Saturday, June 25, 2022

NYC Protests the Overturning of Roe v. Wade


If you want to know more about the protection of reproductive freedom in NYC, go to this site run by the city. Not only is there lots of helpful information but it warns you about fake clinics.

As tragic as this evil decision by the Supreme Court is, I've never been more proud of this city and its people.

Thursday, June 23, 2022

25 NYC Novels in 100 Years

The New York Times has recently published a list of 25 novels set in NYC, published within the last 100 years, where the city is more than just a backdrop or even a "character" in the story -- it is the story, NYC is intertwined with the plot.

These are books that, simply put, couldn't have taken place anywhere else. 

Believe it or not, some big titles are missing -- no Gatsby, nothing by Edith Wharton. Sadly Slaves of New York was not included either but the author, Tama Janowitz (a previous Mr NYC interviewee) was mentioned (with a photo) since her 1980s Brat Pack colleagues Jay McInery's 1984 novel Bright Lights, Big City was included (my review of the movie version of it can be found here). 

This list is very interesting, and it includes commentary by the various critics who chose the titles. Lists like this are inherently flawed and infuriating, but at least they remind you that there are lots of good books about NYC that you should put on your shelf -- or load onto your Kindle. 

One big inclusion is Don DeLillo's 1997 masterpiece Underworld. That is a great NYC novel but so much more -- its an epic sweep of an Everyman living through the second half of the 20th century while history unfolds around him and occasionally touches him. For me, it's not just a novel, or a great novel, or a great NYC novel -- it's a state of mind, a raising of consciousness, a story that makes you look at the world and history differently. I'm glad to see it on this list but Underworld is sui generis, like all great work. The same way that NYC is a city bigger than its population and its borders, Underworld extends beyond the story on its pages.

Supreme Court to NYC: Drop Dead

Friday, June 17, 2022

Here's to Flatbush

The story of Flatbush is the story of Brooklyn and NYC as a whole -- how a Dutch village turned into a suburban oasis before transforming into an urban hub. 

Flatbush is a city within a city within a city -- and one of the most diverse neighborhoods in NYC.

In recent years, part of the it was renamed Little Caribbean, recognizing its history as a welcoming refuge for Caribbean immigrants. 

The latest episode of the Bowery Boys tells the story of Flatbush and its amazing history. It shows how Flatbush, like the city as a whole, is always changing while keeping its history never vanishes. 

2026 World Cup in NYC


 

Thursday, June 16, 2022

Classic Mr NYC

About a year-and-a-half ago I blogged about one of my favorite movies -- Jim Jarmusch's 1991 classic Night On Earth. Set in five taxicabs in five cities around the world on one night, it's a funny and heartwarming look at the interactions and fleeting relationships that cabbies and their passengers develop.

The movies takes place in Los Angeles, New York, Paris, Rome and Helsinki. The NYC story is about a guy trying to get from Manhattan back to Brooklyn and is picked up by a German immigrant -- who can barely drive. Along the way they find the guy's sister-in-law walking the streets, and craziness ensues. The German cabbie was played by the great Armin Mueller Stahl, and his passengers were the brilliant Giancarlo Esposito and Rosie Perez.

Recently Giancarlo and Rosie, who are both in big shows right now, gave a joint interview where they talk about the first movie they did together -- Spike Lee's 1989 classic Do The Right Thing -- and then Night on Earth. 

Nothing better than two great actors reminiscing about two great movies they made more than 30 years ago -- and showing that talent and superior work at truly timeless.

Friday, June 10, 2022

Classic Mr NYC

In the last few years, I interviewed two people who were players in the mid-1980s NYC adult film scene -- on-set photographer Barbara Nitke and Lynn Paula Russell who performed in several films as Paula Meadows.

Like many eras, that time and that business have become somewhat mythic, with shows like The Deuce enshrining it in the gleam of nostalgia -- while also being honest about its dark side.

Recently The Rialto Report republished issues of the Adult Video News magazine from 1987 -- and, if you look at the January 1987 issue (Warning: NSFW), you can see many pictures and reviews of some of the performers and movies that Barbara and Lynn spoke about in their Mr NYC interviews.

It also includes a big, gorgeous picture of Lynn (aka Paula Meadows) in the ad for a movie. (Look at pages 14-15 and 18-19 for these.)

It's one thing to read an interview about a particular time and place ("once upon a time"-like stories), and it's another literally to see it first hand with an original artifact, a primary document, of a world that no longer exists.

Thursday, June 9, 2022

Wednesday, June 8, 2022

NYC Scrapbooking

At the risk of being gauche, allow me to quote myself: a couple of years ago I described this blog as a "pastiche" or "a collage, a repository for memories, a collection of favorite things, a funhouse of nostalgia, a love letter to the past and future, a work of art, a self-contained world that invites you to visit a while and become absorbed in."

You might also call it a scrapbook.

In its way, Mr NYC is a digital scrapbook, roughly defined as a document of precious memories, a collection of souvenirs and mementos, and an opportunity to channel one's inner artist.

Scrapbooks need not be literal books full of pieces of paper and objects of one's past or journey thru life. They can be, more metaphorically speaking, things like diaries or autobiographies or videos -- or blogs like this one -- anything that captures and makes sense of the past and provides tea leaves for the future.

I recently encountered two examples of metaphorical scrapbooking, both of which fascinate me: a new exhibit about Lou Reed at the NYPL that is a collection of his papers, recordings, and various nickknacks, showing the work and evolution of this great and influential NYC musician; and a new novel by, of all people, the actor David Duchovny that is based on his memories of growing up in NYC.

This exhibit and this novel are, in a way, scrapbooks of these two very different NYC artists -- as is this humble blog.

When Anne Frank wrote her diary hiding out in that apartment in Amsterdam or when Marco Polo dictated his memories of China while literally imprisoned, these two people who would otherwise be lost to history instead were made immortal.  They told their stories, they recorded and "scrapbooked" their lives, and in doing so not only made us better understand their times and adventures (told both from the perspective of two people who were literally trapped) but made us understand that the world was a greater place, and the human spirit more indomitable, than we could ever imagine.

Scrapbooking is a great start.

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Moving to NYC Ain't for Sissies

Twice in my life I've moved to NYC -- first, when I exited my mother's womb, and, second, when I moved back from college (which I even blogged about).

So, really, I've never moved to NYC -- I sprouted out of here, then left at one point, then came back, and have stayed ever since. I've moved around NYC a couple times, but never to it. I'm a native, a product of it, a weed in the great field of the city (more on weed later).

But millions and millions of people over the centuries have moved here, sometimes from nearby places, sometimes from across the country, sometimes from the farthest reaches of the world. And yet wherever they come from, and whatever the reason they move here, it's a big change, an overwhelming experience.

As it's been said about getting old, moving to NYC ain't for sissies.

And the reasons, as mentioned, are various, and fascinating. The New York Times Magazine recently ran several stories about people moving to NYC for a variety of reasons, under a variety of circumstances. The stories are about:

- The dreamers, the people who move here to find great success but inevitably find living and achieving here harder than they could ever have imagined. If you can make here ... Heck, it's hard for us natives to succeed here but being an emigre to NYC makes it even tougher. It's a sobering experience, as this story tells us.  

- There are the people (including dreamers) who move here and find themselves living with people they could never possibly imagined even knowing, let alone co-habiting with. The desire to live here is so strong, and the availability of housing is so stressed, that people end up living in all sorts of strange circumstances, in ways they could never have thought before moving to NYC. 

- There are the people who moved here in 2020, at the height of the pandemic, for myriad wild reasons. Moving to NYC is tough at the best of times but moving to the epicenter of the deadliest pandemic in more than a century? That takes guts. That takes determination. And each story behind it is fascinating. 

 - Then there are the people moving here not because they want to but because they have been displaced from their homelands -- refugees, people feeling war and persecution. Ukraine and Afghanistan are the most recent, horrifying examples but over the centuries people have fled danger at home to find peace and prosperity in NYC. My daughter has a new girl in her class who just started school in April, whose family just got out of Ukraine. They may be safe and happy to be in NYC but no doubt miss leaving home under these extreme, tragic circumstances.

- And now, finally, to the weed: marijuana will be legal to sell soon in NYC and New York State, and people who have experience in the legal pot business elsewhere are moving here to get into the game. An influx of legal weed dealers -- not scuzzy guys in wife-beater T's selling dime bags in their gross basement apartments -- but smart businesspeople plying a legit and profitable trade in classy, hygienic stores are coming to town, soon to sell us a variety of Indica and Sativa in various forms. No doubt the competition will be fierce but those who succeed will really have "made it here", seeing their NYC dreams come true through ever inhalation we take.

Moving to NYC ain't for sissies -- but it's always interesting.

Monday, June 6, 2022

Review: The Who @ MSG

I'm a little tardy in writing this review (darn life gets in the way) but yours truly and the misses had the pleasure of going to see the great, legendary British band The Who at Madison Square Garden on May 26th.

In short -- it was a great show. Roger Daltrey and Peter Townsend are still incredible, even into their seventies. 

In my 'umble opinion, The Who is one of the greatest rock bands in history -- in HISTORY! I tells ya' -- in the Top 5 with The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, and Led Zeppelin -- and I don't know who's #4. The Who have so many hits, so many classic and brilliant songs, that it would probably take a full 48 hours to perform all of them.

But they performed a lot of them: "Pinball Wizard" from Tommy (which I saw on Broadway in 1995 so it was great to see the band do it live), "Eminence Front" (perhaps my favorite song of theirs), "Won't Get Fooled Again", and many others, including songs from Quadrophenia. They closed out the show with a rousing version of "Baby O'Reilly" that rocked the house, with a young violinist ending the show that felt, in some ways, like a passing of the torch from Daltrey and Townsend to the next generation.  

Obviously, in this show, they didn't perform all of their hits (no "Magic Bus" or "My Generation" or "Squeezebox") but we left MSG happy to have seen this amazing band. 

Besides the music, this was the most touching and emotional show I've ever seen.

Most rock stars tell the audience "Hey, great to see you, thanks for coming out," but Pete Townsend went much farther. He told us that he's 77 years old and, after COVID and health problems, he couldn't believe that after more than 50 years with this band that people still want to see him and Daltrey rock out -- especially when there's lord knows how many young artists and bands these days. He was truly grateful, and you could tell how much he and the band really truly loved just playing and singing their music, amazed that after so many decades, so many shows in so many cities, they still get to do this and that we, the public, still want them to do it. 

Great music, great enthusiasm, great artistry -- that never gets old, that is truly timeless.  

This city is too funny ...


Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Meet "Grand Central Madison": LIRR East Side Access Is Here!

You might not have realized it but quietly, diligently, for the last fifteen years, roughly the lifespan of this blog, tunnels have been dug under the East River and East Side of Manhattan. Also, a brand new train terminal has been built underneath Grand Central Central that, in December, will open and be known as Grand Central Madison.

Grand Central Madison (I assume it'll become known as GCM), will connect all 11 lines of the Long Island Railroad to Grand Central Station. This means that commuters from Queens, Brooklyn and Long Island who work or want to visit the East Side of Manhattan, now won't be forced to go to Penn Station on West 34th Street and then tack east. 

Instead ... they'll be right there, able to get out and walk to their desired location or hope on the 4/5/6 subway lines. 

This is, in a word, huuuugggeee -- this is the most massive transformation of NYC transportation in the last century. It's a bigger deal than any of the bridges that Robert Moses built because it will greatly reduce commuting times in and out of Manhattan and will, no doubt, transform the economy of the city. 

I can't wait to see it!