Archive for the ‘Events’ category

BET Protest

January 28, 2008

I was on 65th Street between Park Avenue and Lexington when I started hearing chanting.  Intrigued, I sought out the source and discovered a small group of protestors walking in a tight circle in front of one of the townhouses, just using some open parking spaces and not blocking traffic.

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They were orderly and not particularly loud, but we doing an organized chant.  I should have written them down as they changed it a couple of times during my short visit.  (I do remember “BET doesn’t speak for me”, though.)

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I was interested in the protest as they were uniformly Black protesters carrying signs about BET.  It turned out that they were denouncing Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman who apparently lives nearby.  In addition to owning such things as MTV, Dreamworks, Paramount, and more than a dozen other entertainment properties, Viacom owns Black Entertainment Television.

They were protesting the portrayal of Blacks on BET as showing derogatory images and sending negative images of Black Americans.  They handed out literature that identified them as being sponsored by Shiloh Baptist Church and asking for support in generating legislation to set standards in music and videos to prevent such portrayals.  In addition, they want to eliminate a lot of what I would call “basic cable” by generating opt-ins for cable purchases.

Apparently, they do this every Saturday in front of the guy’s home (it’s a pretty nice looking townhouse).  Philippe wasn’t available for comment – or so I presume as I didn’t knock.

-H

Gaza Protest on 42nd Street

January 27, 2008

On Saturday, I was walking home with my lunch when I saw police barricades set up near the corner of 42nd Street and 2nd Avenue.

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The Israeli mission to the United Nations is in the area and there are frequent protests directed toward them.  I suspected that this was true again, and was proved correct moments later when I saw the signs.

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“Answer” is a left-wing group against…well, about everything that America does and is (at least as far as I can tell).  Israel, too.

I’m not a fan.  But I do enjoy a good protest, so I took a few pictures and noticed something a little odd.  Notice the protester with the flag who was standing apart from the others.  I was there just as the protest was beginning and within a minute or two, the guy was more or less part of the larger group.  

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I got a bit confused with it as it was a maxist-leninist protest against Israel and some guy was flying the American flag and the Lebanese flag and the Israeli flag.  I asked some cops about it and they said that he was a counterprotester and that they had to do something about him.  I didn’t get any sense of “do something about him” in a pejorative sense, but that the organizers were unhappy about being pre-empted by this guy and wanting to have their protest be their protest and the police were concerned about having to worry about the guy in the midst of the rapidly growing group.

I guess the mixed message was too much for them.

As I watched and took pictures, two things started to happen.  First, the protesters decided to pre-empt the guy’s protest.  Look at how one of them tries to position herself to block his flag.

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But she just didn’t have the height and the signage to do it (poor, poor, dear [laugh]).

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Next, I saw the police come over and start to talk with the counter-protester and at least one of the protest organizers.

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After a minute or two, I left to eat my lunch before it got cold.  At this point, the protesters numbered a couple of dozen.  I didn’t know their timetable, but figured it’d go on for a while and that I’d be back.

After about an hour, I had finished lunch and started to hear them through my window.  By the time I got there, the protesters may have numbered 60 to 80. 

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They were doing the usual:  milling around with speeches and waving their signs.  They were moderately interesting, but two other groups were more so.

First, the Hasidem had shown up.

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The Hasidem are generally described as “ultra-Orthodox” Jews.  There are several large communities of them over in Brooklyn.  I don’t know if these were from that area or not.  As Saturday is the Sabbath, I don’t know their thought processes nor how they got to the protest site.  I did note that they weren’t holding signs or joining in conversations outside of their own group.

And which side were they on?  They were joining the protesters against Israel.  There’s little love between the Hasidem and Israel.

The other group I found interesting was that the sole counterprotester had been segregated off to the right of the group and had been joined by a few fellows.  They did have a small megaphone and were trying to make themselves heard.  The protesters were not acknowledging the existence of the counter-protesters.

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I was finally able to get a good picture of the third flag (the Israeli flag) that the woman had been blocking with her smaller sign.  It wasn’t an official flag.  Instead, it has an English-language slogan at the bottom:  No surrender.

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No wonder she wanted to block it.

-H

Grand Central’s Vanderbilt Hall Christmas Shops

December 13, 2007

I keep pointing out that everyplace that’s wide and open (at least in NYC terms) becomes filled with kiosks for the Christmas season.  Just inside Grand Central Station (or Terminal) is Vanderbilt Hall.  It’s big, it’s open; and right now it is filled with open-air kiosks selling Christmas gifts and stuff.

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And, yes, it is jammed with people.

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Unlike a lot of these sorts of places, I’ve actually bought stuff here.  They seem to have some of the higher quality goods and I like the ambiance.

-H

Lord and Taylor’s Christmas Display

December 12, 2007

I went out a recent evening to take some pictures of the Lord and Taylor Christmas windows.

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The big sort of lighting of the outside is typically done by the better downtown stores.

Even before I got there, I knew I wouldn’t be taking very good pictures of the windows.  Instead, I got the crowds.

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And they were impenetrable for me.

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Lord and Taylor is on Fifth Avenue around 38th Street.  Just a few blocks north of the Empire State Building.

-H

2007 Grand Central Kaleidoscope Light Show – Part 2

December 11, 2007

Just a quick finish to my Grand Central Station / Terminal light show review…

The people on the Grand Concourse never really stopped, but they did slow down…a little.  There were a number of us lining the walls or just standing in the open.  I was standing near the foot of the west stairs, trying to keep out of people’s way while getting a nice view.

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Other than the music, what I show here can’t really capture the event.  The pictures move pretty quickly across the walls and then there are occasional pauses where you wonder “is it over?”.

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Unfortunately, with the lighting, it took my camera a little too long to take the pictures, hence the shakiness.

More kaleidoscope-type pictures.

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The back walls of the concourse were also part of the show.

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And then a little bit of simulated fireworks…

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And the curtain comes down…

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From beginning to end:  eight minutes.

It’s a nice show.

-H