Beneath the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, to the north, lies a small jetty called Denyse Wharf. It’s a totally abandoned and hopelessly polluted spit of land that once served as a British landing point during the Battle of Brooklyn (then called Long Island) during the Revolution. Denyse Denyse, a Dutch colonist, was the dock’s original owner and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: bridge, brooklyn, construction, culture, energy, Fort Hamilton, Fort Hamilton High School, historic, Long Island, new york, New York City Marathon, Thomas Greene, United States, Verrazano-Narrows Bridge
This year’s Rockefeller Center Christmas tree hearkens back to an earlier time in American history when this nation found itself in the grips of another, more infamous depression…the Great Depression, to be precise. In 1931, a family in Hamilton, New Jersey planted a 7-foot Norway spruce outside their home, the years watching it grow to [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, art deco, christmas, Christmas tree, culture, Great Depression, holiday, New Jersey, Norway Spruce, rockefeller center, rockefeller center christmas tree
A study at UCLA has found that the Internet is actually “good” for the brain.” (And all this time, I was convinced that I was losing my mind because of it.) Researchers there have determined that internet surfing, like “solving crossword puzzles” (or uncapping child-proof bottles, I may add), can reduce “brain shrinkage” and related [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: baby boomers, Computer, computers, culture, Generations and Age Groups, humor, inventions, People, Social media, United States, University of California Los Angeles
Posted on TwitPic by sterfry: 10/9/08 Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: culture, humor, Login, On the Web, Online Communities, photo, Recreation, Social Networking, TwitPic, twitter, Twitxr
Being a New Yorker, every time I see a crowd gathered around something, I usually suspect that either an accident or a crime had occurred. Living all my life in a city where crowds are commonplace, the commonplace crowds becomes unusual when not in motion and unusually stationary; the worst is expected when people here [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: Barack Obama presidential campaign 2008, barack-obama, brooklyn, Brooklyn Paper, Condoleezza Rice, culture, food, John McCain, New Yorker, Park Slope Brooklyn, politics, United States
clipped from www.geekculture.com A genius if there ever was one: This hardheaded mastermind is so ridiculously self-assured and self-involved in his very little “Cowboy and Indian” playtime world that his wisdom is beyond that of mere mortals with more trivial pursuits…like paying their bills and living and dying. Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Arts, Christianity, Cowboy, culture, humor, OneChanbara: Bikini Samurai Squad, People, politics, Rod Blagojevich, Trent Willmon
In Sarah Palin, Republican desperation sought a new and dynamic salesperson to sell America on the old and moldering concepts of God and Country, Family and the American Dream. These traditional goal-inspiring and spirit-uplifting tag words were lost in the mire of, at least, 20 to 40 years of governmental shenanigans, intrigue and corruption: our [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Alaska, culture, Deus ex machina, economy, Executive Branch, Government, Iraq, John McCain, media, personal, politics, sarah-palin, thoughts, United States
On July 25-26, from 8:06 p.m. to 2:42 a.m., an Auricon 16mm camera was rolling steadily and (but for three reel changes) uninterruptedly. Shooting at 24 frames-per-second b/w, the in-progress film’s controversial director along with his crew were situated in the offices of the Rockefeller Foundation on the 41st Floor of the Time-Life Building. Nine [...]
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In the course of its brilliant and sometimes better left forgotten history, the Metropolitan Opera presented quite a few productions that bombed, but this season the Met will feature a new opera about the Bomb itself. John Adams‘ DOCTOR ATOMIC will tell (or, more precisely, sing) the story of Robert Oppenheimer, that wizard of nuclear [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: culture, DOCTOR ATOMIC, Edward Teller, historic, John Adams, ManhattanProject, Metropolitan Opera, music, opera, Oppenheimer J Robert, Robert Oppenheimer
The fine line between the sublime and ridiculous is so laughably tenuous that I would require a website exclusively devoted to its daily nuances. Every day, it seems, humanity’s most brilliant and well-intentioned efforts (ostensibly, at least) are thwarted by humanity’s diverging moods and idiosyncrasies. New York City is particularly famous for this kind of [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: art, brooklyn, brooklyn-bridge, culture, DUMBO Brooklyn, new york, new york city, new york post, Niagara Falls, Olafur Eliasson, United States
The current word on the the streets and through the caverns of New York City is that it’s the Number One destination for foreign tourists, according to Global Insight, an international economic analysis firm. No wonder I found it so crowded here lately, as a flurry of cultures and languages swarmed around me; one and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Big Apple, Carrie Bradshaw, culture, economy, new york, new york city, news, nyc, SEX AND THE CITY, Television program, The New York Times Company, tourism, United States
A very attractive and quaint but, unfortunately, unprofitable curiosity has bitten the dust and has been consigned to the realm of yesterday’s endless assortment of neat ideas. Visitors to the city were underwhelmed with the “tourist trolleys” that offered free yet uninteresting rides to and from Brooklyn cultural institutions; unfortunately, limited to mainly Park Slope, [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: brooklyn, Bus, Business, culture, new york city, news, Park Slope Brooklyn, South Street Seaport, times square, Transportation and Logistics, United States