Sunday, July 15, 2012

Shredding it on East 12th Street


Spotted by Shawn Chittle on East 12th Street between Avenue B and C this afternoon.

We have collected all of the paper, and will put it back together to see what it was. Before completion in 2017, any guesses what these documents were? (No serious replies please.)


Chico's Healthy Choice gates

Chico is keeping busy... fresh off the former Nice Guy Eddie's plywood project ... today, several readers spotted him at work on the incoming New York Healthy Choice market at Avenue C and East 11th Street....

[By Andrew Adam Newman on Ave C]

[EVG reader David]

The last tenant, the Monk Thrift Shop, closed in December 2010. At the time, neighbors heard that a bank branch would open here.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Monk Thrift Shop is closing — but, it remains open for now

2 signs of summer on East 12th Street



Near Avenue B.

East Village Radio celebrates Johnny Thunders, who would have been 60 today


Via our friends at East Village Radio ... this afternoon at 4, "Jesse Malin will be celebrating the life and legacy of Johnny Thunders. Malin will be playing the music of Thunders, born John Anthony Genzale, Jr. on July 15, 1952, as well as the artists and sounds that inspired the Queens-born singer and songwriter."

Thunders, an original member of the New York Dolls, died in 1991.

Find more info (and videos) here at East Village Radio.

If you want more Johnny Thunders, then you can check out the annual Johnny Thunders birthday bash tonight at Bowery Electric.

Lick it up


East First Street at Avenue A.

Previously.

Headline h/t via

Tonight: 'NYU and the Destruction of New York'

From the EV Grieve inbox from McNally Jackson Books...
NYU and the Destruction of New York
Tonight at 7, Peter Carey, Fran Lebowitz, Kevin Baker, Joseph McElroy and Jefferson Mays will all be in the store to protest NYU’s Sexton Plan.

The Sexton Plan may not be familiar to those of you who don’t live in the Greenwich Village or are affiliated with NYU, but it should. This is a proposal that anyone who cares about New York should know about, and be concerned about.

NYU’s expansion plan, as proposed, will erect up to 2.5 million square feet of new building space in the Greenwich Village. In the process, they will destroy three acres of green space. That includes the Sasaki Gardens, the Mercer Street Dog Run, the Key Park Playground and a beautiful grove of trees. It also will require 20 years of continuous construction, without any delay, to begin this August.

The replacement? A number of NYU buildings, including eventually, a pedestrian mall slung between two skyscrapers. This is not the Greenwich Village you think of when you think of Dylan Thomas and James Baldwin and Jackson Pollock and John Cage living in its streets and making art. It’s not even the Greenwich Village you think of now, full of young people and old, dogs and stragglers, tourists and long-time residents. Imagine Washington Square Park. Now imagine it in the shadow of a 48-story hotel tower.

Peter Carey, Fran Lebowitz, Kevin Baker, Joseph McElroy and Jefferson Mays (reading the work of Eileen Myles) will all be present to speak against the plan, and refreshments (wine) will be provided.

They’re mad. We’re mad. And you should be too.

McNally Jackson Books is at 52 Prince Street between Lafayette and Mulberry.

[Image via Curbed]

This afternoon in Tompkins Square Park: Miss Guy, Transgendered Jesus, more...


Good lineup today from 2-6...

Miss Guy
Liquid Blonde
Hussle Club
Transgendered Jesus
Little Annie
Two Times the Gun
MC-Stiletto from Roma

Third Avenue is now nice and smooth


Freshly paved. Nice for skateboarding at the moment. Or falling down on dead drunk next weekend. Or tonight!

Two weeks ago... torn up for paving... Not so good for skateboarding. Or falling down on dead drunk.

7:54 a.m., Avenue A, July 15

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Reel around the Fountain


Tompkins Square Park today... photo by Bobby Williams.

Report: Former Internet millionaire part of 9th Precinct gun heist story

The story of the officer who allegedly stole guns from a locker room at the 9th Precinct on East Fifth Street is getting really, well, fucked up, for lack of a better description on a Saturday morning.

According to published reports, the officer, Nicholas Mina, is addicted to prescription painkillers. He reportedly stole the weapons to pay a drug debt to a Queens drug and gun dealer, prosecutors said yesterday.

Police also arrested Ivan Chavez, described by Assistant District Attorney Chris Prevost as "a prolific and daily drug dealer" of heroin, oxycodone and other prescription drugs, as the Post reported.

That's one part of the story. Also involved in all this is Jennifer Sultan, who along with her boyfriend Adam Cohen, sold their Web streaming-media company Live On Line for a reported $70 million in 2000.

The couple is now penniless, living in a 10-room penthouse with a private elevator on East 17th Street. They have filed for Chapter 11, per the Post.

However, the NYPD also arrested Sultan for, as prosecutors said, pulling "large-scale drug deals" with Chavez in Queens. From the Post: "Prosecutors said cops found at least 60,000 pain pills that Sultan had sold in Chavez's Woodhaven apartment when they raided it on Thursday."

You can read the rest of the Post article here ... and the piece from the Times is here.

Meanwhile, I'll await the piece in Vanity Fair this fall about how this $70 million Internet couple lost it all.

An article on the upcoming summer in the Hamptons from May 2000 in the Observer noted that Cohen and Sultan rented a $400,000 house in Quogue with 11 bedrooms. They also had a pool installed for $35,000. Said the broker about the couple: "There are people who just don't know what to do with [their money]."

A warning

Noted


Matt LES_Miserable spotted this along Tompkins Square Park near St. Mark's Place this morning... No word on any free samples.

The Dark Knight Razzes


East Houston near Chrystie.

Noted

Last Saturday!


Today!


Fourth Avenue at East 10th Street.

How you can mend a broken heart


Dave on 7th spotted this on Second Street and Avenue B...