Category: Brooklyn

  • Practice What You Preach

    I blogged about the Please Touch the Art exhibit in Brooklyn Bridge Park. So here’s Victoria doing just that…

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  • Please Touch The Art

    The already fantastic Brooklyn Bridge Park got some new art recently. Much of it is unusually shaped orange benches. That may not sound like art, but in person it really fits in with the park beautifully.

    I can’t embed NY Times video, but this page has a nice video of the artist exploring his own work.

    This park just gets better and better…

  • Brooklyn is Williamsburg

    This is probably only funny to people in Brooklyn. From Gothamist, Here’s What Brooklyn Looks Like According To Real Estate Brokers:

    I apparently live in SouthWest Williamsburg…

  • I Have 400 or so…

  • Pick your taxi wisely

    This article is brilliant. It starts by being skeptical of a Bloomberg Business article showing how the most common tip amounts are 20%, 21% and 22%, with 19% strangely unusual.

    Any NYC taxi rider would expect 20% to be the most common. The credit card touch screen in the cab gives you three one button tip amounts and the option to manually enter amount. The one button amounts are 20%, 25% and 30%.

    Unless you are rich or you just told your driver, “I’m late for my flight, get me to LaGuardia as fast as possible”, you press 20%. Even if you were thinking 15%, pressing 8 extra buttons and doing the math just isn’t worth the 47 cents you might save.

    But why is 21% popular? And the study showed that the average tip increased after 4PM. The article quoted a taxi spokesman who basically said “in rush hour people appreciate cabs more”. No indication why this is only true in the evening rush hour. And are you really saying that at 4:01 people suddenly feel like pressing 8 extra buttons to tip 1% more? Please. Again, the initial study showed that 21% was the second most popular tip amount, not an overall average of 21%. Seriously, who tips exactly 21%.

    So someone calls BS on the article and digs into the data. NYC has been very good about making data open. You should read the article, but basically he figures out that there are two different software versions in NYC cabs. One of them calculates tips on fare only and the other calculates on fare+surcharge+toll. From 4-8 PM there is a surcharge added to the fare. If you don’t take that into account in your tip calculations, people are suddenly tipping 21%. If you do, you see a chart like this:

    Which is exactly what any NYC person would expect.

    There are two lessons to be learned here. First, question the data. Second, if you drive a cab in NYC, get one that calculates tip percentage generously…

  • BK Hillary

    Apparently Hillary Clinton’s campaign headquarters will be in our neighborhood. Actually it’s in the same building as my daughter’s pediatrician. Maybe we’ll see her in the elevator.

    I’m amused by the building’s website. “Modern Offices. Brooklyn Cool”. Seriously, it’s an office building. It’s nice, and it is quite convenient for a nice stroll in Brooklyn or even across the Brooklyn Bridge. But it’s just an office building.

    It’s also pretty convenient if you want to drive to Manhattan (right by both Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges) or to LaGuardia Airport. I’m guessing that had more to do with it than Brooklyn Cool.

    I’m sure her motorcade won’t mess up traffic at all…

  • Spring in Brooklyn

    Pretty, but can we have real spring please?…

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  • You Tuber

    I am officially old. My 12 year old went to see a big You Tuber, Meg DeAngelis. I, of course, have never heard of her. But she has 2 million followers and was doing a meet and greet in Manhattan:

    My wife got the honor of standing in line with my daughter and four of her friends to meet her. Apparently they did a very nice job and the girls came back crazy excited.

    I can’t even think of something analogous that I did at 12…

  • Amazon Prime Now Hits Brooklyn

    I’m a big Amazon Prime fan. The other day Danielle needed a new pencil case. We walked to Office Max, they didn’t have anything good. We came home, found a perfect Mickey Mouse one on Amazon (Danielle is a huge Disney girl), and two days later she has it.

    These sorts of experiences are teaching me that waiting two days is worth it for the ease of just buying on Amazon.

    But what if instead of two days, it was two hours? Would I ever go to a store again? Enter Amazon Prime Now.

    It is currently only available in Manhattan and Brooklyn. You have to order through a mobile app and the items are obviously limited. But there’s a lot of stuff. My office has been cold lately so I wanted a small space heater. No problem.

    You can actually get things in under an hour, but for that you pay $7.99. Free delivery strictly speaking isn’t in under two hours, you can order for the next two hour slot. So at 7:00 I was ordering for the 8-10 slot. And while free, the app recommends (and defaults to) a $5 tip for the delivery guy.

    That being said, my heater arrived at 8:30. An hour and a half. Awesome.

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  • Famous Person Alert

    I’m the worst at noticing famous people. Given where I live, I’m sure I see them way more often than I notice.

    After a long week, my wife wanted to meet for a drink and an appetizer at a very good local restaurant. This is the sort of place that makes living in Brooklyn great. It’s tiny, awesome and three blocks away.

    So we show up around 6 and it’s pretty empty. We sit at the bar and there’s a guy with his daughter at the other end. She’s getting a hot chocolate, which I think is cute. I don’t really notice the guy.

    My wife is elbowing me furiously.

    The guy was Ethan Hawke. According to Wikipedia he lives in our neighborhood. Who knew?…