When Brooklyn’s very own version of Indiana Jones rediscovered the long-lost Atlantic Avenue Tunnel (the world’s oldest subway tunnel) in 1980, he may have also discovered a paranormal inhabitant of that subterranean antiquity. Just in time for Halloween, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle is reporting that, in 1982, Bob Diamond (see Pages in the Tunnel) and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: BobDiamond, Brooklyn Historic Railway Association, Cobble Hill Tunnel, Electromagnetic field, ghost, Halloween, Indiana Jones, Paranormal
The New York Yankees never fail to show their devotedly slavish fans an exciting time…even when it comes to making complete fools of them. Now, as in other years, when these pinstriped tycoons are in the World Series their arrogance exceeds the norm (a study in hubris, in and of itself) and results in all [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Baseball, Bronx, Home, Major League, New York Yankees, sports, World Series, Yankee Stadium
Bernie Madoff may be gone because locked away but he’s not forgotten. Of course, his victims will remember him until the final day of forever, but this year he’s also being bizarrely commemorated by those in search of a Halloween mask…and discovering one in Madoff. The Prince of the Crooked Players is as famous as [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Costume, Halloween, Halloween costume, Parties, Recreation, Trick-or-treating, United States
New York’s Hudson River Valley was the backdrop for “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” one of the earliest examples of ghost stories in American literature. Irving, a native New Yorker, relied on local landmarks and the lore about them handed down from Dutch settlers who arrived some 200 years before the story was published in [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Hudson River, Hudson Valley, Legend of Sleepy Hollow, new york, New York wine, Travel and Tourism, United States, Vassar College
Signs in New York‘s Times Square run messages from 350.org during an International Day of Climate Action rally Saturday Oct. 24, 2009 in New York’s Times Square. The rally, organized by 350.org, was one of thousands expected to take place around the world to draw attention to the number 350, representing what some scientists say [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: 350, Carbon dioxide, International observance, new york, new york city, Parts-per notation, Time Square, United States
For those of you looking for a unique thrill or exceptional scare to enhance your Halloween enjoyment, there’s one to be found in midtown Manhattan. Club Purgatorio, the city’s first combination haunted house and nightclub, is open for business at 268 West 47th St. As if the city wasn’t haunted enough–with all manner of savvy [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Business, Commercial Attractions, Halloween, Haunted Attractions, haunted house, Holidays, United States, Vampire
Rather old but funny news. Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: funny, Glenn Beck, humor, Jay Leno, Jay Leno Show, Motorsports, NBC, Professional, Recreation, Robert Pattinson, sports, video, Visual, Woody Allen
A ghoulishly delightful time called “Ghouls and Gourds” will take place at the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens to complement your Halloween revelries. The annual BBG frolics will feature a cornucopia of weird bands, even weirder workshops, along with incredible puppets and other oddities that are guaranteed to be appropriately…weird. All of this weirdness set against the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: brooklyn, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Carnivorous plant, Fauna, Flora, garden, Gardens, Halloween, History, Home, Plant
A 74-year-old Brooklyn man is making a big stink over a stinky issue: a female gingko tree. For over forty years Richard Mahany, who lives in the Bay Ridge section of the borough, has been clearing off the tree’s revoltingly odoriferous fruit from his property. Unfortunately, for both man, tree and neighborhood, Mahany recently had [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Bay Ridge, Bay Ridge Brooklyn, Botany, brooklyn, Dendrology, Neighbourhood, Plant, tree
Prospect Park, the 526 acres bounded by Flatbush, Ocean and Parkside avenues, Prospect Park South and Prospect Park West, was considered by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux a better example of their work than their Central Park in Manhattan. Commissioned to begin design work in 1866 by the state legislature, the team worked continually [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Calvert Vaux, central park, Frederick Law Olmsted, manhattan, Prospect Park, Prospect Park West, State legislature, United States
Next Monday, a month long ad campaign of non-believing billboards will sprout up on this incredible city’s unbelievable subway stations. Brandishing the slogan, “A Million New Yorkers Are Good Without God…Are You?,” commuters will have something else to consider while they’re waiting impatiently for a long-delayed train. The ads seek to reassure “secretive nonbelievers” that [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Business, new york city, New York City Subway, subway, Transit Systems, Transportation and Logistics, Urban Transport
In honor of the New York Historical Society‘s upcoming Grateful Dead exhibition, the Empire State Building is going to be tie dye tomorrow. At press time, we were unable to confirm how in the world this was going to happen, short of dosing the entire city with acid and hoping everyone sees beautiful melting colors [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: empire-state-building, Grateful Dead, History, new york, New-York Historical Society, Society and Culture, United States