Archive for the ‘Mid-town’ category

Manhattan and the Mexican Day Parade

September 17, 2007

This weekend, I decided to check out two very different parades:  the Steuben Day Parade (very German) and the Mexican Day Parade.  I ended up doing three (including the African-American Day Parade).

Nevertheless, the two initial parades were very different.  If you’ve read my other parade posts, you’ll note the audience reaction is a key point in my evaluation.  The Mexicans reacted loudly with flag-waving and singing and shouting and whistling.  A fun and enthusiastic crowd.

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There was the usual crowd of dignitaries whom I didn’t recognize. 

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It always helps to have a camera and a reporter to get the crowd roaring though.

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You can’t see the female reporter here, but she went back and forth throughout the parade.  Distance-wise, it was a relatively short parade (27th to 41st, going north to south on Madison Avenue).  Any Madison Avenue parade is, in my way of looking at them, a second-tier parade.  I think the Mexicans need to move to Fifth or 6th next time.  Too much crowd and noise and fun for a Madison Avenue parade.  (Note that some of my favorite parades have been on Madison, it’s just that those tend to be less well-attended.)

An old mystery was solved.  At the Dominican Day Parade, I saw a weird figure that I thought was a Dominican folk character.  In that case, this bearded guy in a dress with a parrot on his head was running around.  Well, he showed up at the Mexican Day Parade.  He’s no folk character.  Just a weird guy.

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He also has a dyed dog.  He must have shown up five times during the parade.  Enough said about the guy.

The parade was pretty typical.  They had very loud music (I forgot my earplugs, of course) and floats and dancers.  Lots and lots of dancers.

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Perhaps my favorite moment was an oddball one.  Some of the crowd had perched on top of a phone across the street.  A cop went over and rousted them.  Hey, join the club.

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In terms of the parade itself, nothing beat the “dancing conquistadors”.  There were a bunch of them.

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And they danced.  Danced big time.

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There were even other versions of them.

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But there were other dancers.  Really good ones, and very traditional.

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There was a group of Mexican soap opera actors.

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Or that could have been a channel 41 news crew…I’m not sure.  There was one stunning blonde that I got a bad picture of (she sure wasn’t part of the news crew).

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And another cool part of the parade…lowriders.  Cars and bicycles.

There were maybe 40 or 50 cars.  Some of them had the bouncing hydraulics, which the crowd loved.  And then it ground to a halt.

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Yeah, the car on the left broke down.  After a few minutes they pushed it off the street.

The cars were fine, but the bikes were more fun.

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There were a bunch of them.  Lots of chrome, chains, and bad taste.

A group that I had passed on my way back from Church arrived.  Little Aztec girls.  Very cute.

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(Another picture that I had taken and thought was perfect was actually pretty bad.)

Then, Aztec women.

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And finally, Aztec….creatures?

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Okay, obviously Aztec men, but stylized like the conquistadors.  I don’t know why.

At this point, I knew the parade was winding down and that I needed to get to Harlem for the African-American Parade.  So I left.  I missed maybe another 20 minutes or so, at least by my reckoning.

A good parade.  I’m going to have to resist the temptation to rate the parades.  I really did like the Steuben Day Parade for its traditional look and feel and for the fact that they didn’t do recorded music.  Most of the Mexican Day Parade music was also generated live, but they really love the amplifiers, which were almost unknown in the Steuben Day Parade.  The crowd reaction from the Germans was, of course, much more muted than the Mexicans; but both crowds seemed to enjoy the events.  I know I did.

-H

Night picture of the Chrysler Building

September 15, 2007

You already know that the Chrysler Building is one of my favorite buildings in NYC.  It was the first photo I posted with my new camera.

I figure that it was time to post a nighttime picture.

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The building’s scalloped top is always lit in white.  The Empire State Building’s nighttime colors change every night.

-H

9/11 in NYC

September 11, 2007

I wasn’t in NYC when 9/11 occurred.  I knew some people here and people who were at Ground Zero, but none were injured.

It’s too overcast for my normal view of the two searchlights that shine from Ground Zero.  I’ve always thought they are the best monument for 9/11, as opposed to a physical place like a wall or a pool.  Just my opinion.

On my way home from work, I was at 40th Street and 3rd Avenue and heard someone playing bagpipes.  He was doing it from an elevated public area at the corner.  I went up the access steps and found a lone bagpiper and one spectator.  The piper had an American flag on his instrument, but there was no overt sign that he was playing in commemoration of 9/11. 

I like to think that’s exactly what he was doing.

-H

Ankling to Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in New York City

September 6, 2007

It’s FASHION WEEK…and Famous Ankles didn’t get an invite…again.  I don’t know how the fashionistas could have overlooked me this year.  I even have a blog.

Fashion Week is actually a big deal here in Manhattan.  It brings out the glamour in the town and I sure can’t object to that.  I’m always looking for something new and odd…and that’s Fashion Week all over.  If only they’d invite me.  If only I actually cared about fashion.

Typically, I go through Bryant Park once a week or so.  It’s sort of on my way to Church and it’s a very pleasant park.  Pretty small with a large green open area in the middle.  It’s located right behind the New York Public Library at 5th Avenue and 41st Street and it goes to 6th Avenue and 42nd.  Fashion Week involves building a series of temporary buildings all over the greenspace and letting the rest of humanity surround the area and hope to see the occasional celebrity and model.

Here’s the main entrance at 6th Avenue.20070906-fashion-week-05-main-entrance.jpg

The crowds were there at rush hour (5:45pm) on Friday.

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And here’s a shot of the temporary buildings.  This is actually over a hundred yards behind the main entrance.

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I had been near this spot last year and apparently it turned out to be one of the “back entrances” used by celebs.  There’s a few discrete car park areas for loading/unloading.  There’s also a nice hotel back here.  I didn’t see anyone using it this year, but I only passed by.

Back at the front, I did get into waiting and watching for about 20 minutes.  Just in case…

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And of course that’s why we all were waiting.  It’s interesting to see how the attendees handled it.  Most didn’t even acknowledge the crowd’s presence, while others rushed up/down the stairs as if they didn’t want to be mistaken for someone, and others did love it.

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And, as the woman sitting across the way shows…it was a hit with the rest of us.

To keep crimes of fashion at bay, the cops were ever-present.

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Walking around, it was easy to spot people who were probably part of the show, whether models or former models or wanna-bees.  I’m not one for asking for poses so I really didn’t capture any of them.  (Actually, last year there were groups of models parading around with mock protest signs to advertise hair care products.  I coulda photographed them without any embarrassment.)

Nevertheless, I did capture one young lady who looked approporiate for the week, but she sure could use some of the GURU energy drink she was advertising.

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-H

The Shake Shack at Madison Square Park

September 5, 2007

The Shake Shack is legendary.  And now that Famous Ankles has partaken, he’s ready to pass supreme judgement on the place.

You don’t know the Shake Shack?  You must be new to NYC.

Okay, you’ve heard of the Flatiron Building?

Flat Iron Building in Manhattan

The building is shaped like an old-fashioned flat iron.  That is, it’s wedge-shaped.  It’s real name is the Fuller Building, but no one ever, ever calls it that.

Anyway, the Flat Iron building is on 23rd St at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Broadway.  Anytime Broadway crossed an avenue, it creates a “square”.  (The most famous being Times Square where it crosses 7th Avenue.)

Well, the square next to the Flat Iron building is called Madison Square.  Yep.  You’ve heard of Madison Square Garden.  It’s not here.  Well, it used to be…twice, actually.  The current Madison Square Garden is way over to the west.  But the first two versions of it were right here, at Madison Square.

So.  What are the current glories of Madison Square?   Ummmm…they’ve got some metal trees….

Madison Square Park trees

And….it’s a nice, family-friendly place.

And…it has the Shake Shack.

The Shake Shack

Don’t let the empty seats fool you.  Let the line be your guide.  This place is popular.  Wildly popular.  Strangely popular.  I’ve never been here when there was a line less than 50 people long, and they serve FAST.  I’ve seen the line with at least 200 people.  And they’re all so patient.  It’s a NYC thing.  You go to the Shake Shack and buy a burger or hot dog or ice cream or shake.  They give you a little signaler (a vibrating gizmo you see at a lot of very busy restaurants) and send you out to wander the park while they fix your food.  After 10 minutes or so, you get your food and sit out in the local areas and eat.

I’ve seen this place at least a dozen times and turned down the opportunity to experience the wait and the food about 11 times.  This time I stayed and ate.  I ordered the “Shack Burger” and a strawberry shake.  I got the food and ate it.  It was $10 and it was fine.  It just wasn’t legendary.  It was fine.  But I don’t know why it has the cult following.  I coulda gone to Burger King up the street and gotten more for less.  It wouldn’t have the ambiance, but I could have just wandered back to the park.

I guess it is something that I don’t get.  There’s some reason for the long lines.

But, I can fault them for something that happened a few months ago.  It was “Barbeque NYC” and the city had brought in first rate BBQ makers from all over the country.  And they served their food at Madison Square Park.  Just a few yards from the Shake Shack.  And it was great BBQ.  GREAT BBQ!  It’s nearly impossible to fine good BBQ in NYC, and they had GREAT BBQ.  And people lined up at the Shake Shack for burgers and hotdogs.

NYC gourmands.

-H