Category: Brooklyn

  • Guilty

    Today’s filming by my office. I did not see Cuba Gooding Jr…

  • Jupiter and Venus

    Thanks to Bad Astronomy’s Phil Plait, my daughters saw Jupiter and Venus from our roof tonight.

    Google Sky Map helped me make sure…

  • One World Trade Center

    I was having a drink with my wife a few days ago at the River Café in Brooklyn, enjoying the sunset views of Manhattan. Looking across the river, I saw a tall building going up and without thinking said, “hey, what’s that building?”.

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    (click to enlarge)

    Well, well, well, it’s getting big. The steel is up to 90 floors and they lit it up for the holidays.

    Nice to see the Trade Center impacting the skyline again.

  • Movie Stars?

    I may have to pay attention on Thursday. There are No Parking signs on all the streets around my office indicating filming for Broken City.

    No clue if any of the big stars will be here…

  • Trapeze

    Danielle turned 9 yesterday and for her birthday she wanted to go to a trapeze place in Brooklyn. She had been there once before at another birthday and had a blast, but it was the first time I had seen it.

    It was pretty awesome.

    First you get a safety belt:

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    Then you practice:

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    Then you fly:

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    In two hours, they try to teach you to swing to the end, bring your legs up over the bar after one pass (it’s all timing, if you do it at the right moment your momentum makes it easier), then let your arms down at the end of the backswing of that pass and you fly upside down. Then you bring your arms up and drop.

    The goal is to get comfortable enough with that move so that you can actually swing upside down to another guy who grabs your arms and truly pass from one bar to another (again, all about timing). Could we learn that in two hours?

    Just getting that first part is tricky. Only a few of us did it. And ultimately I was the only one to attempt the full upside down catch (took two tries, but I got it). But Danielle did do a simpler ankle pass (apologies for the blurry picture)

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    Seriously big fun for kids and adults alike.

  • Atlantic Antic 2011

    Regular readers have heard about the Atlantic Antic, Brooklyn’s largest street fair (biggest in NYC, I believe) and right outside our front door. They close Atlantic Avenue (our street) for the day and it’s a mile long. They say a million people come to this fair.

    To me what makes this street fair great is that the local bars and restaurants come out. Atlantic has some great bars and restaurants with crazy ethnic diversity, so it’s not just the typical NYC street fair food.

    It’s also very kid friendly, which works well for us.

    We like to start the day by taking a stroll before it actually opens. My girls love the fact that they can walk on the street, so we head out around 10:30 am to check out things getting set up. This is what it looks like. The fair goes farther than you can see in this picture.

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    The NYC Transit Museum is just off Atlantic and they block off a side street for a block and bring in a bunch of old buses. This is fun because it’s open before the rest of the fair starts cranking.

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    They also provide arts and crafts for the kids, making buttons and cardboard buses.

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    Since at this point the Antic hasn’t even started yet, we head home (picking up some corn on the cob on the way) to pick up my wife for the real eating.

    For me it’s all about the food. Among the things we ate:

    Not to mention some great beers and sangria along the way.

    Of course, for the kids it’s all about other things. Face painting:

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    Random kid stuff (this guy actually lives in our building):

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    Random kids games:

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    And we all love the music. About every other block a band is playing. This was a great blues band.

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    On the way home we saw these street dancers/acrobats literally in front of our building. I really should have taken video of these guys.

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    It was a truly great day. And it reminded us what a great age our kids have hit. We were out from about 10:30 am until 5:00 walking with our 4 and 8 year olds (almost 5 and 9). No issues. Taking our kids places has become easy.

    And fun.

  • Person of Interest

    Update: The filming out front is for Person of Interest. As I walked out to lunch I heard a crew member shout “Fire in the hole!” followed by many people walking quickly away.

    Very reassuring…

  • Action

    I arrived to work today to see major filming craziness right around my office. All kinds of filming commotion out front. Our glass front door is covered with plywood. A sign on our front door says that bikes can’t be parked in the bike rack, they have to be in the basement (not sure if the concern is them being in the shot or them getting damaged). The sign says that an “action sequence” is being filmed this morning. Not sure for what.

    I can’t really see much from my window, but I actually hear the guy yelling “Cut!”. Never a dull moment in Dumbo…

  • Bikers in Brooklyn

    Riding a bicycle in Brooklyn or any of the boroughs can be a challenge. Traffic is crazy, cabs and buses are total hazards and the whole thing feels like a video game, except you only get one life.

    Mayor Bloomberg has been a strong bike proponent and bike lanes have sprouted up all over the place. While some have grumbled, I’m definitely a fan.

    But bikers overall are the most lawless group from traffic rules perspective. We all do it, roll through the red light when we can, go the wrong way on a one way street to save a few blocks, etc., etc..

    While it is a bit challenging for a parent of an 8 year old learning to ride a bike to explain all this (Papi, why didn’t that guy stop at the light? Papi, I thought grown-ups weren’t allowed to ride on the sidewalk…) I totally understand why bikers do this. I do it too.

    But bikers in NYC are like the Tea Party. Ideological, militant and if you give them a concession they just ask for more.

    The part that drives me crazy is how bikers yell at everyone else if they don’t follow the rules. And I mean literally scream at people. Pot, meet kettle.

    Today I think I saw the craziest example.

    On my commute to work, I scooter in a bike lane down Jay Street into Dumbo. It’s a popular bike route because it leads to the Manhattan Bridge, which is a good bridge to ride over. On the way you have to cross Tillary. This is a major intersection. Cars are coming one way on Tillary to get to the Brooklyn bridge and going another way to the BQE. Four lanes of traffic each way with a median in the middle.

    People who know the traffic pattern (i.e. all of us) know that you can edge halfway across the street safely before the light turns green (due to a left turn arrow). So there’s a few bikers and me crossing half-way on the red light.

    There’s a way to try to sneak across the other half just as the main light turns red and before the left turn arrow turns green. Again, for us the light is completely red at this point, we have no business being in the intersection at all. And this move is beyond what I will try, because you are counting on (1) the drivers going straight not pushing to get through before the light turns red and (2) the drivers turning left not jumping the gun on the left turn arrow.

    So this morning a guy does it. And sure enough, a car is trying to push it and get through the red light. From the driver’s perspective, you are trying to beat a light to get to the Brooklyn Bridge and a bike comes out of nowhere (let’s recall, we’ve been waiting halfway through the intersection). So the car stops and honks at the bike.

    And what does the biker who is in the middle of an intersection, running a red light in a rather dangerous manner do? He screams at the car. He actually stops in the middle of traffic to yell at the guy, while running a red light.

    Bikers in NYC, an interesting breed…