Friday, March 31, 2023
Classic Mr NYC
It's hard to believe but it's already been two years since the COVID-19 vaccine began rolling out en masse. The world was still reeling although beginning, slowly but surely, to recover as millions of needles jabbed millions of arms.
This was before the dark anti-vax forces began to wield their disinformation weapons, aiming squarely at the ignorant.
No, in this period of time two years ago, brief though it was, most (sane) people were scrambling to get an appointment to get the vaccine. This included, here in NYC, a mass vaccination site at the Jacob Javits Convention Center in Manhattan.
Beth Fertig, then a reporter for WNYC radio, got her shot there and filed a radio story putting the vaccine and the vaccination effort into historical context, and what a great achievement it was. It was a simple but powerful story, and I blogged about it at the time -- and now, two years since the vaccination rollout and three years since the pandemic hit, it's amazing to see how right she was.
Wednesday, March 29, 2023
Zoning Wars
Last week I blogged about the idea, proposed by Mayor Adams and others, that vacant office buildings in NYC that have lost tenants due to the rise of pandemic-related work-from-home be turned into apartments.
The cost of housing in NYC is still far too high, and the biggest reason is that for all of our city's density, it's actually not dense enough. People might think NYC is a place full of tall buildings but most people don't live in them -- most people live in buildings less than 10 stories high or in single or two-family homes. NYC is highly "downzoned."
So the other part of addressing the housing crises is "up-zoning" -- allowing for higher density housing development (especially near transit hubs). Governor Hochul has a proposal, as do others in the state legislature, that would include the building of more multi-family homes, apartment buildings, capping/reducing lot sizes, and just generally allowing more homes to be built (up to 3% every three years). This means that the NYC suburbs (and areas outside the city) could be dramatically changed over time, making this urban oasis even more urban.
It's a political minefield.
The Not in My Backyard (NIMBY) folks believe up-zoning would reduce their property values, strain local services, schools, and transportation, and "change the character" of their neighborhoods (i.e. more non-white people). But the cost of housing in NYC is sky-high, it's out of control, and the city has built less housing in the last twenty years than Detroit (Detroit!). We've also built less than cities like Boston and Washington DC, other really expensive places.
In NYC, everyone agrees we need more housing -- just not in their neighborhoods.
I doubt Hochul's plan will come to pass -- her proposals are modest but her critics are violently against it. And it just goes to show how and why it's nearly impossible to create more housing in this town.
Friday, March 24, 2023
Thursday, March 23, 2023
Work@Home vs. Home@Work
The mayoralty of Eric Adams has been a rather odd affair so far. I won't go into all of it here but my main complaint is that Mr Adams seems to have no vision for, or direction that he wants to take, NYC.
But something that Adams talked about recently is intriguing and, if pursued seriously and smartly, could become a transformative policy, and an important legacy, of his time in office.
Long story short -- since the COVID-19 pandemic started three years ago, more people than ever are working from home. This has led to vast amounts of office space around the city laying empty, or mostly empty, at the very same time that the amount and cost of housing in NYC has reached crises levels. There are enormous skyscrapers and office buildings all over town that are basically shells while, at the same time, regular housing is scarcer than ever.
So the solution is obvious and simple -- convert a lot of that empty office space that will probably never be occupied by into apartments are, as Adams indicates, into SROs. Such a policy would be a game change and transform not only housing policy in NYC but the entire economy.
Such a policy would require huge changes in the zoning laws of the city -- simple solutions are very complex when actually implemented. But Adams should run with this, think it through, put together a comprehensive plan that consults with the governments of New York City, New York State, the Fed as well as labor union, business and real estate interests, and everyone who would stand to benefit for this.
Part of what makes this city great is how we constantly reimagine it, constantly change it, and repurpose something old into something new. Such a housing plan would be a huge and important part of this great legacy.
Monday, March 20, 2023
Friday, March 17, 2023
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
Little Island NYC
In May 2021, as NYC and the world were "opening up" from COVID-19, a new waterfront structure called Little Island opened up in the Hudson River Park.
Built over the old pilings of an old abandoned pier, and financed by the super power couple Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenburg, it's a very 21-century "repurposed" public square -- much like the Highline -- that takes something old and gross and turns it into something new and exciting.
You enter Little Island at the crosswalk on the West Side Highway and go up a hilly entrance that leads to several paths and staircases that provide lovely views of the Hudson River and downtown Manhattan. There's a little outdoor theater that, in the summer, hosts events for families or also a big open space with rolling spheres that kids can play in.
Little Island is a modest place, pleasant if not gorgeous, but it's a nice place to hang with friends and families if you're ever walking around the Meatpacking district and need to get some space.
Monday, March 13, 2023
Memo from NYC
If you were a teenager in the early 1990s like moi, you remember the 1992 "classic" movie Encino Man. It was one of those very stupid movies about stupid people doing stupid things that were popular at the time, and all of them seemed to end with lots of people dancing en masse.
Anyway, thirty-one years later, two of its stars have just won Oscars, so it's a good time to remember one of its other big stars, the brilliant comedian Pauly Shore.
Obviously, I'm joking; Pauly Shore's "comedy" was less than brilliant -- then or now -- but, in the early 1990s, Shore had a movie career and his brand of creepy weirdo humor had a moment -- although today it would get you "cancelled" much like Shore's movie career has been since roughly 1996.
And what would REALLY get you cancelled today is this interview Pauly Shore gave with a now-defunct movie magazine in 1994, at the height of his brief stardom. I found it courtesy of previous Mr NYC interviewee Lebeau's Le Blog -- and some of the stuff Shore says in this interview makes you wonder why every women alive isn't a radical militant feminist who wants to kill all men. After reading this interview I wanted to become such a person!
Here are some of Mr Shore's lovely gems about the fairer gender in this interview:
“Girls, basically, run this town because they have the pussy. Especially the hot chicks."
“Now, at a club or something, you’re just gonna meet girls that you fuck … You give them your number, they come over late, they blow you. You fuck them. Whatever. Girls are not gonna be attracted to me necessarily by my looks, but because I’m smart, nice, and sensitive to them. Ninety-nine percent of guys are assholes who treat women very mean.”
“Every girl that I have gone out with has come from a very similar background: all from shitty homes, who don’t know what they want out of life. I keep ’em up, take care of ’em. Kind of a father figure, but these girls are so fucked up. And then, I’m stuck with this baggage on my shoulders.”
“See, guys just like to fuck and get sucked off by hot chicks.”
I told my wife about this and she, quite rightly, said that it was a shtick that was popular at the time (she's the same age as me) but that obviously doesn't hold up today. But for some reason, seeing two of Pauly Shore's co-stars triumph on Oscar night, I couldn't help wondering about their other former co-star who will probably never win an Oscar and what they'd think about his "comedy."
Saturday, March 11, 2023
Interview: Claire Lower, Senior Food Editor @ Lifehacker & Host of the"You Like That?" Podcast on Good Food, Old Porn, and Portland vs. NYC
Friday, March 10, 2023
Thursday, March 9, 2023
Mr NYC in the Poconos
Recently the family and I took an overnight trip to a resort in the Poconos, the beautiful mountain range in Northern Pennsylvania overlooking the Delaware River.
Despite being only a two-hour drive from NYC, this was the first time yours truly ever ventured there. Like the Catskills or the Berkshires, the Poconos is a place where people like to ski in the winter and swim in the summers, getting a literal and figurative breath of fresh air from the stresses of city life.
Since we really aren't skiers, we spent almost all of our time there in a massive indoor water park with slides and running rivers and hot tubs that we really loved. Outdoors the views were beautiful (if not quite as stunning as the Sierra Nevada ranges) and the air was very frigid -- you never realize how high up you are until that cold mountain air hits you in the face. The thing about the Poconos is that its heyday is long past -- before frequent air travel and rising incomes, families from NYC and Philly would go to places like this for vacations. It was a booming time of big resorts, vaudeville shows, and whole transient communities. Nowadays, that's a thing of the past, most of the resorts are gone or abandoned -- but the skiing and rivers still attract some tourists.
We had a few interesting and weird experiences during our 36 hours in the Poconos.
In addition to the water fun, my family and I did an "escape room" where a whole family gets trapped in a series of rooms and has to do a bunch of stunts to get out. The first room was so impossible to get out of that someone had to come in and help us but then I shot a bunch of fake rats (don't ask) that got us out of the second room (this made me a hero to the wife and kids) and then in the third room we didn't have to do much to do. While I'm glad we did the escape room, I can't imagine it's an experience we'll ever repeat.
The people working at the resort were very nice if a little eccentric. One of the guys who served us at the pool was from the Bronx and, when we decided to order pizza, he told us: "Remember, it's not New York pizza, it's Poconos pizza, best for kids and drunks."
We also did something called a "silent disco" where people congregate and are given headphones with pre-programmed music and they can dance to different songs. My family danced (I didn't) and it was a weird if lighthearted thing to experience.
Then another time I ordered a cocktail off the bar menu called "On the Slopes" -- basically a White Russian except that it substituted Grand Marnier for Vodka. When I ordered the drink, the old lady bartender said: "That's a good choice!"
Me: "Thanks."
Bartender: "It's my drink, I invented it."
Me: "Oh, I see."
Bartender: "It's actually called 'Sex on the Slopes' but they wouldn't let me put 'sex' on the menu."
Me (unsure how to reply): "Well, this is a family establishment."
Bartender: "Kids don't look at the menu!"
She had a point but I still don't understand why you'd called a drink "Sex on the Slopes" since, unlike "Sex on the Beach", sex on skiing slopes isn't something people really do. Anyhoo ...
I liked the Poconos, it was very nice, and you should check it out if you'd like a brief respite from the crazy life of NYC.
Tuesday, March 7, 2023
Classic Mr NYC
Recently I went to see the special Edward Hopper exhibit at the Whitney Museum that just closed. Entitled "Edward Hopper's New York", the exhibit displayed Hopper's classic portraits of the the city as seen from the perspective of the common man and woman.
Hopper's NYC was not one of the skyscrapers, the famous tourists sites, the gorgeous parks or any kind of stereotypical cityscape. His city was the city of street corners and every day New Yorkers living their lives, of deserted streets as seen at night or first thing in the morning, of its beauty and loneliness, of people simply working to survive. Hopper's New York was the one we all live in but rarely see reflected back to us in art.
One of the paintings that was not in this exhibit, but that is probably his most famous, is "Nighthawks" that he painted in 1941. In 2018 I did a whole blog post about it and you can read it here.
In many way, this blog aspires to be what Hopper's paintings were -- an attempt to captures the city's emotional core, it's every day psychology, it's spirit and psyche, its underground existence. While Hopper certainly was a lot more talented than I'll ever be, he remains an inspiration to me.
Thursday, March 2, 2023
The Hispanic Society of America
In a city with some of the world's most famous museums, perhaps the least known but most impressive is the Hispanic Society of America in Washington Heights.
I went to this museum several years ago, and recently read a new article about an exhibition that it's putting on in London, the first of its kind (the museum itself is currently closed for extensive renovations).
Founded at the turn of the 20th century, the Hispanic Society is not really so much of a traditional "society" or organization but a museum and research library focusing on the arts, culture, and history of Spain, Portugal, Latin America, the Spanish East Indies, and Portuguese India. There are extensive and gorgeous historical paintings, along with books and other cultural artifacts rom these parts of the world. The building itself is a stunning, palatial, Beaux Arts stone masterpiece that is even more jaw-droppingly beautiful inside than out.
The reason, I'm sure, that this amazing museum is not better known is because it's located so far uptown and, let's face it, concentrates on peoples and parts of the world that White America and White NYC cares little about. But going there, and reading about this museum and the history it records, is a reminder that there is a whole other continent-spanning world (worlds, really), a whole other history, a whole other culturally-rich and fascinating immersive culture that most non-Hispanic peoples know nothing but can easily learn about.
And that's what's so great about NYC -- you can literally go somewhere and enter another world, learn another history, and get immersed in another culture that is so far from your own but that enriches your spirit and expands your world.