• Category Archives People
  • One-Trick Pony

    Not everyone is blessed with the depth and breadth of the Renaissance man. Often, a person may only have a singular talent, skill, idea, or gimmick which is clever but, like the one-tricky pony of early America, is not enough to build a world around. A circus needs more than one act.
    However, in New York City, with careful husbandry and aggressive marketing, one can cultivate even the most singular ideas and make a splash. In some cases, entire careers can be built around one trick, like the Naked Cowboy. Others, who are less ambitious, more interested in casual fun, or just want to enjoy the occasional limelight and ego boost can enjoy a degree of notoriety. Characters often frequent regular events or become neighborhood institutions – the proverbial big fish in the small pond. People like Spike or André, for example, are household names in the Village.

    Recently, after my annual pilgrimage to Fifth Avenue to visit the holiday window displays, I caroused Rockefeller Center, with its skating rink and the Christmas tree. Before leaving, I encountered the Candy Man, completely outfitted in a wardrobe decorated in Nerds candies, including sunglasses. He, like many others I have spoken to (such as Mark Birnbaum), cite the pleasure and happiness they bring others as one of the primary reasons they make public appearances.

    In a Christmas season with commercialism and gift-giving gone wild, what better gift to give others than a moment of joy, even if that of the One-Trick Pony 🙂

    Related Posts: King of Accordion, Swaggertist in Blue


  • Nice Camel Sweater

    When you grow up under a very tight reign, acts of rebellion are small and narrowly focused. For me, it manifested in the rejection of all things light brown. On my yearly pre-school clothes shopping trips, I would invariably be steered towards clothing that would be in the light brown family – beige, tan, camel, etc.*

    I suspect that the palette was being pushed at me because it spoke calmness, safety, moderation, or neutrality. But I didn’t want to be calm or neutral. I didn’t want to be in a blue-color factory town. I didn’t want to be in the suburbs. I wanted to be in the big city. Bright neon lights and bold colors.

    So in time, I grew to hate the family of light brown – it symbolized parental authority and all things boring. As if they were not only neutral enough, the color names were invariably prefaced with the very unnecessary “nice.” So “recommendations” always took the form of “why don’t you get that in a “nice camel” color.”

    I hated sweaters, too. I felt confined, uncomfortable, and restricted in them, just as I did in my hometown. However, a sweater is a sensible article of clothing and, like the beige family of colors, is another element in the wardrobe of the moderate. So, the sweater became another irritant in my life, something forever being sold to me by family and clothing salesmen. Put all the elements together, and the worst offense imaginable was a family member promoting something like a “nice, camel sweater.” You know what not to buy me as a gift.

    Recently, while eating dinner with a friend at the Olive Tree Cafe, I spotted a group of women awash in the color of my youth – every variant of beige, tan, cream, light brown, and camel was represented, even in their hair.

    My dining companion that night is an NYU student and team member working on this blog. Inexperienced in the ways and means of the city, she respects the wisdom I have gleaned and trusts my insights based on nearly a half century of observation and study of the peoples of New York. So she listened intently as I began to dissect and analyze this group of women for her and explain how it was obvious that these women were clearly from the suburbs.

    Not only were they wearing every shade of light brown known to humankind, their entire demeanor cried out-of-towners – they were so gentle and benign-looking, with no edge anywhere to be found. I pointed out how one woman wore her bag slung around her neck while eating – the classic fearful tourist. I explained how one of the key elements in identifying visitors is that everything they wear, from footwear to headwear, is about COMFORT, often at the expense of style. And look – one was even sporting a nice, camel-colored sweater.

    Before we left, I wanted to corroborate my theory. In as polite a way as possible, I would tell them that I was a curious New York blogger and ask them where they were from. I would then return to my dining companion with evidence of my superior skills in observation.

    They were quite approachable and friendly, as visitors often are. I introduced myself and gave them my card. “Why are you here?” I asked. “To celebrate a birthday,” they answered. “Where are you from? “We’re native New Yorkers. Upper West Side, Manhattan.” I knew it. What gave it away was that Nice Camel Sweater. 🙂

    *Note: To make matters worse, I love blue, however, when I was in high school, jeans were not allowed.


  • Taking The Stairs

    Although humility is a much desired character trait, particularly when found in the rich, famous, or powerful, it is unfortunately not a necessary condition to greatness. One cannot ascertain a person’s level of accomplishment based on his/her humility or lack thereof. There are braggarts who are indeed what they say they are and ones whose words are no more than puffery.

    Conversely, there are humble persons of ordinary means and ones who have achieved much and carry it not as a badge but remain shrouded, such as my late friend, Dave, who, until he was on his deathbed, kept his achievements secret from us all.

    In four decades of living in New York City, and with the privilege of meeting tens of thousands in the course of my business, I have seen all the variants of humility and accomplishment. Of course we all love those who are humble – who amongst us wants the achievements and greatness of others rubbed in our face?

    One of the greatest perks of my business are the occasions when I meet the world’s luminaries, both those known to the public at large and the many who are relatively unknown to the public but are legends within their community.

    But there is even a greater privilege – being graced with meeting those who are humble, accomplished, and NICE, regardless of worldly achievement. It is people like Jamie Adkins, whose unadulterated niceness and gentle manner is so DISARMING that meeting him leaves an indelible impression and a smile on my mind. I am left feeling lighter and am reassured that people are good and my work is worth doing.

    Recently I was paid a visit by Bill Irwin and David Shiner. I have known Bill since the 1980s. An actor (stage, film, TV), clown, and writer, his accomplishments are many – too many to list besides the highlights here. He has won a Tony Award, an Obie Award, New York Drama Critics Circle Special Citation, Drama Desk Award, an Outer Critics Circle Award, a CFCA Award, and a New Victory Arts Award. He was named a Guggenheim Fellow and received a National Endowment for the Arts Choreographer’s Fellowship. He is most well known for being the first performance artist to receive a MacArthur Fellowship*, often called the Genius Award.

    Bill created a number of highly regarded stage shows that incorporated elements of clowning – The Regard of Flight (1982), Largely New York (1989), Fool Moon (1993), The Harlequin Studies (2003), and Mr. Fox: A Rumination (2004).

    Before leaving my showroom, I asked Bill and David if they were willing to do a little schtick for our company, which he readily agreed to. For those who would like to meet Bill, I would not bother looking for him strutting in the streets of New York or on TV doing interviews. This is not a man inclined to chest-thumping bravado, limousines, or red carpets. You may find him on Broadway, Taking The Stairs 🙂


  • Pretty Rad, Part 3

    Liliane Through Broken Glass (see Part 1 and Part 2 here)

    My occupation often affords me the opportunity for a bit of fun. I occasionally meet individuals using my product who have been to my showroom, know me by name, yet have never met me in person. Through a series of questions, I let them discover our connection for what I hope will be a very surprising first encounter. This was the case with Gaby Lampkey, whom I wrote about on September 8, 2010 in On The Road.

    Recently, I met Liliane le Prévost, hooping in Washington Square Park. I asked about her equipment and where she got it, letting her discover that I was the owner of the manufacturing company who made her hoop. She basically went wild, even stopping passersby to let them know of my celebrity. A big fish in a very small pond, perhaps, but certainly not worthy of public announcements. However, my philosophy is to take your 15 minutes of fame when you can get it.

    I learned that Liliane was born in Bayeux, Normandy – extraordinarily cool to me for two reasons. One, I rarely meet first generation French living in New York City, and two, I am of French ancestry myself. So, overall, this was a remarkable connection in more ways than one. Liliane’s father is a trained chef living in Europe and, although not having trained at a formal school, has worked with some of the world’s greatest chefs and is part of a well-known family in the region, famous for its milk and cheese. I also learned that her mother is a professor.

    A conversation ensued regarding this website and my photo excursions. Lilie seemed very animated by the prospect of exploring the city, so I promised I would include her in a future urban safari. We went on two such trips, and this excursion was our third voyage out at sea in the wilds of New York.

    She was unfamiliar with the piers in Red Hook. The area is quite scenically dramatic and I was up to another visit, so this seemed a good area to introduce someone as well. My intention was not to spend time shopping indoors, but Liliane was unfamiliar with Fairway and in a fortuitous twist, I was very pleased at my decision to explore this most amazing food emporium. So much so, that our experiences there became the subject of the first two parts of this three part story – you can read about Fairway and Charles Knapp.

    But it was time to go back to our main feature, so after our exploration of Fairway, we ventured out to the Beard Street piers of Red Hook. Behind Fairway, there are abandoned trolley cars. Using flashlights, the interiors looked like a made to order film set – rusted, delapidated with chipped paint, broken glass, and strewn with trash. Lilie convinced me to crawl through a missing window. Inside, the place was amazing. Ever the impromptu entertainer, Lilie struck a number of poses in the trolley. She is quite photogenic, with a mane of hair that, once unfurled, is a show stopper. See more photos here.

    In a previous email to a friend, Liliane referred to me as pretty rad which, from a 22 year old, I took as a compliment of the highest order. To be able to make any impact on someone her age is not easy. I hope this excursion to Red Hook met her expectations, because I am not sure I am able to keep this level of entertainment up forever. For now though, I hope I remain Pretty Rad 🙂


  • Pretty Rad, Part 2

    A Slice of Charles Knapp (see Part 1 here)

    In Part 1 of Fairway to Heaven, I found myself unexpectedly immersed in a food emporium, the likes of which I had never seen. I traveled there with a friend who you will meet in Part 3 of this adventure in Red Hook, Brooklyn. However, the plot thickened, or perhaps I should say curdled.

    I have written a number of stories with the theme Abandon All Preconceived Notions Ye Who Enter Here. However, looking back, it is fair to say that all of the people I have featured could easily fit under this umbrella. In New York City, more than any place I can imagine, you cannot define or judge a person by color, creed, occupation, lack of occupation, appearance, hygiene, education, or any other outward signs – even those things which a reasonable person may use to reasonably judge someone unfamiliar. This city is a salad bowl of ethnicities, types, and kinds. It’s a magnet for luminaries, geniuses, eccentrics, misfits, artists, and every other imaginable variant on the human condition. But the overlying theme is the number of remarkable individuals hidden behind an unassuming or unprepossessing exterior.

    As we explored the aisles of Fairway, we approached the cheese department. I love cheese but do not keep it in the house, lest I lose control and consume too much. My eye was drawn to two wheels of cheese stacked on a wooden barrel. My interest was immediately spotted by a man behind the counter who told me of the special nature of this authentic Parmigiano Reggiano.

    No sooner did I show interest in a cheese that I was offered a taste. Soon it became a cheese tasting extravaganza with no holds barred. My first and favorite for the night was Amarelo – a strong but extraordinary tasting cheese from Portugal, made with both sheep and goat milk. As conversation ensued, it became abundantly clear that this was not just an ordinary salesperson but also someone who had a passion for cheese and a depth of knowledge. I also knew that this man, who introduced himself as Charles Knapp, would be the subject of a story for this website. Charles gave me a postcard with the details of a wine and cheese tasting that he conducts periodically at botto di vino in Red Hook, Brooklyn (see details here).

    As I was leaving, I asked for his full name and contact information. He informed me that he also had a cheese blog which I perused this morning, along with a number of other blogs he authors.*
    Charles has had a fascinating life and is far from what one might expect from a counter salesman in Fairway. Born as a Catholic, Charles studied atheism and shamanism in college, then became an SGI Buddhist. His father was in the Air Force, so Charles moved a lot as a child.  Here are some ruminations from his website:

    Food Trip
    Born in San Antonio, Texas. Raised in Europe. Love food Mexican Food only in Texas and California. Ate a lot. Parents had to hold me back. Was a husky kid always.Making lunch for school. Traveling to Holland. France, Italy,Spain. Ate diff foods olives,olive oils, meats, bread, wine, beer, and spirits. Always liked sweets. Candy gum cake. chocolate. Hot oatmeal. Strawberry picking, Elmers food and steak house. SOSC Cafeteria. Mom was a great cook. In Europe brotchen bread bratwurst. In spain, Bread and olives, cheese, wine and olive oils. Not only the food, culture and history for the region. It continues. I want to take Ben carlos. Own Business in Catering. Gouda in Holland. manchego in Spain. Quantro for dessert. Flowers and food. We have been on the go for the first 15 years of my life. learned German in first grade. Spain Rain on the plane to Majorca. The italians where so wonderful. Very giving about everything. They wanted top show off their food and history and culture all the time. Naples was wonderful Roma did we see the churches. After awhile it became dull. Humor and sarcasm were always around. Munich oktoberfest. garmische partenkirchen. The Sound of Music was our family we danced, learned a lot and ate a lot and drank a lot throughout chiildhood. Potsdam. Checkpoint Charlie. Our history together. resentments. Golden Child. Ms Griffith. 3rd grade Wizard of Oz. Tam class president. I supported her a lot. I was the class clown and the mischievous one.1975 we cam home to Oregon. Strange time. Came out of the cocoon of military life. Life is some cocoons. go in and out.

    And there you have a Slice of Charles Knapp 🙂

    Note: If you want to be even more astounded with Charles’s transparency and the candid exposure of his rich life, follow the links for his various blogs – 21, manspace, spiritworld2011, and snazzysales2011.


  • Esai is Taken

    Frequently I have been in a public space, perhaps a place such as Washington Square Park, when someone has pulled me aside and whispered something like “Do you realize who that guy is?” Of course, everyone has different standards as to what constitutes greatness and importance, so my initial reaction is to take these introductions with a grain of salt and do my research later. However, with current technology, later can be now if one has a portable device with Internet access.

    On September 5th at 9:20 PM, Joe Rios (producer of the film documentary in which I was host – see here) approached me quite excited and whispered to me that this was ESAI MORALES, a lifelong idol of his. Apparently, this was a name I should have known but sadly did not. I did the prudent thing and took a handful of photos along with some video, just “in case” this person turned out to be worthy of a story.
    I moved aside and pulled out my iPad to get a brief overview.

    As I began to type his name in the Wikipedia search bar, his full name was completed quickly, so I knew that this person was likely a heavyweight. A few seconds scanning his Wikipedia entry, and I was embarrassed that I had never heard of him. There was a broad range of films and TV series, nearly 100 in total, many of which were quite familiar to me. Morales is perhaps best known for his role in the 1987 film La Bamba.

    Reading his bio more closely, I could understand why my friend Joe Rios would have idolized Morales and found him to be an inspiration. Like Joe, Esai was Puerto Rican and grew up in New York City from a working-class family (Esai grew up in Brooklyn, Joe had a very rough upbringing in the Bronx). Morales is the classic success story that every urban youth needs to hear.

    I can’t imagine another place where a man or woman who has achieved so much, essentially a celebrity, would sit on a park bench with a local and just sing his heart out. I was introduced to Esai and spoke to him briefly. A piece of the video footage I took that evening may be used in the film documentary that Joe is producing. Although it was crude and hand held, it documents the extraordinary nature of the park and this city, where anything can happen and often does.

    Born in 1962, Morales began his acting career by attending the School of Performing Arts in Manhattan. I also learned that Morales is a vegetarian and political activist. Whatever he is doing, it appears to serve him well. He looks to be in great condition and is quite handsome and charming. For any women who might be interested, I am sorry to say, Esai is taken 🙂

    Related Posts: Mzuri Sings, Myra’s Isle, Walid Soroor


  • King of Accordion

    Barry does not ask for much. He only wants to be known as the King of Accordion. But the media attention he has received spins him the way it wants, so to the media, he is the King of whatever works best to suit their needs, including the front man to a recent Occupy Wall Street march. A little spin or artistic license often makes a story more enjoyable to read – I have been guilty of that myself. My writing has evolved from the fact-reporting style of the news journalist to one that is highly personal, weaving in connections from my life experience that are triggered by the place, person, or thing which I write about.

    Nonetheless, I do like to feel that I have neither misunderstood nor miscommunicated the feelings and thoughts of an individual subject. It is for this reason that on personal profiles, I often email a biographical inquiry and use excerpts so that you can read the subject’s own words, not my translation. I have also frequently recorded long meetings/interviews. I make these available as well.

    Barry Hamadyk, currently a Brooklyn resident, hails from New Jersey. Barry has played accordion since he was 5, and it is this love that he endeavors to communicate by attracting people with his regal garb. He can be found in the parks of New York City and is a habitue of Washington Square Park, sitting on a bench for passersby while recordings of accordion music play continuously. His preferred repertoire are waltzes and rhumbas. At one time he played organ for roller skating rinks.

    Barry found that as his wardrobe became more outlandish (along with his Nordic look), the more attention he got. Once a crown was added, response went through the royal roof. This organic transformation has evolved over the last 5 years. Although, at a surface level, one may see Barry as someone akin to our friend Mark Birnbaum (with a shared passion for music), the motivations for the flamboyant dress are actually quite different, as are the men and their backgrounds.

    Being referred to as the King of New York rather than the King of Accordion is not Barry’s only dismay with a news article recently written. It also was reported that “he gets a lot of money, too, without much effort.” However, Barry neither really solicits money nor collects it.

    I spoke with Barry for quite some time and found him extremely forthcoming and congenial. If you meet Barry in the parks of New York, say Hi and remember, he is the King of Accordion 🙂

    Related Posts: The Conductor


  • One Tree at a Time

    I have an uncle who was a Roman Catholic missionary priest. Eventually, he left the priesthood, entering academia and consulting work. On one occasion, he asked me if I was into politics and was disappointed when I told him no. He said that at that point in his life going forward, he no longer wanted to help individuals one by one, rather to help people en masse via sweeping political change. This seemed to be a noble aspiration but too disconnected to me. As a self-directed entrepreneur, I never had the stomach for long political process or decision by committee. So, be it perhaps ineffectual from a global perspective, my efforts to make a difference in the world are limited to infrequent isolated acts of charity.

    One of the perks of owning a business, particularly a manufacturing company, is the ability to bring tremendous resources to a small problem and fix it easily. I have a factory with a machine shop and a plethora of power and hand tools. Such a facility in Manhattan is now virtually nonexistent.

    Additionally, most people in New York City have a much more limited range of tools and no basement shops or garages. Hence, although some old timers may have handwork experience, most New Yorkers have little or no working knowledge of tools, in depth experience of how to repair things or any skills in electrical, plumbing, metalsmithing, or carpentry work.

    Performing easy, quick procedures such as cutting something on a table saw, drilling a hole using a drill press, or machining on a lathe are like magical blessings for most New Yorkers. I love doing these things – typically these small acts are uber-appreciated and remembered for years. My “return on investment” is so huge that it is a stretch to even see the small favors as “generous.”

    Recently, a customer who knew we had a factory workshop asked if we could do a simple repair on a hand bag with an absurdly designed shoulder strap (unbelievably, the chain was only slipped under the flap, so the bag fell whenever opened). The solution was simple, however, one would need grommets, hole cutters, setting tools, and other hand tools to disassemble and reassemble the linked chain. The repair was made in a few minutes, and Déa Million was elated and profusely thankful. Ebullient, effusive, and perky, there was no better victim for a small charitable act. As repayment, she agreed to this story.

    This morning, I perused Déa’s website and learned many things about this woman, who is a graphic designer, originally from Minneapolis. Her interests and skills are quite eclectic – at one time, Déa worked as a project manager for computer-based training systems for a US Air Force helicopter pilot training system. As I continued to peruse her website, the story you are reading just unfolded without planning as a web of interconnected ideas, such as those on the mind-numbing documentary TV show Connections with James Burke.

    My attention turned to her interest in reforestation with the organization Community Carbon Trees Costa Rica. As I scanned that organization’s website, I saw that this was a grassroots effort, and the wheels began turning in my mind, seeing the obvious analogy between their and my approach at making a difference. An idea for the perfect story title just popped into my mind: One Tree at a Time.

    I continued to scroll the main page, and my eyes fell on the most astounding coincidence. Pseudo-science or not, if there ever was a case for Morphic Resonance, this was it. The metaphor for my way of making a difference and the story title phrase I had thought of seconds before just appeared like magic and leapt off their webpage:

    We believe that ONE by ONE, with your generous sponsorship and our commitment, together we can grow huge new expanses of forest on deforested equatorial land owned by local Costa Rican people, One Tree at a Time.

    Note to Déa: Thanks a million, Déa, for your cooperation and the opportunity to use your image. I hope you enjoy reading this remarkable tale as much as I did writing it. Thanks for letting me repair your bag 🙂

    Related Post: The Book With the Hole In It, Part 2


  • My Pleasure

    One of the driving forces in New York City is that the bar is set higher for virtually every thing imaginable: products, services, culture, architecture, etc. Cream rises to the top, and New York City is where much of the cream of society lies.

    I hate to make this read like “Why I Hate Bristol,” but Bristol, Connecticut, where I grew up, became a metaphor, for many who lived there, for all things boring, unsophisticated, and closed-minded. A place where no one would think out of the box and where a person was made to feel foolish for aspirations, dreams, or anything that would dare take you away from that place or separate you from the pack.

    I broke away and never regretted it. I do travel back there and nostalgize some, but, as I referenced from Jill Eisenstadt, the happiness I feel in those memories are likely about my youth and not the place.

    Even finding the simplest things in that town is a challenge, if not impossible. My family, certainly of no great means, never ate in restaurants there. On the rare occasions where we did have a meal out, we had to travel far and wide. Astonishing for a town of 50,000 that no good restaurants existed (or still exist) there.

    I recall many a holiday gathering where conversations would turn to how I believed that one could improve the services in Bristol in ways such as opening a cafe. Invariably my brother-in-law would always laugh and say, “Brian, we’re talking Bristol.” I was always frustrated because I felt that residents there would heartily welcome improved merchants.

    Here, with an enormous populace and tremendous competition, the volume of quality goods rises. Many compete on price alone, of course, but that is a very tough road to travel; take a trip through Chinatown and see if you want to engage in pricing wars. A better route to follow is to differentiate yourself with better quality, variety, or specialty. Places such as the Doughnut Plant, Kossar’s Bialys, Cones, Il Laboratorio Del Gelato, Van Leeuwen Artisan Ice Cream Truck, Raffetto’s, Eileen’s Cheesecake, Ceci Cela, Matt Umanov, etc. are what makes New York City unique and a joy to visit or live in.

    On a recent visit to the garment district on business (see here), I ran across the Baked Potato King. Nothing could have pleased me more – I was starving and was looking for something satisfying I could get while on the run. I love baked potatoes, and what better way to get some much needed carbs for lunch?

    I chatted with vendor Vladislov Rubinov and took photos and video, for which he was very accommodating. When I thanked him, he responded with a very genuine “my pleasure.” This was so odd and surprising coming from someone in New York City, particularly a street vendor. It reminded me of the comment made by Jamie Adkins in my office. These things are to be expected in suburban or rural environments but can be rare in the city.

    I had many bags and samples to carry, and it was drizzly. Better to take the potato back to my office. I ate it quickly and went back to work. But long after the taste of the potato was gone, Vladislov’s words sting lingered. ‘Twas a bit of humanity that graced my day. It was, and is, My Pleasure 🙂


  • Caught in the Rain

    One of the constants in New York City is the homeless. And one constant within that world is seeing the same homeless. Most are battling with drug addiction, clinical depression, and any other number of physical and/or mental disabilities, making it very difficult for those individuals to climb out of the hole into which they have fallen.

    I have never battled with severe depression or a feeling of general hopelessness. The brief bouts of depression that we all encounter are enough to provide a glimpse into that dark world of the defeated spirit. And, to be honest about it, how much hope can we hold out to a homeless person? In some cases, they may have been well-schooled and may have had a career. But what about the person who had not even graduated from high school and has no marketable skills at all?

    As an employer, I am saddened to see people in this state. What is the possibility of an individual cleaning themselves up, reschooling, or training and going out to compete against others in the job market? Who would hire someone who is formerly homeless with a poor track record over someone with a better work history? Business owners generally hire on merit and qualification, not on a philanthropic basis.

    On Tuesday, August 14, 2007, I wrote a story about a homeless woman, Stephanie, whom I had seen on a regular basis in SoHo. Since that time, I have seen her in the Village, albeit much less frequently. I have often said hello, reminding her of who I was. She generally acknowledged that, but I have no idea whether she really remembers me.

    I caught up with Stephanie recently on the weekend of our recent tropical storm. She looked much cleaner and better dressed than I have ever seen her. I complemented her and she thanked me. She said she had been spending more time in shelters. I asked if she was a drug user, and she said no. Our conversation was quite short.

    I knowthat misfortune has befallen Stephanie, and as I parted, I had no interest in being disingenuous and leaving her with some cute aphorism laden with false hopes. I went for something useful within her capability: Don’t get caught in the rain.

    Related Posts: Crusties are People Too?, Because It’s Not


  • Mzuri Sings

    Have you ever been assaulted by greatness or arrested by talent? In a city where greatness is everywhere you look, one must use superlatives sparingly, lest one robs them completely of any meaning. But everywhere you look, excellence abounds, often hidden behind unassuming exteriors. It may be a homeless person versed on every subject imaginable, or a man so eccentric-looking he literally stops traffic but has a Ph.D in music composition from Columbia University (see Part 1 here).

    Perhaps you have spent summers on park benches with Dave, a gentle, kind and humble man who, you learn only on his deathbed, has two doctorates in pharmacology. We chat often with a physicist who regularly spends evenings on a park bench, as does park architect George Vellonakis.  I once found myself staring in awe at a man who not only played guitar well but learned to play a lap steel on his first encounter, only to learn that the man was Will Galison – a well-known musician who has a Wikipedia entry and has played with greats such as Barbra Streisand.

    These encounters have inspired me to write series of stories with themes such as Abandon All Preconceived Notions Ye Who Enter Here, Only in New York, and Meetings With Remarkable Men.

    Last weekend, an unknown woman dropped by Washington Square Park very late on a quiet Sunday night. I met her eating a salad, sitting elegantly on the granite benches with her agent, Lisa Williams. I had seen her sing the previous Friday and was enthusiastic about speaking to her personally.
    I introduced her to Scott Samuels, the reigning guitar wizard of Washington Square. There was a feeding frenzy within moments as virtually everyone in hearing radius scurried to see what the winds of good fortune had blown in. In an extraordinary coup d’etat, park regulars were treated to a number of classics, sung by Mzuri Moyo and accompanied by Scotty:

    We love beatitudes and platitudes, simplifying life’s complexity – sayings such as you can’t have it all. For those who believe such a myth, meet Mzuri Moyo, a woman who has talent, charm and great looks. Her sincere delivery was transparent to all, and every song was met with cheers and whistling.

    Lorraine Theresa Pope was born in Passaic, New Jersey, and was a graduate of Eastside High School, known for its transformation in the mid-1980s under the leadership of principal Joe Clark (the school and Clark were the subject of the 1989 film Lean on Me, starring Morgan Freeman). Mzuri is a Registered Nurse, a field she worked in for 6 years.

    Mzuri speaks of her family:
    I have 2 brothers. I am the oldest. My oldest brother is very musical he writes and sings. He wrote one of the songs on my Christmas CD, I’ll Be Home For Christmas. The title of the song is Maybe We’ll Find Christmas Love. My father was a painter and he loved music. He was  a distant cousin to James Brown. My mother had a beautiful voice – she sang in the church choir.

    Her influences:
    The greatest influence on my life is having lived in Europe, traveling to Africa and Asia, and meeting all kinds of people. That is why I relate to everyone when I’m singing I feel them and I feel as though they are a part of me.

    Her goals and aspirations:
    My goal is to keep music and my artistic ability honest and to make a great living at it. I also would like to bring peace and love into the world with the music I sing. I love yoga. I am a vegetarian. I love languages – I speak a little French and Spanish.

    From her website:
    A writer since childhood, Mzuri has performed in a variety of venues including colleges and universities. Her recent concert debut at Lincoln Center was widely acclaimed. In 2002, Mzuri won the Audelco Award for Best solo performance. A star of both stage and film, a critic once wrote of her, “when Ms. Mzuri sings, God smiles, and angels flap their wings.”

    In this one-woman show, Mzuri presents… Ms. Fannie Lou Hamer, up close and personal. This presentation in word and song, captures a little known but very important moment in history and lays it at your feet.

    Make no assumptions. Investigate closely. Don’t move through the New York City streets so quickly that you miss an opportunity to be arrested by talent when someone like Mzuri sings 🙂

    See Mzuri’s website and additional performances here and here.


  • Any Questions?

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    The 1980s saw one of the most memorable anti-drug commercials ever made: This is Your Brain on Drugs. It was short, direct and, many feel, effective. In it, a man held up an egg and said, “This is your brain,” then picked up a frying pan and added, “This is drugs.” He then cracked open the egg, fried the contents, and said, “This is your brain on drugs.” Finally, he looked up at the camera and asked, “Any questions?”

    I have observed and socialized on occasion with a few individual members of a group of crusties, who have now begun to make home in one particular area of Washington Square Park. For many young people, the nihilistic lifestyle is seductive. Most are severely addicted to drugs such as heroin and are on methadone programs. I have seen many drug addicts sleeping in a severely slumped type of position on a park bench in New York City, like that in today’s photo.

    On July 8 and 12, 2011, I published a two-part story featuring crusties and Morgan Maginnis ( see Part 1 here). In the photos and video interview, Morgan had a certain charm. She said she had two college degrees at age 23. But all is not well with her. She has violent outbursts and manic episodes, hits others, and has been hit herself in what appears to be a popular recreation among crusties. Morgan always seems to be bleeding somewhere.

    This was Morgan. Today, we have Morgan on Drugs. Any Questions?

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • WYSIWYG

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    For me, getting the cooperation of subjects for photography is a bit of theater. Although it is a somewhat complex issue, permission is generally not needed to take photos of individuals in a public place if used for non-commercial purposes.

    However, taking photos surreptitiously is not the optimal photographic strategy. Although there can be that great candid shot, results are often poor due to the variety of issues one deals with, particularly movement of the subject. Cooperation, when given, allows you to direct the subject, move them, reshoot etc., all with a much more relaxed ease. More importantly, in my case, meeting affords the opportunity to interview and correspond to get a story.

    One evening, I spotted three women with striking blonde hair sitting in Washington Square Park. I guessed they may be from Norway. I discussed with my companions my interest in photographing them. They encouraged me. I explained how I was tired and the theater it may require – introducing myself, giving them a card, explaining what I do and for how long, discussing the nature and number of my stories, where they are published, citations and reviews I have gotten, and the overall seriousness of what I do.

    All this selling is really not required in most cases, but I do not want to risk getting a negative response, leaving me in a very awkward situation – with no photo permission. I will not try later to take a photo candidly. So failure means no photo at all.

    In this particular case, the three women were very accommodating. I learned that, in fact, they were Norwegian. Ingvill Moviken, Cecilie Hahre, and Hanne Svarliaunet are all dancers, here on visas. They were happy to pose in whatever manner I chose. I favored a lamppost which afforded better light and a Singin’ in the Rain type of setting.

    Cecilie works as a dance teacher at Trude Mossin Ballettschool in Norway. She has a bachelor’s degree in Dance from the Norwegian ballet school. She teach ballet, hip-hop, zumba, pilates, and jazz.
    She completed a biographical questionaire I sent her by email. I asked about her experiences in New York City:

    Q. What is it like to be a Norwegian blond woman in the USA? Do
    you get more attention than in Norway? Are you too often approached by men?

    A. Yea we do. People always want to talk to us, and they are very curious about
    us. But in a really positive way. I think is good that the amerikan people are
    so open and curious about us. In Norway we could be kind of cold, we never
    talk to each other at the bus or subway.

    Q. What impressions do you have of New York City? In what ways is it better,
    worse or just different from your expectations?

    A. I love this city. All the opportunities, you never know what the day will bring. You can go out one day, with nothing to do and then you meet someone and suddenly you are sitting in a penthouse appartment in NYC or talking to people like you! People are so kind. It is never a boring day (like in Norway).

    I asked Cecilie if she realized that they were the “American Dream.” She said yes. Blonde, Norwegian, charming, friendly, talented, spirited dancers. These are good things but no surprise – because in New York City, sometimes WYSIWYG* 🙂

    *WYSIWYG – A computer acronym, What You See Is What You Get, to describe a system where text and graphics displayed onscreen appears exactly like that when printed.

    Related Posts: Hair“The Women”, Jenn Kabacinski Pt. 2, Jenn Kabacinski Pt. 1

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • The Book With the Hole In It, Part 2

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    (see Part 1 here)

    “Brian only speaks the truth.”

    Around 1973, I answered an advertisement for a freelance carpenter (see Part 1 here) to work on a retail store restoration on 3rd Avenue in the 20s. I arranged to meet and interview with Max, the new shop owner. For some reason, he took an immediate liking to me with an inexplicable level of confidence, in spite of my lack of experience.

    In the course of the interview, he became fixated on knowing whether or not I had ever fallen on my head. His assertion was that this typically opened a person’s “third eye,” apparently something he was looking for. I decided to play my cards carefully and responded in a vague enough manner to let him believe what he wanted. I was immediately hired and soon promoted to be in charge of the entire construction project – something I was clearly not qualified for in any way. No matter, however, since this project was to derail rather quickly.

    I was introduced to the workers as their boss and that my word was to be followed without question. Max asserted that I could be trusted implicitly because “Brian only speaks the truth.” Apparently, this was a function of my 3rd eye being opened.

    The entire project was the intersection of whimsy, folly, and insanity. After completion of one interior wall, Max decided a curved wall would be more to his liking. I was told to have the wall ripped out and to begin the construction of a curved wall.

    Max always carried an attaché case. On one occasion, he took the time to make a very important announcement. If we ever were to notice his attaché case left behind accidentally, we were to take possession and contact him immediately. We were informed that he typically carried $10,000 in cash. He snapped open the case and revealed neatly bundled and stacked $100 bills. WOW. I had never seen that kind of money.

    But most curious and odd was his possession of a book with a hole in it, which apparently contained arcane knowledge. From time to time in conversation, he would brandish the small black tome and speak to me while looking through the hole. Once, he said, “I was on a plane returning from Amsterdam, reading my book with the hole in it …” As he said this, he would lift his book and peer at me through the hole. I desperately wanted to see the inside of that book. Perhaps it contained the answers to life’s deepest and darkest mysteries. I was never allowed to look inside, nor did the book have any title or markings.

    At one point, I came down with a severe flu and decided to tell Max in person that I would be out of work for several days. I met him at his apartment in Manhattan. When I arrived, his family was seated at a table, eating dinner. He was completely naked, head to toe, casually eating fried chicken. His wife and children were clothed. When I told him of my condition, he said that it was easily cured – I only needed to take 1000 milligrams of vitamin C per hour.

    The project quickly went under, and I was owed $400. One day, I was called by a coworker, who said that Max was at the store with his attaché case and that if I wanted my money, I should get there quickly. I jumped in a taxi, a luxury I rarely indulged in. I arrived and told Max he owed me $400. He said that when I had the exact numbers for him, he would pay me. I told him the numbers were exact. He opened his case and gave me $400 in cash. I returned home and felt rich, drawing from that stack of money for living expenses for some time.

    The last I heard of Max was when the same coworker called and said Max had last been seen lying in the street on 3rd Avenue, singing Delta Dawn (a big hit at the time) and stopping traffic. An ambulance had picked him up and he had been placed in a psychiatric institution. I will never know what lay in the pages of The Book With the Hole In It

    Note: I recently located Samuel Weiser Books in York Beach, Maine, one of the largest dealers of occult books in the world (previously located in Manhattan). I called and spoke to someone very knowledgeable. I described this book with a hole in it. He assured me he was familiar with virtually every occult book, that he had never heard of such a book, and that it was highly unlikely that such a book on an occult or spiritual subject existed.

    Other Related Posts: Never Cut a Board, Shows Me Here, Because I’m the Best Part 2, Because I’m the Best Part 1

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

  • The Book With the Hole In It, Part 1.

    Posted on by Brian Dubé

    In the early 1970s, I worked as a freelance carpenter. At the time, numerous small agencies existed for small jobs – some only requiring a day or even several hours of work. Jobs were immediate and plentiful. Virtually no experience was necessary. Of course, better skills, feedback from clients, and reliability all factored into getting more and better jobs from the agencies.

    Those who were ambitious could parlay their experience and get affluent clients, repeat work and even very long assignments with great perks. One friend managed to get a position for months at a time as handyman at the Connecticut country home of a New York City resident. His employment included living at their country home for what essentially amounted to an all-expense-paid summer vacation with added pay. Affluent clients were typically quite generous and appreciative of those willing to do skilled and unskilled labor and indulge their whims and fancies.

    There was no screening of clients beyond a job description and the ability to pay. One burly gentleman had me build a loft bed with a staircase. He was particularly impressed with his own physical prowess, and he repeatedly asked me for assurance that the staircase would be wide enough for him to climb and that my construction would support the vigorous sexual activity of a heavy, powerful man and would not collapse. I used extra bolts.

    However, I was to learn that when exposed to a populace as large as New York City, clients like the burly man were really nothing extraordinary. To do this kind of work was to enter the homes and personal lives of New Yorkers. Many were unabashed, revealing their habits, lifestyle and needs.

    Nothing, however, could prepare me for one assignment so bizarre that it strains credulity. Trust me – this real New York City tale is 100% true and is an adventure I like to call The Book With the Hole In It

    See Part 2 here.

    Other Related Post: Never Cut a Board

    Posted on by Brian Dubé


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