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Grub Street reports Ryan Skeen is the new chef at Allen & Delancey. Skeen left the Union Square pork palace, Irving Mill, a couple of months ago. A statement from Allen & Delancey says "We look forward to Ryan bringing his talents to the kitchen and
continuing the tradition of exceptional food on the Lower East Side." Yesterday, we mentioned that Kyle Bailey was on his way out as A & D's executive chef.
You can catch the latest TropiChat, an ongoing series that features conversations with renowned Latin American filmmakers, at the New Museum tomorrow at 3:00pm. One of Mexico’s most accomplished young filmmakers, Fernando Eimbcke will be on hand to discuss his work with Gavin Smith, editor of Film Comment. Fernando's award-winning deadpan dramedy Lake Tahoe,
a Film Movement release which opens tonight at Anthology Film Archives.
For more free fun in the city, head over to The Municipal Parking Lot at Ludlow and Broome for the 16th annual Shakespeare in the Parking Lot. Midsummer Night's Dream opened last night and will be running Thurs. – Sat. through July 25th.
Soul Power opens tonight at the Sunshine Cinema. From the same team that produced the Academy Award-winning documentary When We Were Kings, Soul Power
is a verité documentary about the legendary music festival (dubbed
Zaire '74), that took place around the same time, depicting the experiences and performances of such musical
luminaries as James Brown, BB King, Bill Withers, Celia Cruz and a host of
others.
After a bizarre month in Albany, the New York State Senate is back in business. Here's how the Times reports the end of the stalemate this morning: "Senate leaders, sounding by turns apologetic, fatigued and
self-congratulatory, started Thursday night to pass the scores of bills
they had neglected during the leadership struggle."
The Downtown Express explains why City Councilman Alan Gerson has been missing from many public events recently: he had the swine flu.
Public Advocate Betsy Gautbaum talks to Brian Lehrer about the "politically motivated" decision to slash her budget 40-percent.
Curbed is very impressed with the new apartment building, 30 Orchard.
Members of the esteemed New York State Senate are finally having their pay withheld today. Meanwhile, Governor Paterson goes on TV tonight to address the stalemate in Albany. The Albany Times Union reports he may move to appoint a Lieutenant Governor.
Fran Barrett of the Community Resource Exchange weighs in on the impact of the Albany standoff on non-profits.
The city says fewer kindergarteners will be turned away from neighborhood schools in the fall than they first anticipated. But parents are still concerned.
It appears the chef at Allen & Delancey, Kyle Bailey, is on his way out.
Butcher Bay sues Community Board 3, after it decided not to support the restaurant's quest to upgrade its liquor license.
Local butcher Jeffry Ruhalter will be at the Tenement Museum tomorrow evening at 6:30p for a Tenement Talk. Ruhalter, who gave The Lo-Down some excellent Money Saving Tips back in April, will be discussing his fourth-generation family business which opened at 188 Orchard St. in 1920 and is still going strong in the Essex Street Market after all these years.
There’s plenty of room to debate whether Shelly Silver is good for the Lower East Side and good for New York State. But no matter your view of Albany’s most powerful man,” I think you’ll find the new documentary film, “Excuse Me, Mr. Speaker,” interesting, poignant and funny. The film debuted last month at the VisionFest Film Festival in Tribeca. There’s another chance to see it tonight (details below).
Filmmaker Justin Sullivan followed Paul Newell’s campaign to unseat Speaker Silver in last year’s election. It was the first time he’d been challenged in 20 years. Newell didn’t exactly seem like a formidable opponent. Here was a 32 year old guy, a community organizer living in a cramped, rent stabilized apartment on Division Street, who says things like “ritalin don’t fail me now.” Yet in spite of the long odds, he won the endorsement of New York’s three biggest newspapers. Sullivan, who’s been friends with Newell for years, got almost complete access to the scrappy, unconventional and, at times, absurd campaign.
The film is very entertaining. After winning the endorsement of the New York Times, a euphoric Newell declares he’s ready to forgive the paper for “weapons of mass destruction.” At the Democratic convention in Denver, he is determined to win over the political establishment — yet one Albany lawmaker goes in search of hand soap after accidently shaking Newell’s hand. On election day, police reprimand Newell for campaigning outside polling stations. Newell sees one officer as a potential voter, extending his hand.
But “Excuse Me, Mr. Speaker” has a serious message. Newell fearlessly argued that Sheldon Silver is beholden to big developers, an adversary of transparency in government and a politician who has forgotten “the little guy.” It’s a message that certainly resonated with New York City’s editorial boards, if not with voters. Even though the Silver trounced Newell in the primary election, the upstart did succeed in one respect. As the Times put it, Newell’s candidacy “brought the ever-secretive Mr. Silver out to meet voters and campaign for his job.”
There is, of course, an alternative point of view. Many non-profit organizations doing good work on the Lower East Side argue that Silver uses his clout to make sure they receive critical funding. His constituent services are top notch. His representatives fan out across the district, attending community meetings and seeking out constituents who need their help with a wide array of problems. In dealing with New York’s tangled bureaucracy, a call from Shelly Silver’s office can cut through a lot of red tape. Newell counters that this is exactly the thing that corrupts the political system. How is a challenger supposed to compete with a guy who has millions at his disposal to “buy an election?”
Newell is still actively involved in politics. He’s working with Pete Gleason, who’s taking on another incumbent, City Councilman Alan Gerson. At the screening I attended, he did not rule out the possibility of running again for the State Assembly. You can see “Excuse Me, Mr. Speaker,” tonight at 8pm at “The Tank,” 354 West 45th Street. More information here. Newell and Justin Sullivan will be on hand to answer questions after the screening.

We couldn’t resist those signs outside Clinton Street favorite “Alias,” advertising their new lunch service. The other day I stopped by to try it out. Unlike their popular weekend “destination” brunch and dinner that draws people from all over the city, Alias’ managers say, lunch is all about catering to the neighborhood. The menu includes some of the brunch and dinner favorites, like the fried chicken and house made biscuits and gravy, but offers quite a few new items, all for $10 or less.
Keeping with their emphasis on fresh ingredients, Alias offers a lovely grilled artichoke salad with walnuts, blue cheese, mesclun, shallot vinaigrette ($8), a choppped Mexican salad ($8, +$2 with grilled chicken, pulled pork or Italian tuna) and some new hot sandwiches like the duck confIt on a grilled pullman with goat cheese, garlic chives, pickles, sour cherry. Their new “Amazing Veggie Burger” is hearty and flavorful. It’s been so popular, they are considering adding it to their dinner menu. All this, plus free wi-fi, makes Alias a great midday option.
The Late Breakfast/Lunch at Alias is served Monday – Friday from 11a-4p. Visit their site for the full menu.
Mayor Bloomberg has ordered a hiring freeze, as the stalemate in Albany drags on. NYC will lose $60 million by the end of July as a result of the inaction in the State Senate.
A new IPhone app helps you scope out the layout of each subway station — identifying where you should exit each train for the most direct access to exits and transfers.
Saturday, July 18th: Women Movers & Shakers: 150 Years of Influential Lower East Side Women – a lecture sponsored by the East Village History Project. More information here.
New York Magazine has details on the new high-end menswear store No. 8B on Orchard Street.
For several weeks we've been following the campaign to restore funding for 88 after school programs throughout New York City. Today, we heard from the Educational Alliance, which led the campaign, that the programs will, in fact, be fully funded in the coming year. Mayor Bloomberg planned to cut the programs in the face of a large budget shortfall, but in the past week he agreed to restore 80-percent of the money devoted to the community-based programs. The rest of the money will come from the federal stimulus fund. There's still concern that the programs could once again be in jeopardy in future years, but for now, the organizations affected (and the kids) can celebrate a hard fought victory. See our previous coverage of this story, including a video of a big rally at City Hall, here.
In the trendy bars and restaurants along Avenue B, last week's arrest of Lower East Side rapper Roberto Rosado (aka "Tru Life") was barely noticed if it was noticed at all. The Times and the Daily News ran their obligatory stories– only on account of "Tru Life's" one-time status as protégé of rap music mogul Jay Z. But a few steps away down 13th Street, inside the Campos Plaza Housing Project, the story was anything but trivial. Street-smart kids, moms and youth counselors all knew the violence that had erupted a few days earlier was a bad omen, at the start of a long, tense summer.
It would be easy to dismiss the events of the past two weeks as an isolated incident, the conclusion of a long-simmering argument between a hot-tempered rapper and some guys from the neighborhood. But it's become clear that they hint at much larger problems: a pattern of escalating violence, a burgeoning drug trade and the prospect of a full-blown gang war.
Here's what we know. "Tru Life," is being held without bail on Rikers Island, having pled not guilty to charges of second- degree murder and gang assault in connection with a knife fight that ended in the murder of a 20-year old man, Christopher Guerrero. Tru Life's brother, Marcus Rosado, and, possibly, two other men are also being held. Police believe the trouble began hours earlier at a Midtown nightclub, where gunfire erupted and a suspected drug dealer, Michael Slater, was shot in the stomach. There are many conflicting accounts of what happened. But it seems clear the night's violence was fueled by a bitter feud among rival drug gangs based in New York's housing projects. The tensions have apparently been escalating since the early spring, perhaps even earlier.
At a recent community meeting the NYPD acknowledged they've seen an up tick of violence in the neighborhood. But they resisted suggestions that they have an "organized gang problem" on their hands. Captain Edward Britton, responsible for policing 23 housing developments and 40-thousand residents, emphasized that violent crime is still quite low, historically speaking. But some mothers in attendance made it clear a series of incidents over several months have them more than a little worried. These include the pursuit of a teen by men in SUV's brandishing guns, a shootout on Clinton Street and a murder last year at Campos Plaza.
Reports of increasing violence are not new. Late last year, residents demanded more police protection after several shootings at the Alfred E. Smith Houses. Community newspapers and blogs have taken note of several violent episodes at Tompkins Square Park. Police have been investigating the death of a woman who was reportedly attacked in the park two months ago. While they're not convinced she was murdered, some park regulars believe a major gang in the area, the Money Boyz, was responsible.
Continue reading Beyond Tru Life’s Arrest: Growing Fears of a Violent Summer
An opening of interest that caught our eye:
Greene Contemporary's solo exhibition of new work by Hanna Cole, titled Instant Sublime. The press release notes:
Hanna Cole's work explores the distracted American state of mind. In Instant Sublime, she investigates the disconnect between an individual's physical presence and emotional state during a single instant in time. In the chaos of urban life, driving is one of the few remaining acts of
ritual and solitude. Drawing from personal experience, Cole uses
different views from inside a car as a metaphor for the relationship
between interior life and the world outside.
Her show
opens tonight and continues through Sunday August 2, 2009.
New York Magazine reports Ugo Rondinone's now-famous (or infamous?) "HELL, YES!" sign on the New Museum will be staying up on the building a little longer, at least for another year, apparently. It was previously scheduled to be taken down this month but was "recently purchased for the museum by a group of image-conscious trustees". How does the community feel about the sign? At least one response has been painted on the bottom of the light post across the street from the museum for some time now:
There was a lot of activity at the Essex Street Market Tuesday. They're preparing to put down a new tile floor covering the entire indoor space. There's lots of talk about a new bakery (Pain D'Avignon) moving in the old Ronnie Sue's Chocolates (she now has room to spread out in a much larger stall on the other sde of the market). No one seems to know when the bakery might open. We emailed Pain D'Avignon's managers- no word yet. I made sure to snap up a chocolate chip cookie from the Sweet Things Bake Shop, run by the Lower Eastside Girls Club. They are getting close to opening New York City’s first and only Girls Club facility- a LEED Gold state of the art ‘green’ building that will serve hundreds of economically disadvantaged girls and their families.
Along with plenty of delectable treats to be found in the Market, one never knows what sort of interesting art you might stumble upon. From the various local artists represented at Jeffery's Meat Market (everyone wants to paint Jeffery but he also puts on shows by other artists), to the photographs hanging in Tra La La Juice Bar's seating area, you'll find some interesting works of art. While sipping a delicious strawberry, blueberry, banana, and mango smoothie I spoke with Ira Stolzenberg, one of Rainbo's (and Tra La La Juice Bar) founders about his current "installation", titled Heady Stuff. It is a series of portraits of people's faces overlaid with different types of meat. Mostly uncooked meat. The results are fabulously disgusting. You'll have to see these photos to believe them.
I also visited the Chuchifritos gallery/project space, which is currently exhibiting "Feedback: Working space 09." It features works selected by guest curator Thomas J. Lax from artists participating on the Lower East Side-Rotating Studio Program. I particularily liked Harumi Ori’s ongoing sculptural series on paper, "I was here," made out of plastic mesh and depicting the East River Park (pictured below).
A NYPD cruiser pursuing a white Cadillac jumped the curb on Avenue D and 5th Street yesterday afternoon, injuring 9 people. Five pedestrians (including a baby) and the driver and a passenger in the Cadillac were taken to Bellevue Hospital. The two officers in the police car were also hospitalized. Apparently none of the injuries was serious. A police spokesman said the officers were responding to a colleague who they thought needed assistance.
Uncharted territory: due to the State Senate's inaction, Mayor Bloomberg has lost control of the city's schools. Now what? No one knows.
Grand Street News details State Senator Daniel Squadron's bill to allow residential permit parking (BTW thanks to GSN for talking up The Lo-Down)!
Eater has the scoop on the shuttering of Le Pere Pinard on Ludlow Street.
Frank Bruni dines on the Lower East Side, discovering that, on weekends, it's a party scene:
More and more there’s a meatpacking-district loudness and rowdiness to
the circulating throngs, and it made me wonder if some of the
restaurants that set up shop here years ago chose the wrong area—or,
rather, are hurt by the direction in which the area evolved. It feels
less edgy and more like an all-purpose, indiscriminate party scene than
it used to.
He mentions specifically WD-50 and Falai. On the upside he loved the restaurant, Peasant on Elizabeth Street. The downside: it's not really in the Lower East Side. Our upside: Peasant's sister restaurant, Bacaro (on Division Street), is just as good and it is, in fact, in the neighborhood.
Finally, we mentioned this a few days ago, but now it has the air of legitimacy only Twitter can provide:
From RPATTZGPS: WEDNESDAY 6am-9pm CONFIRMED Remember Me (the Robert Patterson film) at Orchard St. btw Broome & Grand on lower east side from TweetDeck
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