Earlier this summer, I arrived home late on a Friday night—late these days meaning after 8 p.m.—and was taking things out of my pockets after a long day. When I reached into my right front picket, I came to the realization that I did not have my wallet. My stomach tied in knots and I… Read more »
New York General
A surviving dive bar: Doc Holliday’s on Avenue A and 9th Street, New York City. A few weeks ago, my band was fortunate enough to be asked to play music in Tompkins Square Park. The four of us arrived punctually (an impressive feat for an old-school punk rock band like ours). The sun was blazing… Read more »
Flushing Night Out at the Quaker Meeting House in 2017. This year will see the festival on Main Street at St. George’s Church during the day. Despite the popularity of some parts of Brooklyn, our collective dialogue around New York City remains excessively Manhattan-centric. New Yorkers will still say “the city” when they mean Manhattan,… Read more »
Homo Sapiens – HumankindThere is confusion and delusion.There are times we act without reason.I don’t have an answer. I’m just trying to make it.All I really know is life is complicated. I don’t know what’s the best. It changes from day to day but one thing I will suggest – Don’t participate in the hate.I’ve got places to go, but someone’s in the way.It… Read more »
A few years ago a friend who lives in Las Vegas posted a photo of his car’s dash board, which displayed a temperature reading of close to 120 degrees Fahrenheit. “Still nowhere near as bad as New York City subway in the summer,” was his photo caption. New York City survived its first major heat… Read more »
This past Saturday I noticed a friend posting on social media from the dark interior of one of Hell’s Kitchen’s finer dive bars, Rudy’s. “Uh-oh. Power’s out. Better drink all the beer before it gets warm.” That was the caption accompanying a photo of business as usual on a busy Saturday night at Rudy’s. There… Read more »
Last Wednesday thousands gathered in Fort Totten Park in Bayside, Queens for a fireworks display. The event had all the makings of potential disaster by modern metrics. Thousands of diverse people crammed into a limited area and jockeying for space to get a good view. A little league soccer team was wrapping up practice as… Read more »
Two years ago my wife and I packed our small children into our van and drove to the Catskills for a camping adventure. Based on the success of that year, we chose to head to the mountains again for another vacation spent in the wild. We chose the Beaverkill Campground, which is outside Roscoe, New… Read more »
“It is sweet and right to die for one’s country,” wrote the Roman poet Horace in his ‘Odes.’ The Roman army still influences our world today; its conquests built an empire. But it could not stop Rome from rotting from within. Monday was Memorial Day in the U.S. While we can hope to spend some… Read more »
Ask A New Yorker interviewed Joep de Koning, Chairman and President of The Tolerance Park Foundation, on the history of New York. He discussed the history of Dutch colonial life in New York. Ask a New Yorker: What’s the biggest myth about New York’s history? Joep: That is a real estate myth. The story about… Read more »