Pier Pressure

You know I love the Frying Pan, but I had never hung out on th adjacent Pier 63 until this weekend. A ton of kids showed up in the gloaming on Friday and it was alright. The place has six things that make for a great summer night:

  1. Buckets of reasonably priced Coronas
  2. Palms trees
  3. Sunsets over the water and boats
  4. Table tennis
  5. An awning for the pale and an upper deck for sweet hearts
  6. Stone cold killers

As the night darkens, a DJ kicks in and the place turns into a jumping night club with all the twirly girls. The line to get aboard was a dozen yards long when we left.

As you can tell from the bags under my eyes, it was long week for me and some of the other kids. It was definitely thereputic to settle in a plastic deck chair and decompress.

Site of the Day: So cute it goes beyond sick and then back to cute, giggling quintuplet babies.

You know I love the Frying Pan, but I had never hung out on th adjacent Pier 63 until this weekend. A ton of kids showed up in the gloaming on Friday and it was alright. The place has six things that make for a great summer night:

  1. Buckets of reasonably priced Coronas
  2. Palms trees
  3. Sunsets over the water and boats
  4. Table tennis
  5. An awning for the pale and an upper deck for sweet hearts
  6. Stone cold killers

As the night darkens, a DJ kicks in and the place turns into a jumping night club with all the twirly girls. The line to get aboard was a dozen yards long when we left.

As you can tell from the bags under my eyes, it was long week for me and some of the other kids. It was definitely thereputic to settle in a plastic deck chair and decompress.

Site of the Day: So cute it goes beyond sick and then back to cute, giggling quintuplet babies.

100 Words on Daisy May’s BBQ – Best Ribs in NYC

I have a new favorite BBQ joint–Daisy May’s BBQ. It’s just a catering/takeout place with a picnic table in the back, but they char a rib better than anyone in town. I recommend going with a friend and splitting an order of Memphis-style (dry) and Kansas City (with sauce, as in the pic). The sides are just as delectable, especially corn with cheddar and the bourbon peaches. The lack of table service keeps the prices down and the proximity to Times Square and the Intrepid make it a welcome and convenient respite if you are entertaining out of town’ers.
Links:
Daisy May’s BBQ USA
Citysearch Review

Site of the Day: I made fun of this guy once when I met him at The Edge, snarkily calling him “Internet famous,” but I apologize now. He has gone on to be amazing, working really hard to produce the best and only viable video blog, The Show. Power on, Speedracers. New to The Show? Check out my favorite, the earth sandwich, you know…one earth between two slices of bread.

I have a new favorite BBQ joint–Daisy May’s BBQ. It’s just a catering/takeout place with a picnic table in the back, but they char a rib better than anyone in town. I recommend going with a friend and splitting an order of Memphis-style (dry) and Kansas City (with sauce, as in the pic). The sides are just as delectable, especially corn with cheddar and the bourbon peaches. The lack of table service keeps the prices down and the proximity to Times Square and the Intrepid make it a welcome and convenient respite if you are entertaining out of town’ers.

Links:
Daisy May’s BBQ USA
Citysearch Review

Site of the Day: I made fun of this guy once when I met him at The Edge, snarkily calling him “Internet famous,” but I apologize now. He has gone on to be amazing, working really hard to produce the best and only viable video blog, The Show. Power on, Speedracers. New to The Show? Check out my favorite, the earth sandwich, you know…one earth between two slices of bread.

I like tiling.

Last weekend, the gf and I enjoyed a trip to visit her parents in the Garden State. While, she read Us Weekly by the pool, I eagerly volunteered to help Mr. P finish tiling their new addition. I ran the tile saw and mixed mud while he did the painful work. I even considered taking off work Monday to help finish, but unfortunately I could not. See the thing is I don’t like Us Weekly. I don’t like the sun. I hate sand. I really hate golf. I don’t think adult men should wear shorts. All of this things make the month of August a long one for me.
Without any viable segue, this leads me to list my hobbies, in honest order ranked by how much time I spend doing them:
– Watching TV. Particularly the Discovery Channel. It’s Shark Week.
– Blogging/Photography. Now we are self-referential.
– Computer Programming. Yes, I do it for fun.
– Drinking
– Crossword Puzzles
– Home Improvement
– Eating sushi with the gf
– Reading
– Running
– Climbing Mountains
– Writing
– Fly-fishing

I got no problems with any of those, but I do wish I could readjust the order. Maybe if I get a car someday.

Site of the Day: Via the Thighmaster, Tron Guy on a zero gravity date.

Last weekend, the gf and I enjoyed a trip to visit her parents in the Garden State. While, she read Us Weekly by the pool, I eagerly volunteered to help Mr. P finish tiling their new addition. I ran the tile saw and mixed mud while he did the painful work. I even considered taking off work Monday to help finish, but unfortunately I could not. See the thing is I don’t like Us Weekly. I don’t like the sun. I hate sand. I really hate golf. I don’t think adult men should wear shorts. All of this things make the month of August a long one for me.

Without any viable segue, this leads me to list my hobbies, in honest order ranked by how much time I spend doing them:
– Watching TV. Particularly the Discovery Channel. It’s Shark Week.
– Blogging/Photography. Now we are self-referential.
– Computer Programming. Yes, I do it for fun.
– Drinking
– Crossword Puzzles
– Home Improvement
– Eating sushi with the gf
– Reading
– Running
– Climbing Mountains
– Writing
– Fly-fishing

I got no problems with any of those, but I do wish I could readjust the order. Maybe if I get a car someday.

Site of the Day: Via the Thighmaster, Tron Guy on a zero gravity date.

St. Brigid’s and the “Destruction” of the East Village

You may have seen the huge old Catholic church on the east side of Thompkin’s Square Park, it’s looming faded yellow facade visible from almost anywhere in the park. Well, if you haven’t seen it, you won’t unless you go there soon. It’s being torn down (link). This is sad for a lot of reasons.
The loss of such old architecture is a shame because the place is over one hundred and fifty years old. You can’t recreate the charm of an old building because methods and materials have changed so much. Or you can create it, but it is REALLY expensive, often involving cryogenics and dead Italian stone masons.

The destruction of St. Brigid’s must be difficult for anyone who had ever worshipped there, (including my friend Colleen who went every Sunday when she lived in the EV). Large churches, cathedrals, temples, and mosques are created as a testament to God and the abilities he gives man, an eternal concept. The falling bricks beneath the wrecking ball make particularly graphic metaphors for mortality and how faith can be fleeting.

Lastly, the changing cityscapes mark the passage of time in my life, whether in Altoona or New York City. When I look at Kudo Beans and remember that it was once Bulgin’ Waffles, I realize I was recently a lot younger. I spent quite a bit of time passing this church, sometimes seeing the young priest sneak a smoke out the backdoor between the Spanish and the English masses. When it goes, it removes one frame of reference for my internal autobiographical movie, SeanTConrad.com – The True Story, a Made for TNT Movie.

I am being a touch melodramatic, but my pang at the loss of the church also shows that the life of anyplace begins when we discover it or move there. This is why older people hate younger people (among all the other reasons); because they don’t feel the pain every time a deli becomes a bank. I’m sure some other residents would chide me for not being nostalgic for the junkies that use to sleep huddled against the yellow bricks on the church’s steps. Yes, in the East Village, there are people longing for junkies of yore–a lot of people.

All this environmental nostalgia is arguably a good reason to keep moving, so that the world is always new and nothing is ever lost. Of course it wouldn’t work because, wherever you go, there you are, and most of life’s problems generally lie between the front of your shirt and the back.

Links
Curbed is following the demolition, which apparently a judge has temporarily stopped. Protesters and judges should pack it in. I took this photo last Friday, after the demoltion had begun. When I was walked around, I saw a crack going from the foundation to the roof along the back wall. The entire rear is one rough pigeon step from falling off.

You may have seen the huge old Catholic church on the east side of Thompkin’s Square Park, it’s looming faded yellow facade visible from almost anywhere in the park. Well, if you haven’t seen it, you won’t unless you go there soon. It’s being torn down (link). This is sad for a lot of reasons.

The loss of such old architecture is a shame because the place is over one hundred and fifty years old. You can’t recreate the charm of an old building because methods and materials have changed so much. Or you can create it, but it is REALLY expensive, often involving cryogenics and dead Italian stone masons.

The destruction of St. Brigid’s must be difficult for anyone who had ever worshipped there, (including my friend Colleen who went every Sunday when she lived in the EV). Large churches, cathedrals, temples, and mosques are created as a testament to God and the abilities he gives man, an eternal concept. The falling bricks beneath the wrecking ball make particularly graphic metaphors for mortality and how faith can be fleeting.

Lastly, the changing cityscapes mark the passage of time in my life, whether in Altoona or New York City. When I look at Kudo Beans and remember that it was once Bulgin’ Waffles, I realize I was recently a lot younger. I spent quite a bit of time passing this church, sometimes seeing the young priest sneak a smoke out the backdoor between the Spanish and the English masses. When it goes, it removes one frame of reference for my internal autobiographical movie, SeanTConrad.com – The True Story, a Made for TNT Movie.

I am being a touch melodramatic, but my pang at the loss of the church also shows that the life of anyplace begins when we discover it or move there. This is why older people hate younger people (among all the other reasons); because they don’t feel the pain every time a deli becomes a bank. I’m sure some other residents would chide me for not being nostalgic for the junkies that use to sleep huddled against the yellow bricks on the church’s steps. Yes, in the East Village, there are people longing for junkies of yore–a lot of people.

All this environmental nostalgia is arguably a good reason to keep moving, so that the world is always new and nothing is ever lost. Of course it wouldn’t work because, wherever you go, there you are, and most of life’s problems generally lie between the front of your shirt and the back.

Links
Curbed is following the demolition, which apparently a judge has temporarily stopped. Protesters and judges should pack it in. I took this photo last Friday, after the demoltion had begun. When I was walked around, I saw a crack going from the foundation to the roof along the back wall. The entire rear is one rough pigeon step from falling off.

Mr. B and YOUR SeanTConrad.com

Behind the scenes I am continually reworking and updating SeanTConrad.com, just for your benefit. A while ago, I listed a bunch of improvements I wanted to add to the site. Most have come to pass. Since then, I’ve done a lot more. Here’s some recent improvements:

  • Updated to MovableType 3.3.
  • Updated my database to MySQL 5 and full text search.
  • All issues and bugs are now being tracked via Bugzilla. Soon you will be able to submit spelling errors or any bug directly to my work queue. Fun, right?
  • I can now post entries from my phone thanks to MobileMT.
  • Down there on the right is my latest cellphone pic, thanks to Flickr.
  • Possibly remove the ads to the right. Since they were placed I have made $0 with Amazon and $11.88 cents with Google. This cover %60 of one month of hosting fees.

And the last imrovement? SeanTConrad now has a concept for a mascot, as seen above, Mr. B, the drunken little Irish bumble. He’s such a silly little bee!

Any other suggestions? Please add to the comments.

Site of the Day: According to the Miami Herald, we eat what is in front of us. So last week, when I ranted about yogurt portions, I should have acknowledged that perhaps Dannon was doing a us a favor in downsizing. My bad. The war in Iraq and now the Israeli attack on Lebanon is still your fault, though.

Behind the scenes I am continually reworking and updating SeanTConrad.com, just for your benefit. A while ago, I listed a bunch of improvements I wanted to add to the site. Most have come to pass. Since then, I’ve done a lot more. Here’s some recent improvements:

  • Updated to MovableType 3.3.
  • Updated my database to MySQL 5 and full text search.
  • All issues and bugs are now being tracked via Bugzilla. Soon you will be able to submit spelling errors or any bug directly to my work queue. Fun, right?
  • I can now post entries from my phone thanks to MobileMT.
  • Down there on the right is my latest cellphone pic, thanks to Flickr.
  • Possibly remove the ads to the right. Since they were placed I have made $0 with Amazon and $11.88 cents with Google. This cover %60 of one month of hosting fees.

And the last imrovement? SeanTConrad now has a concept for a mascot, as seen above, Mr. B, the drunken little Irish bumble. He’s such a silly little bee!

Any other suggestions? Please add to the comments.

Site of the Day: According to the Miami Herald, we eat what is in front of us. So last week, when I ranted about yogurt portions, I should have acknowledged that perhaps Dannon was doing a us a favor in downsizing. My bad. The war in Iraq and now the Israeli attack on Lebanon is still your fault, though.

Yogurt and the Iraq War

You may or may not have noticed this, but yogurt “cups” are now no longer cups. That is they aren’t 8 oz. any more. You now only get 6. Dannon did it first and then Stoneybrook. The other day I noticed (as seen above) that ALL yogurt cups are now 6 oz. If you search the Web for info, the only thing you find is that Colombo yogurt is still 8 oz. The thing is the smaller cups cost the same as their larger predecessors. What a genius business idea!
So are Dannon (and all the yogurt makers who followed) evil? You might expect me to say yes, but the answer is no. They are not evil. I’m sure the reduction of size (along with cleverly leaving the lid diameter the same width) was a committee decisions. Probably by a lot of people who just wanted to increase profits to more securely put food on the table for baby and spouse. That’s the point of today’s rant. Many (most?) evil in the world is not done by one old white man in a suit, like the TV ads depict. Most evil is the result of tiny additions over years by thousands if not millions of people (many in advertising). Yes, GE may pollute a river to pad the board’s portfolio, but even 1% growth also protects everyone down to the line workers and janitors. It’s the government’s job to save us from ourselves and legislate against these accidental atrocities that are committed with the best of intentions.

Okay, I still haven’t reached the point. The point is that rather than only vilifying GWB for the Iraq war debacle and the new Israeli conflict, we must remember to also point fingers else ware. There are two types of people in DC who regularly contribute a 1/435th and 1/100th of evil and unless you are Joe Lieberman, they never seem to face repercussions. That sentence may be obscure, so I’ll say it as “Don’t forget to also blame Congress.” And if we want to follow the blame trail backwards, it leads to you. Yes, you. You elected these people, either by voting or giving an implicit non-vote. You are to blame for smaller yogurt and the Iraq war.

So the next time you give Dannon more money for less, think about how often we comply in our daily lives. We just don’t have the free time to make our own yogurt. However, we can protest in other ways. Buy the yogurt that tastes best or maybe get a banana. At least you can vote with your money for quality. And the next time you vote, make it for the smartest person on the ballot, no matter the party. Or better yet, donate money (worth more than votes) to a PAC of your choice to try and get some quality on the ticket, so that there is a choice.

Join me next week when I connect mattress labels with global warming.

Links:
Amy’s World blog post on yogurt scandel
TrueMajority.org
MoveOn.org

You may or may not have noticed this, but yogurt “cups” are now no longer cups. That is they aren’t 8 oz. any more. You now only get 6. Dannon did it first and then Stoneybrook. The other day I noticed (as seen above) that ALL yogurt cups are now 6 oz. If you search the Web for info, the only thing you find is that Colombo yogurt is still 8 oz. The thing is the smaller cups cost the same as their larger predecessors. What a genius business idea!

So are Dannon (and all the yogurt makers who followed) evil? You might expect me to say yes, but the answer is no. They are not evil. I’m sure the reduction of size (along with cleverly leaving the lid diameter the same width) was a committee decisions. Probably by a lot of people who just wanted to increase profits to more securely put food on the table for baby and spouse. That’s the point of today’s rant. Many (most?) evil in the world is not done by one old white man in a suit, like the TV ads depict. Most evil is the result of tiny additions over years by thousands if not millions of people (many in advertising). Yes, GE may pollute a river to pad the board’s portfolio, but even 1% growth also protects everyone down to the line workers and janitors. It’s the government’s job to save us from ourselves and legislate against these accidental atrocities that are committed with the best of intentions.

Okay, I still haven’t reached the point. The point is that rather than only vilifying GWB for the Iraq war debacle and the new Israeli conflict, we must remember to also point fingers else ware. There are two types of people in DC who regularly contribute a 1/435th and 1/100th of evil and unless you are Joe Lieberman, they never seem to face repercussions. That sentence may be obscure, so I’ll say it as “Don’t forget to also blame Congress.” And if we want to follow the blame trail backwards, it leads to you. Yes, you. You elected these people, either by voting or giving an implicit non-vote. You are to blame for smaller yogurt and the Iraq war.

So the next time you give Dannon more money for less, think about how often we comply in our daily lives. We just don’t have the free time to make our own yogurt. However, we can protest in other ways. Buy the yogurt that tastes best or maybe get a banana. At least you can vote with your money for quality. And the next time you vote, make it for the smartest person on the ballot, no matter the party. Or better yet, donate money (worth more than votes) to a PAC of your choice to try and get some quality on the ticket, so that there is a choice.

Join me next week when I connect mattress labels with global warming.

Links:
Amy’s World blog post on yogurt scandel
TrueMajority.org
MoveOn.org

Sunsets and Not Jogging

On cool summer evenings, one of my favorite thing to do is have drinks at Steamers and watch the sun set over the Hudson. I like to watch people jog while I have a beer. It feels balanced.
As the sun got lower, there were more people strolling than running:
esplanande2.jpg

Site of the Day: Via Gothamist, an NY Sun article and a blogger entry on the fruit stand on the corner of Broadway and Houston. I walk buy it everyday and often buy something and I never thought, “How the hell do they have a fruit stand here?” It just seems natural.

On cool summer evenings, one of my favorite thing to do is have drinks at Steamers and watch the sun set over the Hudson. I like to watch people jog while I have a beer. It feels balanced.

As the sun got lower, there were more people strolling than running:
esplanande2.jpg

Site of the Day: Via Gothamist, an NY Sun article and a blogger entry on the fruit stand on the corner of Broadway and Houston. I walk buy it everyday and often buy something and I never thought, “How the hell do they have a fruit stand here?” It just seems natural.

Old Timers and Stickball

Saturday I awoke to the annual Nolita Neighborhood Old Timers Stickball Game. The chalk score on the street showed that Mulberry had an edge over Mott. From the shouting I learned that David and Vinnie were two of the better hitters. I don’t know the rules of stickball, but it looks like a lot of fun. Maybe I can get in on a game when I am an old timer.
Apparently, it’s a popular street game because you only need a nickel rubber ball and an old broomstick. Read the Wikipedia on stickball.


Here was the ad for the game at Curbed.

Site of the Day: I think I love the bionic wrench. I don’t need one, but I really need one.

Saturday I awoke to the annual Nolita Neighborhood Old Timers Stickball Game. The chalk score on the street showed that Mulberry had an edge over Mott. From the shouting I learned that David and Vinnie were two of the better hitters. I don’t know the rules of stickball, but it looks like a lot of fun. Maybe I can get in on a game when I am an old timer.

Apparently, it’s a popular street game because you only need a nickel rubber ball and an old broomstick. Read the Wikipedia on stickball.


Here was the ad for the game at Curbed.

Site of the Day: I think I love the bionic wrench. I don’t need one, but I really need one.

Don’t Go on Vacation…

… or your cube may suffer in your absence. Ah, the ways we fill our days. This is not my cube, btw.
On an unrelated note, summer blows. Worst season ever.

SItes of the Day:
– From Ildi, solve global warming Van Halen style: http://www.worldjumpday.org
Kottke points out the cover of The Independent showing who would be ridiculous to think shooting people is better than not shooting people.

… or your cube may suffer in your absence. Ah, the ways we fill our days. This is not my cube, btw.

On an unrelated note, summer blows. Worst season ever.

SItes of the Day:
– From Ildi, solve global warming Van Halen style: http://www.worldjumpday.org
Kottke points out the cover of The Independent showing who would be ridiculous to think shooting people is better than not shooting people.

Hotel Wopsononock And Train

My mom just emailed me this image of a postcard she bought on eBay. The photo was taken about 1900 and it shows a hotel and resort on a mountaintop above Altoona, PA. The narrow guage railroad in the shot would bring weekend picnicers from the grimy machine shops in Juniata or wealthy railroad execs to the hotel for ballroom dancing and general revelry.
The connection to me is that the house I grew up in now sits directly between the train and the building in that picture. That hotel burnt down in 1903 and I’m possibly possessed by the ghost of the surly Irish bartender who would occasionally go on drunken murder binges beneath the full moon. It would explain a lot.

Thanks, mom.

Site of the Day: Bush is a German Groper. He’s like that dude in high school who got caught picking his nose or wetting himself and then turns into a persona non gratis. Everything he does is dorky, by definition, because he is doing it.

My mom just emailed me this image of a postcard she bought on eBay. The photo was taken about 1900 and it shows a hotel and resort on a mountaintop above Altoona, PA. The narrow guage railroad in the shot would bring weekend picnicers from the grimy machine shops in Juniata or wealthy railroad execs to the hotel for ballroom dancing and general revelry.

The connection to me is that the house I grew up in now sits directly between the train and the building in that picture. That hotel burnt down in 1903 and I’m possibly possessed by the ghost of the surly Irish bartender who would occasionally go on drunken murder binges beneath the full moon. It would explain a lot.

Thanks, mom.

Site of the Day: Bush is a German Groper. He’s like that dude in high school who got caught picking his nose or wetting himself and then turns into a persona non gratis. Everything he does is dorky, by definition, because he is doing it.