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Au Revoir and RNC


Tuesday, September 9, 2008 - 3:09 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Hey all. This is my last post here at Medicine. I had a great time writing about dumb shit for the past 8 or so months. Thanks to John for giving me such a great experience in cyberspace.

I started a new site with Inigo, Jeff N, and a few others called Shiite Happens. (Below is the first post.) For now, it will be a political, arts, and culture blog with a young-ish voice, much like Medicine, but with more original video content. We’ll have a redesign and hopefully our own url soon. Please ignore the generic design for now. There won’t be any ads or commercial aspect and it will operate as a cooperative. We’re looking for writers, so give me a shout at wormetheperm {at} hotmail(.)com if you’d like to contribute.

Anyway, I’ve been out in Denver and Minneapolis for the Conventions with Inigo Gilmore, a filmmaker friend. And tomorrow we’re going moose hunting in Alaska. Despite our being robbed twice over the past two weeks, a video diary of the RNC was still able to be cut for Britain’s Channel 4. Note the shot of Inigo getting shot at by police (with rubber bullets of course) during a riot in St Paul.

 

Sarah Palin and the Re-Rise of the Republicans: An RNC Diary

1
I’m in Minneapolis, having arrived from Denver on Sunday night. With me: Inigo Gilmore, a British journalist and filmmaker who recently relocated to New York after a year’s stint in Bangkok for Channel 4 UK. That morning, we’d awoken to find our rented SUV had been broken in to, and someone had stolen the tapes from Obama’s stadium coronation. The video and still cameras were safe, but everything else—chargers, bags, tripod, batteries—gone.

So our arrival at the Republican Convention came without glory. Luckily we were staying at a nice loft in downtown St. Paul, just blocks from the Xcel Center. To forget about our Denver loss, we trekked across St. Paul’s quaint downtown looking for a bar. It’s 10m. The bars, which normally close at 2am, are supposedly open until 4am all week, but few people are out.

“The thing about St Paul is that it’s only a few hundred thousand people,” says the local who’s guiding us. “It may be the smallest city to ever hold a national Convention.”

We stop at a dive-y bar on 7th Ave, St Paul’s pedestrian mall. Neon beer signs dangle on the windows. Dart boards and pool tables are visible inside. Sitting outside, we realize 20 or so Texas delegates surround us. Clustered around two pitcher strewn tables, the Texans meet every cliche: loud, foul mouthed, cross bearing, light beer loving, and cigar chomping. They wear orthopedic shoes, unrevealing dresses, snakeskin, denim…

Our next stop was another bar filled with boozing Texas delegates. Third stop: booze, Texans. Later, we even stumble on a hotel with a sign reading, “WELCOME TEXAS DELEGATION! Crowne Plaza Hotel…”

Aside from cowboy hats and generic clothing, what else did these Texans have in common? A shockingly passionate love for Ron Paul and his post-libetarianism. Few of the Texans we meet even like John McCain.

“We support McCain because we are Republicans,” one says. “But Ron Paul is beyond partisian politics.” Then comes a detailed Paul “Revolution”-ary spiel, which I block out. Yet as Convention eve came to a close, the Paul insurgency made clear that this year’s GOP was indeed a fractured party.

2
Monday. The Twin Cities got hit by twin bombshells. First, due to Hurricane Gustav, day one of the Convention was canceled, meaning no President Bush. Second, Sarah Palin, the dark horse Alaskan Governor McCain chose for VP, has a 17-year-old pregnant daughter. Some Convention so far, eh GOP? No opening night and so much for the whole family values and no sex before marriage thing.

Around noon we hear about a anti-war protest. Venturing from the loft, on 4th Street, up a block or two, we quickly realize this is no mere protest. On a street corner stood fifty plus cops in full riot gear—helmets, bulging pads, gas masks, sticks and tazers at the ready. The police surround about twenty black-clad, masked anarchists. The anarchos are backed against a building and all have their hands up, but they yell to the few onlookers and journalists on hand.

“We did nothing!” one kid in googles yells.

“These are our streets!” they chant.

A few blocks away we spot a beat-up blue Volvo blocking a major intersection connecting St Paul to the highway that leads to Minneapolis. About two dozen cops cordon the area. Inside the car I see a black clad youth chained to the steering wheel. A big yellow forklift arrives. I hear a buzzsaw. The cops are cutting the anarchist out of the car. Once he’s been removed and arrested, the forklift removes the car and dumps it on a grass lot.

Pushing further downtown we cross paths with about two hundred “direct action” folks. They even have a trance/techno soundtrack (c/o a red wagon with a stereo and “Funk the War” signs). But the mostly black wearing bandana crew seem confused as to where they’re headed.

“C’mon, this way,” yells one.

“No, this way,” shouts another, who eventually wins out.

But the confusion ends when it comes to the marchers’ intent. These folks want nothing short of destruction of the capatilist state. I’ve witnessed a few dozen riots in my day—mostly sports related—but I’ve never seen such a long, uncontested orgy of smashed windows, popped tires, trash can flipping, road blocking, and wreckage. Inigo captures a long shot of people running up the road by a big Macy’s, where a black woman sits on a bench smiling, Macy bags at her feet. Just then, two anarchists charge from behind with a metal grate. It takes a few tries, but they smash the windows.
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TAGS: 2000, 2004, Amy Goodman, beer, BOOKS, Bush, Campaign, Congress, contest, Denver, dog, Fox News, free, GOP, Gustav, Hillary, iPod, Iraq, John McCain, kids, mccain, Music, New York, New York Times, NPR, nypd, obama, political, Politics, Pregnant, Race, Rap, Republicans, RNC, Ron Paul, Sarah Palin, Shiite, Soundtrack, spin, Sports, Texas, the Replacements, Trade, Video, war, williamsburg, youtube

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I Got It


Monday, August 25, 2008 - 3:59 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

This is music. “I ain’t no god damned son of a bitch,” says Matt Caplicki, who took this cellphone photo of Yo La and friends doing the Misfits’ “Where Eagles Dare.”

Yo La Tengo are the rare live band that, on any given day, can totally suck or be better than Zeppelin at the Garden 75. Yesterday, at the last free show ever at McCarren Pool in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, the trio made Page, Plant, and co look like pansies.

Playing a sun-soaked late afternoon set before 6000 nostalgic drunkards, YLT meandered through a 2-hour career spanning set, with styles careening across sonic oceans. In what was undoubtedly the best set any band ever played at this venue, the band seamlessly moved from free jazz to hardcore, ambient post-rock to solo-ed out fuzz jams, minimalist maraca and organ soul to ye olde style rock n roll. By the time they welcomed the opening band onstage for a cover of the Misfits’ “Where Eagles Dare,” my ears had heard more variety than a Kim’s Video clerk’s iPod shuffle. And YLT’s just one band—with only three people! Mind numbing. 

Did I mention YLT are the masters of site specific setlist-free shows? Example: at about 6:40pm an August sun blindingly spiked the stage. So Yo La played their song “Summer Sun.” I’ll stop…It was great. The end.

RIP pool shows (though I must admit I only attended one before this—so “best show ever” would be hyperbolic had everyone I spoke to not said so). Mayor Bloomberg has announced plans to return the Bob Moses-built pool to it’s former self (a swimming pool), at a cost of a lot of millions of tax dollars. But smart money says the city will have no money come next year. Expect the pool to rock again next summer…  

TAGS: Brooklyn, drunk, free, iPod, Music, Video, williamsburg

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News Poem


Friday, August 15, 2008 - 4:42 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

I took one phrase from each paragraph of The Independent UK’s ground breaking study on the global urban hipster and created this inspiring poem.

MacBook
Williamsburg
Style anthropologist and author of Streetstyle: From Sidewalk to Catwalk
Rough Trade
local scooter dealership
American Apperal
Dov
repackaging it and selling it
Japanese clothing giant
he recently told Creative Review, was “the ultra-contemporary cool aspect of Japan, its pop culture rather than something traditional and Japanese-y.”
a shabby-chic pub where Vice magazine, style bible to the global scenester, hosts regular parties.
Belgian producers can make a Kylie Minogue song sound like The Prodigy (as did Soulwax);
“dork” glasses,
Julian Casablancas’s vocal persona
Ian Curtis; the French version
Now, the Vice empire includes a clothing chain, a record label and an online TV channel.
guns, sex, drug-taking, blood
Terry Richardson
Cheap digital cameras and the internet popularised that
a satire of scenester life aired on Channel 4
The keffiyeh, once a signifier of solidarity with Palestine, now signifies nothing but cool.
Co-founder of The Future Laboratory, a trend forecasting company
global scenester stays on top of what’s cool worldwide by reading such urban culture despatches as The Cool Hunter
The Vice weekly e-mailout, with images from the global scene, and listings for Vice events in each city, is not unique. Le Cool
We’re The Economist
Flavorpill’s weekly fashion
a product of punk, a product of straight edge
sold out in Berlin

TAGS: Hipster, Review, Trade, Vice Magazine, williamsburg

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UK Discovers Hipsters, AD 2008


Thursday, August 14, 2008 - 5:34 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

No pictures needed. I’ve highlighted key findings in this dispatch from The Independent UK:

The bewildered boy clutches his fruit salad and searches for a seat at the back of the bar. He’s wearing a vintage flannel shirt and skinny jeans, a pair of pointed brogues and pink plastic-framed sunglasses. His hair is a peroxide crop in the androgynous, Agyness Deyn style. This hipper-than-thou hangout in the Truman Brewery on London’s Brick Lane, with its indistinct electronic soundtrack, is a popular spot. Emos, nu-folkies and post-post-punks mingle on Moroccan-style cushions. A guy in a ripped white V-neck T-shirt is stretched out on the leather couch in the corner, his face lit by the pale glow from his MacBook. For an aspiring scenester like the boy in the flannel shirt, standing out from the crowd is going to be a struggle.

We’re in the crucible of London cool, a district so packed with poseurs that it attracts as many satirists as it does followers of fashion. But forget any tired talk simply of Shoreditch twats and Brooklyn hipsters. Across the developed world, from Copenhagen to Cape Town, from Tokyo to Sao Paolo, from Kreuzberg to Williamsburg – from Grangemouth to Guildford, for that matter – today’s scenesters all wear the same clothes and accessories, listen to the same sounds, ride the same bicycles, and read the same magazines, e-mailouts and style blogs.

“There always used to be a particular city that was the centre of cool at a particular point in time,” says Ted Polhemus, style anthropologist and author of Streetstyle: From Sidewalk to Catwalk. “But now there’s no longer a place where it’s ‘at’; there’s no longer any centre of the world’s popular cultural universe. For a time it seemed it would be a simple matter of shifting from London to Tokyo. But instead, street style is everywhere and in places you’d never have guessed it would be.”

The Truman Brewery is a microcosm of an international phenomenon. Across the alley from the bar, Rough Trade East – London’s coolest independent record store – is celebrating its first birthday with a limited edition run of Rough Trade-branded Converse All Stars, the global scenester’s shoe of choice. Next door, there’s a hairdresser cutting the “do” of the day, its clients reclining in Japanese Belmont Cadilla styling chairs “for ultra-comfort and design”.

There’s the local scooter dealership with a rank of Mod-ish Italian Vespas lined up on the pavement outside. And at the end of the row is a clothing store that specialises in stitching together two old pieces of clothing to make something new. Want your pinstripe suit grafted to a hoodie? This is the place for you. And this is what global scenester culture has come to in the Noughties – a succession of styles from the past half-century, patched together to form a single, strangely familiar whole. There’s a bit of Eurotrash here, some British punk there, a swatch of Asian minimalism, and a sizeable off-cut of blue-collar chic from both sides of the Atlantic. So how, exactly, did hip get globalised?

Like every other American Apparel clothing store worldwide, the East End branch – a stone’s throw from the Truman Brewery – stocks Spandex hotpants and sequined tube dresses, white Eighties gym socks and DayGlo sports sweats, maroon corduroys worthy of Woodstock, even the latest album by French electro-auteur Sébastien Tellier. The shop is so popular it’s moving to bigger premises.

American Apparel is an archetype for the globalisation of “cool”. The retail chain was founded in California in 1997 with an outsider ethic. Most of its clothes are produced in an 800,000-square foot factory in Los Angeles, and its Canadian founder, Dov Charney, actively associates his brand with the city’s multicultural melting pot.

Today, American Apparel is the largest domestic clothing manufacturer in the US, and boasts around 200 stores worldwide – in Canada, Mexico, Israel, Japan, Korea and most of Western Europe. There are outlets in Glasgow, Brighton and Liverpool, and the locations of its London branches read like a historical tour of capital cool: Portobello Road, Carnaby Street, Covent Garden, Camden. The further its global reach stretches, the more easily the company can study and copy street style, before repackaging it and selling it back to the originators of that style, with an American Apparel label attached.

Uniqlo, the Japanese clothing giant, is another outfitter of the global scenester. Until 2004, the chain was known as a cheap and nasty Asian C&A equivalent. Its first move into the UK, in the early Noughties, met with little success. So Uniqlo executives went back to the drawing board and hired top creative director Kashiwa Sato to transform its fortunes.

Sato’s strategy was to make Uniqlo a global brand, but one unafraid of flaunting its modern Japanese origins. Now the company’s website is world class, its store interiors sleek and minimalist, its global logo (in both Roman and Japanese script) ubiquitous, and its clothing cutting edge and inclusive. Today, Uniqlo has almost 800 stores worldwide, including outlets in the UK, US and France. What Sato was looking to replicate, he recently told Creative Review, was “the ultra-contemporary cool aspect of Japan, its pop culture rather than something traditional and Japanese-y.” He’d tapped into the global scene.

Down the street from American Apparel, past the London College of Fashion, is The Old Blue Last, a shabby-chic pub where Vice magazine, style bible to the global scenester, hosts regular parties. Outside, a blackboard advertises “fuzzed garage, punk, post-punk, freakbeat and more in an anything goes night of really GOOD music”.

Once, style tribes defined themselves by their music. There were disco divas, electro heads, hippy West Coast rockers…. But in the age of the MP3, anything really does go: Parisian lounge jazz bands can cover the Ramones (as did Nouvelle Vague); Belgian producers can make a Kylie Minogue song sound like The Prodigy (as did Soulwax); and DJs can drop The White Stripes into a hip-hop set – Mark Ronson made his name on the New York club circuit doing just that.

Today’s music scene is a global swapshop. One of the coming bands of this year, for instance, are Johannesburg’s Blk Jks, whose style choices include the global scenester’s familiar Elvis Costello “dork” glasses, 1970s ski vests, vintage Nikes and, yes, skinny jeans.

The band that defined the US branch of the global scene was The Strokes, a quintet of monied Manhattanites posing as Lower East Side hipsters. Lead singer Julian Casablancas’s vocal persona is insouciant, unimpressed, too cool to try harder. His latest project is the song “My Drive Thru”, commissioned for a Converse advertisement; the ad is the centrepiece of Converse Century, a celebration of the company’s first 100 years, and a smart marketing campaign that condenses decades of global youth subculture and rebrands it for the mainstream.

The print element of the Converse Century campaign features a row of international, intergenerational scenesters, each wearing their pair of Chuck Taylor All Star trainers – among them are Hunter S Thompson, James Dean and Sid Vicious. The UK version of the print ad features Joy Division’s Ian Curtis; the French version, actress and singer Jane Birkin; the Chinese version, singer-songwriter Cui Jian. Converse means cool in more than 20 languages.

When the first edition of the glossy freesheet Vice came out in Montreal in 1994, its founders could hardly have believed that, 14 years on, it would be sought out by 900,000 readers on five continents. Now, the Vice empire includes a clothing chain, a record label and an online TV channel.

The Vice aesthetic has had an abiding influence on global scenester style. The magazine’s photographers popularised a street-verité photographic vernacular, with touches of soft porn and a sense of menace. The Vice Photo Book, a collection published earlier this year, boasts images of guns, sex, drug-taking, blood and vomit.

It’s no coincidence that American Apparel’s often controversial advertising campaigns imitate the Vice look, nor that Vice photographer Terry Richardson is the principal photographer for Uniqlo’s in-house magazine, Paper. His style has countless amateur copycats worldwide, whose photos have found a home on fast-growing photo-sharing websites such as Flickr and MySpace. Snapping away at a party in Portland, Oregon, or in Harajuku, Tokyo, a global scenester can disseminate their local style worldwide before sunrise.

“People like Ryan McGinley and Terry Richardson just took pictures of their friends on basic cameras,” explains Andy Capper, the UK editor of Vice. “American Apparel and Uniqlo are doing what Vice did, which is to stop using expensive models and Photoshop. They use point-and-shoot photography, which is more honest and exciting. Cheap digital cameras and the internet popularised that.

Outside a bar in Shoreditch, near the Vice offices, there’s a guy handing out flyers for a club night called Shoreditch is Shit: The Worst Night of Your Life. On the flipside are instructions for how to play “cock, muff, bumhole”, the variation on paper, scissors, stone created for Nathan Barley, a satire of scenester life aired on Channel 4. Making fun of the global scenesters is futile, for they love nothing more than to mock themselves. Everything a scenester does is rendered in air quotes: ironic moustaches, ironic trucker caps, faux-offensive Urban Outfitters T-shirts, white guys with afros, or musical acts with names like Does It Offend You, Yeah?

Nathan Barley himself ran a scenester website – or “urban culture despatch” – called Trashbat.co.ck, and the internet has been a key factor in the globalisation of hip. Through mailouts and blogs, the tropes of eclectic style tribes the world over are quickly integrated into a single street style. The keffiyeh, once a signifier of solidarity with Palestine, now signifies nothing but cool. The fixed-wheel bike is now the global scenester’s favourite ride. China’s cheap Holga camera, once a well-kept secret among professional photographers hoping to achieve that lo-fi look, is now an essential urban accessory, and the results of its use are plastered all over Flickr. Albert Hammond Jr, The Strokes’ guitarist and boyfriend of Agyness Deyn, had one hanging round his neck at the T4 on the Beach party.

“Trends aren’t transmitted hierarchically, as they used to be,” explains Martin Raymond, co-founder of The Future Laboratory, a trend forecasting company. “They’re now transmitted laterally and collaboratively via the internet. You once had a series of gatekeepers in the adoption of a trend: the innovator, the early adopter, the late adopter, the early mainstream, the late mainstream, and finally the conservative. But now it goes straight from the innovator to the mainstream.”

The global scenester stays on top of what’s cool worldwide by reading such urban culture despatches as The Cool Hunter, a blog begun in Sydney four years ago by Bill Tikos, which reports on the hippest fashion, furniture, and design culture. The Cool Hunter has more than 600,000 unique visitors per month, who pore over the contents of its licensed offshoots in the US, UK, Turkey, Italy, China, and Japan. Its global audience allows Tikos to homogenise cool worldwide.

The Vice weekly e-mailout, with images from the global scene, and listings for Vice events in each city, is not unique. Le Cool, also emailed, calls itself “a free weekly cultural agenda and alternative city guide” for European capitals. Flavorpill does the same job for London and the US. It also makes sure scenesters are on the same page with weekly music, art, fashion, and literary mailouts, and Activate: “world news filtered by flavorpill”.

Not even geopolitics is beyond the boundaries of cool for a global scenester: there’s a vague pro-organic, anti-Bush sentiment uniting them all. For more precise examples, look at American Apparel’s pro-immigration political activities, or Vice’s “Iraq Issue” of 2004, which covered the conflict from a new, Vice-centric angle – following, for instance, the travails of an Iraqi heavy metal band. The magazine’s pet topics may be controversial, but they aren’t self-regarding.

“We’re more of a news magazine than a fashion magazine,” says Capper. “Even if we’re writing about a band we try to put some social context in it. We’re The Economist meets Rolling Stone – but back when Rolling Stone was good.”

In the 7 August edition of the JC Report, Flavorpill’s weekly fashion mailout, Erin Magner reported on ‘The Death of Trends’ on the catwalk. “In 2008, the only prevailing trend is that there are no prevailing trends,” she wrote. “It’s not just designers who are contributing to the end of boldface trends … consumers, too, are rejecting the commandments of the editorial elite, taking inspiration from peers around the world to craft their own interpretations of style. Rather than buy into one trend from head-to-toe, like the ‘preppy’ or ‘punk’ movements of decades past, consumers are appropriating eclectic influences and remixing them like a DJ does with music.”

“Fashion is a borrowed medium,” says Martin Raymond. “It’s pick-and-mix, it’s retroactive and it’s nostalgic. So you get a chronological misfit of products and references, mashed together to create something completely different. Think about nu-rave: it’s a product of Eighties romanticism, a product of punk, a product of straight edge and of old rave. The growth in cool-hunting websites and businesses has led to the decay of the traditional time scheme between an emerging group doing something, and it being spotted, embraced and codified. It used to be a year, then it was six months. Now it’s about six days. We have 3,500 trend-spotters stationed around the world. I sit down with them four times a year, and we’ll find that the same trend has cropped up in about 25 different cities.”

As this “borrowing and referencing” takes place not in capitals of cool like London but on an international scale, via the internet, the result is that same brand of individuality is sold, worn and celebrated the world over, simultaneously. If a global scenester starts wearing their underpants around their neck in Sao Paolo tomorrow, by next week boxer shorts would be sold out in Berlin. Ted Polhemus explains, “If you Google ’street style’, you can see street fashion photography from all over the world. What’s interesting is not just the images from London or Tokyo, but those from places like Helsinki, Zagreb, Mexico City, Jakarta, even Tehran. People always ask me, ‘What’s the next big thing?’ but there will never again be a next big thing. The future of fashion is that all of these places will participate. There will never ever again be one ‘the place’.”

TAGS: Brooklyn, converse, france, free, Hipster, Hipsters, immigration, Iraq, Manhattan, model, mp3, Music, NATO, New York, paris, Photoshop, political, Politics, Race, Review, Soundtrack, Sports, t-shirts, The Strokes, Trade, Vice Magazine, williamsburg

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Skatebook launch in Brooklyn tonight


Thursday, August 7, 2008 - 6:40 pm (EST)
By John LaCroix

Skatebook launch party for the Paul Sharpe edition.

Free drinks and skating.

6-9pm  90 N 11th Street, Williamsburg, NY 11211

(say hi to Salman for me!)

TAGS: Brooklyn, free, williamsburg

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Beatrice By Bus: The Chelsea Atlantic City Sans Metaphor


Tuesday, August 5, 2008 - 11:15 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

CORRECTION: Nicole Brydson wrote in an email that neither John Ford nor his brother Juan ever lived with her.  Rather the Ford bros just slept on her floor. Fordsy!!! Also, I spelled Nicole’s name wrong and she’s from NYC not the Hamptons. Yes, I’m retarded.

Left, Paul Sevigny and Vegas being filmed by Inigo Gilmore on the front steps on The Chelsea Hotel, AC. Right, drink in hand…Pics by Lindsay Boisvert.

You’ve been invited to a “soft-opening” party by the owners of the Beatrice Inn for their new venture, The Chelsea Hotel in Atlantic City. A bus to AC is supposed to leave from the corner of Jane St and 8th Ave at 7pm. It’s a Friday, 25 July. You were told there were only 10 seats for your friends, but by 7:30pm you realize there are 60 seats on the (pink) bus, most empty. You call everyone you’ve ever met, ever. You get the bus driver high as he wheels around the city picking up everyone you ever met, ever. 

8:30pm. The bus leaves with thirty or so people, including two middle-age Turkish guys, a half-dozen Euro females (a Slovene, an Austrian, two Italianos, two Brits), a black chick w/ fake tits and Ivy League degree, etc. A lot of laws are being violated (mostly by your lawyer). A makeshift bar, two seats covered in ice, is stocked with every kind of booze. There’s a British Elvis impersonator/television correspondent filming everything. You don’t care because you know you get to keep the tapes.

You realize by 9pm that this is the best bus you’ve ever been on, ever. That’s due to the whos and whats of the party. See, the Beatrice Inn is New York’s sole “dive-club.” In less than two years it has branded an unparalleled party ethos—one that combines everything downtown that’s not lame or too trashy with pure excess. It translates quite well to a bus party. 

Loud indie and rap music via iPod doc spark a dance party. People yell, hug, scream, sing songs, make-out, do drugs, smoke hash and weed, all the good stuff—and you’re still on the bus. You love that the Beatrice party ethic isn’t irony based like the BK/LES scenes, nor is it status based like the Meatpacking or Chelsea (how else do you explain your loser-ass riding on this bus). 

Upon arrival you’re greeted by Paul Sevigny, the DJ, ex-promoter, Beatrice Inn owner, A.R.E. Weapons band member, and former Club Anthrax-goer who is originally from Darien, CT. He wears an old, ripped navy blue sweater with light tan pants. He walks your whole party into the lobby. The all white modernist space is furnsihed with purple couches and phallic lamps and jammed with a weird mix of Philly-area middle age tourists and downtown New Yorkers sipping stiff drinks from red plastic cups.

“The party is in the penthouse,” Sevigny says. “Sign up for rooms here. And thanks for coming.”

Sevigny’s sister is Chloe, the actress, and that surely helped his rise. But you can’t deny the brilliant Britpop/punk/post-punk/downtown-style Paul perfected in the late 90s and early 2000s. The Sevigny style wasn’t wigger-y and druggy like Supreme/Vice, the era’s other dominant downtown vibe. It was just cool and fun. But like Supreme and Vice, Sevigny has proven one of NYC’s most durable brands. Take when you recently interviewed at a national gossip magazine, and the first question they asked you was if you had access to Beatrice. “That’s the only club we really care about,” the weekly’s news editor said. “Nowhere else gets the celebs acting as wasted and slutty.” Not wanting to sell people out for money, you never took the gig, but Beatrice certainly is unique in the celebs-gone-wild respect. For example, Heath Ledger’s last stop on Earth was Beatrice. 

You remember going to Spa Wednesdays, an early 2000s party Sevingy hosted on 13th St in Union Sq. (Spa’s the club Vince Vaugh and Jon Faverau went to with Diddy in the movie Made.) You remember the all-white side-room, where Razzle the dreaded HC kid did the Afro-beat party. And the time Smelly Tom bought Veuve bottles for the now-bargain price of, like, $100 per bottle. All the Brazilian girls. “Michael James” as the door name. Stone Roses into James into Sex Pistols… 

Penthouse beer filled tub. On the bus.
(more…)

TAGS: beer, Boston, Brooklyn, Drugs, iPod, kids, Las Vegas, Movie, Music, NATO, New York, NSA, paris, Pirates, war, wasted, williamsburg, Yankees

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Aaron Stuart on Today’s NYT Cover!!!


Thursday, July 31, 2008 - 11:30 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine


Stuey is the dude squatting…

Holy shit, Aaron Stuart, former Piebald guitarist and current diesel to vegetable oil converter, is on the cover the NYT...Stuey and I grew up together in the Andovers of Mass. He was the only guy in Andover Domino’s Pizza history to have anal sex (with a female) while delivering a two large ‘ronis and wings.

July 31, 2008
On the Bus, and Off It: The Initiation of a Young Rock Impresario

By MELENA RYZIK
“Where’s the bus, where’s the bus, where’s the bus?” Sean Carlson fretted last month as he paced around a block in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, his BlackBerry buzzing a message a minute. He peered anxiously down the street, waiting. An hour later, he spotted it: an old Blue Bird school bus, painted white and powered by vegetable oil. On its wheels rode one far-fetched idea, months of work and, perhaps, a blueprint for his future.

A nascent music promoter, with a wardrobe of cut-offs and three well-worn T-shirts, Mr. Carlson had turned 23 a few days before and barely had a moment to celebrate back home in Los Angeles. He was too busy planning the next step in his evolving career: taking the independent music festival that he founded five years ago in Los Angeles on the road.

(more…)

TAGS: Brooklyn, converse, Domino's Pizza, free, HBO, model, Music, New York, Pizza, polls, Race, t-shirts, Texas, Travel, vegan, Video, war, williamsburg

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Saw you on the L. Want herpes?


Thursday, June 12, 2008 - 3:15 pm (EST)
By Azriel Relph

The only pic I could find of the L platform, but it sort of works.

I ran across an interesting story from the New York City News Service a while ago. Basically it says what most New Yorkers could easily guess; the Bedford Ave. stop off of the L Train is the number one spot in the city for Missed Connections postings on Craigslist. These things are my new favorite reads, (as a spectator only, I’ve not fallen to those depths of desperation yet). Sometimes the shit on them is too good:

“You were tall, dark and handsome - plain and simple - in a blue cowboy-style shirt, short running shorts and flip-flops…

“I was scruffy, blue cap, green shirt, jeans, reading some steinbeck.”

“You had a beard , thin and kinda tall, great clothes, and talking on your phone…”

These posts really narrow it down for Williamsburg, eh?

I knew a dude who used to basically search every spot he’d visited the day before on there every day at work. He definitely found himself alot and would actually date chicks off of it. Shit boggles my mind.

That trend will go great with this one, from AFP:

“One in four adults living in New York City has the virus that causes genital herpes.”

Yup.

TAGS: New York, New York City, williamsburg

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Fuck! MTV’s Real World Invading Brooklyn: Williamsburg Is Likely Destination


Tuesday, May 13, 2008 - 4:51 pm (EST)
By GnarlyTown USA

This has been a rumor for years, but now it looks like MTV and their annoying cast & film crew are coming to NYC back for it’s highly rated TV show, The Real World.  The word is that the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn will be the likely choice of the show’s producers to house their favorite frat brothers and sorority sisters.  Maybe this season will be different than the previous seasons and someone will get “boned” in the jacuzzi.  Yeah right.  Bring back Puck!  But maybe it’s not a bad idea - it probably is, but only time will tell.

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Gothamist article here… 

TAGS: Brooklyn, HBO, williamsburg

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Kate Christensen Q and A


Tuesday, April 22, 2008 - 12:59 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

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Kate Christensen won 2008’s PEN/Faulkner Award for her novel The Great Man. She lives in Greenpoint, BK, and much of The Great Man is set there. I interviewed Kate via email for a story about the neighborhood. The resulting Q and A proved an impressive stand alone document, and I’ve printed it below. PS: Read The Great Man ASAP…

1. What affect does your neighborhood have on your writing?

In addition to the low, unassuming buildings, big sky, proximity to water, and rough-and-tumble history, I’m constantly soothed and inspired by the melange of people in Greenpoint, the combination of big-city open-mindedness — an implicit but very real-feeling tolerance of eccentricities and differences — with a small-town feeling of familiarity and being known. I have something of a dog’seye view of the place; I know all the lampposts and fire hydrants –I walk my dog every day, twice a day, for miles, over to the Newtown Creek, up to my tiny work-studio on Morgan Avenue, through McCarren Park. We traverse the whole neighborhood.

2. When and why did you move to Greenpoint? Approximately where in GP do you live?

I first moved to north Brooklyn in 1990, when I rented a one bedroom above a laundromat on Graham Avenue for $450 a month.Then I lived with my husband in a loft in Williamsburg for the first seven years of our marriage, until we realized (in 2003) that we were suddenly old enough to be everyone’s parents, and that we’d saved enough for a down payment on a house. We found our houseon Calyer Street by what felt like a stroke of amazing luck; we could (barely) afford it, it was exactly where we wanted to live and exactly the house we wanted, a little row house with nineteenth-century details under drop ceilings and shag carpets and paneling. We renovated it ourselves; anyone else who has done this knows what this entails. We tell each other that we’ll never move again because it was so much work to get ourselves here, and in fact we might very well stay here till we die, unless the neighborhood changes radically and becomes too crowded and corporate, which I fear it might, like everywhere else…

3. Your latest novel won the Pen/Faulkner, placing you alongside Henry Miller, Paul Auster, Norman Mailer etc as a major award winning Brooklyn writer. (A google search of “great brooklyn writers” finds a link to you SIXTH! WTF?) How did it feel to get thePEN phone call? Were you really doing laundry in the Greenpoint?

WTF!?!?!!? It must be because of the word “Great” in my title. The washing machine was indeed in use when I got the call — does that count as “doing laundry”? When I learned that I had won, I almost fainted. The shock was so great I came down my first cold in about eight years and still have it, a month later. The PEN/Faulkner wasnever even anything I had daydreamed about winning. It’s still hard for me to believe it.

4. Writing is an intensely personal and difficult act, which you say “causes an enforced manic-depression.” Can you describe what Greenpoint does to lift your spirits? Is there a certain time of day when the sun hits a certain flower pot or something?

Ha! I love that image. But — not to harp on this — what unfailingly lifts my spirits, twice a day, is walking my dog, Dingo. He’s what some of us locals call a Brooklyn Brown — a mid-sized yellow-brown mutt with huge ears. I got him from BARC; he was evidently a wild street dog for at last three years before someone “rescued” him, and although I could see right away how smart, scrappy, and adaptable he was, he wasn’t housebroken or trained. But the instant he arrived in our house he was obviously determined to do the right thing so he’d be allowed to stay. He is now a loyal and stellar companion, but because of his difficult past, he (like me) is prone to occasional fits of melancholy and worry. So even in the worst weather, we go out together morning and evening, and because of this, we both stay (relatively) sane.

5. Food is a major character in The Great Man. Where do you eat/shop in GP?

I go to the Associated up the street, on Manhattan Avenue. And Freshdirect delivers…

6. Hollywood. The place is insane. Can you describe the feeling of returning to GP after a meeting in LA? (And is the Great Man being developed? If so by whom?)

The Great Man is not, to my knowledge, in any sort of development, because no one seems to realize how many brilliant actresses of a certain age there are, being wasted, while 22-year-old lookalike starlets rule the world. Hollywood is insane mostly, to me, becauseno one will say anything negative there. I went out for two series of meetings after I wrote the script for “The Epicure’s Lament,” and after all that fairy dust blowing out of everyone’s mouth, I found it deeply refreshing to come back to Greenpoint, where everyone seems willing to tell it as they see it.

7. Anything you’d like to add about being a writer in Greenpoint…

I feel lucky to live here. I hope the rough edges don’t all get smoothed over; this place feels like an endangered enclave of present and historical authenticity in a spreading unstoppable sea of corporate homogeneity.

8. Hillary or Obama?

Ugh. Do I really have to choose? They both seem like crass, calculating game-players to me. I don’t like either one of them, or any politician, or the political system. I’m a crank who wants revolution. Where are the philosopher kings?

As far as other Greenpoint writers go — I honestly don’t know of any. Am I the only one? Do you know? I would love to know of others…poets or playwrights, novelists…

TAGS: Brooklyn, dog, HBO, Hillary, Manhattan, NSA, obama, political, war, wasted, williamsburg

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Scarlett Johansson records “Best Album Ever By an Actor”? And the end of indie…


Wednesday, April 16, 2008 - 10:48 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

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Gimmick rockers unite! Actresses Scarlett J and Zooey D both go indie…

Best album ever by an actor—Scarlett J? So says New York Magazine. Somehow I doubt it (does Kris Kristoffersen count as an actor or singer?). Actually, it sounds like the worst album ever recorded in world history: Scarlett covering Tom Waits tunes in a Nico-y voice and recorded in Louisiana with the guy from TV on the Radio. (Even Dick Dead in the graveyard at midnight with Diesel jeans sounds better.)

This=good?

We’ve finally heard her forthcoming album of Tom Waits covers for ourselves, and it’s official: Scarlett Johansson just gave us a Woody Allen. (And by the way, can’t you just hear the little man saying schwing?) The disc, Anywhere I Lay My Head, is good.

And yes, girl can sing. Not like Waits — that, of course, would be impossible, not to mention unbecoming. Think Nico, if Nico weren’t a Germanic death angel but the remaining American actress of her age who has not openly displayed her vagina. And who here is the Woody to Johansson’s crooning alter-ego? Dave Sitek, that arrogant white guy from TV on the Radio. (He acted as producer. David Bowie, by the way, also sings on a couple of songs, but obviously he’s no 24-year-old actress.)

To paraphrase Jerry Seinfield, What is it with “quirky” actresses recording lame albums? Another new Indie-Hollywood duo, M Ward and an actress named “Zooey Deschanel,” are hyped in the NYT today. Per NYT: “Zooey Deschanel is often cast as the quirky naïf or the ironic wit…”

In what might be the worst paragraph of National Poetry Month, Melana Ryzik describes the life and times of Zooey D:

Though she was raised and lives amid celebrity in Los Angeles and has appeared in both hugely popular films (“Elf,” in which she briefly sang) and critical and cult favorites (“Almost Famous,” “All the Real Girls”), it’s easy to imagine her puttering around a cozily decorated Williamsburg loft. She takes home doggie bags, prefers tights to spray-tans and uses David Bowie’s “Changes” as her ring tone. She knits and crochets and makes brownies and gingerbread because, she said, “I like the way people react when you bake, which is, like, just pure childlike joy.”

I don’t know much about M Ward, though I do—or used to—like Merge Records, who released this gimmick of an album. I may be decade late, but I suppose now is the time to officially declare indie rock dead.

Indie classicists Pavement, Archers of Loaf, and Built to Spill are among the most underrated bands ever. If those bands formed today, post-Indie takeover, they would be playing Archers’ “Web in Front,” Pavement’s “Gold Sounds,” and BTS’ “Carry the Zero” at sporting events. Every one of their respective albums rule (how many bands have 8 solid outings like Archers?) and nearly all push new boundaries. Pavement, on their first three records, moved from jangly pop to post-pop to stoner fuzz. BTS recorded 10 minute songs on “Further From Now On” after “Keep it Like a Sceret,” an album of 4-minute tunes.

Yet since 1999 indie has gotten safer and safer, moving further and further mainstream, growing risk averse, and sounding boring as hell—like a genre shivering in the face of internet downloads. Modest Mouse is largely to blame (though Antartica is a classic). That Volkswagon song did it.

And Arcade Fire, despite being pretty decent, put the nail in the coffin by kissing Bruce Sprinsteen’s ass. Yes, the Boss rules (Promised Land anyone?), but what he stands for (stadium guitar solos, Made in the USA pride, un-ironic lyrics, the red-head-girl-next-door, union work) is the opposite of indie values (solo-less tunes in rock dives, anti-commercialism, ironic lyrics, dyed-haired art school chicks, non-union service industry work).

Now we have scary bad bands like Vampire Weekend stealing the “indie” flag. Kwaito infused Ivy prep-pop is not cool, not indie. Kwaito is South African rap/house music. White kids from Columbia U stealing kwaito’s style makes Eminem look like Fredrick Douglas. To do so and then put on tennis outfits and look cute is like wiping your ass with an anti-apartheid poster. Looking like an Afrikkaner while playing South African ghetto music sucks.
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Vampire Weekend and South African Afrikkans share a colonial style! And they rip-off South African Kwaito music too! This is similar to wearing an SS uniform and playing klezmer music.
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TAGS: Built To Spill, dog, indie rock, kids, Music, New York, Stoner, war, williamsburg

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Box Fatigue? Nyet yet.


Wednesday, April 9, 2008 - 10:45 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

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The man who saved The Box. Christian Alexander at left ripping shirt. And in bandana with Kanye…

Haters so want to desecrate The oh-so-glorious Box. But even NYC’s finest PHD (Player Hater Degree) holder, Gawker, admits the downfall of The Box means more trance at Mansion.

Supposedly, The Box is broke and can’t afford lawyers. I’ve not heard such things. In fact, I keep hearing about Snoop Dog performances, free mushrooms at the tables, NAS looking at titties, bikini girls in the face, and so on from my neighbor and friends. Even Gawker’s EIC/founder Nick Denton agrees The Box still rox:

The economics of The Box—the venue is intimate and the acts expensive—have forced the owners to allow in more high-spending bankers than consistent with the club’s celebrity cachet. Predictably, Manhattan’s lemming-like press, Gawker included, has been quick to declare the club over.

However, the gleeful criticism misses one point: the shows at The Box, which range from sexy burlesque to gross-out tranny acts, give the venue an energy that’s lacking elsewhere. (Mos Def gave an impromptu performance the other night.) Even on lackluster nights, it’s enjoyable—as one Gawker writer, who admits to being “knee-jerk snarky” when writing about the club, found to her surprise. If The Box’s pricey proposition forces it to scale back, Manhattan nightlife will be the poorer. The club’s critics deserve to be chained to the speakers at Mansion. Then they’ll be sorry.

There’s a few reasons why The Box continues to rule. First, owners Simon Hammerstein (grandson of South Pacific’s Rodgers and Hammer…) and Richard Kimmel (Wooster Group alum) actually know theater, and they’re show is still fun.

Second, after Box owner Cordell Lochin was sent to jail for drug trafficking, they hired in his place the one and only Christian Alexander. A true gentleman of leisure, Christian is also a borderline thug. He brings to The Box something that that the downtown club scene severely lacks—the hood. For every banker, Christian brings in a criminal, rapper, all out party girl, model etc. He’s not a promoter solely in nightlife for cash and women either. No. He not only hosts the party, Christian Alexander is the party. The guy’s had multiple 40-day long parties in 2008 alone!

Finally, The Box is still cool because you can walk to it from Soho, LES, East Village, Tribeca, West Village, Chinatown, and even Williamsburg. There’s no other place in a central downtown location where you can see celebs hanging with your pot dealer while on stage can-can girls dance around someone shoving dildos up butts.

TAGS: dog, free, HBO, Manhattan, model, NATO, The Box, williamsburg

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Sooooo ANNOYING!!!


Wednesday, April 2, 2008 - 1:03 pm (EST)
By GnarlyTown USA

No, this isn’t a band photo.

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Being fashionable means being privileged and lucky, right? But as we all know in the fashion biz, there are trend spotters, trend forecasters and the worst term of all, Cool Hunters*. Hunting Cool? Really? That job itself, and job title even more so, gives me heavy brain pain. These assholes go around the globe looking to get a step ahead in the business of youth and teen culture/fashion. Whether it be Brussels, Barcelona, Beirut or Brooklyn, the current trends must start somewhere, right? So from what I understand, it goes like this… Find a somewhat fashionable, youthful, energetic city. Travel there. Look for all types of kids with “unique” style. Photo or Video them. Ask them questions about how they’d describe their style(vintage, rare, thrift, chic - whatever lame adjective), what bands they’re into, what websites they frequent, etc. Then these style-less forecasters go back to their stuffy Manhattan, London, Paris, Tokyo or Santa Monica offices and sort out what trends to pitch to their clients; Urban Outfitters, American Apparel, Coca Cola, Diesel, Quiksilver, Etc., Etc., Etc. Does this marketing scheme work? I’d say yes. Is Fashion important - even on a grand scale? Even on a smaller scale? I’d say yes, well kind of. If it makes people happy, then yes it’s important. Personally I care how I dress and look - to a certain extent. Do you care how you’re dressed? Really though, it’s a matter of taste and opinion, and if riding the L Train from Manhattan to Brooklyn in a pair of sweatpants is important enough to care about, then so be it. Would you wear sweatpants on a date? If so, you’re rad. Who the hell am I to be covering fashion? Lissa, punch me when you see me next.

*I do have two friends who have this type of trend forecasting job and it’s painful to talk to them about it. They honestly believe in their job, and feel as if they are contributing to New York’s fashionable youth.

** The people in the photo are very close friends of mine. I am NOT making fun of them, or their choice of shirts, just using them as an example of what happens in Brooklyn, (Williamsburg specifically) when something gets “cool” or revisited, and how it ultimately implodes on itself. These three friends had no idea of the other one wearing essentially the same piece of clothing - (which I must point out, this certain shirt is not a new shirt as we all know - this type of shirt is classic, flannel, rad) but they all ended up showing up at mega-hip, but “locals only” bar, Daddy’s in Williamsburg.

You gotta stay either one step ahead, or four steps behind and you’ll be fine in the fashion world.

TAGS: Brooklyn, kids, Manhattan, New York, paris, Travel, Video, williamsburg

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Six Years Later: Max Fish/Hole Party Moves to Whitney Biennial, Becomes “Performance Art,” Then Brawl


Tuesday, March 18, 2008 - 10:09 am (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

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I smell art…

Part of this year’s Whitney show is a series of performances at the 67th St Armory. Whether you think The Voluptuos Horror of Karen Black playing trannie punk while ex-graff artist and current art artist Dash Snow DJs another room is art is up to you.

On Saturday, Dash Snow’s legal wife Agathe Snow—a FOB whose art is weird “dinner parties”—was in the middle of DJing a 96-hour set when a riot broke out:

Obinna Izeogu, an art director who attended the party, described the scene as a “mini-riot,” in which blows were traded for more than fifteen minutes as more partygoers joined in the fray that continued to swell even after D.J.’s killed the tunes (and Snow’s vision of infinite dance). “It started off like two and then it just became a rumble,” said Izeogu. Armory security staff, unprompted, dialed 911 for reinforcements, and officers who responded called it “that gigantic fight”.

“It was mostly a young skate-inspired crew,” said Izeogu, “but then everyone got involved.” Attendees, including members of ThreeAsFour and Dash Snow, some of whom had committed earlier to spending hours on the dance floor, tried valiantly to keep going, dancing even as the lights bumped up and organizers decided to cut the music.

In the early 2000s this crew was hanging at Max Fish and the Hole, doing pretty much the same amount of drugs and partying. Thanks to a global art bubble and post-9/11 worship of downtown cool, their lifestyle has become genuine get rich art.

Let’s flashback to The Hole, 2002.

A Wednesday, DJ Gibby Miller is spinning a CD set. I request Biggie like 14 times. The only light is dim and red. About 200 pack the tiny gay bar’s only weekly mixed (gay, straight, bi) party. No one I know is doing bad coke in the doorless bathrooms or while sitting in cum covered booths. Dash Snow is wearing a full Knicks homey suit, matching orange hat and XXXL jersey. AsFour were still a four-piece then and those stupid circle bags were hoisted on a half-dozen arms, both male and female.

All of sudden, Boston Mike (RIP) and Ezec from DMS (Doc Marten Skins or Drugs Money Sex—the famed New York hardcore crew that spawned Agnostic Front) roll in. Gibby sees them and plays The Clash’s “White Riot” followed by “Minor Threat” by Minor Threat. (”I couldn’t find Madball ‘Set it Off’,” Gibby later explains.) Ezec, a former mob enforcer, wears a baggy full camo outfit. Boston Mike—his lion face and gold teeth filled out by a dreadlock mane—wears a bubble jacket. They’re inside for like 5 minutes when Boston Mike attacks a gay kid in black frame nerd glasses and a tight white tee.

“What did I do,” the gay cries. A bottle smashes his face. Blood spills from his noes and lips.

Ghost, son—Ezec and Boston Mike vanish. Blood is being mopped from the floor. Two cops show up, and, ten minutes later, leave.

And The Hole’s back to business as usual. The third guitarist from SF psych-junk rockers The Warlocks spills his coke on the cum cushions and sniffs it straight off the crusty felt, inhaling AIDS. A graff-meister stands on his buddy’s shoulders to spray paint a tag. At 3am a mosh pit busts out: Bad Brains “Banned in DC.” This half-Hawaiian girl who worked at Isa in Williamsburg gets on someone’s shoulders and flashes her small breasts, wearing jean short shortz and Nike dunks.

So, what sounds better? The Whitney fight on the Upper East Side or this DMS gay bash on Houston and 2nd Ave? More importantly, isn’t it great that New York will allow pure idiocy into it’s most hallowed halls as long as it’s in the name of “art”?

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Dmize: an early 90s DMS band who sucked, I mean were awesome. They should play a reunion the Whitney Biennial. Just look at that cover art—Picasso be damned!

TAGS: attack, Boston, Drugs, Hawaii, Music, New York, NPR, spin, Trade, war, williamsburg

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Re-doing the Guardian’s Re-doing of the Best Of New York, chow


Monday, March 10, 2008 - 3:25 pm (EST)
By Ray LeMoine

Today, The Guardian goes through NY Mag’s “Best of” issue’s food sections and re-selects a top ten. Below, I’ve reselected their reselections.
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Waverly Restaurant.

1. Best fried chicken
They say: Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar and Grill (308 W 58th St, + 212-397-0404).
We say: Egg (135 N 5th St, Brooklyn, + 718-302-5151). As Peter Meehan, the New York Times restaurant critic rightly noted, “A good fried chicken is hard to find. Especially in New York City. But the fried chicken at Egg in Williamsburg, Brooklyn: it’s good.” Not only good. It’s great. Meehan is right because the fried chicken is made at Egg by Stephen Tanner, a man from Georgia whose mind is fried in the best way possible. Tanner was the genius behind the now-closed Pies n’ Thighs, a fried chicken cult favourite.

Me say: Kennedy Fried Chicken. Blue Ribbon rules. But if go there and eat fried chicken you’re wasting your money. Who besides Blue Ribbon offers bone marrow and escargot at 3am? (Try the raw bar at Blue Ribbon Soho’s non-sushi location. Eat the crawfish.) Egg is in Williamsburg. Eating fried chicken in Wiliamsburg is the munching equivilant of a mustache—aka way too ironic. Go to any Kennedy’s location with a bullet-proofed kitchen.

2. Best Wine Bar
They say: Gottino (52 Greenwich Ave, + 212-633-2590).
We say: Peasant Wine Bar (194 Elizabeth St, + 212-965-9511). Gottino is new and nice and has a marble bar. It oozes spanking new rusticity. Peasant Wine Bar, a converted cellar in NoLiTa, makes Gottino seem like a Disney ride. Peasant is cozy in an unforced way, has a solid menu (courtesy of Peasant, the upstairs restaurant), and a small but expertly chosen wine list.

Me say: Wine bars are for yuppies trying to act sophisticated and impress girls with their credit cards. Still, the Guardian is on to something in recommending Peasant. Almost. Peasant’s owners recenterly opened Bacaro on Division St at Canal St in Chinatown. Roughly translated, Bacaro is Italian for wine bar. Roughly located on the fringes of downtown gentrification, Bacaro’s basement is a grunge-y maze. It’s staffed by a crew who used to work at uber gay bars the Hole and the Cock. Where better to drink wine than amongst this art fart, drug dealer/doer crowd?

3. Best pizza
They say: Actually, NY mag has cleverly skirted the issue here by picking one for each borough. In Manhattan, they tap Una Pizza Napoletana (349 12th Street, + 212-477-9950).
We say: Agreed, Una Pizza Napoletana is good. But, if you must sample only one, check out Park Slope’s Franny’s (295 Flatbush Avenue, Park Slope, Brooklyn, + 718-230-0221). Whereas UPN offers the most ascetic of menus, at Franny’s, you can choose from a large and shifting selection of toppings. Also, without qualification, the crust on Franny’s Neopolitan pies is something approaching the ideal form of pizza crust.

Me say: John’s Pizza by the W 4th stop in the West Village is the slicer’s delight. But Pizza Gruppo on Ave B and 11th offers NY’s most unique pie—uber thin crust with strange, perfect cheese. Plus, Gruppo’s staff includes not only a competition eater (Eater X—world champion jalepino eater) but also the most relaxed mann on earth, Evan Mann, who handles day shifts, when you can score two slices and drink for $4.

The best pizza, however, is cooked by Gianni at Lil Frankie’s. When Fat Man Batali was opening his low-rent Babbo, Otto, he came in to Lil Frankie’s with notepads and a three-man team and literally stole Gianni’s recipe.

4. Best steak (not in a steak house)
They say: Park Avenue Winter (100 East 63rd Street at Park Avenue, + 212-644-1900), which must be a joke. Not that the steak there is “bad”, but…
We say: To call PAW the best when Momofuku Ssam Bar (207 2nd Ave, + 212-254-3500) is serving it’s rib eye only 40 blocks south defies logic and righteousness. Th