"A New York Treasure" --Village Voice

Monthly Archives: February 2013

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Everybody Loves the Sunshine

For those of you who live here in town, something to keep in mind…my dear friend Sherri, native Upper West Sider, has a reflexology practice.

She’s great at what she does, so if you are looking to do reflexology work, she’s your person. Highly recommended, for sure.

Check her out on Twitter: Blue Sun Reflexology@Sherri Oustalet. Or e-mail directly: sherrioustalet@aol.com.

Also, Sherri’s Facebook page and Linkedin profile.

[Photo Credit: Disorder]

He’s Still Got It

Ted Berg is now at USA Today and he’s  still funny.

Food 52 Says: Eat Your Beans.

It’s Not About the Money…Stupid

 

Uh-huh.

[Photo Credit: Jared Wickenham/Getty Images]

Million Dollar Movie

Flavorwire has links to 10 Oscar-Winning Short Films.

Lede Time

Nice piece on Larry Merchant by Stan Hochman:

When Merchant was 50 years younger, he was sports editor of the Philadelphia Daily News. He was taking names and kicking ass, surrounded by a posse he had hired, hard-driving guys with similar inclinations.

He’d yanked me out of San Bernardino, Calif., and told me where to park near Connie Mack Stadium so I’d find my hubcaps intact after games. And then he told me what we owed our readers.

“Inform ’em, entertain ’em, and every so often surprise ’em,” Merchant said. He wrote incisive essays about pro football. He called his column “Fun and Games” as a stark contrast to life and death. And he’d open his occasional notes columns with “Some questions answered, some answers questioned.”

Merchant informed, entertained, shocked. We were tabloid and proud of it. Not that everyone loved our swagger, our persistence.

There was that night in 1962 on the Phillies’ charter flight, Merchant in an aisle seat, typing away. The catcher, Sammy White, peered over Larry’s shoulder, unhappy with what he read.

“He yanked at the copy paper,” Merchant recalled, “and it stuck. He wound up throwing my Olivetti [typewriter] down the aisle. I went to get it and some of the keys were twisted and some vital parts scattered.

“That night, I dictated a story that said it was the best throw he’d made all season. About a month later, the Phillies sent me an invoice, paying for a replacement and indicating it had been deducted from White’s salary.”

New York Minute

“Manhattan of the Mind” by Becky Cooper.

Morning Art

Painting by Mark Rothko.

Beat of the Day

I was alone, I took a ride…

[Picture by Bags]

Holidazed

Blogging will be light today what with the holiday and all.

Meanwhile, Chad Jennings has the recap of Derek Jeter’s first press conference of the spring. As well as some notes on Mark Teixeira and the WBC.

[Photo Credit: Charlie Riedel/AP via It’s a Long Season]

Sundazed Soul

“Please Make Up Your Mind”–Hank

[Photo Via: MPD]

Saturdazed Soul

“Imagine My Surprise” Fats Waller

[Photo Credit: Fiona Osborne]

Everything is a Remix

When I worked as an intern on Ken Burns’ Baseball documentary I had the occasion to drive to New Hampshire one day with him. Just the two of us. I played him a few songs I wanted him to hear–from the Pharcyde, I think it was–and then he said, “I want to play you something special.”

He put a cassette in the tape deck and turned me on to Marvin Gaye’s version of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” performed thirty years ago at the NBA All-Star game.

Over at Grantland, Pete Croatto explains why it stands alone.

House Calls

 

Go here to read some of the Good Doctor’s writing.

On Guard

Here’s Wright Thompson’s big piece on MJ at 50.

Taster’s Cherce

Food 52 shows us how to make Harissa at home.

New York Minute

There’s a slightly surreal quality to a subway station during the day when the light from outside falls inside–through a grate, or in this picture by our man Bags, through the stairwell.

Straight, No Chaser

 

Youk talks to Mark Feinsand. I like his candor though it won’t endear him to Yankee fans. You know what will? Him not sucking.

More Yankee notes from the intrepid Chad Jennings, here and here.

[Picture by Joe Martz via It’s a Long Season]

Morning Art

Richard Diebenkorn. Early Fifties.

Beat of the Day

 
Great use of this song in the movie, Shoot the Moon.

 

[Images Via: Daniel Stolle and Le Parfum de la dame en noir]

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"This ain't football. We do this every day."
--Earl Weaver