Author: fish1964

  • Urban Recycling

    My oldest daughter just finished 8th grade at Brooklyn Friends School. She’s been there since pre-K and one thing I found interesting was that in Lower School (K-4) they have woodworking class. And it’s for real woodworking. They have very young kids using very sharp tools, including power versions, and no one gets hurt (at least to my knowledge). Both my daughters loved woodworking and neither are particularly into that sort of thing, so the teacher must be doing something right.

    One year (3rd grade?) the project was to build a chair with whatever creative thing you wanted to add to it, so my daughter build a bench like chair with a cow head that swiveled. Imagine a very sturdy small bench with a carved cow head, painted white with black spots. And it was really sturdy. Pretty good for a 3rd grader.

    We have a regular homeless person on our block. An older Asian woman who is clearly not all there, but crazy in a mostly harmless sort of way. She camps out in front of the Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church on the corner (doesn’t everyone have one of those?). She does some clean up and other stuff for the church and the church clearly looks out for her as do the other local businesses and most folks. Crazy but our crazy. Welcome to Brooklyn.

    My daughter is leaving for sleep-away camp for four weeks. I know people do this all the time at earlier ages and for longer, but this is a big deal for us. Four weeks without her will be really strange. While she’s out we want to paint her room. We want to push all the furniture to the middle of the room and throw a big drop cloth over it. But it’s not that big a room, so we needed her to get rid of a bunch of old stuff.

    She did great and threw out a ton of stuff. The cow bench got pitched.

    In Brooklyn garbage goes out front. We are in a large building with 58 units, so it’s a bunch of garbage. It goes out in the evening and is picked up early in the morning.

    Our homeless lady now has the cow bench.

    The swivel head is gone, but without that it’s basically a very sturdy small bench. Ideal for her during the day. It’s just hard not to chuckle as I walk past.

    Urban recycling.

  • Winner, Winner, Chicken Dinner

    Once again, Origami Risk has been named one of the Best and Brightest companies to work for in Chicago and Atlanta (our two largest offices). Nationwide awards will be announced soon.

    Chicago winners

    Atlanta winners

    I don’t see any of our competitors, all of whom have big offices in Chicago and/or Atlanta, on these lists. Hmm…

  • AlphaGo Go

    Google’s AlphaGo software just beat the world #1 Go player. And it’s getting better:

    “Last year, it was still quite humanlike when it played,” Mr. Ke said after the game. “But this year, it became like a god of Go.”

  • Nothing Matters

    I enjoy reading Dr. Aaron Carroll on Twitter, the blog The Incidental Economist or the excellent YouTube series Healthcare Triage. You should at least follow the last one. When he’s frustrated (which seems to be often these days) he tends to tweet “nothing matters”.

    That came to mind today. I’ve been avoid political posts because, well, nothing matters. But these two items leaped out:

    blog_ahca_vs_obamacare_uninsured_2

    https://twitter.com/cspan/status/867425942624509953

    We’d be fine with schools discriminating against women and blacks if it weren’t for those pesky Title IX and Civil Rights laws…

  • Happy Birthday Brooklyn Bridge

    My favorite bridge is 134 today. Brownstoner has a post with their ten most popular Instagram pictures of the bridge. Click the link for all of them, but this was #1:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BCtZ2XjFBub/

  • Blossom Brooklyn

    I blogged about this place already, but we were there again tonight and I took video. This is Tori’s order, Strawberry, Graham Cracker Vanilla (it has a better name, but those are the ingredients). If you don’t feel like reading the old post, the idea is that the pan is super cooled so it is freezing into ice cream while they smash the ingredients. Then they flatten it and roll it.

     

  • USA for Dummies

    This comes via a blog called One Hot Mess, which I had not heard of before today. So if it turns out the author is a multiple felon devil worshiper, it’s not my fault. The post (actually called The United States Presidency for Dummies) is accurate and funny:

    6.  In 1787, the Continental Congress—which was like a temporary government –created the UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION to be the “Supreme Law of the Land.” That means we do not have KINGS or DESPOTS or any LOYALTY to anyone except for THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION which is a PIECE OF PAPER and not an ORANGE person or any person.

    There’s also a post called “The James Comey Firing in Limerick” which amuses me, so I might have to check out the rest of this blog…

  • Derek Jeter Night

    They retired Derek Jeter’s #2 tonight at Yankee Stadium and all the greats were there. Everything has already been said about Jeter. He had an amazing knack for the dramatic.

    The Dive:

    A classic because it was Yankees vs. Red Sox and it was the 12th inning tied at 1-1 and there was a runner at second who scores if he doesn’t make this catch:

    Mr. November:

    This would be a World Series the Yankees eventually lose, but in the first World Series pushed into November, literally the first pitch after midnight, he hits a walk-off home run.

    Hit #3000:

    Of course it was a home run.

    Final at bat of his career:

    A game winning hit.

    And of course, the flip:

  • Under a Million

    When two bedroom apartments are enthusiastically reviewed as “under a million” it’s clear Brooklyn real estate prices are crazy. The place looks very nice, if too modern for my tastes. It’s a good neighborhood in Brooklyn. But it’s 939 square feet. That’s $985 per square foot. Crazy.

    brooklyn-apartment-for-sale-clinton-hill-29-lexington-3b-2