Monday, November 12, 2018
Jump drama on 9th Street
There was a large police presence late this afternoon on Ninth Street/Stuyvesant Street and Third Avenue... EVG reader DPinEV shared these top two photos...
The unofficial word here was that a young man was threatening to jump out the window (hence the inflatable) ... there was talk that the man claimed to have been assaulted, but then he refused to come out when the NYPD arrived.
And here are a few shots via EVG regular Lola Sáenz showing how the NYPD responded and created a perimeter...
DPinEV reports that the young man was eventually led out in handcuffs.
Ray gets to see Ray's Candy Store on 'Parts Unknown'
CNN aired the series finale of Anthony Bourdain's "Parts Unknown" last night, as you might know. The episode, which arrived five months after the TV host and writer's death, was set in the East Village and Lower East Side. "This is a show about a very special place, a special time, and some very special people," Bourdain announced in the intro, the only voice-over during the 75-minute show.
Ray's Candy Store on Avenue A was among the stops (this listicle has all the places he visited) that Bourdain made with a variety of artists, musicians and filmmakers.
Ray was working and didn't get to watch any of the episode. However, afterwards, he was able to see his appearance — in which he serves Bourdain and Harley Flanagan egg creams — courtesy of Eden's smartphone. (EVG contributor Stacie Joy was among the people who stopped by Ray's last night.)
Meanwhile, over at Eater, Greg Morabito complied his best moments-quotes from the episode, including:
Bourdain asking Jim Jarmusch and Amos Poe about the neighborhood: “What do you think now when you walk around the neighborhood? You paid some dues to walk down back in the day, now it’s projectile vomiting frat boys with their baseball caps on backwards. Does this give you a sinking feeling or make you angry?”
Jarmusch, responding: “The thing that I always tell myself is: Look at the history of New York City, and it’s always about hustling and change. And if you want it to stay the same, man, you’ve got the wrong historical spot, because there used to be a Native American trading post on the tip of Manhattan. It’s now Wall Street.”
False alarms: A moment of panic yesterday afternoon on 3rd Avenue
Fireworks? Gunfire? Anybody know what that was in the #eastvillage NYC a minute ago?— Tom Cunniff (@tomcunniff) November 11, 2018
An EVG reader writes in about an incident that occurred yesterday afternoon on Third Avenue shortly before 4.
The reader was on the northwest corner at Ninth Street "when we heard a series of pops, that sounded like gunshots, from a block or two south. We couldn’t see down that way, because of the angle, and because there’s scaffolding up there. People started running north, trying to scatter."
Several people, including the reader, took refuge in a nearby shop, where the employee locked the front door. After a few minutes: "We peeked out, and everything was back to normal, almost immediately. People were walking, and it was like nothing ever happened. After a couple of minutes, we came out. There were a couple of cop cars around, a block or two south, but clearly it hadn’t been a shooting."
The Citizen app had the following sequence...
People who experienced this are curious to learn more about what happened. Was it a bunch of dumb kids with some fireworks? Part of some kind of student art show? Disgruntled Jets fans? Or did someone have a more malicious intent?
Per the reader: "The rapidity of it – the moments of panic, followed by the swift return ... to normalcy, as if nothing had transpired – was surreal, out of a Wallace Shawn play."
That 40s show: Get lost in the NYC Municipal Archives's online collection
The New York City Municipal Archives delivered an early holiday gift this month after putting their 1940s tax photo collection online. (Previously these were only available to view in person via microfilm.)
You can browse for yourself — there are 720,000 digitized photos! — at this link. High-resolution versions of these tax photos — print or digital — are available to purchase online.
Anyway, I spent
Here we go (in no particular order):
The Con Ed power plant on 14th Street and Avenue C...
The Church of the Immaculate Conception on 14th Street at First Avenue...
The Tompkins Square Library branch on 10th Street between Avenue A and Avenue B...
McSorley's on Seventh Street...
East Houston looking southwest at Norfolk and Essex (P.S. 20 the Anna Silver School is on that corner now)...
Astor Place (where Starbucks is now in the retail space)...
Looking toward Stuyvesant Street and 10th Street from Second Avenue...
The southwest corner of Seventh Street and Avenue B... (where 7B/the Horseshoe Bar/Vazac's is)...
The Christodora House on Avenue B at Ninth Street...
St. Brigid's on Avenue B at Eighth Street...
66 Avenue A between Fourth Street and Fifth Street (where Ink on A, Alphabets, Mast, Lancelotti Housewares, etc., are today) ...
313-315 Bowery (315 would become CBGB ... then John Varvatos ... the Palace Hotel was around until 1993, when the Bowery Residents Coalition signed a lease for the upstairs space)...
224-226 Avenue B between 13th Street and 14th Street (Mona's is in one of those spaces now)...
125 E. Seventh St. at Avenue A (currently Miss Lily's 7A Cafe in the retail space)...
106 Avenue C at Seventh Street...
28-30 Second Ave. at Second Street (now the Anthology Film Archives and Manhattan Mini-Storage)...
... and one spot that's not entirely recognizable today — 25 Cooper Square (now the Standard East Village)
MTA Chairman Joe Lhota resigns; Twitter responds
Here's some more reaction to the resignation via the Twittersphere...
Joe Lhota resigned from the MTA to spend more time with his signal problems
— andy (@andipalmur) November 9, 2018
After 18 months on the job, Joe Lhota resigns.
— Louis Ortiz (@LouisOrtiz92) November 9, 2018
And after 18 months, the NYC Subway system is still in crisis. https://t.co/HSv4aomoFC
But now who is going to not run the MTA?! https://t.co/oFla8gc6TK
— Next AG Ryan Hassett (@ryan_hassett) November 9, 2018
I want to thank MTA chairman Joe Lhota. Without his tenure I would never have adopted the habit of biking to work. #FixTheSubway https://t.co/w46Euv8AEZ
— 🌹 No Friend of Kissinger Scott Wooledge (@Clarknt67) November 9, 2018
Congrats to Joe Lhota and Cuomo on stabilizing the subway. The L train I took during this AM rush hour was extremely stable, in fact it stayed at Lorimer for 15 minutes in a dramatic showing of stability. https://t.co/RK6BpCuPbv
— Tommy Kahn (@tommykahn) November 9, 2018
Joe Lhota has resigned from the job he claimed he did not have, in order to spend more time with his other full time jobs. #cuomosmta
— David L. Bragdon (@DLBragdon) November 9, 2018
Joe Lhota resigned as chair of the MTA today. Could scenes like this be the reason why? (Courtesy of this morning’s F train) 👇 pic.twitter.com/YOw4KoMXAX
— Chris F. (@fnytv) November 9, 2018
Sunday, November 11, 2018
As long as you love me
Here's the clip, via Instagram...
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Jordan Haskins (@jordanphaskins) on
Week in Grieview
[The Jimi Hendrix experience on Avenue A]
Stories posted on EVG this past week included...
1st signs for the future tech hub arrive on 14th Street; more details emerge about 14th @ Irving (Monday)
A visit to Eat’s Khao Man Gai on 6th Street (Friday)
The Tompkins Square Park holiday tree lighting is Dec. 9 (Thursday)
Vacant lot at 14 2nd Ave. sells for $7 million; will yield to 10-floor condoplex (Thursday)
The Mars Bar lives! (in a penthouse suite in Times Square) (Wednesday)
This week's NY See panel (Friday)
Police looking for suspect in slashing outside Karma on 1st Avenue (Wednesday)
1st signs of the 14th Street SBS lane (Monday)
[A post-election scene on Avenue C]
Election results: All 3 NYC ballot measures approved (Wednesday)
At the You Can't Fire the Truth rally in support of protecting the Mueller investigation (Friday)
Remembering Todd Youth (Thursday)
peter radley's "Summer Hibernation" (Saturday)
Atino Eyewear Optical closing at the end of the month on 7th Street (Thursday)
New signage and a Michelin star for Tuome on 5th Street (Wednesday)
Pawsitive news: School for the Dogs relocates to larger space on 7th Street (Monday)
The return of 'The Village,' and the loss of a tree (Friday)
Setting up for the Union Square Holiday Market (Tuesday)
Pressure washing around the fountain (Thursday)
A new broker for 503 E. Sixth St. (Wednesday)
Uluh Tea House debuts on 2nd Avenue (Monday)
Report: New owner for 531-533 E. 12th St., the onetime home of the East 12th Party Crew (Tuesday)
Dunkin' done on 1st Avenue at 13th Street (Monday)
... and for this Veterans Day... members of the Air Force Honor Guard on Second Avenue and Seventh Street via Derek Berg...
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These laundry baskets outside the Marble Cemetery have dead chickens in them
An EVG reader shared this rather grisly discovery this morning from outside the New York City Marble Cemetery on Second Street between First Avenue and Second Avenue... inside the baskets are at least two dead chickens as well as an assortment of candy and broken dishes.
One resident on the scene said that this was likely a Santeria ritual, conducted by someone of the Santeria faith, with each chicken representing a curse on someone. (If any occult experts want to chime in...)
The reader who shared the photos said that the NYPD was notified of this discovery.
The 'Parts Unknown' series finale, featuring the East Village and Lower East Side, airs tonight
[Photo of Kembra Pfahler and Anthony Bourdain via Instagram]
As you might know, CNN is airing the series finale of "Parts Unknown" tonight at 9.
The episode, which arrives five months (and three days) after host Anthony Bourdain's death, is set in the East Village and Lower East Side ... and features Harley Flanagan, Lydia Lunch, Richard Hell, Fab Five Freddy, Amos Poe, Jim Jarmusch, Debbie Harry and Chris Stein, and John Lurie, among many others.
Along the way, Bourdain, a former LES resident, visits old haunts including Ray’s Candy Store, Veselka, John’s of 12th Street, Max Fish (where they're screening the episode tonight) and Emilio’s Ballato.
Here's a mini trailer...
Some of the biggest names in music, film & art came out of one New York neighborhood. Tony returns to the Lower East Side on the final episode of #PartsUnknown, Sunday at 9p ET on @CNN pic.twitter.com/Ea7FHaOU62
— CNN Original Series (@CNNOriginals) November 8, 2018
And for more on what to expect, here's a preview via Eater:
In the episode, a recurring question Bourdain has for his interview subjects regards the romanticization of a time and a place that, in many ways, was dangerous and bad. Was it all really better then than it is now, with clean streets, Target stores, Whole Foods supermarkets, and fancy restaurants filling the blocks? For Flanagan, it was a “horror story,” but he misses it. Lydia Lunch, who fronted bands and starred in independent films, doesn’t look back with nostalgia and instead lives in the present: “I still have shit to do,” she tells Bourdain over a white-tablecloth meal.
And via Rosie Spinks at Quartzy:
Of course, like the prior episodes in this final season — which, with the exception of the season premiere in Kenya, are devoid of Bourdain’s narration, which he he had not finished at the time of his death — the episode feels haunted by its star’s absence. The voice that told you what was what, who was who, and why you should care is replaced by frenetically-styled transitions, and on-screen text introducing the next interviewee or luminary. The absence of Bourdain’s voice as an anchor feels like a loss throughout, and the disorientation it brings feels like delayed reaction to his death — a reminder that the world we live in is one that Bourdain chose to leave.
In a review of the episode, Verne Gay at the Chicago Tribune sums it up this way: "In one final whoosh, Bourdain is framed in an episode of pure, unadulterated post-punk joy."
Michael Steed, the director, told Eater: "People are going to feel a lot from this particular episode. I just hope people feel something."
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CNN has released several interviews with people featured in the episode, including Lunch (access here) and Lurie (access here).
And if you feel like a post-show egg cream and conversation ... then you can head over to Ray's Candy Store...
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Ray's Candy Store (@rayscandystore) on
Saturday, November 10, 2018
Summer Hibernation
Make a lantern and join a parade tomorrow at the Green Oasis Community Garden
The Green Oasis Garden's annual Lantern Festival happens tomorrow (Sunday) from 1 to 4 p.m. A parade follows at 5 p.m. Per the invite: "S'mores & cider, fun for all ages, make a lantern and join the parade!"
The Green Oasis Community Garden is on Eighth Street between Avenue C and Avenue D.
The fall collection from Tompkins Square Park
From Tompkins Square Park this morning... peak colors with the changing of the leaves...
Also, those two bras and witch puppet are still hanging at the Avenue A/St. Mark's Place entrance...
Friday, November 9, 2018
Friday's parting shot
Grant Shaffer's NY See
Here's this week's NY See, East Village-based illustrator Grant Shaffer's comic series — an observational sketch diary of things that he sees and hears around the neighborhood and NYC...
The 'Hit' parade
After 30-plus years of work in bands like Pussy Galore, Boss Hog, the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and the Honeymoon Killers, Jon Spencer has released his first solo record, Spencer Sings the Hits!, which is out today on In the Red Records.
The video here is for "I Got the Hits."
At the You Can't Fire the Truth rally in support of protecting the Mueller investigation
Thousands of people converged on Times Square last evening at 5 in a rapid-response rally — one of many nationwide — following President Trump's firing of Jeff Sessions on Wednesday and appointment of loyalist Matt Whitaker as Acting Attorney General.
The demonstrators gathered and marched to show support for special counsel Robert Mueller's ongoing investigation into possible collusion between Trump's 2016 campaign and the Kremlin.
EVG contributor Dan Efram shared these photos...starting in Times Square ... and then from along Broadway as the peaceful protestors headed south to Union Square...
Dan's work can also be found at New York Indivisible on Facebook and Twitter.
XII
Another addition arrived over night at “The Gun Chronicles,” JR's mural featuring images of 245 Americans who represent various viewpoints on the gun debate.
On Oct. 28, someone added an 11 — for the victims in the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre — in red paint here on the Bowery mural wall.
And now an X was added to make the 11 a 12 — representing the number of people gunned down in Thousand Oaks, Calif., Wednesday night.
JR collaborated with Time magazine for this interactive special report on gun violence in America.
Thanks to EVG regular Lola Sáenz for the tip.
Previously on EV Grieve:
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