Tuesday, August 14, 2012

St. Mark's Bookshop hits crowdfunding goal with several days to spare


Following up on our earlier post today ... from the EV Grieve inbox...

ST. MARK’S BOOKSHOP RAISES $23,000 (AND COUNTING) ON LUCKY ANT

Two weeks ago Lucky Ant set out to help embattled St. Mark’s Bookshop finally make a real push towards financial sustainability. The goal was to raise at least $23,000 to help toward the cost of moving to a smaller store and develop the online presence needed to compete.

What happened?
With a few days to spare, St. Mark’s Bookshop surpassed their fundraising goal. They currently stand at $24,560 from 405 customers. The most popular pledge was the $100 and most of the support came locally (76% from New York). We did see support from all over the world including pledges from Japan, Australia, France and 7 other countries.

What’s next?
The bookshop raised the minimum they need to get the ball rolling on their transformation. The full cost of the move could cost up to $100,000 and we are keeping the pledging open until the deadline this Friday night at 11:59. We hope to continue to see pledges coming in and to raise the maximum we can.

What this means:
The rewards were structured so that pledgers were not only pledging their financial support today, but will receive discounts for the year to come and we hope that this will encourage a surge in sales for the bookshop.

In the grander scheme of things this is the first time the community has put their money where their mouths are. After pledging to support the bookshop, through Lucky Ant, the community has proven that it will not stand idly and watch neighborhood institutions fail. This is a victory for bookshops, but also for small business everywhere.

The calm before the swim


At the Dry Dock Playground on East 10th Street and Avenue D just now... the pool is open 11 a.m. through 7 p.m. (through Labor Day), with a daily break for cleaning between 3-4 p.m.

Photo by Shawn Chittle.

Report: Dog shot by NYPD in 'stable condition'

There has been some speculation about the condition of the pit bull mix that the NYPD shot yesterday afternoon on East 14th Street and Second Avenue. Early media reports said that the dog was dead ... the Daily News later reported that the dog, Star, was alive and in an East Harlem animal shelter.

Serena Soloman at DNAinfo got confirmation this afternoon that the dog is alive. Per her story:

"The dog is being provided medical care by Animal Care & Control of NYC and is in a stable condition at this time," said Richard Gentles, a press representative for ACC, which contracts with the city to rescue and care for homeless and abandoned pets.

No word just yet on the condition of the dog's unnamed owner, who reportedly was homeless and suffered from epilepsy.

Meanwhile, Gothamist hears from an NYPD spokesperson who confirmed that officers discharged pepper spray on the dog before shooting it. Per Gothamist:

"Pepper spray in no way would ever be effective in subduing a dog," says Doug Halsey, the director of Ready For Rescue, a non-profit animal rescue group. "I only see this as heightening the animal's aggression. This was an ignorant and irresponsible approach on these officers' part."

Witnesses have said that the dog was protecting his owner, who may have been unconscious at the time of the police response.

Previously.

[Image by @robbyohara]

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning edition


Looking at the ruins of 185-191 Bowery (BoweryBoogie)

A brownstone is neutered on East 12th Street (Off the Grid)

An update on the new Museum of Reclaimed Urban Space (MoRUS) (The Villager)

Take a subway ride from Union Square to Coney Island in 1987 (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

More about the Ruff Club (for dogs) opening at 34 Avenue A (DNAinfo)

More on the 7-Eleven drama at Seward Park (The Lo-Down)

New Yorkers becoming heavier (Gothamist)

Fantastic photo of Debbie Harry in front of CBGB (Flaming Pablum)

Noted: Bourgeois Pig now selling wine spritzers on tap (Grub Street)

Maserati owner leaves car idling, unattended in Times Square. Guess what happens next? (Runnin' Scared)

WPIX was the lone media outlet outside 116 Avenue C this morning... where a woman was violently robbed last Saturday... here is the WPIX report.

[Photo by Matt LES_Miserable]

And this morning, Chico started work on a new mural in the backyard space at Tompkins Square Bagels on Avenue A at East 10th Street...

[Photo by Shawn Chittle]

[Updated] Reader report: Fares Deli reopening on Avenue A

Last month, the State seized Fares Deli on Avenue A near St. Mark's Place for "non payment of taxes."


This morning, EVG reader mdmn walked by and spotted workers restocking and repacking the shelves. A man who seemed to be in charge Longtime owner-operator Tony (Abdul), pictured here with his back to the camera, said that the store was reopening...

Wall Street Journal investigates St. Mark's Place Supreme Slice 'experiment;' wither $1 pizza?

The Wall Street Journal today looks at the new $1.50 SUPREME Slice that 2 Bros. Plus is selling at 36 St. Mark's Place ... a few storefronts away from where they sell the $1 slice...

To the article!

According to Eli Halali, who owns the 2 Bros. Pizza chain with his brother, the 50% price hike is an experiment to gauge customer reaction to a larger and higher-quality slice.

And!

If successful, Mr. Halali said the chain would consider adding the Supreme Slice at some of its other locations, in addition to keeping the $1 slice. He stressed that the $1 slice was in no way in jeopardy.

And!

The Supreme Slice is cut from a 22-inch pie, versus the normal 18 inches. The sauce is different, made with plum Italian tomatoes; and the baking process is longer and more involved, said Mr. Halali.

And how does that Supreme Slice taste compared with the non-supreme slice? Said one customer, No difference. "I don't expect great taste for $1 and I don't expect better taste for $1.50."

Previously on EV Grieve:
Slice shockers: 2 Bros. blows up the $1 pizza model

Reader report: Animal Crackers has closed

A reader walked by the family-run pet store on Second Street between First Avenue and Avenue A and was surprised to find it empty this morning ... the reader recalls seeing it open as recently as last week... (In February 2011, the NYPD closed the store for receiving stolen property.)

Any patrons of the store know what happened ...?

By my count, this makes the fourth pet store to close in the East Village in the past year or so...

Brick Lane Curry House still planning Second Avenue expansion

Back in April 2011, Steve Cuozzo at the Post reported that reps for Brick Lane Curry House had signed a lease for a 7,000-square-feet, three-level outpost on Second Avenue in the East Village...

Turned out that the space was for 99 Second Ave., most recently home to Sea Salt, the upscale fish eatery that closed in early 2008 after a seven-month stint...

[2011]

Anyway, we bring this up because... have you seen the shape of No. 99 these days...? Been awfully quiet there... and collecting an array of tags, flyers and what not...


However, Vivek at Brick Lane told us that they will be moving here... they're currently focusing on the new location on Third Avenue and East 93rd Street... which is expected to open in three weeks...

"Once that is done, we will focus on 99 Second Ave."

10 reasons to help St Mark's Bookshop survive

Writer-small press blogger Karen Lillis (featured here on EVG in 2009) offers 10 reasons why people should consider supporting the St Mark's Bookshop fundraiser ... as the store asks for help moving to a less-expensive space in the neighborhood.

The store's fundraising campaign at Lucky Ant wraps up this week ... and they are roughly $2,500 short of their $23,000 goal as of this morning.

A brief excerpt...

2. St. Mark's Bookshop is not just a place that sells (and curates) culture and history. St. Mark's Bookshop IS living history.

As a bookstore, St. Mark's holds an institutional memory of major moments in alternative publishing history. The owners (and some longtime employees) both worked at 8th Street Books, which was the New York bookstore the Beats frequented and the New York bookstore that embraced the "paperback revolution." Both owners worked also at East Side Books, an East Village bookstore which was known as a place to find underground comics, mimeographed novels, and local political pamphlets — at a time when these were a major currency of the cultural revolutions and the avant garde. St. Mark's opened in the late '70s, making a place for artistic expressions to live and breathe alongside new areas of inquiry we take for granted today, such as sections with labels like "Vietnam Studies" or "Lesbian and Gay Studies."

You can find the post by Lillis, a former St Mark's Bookshop employee,  here.

118-120 E. Fourth St. now (slightly) less expensive to buy

Back in May, a pair of tenements at 118-120 E. Fourth St. owned/managed by Magnum Management, in partnership with Meadow Partners, hit the market for $25 million.

Today, the buildings will cost you a little less ... as the listing at Massey Knakal shows a $1.5 million price drop....


According to public records, 118 East 4th LLC bought 118 E. Fourth St. in November 2010 for $4.025 million; 120-122 East 4th, LLC bought 120-122 E. Fourth St. on the same date for $7,475 million... good for $11.5 million total.

Ducks Eatery now open in former Resto Leon space on East 12th Street

You may have noticed the renovation going on at the former Resto Leon space on East 12th Street just west of First Avenue...


UrbanDaddy previewed the new restaurant taking over the location, a BBQ place called Ducks Eatery... which has expanded from its origins as the Ping pong club SPiN's in-house eatery on East 23rd Street.

Menu items include apricot-glazed brisket that has been slow-cooked for 15 hours... beef jerky cured in squid ink ... and trail mix with bacon and Cocoa Krispies. After previews the last few nights, UrbanDaddy says that the place opens tonight.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Report: NYPD looking for this suspect who robbed and punched a woman on Avenue C


The NYPD released this video showing a man they say robbed and punched a woman Saturday night. According to NBC 4, the man followed the 28-year-old woman into 116 Avenue C. He grabbed her while she walked up the stairs. He allegedly threw the woman down, punched her and left with her purse.

Info: Call Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPs.

Last look at 'Boardwalk Empire' on East Fourth Street today

Let's end the day with a few more photos from the "Boardwalk Empire" shoot on East Fourth Street today... the lot adjacent to to the Cornelia Connelly Center was remade to be the "Carmine Street Garage."


Sonia Akhtar, who took the above photos, said on Facebook that the crew had been working on this set for about a week...

And here are shots of some cast members via Bobby Williams...





...and East Village photographer Gudrun Georges captured the spirit of the set in black and white...



Find more of her photos here.

At the end of the day, the Models Ts were returned to Ventnor Avenue...




[Updated] Report: NYPD shoots dog on 14th Street and Second Avenue

[Eddie Huang]

All sorts of reports coming in. Per NBC:

Officers were responding to a call to check on a man who appeared to be passed out on a sidewalk at 14th Street and 2nd Avenue Monday afternoon, police said. A dog near the man, who was possibly homeless, began attacking the officers.

That's when police opened fire on the dog, killing it.

[Via @robbyohara]

[Via @robbyohara]

Gothamist has more here ... including a statement by the NYPD ...

An NYPD spokesman confirmed that officers shot and killed a dog at the location at approximately 4:25 p.m. The spokesman could not comment on why officers opened fire.
An East Village resident who witnessed the shooting says that the four officers who responded to the scene in front of the KFC at first were "not aggressive" towards the man or the dog. "The dog was barking very loudly, as though it were protecting its turf," the witness said

And here's a report via the Observer... they interview Eddie Huang, the chef-owner of nearby Baohaus...

Everyone around was like: Put the dog out of its misery. The cops left this dog wiggling and flaying, blood coming out of its mouth. They shot it in front of a public bus.

You can see in the photo, the trail of blood. The dog traveled. People were really really vocal, harassing the cops to put the dog down, and they wouldn’t do it. The whole thing just seemed really, really unnecessary. I don’t know what the protocol is for this, I know they have to keep the peace, but it really seemed like an abuse of power, an unnecessary one, and not doing it the right way.

According to NY1, authorities said the dog "snapped at a pedestrian and an officer."

"He was protecting the owner, like what animals do. He doesn't know any better, he's a dog," said one witness. "They could have handled it differently, rather than shooting the dog. The dog was twitching and rolling around."

"I talked to the cop afterwards. He was very shaken up. He's a dog lover and it ruined his week if not his year," said another witness. "And he did what he had to do to protect himself."

DNAinfo reported that the dog belong to a 29-year-old man from Poland... and that he "epilepsy, and had frequent seizures."

UPDATED 10:11 p.m.
The early reports said that the police killed the dog. Not so. According to the Daily News: "Police said the dog survived and was being cared for at an East Harlem shelter. The unidentified homeless man and the shooting officer were taken to Bellevue Hospital for minor injuries."

And here's a photo from the News ...


The Post notes that the dog's name is Star.

Reader report: Police tackle bicycle-riding suspect on Second Avenue

From a reader:

Yesterday around 3:30, on 2nd Ave between 2nd & 3rd, a police car & unmarked both went the wrong way up 2nd ... A police officer made a long horizontal dive to knock a young man off his bike. He got up & tried again to ride but a detective knocked him down. [The cyclist] was quickly handcuffed ... a total of EIGHT police cars pulled up, lights flashing. They pushed him into one car, & I believe took the bike in another car. Any idea what that was all about? Anyone else see this?

The reader didn't have a camera... so no photos...

Breaking: fake laundry hanging on actual tenements; plus, old cars on East 4th Street

And the props are arriving this afternoon for the "Boardwalk Empire" shoot here along East Fourth Street between Avenue A and Avenue B... EVG reader David sends along the latest from the block...





May need to do a little FX to blot out those ACs...

Boardwalk Empire's beachy looking set off East Fourth Street

Several readers have pointed out that "Boardwalk Empire" will be filming around parts of the neighborhood today...


Always an interesting production to watch ... with the old-timey cars and sets and mobsters ...

EVG reader David sent along these photos from this morning on East Fourth Street between Avenue A and B... where crews are creating some kind of beachy-looking set in the lot adjacent to to the Cornelia Connelly Center ...



David and I are agreement that this is for a scene in which Nucky starts betting on beach volleyball games.

[Updated] And how was your commute? Confusion on First Avenue as Select Bus service moves to different stop

Readers and patrons of the M15 Select Bus service on First Avenue are noting a lot of confusion this morning... on Saturday, the MTA removed the M15 Select Bus ticket machines from the stop at First Avenue between Second and Third streets ...


...and moved them to First Avenue at First Street... where the new bus bulb thingy is...

[A more tranquil yesterday]

All fine. Except that the MTA apparently didn't tell anyone that this was happening.

Per a reader, waiting for a bus:

"People who usually catch the select bus on 3rd and first are all confused this morning. machines are gone other commuters informed us they were moved here to first and first. lots of people dressed for work and running down first ave."

Welcome to the newly placed machines...


Any other Select Bus stories to share today? (Or any other day...)

Updated 9:27 a.m. — @Newyorkist said that the M15 drivers had continually announced the coming changes ...

Previously on EV Grieve:
On First Avenue, the machines are taking over!

Juice Press opening another East Village location

Earlier this year, the American Copy Center changed names and moved down the block here on East 10th Street... opening up this prime space adjacent to Nicoletta's to-go operation ...


... and the work permit in the window reveals the new tenant... "Juice Press Store"...

[Photo by Blue Glass]

The Juice Press has proven to be quite popular since opening on East First Street in April 2010... the raw juice/raw food retail spot has expanded to include several locations, including on East 10th Street near Avenue A... as well as one on Mott between Houston and Prince...

Expect a jokey coming soon sign here one of these days, such as a Robot Daycare/Missing Sock/Mime Academy ... as we've seen at the other under-renovation Juice Press locations...

Previously on EV Grieve:
Another day, another wacky new store sign on First Street

Someone is selling this supply cabinet at the former Cabrini Center

Spotted over at the former Cabrini Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation on Avenue B and East Fifth Street ... where renovations are under way to convert the building into residential use...



Workers have been clearing out the building... perhaps instead of trashing the items, someone thought he or she could make a few dollars... curious who is selling this behind the fence... no one was around to ask at the time... the plastic storage bins on top of the supply cabinet are also for sale for $5.