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Showing posts with label new york. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new york. Show all posts

Thursday, November 17, 2011

New York Tops December Hotel Searches

Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree
USA Today: Where are travelers most searching for hotels this December? New York tops the list, according to Kayak.com's analysis of two years of hotel-search data.

The Big Apple, after all, does a fantastic job of decking itself out for the holidays. And each year, tourists from the Tri-State area - and around the world - flock to the city to soak up the atmosphere.
Last week, workers were busy hanging gigantic snowflakes from wires high above Fifth Avenue. Visitors also love to photograph the spectacular Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, which will be lit this year on Nov. 30, and take in other festive sights - including hotels adorned with decorations.

So what about the four other cities that made Kayak.com's Top 5 list? They're all warm-weather destinations.
It makes you wonder if Northeast residents rushed to book December trips after the freak, Oct. 29 snowstorm pounded the region and left millions without power for days.

The full Top 5 from Kayak:
·         New York
·         Las Vegas
·         Orlando
·         Cancun
·         Miami

The Top 5 cities that experienced the biggest increases in hotel search volume for December travel on a year-over-year basis:
·         Miami
·         San Francisco
·         New Orleans
·         Fort Lauderdale
·         New York

On the flip side, Kayak.com also looked at cities that fell out of favor this year compared to 2010.
Deal seekers may want to scan this list of Top 8 cities where hotel search volume decreased the most on a year-over-year basis because they could have better luck in these destinations finding hotel bargains in December:

·         Barcelona
·         Los Angeles
·         San Diego
·         Boston
·         Nassau, Bahamas
·         Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
·         San Juan, Puerto Rico
·         Chicago

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

New York To Have 90,000 Hotels Rooms by 2012

NY Daily News:  New York is on its way to having a record number of hotel rooms this year — and a good many of them will be in the outer boroughs.

The city will have 90,000 rooms by the end of 2011, Mayor Bloomberg said Monday, as tourism continues to grow despite a weak economy. The number of rooms in the city has grown 24% since 2006, according to City Hall. New York is also set to surpass last year’s record of 48.8 million visitors.

Speaking at the opening of the Z NYC Hotel in Long Island City, Queens, Bloomberg said the record number of rooms show how the city’s tourist trade is expanding beyond Manhattan.

“Our tourism sector employs 323,000 people, and those jobs are now increasingly located outside Manhattan as tourists want to visit all of the city’s great neighborhoods,” Bloomberg said.

About 40% of new hotel openings will be in outer-borough areas including trendy hotel-hotspot Long Island City, which now boasts 17 properties and has another five on the way.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

NYC Hotels Offer SAD Packages

Gansevoort Hotel
Hotel Chatter: This winter, both Gansevoort Meatpacking and Gansevoort Park Ave are battling Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) with a new promotional package that includes things like a duplex penthouse suite, a tropical cocktail, vitamin D-infused facial, and beach attire for hanging out in your room. For many people, this might just be enough to lift the heavy winter blues. 
 
But Gansevoort's not stopping there. Taking all precautions, the hotel has also decided to photoshop pictures of you with Santa Claus. And provide you with a "friend for the day" (it's exactly how it sounds). Or, even, if that glum mood just won't pick up, to offer a Compliment Concierge that will shower you with praise throughout your entire stay—by the end of which, no doubt you'll be positively elated.

If not slightly stuck-up.

The "SAD" package, which was announced earlier this week, isn't cheap. Those who are truly on board with the idea of pay-per-ass-kiss ("You're so pretty," "I wish I had as much style as you," "My, your houndstooth coat perfectly matches the furniture in our lobby!") will have to cough up $10,000 a night at either property.

No fair! When The James hired a tanning concierge over the summer, that service was completely free of charge, so long as you were actually a guest of the hotel.

Of course, there are some for whom a simple Vitamin D facial would suffice. If that's the case, save your credit card and just book a treatment at the spa ($100-$300).

Or just stare at the sun for a while. It won't tell you how good you look, but it'll probably do the trick.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

New York Casino Using Robot Croupiers

Daily Mail: New York's first casino has opened to a frenzied crowd after successfully side-stepping gambling laws - by staffing its tables with robots.

The Aqueduct racino - so called because it is connected with the race track in South Ozone Park, Queens - has done away with human dealers in favour of mechanical arms. It also features 5,000 video gambling terminals and some 200 electronic table games including craps and roulette.

New York state regulations prohibit live casino games, but allow electronic gambling at race tracks.

On its opening day on Friday, the Resorts World Casino, was swamped by a 15,000 capacity crowd, with a further 5,000 lining up outside.

To remain in accordance with state rules that prevent human-operated table games, guests shot craps using two fingers and a touch screen. Meanwhile, a roulette game was supervised by a chesty cyber-woman who leaned forward immodestly as she spun the little white ball on a pixilated wheel.

But some gamblers weren't so impressed.

'It's very confusing,' Lennox Bailey, 35, told the New York Daily News after trying his hand at computerised baccarat. 'I like it better with the people... this is just you and the machine.'

JohnPaul Difava, a 'slot ambassador' for the casino, argued the faceless table games were 'better than going all the way to Atlantic City.'

'I'm sure there will be a lot of confusion in the beginning, but once you get the hang of it, it's pretty easy,' he said.

The casino, which has been a decade in the pipeline and took a year to build, is predicted to add more than $1 million to the state funds. However, anti-gambling advocates argue that the economic benefits are far outweighed by the potential social problems.

'Crime might go up,' said Zenaida Carson, 25, a business analyst who lives nearby in South Ozone Park. 'This is gambling and drinking - and it's right next to a school.'

Monday, October 31, 2011

Are OWS Protests Hurting Tourism?

Poll Position: More than four out of ten Americans say they would be less inclined to visit New York City because of the ongoing Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protests. In a Poll Position national scientific telephone survey 42% of the people we asked said they would be less inclined to visit NYC because of the protests, 38% said the protests would have no impact on their decision and 17% said the protests would make them more inclined to visit the city.

The question led to noticeable differences along political lines. Republicans we polled said they would be less inclined by 62% to just 9% saying they would be more inclined and 24% telling us the OWS protests would have no impact.

Democrats countered with 29% saying the protests would make them more inclined to visit the city, 25% choosing less inclined and 43% saying the protests would not have any impact.

Among Independents, 36% would less inclined to visit, only 15% would be more inclined and 48% said the demonstrations would not have an impact on their decision.

Poll Position’s scientific telephone survey of 1,082 registered voters nationwide was conducted October 27, 2011 and has a margin of error of ±3%.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

A Makeover at Age 125

Los Angeles Times: The Statue of Liberty hosted a 125th anniversary celebration Friday and then decided to take off the rest of this year and part of the next.

Being a hostess, of course, can be a lot of work, but in this case, it's a lot of work that's being done to the hostess that will keep her closed for about a year.

Now the party is over, although the National Park Service emphasizes that Liberty Island will remain open during the $27.25-million renovation.

About 3.5 million people visit Liberty Island in a year, but only about only 2,500 tickets a day have been available for the inside tour of Lady Liberty, which means about two-thirds of the visitors don't go inside. Because the work is inside, the view of the statute will be largely unobstructed, the park service says.

Among the improvements to the lady are new elevators and stairways and rehabbed restrooms. Visitors will still be able to take the ferry to the island.

The United States received the statue from France, and it was dedicated Oct. 28, 1886, with President Grover Cleveland in attendance. George Cleveland, the grandson of President Cleveland who is said to bear a striking resemblance to his grandfather, attended the Friday ceremonies.

For info on visiting, see the National Park Service website. You can also subscribe to an RSS feed, follow the work on Twitter (@StatueLibrtyNPS) or like it on Facebook.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Statue of Liberty Webcams Switched On


As scheduled, five webcams attached to the Status of Liberty’s torch in New York harbor went live today, offering views not seen by the public in nearly a century.

Today marks the 125th anniversary of the dedication of the copper-clad monument, which was a gift from France to the people of America. Webcam viewers will be able to watch live video streams of traffic, boats and airplanes in high-resolution panoramic images showing the Manhattan skyline, the city's borough of Brooklyn and neighboring New Jersey.

Officials closed the torch to the public in 1916 during World War One following an explosion at a nearby munitions depot, blamed on German saboteurs that damaged the statue. Since then, the sweeping views have been seen only by a handful of people involved in the statue's maintenance.

"It's a heck of a climb," said Briganti, who last made the difficult ascent in the statue's right arm in the 1980s.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Webcams & Events to Mark Lady Liberty's 125th Birthday

AM NY: The Statue of Liberty’s torch has been closed since 1916, but starting this Friday, people around the world will enjoy breathtaking vistas from the golden perch 305 feet above New York Harbor.

In honor of the monument's 125th anniversary this Friday, five webcams will go live on Lady Liberty's torch and start delivering live panoramic views of New York City, as well as a rare look at the tablet she cradles in her left hand.

The launch of the torch cams is part of a full day of events, which will include a naturalization ceremony in the morning and a Macy’s fireworks spectacular in the evening.

For more details, and to see the live streams, go to www.ellisisland.org.

If you go:

All events are on Ellis Island

8:45 a.m.-9:30 a.m.: Naturalization ceremony
One-hundred and twenty-five people from more than 40 countries will be naturalized.

10 a.m.-noon: National Park Service ceremony
The main ceremony, which will feature a reading of Emma Lazarus' famous poem "The New Colossus" by Sigourney Weaver and the giving of a gift of friendship to a French representative.

1:30 p.m.: Ladies Auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
The group will present a donation to the Statue of Liberty National Monument for the 75th year.

7:45 p.m.: Macy's Fireworks Grand Finale
Two barges behind Lady Liberty will launch a 12-minute pyrotechnic display synchronized to patriotic music and an original song.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Another New York Tour Bus Crash


CBS New York: There’s been another bus crash, this time is Rockland County.

A New York Trailways bus bound for New York City was involved in an accident with a tractor-trailer near Exit 15A on the Thruway. The accident occurred at around 5:35 a.m. just past a service area. The bus rear-ended the truck. The bus driver’s cabin was pretty well smashed up, along with the front left corner and side of the bus.

There were 17 people were on board the bus. Six people were injured, though none of the injuries are considered to be life threatening. The 11 uninjured passengers were transferred to another bus and continued to New York City.

A recent spate of tour bus crashes has caught the attention of lawmakers, who have been working to improve safety conditions.

In July, a fiery bus crash between a tractor-trailer and a tour bus in Waterloo killed driver Timothy Hume and injured at least 30 people.

In March, 15 people were killed in the Bronx when a tour bus headed to Chinatown from a casino in Connecticut overturned and slammed into a poll, peeling off its roof.

Four people were killed in May when a Sky Express operated bus returning to Chinatown from North Carolina swerved off the road and overturned on I-95 in Virginia. The driver of that bus, 37-year-old Kin Yiu Cheung, is charged with four felony counts of involuntary manslaughter and reckless driving. He has pleaded not guilty.

Then in June, police said a bus carrying tourists headed to Flushing, Queens, rear-ended a flatbed tractor-trailer on the Pennsylvania Turnpike killing the bus driver and injuring nearly two dozen passengers.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Starbucks Barista Labels Customer 'Phone'

The Village Voice: Starbucks is not only offending Alec Baldwin! It is causing trouble for regular people as well, particularly a woman named Marguerite McAfee, who had an incident this week at the Starbucks on Third Avenue and 23rd Street, her regular spot, where, she says, "The employees have seemed to me to be quite unhappy and, at times, rude to customers." (She keeps going there because it's convenient.) However, yesterday, the last straw was had. She was waiting in line to purchase a tall soy latte for $4.08, playing FlightControl on her iPhone, and, well, we'll let her tell it in her words:

She writes,

I was in line for the register and the barista was taking orders before people in line paid for their drinks. There were several people in front of me in line and the barista took their orders. I was playing a game on my phone, but was completely attentive to the barista's process and noticed that he had taken the order of the lady in line in front of me. I looked up to see if he would take mine and thought he was heading back to make drinks so I looked back down at my phone. Apparently I was wrong and he had planned to take my order. He shouted at me, "Miss on the phone." I felt affronted by the way he spoke to me, it was rude and angry, as if I had no right to be looking down at my phone while waiting for him to take my order. I wasn't speaking on the phone, I was looking at it, but no manner of using a phone should have caused him to speak to me this way. I placed my order with him, a $4.08 tall soy latte, which I buy once or twice a day (this adds up over the course of a year), and continued to wait to get to the register. At the register, the cashier asked me if I had "had my order called." I didn't know what she meant, so I asked her to repeat herself. She said, "Did you have your order called?" I said to her this time, "I don't know what you mean." She then waved her hand at me as if to dismiss my idiocy. She didn't explain what she had meant, she just dismissed me with a wave of her hand, grabbed a tall cup and said, "What's the name?" I tried to explain to her that the barista had taken my order but that he had not asked my name, but she was fed up. I was trying to comply and gave the name, which happens to be my name, I am a person, who was trying to order an expensive drink from her. She wrote it on the cup and put it in line for the barista to fill.

The barista had, of course, already taken my drink order, but hadn't asked my name. Instead of using the cup that the cashier had secondarily prepared for me with my name on it, the barista was using a cup on which (I assume) he had marked what type of drink I wanted, without writing my name on the cup. I waited at the bar for my drink and continued to play the game on my phone. The barista said, "I have one soy latte coming up," so I looked up to get my drink and on the cup the barista had written the word "Phone" instead of my name, and instead of just leaving the cup blank. I was really taken aback by this action, it was meant to be humiliating and it worked. I was embarrassed to take the cup with the sort of scarlet letter written on it. I mentioned to the barista quietly that I thought this was rude and he replied, "I didn't get your name." I just left at this point, but when I got outside I got up the nerve to go back in and set things straight.

I went back to the bar and asked the barista for the manager's name. The barista ignored me and continued making drinks so I waited a few minutes for him to ask me what I needed, but finally gave up since he was intentionally ignoring me and asked again for the manager's name, to which the barista replied that the manager was in the office and "do you wanna talk to him?" I said yes and waited for the employees to get him. When he came to the bar he didn't introduce himself, he just stood there and waited for me to speak. I asked if he was the manager, then showed him the cup with "Phone" written on it and said that I thought it was "obnoxious" and "rude." The barista jumped in after I finished my sentence, even though I was speaking to the manager, and said argumentatively that he didn't realize I had given my name to the cashier, which is completely irrelevant to the situation. He was making an excuse for his actions and was now trying to argue with me. The manager looked horrified and turned to me and said he would take care of the situation. He didn't apologize or try to make amends, or ask if I would like a new cup, but he did say that he would take care of the situation. I believed him based on the look on his face as he appeared genuinely terrified that his employee had been so rude and was now arguing with the customer about an incontrovertible issue... the cup was sitting there on the bar with "Phone" written on it.

McAfee says she'll deliver her note to the manager of the Starbucks in question, and that she hopes they work to ensure that their staff is professional and kind. But given our reporting on Coffee Names and Marguerite's vowel-filled appellation, we might suggest that she come up with a "backup" name, just in case. Something better than Phone, of course. And, perhaps, we should all stop using our phones for entertainment in public (we are guilty of this, too). You never know, it might be nice to take a break now and again. Maybe.

In any case, as of this morning, McAfee had not returned to her local Starbucks. We've called them for comment and will update when we hear back.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

New York City's Hotel Room Boom

New York's Sanctuary Hotel
 MSNBC: Planning a trip to New York City? You’ll find plenty of places to stay.

The Big Apple is experiencing a hotel room boom. More than 30 New York City properties opened their doors in 2010, and so far in 2011, 18 new hotels have opened. “As of August, our inventory count was 88,144 rooms and we have approximately 2,000 rooms in the pipeline for the remainder of 2011,” said Chris Heywood of NYC & Company, the city’s official marketing and tourism organization. “We expect to reach 90,000 rooms by year end.”

The Sanctuary Hotel, where rooms include crystal chandeliers, leather headboards and leather-printed wall tiles, opened in September and the high-tech YOTEL New York, featuring 669 small-even-by-New York-standard sleeping pods or “cabins,” opened in June.

Several of the newly opened properties — including W New York Downtown, Andaz Wall Street, the Doubletree Financial Center and the World Center Hotel, are in Lower Manhattan — the revitalized area now home to the 9/11 Memorial.

Half of the NYC hotels that have opened this year are in Manhattan, with the others in the neighboring boroughs of the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens.

“Intrepid travelers willing to go a few stops on the subway now have the option to save 30 percent to 40 percent on their hotel room rates and still get a unique New York City experience,” said Heywood.

For example, the Aloft Brooklyn, part of Starwood’s chain of hip, lower-priced hotels, opened in June and has been sold out almost every night. The 64-room Hotel Williamsburg, also in Brooklyn, will open Oct. 17 and features an onsite restaurant, swim club, cocktail lounge, rooftop bar and lending library of vinyl records. Vintage-style record players will be standard in every room.

If you do head to the Big Apple, be sure to bring your checkbook.

According to NYC & Company, the average daily rate for a hotel in New York City hovers around $250, but that doesn’t include sales, occupancy and use taxes of about 15 percent.

Special events such as Fashion Week, major conventions or the recent meeting of the UN General Assembly can fill the best rooms and cause hotel prices to spike significantly citywide. None of that seems to deter business or leisure travelers, who kept New York City hotel rooms filled to a healthy 85 percent occupancy rate during 2010 and are doing the same in 2011.

"The good news is that prices are not as high as the market peak in 2008," said Melissa Klurman, contributing editor for Travelocity.com. "And since many of the new properties added this year are mid- to lower tier, there are deals to be found."

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Birthday Celebration Turns to Tragedy

NY Daily News: Just before the doomed chopper crashed into the East River Tuesday, the pilot issued a dire warning to his passengers: "We're going down."

Seconds later, the helicopter fell upside down into the water, sparking a desperate rescue operation by city cops and firefighter that saved four people from the treacherous water - but which came too late to save a British woman who was in the city celebrating her 40th birthday.

Federal investigators are now probing the deadly crash that claimed the life of Sonia Marra Nicholson and left her parents - and partner Helen Tamaki - in critical condition.

Pauld Dudley, a veteran pilot, survived unharmed.

"He's very distraught," a source said. "He says he just lost control and it crashed in the water."

A source close to the investigation gave a harrowing account of what happened moments after the Bell 206 Jet Ranger crashed and the chilly water began pouring inside the cabin.

Nicholson's stepdad, 71-year-old Paul Nicholson, was sitting beside Dudley, the source said. Her mother, Harriet, and Tamaki, were sitting with her in the back.

"When it hit the water he unbuckled and tried to get to his wife in the back," the source said of Paul Nicholson. "He was pulled out of the water as he was trying to grab his wife."

Paul Nicholson was rescued by NYPD anti-terror and Emergency Service Unit cops who had been in the area. They immediately shed their gear and leaped into the water.

ESU Det. Keith Connelly said that when he reached the helicopter, he beheld a surreal sight: two men clinging to the chopper and two unconscious women "just bobbing in the water."

"The pilot was by the helicopter, screaming for help," ESU Connelly said. "He was yelling, 'Someone is in the helicopter!'"

Seconds later, the helicopter went under - taking the birthday girl with it.

In the chaos the followed, Dudley somehow drifted away from the officers and was suddenly caught by a swift current about 30 yards from the pier.

That's when Firefighter Robert Lopez of Ladder Company 7 came to his resue.

"He was in shock," said Lopez, 39. "He was saying there was someone in the helicopter still."

"Go get them!" Dudley screamed, according to Lopez.

Video:

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

NYC's Latest Tourist Attraction: Occupy Wall Street


USA Today: "How many times in life do you get a chance to watch history unfold?" asks a story in The Occupied Wall Street Journal, a free newspaper that debuted this weekend as part of a vague but growing movement against financial and political avarice.

For London visitor Sarah Lewis, that chance is now. Like dozens of other curious bystanders snapping cellphone pictures at the "Occupy Wall Street" encampment in Lower Manhattan's Zuccotti Park, she'd heard about Saturday's arrests of more than 700 marchers on the Brooklyn Bridge - and has made an impromptu detour to the Big Apple's newest tourist attraction.

The draws: Face painting, drum circles and a chance to meet activists like Bill Steyert, a 68-year-old Vietnam veteran from Queens. Sporting a tie-dyed T-shirt and peace symbol pendant, he tells Lewis he is "just as angry now as I was back in 1968."

" The country is in economic crisis, " says an increasingly hoarse Steyert, waving a white Veterans for Peace banner. "And the corporations are strangling us to death."

Now entering its third week, what started out as an ad hoc, social media-fueled handful of college student protesters has evolved into a nationwide phenomenon, with solidarity demonstrations in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and other cities.

But the movement's ground zero remains Zuccotti Park, a privately owned, tree-shaded plaza on Liberty Street just a few minutes' walk from the 9/11 Memorial at the former World Trade Center. Rebuilt in 2006 after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, it's now studded with blue tarps, a makeshift library and hospital, and a carpet of hand-lettered cardboard placards proclaiming "Eat the Rich," "Too Big To Fail is Too Big to Allow" and "You Tube is Powerful. Use it!"

The park's carnival atmosphere, complete with balloons and bongos, has sometimes seemed to attract as many media and passers-by as actual protesters. But 24-year-old volunteer Matt Brandi insists his fellow activists "are here for the long haul...people are sending up socks and wool clothes, and we're figuring out how to get through the winter."

Meanwhile, visitor Lewis is entertained - if not convinced - by Occupy Wall Street's message. Interrupting Steyert's harangue comparing the current U.S. movement to recent protests in Cairo, she tells him "you can't equate a dictator who tortured people and shut down democracy with what's happening here."

"They're not very specific in their demands, are they?" Lewis asks with a bemused smile. But on this sunny Sunday in New York, the protesters' earnestness is enough for her.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

After 27 Years, Historic Carousel Rides Again

MSNBC: It’s taken more than $15 million and 27 years of repair and restoration, but an elaborate, historic carousel that once entertained amusement park visitors in Ohio will begin welcoming riders at its new home in the DUMBO neighborhood (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) of Brooklyn on Friday.

The ride is now called Jane’s Carousel, named after Jane Walenta, the artist who spent more than a quarter century refurbishing and painstakingly restoring it. The carousel was built by the Philadelphia Toboggan Company in 1922 and spent its heyday at Idora Park in Youngstown, Ohio. In 1975, it became the first carousel to be placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1984, Walenta and her husband, David, a DUMBO real estate developer, bought the ailing carousel for $385,000 and saved the 48-horse, 2-chariot treasure from being broken up and sold in pieces.

Then came the time-consuming and expensive part.

Walenta wanted the restoration of the carousel to be historically correct. So she ensured all the old paint was scraped off, all necessary carpentry repairs were made and, with the help of documentation for the carousel’s original design and color palette, that all the steeds were repainted to look as they did in 1922. The entire carousel housing also got a makeover, with newly repainted designs and stenciling, fresh mirrors and “jewels,” updated mechanical systems and re-wiring that includes 1,200 sparking lights.

Walenta's favorite piece of the ride is the lead horse — "the white horse with the Philadelphia Toboggan Company monogram on the saddle," she said as she was getting the carousel ready for its grand reopening.

The carousel is now housed at Brooklyn Bridge Park, in a $9 million pavilion designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Jean Nouvel that has been described as a “transparent jewel box” offering riders views of the East River, Brooklyn and the Manhattan skyline. At night, when the horses and the carousel are resting, screens inside the pavilion will become the backdrop for an hourly light show projecting shadows of several rows of horses.

Those interested in taking a ride on the refurbished masterpiece will have to pony up $2. The carousel is open 11 a.m. – 7 p.m. every day except Tuesday.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Starbucks Strikes Twice in NYC's East Village

Bowery Boogie: First Avenue and Third Street saw a flurry of activity yesterday, as the media played up a newly-declared David and Goliath style battle between local coffee house The Bean and the over-caffeinated not-so-local Starbucks.

It’s not hard to get info about this story. From a block away, signs are visibly plastered all over the facade of the Bean’s current location on First Avenue, emphatically stating that they are leaving their location of ten years and are not happy about it. Forced out by “the evil empire,” they may be vacating their current corner, but not the East Village. Barely a venti away, they are opening three new locations, including one right down the block on First Avenue and Second Street (in addition to their recently opened spot on Broadway and 12th street).

Walking into the coffee house today, this Boogie writer was one of the many people filmed by NBC discussing how the neighborhood will not exactly welcome a Starbucks with open mugs. Watching NBC’s coverage tonight was somewhat disappointing. After interviewing several locals who were upset over the upcoming hostile takeover, NBC somehow managed to end the segment with some mundane chit-chat among the anchors about how “some people just aren’t used to change.”

Sort of missed the entire point, guys (and no, it’s not simply sour grapes talking because this gal ended up on NBC’s cutting room floor!).

But, wait, there’s more.

What is quite interesting to this reporter is that there is a sordid history of Starbucks and this particular space. Before The Bean (and quite briefly, a waffle shop) lived the beloved store Little Rickie, which had been an East Village institution for many years.

In the late 1990′s, back when the mallification of Manhattan was just a twinkle in corporate eyes, Little Rickie was selling stickers which resembled the Starbucks logo. The only difference – and it’s a big one – is that these stickers said “F*ckoffs Coffee” in place of you-know-who. The East Village being what it is, the stickers went over big-time.

Starbucks got wind of this preternaturally quickly and not only sued the people who made these products, but decided to sue all of the stores that sold them, Little Rickie among them.

Coincidence or not, Little Rickie’s closed shortly thereafter. So, once again, we have the involvement of Starbucks preceding the demise of a local favorite.

Just as a refresher, Little Rickie was – in this totally unbiased view – one of the greatest places that ever existed in this town. Vintage toys, outsider art (before it was even called that), kitsch memorabilia, art books, Day of the Dead collectibles (which had never been for sale in this town before) were interspersed with fine art items and the occasional comically naughty gift. One could find a perfect and affordable gift there for anyone.

It was nothing but fun on both sides of the counter. The eclectically ahead-of-the-curve owner gave yours truly a job during one of the recessions, for which she is forever grateful (despite the lousy heat in the winter).

Among the varied attractions of the store was a wildly popular black and white photo booth which inadvertently documented the celebutantes, club kids and stars of tomorrow. The booth was not only a destination (and an excellent cheap date), but now has its own Facebook page.

One last note: when the store was closing, this former employee, who already had shoeboxes filled with photobooth strips from the store, had wanted to buy the contraption (and was shocked to realize that quite a few others had the same idea). However, SOMEONE’s husband “gently” reminded her that it would take up space needed for either the stove or the bathtub. Sigh.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Central Park's Latest Attraction: Jokes for $1

Daily Mail: One method of relieving the depression of not being able to find a job might be to laugh at your own situation rather than shedding a tear.

But Jason Schneider, 26, of Queens, New York, is getting other people to chuckle in Central Park - and generating a decent income in the process.

After failed job applications to the likes of Comedy Central, Time Warner and HBO, he is making a name for himself by telling jokes for $1 a go.

‘What do you call a seeing-eye cow for blind people?’ he asks some people in the Manhattan park. ‘Hamburger helper’ is his answer.

In a playful dig at Coca-Cola, he also jokes: ‘Scientists have found significant sources of water on the moon. Unfortunately it is all Dasani.’

He stands in Central Park holding a 40x30 inch sign saying ‘laughter guaranteed’ and has proven to be extremely popular with punters. Mr. Schneider has been telling jokes there since April after making an impressive $140 in his first six hours, reported the New York Daily News.

He arrived in New York City four years ago after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania but could only find temporary work. Mr Schneider is so confident in the quality of his jokes that he even offers refunds and people are often seen waiting in line to hear him. He stands next to a bench featuring a plaque engraved with a saying of writer George Plimpton: ‘When there is no wind, row’.

‘That's exactly what I'm doing because I couldn't get a job,’ Mr Schneider told the New York Daily News.

He writes around 20 jokes a day and spends four hours in Starbucks from 6am each weekday morning perfecting his puns, he added. Some of Mr Schneider’s jokes on his website contain sexual content, but he sticks to family-friendly quips when children are listening.

Perhaps they might enjoy this one: ‘What did the green grape say to the purple grape?’ His answer was: ‘Breathe, stupid, breathe.’

More Jason Schneider jokes:

• Hulk Hogan’s wife surprised him with a divorce petition. (He) said the news hit him like a chair to the back of the head

• Did you see MIT students invented a robot that can play video games? Yeah, even their inventions are virgins

• Sarah Palin visited the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem this week. Palin remarked that it was incredibly moving to see first hand the inspiration for her favorite Pink Floyd album

• Why are sharks racist? Only the white ones are great

Saturday, September 3, 2011

New York City is Booming Again


Daily Mail: New York is an iron lady. She's survived the darkest of times, picked herself up, started again, and again.

There have been crises over the years - and some terrifying weather recently - but one catastrophe hurt more than any other. Next Sunday marks the tenth anniversary of 9/11, the terrorist attack that killed almost 3,000, devastated downtown Manhattan and shook the world.

Two weeks before those planes struck, I'd been in the World Trade Centre plaza with my family, enjoying a free concert in the sunshine.

Ten years on, I'm there again, because it's impossible to come to New York without paying your respects to Ground Zero. The site roars with life. Four towers are on the go, with a team of more than 1,000 - deeply proud - workers on the job. The Freedom Tower is going up by four stories a week and the Memorial Museum is set for completion in 2012.

Next week, the 9/11 Memorial will be opened by the Obamas. Five million people are expected annually. Visitors will have to navigate cranes, trucks and building paraphernalia, but once inside the eight-acre site they will find a peaceful space in which to sit and think.

It will be planted with 400 oak trees, including the Survivor Tree - a Callery pear - which was salvaged from the wreckage and nurtured back to life in the Bronx. Enormous pools will run with 52,000 gallons of water. These great voids sit in the footprint of the towers and take up 85 per cent of the original area. The names of the victims are engraved around the edge.

The Freedom Tower - officially named One World Trade Center - at 104 stories will reach higher than the original towers. It's encased with glass - not unlike London's Shard. Glinting in the sunlight, it is undoubtedly a hope-filled spectacle, a rebuke to those who wrought such destruction ten years ago. Condé Nast recently signed a deal for office space inside - quite a move for Vogue's uptown girls.

But downtown is moving on - and up. Several new hotels have opened, including W Downtown. It's slick and business-like with knowledgeable staff and a relaxed approach. Peering into the memorial site from your bedroom window will not be for everyone, though at night the balcony bar will have quite a view of the lamp-lit trees and pools. From here, Battery Park is a five-minute walk and you can follow the Hudson to the far north tip of Manhattan. Whether your bent is for mini-golf, basketball, lounging or running, this is a lovely spot for it.

The Statue of Liberty sits across the water, looking small on the horizon. Brooklyn Bridge is nearby, too, and the views from it across the city, whether you're looking into the crowded projects or down the East River, do something to take your mind off the rumbling traffic and stifling fumes.

Romance is in the air on the High Line, an elevated public park on what used to be a freight railroad through the Meatpacking District. On a sunny evening, it's a pretty place for a stroll - and, it seems, a date. There aren't many places in New York where you can sit beside dreamy meadow grasses overlooking rooftops and New Jersey, after all. There are art exhibitions, concerts and live music, too. The city's myriad entrepreneurs have been quick to tap into the High Line's holiday spirit - and it's an imaginative stretch.

Working hours are notoriously long here - but cocktail hour is sacred and New Yorkers don't mess about. The bars quickly buzz. Friends who live in the city tell me they never tire of going out because there is always something new to see and eating out well is far cheaper than in London. No one stays in.

Peels, in the Bowery District, does everything on a biscuit - a buttery sort of scone - in a pantry kitchen setting. Mr Chow, in Tribeca, serves chillingly delicious Martinis and Le Zie, in Chelsea, is an unassuming, but utterly delicious, Italian restaurant. Uptown still reverberates with old wealth and Tom Wolfe's infamous Wasps. The Carlyle hotel - Princess Diana's favourite place to stay in Manhattan - perches elegantly on Madison Avenue and is still every inch the well-groomed hostess.

Things are done properly here. There's a uniformed concierge to take you up and down in the lift, and when the rain throws down I am handed a voluminous umbrella for the evening. I could do with a pair of wellies.

The Carlyle is discreet, dark (there's a lot of black marble), plush and pampering (the spa works wonders on a scrunched back). The hotel was allegedly the scene of clandestine meetings between John F. Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe - and no wonder. The lighting is artful, the atmosphere sumptuous. Woody Allen still plays jazz clarinet in the Café Carlyle. This is a place to stay in with someone special. But you should venture out. New York's numerous galleries, museums and the capacious - and hilly - Central Park are all on your doorstep.

The pulse of New York is such that when I return home, Central London seems soothing, laidback, quiet.

Throw yourself in. Or as Colum McCann, in Let The Great World Spin, puts it: 'One of the beauties of New York is that you can be from anywhere and within moments of landing it is yours.' This is an energetic place - and now is an exciting time to go. There's huge pride in what has been achieved at Ground Zero and there's plenty more to come.

Obama's presidency might be in the doldrums, but his election slogan still rings true in this extraordinary city. Yes We Can.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Hurricane Irene Continues to Pound U.S. East Coast

Reuters: Hurricane Irene battered New York with ferocious winds and driving rain on Sunday, shutting down the U.S. financial capital and most populous city, halting mass transit and causing massive power blackouts as it churned slowly northward along the eastern seaboard.

New York City's normally bustling streets were eerily quiet after authorities ordered tens of thousands of residents to evacuate low-lying areas and shut down its subways, airports and buses.

Those who had to travel were left trying to flag down yellow taxis that patrolled largely deserted streets.

Irene, still a menacing 480-mile (780-km)-wide hurricane, was enveloping towns and cities in the northeast, hugging the Atlantic coast and threatening floods and surging tides. From the Carolinas to Maine, tens of millions of people were in the path of Irene, which howled ashore in North Carolina on Saturday, dumping torrential rain, felling trees and knocking out power.

"The edge of the hurricane has finally got upon us," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg told the more than eight million people who live in New York as he warned that tropical storm-force winds would hit the city. Times Square, often called the crossroads of the world, was sparsely populated, mostly with visitors, as Irene rolled into the city with full force.

Broadway shows were canceled, coffee was hard to come by with Starbucks stores closed and burgers and fries were in short supply as McDonald's outlets were shut. "We just came to see how few people are in Times Square and then we're going back," said Cheryl Gibson, who was vacationing in the city.

Bloomberg warned New Yorkers Irene was a life-threatening storm and urged them to stay indoors to avoid flying debris, flooding or the risk of being electrocuted by downed power lines. "It is dangerous out there," he said, but added later: "New York is the greatest city in the world and we will weather this storm."

In midtown Manhattan, there was a substantial police presence on the streets but most people heeded Bloomberg's warning to stay inside. New York City's Office of Emergency Management said there was a tornado warning for the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, and urged people to seek shelter.

Television reports said local airports had already recorded winds of over 60 miles per hour (96 kph) and they had not yet reached their expected full strength. About 370,000 city residents were ordered to leave their homes in low-lying areas, many of them in parts of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan. Some were unwilling to go. Nicholas Vigliotti, 24, an auditor who lives in a high-rise building along the Brooklyn waterfront, said he saw no point. "Even if there was a flood, I live on the fifth floor," he said.

STORM SURGE FEARS
Flood waters forced officials in Hoboken, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan, to evacuate a storm shelter, the mayor of Hoboken, Dawn Zimmer, said on Twitter.

The Miami-based U.S. National Hurricane Center forecast a storm surge of up to 8 feet (2.5 meters) for Long Island and metropolitan New York. That could top the flood walls protecting the south end of Manhattan if it comes at high tide around 8 a.m. (noon GMT). With winds of 8O miles per hour (130 km per hour), Irene was a Category 1 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson intensity scale. By 5 a.m. (0900 GMT), the storm center was 15 miles (25 km) south southeast of Atlantic City, New Jersey, and 115 miles (190 km) south southwest of New York City.

On its forecast track "the center of Irene will move near or over the coast of New Jersey and over Western Long Island this morning ... and move inland over southern New England by this afternoon," the hurricane center said. Boston's public transit authority, the MBTA, said on its website it will shut down all services as of 8 a.m./noon GMT. After that time, "all modes of transit will be shut down for the remainder of the day and night," it said.

Summer vacationers fled beach towns and resort islands. More than a million people left the New Jersey shore and glitzy Atlantic City casinos were dark and empty. This year has been one of the most extreme for weather in U.S. history, with $35 billion in losses so far from floods, tornadoes and heat waves.

President Barack Obama, who cut his vacation short on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard to return to the White House, was keeping a close eye on preparations for the hurricane. After moving across North Carolina with less punch than expected but still threatening, the hurricane re-emerged over inshore waters on its route northward, hugging the coast.

NINE DEATHS REPORTED
At least nine deaths were reported in North Carolina, Virginia and Florida. Several million people were under evacuation orders on the U.S. East Coast. In total more than two million utility customers were without power as of early Sunday morning due to Irene, including more than 20,000 in New York City. Utility company Consolidated Edison warned that downtown Manhattan, including Wall Street, could face more blackouts as low-lying areas flooded.

When Irene hit the North Carolina coast on Saturday, winds howled through power lines, sheets of rain fell and streets were flooded or littered with tree branches.  Hundreds of thousands of people in Irene's path evacuated their homes, many taking refuge in official shelters.

"Things can be replaced, but life can't be," said Robert Hudson, a 64-year-old military retiree, who sought refuge at a shelter in Milford High School in Delaware. North Carolina Governor Bev Perdue said there may be "a major hit" to tobacco crops, poultry and livestock in her state.

Torrential rain hit Washington but expected high winds had not hit the city by the early hours of Sunday.

Irene was the first hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland since Ike pounded Texas in 2008. Emergency workers were mindful of Hurricane Katrina, which swamped New Orleans, killed up to 1,800 people and caused $80 billion in damage in 2005.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

NYC Street Performers Take Center Stage on 'The Ride'

Passengers on 'The Ride' get a rolling ringside seat for the street theater that is New York City.

How Do Large Hotels Prepare for a Hurricane?


USA Today:  How do large, New York City hotels plan for an unusual weather event such as Hurricane Irene?

To understand what's likely going on inside the Big Apple's biggest hotels, I spoke with veteran hotelier Peter Strebel. He's the general manager at the 400-room Omni Berkshire in Midtown Manhattan. We spoke this morning, just as he'd stepped out of a hurricane planning meeting.

Are guests canceling rooms? Right now, we're taking as many cancellations as we are reservations.

Last night, 34 guests cancelled but this morning a lot of our corporate accounts such as News Corp., BlackRock booked because they need people to run their operations. Most of them are taking precautions and having people come into the city so they can run operations (in case they can't get to work due to storm-related damage).

Can people still get rooms at your hotel this weekend? We expect to be 85% full Friday night and sold out on Saturday night. We may have availability on Sunday night

Are you changing your rates? We're keeping rates that we had if there was no storm. I've heard that some hotels are price gouging because people from Long Island are coming, and you've got people from Lower Manhattan wanting to book Upper Manhattan. We're not out to gouge anyone.

What do you do if employees can't make it to work? We want to run at good service levels, so we have eight managers who will be staying over the entire weekend. I also live at the hotel. We're also getting volunteers from the restaurant, housekeeping and front desk to stay. We could have as many as 20 rooms allocated to associates this weekend.

Does a hotel buy extra supplies like most everyone else does? We bought extra cases of bottled water, and we doubled our food quantities for the weekend - so that's doubled the supply we normally have of eggs, bread and cheese. We bought batteries, candles, glow sticks, umbrellas and everything else you can think of.

Do you expect to have power when/if the hurricane hits? We have full generators at this hotel that have already been tested. They don't cover all areas but they keep the building functioning.