Wednesday, November 26, 2014

thanks a lot


foodista.com 

The Yankee version of the first Thanksgiving in 1620 paints the Native American “Indian” as a guest, fed by the intrepid Pilgrims.


Nothing could be further from the truth.

mayflowerhistory.com

Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket formed the home of the Wampanoag, a people with a sophisticated society who had proudly occupied this region for 12 thousand years. 

britannica.com

According to the National Museum of the American Indian: 

“They had their own government, 
their own religious and philosophical beliefs, 
their own knowledge system, 
and their own culture.”

britannica.com

They knew the rain, the dry spells, the migration of animals and the cycles of water, plant life and the seasons. 

Giving thanks was a daily part of their lives.

Giovanni da Verrazano, the Italian explorer for whom our bridge is named noted that the Wampanoag were "very charitable towards their neighbors".

thesestonewalls.com

So here are the facts: the Wampanoag taught the Pilgrims to plant corn, and the corn saved the English that first winter because their European seeds didn’t thrive.


And while the Pilgrims did go “fowling” with muskets and brought home a few field birds for the feast, the Indians arrived with baskets of greens and squash and corn and five freshly killed deer, which were roasted.

sensualanimist.com

The Pilgrims did produce a very robust ale, made from the one successful English crop of barley. 

But the party didn’t last.

rustycans.com

Within a few years, by 1675, the Wampanoag were decimated by European diseases and defeated in War.

images.tribe.net/

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

it’s quiet out there





Too quiet.




Riviera is Italian for "coastline"



After the 1929 stock market crash, the American economy tanked.

nycparks 

The next year saw massive layoffs and the Federal Works Progress Administration was created.

nycparks 

This made Federal tax money available to put construction back to work, and urban planner Robert Moses saw his chance.

nycparks


He turned to architect Aymar Embury II and according to the Landmarks Preservation Commission they pulled off “among the most remarkable public recreational facilities ever constructed in the United States.” 


Begun in 1934, by ‘37 our Bronx Riviera, 
Orchard Beach, was born.



Moses arranged for 1.7 million cubic yards of clean, white, New Jersey sand to create 115 acres of shoreline.

googleearth
Embury designed the bathhouse as a riff on the Palais de Chaillot, in Paris.

Palais via Travelocity

It was an immediate success. 

At its peak in the 1940’s, Orchard beach could attract 40,000 on a sunny Summer day.


Designed in the “Federal Moderne” style, the bathhouse featured classic Greek key detailing, public showers, 5,000 lockers, a bandstand and a 500-seat cafeteria. 



nycparks

But time, wind and water has taken its toll. 

A $2.4 million study of the pavilion revealed it suffers from alkali-silica reaction, a process in which moist salt air degrades concrete.




Chain link now keeps people away from falling chunks of tile and cement.


Demolition appeared to be inevitable, but some think it can be saved for about $50 million.

Mayor Bloomberg focused on eight different sites, including our High Bridge over the Harlem River, for capital reconstruction projects totaling nearly $300 million.

Whether Mayor de Blasio will value this Bronx landmark enough to save it is anybody’s guess but doing nothing is no longer an option.

Left to deteriorate demolition will be next, and a fond memory of our Bronx will be lost to the weather.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Sunday Night Fever


Lobsterdust is a NYC DJ who specializes in mashups, using digital to “deconstruct and then reconstruct” in his own words.


He was born 42 years ago and was raised in Israel while studying graphic design and photography, recording engineering and he played in a high school band.


He’s also a featured DJ at the Bootie Club, according to Wikipedia “the first night club in the United States dedicated solely to mashups and bootlegs.”

power953.com

Nelly is the fourth best selling rap artist in American music history.

theguardian.com/music

The BeeGees have sold more than 220 million albums worldwide, making them one of the best selling musical artists of all time.

Now Lobsterdust has answered the question, 

“What would Nelly rapping “Staying Hot” 2002
with the BeeGees singing “Staying Alive” 1977
sound like together?


Good Answer!