Fireworks at the United Nations

Posted September 20, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town

I live in a east-side section of Manhattan called Tudor City.  I was working on a post this evening and heard a loud explosion.  And then another, and another.  I’m a stone’s throw from the United Nations and they’re all in a tizzy regarding opening of the general session and visits from President Bush and the president of Iran (I’m not going to google his name just to get the spelling right, though).

So, I thought something was up.  I grabbed my camera and went to the East River.  Okay, to an overlook in Tudor City that looks out to the East River.  It was fireworks.  Not really a huge show (the 4th of July stuff is unbelievable), but a big one.  One large barge in the middle of the East River just a few hundred yards downstream from the UN.

I wasn’t the only one there.  We had about 50 of us.  The show lasted maybe 15 or 20 minutes and that was it.

I took a number of pictures, but only one was any good at all.

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And absolutely no one had any idea why it was being done.  I heard speculation regarding Yom Kippur, the equinox, celebrating a presidential visit, and the opening of the general session of the UN. 

-H

The Feast of San Gennaro

Posted September 20, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Food, LES, Little Italy, Manhattan, Wanderings

Okay, it’s September, it’s NYC, I’m not Italian; but I’m going to the Feast.

St. Gennaro (AKA St. Januarius) is the patron saint of Naples.  That’s something I just recently learned and have to admit that too many mafia movies had me thinking of Little Italy only in Sicilian terms.  The Feast of San Gennaro is Little Italy’s biggest celebration and is a magnet for tourists and the occasional ankler (your host).  I’ve been there over the past couple of years, but each time was at a quiet point at the end of the Feast, so I never got too much of a sense as to how crowded it was.

Well, this year, I bested myself big time.  I went there on the first Saturday of the festival and then I went on Wednesday night (the actual Feast Day of San Gennaro).  In a word:  crowded.  In a few words:  really, really crowded…oh, and lots of food and a carnival atmosphere.

Here’re some pictures from Saturday.

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The Feast is held mostly on Mulberry Street and goes all the way from Houston Street in the north (okay, about 20 yard shy of the end of the block) to Canal Street in the South.  This is traditional Little Italy, although it used to include a couple of other blocks, but which are now mostly Chinatown and a bit of SoHo.

Saturday’s crowd was massive.  But I suspect there’s a bit of trick to it.  Mulberry is a pretty thin street, but they add all the stands to the edges of the street.  That makes a thin street even thinner.  It would have a crowded feel if there were just a few dozen people and not a couple of thousand (I guess).  The crowding drives up the energy, of course.  And that’s the sort of thing I thoroughly enjoy.

Parts of the Feast are totally dominated by food vendor after food vendor.  The best of them are ones that are just extensions of the restaurants.  Lots of NYC restaurants dominate the sidewalks outside, but in the Feast they get to take over a lot of the street.

As I was exploring on Saturday, I became a bit discouraged with the situation.  I kept seeing a lot of standard NYC “street fair” vendors.  I see street fairs each and every weekend.  You wanna buy socks?  Wallets?  Linens?  The street fairs have them plus a lot of other boring stuff.  The fairs also have a lot of food vendors, typically dominated by gyro, smoothie, and crepe suppliers.  Boring and repetitive and not attractive to me.  And I was seeing some of these same food vendors at the Feast (thankfully, no sock and wallet guys).  One thing that the Feast of San Gennaro has done that’s warmed my heart is to not have that junk.  Instead, they are very ethnic.  And, yet here they were.

So, I wandered down to the lower reaches of Mulberry and thought I’d check out a bit of authentic Little Italy:  the Church.  When I’ve seen it before, they’ve had money next to the statue of the saint.  This time there was more.

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I’d seen the bills attached to some cardboard before, but this time it was on the statue.

The statue of Mary was similarly bedecked.

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So, I left on Saturday feeling a little discouraged.  The street vendors had busted through and it seemed to be a really nice version of a street fair, but a street fair nonetheless.

And then I went on Wednesday night and the Feast was back in order.  The vendors didn’t get up quite as near Houston as on Saturday, but it seems that most of the street fair places were gone.  Good.  (Hey, I know those people work hard but I see them everywhere on the weekends and the repetitiveness is not to my taste.)

Lots of games and other stuff for the kids.20070919-feast-of-san-gennaro-01-game.jpg

They didn’t seem to be doing the business they had on Saturday, but fewer kids were out on a school night.  That’s fine with me.

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One character I certainly didn’t see on Saturday.

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Two snakes, one iguana, and two parrots.  I would have noticed him Saturday, don’tchathink? 

And there was food.  And more food.  And a bit more.  And after that, more food.

The mainstay of the Feast of San Gennaro is?  (Answer:  sausage and peppers!)  It’s everywhere.
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But don’t let the “peppers” fool you.  It’s about 95% onion.  They’ll put a few bell peppers on the top, but it’s onions all the way down.

Okay, what do you think this guy is selling?

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It’s the other mainstays of the Feast:  zeppoles and calzones.

Now, zeppoles are a mainstay, but they ain’t the only choice for dessert.

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The above is just one of many.  The cannoli people are everywhere, too.  I love me a good cannoli.

The Feast doesn’t cover a big area, but it covers the area it does have very tightly.  I do enjoy it and am delighted that my initial concern didn’t hold for the whole Feast time. 

I haven’t mentioned that it does encompass parts of some of the sidestreets, but it does.

And I’ve saved the “worst” for last.  Everyone reading this blog who has been to the Feast is wondering when I’m going to mention him.  Drown the clown.  Or, drown the insulting clown.  He’ s a clown figure who sits in a dunking booth and spews out minor insults to passerbys, or more directly at the people who are throwing baseballs at the lever to send him into the water.  As I was walking nearby on Saturday, I was right behind a family and the kids saw him and got excited.  “Mom” said something like “Oh, your father can’t stand him” and “Dad” responded “He always makes fun of my nose.”  The kids laughed and the last I saw they were on their way to try to drown the clown.
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-H

Taiwan Protest March in NYC

Posted September 19, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town

On Saturday, I was leaving my apartment to go to the Steuben Day Parade and saw a long line of marchers dressed mostly in green coming down 2nd Avenue and then turning west on 42nd Street.  It took me a moment to realize that this was a Taiwanese protest march that I had seen announced a few days ago.

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They were very orderly, had a few chants, stayed on the sidewalk, and had a bunch of people.  I don’t think they’re going to ever get what they want, though.  They want to have recognition of their independence and a seat in the United Nations.  Not likely.  The U.S. is their best friend and even we oppose it.  Too bad.

Actually, I visited there long ago in 1972.  A beautiful island that had a lot of wonderful things for a teenager to see and buy (they didn’t recognize copyrights and you could buy a whole album for about 50 cents; you can imagine how many albums my brother and I brought back).  Whenever I mention my visit to a Taiwanese, he/she always, always, always says something like:  “It’s changed a lot from back then.  It doesn’t look like that anymore.”  It’s almost scary.

Some more pictures of the group.  I’ve no idea of the size, but they stretched way, way out.

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I feel for their situation.  They’re an extremely prosperous nation with a wild and wooly democratic system that occasionally includes fistfights in their government’s chambers.  And the rest of the world thinks of them as a rebellious region of mainland China.  Just like Chechnya, which is what these protesters really fear. (For the reasons of that fear, see here and here.)

-H

Ankling to Harlem’s African-American Day Parade

Posted September 18, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Harlem, Manhattan, Parades

You can’t keep me out of Harlem too long.  And I had a great excuse for going back:  a parade.

A strange parade.  A political parade.  A pretty fun parade.  The bad part:  it was on the same day as the Mexican Day Parade and one day after the Steuben Day Parade.  I was pretty much paraded out.  But I had to go, if only to complain about having too much to do on a NYC weekend.  And NYC can keep you very busy, even if you don’t go clubbing or whatever.  Hey, I’m cheap and the parades are free.

Another bit of bad news.  In the two days of parades, I had neglected to re-charge my camera’s battery.  It started getting low during the Mexican Day Parade and I had to conserve power.  That’s one of the reasons that my Mexican Day pictures were more sparse than the Steuben Day Parade and why this post will also have relatively fewer pictures.

On the other hand, the African-American Day Parade had fewer can’t-miss-this-picture shots.  The parade was interesting, but the best parts were all about movement and it’s hard to capture the movement in a shot.

For example, one of the first sights was this group.  (REMEMBER, you can enlarge the photo by clicking it.)

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Great music, but the dance sequence they did, where they all did a sort of “bust-out” move was unexpected and way too quick for me to capture.  I tried, but the move was sudden as they all moved to the side while playing.  They were a little distant from me when they did it.  I waited for another, but no-go.

Some of the costumes were great.  There was a lot of Egyptian motif stuff at the parade.  This group had the best of the costumes, but they weren’t alone.

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Note the group toward the back.  Recognize what they’re carrying?

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Yeah, Anubis and Sobek and others….escorting a version of the Hebrew Ark of the Covenant.  A little bizarre bit of mix and match, methinks.  (You know it’s the Ark because of the Cherubim are on it.  Yeah, Famous Ankles knows of the cherubim.)

One of the more disconcerting moments came shortly after the Egyptians.  It was a pretty small group, but very loud.  They were calling for reparations in a call-and-response with a bullhorn.  Some members of the crowd joined in, not many.  But when people start calling out “They stole us, they owe us” with me there, I get a little uneasy.  Hey, I didn’t do it, folks.  They also showed signs saying “Mugabe is right”, and I’m no fan of the president of Zimbabwe. 

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A couple of them were really photogenic and I would have loved a photo.  But I thought it was the better part of disgression….

They also were calling for Harlem to be left alone (“They are pushing us out of Harlem” was repeated on the bullhorn a number of times).  They don’t want it developed.  Sorry, folks, but that ain’t gonna happen.  Harlem’s way too interesting to be left a backwater.

The African-American and the Steuben Day Parades both shared a large measure of traditional parade type displays.  I really, really liked this group on all levels.

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“Miss Hal Jackson’s Talented Teens” all done up and looking very retro.  Very cool.  There was a larger group behind them.  The most fun part is that they had developed their own way of waving to the crowd.  It looked very much like a variation on how Queen Elizabeth does is (by holding the hand and wrist steady and just twisting the forearm).  There was a slight other arm movement that I can’t quite remember, but I think you can tell I had a fine moment waving to them.

The majority of the parade was civic minded, very unlike the Mexican Day Parade.  There were several groups with similar name variations.  The first and the one that the crowd seemed to cheer the most was called “100 Black Men“.  It was a pretty well spread-out group so I only got a quick photo (and my battery was showing near empty).  There were groups with names like 100 Black Women and, I think, 100 Black Young Men.

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There were a couple of African Chieftan versions.

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The guy above never looked in my direction.  I kept waiting for a good shot, but apparently he knew some people on the other side as he greeted one guy and two children with him.  But the guy below was a big hit with the crowd.

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It was a very traditional parade in another way:  politics.  They were everywhere in the parade.  Anthony Weiner did show up.  He didn’t have a bullhorn so I guess it wasn’t his favorite kind of parade.  I’ve noticed he has a trick when he goes without the bullhorn:  he does a lot of running.  He’ll meet and greet members of the crowd (always being followed by a staffer with a sign saying “Meet Congressman Anthony Weiner”) and then he’ll suddenly take off at a sprint to a distant part across the street.

In other politics, there was a group that did a Hillary Clinton versus Barak Obama question that was kind of loaded.

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The backs of the shirts said “Let the people decide between Clinton and Obama” and some placards that read something like “Who says that Clinton represents us?” or something like that. 

As I always say, the crowd is half the show.  One thing about this crowd was they had no compunctions about their comfort or in making themselves heard.

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Notice the chairs.  Lots of the first spots next to the barricades were held by people who had brought chairs from home.  Some were nice chairs, some wicker, some were cheap.  But all looked relatively comfortable.  For a while, I stood behind a woman who had a chair that looked designed for the day.  Lightweight, with a high back and even a cupholder.  I was rather envious.

The crowd did a fair amount of whooping and cheering.  Lots of whistles and the like.  Behind me, there was a line of vendors plying their trade.  A lot of people would get up from their chairs to grab something to eat/drink and then go back to their seats.  You can’t do that at most parades as people will stand where you were standing.

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There were a number of other groups.  Lots of civil service groups, including the transportation workers.  Well, I’ve seen them at other parades, but they never paraded with a bus!

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 Actually, they had two.  There were large groups of police marchers, corrections officers, sanitation workers, and educators.

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The group below is associated with some civic group called “North Star”.  It was more than the wheelchair group, but they were the most interesting part of it.

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The Muslims were present, too.  But I noticed very few Christian Church groups.  In fact, I only spotted one.  It was the only group that was calling for peace in Darfur.  I would have expected more mention of Darfur, but I think I only saw one other placard in a different group.

The NAACP had a fair sized group under the banner of “Legislate justice for all.”  (I don’t think a lawyer wrote that slogan.)  There was a cancer survivors group and a HIV-awareness group.

McDonalds sponsored a dance group, complete with Ronald McDonald.  The dancers were great, but Ronald was the crowd favorite in that group.

There was one very odd group:  Brahma Kumaris.  They appeared to be almost all of India nationality.

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One odd group (hey, it’s a NYC parade and it needs lots of “odd groups”) was some bodybuilders and physical fitness types who carried a pullup bar and did exhibitions of strength.

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A bunch of them also did pushups and some general running around.  No placards identifying them, but they did appear to be a Muslim group.

Another group identified with American Indians.  They didn’t mention any tribal identifiers so I don’t know if it is an official association with them or not.

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You know, I’ve gotten this far and barely mentioned the music!  It was loud and continuous.  There were lots and lots of marching bands and quite a few radio stations blaring out rap and the like.  Fun stuff, I just wish I had remembered ear plugs.  I think everyone can enjoy every kind of music at a parade, it passes by quickly and is often replaced by something altogether different.  The crowd was into it.  You could always spot someone doing some bouncing/dancing to the music.

I did mention the vendors.  I walked the parade route from 125th down to 110th (it actually did go up to around 140th – it’s a big parade).  There were vendors all along the way.

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They sold everything.  For a while there was a young girl walking back and forth calling our what was for sale.  Always one item only (an air horn or camera were what she was selling).  She seemed to be doing a good business.

After a while, the sun was getting too much.  I ended up close to the beginning point of the parade where there was some nice shade.

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I finally ended up walking through the setup area of the parade and on the other side I saw an unusual sight.

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I don’t know if they had been at the very beginning of the parade and I missed them, but saw them coming back to load up; or whether they were scheduled to go later on.  In either case, I was tuckered out and needed to go home.  And did.

Overall, a wonderful parade.  Big and loud with a crowd to match.

When I first contemplated doing three parades in the weekend, I thought about ranking them.  The more I thought about it the more I realized such a ranking couldn’t capture the ways that the groups attempted to portray themselves to the viewers and to their peers.  Each had elements that I really liked, but for different reasons; and each had points that I couldn’t really get into.  But they’re free and they’re the creation of a whole host of individuals who are just trying to put forth their best face.  And I think they do.

-H

Manhattan and the Mexican Day Parade

Posted September 17, 2007 by Famous Ankles
Categories: Events, Manhattan, Mid-town, Parades

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