Saturday, June 25, 2011

Earlier today on Avenue A


Photo by Shawn Chittle.

Tomorrow in Tompkins Square Park: Puke Island 2011


Per The Shadow website:

Sunday, June 26: ICONICIDE PRESENTS: PUKE ISLAND 2011

As many of you know, the first Punk Island was complete and utter chaos, and 100% free expression. A badly organized bolt from the blue. Without going into detail, it's gotten way TOO organized for a lot of people.

COME ON DOWN to Tompkins Square Park on Sunday, June 26, from 2 pm - 6 pm (one week after Punk Island), and bask in what it used to be.

The schedule at this point is subject to change, and a couple bands need to be confirmed, but right now it looks like:

2PM - The Autistics
2:40 - The Straight Edge Huffers (featuring Johnny Waste)
3:20 - Sexual Suicide
4PM - Agitator
4:40 - Up Your Bucket (members of KILSLUG)
5:20 - Olde York

'Add this to the long list of vanishing New York institutions: Jeffrey’s Meat Market'

In case you missed this report from The Wall Street Journal late yesterday afternoon:

Add this to the long list of vanishing New York institutions: Jeffrey’s Meat Market.

When Jeffrey’s, believed by many to be Essex Street Market’s longest-tenured seller, vacated a couple of months ago, the owner and city officials hoped for its return.

But this week Jeffrey Ruhalter – the business’s charismatic fourth-generation owner – confirmed that he’s not coming back to the city-owned market on the Lower East Side.

“I’m leaving the Essex market,” said Ruhalter, 55 years old. “Right now, honestly I’m still numb from it. I started working there when I was six years old. We moved into Essex Street Market the day it opened and we’ve been there ever since. It’s hard to accept.”

The Lo-Down has more here.

This news prompted BoweryBoogie to ask a bold-faced question:

Seriously, what the fuck is happening to our neighborhood?

Let's try this again: 'Contempt' tonight in Tompkins Square Park


As Esquared alerted us ... someone official postponed last night's free screening of "Contempt" due to the threat of storms and what have you.

So!

The screening is on for tonight...

7:15 PM: Music by DJ Super Jaimie
8:30 PM: Film "Contempt"

Le Mépris | Contempt
By Jean-Luc Godard | 1963
With Brigitte Bardot, Michel Piccoli, Fritz Lang, Jack Palance
In French with English Subtitles
Rated PG | 103 min

Parisian screenwriter Paul Javal (Piccoli) and his wife Camilla (Bardot) join director Fritz Lang and American film producer Jeremy Prokosch (Palance) on the set of new film version of The Odyssey in Italy. Camille is not happy about this long journey away from home and among strangers...

[Image via Nonetheless]

East Fifth Street, 8:47 a.m., June 25

Avenue A and 11th Street, near midnight, June 24


[Photo by Shawn Chittle]

Friday, June 24, 2011

3 scenes from Tompkins Square Park today




Photos by Bobby Williams

Last Friday for the Mars Bar?


That seems to be the consensus, anyway, with an alleged June 30 closing date looming. But no one knows for sure.

Meanwhile, Goggla shares her feelings on all this here.

One too many



The Specials circa 1979...

The changing of the awning


St. Mark's Place and Third Avenue a little bit ago.

EV Grieve Etc.: Mourning Edition


In case you didn't see Jeremiah's posts this week on 7 1/2 Second Ave.:
The mystery of the S. Rosen graffiti
Inside the Wu Tang studio
A pre-demolition memorial

History of 143-145 Avenue D (Off the Grid)

The power of a dog in front of Ray's (Neither More Nor Less)

Alex keeps digging up some 80s-era NYC-based music videos. Remember Kix? (Flaming Pablum)

That damn giant white Timber Wolf of the Bowery wondered into a photo opp at the Bowery Hotel...

[Billy Leroy]

The 1870s version of Missed Connections ads (Ephemeral New York)

A rundown of all the NYC Pride weekend events (NYC Pride)

A call for safety improvements on Delancey Street (The Lo-Down)

More on a possible East Side pub crawl ban (DNAinfo)

(Sad) headline of the day: "Peep World to Become Douche Hang" (Grub Street)

About the LES Love Truck (BoweryBoogie)

A Care Bear on the subway (Runnin' Scared)

And now showing at Theater For The New City at 155 First Ave. — "Queer From Zero to One Hundred," an exhibit featuring the work of many Lower East Side residents...

[Work by Aaron J. Miller via According to G]

Tough economic times: Enduring a 'perfect storm' at the St. Mark's Bookshop

Jeremiah recently posted this rather ominous photo from outside the St. Mark's Bookshop...

[JVNY]

An article in The Villager this week confirms that the situation is bleak at the bookshop.

The latest local victim in an ongoing national trend afflicting independent booksellers, St. Mark’s Bookshop has considerably downsized its staff due to rising costs and declining sales.

The current economic downturn coupled with steep overhead costs and dwindling sales finally forced the management of St. Mark’s Bookshop, on Third Ave. near E. Ninth St., to lay off all of the shop’s part-time staff and to reduce the hours of full-timers. The downsizing occurred last October, but the business continues to struggle because of the ongoing economic stresses.

David Russo, a manager at the bookstore, said St. Mark’s is enduring a “perfect storm.”

According to Russo, St. Mark’s is in no danger of shuttering in the short term, but the store’s situation is still dire.

“I wouldn’t say it’s merely a little tight, but I wouldn’t say we’re planning on closing the store,” he said. “That’s not the plan right now, but that is a possibility, I would have to say.

With the addition of the fancy new 51 Astor Place tower across the street, things can only get worse. As the article points out, "the bookstore occupies valuable real estate and staff members said the landlords are unwilling to lower the rent for the space."

Mostly, when we deal with them, we’re told that they could get a lot more for the space,” Russo told the paper.

'Another example of New York City's impending Americanization' — Street signs

We had a pleasant email exchange with East Village resident and EV Grieve reader James C. Taylor the other day. He sent us the following photo, noting that he was veering slightly off of our usual beat.


As much as we think we pay attention to things, such as street signs, I didn't see what the big deal was. He wrote:

"I spotted another example of New York City's impending Americanization: my first sighting of the generic conformist street signs. They may not look like much, but I was still shocked by their ability to make a quiet corner of Greenwich Village look like... well, every other town in the US."

Huh, don't these look like the street signs from, say, this corner?


No!

The signs themselves are basically the same, he said. The difference lies in the type. (He's a graphic designer, so he's into the whole font thing.)

"Notice how 'Greene' and 'St' are lower case? The signs on 9th and B (and all the others, going back to the yellow and black signs) all used a condensed uppercase typeface. The change is part of a federal mandate for all street signs to use a lowercase font called Clearview. I remember reading about it a few months back but hadn't seen one of the new signs until [the other day]."

Anyway, somehow we missed this entertaining story from the Daily News last Oct. 1, in which Bloomberg was a dick when asked about the federal mandate to change the font and capitalization on 250,000 city street signs by 2018.

Said James: "I used to refer to events like these as the encroachment of 'America' upon New York City, but these days it seems like New York is just submitting willingly to whatever 'America' wants. C'mon New York, where's your fight?"

According to that Daily News article, there was one man ready to stand up for New York: Rep. Anthony Weiner. Per the article: "Weiner ... wasn't shy about saying where he stood on the matter. He's considering sending a letter to the feds 'but I'm trying to figure out whether to put STUPID in all caps so they'll understand it.'"

Discussion on 34 Avenue A to continue next Tuesday


We're catching up to Monday night's CB3/SLA meeting. We weren't able to attend. But. The big ticket item on the agenda was 34 Avenue A, a modified proposal for a restaurant-bar-performance space. The CB3/SLA committee rejected the plans from Phil Hartman and Todd Patrick back in March.

According to the Lo-Down, the discussion for 34 Avenue A lasted two hours and 15 minutes. After several attempts with various stipulations, the CB3/SLA committee was unable to reach a majority vote, so the item was booted over for the full Community Board to discuss on Tuesday night.

The Local East Village reports that 11 people spoke out in favor of the establishment (many of them musicians); while 16 people spoke in opposition.

CB3 District Manager Susan Stetzer, speaking she said as a private citizen, was against the proposed new venue. "What we're talking about is kind of community planning. This is 150 more people on the street at 4 a.m.," she was quoted as saying in the Local East Village. "We cannot accommodate that."

Here are a few details about the space: It's called the Piney Woods, featuring a kitchen serving "affordable" Southern cuisine ... and open for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Jeremy Spector, owner and chef of the Brindle Room on East 10th Street, will serve as the chef here.

The second-floor stage aims to showcase the kinds of bands you'd have seen at the original Knitting Factory on Houston as well as Tonic. During the day, the stage would be made available to local community groups to use for fundraisers, student productions, etc.

People we spoke with who attended the meeting — both for and against the proposed space — described the proceedings as "pissy" and "contentious." Oh, and "ludicrous." We're reluctant to recount what happened via the attendees, because the course of events varies a bit from person to person.

As the Local East Village reported: "Tensions ran high among the crowd gathered ... At one point, chatter from audience members prompted Alexandra Militano, committee chair, to scold the spectators for 'heckling' when opposing viewpoints were presented."

Here are a few other highlights, gleaned from the post that Devin Briski wrote for Eater:

• The committee said no to the sushi place hoping to open at the former Mondo Kim's/Cafe Hanover at 6 St. Mark's Place.
• No go either for the aspiring East Village Brewery & Beer Shop at 14 Avenue B. (They were the ones who borrowed the Prime Meats menu for display...)
• Frankies got the OK to expand its storefront at 17 Clinton St.
• Bistro Nomad at 78 Second Ave. was OK'd to expand its sidewalk presence and extend its hours.
• JujoMukti Tea Lounge at 211 E Fourth St. did get the OK for a beer and wine license in a resolution area ... per Eater, "a decision that was made in an attempt to save the healthy living center after enthusiastic patrons spoke out about the venue's uniquely diverse presence and focus on a nurturing lifestyle."
Cooper Craft and Kitchen ( a craft-beer-focused bar-restaurant) got OK'd for a full liquor license for the former Kurve/Rhong-Tiam space on Second Avenue at Fifth Street.

BoweryBoogie has a little more on other LES agenda items here.

As for Tuesday, the fun meeting starts at 6:30 p.m.
PS 20 - 166 Essex Street, (Between East Houston and Stanton Street)

Previously on EV Grieve:
Phil Hartman bringing a 'performance venue' back to former Mo Pitkin's space

[Updated] Bringing 'the tradition of the old Knitting Factory and Tonic' to 34 Avenue A

Because you want to know more about the plans for 34 Avenue A