Thursday, September 29, 2005

Two Sexy Italians Up for Grabs

Monday morning, a group of sexy Italians appeared in Grand Central Terminal. Under the star-spangled ceiling, a pair of Lamborghini sports cars was parked next to the information booth while four Augusta Brutale motorcycles were in the passageway to Vanderbilt Hall.

The reason? The Columbus Citizens Foundation is sponsoring two raffles for the benefit of their scholarship fund: Win an MV Agusta Brutale and Win a Lamborghini. A limited number of tickets are for sale and the drawing will be held when the last ticket is sold. Price per ticket? A chance to win the motorcycle is $50; a raffle ticket for the car costs $1,000. More than twenty tickets for the Lamborghini were sold the day they became available.

Of course, upon seeing the vehicles inside the train terminal, my immediate reaction was "A sports car? But if you won it, where on earth would you park it?" Sometimes I forget that there's world outside New York where normal, average people have things like long, winding driveways and private garages. In this part of the world, those are ultra-luxury items; even multi-million dollars homes generally don't include parking spaces, and private garage ownershp is confined to the very, very, very rich.


Yellow Lamborghini in Grand Central Posted by Picasa


Black Lamborghini in Grand Central Posted by Picasa


Agusta Brutale in Grand Central Terminal Posted by Picasa


Win Lamborghini Gallardo Posted by Picasa


Win Augusta Brutale Posted by Picasa

  • Columbus Citizens Foundation

  • Grand Central Terminal

  • Lamborghini

  • Lamborghini Club

  • MV Agusta Brutale

  • MV Agusta Brutale USA

  • Jerry Seinfeld's private garage
  • Sunday, September 25, 2005

    The 31st Annual Atlantic Antic

    For more than three decades, Brooklynites have gathered on Atlantic Avenue once a year to celebrate themselves and each other. The Atlantic Antic is Brooklyn's biggest community event, an opportunity for the residents of several diverse neighborhoods to come out, meet and mingle.

    It is a time to learn about (and join) community groups, cultural groups and polticial groups of every stripe and respresenting every cause.

    It is a chance for kids to follow their passions. A parking lot is turned into a playground. Face-painters, balloon twisters and pony rides abound. Civic-minded kids set up stands to raise money for victims of Hurricane Katrina and sell lemonade to benefit childhood cancer.

    It is the time to dance. Throughout the Antic, the air is filled with music as bands perform country, rock, oldies, middle eastern, hip-hop and folk from stages and in front of bars.

    It is an opportunity to find bargains. Retailers bring their merchandise outside. Artisans and craftspeople show off their wares and make connections.

    It is the day to eat. The doors of the Avenue's many restaurants open their doors and food vendors from elsewhere join them. Walk a few blocks and you'll be able to sample Barbeque, British, French, Italian, Korean, Chinese, Indian, Thai, Lebanese, Egyptian, Greek, Palestinian, Jamaican, Hatian, Soul Food, Spanish, Mexican and a host of other cuisines. Must your food be vegan, halal, kosher, fat-free, salt-free or wheat-free? Don't worry, there's plenty available here, no matter what you prefer, for little or no money.


    Kids Help Kids working to benefit victims of Hurricane Katrina Posted by Picasa


    The pastor of a church just off Atlantic drums up business Posted by Picasa


    Mayoral candidate Fernando Ferrar and wife Posted by Picasa


    Drummers in front of Stan's Place Posted by Picasa


    Frying crawfish cakes in front of The House of The Lord Church Posted by Picasa


    Selling lemonade for childhood cancer research Posted by Picasa

  • Atlantic Antic

  • Atlantic Avenue Betterment Association

  • Alex's Lemonade Stand

  • Project Backpack: Kids Helping Kids

  • Lambda Independent Democrats of Brooklyn

  • The Arab-American Family Support Center

  • Kane Street Synagogue

  • Gowanus Dredgers Canoe Club

  • Brooklyn Greenway Initiative

  • Brooklyn United for Innovative Local Development

  • Willowtown Association

  • Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment

  • Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts

  • Brooklyn Public Library

  • Brooklyn Community Access Television

  • Williamsburg Music Center

  • Doll & Toy Museum of NYC

  • Magnetic Field

  • Waterfront Ale House

  • Floyd

  • Last Exit

  • Brawta Carribean Cafe

  • La Mancha

  • The Soul Spot

  • The Chip Shop

  • Musician's General Store

  • Urban Organic

  • Hope Vet

  • Providence Day Spa
  • Saturday, September 24, 2005

    Banned Books Week

    Banned Books Week: Celebrating the Freedom to Read is an annual event held during the last week of September. Every year I forget about it until something reminds me. This year, the reminder came in the form of an e-mail from Coliseum Books:

    Greetings Book Lovers!
    Starting September 24 to October 1, booksellers, librarians, authors, readers, students and other friends of free expression will participate in Banned Books Week. It was started in 1982 by the American Library Association, the American Booksellers Association, the Association of American Publishers and the National Association of College Stores to raise awareness of censorship problems in the United States and abroad. For the past 22 years, it has remained the only national celebration of the freedom to read.

    Book banning is nothing new. Dante's The Divine Comedy was burned in 1497 on religious grounds. Queen Elizabeth censored parts of Shakespeare's Tragedy of King Richard II in 1597. Jean Jacques Rosseau’s philosophical work was placed on the Roman Catholic Church’s Index of Prohibited Works in the 18th century. Click here to read a list of the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression’s banned and challenged Books of 2004 – 5.


    --------

    I plan to mark the week by reading and releasing Barbara Kingsolver's Animal Dreams, which appears on the current list of banned and challenged books.

    Just a gentle reminder that those of us who are able to read and write what we wish must not take this precious freedom for granted.


    Animal Dreams Posted by Picasa

  • Banned and Challenged Books of 2004 - 5

  • American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression Banned Books Week Resources

  • American Library Association Banned Books Week Resources

  • American Library Association

  • Association of American Publishers

  • American Society of Journalists and Authors

  • Association of College Stores

  • Barbara Kingsolver

  • Animal Dreams

  • Coliseum Books

  • Bookcrossing
  • Sunday, September 18, 2005

    Broadway on Broadway

    Today the 14th edition of Broadway on Broadway was held in Times Square. This free event features some of Broadway's best: hit numbers from nearly every musical now on the Great White Way, including performances from some shows that haven't yet opened (The Color Purple, Sweeney Todd, In My Life) and one from a show that will close later this week (Lennon).

    The logistics are daunting, involving the closing of several of midtown Manhattan's busiest blocks to traffic, the erection of an enormous stage and the installation of an extensive sound and video system. Television stars John Lithgow and Christina Applegate, currently appearing in, respectively, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Sweet Charity, hosted the event.

    Featured shows included All Shook Up, Avenue Q, Beauty and the Beast, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Hairspray, Lennon, The Light in the Piazza, The Lion King, Mamma Mia!, The Producers, Rent, Sweet Charity, Sweeney Todd, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee and Wicked.

    Representatives of various businesses strolled behind the police barriers distributing free souvenirs to the crowd, including paper fans, newspapers and CDs. The day was gorgeous, the singing was fabulous, the dancing amazing and the spectators enthralled. Darlene Love, currently appearing in Hairspray, had her first hit record (He's a Rebel) more than 40 years ago and her soaring voice has lost none of its power. Her soulful, stirring rendition of "I Know Where I've Been" made her the brightest light on Broadway today.

    There's a light
    In the darkness
    Though the night
    Is black as my skin
    There's a light
    Burning bright
    Showing me the way
    But I know where I've been

    There's a cry
    In the distance
    It's a voice
    That comes from deep within
    There's a cry
    Asking why
    I pray the answer's up ahead
    'Cause I know where I've been

    There's a road
    We've been travelin'
    Lost so many on the way
    But the riches
    Will be plenty
    Worth the price we
    Had to pay

    There's a dream
    In the future
    There's a struggle
    We have yet to win
    And there's pride
    In my heart
    'Cause I know
    Where I'm going
    And I know where I've been



    Police barriers ensure no traffic on Broadway  Posted by Picasa


    Video screen displays performers onstage Posted by Picasa


    Confetti released during the finale Posted by Picasa

  • Broadway on Broadway

  • Playbill on Broadway on Broadway

  • Broadway World

  • Avenue Q

  • Beauty and The Beast

  • Chitty Chitty Bang Bang

  • The Color Purple

  • Hairspray

  • The Lion King

  • Mamma Mia!

  • Sweet Charity

  • Wicked

  • Darlene Love
  • Saturday, September 17, 2005

    12th Annual Bus Festival

    In the mid-1950s, America fell in love with a television program about working class New Yorkers called The Honeymooners. Ex-vaudevillian Jackie Gleason starred as blustering Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden; 50 years later, the actor and the character he portrayed continue to occupy a special place in the hearts of New Yorkers and the New York Transit Authority. In fact, a statue showing Kramden in uniform stands outside the Port Authority Bus Terminal (New York City's largest bus station) and a major bus depot on Brooklyn's Fifth Avenue is named in Jackie Gleason's honor.

    Today the New York Transit Museum held its 12th annual bus festival at the foot of Borough Hall, drawing bus aficionados from far and wide. And naturally, Gleason's presence was felt. As they walked along the avenue of historic vehicles, visitors were serenaded by the series' familiar, brassy theme song issuing from loudspeakers. One of the highlights of the day was watching people suddenly stop, smile in recognition and happily exclaim, "Hey, they're playing the Honeymooners' song!"

    From the official festival announcement:
    September 17, 2005, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
    Join us as we celebrate a century of motorized bus service in New York City at the New York Transit Museum’s 12th Annual Bus Festival. More than a dozen vintage Museum buses, dating from 1917 to the 1980s, support vehicles, and more recent examples from the MTA fleet of buses will be on display in Columbus Park. The star attraction of this year’s festival is “Betsy,” the Museum’s newly acquired closed-top, double-decker bus (no. 1263), originally operated by the Fifth Avenue Coach Company from 1931 to 1953.

    Throughout the day visitors to the Festival may enjoy guided tours of the fleet, live musical entertainment, hands-on children’s workshops, story-telling, and complimentary rides around historic Brooklyn Heights on a horse-drawn omnibus. And everyone can shop for unique bus-related gifts and transit memorabilia in the Transit Museum Store tent. This event is free and open to the public.



    Vintage double-decker bus Posted by Picasa


    New York Transit Museum Bus Festival Posted by Picasa


    Parked in front of the State Supreme Court Posted by Picasa


    Bus 303 (circa 1917) Posted by Picasa


    New York Transit Museum Posted by Picasa


    Getting ready to tow a bus back to the depot Posted by Picasa


    Jackie Gleason Depot, 871 Fifth Avenue (July, 2005) Posted by Picasa

  • Transit Museum

  • Transit Museum Store

  • Museum of Broadcast Communications on The Honeymooners

  • The Honeymooners

  • The Honeymooners

  • The Honeymooners Theme Song

  • Ralph Kramden statue
  • Sunday, September 11, 2005

    Tribute In Light

    Twin beams of light now mark the place where two mighty towers rose and fell. Each year, on the date of the World Trade Center's destruction, brilliant blue towers shine into the heavens from dusk until dawn.

    I shot this photo from my rooftop.


    Tribute in light Posted by Picasa

  • Tribute In Light

  • Tribute In Light Explained
  • Four years

    Today a memorial service was held at the site where the World Trade Center once stood. Security was, of course, very tight. A chorus of children sang. A small orchestra played. Politicans spoke. The Secretary of State read a poem by Christina Rossetti, and then the brothers and sisters of the victims read the names and spoke briefly about - and to - those lost four years ago.

    "We will be twins forever."
    "I know you are watching over the kids from heaven."
    "Every day brings us closer to the time we'll be together again."
    "You are my hero."
    "In memory of my brother, my sister-in-law and their unborn child."
    "Thank you for the joy you gave us for 27 years."
    "Our hearts are broken."
    "You were my baby brother. I took care of you all your life."
    "You did so much in such a short time."
    "I'm wearing this bright pink because he loved bright colors."
    "We are all proud of you."
    "I'd give up tomorrow for just one yesterday with you."
    "Daddy hasn't been the same since we lost you."
    "We love you and miss you every day."
    "There was so much you wanted to do and you never had a chance to do it."
    "My brother...."
    "My sister...."
    "Mi corazón...."

    Four times bells rang out, four times the crowd was silent:

  • 8:46 a.m., when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into Tower One

  • 9:02 a.m., the time United Airlines Flight 175 dove into Tower Two

  • 9:59 a.m., the moment Tower Two fell

  • 10:28 a.m., when Tower One went down


  • Hundreds of uniformed police and fire officers wore small black ribbons imprinted with "WTC" on their chests, indicating that they served at the site on that day. Many friends and family members literally wore their hearts on their sleeves, attending the service clad in t-shirts and badges printed with the names and photos of those they lost.

    Thousands walked down the massive concrete ramp into the gravel-strewn pit that had served as the foundation of the World Trade Center. Volunteers offered long-stemmed roses to those who were descending. Chaplains stood ready to offer comfort. Red Cross workers circulated with bottles of water, cookies and packets of Kleenex.

    Two shallow pools, edged with planks of raw wood, were erected where the two towers had stood. Mourners propped photos and stuffed animals alongside the edges, dropped flowers, notes and religious symbols into the water, and inscribed notes onto the wood. A childish scrawl alongside a drawing of a dog said, "Dad, I am being good and taking care of the animals." Nearby, a neat, precise hand wrote, "Nancy, you were the best daughter in the world. I'll see you soon. Love, Mommy."

    Some of those assembled scattered rose petals to the wind, or used the flowers and stones to spell out their messages of grief. Several trained therapy dogs patiently allowed shaking mourners to hug them and weep into their golden coats.

    The sky was the same shade of blue. The sun shone at the same angle. But four years later, nothing else was the same.


    The survivors' staircase Posted by Picasa


    At the bottom of the ramp Posted by Picasa


    Red Cross worker Posted by Picasa


    1WTC stood here Posted by Picasa


    2WTC stood here Posted by Picasa


    The pool filled with roses Posted by Picasa


    Memorial t-shirts Posted by Picasa


    FDNY mourners Posted by Picasa


    Therapy dog Posted by Picasa


    We miss daddy Posted by Picasa


    Jake Posted by Picasa


    Roses on a spot where a steel beam stood Posted by Picasa

  • American Red Cross

  • Bright and Beautiful Therapy Dogs

  • Delta Society