in industrial rubber boots waded through stagnant brown water, salvaging what they could. Mr. Linomontes said he lost refrigerators, boilers, and other equipment to flooding — along with tens of thousands of dollars worth of seafood.
East Houston was expected to be open to motorists later this morning.
This photo (via BoweryBoogie) by @ja0095 is the best shot that we've seen of the damage…
Labels:
East Houston Street,
Katz's,
Lobster Joint,
sink holes,
sinkholes
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