Thursday, August 15, 2024

Former research scientist tells all in solo comedy show at Under St Marks Theater

Another day, another former reproductive health research scientist turned comedian taking the stage. 

Sarah Adelman is a native New Yorker who started her professional career working in a lab (a sperm bank, to be specific) before moving full-time into stand-up comedy.

With a background in science, Adelman has taken the analytical mind of a researcher and combined it with sharp wit in her solo show, "EGG," which plays for a three-night run (Aug. 22-24) at Under St Marks Theater, 94 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue.

"EGG" is about Adelman's path to becoming a researcher, the hijinks involved with running clinical trials, and the intersection between science and art. You can find ticket info here, including details on a sliding admission-price scale.

In this Q&A with EVG, she discusses the transition from the lab to the stage and the role of humor in science. 

Growing up, were you a class-clown type or more of a laid-back observer with a knack for a well-placed zinger? Or maybe none of the above! 

None of the above. I was an enormous goody-two-shoes growing up. I was the kind of kid who attended my own parent-teacher conferences instead of taking the day off because I wanted to hear the compliments, which, in retrospect, was psychotic. 

I liked to invent my own holidays and would call my classmates on their landlines and ask them to dress up for me, which they usually did not. But I would be funny in my own way — aka in a controlled setting, like at a talent show — and I wish I'd seen as a kid that being funny and easygoing and getting good grades were not mutually exclusive! 

So, how did you first come to use humor to enhance your work as a research scientist? 

Humor is the easiest way to get people to like you, and I figured that out at a young age. 

When I was working as a research scientist at a sperm bank, I felt like a lot of the participants felt extremely awkward about having to interact with me before and after, which is very fair. Humor was the easiest way to make them feel at ease and make my own job easier. I found that it also helped me connect with coworkers and supervisors and get people to help me out like it would in any job! 

As an undergrad and grad student, I also had many times when I had to recruit people to a study or try to speak with people for interviews for reports, and humor was always the fastest way to earn trust. Scientists aren't really known for their humor, so it was relatively easy to become the "funny" one at the lab. I actually wrote a little article about this topic here

Was there a specific moment or situation where you realized humor could play a role in your scientific work? 

I remember during one of my first clinical visits with a sperm bank participant, he was concerned that the female scientists were going to use his sperm to bear his offspring without his knowledge. Usually, I'd give a long speech about medical ethics and why that would be illegal, but this tended to confuse everyone more. One day, I just said, "Don't flatter yourself," and I got a huge laugh, and the matter was settled. So I gave myself to try jokes from there on out. 

Were you concerned that using humor in that role could diminish your credibility as a researcher? 

I think there's always the concern that anything lighthearted could take away from the seriousness of a topic. But just like in stand-up, it's all about knowing your audience. 

For example, when publishing in peer-reviewed journals or giving a presentation to the head of a lab department, I kept everything super professional. But if I got to speak in front of just my coworkers or was interviewed for a non-academic publication, I let myself loosen up. It's the same with comedy — I take an audit of the crowd when I first get on stage; are they young? Old? Locals? Tourists? Parents? And then I try to tailor the material to what I think they'll like, and I'm always ready with other jokes in case what I'm giving them isn't landing. So, I think it's just about knowing your audience! 

Was there a particular event or realization that made you make the leap into comedy full-time? 

Let's just say it wasn't totally my choice, and you'll have to come to "EGG" to see why I'm not a scientist anymore. 

But generally speaking, I just felt like all my life, I secretly wanted to be a comedian. I remember so clearly in high school, someone asking me what I wanted to do after graduation, and I said, "Well, if I could be ANYTHING, I'd be a comedian, but I'm going to college to become a medical researcher." It felt so natural to say that, like, Yes, duh, I want to be a comedian, but I assumed that it would be a thing I always yearned for from a distance, like the way people dream about going to outer space. 

It wasn't until I got older that I realized 1) not everyone secretly wishes they were a stand-up comedian; in fact, that sounds like a nightmare to most people, and 2) you can break into it just like you can at any job, I just didn't know how. 

So once I did my first open mic, when I'd already finished my masters and was starting at my lab, I was like, WHOA, I didn't know life could feel like that. It felt like all my nerve endings were exposed for the first time. And then I just became totally addicted, and I've been doing comedy every single day since then. It's all I think about. 

As I got deeper and deeper into the comedy scene in NYC, the more I felt like that was the "true" me and that the Sarah at work was a muted version. It feels so amazing to just be fully myself all the time now. 

Stand-up also gave me a chance to really stand on my own two legs, not hide behind a fancy university or hospital, but just be rawly myself, share my thoughts with the world, and make people laugh. 

I'll never get sick of that feeling. I feel like I'm now squeezing every drop out of life. This isn't to say that I don't love/miss science; that's why I'm so happy I have this show! "EGG" allows me to combine my love of writing and performance with scientific exploration. 

Despite filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the local Blink Fitness outposts will remain open

After filing for bankruptcy on Monday, Blink Fitness said it may close an unspecified number of its 101 clubs. 

However, according to a report in Our Town, the 11 NYC locations, including on Avenue A between Sixth Street and Seventh Street and the NoHo outpost on Lafayette and Fourth Street, will remain open.

Equinox Group, Blink's parent company, is not filing for bankruptcy protection, per published reports.

Reported ABC 7
Around 25% of US gyms and studios permanently closed during the COVID-19 pandemic — roughly 10,000 facilities, according to the Health & Fitness Association, an industry trade group. Several major chains, including 24 Hour Fitness and Gold's Gym, filed for bankruptcy. 

Blink's bankruptcy shows the lingering impact of the pandemic on the fitness industry. During the height of the pandemic in 2020, Blink temporarily closed all of its clubs, leaving it without revenue to fund operations. Blink said in its bankruptcy filing that it is still financially constrained by rent payments it had put off and was still trying to catch up on from the pandemic. 
The 98 Avenue A Blink location opened in October 2017 in the retail space of Ben Shaoul's luxury condoplex

Before the demolition, the vast retail space was East Village Farms. That building opened as the Avenue A Theatre in 1926. RKO operated it, followed by Loew's, and it closed in 1959. 

Building the ramp to the new Delancey Street pedestrian bridge

EVG regular William Klater shared this photo from yesterday morning, which shows the ramp to the new Delancey Street pedestrian bridge under construction.

Crews installed the new bridge, one of the new access points for East River Park, overnight on June 8. (The previous bridge was removed in early 2022.) 

According to a City Department of Design and Construction spokesperson, the 215-foot-long bridge weighs 125 tons (much larger than the previous one) and is fully ADA-accessible. 

There's a partial-lane closure this week on the FDR from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. while work continues. It is expected to be ready for pedestrians early next month. 

Here's a video from June showing workers assembling the new bridge...

  

The "phased work operations" in East River Park began in November 2021 in Project Area 1 between Montgomery Street and 15th Street. As part of the billion-dollar-plus East Side Coastal Resiliency project, workers have been burying the 57.5-acre park under fill and cutting down many trees. They are elevating the land 8 to 10 feet above sea level to protect the area from future storm surges. 

The city has said it will maintain public access to at least 42% of the park throughout construction, which is expected to be completed by the end of 2026. 

You can find the latest updates and notifications at this link.

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Report of a DOA in Tompkins Square Park this afternoon

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Police and EMTs responded to a report of a body found outside the porta-potties in Tompkins Square Park this afternoon just after 3. (The temporary toilets are positioned on the walkway between the main lawn and Sandra Turner Garden.)

Sources on the scene say this is a suspected OD, though there wasn't any official confirmation. 

The deceased is a 35-year-old male, police said. His name has not been released pending family notification.

A look at the ongoing renovations at First Houses

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

We've fielded several queries about the extensive renovations at the city-owned First Houses on Avenue A between Second Street and Third Street, both in the residences and above the strip of retail spaces.
For starters, a little history of the eight four-story and five-story buildings with the residential entrances on the south side of Third Street between Avenue A and First Avenue. First Houses was the first publicly funded low-income housing project in the U.S., opening in December 1935 under the auspices of the just-created New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). 

First Houses was originally planned to house 120 to 122 families, and all apartments had steam heat, hot water and were equipped with the modern amenities typically found in middle-class housing. Within two months of opening a rental office for the project, the Housing Authority received between 3,000 and 4,000 applications. Prospective tenants were carefully selected by a team of social workers, with preference given to the inhabitants of the worst slums and relatively small families. All but one of the families chosen were residents of the Lower East Side. 

First Houses became a NYC Landmark in 1974. 
In recent decades, the buildings have shown their age, revealing ongoing bureaucracy issues plaguing the NYCHA.

In 2011, City Limits documented many of the residents' issues here. There were stories of mice eating their way through the worn floorboards and a resident battling the NYCHA for 15 years over a persistent leak. 

Fast forward to the start of the renovations last year. According to an architect working on the $24.8-million roofing replacement and exterior restoration:
[The] project is for restorative work throughout all of the facades of buildings within the complex, including rebuilding brick parapets in kind, repointing masonry and replacing brickwork, precast coping stones and metal lintels. 

Entrance porticos will be temporarily removed to allow for the replacement or restoration of green-painted cast iron columns and railings. Work on porticos includes the replacement of portico copper roofs, copper cornices, new concrete entrance stairs, landings, and footings, and replacement of nearby concrete or asphalt pavers pathways. Roofs of all buildings will be replaced with new liquid-applied roofing membrane over new insulation. 
In addition, the construction site manager told us: "We are replacing the roof and doing masonry restoration. We've also started on the interior work, which includes drywalling and lead and asbestos removal." 

Here's a look around the complex earlier this summer...
As you may have noticed, many tenants have moved out, including the local folk hero known as The Chillmaster, known for blasting classic R&B from his open window (year-round).

Local Assemblymember Harvey Epstein told us that tenants were temporarily relocated to other complexes, including the Jacob Riis Houses and the Wald Houses, and some public housing further away from the Lower East Side. 

Epstein said that all tenants can return to the First Houses upon completion of the work, set for 2025, per the posted signage.

A Bronx Brewery cheer for miniatures artist Danny Cortes on 2nd Avenue

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 
Top pic: Bronx Brewery Creative Direct Jose Ruiz and Danny Cortes 

This past Saturday evening, the Bronx Brewery celebrated a collab release with artist Danny Cortes at its East Village outpost, 64 Second Ave., between Third Street and Fourth Street. 

Cortes is a Mexican-style lager brewed with Texas blue corn. (Hop heads can find a complete description of the beer here.) The release is part of the Brewery's Y-Series.

The can includes an image of one of his iconic hyper-realistic miniatures — the NYC ice merchandiser.
The Bronx Brewery also has a new display of Cortes' miniatures (we've featured them here and here and here) ...
"The East Village has been a significant part of my life and artistic journey," the NYC native told us. "The East Village feels like a second home to me. I've been coming here since I was 9 years old with my cousin and friends from my block, crossing the Williamsburg Bridge to visit places like the Boys Club and Pitt and Houston [Hamilton Fish Park]. The East Village has resonated with my art from the beginning." 

On Saturday night, Cortes was joined by Neyda, his life partner, and many friends...

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Tuesday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg
Along St. Mark's Place today...

3 new loos for you in Tompkins Square Park

Photos by Steven 

Today saw the changing of the porta-potties in Tompkins Square Park. (Look for the pay-per-view special coming soon.)

And to be clear, the new arrivals aren't necessarily new, like factory fresh, more like cleaner (cleanish?) than the previous triplex that served with honor this summer...
Top photo: It's important to pause for a moment and strengthen your resolve before entering.
As previously reported, the restrooms in the Tompkins Square Park field house are now closed as part of an 18-month renovation. The Parks Department website lists the construction as 72% complete with a September 2024 completion date.

EVG Etc.: Blink Fitness files for bankruptcy; cops find cocaine at smoke shop

The return of "Law & Order SVU" to the EV tomorrow, Aug. 14 

• Blink Fitness, Equinox-owned gym chain with an outpost on Avenue A, files for bankruptcy (CBS News ... CNN

• The East Village is now the nexus of a $10 takeout pasta trend (Eater

• Tompkins Square Park red-tailed hawk class of 2024 ready to venture out (Laura Goggin Photography

• Ticket to ride, white line highway: Law enforcement discovers 13 pounds of cocaine at Clinton Street smoke shop (PIX11)

• The sometimes watchable "Blank Generation" with Richard Hell gets a rare screening (Metrograph

• Locking up items to deter shoplifting is pushing shoppers online (Axios

• ICYMI: Pier 35 to be home to the East River floating pool (6sqft

• Did you lose something in a public place in NYC? How to maybe get it back. (The City

• After 57 years, AM fave WCBS-880 will shift from an all-news format to sports (amNY

•  The New York Times will no longer offer endorsements of local NYC candidates, including governor (Media Nation)

• NYC travel and tourism are back, report shows (McKinsey & Company

'Make Me Famous' receives an encore presentation at the Village East by Angelika

You have five more opportunities to see "Make Me Famous" in the neighborhood where the well-regarded documentary is set. 

The film about 1980s-era East Village-based painter Edward Brezinski will be playing these five dates at Village East by Angelika on Second Avenue at 12th Street: 

• Aug. 16, 7 p.m. Post-screening guests: artist James Romberger and director Brian Vincent 
• Aug. 17, 7 p.m. No post-screening guests 
• Aug. 18, 4 p.m. Post-screening guests: photographer Allen Frame and Vincent 
• Aug. 19, 7 p.m. Post-screening guests: writer, muse Claudia Summers and Vincent 
• Aug. 21, 7 p.m. Post-screening guests: archival cinematographer Jim C. and Vincent 

Find ticket info here

The encore comes after a successful three-night run (July 27, 31 and Aug. 1) at the Village East. The documentary, featuring some never-before-seen 1980s footage of the East Village, explores Brezinski's colorful career and mysterious disappearance.

   

On Saturday, EVG's Stacie Joy spotted Vincent and producer Heather Spore handing out business cards in Tompkins Square Park for "Make Me Famous" ...
Previously on EV Grieve

'Street Leather,' the rat zine of your dreams, is now available

Photo and reporting by Stacie Joy 

The rat pack came together this past Friday night to toast the first issue of "Street Leather," a zine dedicated to stories of NYC's most beloved and hated rodents.

As we first reported back in March, two local residents — anonymous at the time — were collecting submissions for this project, an assortment of memorable encounters with rats in NYC. 

During Thursday night's unveiling at the Francis Kite Club on Avenue C, the creators revealed themselves as two journalists with a shared interest in the subject matter — Jake Offenhartz and Olivia Bensimon.

The evening was suitably strange for a launch party for a rat zine. Claudi of Pinc Louds performed a rat song and a spoken-word poem while there were readings by contributors, such as Harry Siegel. Meanwhile, guests enjoyed a drink special called the Ratini. 

Volume 1, illustrated by Sabrina Bezerra, is filled with stories, poems, photos, and other oddities about rats, dead and alive, and dedicated to "all the rats who died, often violently and in occasionally interesting positions." (We especially like the story about the Top View Hop-On-Hop-Off Double Decker tour bus.) 

The zine is available in Brooklyn at Quimby's Bookstore and Spoonbills Books. Closer to home, free copies are available at Bluestockings, 116 Suffolk St., between Rivington and Delancey on the LES. (The editors are working on getting the zine in more places.) 

Meanwhile, you can submit your rodent-related comics, poems, true stories, and songs to newyorkrathole (newyorkrathole@gmail.com) for possible publication in volume 2. 

You can also follow @streetleathernyc on Instagram for updates. 

Previously on EV Grieve

'The Big Gay Jamboree' announces itself on the classic Orpheum marquee on 2nd Avenue

"The Big Gay Jamboree," described as "a new comedy trapped inside of a musical," is up next at the classic Orpheum Theatre on Second Avenue. 

And yesterday, the marquee signage arrived here between Seventh Street and St. Mark's Place.
Derek Berg caught the changing of the show signs in action...
As we previously noted, previews start on Sept. 14 ... with a run through Jan. 19. Ticket info here

Meanwhile, workers left signage for the last production, Eddie Izzard's "Hamlet," lying on the sidewalk... and now likely part of a traveler's encampment down the block.
And another angle via Derek...
With "Stomp" playing at the Orpheum for 29 years, we didn't get many chances to announce the changing of the marquee signage.

Monday, August 12, 2024

Waiting on the Hard Quartet video on St. Mark's Place and 1st Avenue

The Hard Quartet, a new supergroup with local ties, was spotted a few weeks back shooting a video outside 98 St. Mark's Place and around the corner at the International Bar on First Avenue near Sixth Street, per these photos shared by an EVG reader. 

Group members Emmett Kelly, Stephen Malkmus, Matt Sweeney and Jim White are apparently paying homage to the 1981 Rolling Stones video "Waiting on a Friend." The classic clip saw Mick Jagger and Keith Richards (and friends!) on the stoop next door at 96 St. Mark's Place. (Yes, the building at No. 96-98 is also famous for this.)
After meeting on the stoop, Messrs. Jagger and Richards head to the corner of St. Mark's Place and First to meet the rest of the Stones inside the old St. Mark's Bar & Grill (now the Lions Bar & Grill). 

It looks as if Malkmus and Sweeney are taking a similar, though not exact, path...
The International Bar also has a starring role. (In the Stones video, Richards is seen walking by the iBar when it was on St. Mark's Place).
 

No word on what Hard Quartet song this video might for... you can check out their first video here

The Hard Quartet play Webster Hall on Oct. 17. 

Demolition watch: 50-64 Third Ave.

TLK by Tigerlily Kitchen shut down after service last night at 58 Third Ave. "due to the pending demolition."

The restaurant was the last tenant (retail or residential) in the six buildings at 50-64 along Third Avenue between 10th Street and 11th Street.
As PincusCo. first reported in May 2023, Kinsmen Property Group — a joint venture between State Building Group and another Toronto company, Madison Group — bought the walk-up buildings over several years, paying more than $60 million for the parcel. 

We saw some demolition prep work late last year (64 Third Ave., where the Ainsworth was, looks hollowed out), though the work has tapered off this year. 

Last August, according to Straus News, which publishes several local weekly newspapers and associated websites, including Our Town — Eastsider, a spokesperson for the DOB said "that outstanding objections" have interrupted the developer's plans. 

While various demolition permits are on file with the Department of Buildings, there is still no sign of paperwork for the new development. 

A rendering of the new building appeared on the State Building Group's website last September. It is listed under the company's "residential" portfolio. 

At first glance, the building looks more commercial/office. Here's the information included with the listing: 
50-64 3rd Avenue is a 6-building assemblage located at the nexus of the East Village, Greenwich Village and Astor Place. The site allows for 160,000 sq. ft. of new construction and has a land area of 16,500 sq. ft.
Only one building will remain on the block after the demolition—48 Third Ave., the four-story property owned by Isfahany Realty Corp. on the northwest corner of 10th Street, which has Healthy Greens Gourmet in the retail space.
Meanwhile, Kinsmen Property Group owns a stalled development on the west side of the Bowery between Delancey and Kenmare.
New building permits dating to 2022 are on file for a 72,441-square-foot mixed-use commercial building via Real Estate Equities Corporation (REEC) at 156-166 Bowery. 

However, this project will likely remain stalled after the death of REEC's Brandon Miller. Here's a rendering of the new Bowery building via Perkins&Will Architects ...

More unlicensed weed shops shuttered, and one return

With photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Law enforcement continues to crack down on unlicensed cannabis shops throughout NYC.

The most recent victims in the East Village include Smoke House at 44 Avenue A at Third Street. (Tough few weeks for them — they were also burglarized on July 29.)
The Villager Smoke Shop at 445 E. Ninth St. at Avenue A was also busted (next two photos via Steven)...
And there have been others, as local City Councilmember Carlina Rivera noted in an X post this past Thursday... Still, despite the efforts of local law enforcement (under the New York City Sheriff's Joint Compliance Task Force), the fines, the restraining orders, etc., some places find a way to return. 

For instance, the Grab & Go Convenience at 23 Avenue B, which was shut down in May, returned as Camino.
Apparently they won their court case, bringing them back from the dead. This is the first time that we've seen a smoke shop come back from a sealed, multiagency court order. 

So: Open smoke shop. Bust. Reopen. Bust again. And again. Court-order seal. Slap a new business name on the space and reopen. Rinse. Repeat.

Reader report: the sloppy Joe from the Slopey Joe truck on 14th Street

If you want to relive a favorite middle/high school lunch, we have a food truck for you. 

An EVG reader reviewed a favorite item from the Slopey Joe's truck stationed this summer on 14th Street just east of Avenue A. 

"I love a good sloppy Joe sandwich — it was my favorite school lunch meal. But you rarely see them on menus," said Julie Manis, who shared the above photo. "And this is far and away the best I've ever had. Sauce with just a slight kick. A slice of melty cheese. Kind of a barbecue flavor. They make other things, too, but why have anything else when you can get a sloppy Joe?" 

Slopey Joe also offers several burgers, chicken sandwiches and hot dogs. (There are vegetarian options too.) You can find a menu here. And you can follow them on Instagram.