Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Why there were 20 women having fake orgasms at Katz's



For comedy, of course ... via Improv Everywhere:

For our latest mission we recreated the famous fake orgasm scene from When Harry Met Sally with 20 women in Katz’s Deli. This was staged without the knowledge of the restaurant, though thankfully they all seemed to love it.

This project is part of our new series, Movies in Real Life. Every Tuesday, we’re releasing a new video that brings an iconic movie moment to life in the real world.

As you may recall, the so-called "prank collective" had some 100 people camp out in front of the 99-cent store on First Avenue next to the Rite Aid last Black Friday. Hijinks ensued, sort of.

H/T Gothamist

Typhoon Haiyan fundraiser tonight at Ugly Kitchen



In addition to the Typhoon Haiyan fundraiser tonight at Jeepney, there's a relief event at Ugly Kitchen at 103 First Ave from 5-11.

According to the Facebook event page, all profits from the bar-restaurant tonight will go to The Philippine Red Cross. There will also be Red Cross donation boxes in the restaurant, according to the organizers.

Mid-afternoon red-tailed hawk break



In Tompkins Square Park, where some pigeons got a good fright. Photo by EVG regular peter radley.

Typhoon Haiyan donations drive tonight at Jeepney on First Avenue



From the EVG inbox...

Join us tonight for our Typhoon Donations Drive w/ Jose Antonio Vargas, 6-9p! Sponsored by Tiger Beer, we'll be donating all beer sales to The Philippine Red Cross. Please come out and support the relief effort with canned food and monetary donations. Help heal our Philippine nation.

Jeepney, a self-described Filipino Gastropub, is at 201 First Ave. near East 12th Street.

A quick look at the first snowfall (well, sort of) of the season



Thanks to @TravisHuggett for this photo on East 14th Street near Avenue C... and how much longer before the 12 Days of Con Ed?

A bad sign at the Yippie Museum



A "for rent" sign now hangs above the 40-year-old home of the Yippie Museum at 9 Bleecker St. near the Bowery.

Tough times here of late at the headquarters of the counterculture group … Back on June 10, Colin Moynihan at The New York Times reported that Yippie leaders have been locked in an ongoing legal battle … fighting an attempt by a lender to foreclose on their home.

In addition, the Harmony Kitchen, the food vendor at the Yippie Museum Cafe, closed at the end of June. The space was closed during July for a "re-calculating" … eventually reopening at the end of the month.

This past Friday, the Yippie Museum Facebook page offered up the latest on the legal wrangling here:

The October court action fended off a summary eviction of Dana and Co. and Atty Noah Potter has arranged a court date for January where he will present documents in his possession that will help save #9. If justice may be had in today's courts...

Yippie leader and activist Dana Beal is currently serving a four-to-six year prison sentence after being caught hauling 150 pounds of pot in a van in Ashland, Neb., in 2009.

Back to Facebook:

Even a win there won't fully save #9, though. What is really needed is more people to come to #9 for meetings and events to raise funds and consciousness. This space is NOT a relic of the past but a living historical site for today's activist generation. USE IT OR LOSE IT has never had a better object lesson than at #9!!

For now, events continue to take place in the space…



Meanwhile, the building is on the market. According to the Corcoran listing:

Exceptional opportunity to rent an entire building in prime Greenwich Village / NoHo. The bottom two floors feature bars that are built out already. But these could also work well for retail. And the top two floors can be used for either residential or office space. Each of the 4 floors is approximately 1600 square feet.

This is truly an unbeatable Greenwich Village / NoHo location, on a block with high and brilliant visibility for business. Original details still in tact - including exposed brick, and a cast iron honey comb curved skylight which graces the ground floor, with 13' 6" ceilings. Old world charm ready for a new world establishment

Asking price: $25,000

As the Yippie Museum Facebook page says: "time to save the yippie museum from the crapitalist wrecking ball..don't let 9 bleecker street turn into a gentrified yuppie boutique."

H/T @JonSpiegler

Previously on EV Grieve:
The Yippie Museum Cafe is in financial trouble

The Yippie Museum Cafe will reopen next Wednesday

With move to East 7th Street, Oaxaca Taqueria closes Extra Place location



With the new location at 125 E. Seventh St., Oaxaca Taqueria has closed its Extra Place location, as this photo via EVG reader xomars shows.

So until Momofuko Ko opens in its new home, Extra Place is currently restaurant free…

And the East Seventh Street space between Avenue A and First Avenue was previously home to the Butter Lane cupcakes classroom.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Oaxaca Taqueria opening a new location on East Seventh Street

Looking again at St. Mark's and 2nd Ave., and more photos of the former St. Marks Cinema



8-Bit and Up, the retro video shop, recently moved away from the second floor of 37 St. Mark's Place at Second Avenue. (Read about the new 8-Bit space on East Third Street here.)

This prime corner space is now mostly without tenants… (save for the newish Verizon Wireless store).



The building won't be empty too much longer. As we first noted back on Oct. 17, a retail outpost of DF Mavens ("The finest dairy-free ice cream in the world. Made in NYC.") is taking the former Eastside Bakery (.net?) location. Winick has the listing with the available retail slots here.

Anyway! All this is all just an excuse to trot out these new-to-us photos of the corner … when it was home to a single-screen movie theater… eventually called the St. Marks Cinema … a movie theatre was in operation here roughly from 1916 to 1985, according to Cinema Treasures...



… this shot is dated 1936 ...



We've written about the theater before here. Maybe you drank beer here and got high once. And there was that time you may have seen "Return of the Jedi" here in 1983.

People still missing the Mars Bar



Recently spotted on the former site of the bar… in a building now known as Jupiter 21. The space will soon yield a 4,300-square-foot TBD Bank branch.

Cafe Rakka's (Rakka Cafe's) new look



Cafe Rakka at 81 St. Mark's Place has been closed these past six or so weeks while undergoing a renovation... their new signage is up... and it shows a name switcheroo — from Cafe Rakka to Rakka Cafe...



Paperwork on file at the CB3 website points to a corporate name change, though there's not much else info... The Avenue B location remains open...

Report: The making of Empire Biscuit; plus, people drop biscuits on the floor but eat them anyway



The New York Post features Empire Biscuit co-founders Jonathan Price and Yonadav Tsuna in the paper's @work section this week ... in a piece titled "Birth of an Empire (Biscuit)."

The piece offers some background on the two, who opened the storefront on Avenue A on Oct. 30:

For the fledgling team taking their first foray into restaurant ownership, a single-product restaurant made sense. Price — who cut his teeth at the famous Magnolia Grill in Durham, N.C. — and Tsuna, a Memphis, Tenn., native, both knew the magic of the Southern biscuit and how well it would resonate with New York City’s consumers.

And what else was needed to launch the business?

So the pair surrounded themselves with a team of advisers to make up for the skills they lacked, including design and real estate. To raise funds, Price and Tsuna created a crowd funded Kickstarter campaign page with a video of the enigmatic pair describing the concept.

“Making the video required us to think really hard about articulating our core values — creating high quality food and being part of this great neighborhood,” Tsuna notes.

And?

To build buzz, Price and Tsuna hosted tastings out of Price’s apartment.

Once they secured their storefront, “People around us would come in to chat. We would spend hours everyday chatting with people. We love Avenue A because it’s so neighborly,” says Tsuna, who recently moved into an apartment down the block from the shop.

The piece also touches upon EB's apparent popularity, noting the need for a "biscuit bouncer" to help manage the lines waiting for their product, which people apparently really like.

After dropping a tiny piece of biscuit, Max Hatfield-Biondo, 28, an engineer from Soho, took a moment to think before declaring, “I’m going to eat that off the floor.”

Eating off the floor is apparently a trend. As noted earlier in the aticle:

At the front wooden counter, a lanky 20-something in a baseball cap is apologizing to his less-than-pleased girlfriend for dropping her biscuit on the floor. She pouts, taking the slightly bruised biscuit from his hands — and eats it anyway.

Meanwhile, via the EB Instagram account, an update on their hours ...



Monday, November 11, 2013

Shooting 'My Dead Boyfriend' on East 9th Street



Interior filming for "My Dead Boyfriend" returned to East Ninth Street today… crews were here just east of First Avenue for two days last week as well…



The film, based on the novel "Dogrun," stars Heather Graham and is set in the East Village in 1999. Actor Anthony Edwards is making his feature-film directorial review.

Previous filming locations in the neighborhood included Tompkins Square Park and C-Squat.

Photos by Bobby Williams

Local blogger probably looking forward to posting photos of snow flurries in the morning



Anyway, I'm already in line for supplies at Trader Joe's! Woot!

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition


[Window shopping at Mast along Ave. A via Fenton Lawless]

The best places to get tacos in the East Village (Eater)

Man dies after shooting at the Smith Houses (The Daily News)

About the new Saturday flea market at East Side Community High School (DNAinfo)

About 'The Pop-Up Activist of the Lower East Side' (The New York Times)

They'll be more L trains some day (New York Post)

Former 'Eastern Dispensary' building back on the market on Essex Street (BoweryBoogie)

Renovations in store for the Pink Building on Grand and Orchard (The Lo-Down)

About the Tom's Restaurant documentary (Jeremiah's Vanishing New York)

...and now on the wall on East Houston and Avenue B...


[Via VH McKenzie]

Continuum Coffee has closed... for now



Flyers went up around the neighborhood last Tuesday asking for support for Continuum Cycles and Continuum Coffee on Avenue B... There was talk of a fundraiser Saturday, though that didn't happen. Per the Save Continuum page on Facebook Saturday:

Hi everyone. I wanted to say thank you for all of the support you have given us in the past few days. I regret to inform you that the coffee shop was shut down yesterday, by the fuckin' man. Needless to say there won't be an event tonight. I'm sorry for the last minute cancellation. We did all we could.

Continuum Cycles next door will close in the days ahead as well.

In a tweet from Friday, owner Jeff Underwood wrote:

I am sad to say that today was our last day; I am going to regroup over the winter and reopen at a new location. Continuum, a bicycle shop will also be closing shortly. I will stil take on some clients and work on their bikes. Continuum Cycles is still happening. Our team is growing strong. If you want a frame, they are still available. Aluminum frames are limited but we are fully stocked with our Italian hand built steel frames. A new site is in the works so you can purchase them online.

Continuum Coffee had the misfortune of opening a few weeks before Hurricane Sandy. They were never able to recover, especially in the following weeks without Internet or phone service. It was a cool spot, and we liked what they were doing there. Hopefully they can find a new home in the neighborhood.

Previously on EV Grieve:
Out and About in the East Village with Jeff Underwood

Fair Folks & a Goat opening East Village location



The owners of Fair Folks & a Goat announced on Facebook Friday that they will open a cafe-boutique-gallery on East 11th Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue.

The space is owned by the husband-wife team of Aurora and Anthony Mazzei. Here's a description of their concept via the FF&G website:

Fair Folks & a Goat is a creative company, specializing in filling spaces with stories through design, art, hospitality, and event programming.

They also have a cafe-boutique space on West Houston, which opened last fall.


[Via the FF&G website]

Per the Times on the opening:

A visitor surveyed the Houston Street space with an eye toward consumption: the Haynes mirror with brass wall mounts ($2,800) by the Brooklyn-based Egg Collective, a groovy set of white-ceramic speakers ($450) by Joey Roth, a carved blue bowling pin ($110) by Jason Boone.

For $25 a month, members get unlimited coffee and espresso, and discounts on the art and design, which will rotate every month or so. But you don’t have to be a member to buy what they sell.

Love, Veselka Style


[Via Craigslist]

A Missed Connection posted yesterday on Craigslist:

Veselka Romance - w4m - 23 (East Village)

One week ago I was sitting outside of Veselka, reading "The Bell Jar" by Sylvia Plath.
(My favorite book)
I saw you from the table nearest to 2nd ave, on the side of the restaurant.
You had the most beautiful brown eyes I have ever seen.
Tall, thin, with a beard. We made eye contact for about fifteen seconds, and then you walked away, down 9th street.
I would love to meet you.
You are exactly my type.
You probably live in Williamsburg, and shop at local farmer's markets.
I would love to buy some vegetables with you.
I like to make omelettes with fresh asparagus and swiss cheese,
I could make you one.
I hope you don't have a girlfriend.

Why illustrations help Urban Etiquette Signs



Spotted on East Fifth Street.

Tree spared from death by cement on Avenue C


[Via EVG reader Ann]

Last week, we noted that someone filled up the above tree well with about 500 pounds of cement on Avenue C… as an update, by this past weekend, the cement was gone…



Now can the tree survive the Sunburnt Cow's all-you-can-drink brunch crowd?

New York City's 1st holistic vapor lounge opens in the East Village



At least according to the press release that landed in our inbox!

Here it is:

New York City's first holistic vapor lounge is opening in the East Village — Vape Lounge NYC, in the cellar of Barbiere at 246 East 5th Street. Unlike other so-called vapor lounges that sell artificial e-cigarettes, Vape Lounge NYC uses only natural herbs, each selection designed to give the customer varied, distinct and often medicinal experiences.

Currently, patrons can choose from three different herbs to vape — Chamomile, to aid in the relief of stress, digestive disorders, headaches, anxiety, and depression; Damiana, an aphrodisiac and excellent remedy for the nervous system, acting as a stimulant and tonic in cases of mild depression; and Green Tea, for headaches, digestion, immune enhancement, to detoxify, energize, and to prolong life.

Single and blended herb teas by the cup and pot are available, as well. All brews are caffeine free and certified kosher.

The brain child of Kimberly DeAzevedo (a trained herbalist) and Al Bonsignore, Vape Lounge NYC is designed to be an oasis away from the city, an indulgence meant to enhance quality of life, instead of being a vice. The space itself was hand mosaic-ed by DeAzevedo and Bonsignore, with themes like the secret garden and the dawn of time running throughout.

Prices to vaporize are $10/person in the "plenty lounge" or $12/person at the Volcano Bar. Teas run $4 single herb or $6 blended per cup, $10 or $12 per pot.

Vape Lounge NYC - located at 246 E 5th st. (Btwn 2nd ave and Cooper), NY, NY 10003 - is open Mon-Sat from 2pm-8pm.

Volcano Bar!