Archive for the ‘New York City’ category

Friday Flash 55 – 99 Percent at Downtown NYC Subway Station

November 4, 2011

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Varying Percentages At Fulton Street Station

Yesterday, cop at the subway by Occupy Wall Street dressed as a hippie.  Today, the guy wears plain clothes; i.e. his uniform.

He got two occupiers though, fare-skippers, thoughtful faces hangdog now, betrayed; victory in his stance, scribbling–as he mumbles ‘sorry’–tickets.

Just behind, tourist wedges around the turnstile, card outspent, confused, unseen.

I am telling this 55 word story (minus) title to the G-Man, also to Occupy Wall Streeters who get on the train at the Fulton Street Station, usually with metro cards, but sometimes perhaps without.  The station looks abandoned at the bottom entrance;  it isn’t.

Feeling very human in Downtown NYC

November 2, 2011

I’m trying trying trying to work on Nanowrimo, but instead I wrote a new, kind of random piece, for a site hosting an event called Imperfect Prose.  This prose poem is very imperfect, but came to me walking home through downtown NYC.

Feeling Human in Downtown NYC

I am thinking, as I walk past Ground Zero–I am not thinking, as I walk,
of Ground Zero, but I am thinking as I walk past, the tall wire fence
on one side, the red neon storefront on the other, of what keeps us human–what
capacities–and my mind, not thinking in the least bit about Ground Zero until
now when I see myself in my mind’s eye
walking there, the sidewalk dark as a night that is not blue
as this night is, this night sheeting Church Street, the lights of the scaffolding–

I am thinking that it has to do with pain–first, the inability to remember
pain.  By this, I mean to recreate pain, to physically call it back,
to make one’s self feel again a pain
not currently manifest–

And I think, as I walk past Ground Zero,
of the birth of my second child, of the tan scuffed front seat
beneath my grip–I was sitting in back–of a car service station wagon
somehow so  different from the midnight-colored seat of the car service sedan
that took me to the birth of my first child, and yet in those moments
that followed each contraction, like the very same ride.
I know this pain, I kept thinking, intimately, astonished with each wrench
that the memory had not imprinted itself like
a difficult scar, to be felt whenever touched, to be felt
when even approached,
and yet, even now, even as I remember so exactly the white slant lines on that
tan seatback that looked as if someone had run a dull knife across it,
I cannot come up with the pain, but only my reactions to it,
the way my upper torso tried to arch from the lower,
the way my mind
scrambled like junked marbles,
the disbelief that pain like that
could ever be part of the natural order of things, the
terror that surrender
might just be meaningless.

And then I think, as I get to a corner–there are stairs on one side
leading up to Brooks Brothers, and on the other Liberty Street
where the old Deutsch Bank building stood, killing two more firemen in its
dismemberment–but I don’t think of them, the weight of machinery smashing
through broken, mismanaged, floors, nor even do I think of how, just across the way,
shadows may still hover, escaping flame–

I think of the ability to imagine pain–how this same body
that cannot recreate its own torment–how it will, if
fully human, cringe or stream with tears
at the sight of a blow, at the muted thud of kick, the
torn cry, the fall, the hew, bang, loss–there
was a man flat on the floor of Grand Central yesterday, feet too neatly
askew, with blood blooming on his forehead like a flag, the soldiers–we have
those now–and police stilled beside him in a watchful pentagon.

I had to be careful then at West Street, as I walked and thought, because it’s hard
in this part of the City, the scale aggrandized, not to be hit by
a car,
how the inability to remember pain allows us to
go on, while the second–the ability to imagine pain–makes us to stop–
(or stop that which should be stopped)
only I think now, as I write this, of all those spirits in the air, and
the blossom of the fire balls, the reeling cry of the street, the blurs of smoke
and dust and all those wisps of photos (the
missing, not to be found)
and my heart finds suddenly that it does remember pain,
and that it can feel that remembered pain,
again and again and again,
even though I cannot think of anything I personally
truly
lost upon that day, anything that I could call
my own.

 

 

in the hush of the moon

Hunkering down in Zuccotti Park (“Occupy Wall Street”), a New/Old meaning of TARP

October 27, 2011

Cold and very wet in downtown NYC today. Tarps over both the tented and tentless. One of the best signs I’ve seen.

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Occupying Wall Street looks hard in the A.M.

October 26, 2011

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Sorry–uploaded from iPhone so this is a bit manky and went out to subscribers too quickly. Fits the morning mood though perhaps.

Occupy Wall Street – Zuccotti Park – Monday Night (10/25)

October 26, 2011

It’s getting dark early and cold in Zuccotti Park, the site in the New York Financial District where Wall Street is occupied.

I have to confess that, as a rule, I don’t watch television news, but my sense is that the protestors are being painted by some channels (i.e. Fox) as a scurrilous bunch. I walk through the park daily and they frankly seem a fairly studious bunch–there’s a whole lot of computing going on, as well as sitting, talking, and checking out pamphlets, magazines and books at a corner devoted to a library.

In the evening, because there is no megaphone, the crowd repeats the speaker’s words for amplification. Walking by, they actually sound something like a congregation in a church, repeating a creed or prayer. The voices are that somber.

Here are some pictures from last night–the library center, those standing and listening to speeches, the food line. (Sorry, I don’t have a great camera, and I’m really just a passer-by.)

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Occupying a Very Wet Wall Street

October 19, 2011

J. Seward Johnson Sculpture "Double-Check" Bronze Businessman Under Cover (With Papier Mache Megaphone Behind--There is no permit for real megaphone at the park.)

Those in Zuccotti Park, down on Wall Street, were occupied by the very difficult task of staying dry today.  Heavy rain all day, and these guys don’t really have tents so much as tarps layered over sleeping bags.  These conditions seen particularly difficult for a movement which seems in part to have generated whatever general respect it has garnered simply through its staying power.

Occupiers seemed pretty cheerful this morning.  (When I commented walking by on the awful weather, one made the joke that it enabled them to offer free bottles of water.)

This evening looked miserable though.  Occupiers were performing regular human mike duties (the group repeats whatever the main speaker says to make up for lack of amplified sound) but all sleeping gear looked absolutely drenched.  Also no drumming to speak of.

Best light held by cameramen

Zero tolerance for illegal activities rules (sign shot in rain.)

Umbrella propped sideways to cover entrance to tarp-covered area.

Monday Evening in Zuccotti Park (Walking By “Occupying Wall Street”)

October 17, 2011

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Evening falls early and quite cold in Zuccotti Park. At the bottom, a yogi type was instructing a group (sitting) in some kind of relaxing breathing exercise. Everyone seemed pretty relaxed.

Monday Morning in Zuccotti Park (“Occupy Wall Street”) In Dappled Pix

October 17, 2011

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Wall Street Area – Very Much Occupied

October 16, 2011

South Side Zuccotti Park

Downtown NYC was very much occupied today.

I live to the West, so I first came to the entrance of  the new visitors center at the old WTC.  (Ground Zero to those who are not long-time New Yorkers.)  This seems to have become one of the most popular tourist destinations in the City, with perpetual lines waiting to gain entrance to the walled-in Memorial Garden. The tourists, whether from Japan or Kansas, almost all have a certain look–scrubbed skin, khaki on some part of their body, and hats (often of the small bucket variety).

Then, I arrived at Occupy Wall Street.  Zuccotti Square has become increasing crowded over the last few weeks, and sports an increased sense of good cheer.   There seems also to be a much greater variety of people–a significantly higher percentage of middle-aged folks to dredlocks.  (I’m not complaining about the dreds, just commenting.)  Occupiers also have a certain look, but it is different from the tourist look.  Rumpled.  (The park is not a comfortable place to stay.)

Today, the complexity of the scene was magnified because there were not only tourists,  occupiers, gawkers, construction workers,press and police–there were also the Lubavitchers!  Those proselytizing in vans highlighting Succoth.   They were dressed in Hasidic gear with wide-brimmed black hats (as opposed to the buckets) and several held large stalks of grain.

(This at Zuccotti Park)

(This one at Memorial Garden.)

And then (exciting!), we happened onto Jon Oliver, musing to the side of the park across the street.  “Hey Jon!” I found myself calling and then felt surprised (and almost hurt) that he didn’t call back.  (It is odd to think that someone can look so familiar and not know you at all.)   We did speak very briefly  and  I would note that he seemed much better looking in person than on TV, and was extremely gracious.

Later, I saw some occupiers escaping over to my side of the West Side Highway.  My guess is that the grass of Hudson River Park is a lot more comfortable for napping than Zuccotti’s concrete.

(Hard to See - People Napping on Napsacks.)

Ray’s Pizza Closing Or Moving – Really the original Ray’s (no trademark infringement intended.)

September 18, 2011
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(Not actually like the appetizing wonderful pizza at Ray's.)

I was very sorry to read this morning that Ray’s Pizza on 27 Prince Street, the certifiably first Ray’s Pizza, the Ray’s Pizza that was so ahead of the pack that it didn’t have to assert its pre-eminence in its name, and more importantly (on a personal basis), the only Ray’s Pizza I ever regularly frequented, is closing.

There’s still the possibility of a move, but, after 52 years, Ray’s will no longer be open at 27 Prince Street, which sits between Mott and Elizabeth, one block below Houston (for non-New Yorkers, pronounced House-ton).

I have to confess to not having been to Ray’s for some time, but when I first moved to New York, I lived at Mott and Houston, about a block away, and Ray’s was a source of salvation.

At that time–late 70’s – early 80’s–Mott and Houston (now mainly yuppie and traffic-clogged ) was kind of menacing. There was a large juvenile detention center across the street, which, because it was a squat building with a concrete playground/basketball court, allowed for a lot of sunlight, but also cast a kind of shadow over the area. Of course, the streets were already shadowy–the Bowery a block away, legions of “squeegee-men” on the street corners. (They were the guys who were usually paid NOT to clean the windshields of cars waiting for stoplights.) Roosters crowed from boarded buildings/vacant lots; crack vials littered the sidewalks.

To the south, there was Little Italy. Safe enough–if you watched yourself (it probably also helped to be a certain racial type)–but shadowy. That part of Mott Street was still lined with Italian social clubs, little hole-in-the-wall places with one curtained window upon whose ledge stood a plastic Virgin Mary. Inside and out was a shifting (if rarely physically moving)  group of heavily-jowled men wearing black coats and fedoras.

Picturesque, though also a bit sinister–Umberto’s Clam House where Joey Gallo was killed execution style was several blocks down as was the Luna Restaurant (where supposedly the hit men were eating before going after Joey). A bit closer to home, a Chinese Laundry torched.  (I remember the face of the Chinese proprietor after the fire, like a sheet badly folded–lengthened, flattened, lined.)

And then there was Rays.

The pizza was delicious. Fresh, crusty,saucy, cheesy, not too much of anything to overpower, just enough of everything to savor.  (The crust was so good that I remember a girl visiting from Long Island asking everyone else in the place if we wanted ours.  She couldn’t justify another slice, but was desperate for more crust.)

The place was comfortable too, pleasant. There were exposed brick walls, which for someone from suburban Maryland, seemed incredibly exotic.  In the summer, some of the chairs and tables were shifted out to the sidewalk.

Ray (Ralph Cuomo) was a big guy at that point. (I think I mean in all senses, i.e. large, expansive, later dying in prison.)

The black-hatted, black=coated guys came in to Ray’s too, not for pizza so much as endless cups of espresso.

Still, the place had kind of a family atmosphere.  I won’t say that I didn’t ever see anything that didn’t make me gasp, and my husband kick my leg to shut me up.  But Ray was friendly, polite; no one was ever rushed.  A lot of artist types sat there endlessly arguing about Ross Bleckner.

There was the regular slice, the white slice, the pesto with olives slice, and for a while, weirdly, the white slice with pineapple and ham.

All so good.  (Well, I don’t know about the pineapple and ham.)  I left Mott Street to travel a year in India and spent a fair amount of that year trying to decide which slice–the regular or the white–would be the first thing I’d have when I got off the plane back in New York. On the clackety Indian trains, waking up to swat a mosquito at my ear, sometimes even when suffering from some traveler’s stomach bug, I would contemplate this question. It was an incredibly difficult decision, even though I knew, of course,that either option would be absolutely great.

I wish the current manager of Ray’s, Helen Mistretta, the very best of luck.

(PS – this post does not mean to imply any connection between Ray’s Pizza and any of the activities described in Little Italy–I’m just thinking back to a time generally.  All I know about Rays–great great pizza.)