At the 23rd annual Tompkins Square Park Riot Reunion last Saturday, activist John Penley urged the crowd to join him after the show for a protest outside of the Economakis house, to be followed by a “takeover” of the BMW Guggenheim Lab and maybe even a riot outside of the former Mars Bar. “We need to drive the property values down,” Mr. Penley implored. The riot never happened, but video shows that Mr. Penley did manage to suck down an illegal smoke at the BMW Guggenheim Lab and lead an expletive-laden chant of “Who’s art space? Our art space!” But was he right to target the BMW Guggenheim? Clayton Patterson, a fellow veteran of the 1988 Tompkins Square Park riot whose work will be shown at the Lab later this month, thinks not. Read more…
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The Day | Gavin DeGraw is on the Mend
By KHRISTOPHER J. BROOKSGood morning, East Village.
The Associated Press tells us that Gavin DeGraw, who was attacked by at least two men in the East Village on Monday night, has been released after a night’s stay at Bellevue Hospital. A police source tells the Post that the singer was too drunk to remember the attack clearly, but his brother Joseph insists he was drinking nothing but cranberry juice.
If that incident isn’t keeping you away from the nightlife, the folks at DNA Info remind us that the first-ever AlphaBet City Dolly Film Festival starts tomorrow. Thirty independent films will be screened at bars and restaurants between Avenues A and C, from First Street to 14th Street.
Two new Bowery restaurants are coming along: Yesterday EV Grieve noticed that Veselka Bowery was readying its tables, and now Bowery Boogie notes that the Bowery Diner, from the owners of Peels, has put up some signage. Read more…
Two Men Rob 75-Year-Old at Gunpoint
By KHRISTOPHER J. BROOKSAuthorities are looking for two men who are believed to be involved in a robbery at the Baruch Houses, just below Houston Street. A police spokesman said that two men robbed a 75-year-old Hispanic male at gunpoint around 10:30 p.m. on Monday at 105 Baruch Drive. “The victim states that he was robbed and made to give up money,” the spokesman said. The suspects were described as about 25 years old and about 5-foot-11. This isn’t the only crime involving a septuagenarian victim in recent weeks. A 18-year-old male was arrested last week and charged with grand larceny after police say he snatched the purse of a 78-year-old woman in a wheelchair. The purse contained $15 and medication.
With The Opening Maharlika, A Filipino Food Resurgence
By DANIEL MAURER
Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR. Photos: Noah Fecks.
The closing of Elvie’s Turo-Turo a couple of years ago left East Villagers starved for Filipino food, but earlier this summer Sa Aming Nayon opened across from where Elvie’s once stood, and now Maharlika, the brunch pop-up that was first at Resto Leon and then briefly at 5 Ninth, has found permanent residence at 111 First Avenue. Noel Cruz, a partner in the operation along with Nicole Ponseca, Enzo Lim, and chef Miguel Trinidad (all have family ties to the Philippines except for the chef, who is Dominican but has traveled the country extensively) tells us that dinner and brunch service quietly started a week ago. In the next weeks, lunch will also be added and the menu, below, will expand to include a mix of “really approachable things and really deep-rooted traditional items.” Read more…
Feel Like Singaporean for Dinner?
By DANIEL MAURERGrub Street brings word that Masak, a Singaporean restaurant from a former Alias chef who admits his cooking is “not going to be entirely authentic,” will open later this month at 432 East 12th Street. Cocktails are by Jeremy Hawn of Mayahuel.
Watch What Happens When Teens Tear Up Wedding Dresses for Fashion
By CHELSIA ROSE MARCIUSLyn Pentecost, Executive Director of The Lower Eastside Girls Club, came across what some fashion lovers might consider the ultimate Craigslist find: 50 never-worn vintage wedding gowns, each with its original price tag. Looking to purchase one or two last fall, Ms. Pentecost contacted the seller (a lawyer representing the estate of a wealthy woman) who told her it was an all-or-nothing deal— 50 dresses for $2,500. She declined at first, only to hear back from the lawyer a few months later with an offer of $500 for the entire lot.
Within weeks, two boxes arrived on her doorstep stuffed with mint-condition gowns—garments that a group of teenage girls have since ripped, cut, and spray painted, putting an individual, modern twist on fifties style. Read more…
The Day | Gavin DeGraw Hospitalized After Beating
By KHRISTOPHER J. BROOKSGood morning, East Village.
The Post reports that singer Gavin DeGraw was attacked by a group of men on First Avenue between Fifth and Sixth Streets around 4 a.m. Monday. He was scheduled for a concert in Saratoga Springs today, but instead Mr. DeGraw, who owns The National Underground with his brother Joey, is under observation at Bellevue Hospital.
The “outlook is dim” for the last of the lighting businesses along the Bowery. “Store owners point to gentrification, the downturn in the local housing market and the rise of online shopping as having taken a toll on their businesses,” writes The Wall Street Journal.
More change on the Bowery: The folks at Bowery Boogie and The Lo-Down recap last night’s CB3/SLA meeting. According to The Lo-Down, a “slightly more affordable” version of midtown steakhouse Quality Meats has been green-lighted for liquor at 199 Bowery. Bowery Boogie reports that the owners of Peels at 325 Bowery were given the nod for some alterations.
Correction: August 12, 2011
An earlier version of this blog post misstated the name of a neighborhood blog. It is The Lo-Down, not The Lo-Side.
Francesca Manisco Wants to Clean Your Room
By KHRISTOPHER J. BROOKSToday on The Local East Village, it’s all about cleaning house. First Brendan Bernhard recounted the epic task of clearing out his apartment after it was infested by bed bugs. Now a professional organizer (yes, they exist) tells how to avoid all that clutter in the first place.
For nearly a decade, Francesca Manisco was a radio and television producer for Italian broadcast programs. An avid cook, she also contributed a chapter on regional Italian food to “All Italy: The Book of Everything Italian.” She moved to New York in 1980 and found her true calling a little over a decade ago after reading a story in the New York Daily News about professional organizers. Ms. Manisco says she was fascinated to learn that she could “get paid to nag people on where to put their things.”
These days Ms. Manisco works out of her East Village apartment on East 4th Street, a one-bedroom unit that holds thousands of books and hundreds of CDs, but is still quite tidy. A dozen mugs hang from hooks that are screwed underneath her kitchen cabinets; her books are stacked two rows deep; her art supplies are tucked into a canvas box in a corner; and she keep documents in an antique secretary desk.
The Local sat down with Ms. Manisco to gather a few tips on organizing, including how to get more space in a studio apartment. Read more…
A Heated Battle Over Air Conditioning Units
By STEPHEN REX BROWN
Stephen Rex Brown Tommy McKean says that the whir of the air conditioning units directly above his apartment is a constant nuisance.This time of year, the whir of an air conditioning unit is usually reassuring. But for several tenants living at East 13th Street and First Avenue, two industrial-strength air conditioning units on the roof of their building are instead a constant torment.
“It’s like a helicopter hovering overhead all day,” said Tommy McKean, who lives directly below the units on the fifth floor of the building. “For ten minutes, it’s not so bad. But for 24 hours a day it’s awful.” Read more…
Katie Holmes Graces East 13th With Her Presence
By LAURA E. LEEIs Joey Potter the East Village’s new Joey? The Local caught Katie Holmes emerging from the apartment she and husband Tom Cruise share in the American Felt Building on 13th Street this morning. The actress is in town to promote her latest work, “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark,” set to release August 26.
Ex-Officer Acquitted of Rape Gets One Year For Misconduct
By STEPHEN REX BROWNOne of the two police officers who was acquitted of raping an intoxicated East Village woman in 2009 has been sentenced to one year in jail for official misconduct, the Daily News reports. The officer, Kenneth Moreno, 43 was immediately taken away in handcuffs to begin serving his sentence as his accuser looked on. A jury found Mr. Moreno not guilty of rape in May, but did find him and his partner, Franklin Mata, guilty of misconduct for entering the woman’s apartment without permission. Mr. Mata is expected to be sentenced later today as well.
Update: The sentencing of Mr. Mara has been postponed until Wednesday because his lawyer could not be present, the Daily News reports.
Felipe Baeza: An Artist and Activist Living Without Papers
By JOSHUA DAVISIn the bars and restaurants of the East Village, immigrant workers, many undocumented, toil behind the scenes cooking food, waiting tables, and doing whatever else they can to keep the nightlife abuzz. Felipe Baeza is one of them. He serves food and drinks in a hopping East Village restaurant. For Mr. Baeza, 24, the job was to be a mere stepping stone into an exciting art career, which was to begin three years ago when he graduated with a degree in art from The Cooper Union.
But Mr. Baeza, who as a young boy left Mexico for the United States, doesn’t have a work visa or Social Security number, so he cannot legally work in the U.S. Under current federal law, the jobs he studied to perform are not available to him because of his status.
As Mr. Baeza looks from beyond a bar lined with moist beer bottles and cocktail glasses, he sees his classmates finding success in the art world, at home and abroad. In a word, he is frustrated.
“My options are very limited,” he said. “I couldn’t work in a print shop. I couldn’t even assist an artist.”
Read more…
The Day | Walking Against Gentrification
By KHRISTOPHER J. BROOKSGood morning, East Village.
East Village cyclists have been put on notice. City workers plan to discard several abandoned bikes near East First Street between Avenue A and First Avenue, according to a Department of Transportation sign spotted by EV Grieve. Better pick yours up by the end of the day.
The New York Daily News profiled former CBGB bartender Jane Danger, owner of Jane’s Sweet Buns. The shop, at 102 St. Marks Place, features baked goods with hints of alcohol, like a Rum Runner bun with nutmeg, cinnamon, raisins, brown sugar, Galliano liqueur and aged rum.
Finally, Neither More Nor Less, Marty After Dark, EV Grieve, and Gothamist have photos from Saturday’s protest against East Village gentrification. Activist John Penley and his crew started at East Third Street, found its way to the BMW Guggenheim Lab and ended at what used to be Mars Bar. A poem was read. A cigarette was lit. Signs were waved, and then the protestors went home.
Viewfinder | Imperfect Contrast
By PHOENIX EISENBERGPhoenix Eisenberg on capturing the complexity of limitations.
“I want to give people a reason to be interested in the things they would normally dismiss– by making the unattractive look beautiful, the crazed look understandable, or the pristine seem imperfect. I want people to understand that it is the imperfections in our lives that make us so interesting.”
Read more…
Mogador: Breakfast of Champions
By DANIEL MAURERAlain Levitt isn’t the only East Villager praising Café Mogador’s Moroccan eggs today. Playwright Adam Rapp, who lives on East 10th Street and is a big fan of the Juice Press that recently came to his block, tells Grub Street everything he’s eaten over the past six days, and the eggs are his “favorite breakfast.” Mr. Rapp’s latest, “Animals and Plants,” just opened at the Gershwin Hotel.
Vandaag is Out a Chef
By DANIEL MAURERDiner’s Journal reports that Philip Kirschen-Clark, previously of Jimmy’s No. 43, has left his latest post as chef of Vandaag, the Dutch-inspired restaurant that received two stars from The Times in September but hasn’t managed to become a hot spot: “They wanted a more neighborhood approach but I prefer doing more elaborate food,” explained the chef. In a review of Vandaag posted on At the Sign of the Pink Pig last month, Kim Davis, who is also Associate Editor of The Local East Village, observed (astutely, it turns out) that “the food gave off a ‘not really trying’ vibe”: “I felt I ought to eat there more often, just to show some support. Unfortunately, when I did so, I wondered whether I had left it too late. Chef Philip Kirschen-Clark was present; he didn’t seem in the best mood when he visited a nearby table.”
On The BMW Guggenheim Lab: Are ‘Emerging Talents’ Really What We Need?
By BRENDAN BERNHARDYou can tell a lot from the language people use– as well as from the language they don’t use. An online visit to the “mobile” BMW Guggenheim Lab, which recently touched down on Houston Street and Second Avenue in all its up-to-the-minute minimalist splendor, suggests that the “international, interdisciplinary teams of emerging talents” running it are engaged in the paradoxical task of trying to discover “innovative” solutions to intractable urban problems while thinking solely in clichés.
The Web site itself is of course cheery and bright, featuring lots of baby blues, the usual self-promotional videos, fussy graphics, things to click on, and, of course, an Internet letter box in which you – an ordinary citizen! – can post your radical visionary ideas about how to improve the city without even buying a stamp.
The economy is almost beyond repair, world banks are facing a meltdown, entire segments of the population have been served with their divorce papers by any and all employers, but the Guggenheim’s site is full of madly utopian visions such as that eye-catching poster in which all of New York’s major buildings are squeezed into the rectangle usually occupied by Central Park, while the rest of the island becomes a green, pristine forest – much as it was before those horrid Europeans arrived in their high-tech wooden boats. Yeah, that’ll work. Just watch out for the bows and arrows.
In a section of the Web site named “I Meditate NY” – a joke in itself – we read that “creativity is the font of innovation.” This is about as perceptive as stating that “sexuality is the mechanism of reproduction.” There’s a reason certain sentences such as “necessity is the mother of invention” stick around forever, while others barely make it to the end of the week. I think we can agree that “creativity is the font of innovation” belongs in the second category. It’s think-tank language, dead on arrival. Read more…
Street Style | Summer of Ray Bans
By JENNIFER PULEIO and NATALIE MONTASStreet Style: Retro Sunglasses from Jennifer Puleio on Vimeo.
Whether you’re outside on a bright afternoon, or dodging sun showers, one of the most unavoidable trends this summer are fifties-inspired sunglasses. We caught up with people in the East Village who were sporting bold and colorful prints, or keeping it classic and neutral. Either way, they were making a spot-on fashion statement.
Want to See Your Facebook Updates Performed Live? Tell These People!
By IAN DUNCAN
Courtesy of “Blogologues” The “Blogologues” production team from left to right: Assistant director Meredith Hackman, director Megan Loughran, co-producers Allison Goldberg and Jen Jamula, and stage manager Jim ArmstrongWhen an online phenomenon escapes the bounds of the digital world and emerges IRL (in real life), bloggers are fond of proclaiming “the intertubes are leaking.” “Blogologues,” an upcoming show at Under St. Marks, will turn the spigot and let Internet culture gush out at full flow.
Each month, “Blogologues” will take real Internet postings on a theme and turn them into a stage show. And get this: The producers are taking suggestions from readers of The Local. Have any recommendable tweets, blog posts, even Craigslist ads? Don’t be shy. Leave them in the comments and they may end up being enacted on stage. Read more…












