Near Fulton in the Financial District.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Things that EV Grieve lets bother him
Been plenty of discussion already about Bowery St and the Cemusa shelters. But would it have killed Cemusa to add the "th" after the street name or an "rd"? You know, 11th Street, 14th Street, 3rd Avenue.


Labels:
bus shelters,
Cemusa,
East Village streetscenes,
street signs
Easiest movie poster in the world to deface is defaced
Labels:
East Village streetscenes,
graffiti,
movie posters,
W
Monday, October 13, 2008
On this date in 1982...
The Clash opened for the Who at Shea Stadium. (The "Should I Stay Or Should I Go?" video, of course, has footage from that show and shots of NYC...)
Anyway, here's the first part of a Who documentary that chronicles the Shea show...
For the bird
Noted


From Page Six Magazine this week:
Courtney Love is searching for an East Village walk-up so she can live like writer Edith Wharton. The only problem? Friends like Gwyneth Paltrow and Scarlett Johansson have tried to talk the messy rock icon out of moving anywhere without a doorman — but Courtney isn't taking them seriously, telling friends, "They're just being goddesses, and I'm a normal woman."
(Also, in the same column...read about BFFs Sarah Palin and Ivana Trump. At your own peril.)
At Mary Help of Christians yesterday morning
Two things.
1) I thought that the Mary Help of Christians Church on East 12th Street closed in May 2007. As the photo below shows, it's very much open. Pay a visit while you can.
2) I expected to find a few more people in the church. You know, given these difficult economic times, people looking for comfort in their faith, etc. ... Anyway, this was the scene yesterday morning for the English-language mass at 10. Not a problem finding a seat.


Related:
East Village playground in contract for $10M (The Real Deal)
1) I thought that the Mary Help of Christians Church on East 12th Street closed in May 2007. As the photo below shows, it's very much open. Pay a visit while you can.
2) I expected to find a few more people in the church. You know, given these difficult economic times, people looking for comfort in their faith, etc. ... Anyway, this was the scene yesterday morning for the English-language mass at 10. Not a problem finding a seat.
Related:
East Village playground in contract for $10M (The Real Deal)
For rent and coming soon on Third Avenue
Now that's a new "store for rent" sign up at the former Grace & Hope Mission at 114-116 Third Ave. So does this mean the Mitchell Banchik (Jake's Dilemma, Down The Hatch, etc.) frat bar is off for this space?

Meanwhile, the old Tina Chinese restaurant next door gets a new sign...(And the Robin Raj corner is still on the block.)

And across the street between 13th and 12th...What was this place before? Some Japanese hipster boutique? I can't really remember. Anyway, it's now going to be a Japanese anitiques store.

Meanwhile, the old Tina Chinese restaurant next door gets a new sign...(And the Robin Raj corner is still on the block.)
And across the street between 13th and 12th...What was this place before? Some Japanese hipster boutique? I can't really remember. Anyway, it's now going to be a Japanese anitiques store.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
El Muchacho in Tompkins Square Park
I love the dragstrip boogie of El Muchacho, one of the many great bands who played today during the Tompkins Square Harvest Rebellion today. (Sorry that I didn't get shots of some of the other bands...However, Rhea Ball has 65 excellent shots from the afternoon on her Flickr page.)
Anyway, thanks to the Shadow for the good times. Check out their site for more upcoming events.




And here's 35 seconds of El Muchacho:
[Photos by Mrs. Grieve]
Anyway, thanks to the Shadow for the good times. Check out their site for more upcoming events.
And here's 35 seconds of El Muchacho:
[Photos by Mrs. Grieve]
Reminder: The Harvest Rebellion today

From The Shadow:
THE TOMPKINS SQUARE HARVEST REBELLION IS ON!!
Join us for free shows in New York City's Tompkins Square Park, featuring great music, political speakers, information and lots of surprises!!
These shows celebrate the vitality of the counter cultural scene that has survived on the Lower East Side, despite the rampant gentrification, soaring rents and lost venues that have contributed to the cultural genocide sweeping New York City.
> October 12: THE SHADOW Presents: David Peel, Rubber Room Rats, The Pigs, El Muchacho, Endangered Feces, Fisherman Vibraphonic Orchestra, Iconicide
Come aboard, we're expecting you (well, not really...)
Andy Warhol appeared on the 200th episode of The Love Boat, which aired Oct. 12, 1985.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Week in Review: Bikini and underwear edition (with half-hearted apologies)
In dire times like these...
Wall Street on Monday (via Getty Images)

Jimmy Choo photo shoot on Fifth Avenue. Because no one would buy the shoes if she was wearing a dress or pants or something...? (Via Drunken Stepfather -- NSFW)

Amazin' Jane's Flickr page includes these shots...As AJ explains:
Tourists got an eyeful as they filmed the ridiculous reality show Make Me a Supermodel today at Fulton Ferry Landing. It was quite entertaining as they hoisted scantily clad models into the air by crane - inside a plexiglass cube. [Via Gothamist]
Wall Street on Monday (via Getty Images)

Jimmy Choo photo shoot on Fifth Avenue. Because no one would buy the shoes if she was wearing a dress or pants or something...? (Via Drunken Stepfather -- NSFW)

Amazin' Jane's Flickr page includes these shots...As AJ explains:
Tourists got an eyeful as they filmed the ridiculous reality show Make Me a Supermodel today at Fulton Ferry Landing. It was quite entertaining as they hoisted scantily clad models into the air by crane - inside a plexiglass cube. [Via Gothamist]

Nothing is forever in New York...
The Times has a piece today about people who have scattered their family members' ashes at Yankee Stadium and Shea Sadium. Given the fate of those ballparks...
When the two stadiums are being razed in the coming months, demolition crews will be working where Reggie and Mookie once played. But the ashes, apparently, will stay where they were scattered. And that means that relatives who believed they were giving their loved ones a resting place have had to accept that in New York, the quintessential tear-down-and-build-again city, nothing is forever.
Friday, October 10, 2008
For the soul
Here are the Fleshtones, the Queens natives who debuted at CBGB May 19, 1976.
It's "Soul City."
It's "Soul City."
Nightmare: A culturally dead city that's still unaffordable
As always, thanks for reading...and leaving comments here.
Wanted to share a comment from this post:
Wanted to share a comment from this post:
ed said...
My nightmare is that the job losses on Wall Street turn out to have no effect on New York, since the city has basically turned into a place for the super rich to go and live, not as a place to have careers. That is what Venice turned into during the 18th century. Then the city will be culturally dead, with no recovery, and it will still be unaffordable.
October 9, 2008 1:24 PM
Daily News crime video almost bad enough to make local TV news
The Daily News has this exciting crime story! (Via Gothamist)
Nominee for the worst video ever...? How harrowing! (Love how the store owner/manager/victim taunts the perps!)
A shoplifter with a taste for designer threads was nabbed by police after he and his buddies tried swiping a pricey jacket at a Lower East Side clothing boutique.
Police arrested Christopher Foster, 22, after he and a group of friends tried stealing jackets from Unis, a trendy clothier on Elizabeth Street.
Although his buddies successfully fled the store, police nabbed Foster around 5 p.m. on the Bowery near Rivington Street, where a Daily News videographer taped the arrest.
Nominee for the worst video ever...? How harrowing! (Love how the store owner/manager/victim taunts the perps!)
Today's sign of the apocalypse

In these trying financial times, the Post has launched a ridiculous daily feature dubbed "Dire Straits," a collection of anecdotes about New Yorkers braving the economy. Here's an item from today's paper:
Folks can't afford a meal? Let 'em eat cake!
In the midst of the meltdown, the Magnolia Bakery opened up a new location at Sixth Avenue and 49th Street this week.
"When the market dropped 700 points last week, business was great," said owner Bobbie Lloyd. "Maybe people needed a pick-me-up. It's an affordable luxury, a small investment for a lot of happiness."
Many of the customers who were scarfing down cupcakes at $2.50 or more a pop said they were seeking a respite from the bleak fiscal news.
Labels:
economic collapse,
Magnolia Bakery,
the apocalypse
Life on Marzzzzzzz (a 20-second review)

As mentioned previously, "Life on Mars" made its debut last night. I'm not much of a prime-time TV person. But! I tuned in anyway. Was a little more curious about the show than I needed to be. So you know the premise: Present-day NYC detective finds himself back in time in "gritty" 1973 Manhattan.
And?
Eh. Or maybe Meh.
For starters, the lead fellow Sam Tyler (Jason O'Mara) is an annoying mix of Mel Gibson and, oh, Michael Sarrazin. Without getting into all the plot points, I understand the confusion...the anger...the feeling of helplessness that he felt, trapped in 1973 NYC while the eldest Cosby kid (Lisa Bonet!) is in peril in 2008.
Still! Think of the fun you could have! Porn in Times Square! Betting on sporting events that you already know the outcomes to! I don't know. Maybe check out some shows. Are the New York Dolls playing somewhere?
Savor the opportunity...revisit a now-vanished bar...go to the top of the World Trade Center (which they showed twice...)....Buy up a ton of buildings in Soho and become a real-estate baron!
Plus, I had so many questions...Did he travel back with money? They showed his East Village apartment...Where did he eat breakfast? Lunch? Dinner? Why wasn't anyone smoking during the scene inside 7B? Why did all the extras look like players from a summer stock production of Hair?
OK, this was only the first episode...maybe all this is explored in the coming weeks. I'll give it a another shot next week.
P.S.
I'll leave the critique of co-star Gretchen Mol to someone more qualified ...
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