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JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEATPACKING PROSTITUTES Before the Meatpacking District was a glitzy and hollow shopping mall, it was the stroll for countless transgender sex workers. Invisible to many, eradicated fast, those girls can now be seen in the work of two photographers recently come to light. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FRANKEL'S Tucked into the shadows of the Gowanus Expressway in Sunset Park, the shop's painted bricks announce: "An American Treasure Since 1890," "The One," "The Only," and "We're Still Here." But Frankel's won't be here much longer. Third-generation owner Marty Frankel has decided it's time to pack up and move the shop to Jersey. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: STRIP STREET Strip Street. It was known, simply, as The Street. Arnold Shaw, its main historian, wrote in 52nd St., "If you flagged a taxi in NYC and asked to be taken to The Street, you would be driven, without giving a number or an avenue, to 52d between Fifth and JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE FLAGSHIP The Barnes & Noble flagship store on 5th Avenue and 18th Street closed for good on January 6, and while I generally don't bemoan the loss of chain stores, the death of bookstores makes my blood run cold. Also, this particular Barnes & Noble was special. First, the store had been in this spot since 1932. It was old and crummy, with the feel of a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE DUGOUT Charlie lived upstairs from the Dugout & spent most of his free time there. He's the guy who took & developed most, if not all, of the photos on those walls. Which we all got to preview first, along with hearing whatever new dirty joke he had heard at the JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: VILLAGE VOICE The Village Voice is vanishing from the streets of New York--and something critical will go with it. Yesterday, the Hollywood Reporter announced that the Voice will soon be going digital only. No more print. No more paper. No more ink. After 62 years of gracing the streets of the city, from newsstands to red boxes, no more. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILL'S GAY 90S VANISHING We've been hearing speculation for months that the wonderful Bill's Gay 90s would be closing. Now it's official. Marty visited this week and talked to the bartender and the owner. They confirmed that the last day for Bill's will be March 24. Writes Marty, "It seems that the landlord isn't going to renew the lease and someone else is goingto take over.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORKUPPER WEST SIDENEOLIBERALIZATIONTRIBECABRONXART BOOKS FILMUPPER EAST SIDE May 3: Governor Cuomo announces a “major reopening” for New York on May 19. May 6: In the Village, Christopher Park is closed early and padlocked, but only on Thursdays at 4:00 or 5:00pm, just before the Stonewall Protest has its weekly rally, an event that has been going strong since July 2020.In addition, Federal Park Police are stationed with a car outside the park and they routinely go JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: DUBROW'S CAFETERIA Marcia Bricker Halperin is a veteran street photographer who, years ago, captured the wonders of New York City's Dubrow's Cafeteria. Established in 1929, there were a few locations in the city, and the last one closed in 1985. I asked the photographer some questions, andshe answered.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEATPACKING PROSTITUTES Before the Meatpacking District was a glitzy and hollow shopping mall, it was the stroll for countless transgender sex workers. Invisible to many, eradicated fast, those girls can now be seen in the work of two photographers recently come to light. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FRANKEL'S Tucked into the shadows of the Gowanus Expressway in Sunset Park, the shop's painted bricks announce: "An American Treasure Since 1890," "The One," "The Only," and "We're Still Here." But Frankel's won't be here much longer. Third-generation owner Marty Frankel has decided it's time to pack up and move the shop to Jersey. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: STRIP STREET Strip Street. It was known, simply, as The Street. Arnold Shaw, its main historian, wrote in 52nd St., "If you flagged a taxi in NYC and asked to be taken to The Street, you would be driven, without giving a number or an avenue, to 52d between Fifth and JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE FLAGSHIP The Barnes & Noble flagship store on 5th Avenue and 18th Street closed for good on January 6, and while I generally don't bemoan the loss of chain stores, the death of bookstores makes my blood run cold. Also, this particular Barnes & Noble was special. First, the store had been in this spot since 1932. It was old and crummy, with the feel of a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE DUGOUT Charlie lived upstairs from the Dugout & spent most of his free time there. He's the guy who took & developed most, if not all, of the photos on those walls. Which we all got to preview first, along with hearing whatever new dirty joke he had heard at the JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: VILLAGE VOICE The Village Voice is vanishing from the streets of New York--and something critical will go with it. Yesterday, the Hollywood Reporter announced that the Voice will soon be going digital only. No more print. No more paper. No more ink. After 62 years of gracing the streets of the city, from newsstands to red boxes, no more. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILL'S GAY 90S VANISHING We've been hearing speculation for months that the wonderful Bill's Gay 90s would be closing. Now it's official. Marty visited this week and talked to the bartender and the owner. They confirmed that the last day for Bill's will be March 24. Writes Marty, "It seems that the landlord isn't going to renew the lease and someone else is goingto take over.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK April 8: Even though the weather is chilly, the fountain water is turned on, effectively getting rid of the culture it had been fostering. For weeks, few people approach the fountain because it’s too cold. The water, turned on early, is a device of social control.It's nothing new.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: 2020 Waste. This article in the Guardian begins, "On a damp and humid Thursday afternoon Manhattan’s Union Square is looking sorry for itself. There’s 73,000 sq ft of empty retail space up for grabs at 44 Union Square in the now boarded up neo-Georgian landmark that was once Tammany Hall." What it doesn't mention is the fact that severalsmall
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FOLLIES BURLESK The billboard above advertised nothing more glamorous than plain and simple WOOL. When the Gaiety opened in 1976, replacing the Follies Burlesk, the signage above HoJo's shifted-- from girls to boys. close-up, Gruen. close-up, Feininger--same view. By 1978, the painted strippers on the old Burlesk sign had peeled and flaked. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE VILLAGE BARN Ephemeral New York explains: "When the Village Barn closed in the late 1960s, it became Electric Lady Studios, where Jimi Hendrix, The Clash, and pretty much every other rock group recorded. Above ground was the late, great 8th Street JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: SHOW WORLD CENTER Last year, Richard Basciano, "New York’s former prince of porn," died, leaving behind the Show World building at 42nd St. and Eighth Ave. While the big Show World closed in 2004, the next door Show World Center remained, a glittering warren of peep booths, sex toys, and crossword puzzle books. I wrote, "Now is probably the time to go andsay
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BABY DOLL LOUNGE Partied with some dancers after hours and had quasi relationships with others.Beautiful very dark black girl who was a bartender and a brunette dancer who lived in Queens with her son. When the brunette danced there, early 90's, there was a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BLEECKER BOB'S: CLOSING Capital New York produced a heartbreaking documentary about the shop in July and wrote, "Bleecker Bob’s will stay open until the landlord has found a new tenant. When it goes, it will take with it a huge part of the history of the Village. And it looks JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: HISTORY AT LUCKY CHENG'S The rumor has been floating for a few years, but by now you've heard the official news that, after nearly two decades, Lucky Cheng's is leaving the East Village for Times Square. Rumor says the building at 24 First Avenue will be sold, and that means JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEN IN LEATHER Men in Leather. In celebration of those vanished men in leather--many taken by the AIDS epidemic--enjoy my visual retrospective of the city's lost queer fetish clubs, showing them as they were yesterdayand what I discovered in their places today. Be sure to click the lavender club titles for more juicy info and images. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORKUPPER WEST SIDENEOLIBERALIZATIONTRIBECABRONXART BOOKS FILMUPPER EAST SIDE May 3: Governor Cuomo announces a “major reopening” for New York on May 19. May 6: In the Village, Christopher Park is closed early and padlocked, but only on Thursdays at 4:00 or 5:00pm, just before the Stonewall Protest has its weekly rally, an event that has been going strong since July 2020.In addition, Federal Park Police are stationed with a car outside the park and they routinely go JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: DUBROW'S CAFETERIA Marcia Bricker Halperin is a veteran street photographer who, years ago, captured the wonders of New York City's Dubrow's Cafeteria. Established in 1929, there were a few locations in the city, and the last one closed in 1985. I asked the photographer some questions, andshe answered.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEATPACKING PROSTITUTES Before the Meatpacking District was a glitzy and hollow shopping mall, it was the stroll for countless transgender sex workers. Invisible to many, eradicated fast, those girls can now be seen in the work of two photographers recently come to light. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FRANKEL'S Tucked into the shadows of the Gowanus Expressway in Sunset Park, the shop's painted bricks announce: "An American Treasure Since 1890," "The One," "The Only," and "We're Still Here." But Frankel's won't be here much longer. Third-generation owner Marty Frankel has decided it's time to pack up and move the shop to Jersey. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: STRIP STREET Strip Street. It was known, simply, as The Street. Arnold Shaw, its main historian, wrote in 52nd St., "If you flagged a taxi in NYC and asked to be taken to The Street, you would be driven, without giving a number or an avenue, to 52d between Fifth and JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE FLAGSHIP The Barnes & Noble flagship store on 5th Avenue and 18th Street closed for good on January 6, and while I generally don't bemoan the loss of chain stores, the death of bookstores makes my blood run cold. Also, this particular Barnes & Noble was special. First, the store had been in this spot since 1932. It was old and crummy, with the feel of a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE DUGOUT Charlie lived upstairs from the Dugout & spent most of his free time there. He's the guy who took & developed most, if not all, of the photos on those walls. Which we all got to preview first, along with hearing whatever new dirty joke he had heard at the JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: VILLAGE VOICE The Village Voice is vanishing from the streets of New York--and something critical will go with it. Yesterday, the Hollywood Reporter announced that the Voice will soon be going digital only. No more print. No more paper. No more ink. After 62 years of gracing the streets of the city, from newsstands to red boxes, no more. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILL'S GAY 90S VANISHING We've been hearing speculation for months that the wonderful Bill's Gay 90s would be closing. Now it's official. Marty visited this week and talked to the bartender and the owner. They confirmed that the last day for Bill's will be March 24. Writes Marty, "It seems that the landlord isn't going to renew the lease and someone else is goingto take over.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORKUPPER WEST SIDENEOLIBERALIZATIONTRIBECABRONXART BOOKS FILMUPPER EAST SIDE May 3: Governor Cuomo announces a “major reopening” for New York on May 19. May 6: In the Village, Christopher Park is closed early and padlocked, but only on Thursdays at 4:00 or 5:00pm, just before the Stonewall Protest has its weekly rally, an event that has been going strong since July 2020.In addition, Federal Park Police are stationed with a car outside the park and they routinely go JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: DUBROW'S CAFETERIA Marcia Bricker Halperin is a veteran street photographer who, years ago, captured the wonders of New York City's Dubrow's Cafeteria. Established in 1929, there were a few locations in the city, and the last one closed in 1985. I asked the photographer some questions, andshe answered.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEATPACKING PROSTITUTES Before the Meatpacking District was a glitzy and hollow shopping mall, it was the stroll for countless transgender sex workers. Invisible to many, eradicated fast, those girls can now be seen in the work of two photographers recently come to light. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FRANKEL'S Tucked into the shadows of the Gowanus Expressway in Sunset Park, the shop's painted bricks announce: "An American Treasure Since 1890," "The One," "The Only," and "We're Still Here." But Frankel's won't be here much longer. Third-generation owner Marty Frankel has decided it's time to pack up and move the shop to Jersey. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: STRIP STREET Strip Street. It was known, simply, as The Street. Arnold Shaw, its main historian, wrote in 52nd St., "If you flagged a taxi in NYC and asked to be taken to The Street, you would be driven, without giving a number or an avenue, to 52d between Fifth and JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE FLAGSHIP The Barnes & Noble flagship store on 5th Avenue and 18th Street closed for good on January 6, and while I generally don't bemoan the loss of chain stores, the death of bookstores makes my blood run cold. Also, this particular Barnes & Noble was special. First, the store had been in this spot since 1932. It was old and crummy, with the feel of a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE DUGOUT Charlie lived upstairs from the Dugout & spent most of his free time there. He's the guy who took & developed most, if not all, of the photos on those walls. Which we all got to preview first, along with hearing whatever new dirty joke he had heard at the JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: VILLAGE VOICE The Village Voice is vanishing from the streets of New York--and something critical will go with it. Yesterday, the Hollywood Reporter announced that the Voice will soon be going digital only. No more print. No more paper. No more ink. After 62 years of gracing the streets of the city, from newsstands to red boxes, no more. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILL'S GAY 90S VANISHING We've been hearing speculation for months that the wonderful Bill's Gay 90s would be closing. Now it's official. Marty visited this week and talked to the bartender and the owner. They confirmed that the last day for Bill's will be March 24. Writes Marty, "It seems that the landlord isn't going to renew the lease and someone else is goingto take over.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK April 8: Even though the weather is chilly, the fountain water is turned on, effectively getting rid of the culture it had been fostering. For weeks, few people approach the fountain because it’s too cold. The water, turned on early, is a device of social control.It's nothing new.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: 2020 Waste. This article in the Guardian begins, "On a damp and humid Thursday afternoon Manhattan’s Union Square is looking sorry for itself. There’s 73,000 sq ft of empty retail space up for grabs at 44 Union Square in the now boarded up neo-Georgian landmark that was once Tammany Hall." What it doesn't mention is the fact that severalsmall
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FOLLIES BURLESK The billboard above advertised nothing more glamorous than plain and simple WOOL. When the Gaiety opened in 1976, replacing the Follies Burlesk, the signage above HoJo's shifted-- from girls to boys. close-up, Gruen. close-up, Feininger--same view. By 1978, the painted strippers on the old Burlesk sign had peeled and flaked. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE VILLAGE BARN Ephemeral New York explains: "When the Village Barn closed in the late 1960s, it became Electric Lady Studios, where Jimi Hendrix, The Clash, and pretty much every other rock group recorded. Above ground was the late, great 8th Street JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: SHOW WORLD CENTER Last year, Richard Basciano, "New York’s former prince of porn," died, leaving behind the Show World building at 42nd St. and Eighth Ave. While the big Show World closed in 2004, the next door Show World Center remained, a glittering warren of peep booths, sex toys, and crossword puzzle books. I wrote, "Now is probably the time to go andsay
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BABY DOLL LOUNGE Partied with some dancers after hours and had quasi relationships with others.Beautiful very dark black girl who was a bartender and a brunette dancer who lived in Queens with her son. When the brunette danced there, early 90's, there was a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BLEECKER BOB'S: CLOSING Capital New York produced a heartbreaking documentary about the shop in July and wrote, "Bleecker Bob’s will stay open until the landlord has found a new tenant. When it goes, it will take with it a huge part of the history of the Village. And it looks JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: HISTORY AT LUCKY CHENG'S The rumor has been floating for a few years, but by now you've heard the official news that, after nearly two decades, Lucky Cheng's is leaving the East Village for Times Square. Rumor says the building at 24 First Avenue will be sold, and that means JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEN IN LEATHER Men in Leather. In celebration of those vanished men in leather--many taken by the AIDS epidemic--enjoy my visual retrospective of the city's lost queer fetish clubs, showing them as they were yesterdayand what I discovered in their places today. Be sure to click the lavender club titles for more juicy info and images. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORKUPPER WEST SIDENEOLIBERALIZATIONTRIBECABRONXART BOOKS FILMUPPER EAST SIDE I went by yesterday and talked with building manager Jackie Valiente who told me that she and the building owner would love to save Eisenberg's, but they need someone to take it over and keep it as it is. "Someone who wants the old Eisenberg's," she said, "the old concept of New York." JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE BATTLE FOR PUBLIC SPACE April 8: Even though the weather is chilly, the fountain water is turned on, effectively getting rid of the culture it had been fostering. For weeks, few people approach the fountain because it’s too cold. The water, turned on early, is a device of social control.It's nothing new.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEATPACKING PROSTITUTES Before the Meatpacking District was a glitzy and hollow shopping mall, it was the stroll for countless transgender sex workers. Invisible to many, eradicated fast, those girls can now be seen in the work of two photographers recently come to light. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: DUBROW'S CAFETERIA Marcia Bricker Halperin is a veteran street photographer who, years ago, captured the wonders of New York City's Dubrow's Cafeteria. Established in 1929, there were a few locations in the city, and the last one closed in 1985. I asked the photographer some questions, andshe answered.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: STRIP STREET Strip Street. It was known, simply, as The Street. Arnold Shaw, its main historian, wrote in 52nd St., "If you flagged a taxi in NYC and asked to be taken to The Street, you would be driven, without giving a number or an avenue, to 52d between Fifth and JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FRANKEL'S Tucked into the shadows of the Gowanus Expressway in Sunset Park, the shop's painted bricks announce: "An American Treasure Since 1890," "The One," "The Only," and "We're Still Here." But Frankel's won't be here much longer. Third-generation owner Marty Frankel has decided it's time to pack up and move the shop to Jersey. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE DUGOUT Charlie lived upstairs from the Dugout & spent most of his free time there. He's the guy who took & developed most, if not all, of the photos on those walls. Which we all got to preview first, along with hearing whatever new dirty joke he had heard at the JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE FLAGSHIP The Barnes & Noble flagship store on 5th Avenue and 18th Street closed for good on January 6, and while I generally don't bemoan the loss of chain stores, the death of bookstores makes my blood run cold. Also, this particular Barnes & Noble was special. First, the store had been in this spot since 1932. It was old and crummy, with the feel of a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BABY DOLL LOUNGE Partied with some dancers after hours and had quasi relationships with others.Beautiful very dark black girl who was a bartender and a brunette dancer who lived in Queens with her son. When the brunette danced there, early 90's, there was a manager, big guy long hair, beard dagger tattoo on his arm. He wasn't too nice. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORKUPPER WEST SIDENEOLIBERALIZATIONTRIBECABRONXART BOOKS FILMUPPER EAST SIDE I went by yesterday and talked with building manager Jackie Valiente who told me that she and the building owner would love to save Eisenberg's, but they need someone to take it over and keep it as it is. "Someone who wants the old Eisenberg's," she said, "the old concept of New York." JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE BATTLE FOR PUBLIC SPACE April 8: Even though the weather is chilly, the fountain water is turned on, effectively getting rid of the culture it had been fostering. For weeks, few people approach the fountain because it’s too cold. The water, turned on early, is a device of social control.It's nothing new.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEATPACKING PROSTITUTES Before the Meatpacking District was a glitzy and hollow shopping mall, it was the stroll for countless transgender sex workers. Invisible to many, eradicated fast, those girls can now be seen in the work of two photographers recently come to light. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: DUBROW'S CAFETERIA Marcia Bricker Halperin is a veteran street photographer who, years ago, captured the wonders of New York City's Dubrow's Cafeteria. Established in 1929, there were a few locations in the city, and the last one closed in 1985. I asked the photographer some questions, andshe answered.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: STRIP STREET Strip Street. It was known, simply, as The Street. Arnold Shaw, its main historian, wrote in 52nd St., "If you flagged a taxi in NYC and asked to be taken to The Street, you would be driven, without giving a number or an avenue, to 52d between Fifth and JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FRANKEL'S Tucked into the shadows of the Gowanus Expressway in Sunset Park, the shop's painted bricks announce: "An American Treasure Since 1890," "The One," "The Only," and "We're Still Here." But Frankel's won't be here much longer. Third-generation owner Marty Frankel has decided it's time to pack up and move the shop to Jersey. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE DUGOUT Charlie lived upstairs from the Dugout & spent most of his free time there. He's the guy who took & developed most, if not all, of the photos on those walls. Which we all got to preview first, along with hearing whatever new dirty joke he had heard at the JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BARNES & NOBLE FLAGSHIP The Barnes & Noble flagship store on 5th Avenue and 18th Street closed for good on January 6, and while I generally don't bemoan the loss of chain stores, the death of bookstores makes my blood run cold. Also, this particular Barnes & Noble was special. First, the store had been in this spot since 1932. It was old and crummy, with the feel of a JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BABY DOLL LOUNGE Partied with some dancers after hours and had quasi relationships with others.Beautiful very dark black girl who was a bartender and a brunette dancer who lived in Queens with her son. When the brunette danced there, early 90's, there was a manager, big guy long hair, beard dagger tattoo on his arm. He wasn't too nice. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: 2020 Waste. This article in the Guardian begins, "On a damp and humid Thursday afternoon Manhattan’s Union Square is looking sorry for itself. There’s 73,000 sq ft of empty retail space up for grabs at 44 Union Square in the now boarded up neo-Georgian landmark that was once Tammany Hall." What it doesn't mention is the fact that severalsmall
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: THE VILLAGE BARN Ephemeral New York explains: "When the Village Barn closed in the late 1960s, it became Electric Lady Studios, where Jimi Hendrix, The Clash, and pretty much every other rock group recorded. Above ground was the late, great 8th Street JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: B. SHACKMAN'S But then Ed Sijmons of Amsterdam got in touch to share some wonderful shots he'd taken of Shackman's on a trip to New York back in 1980. photo by Ed Sijmons, flickr. Shackman's had been selling toys and gifts since 1898. The "B" in B. Shackman stood for Bertha, who was killed by a car on Amsterdam Ave. in 1925. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: FUR DISTRICT New York City's Fur District consists of a few blocks in the western upper 20s and lower 30s, just south of Penn Station. It began vanishing 30-some years ago. In 1979, there were 800 manufacturers here, by 1989 there were 300, and today there are certainly muchfewer.
JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MOSKOWITZ & LUPOWITZ The restaurant ( where “the finest Jews come to eat”) was founded in 1909 by Romanian immigrants ( Joseph Moskowitz was a child prodigy on the cymbalom and went on to a somewhat illustrious music career). It was known as a sophisticated JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: UNCLE CHARLIE'S DOWNTOWN The following is a guest post by Charles Cosentino, who runs the Original Uncle Charlie's Downtown Facebook page: Uncle Charlie's Downtown opened in the early 1980s in Greenwich Village, part of a popular chain of gay bars in New York City. JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BLEECKER BOB'S: CLOSING Capital New York produced a heartbreaking documentary about the shop in July and wrote, "Bleecker Bob’s will stay open until the landlord has found a new tenant. When it goes, it will take with it a huge part of the history of the Village. And it looks JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: BILLY'S TOPLESS When photographer Tony Stamolis wrote in to say he read my post on Billy's Topless and recalled renting the place out for a photo shoot just a week before it closed, I asked him to please send the photos. Billy's closed in 2001 and images of the interior are hard to find. Tony was kind enough to share these shots (the women here are friends of Tony's, not actual dancers). JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: HISTORY AT LUCKY CHENG'S The rumor has been floating for a few years, but by now you've heard the official news that, after nearly two decades, Lucky Cheng's is leaving the East Village for Times Square. Rumor says the building at 24 First Avenue will be sold, and that means JEREMIAH'S VANISHING NEW YORK: MEN IN LEATHER Men in Leather. In celebration of those vanished men in leather--many taken by the AIDS epidemic--enjoy my visual retrospective of the city's lost queer fetish clubs, showing them as they were yesterdayand what I discovered in their places today. Be sure to click the lavender club titles for more juicy info and images. skip to main | skip to sidebarJEREMIAH'S
VANISHING NEW YORK
a.k.a. The Book of Lamentations: a bitterly nostalgic look at a city in the process of going extinct FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2019 WE'LL ALWAYS HAVE...PARIS? Last month we heard that the Paris theater might be closing. Now
we hear it's staying alive.Deadline
first reported that the theater, "the last great single-screen prestige picture palace in New York," was "expected to shutter in lateJuly or August."
Indiewire
seemed to seal the deal when they reported: "sources confirm that the Paris will likely close next month," meaning July, because that "marks the end of the lease currently held by City Cinemas." They added, "alternative uses are considered likely for the street-level space at W. 58th and Fifth Avenue." The Paris is one of the last places (on the planet) that doesn't cater to short attention spans. The purple curtains stay closed while the speakers plays jazz, Louis Armstrong, big band. There are no riddles or word scrambles on the screen, and very few commercials. It's pleasant to be there. It would be a terrible shame to lose it. When I visited the theater to say goodbye, I was told by two employees that the Paris is not closing. They say the rumors are absolutely not true and the Paris will go on. The reason _Pavarotti_ is playing for such a long run, with no end in sight? The rumors of closure have driven up ticket sales, as fans go to say goodbye, and this has made _Pavarotti_ a success for the Paris.So which is it?
As with all rumors and denials, take it as a warning. Go, enjoy the Paris, enjoy the movie. Because you really never know when it will beyour last time.
Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 6:32 PM1 comments
Labels: midtown
SUNDAY, JULY 21, 2019GEM SPA T-SHIRTS
Support the great Gem Spa by buying a t-shirt! From Gem's Instagram : "T-shirts can be purchased at paypal.me/gemspa on PayPal and picked up next Thursday evening after 5 PM. Or they can be shipped worldwide at an extra cost. Be sure to include your size." Gem is struggling these days,
so even if you can't buy a shirt, go by and grab a coffee, egg cream, Juul, anything and everything helps. Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 6:31 PM0 comments
Labels: east village TUESDAY, JULY 9, 2019MICHAEL SEIDENBERG
Michael Seidenberg, the proprietor of the great Brazenhead Books,
has passed away. According to Facebook updates, he was in recovery from a heart attack and a bypass operation. Family, friends, and fans are sharing memories on Michael's Facebook page . Their words say more than I can about a man that many remember as a one-of-a-kind NewYorker.
Brazenhead was a "secret" bookshop housed in an undisclosed rent-stabilized Upper East Side apartment, complete with a twice-weekly salon, open to all who could find it. I was fortunate to visit once before it closed in 2015.
It was a truly magical place. Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 3:56 PM0 comments
Labels: art/books/film TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2019BOOK CULTURE
VANISHING?
Book Culture has been on the Upper West Side since 1997, when it was founded as Labyrinth Books. Since then, it has expanded from one to four shops. It's a great local business and much beloved. But now, owner Chris Doeblin has announced in a letter (below) that Book Culture is in danger of closing--but it's unclear why. UPDATE: I spoke with Doeblin about the situation. He told me that his landlords have been "terrific." Columbia University is one of them and "they're trying to keep us open and have made adjustments over the years." AMAZON, HOWEVER, "HAS JUST BEEN DEVASTATING. A HUGE NUMBER OF PEOPLE SHOP THERE WITHOUT BEING REMINDED ENOUGH OF THE VALUE OF HAVING STOREFRONTS IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD." The biggest bite, right now, says Doeblin is THE 50% INCREASE IN WAGES. "We've not been able to grow fast enough to deal with the increase," he told me, "and we've had to lay people off. But I think we can make it, if we have more financing." To that end, he's hoping for an angel. Either a wealthy investor or the city. "I'm hoping that the city will underwrite a loan for us. What would really help us is a significant loan from a local bank that's subsidized." HE NOTED THAT THE CITY AND STATE "PULLED A LOT OF STRINGS FOR AMAZON AND EVERY LUXURY BUILDING IN NEW YORK CITY," SO WHY NOT SMALL BUSINESSES LIKE BOOK CULTURE? Doeblin also says he wrote the letter to get the word out. "I want people to hear from me about what it's really like" to run a small business in the city. "I want to direct people's attention to a better idea of the future." _Doeblin sent out the following letter and accompanying video onFacebook :_
To all our members and patrons, to Mayor De Blasio, Governor Cuomo, Speaker Johnson, Gale Brewer, all City Council members, fellow citizens of New York, neighbors; My name is Chris Doeblin and I am the owner and operator of Book Culture. We run 4 storefront bookstores in New York City, 3 in Manhattan and 1 in LIC Queens. We have been in business for over 22years.
There is a situation that I need help with and I want to address as large a group as possible in the hopes of finding a solution. I hope to also make a statement about the future of our city. OUR 4 STORES ARE IN DANGER OF CLOSING SOON AND WE NEED FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE OR INVESTMENT ON AN INTERIM BASIS TO HELP US FIND OUR FOOTING. THIS IS TRUE IN SPITE OF THE FACT THAT BUSINESS HAS BEEN GOOD AND WE ARE WIDELY SUPPORTED AND APPRECIATED. Book Culture's stores generate over $650,000 in sales tax revenue each year for the city and state. We employ over 75 people at peak season and had a payroll over $1.7M last year. Book Culture has always been committed to paying our employees above minimum wage, both before and after the increase. All of that payroll along with the $700,000 a year that we pay in rent goes right back into the New York economy, which is why I address our government here. Many large development plans, Amazon’s HQ2 in LIC for example, included a cost to taxpayers of $48,000 per job. There is a history here of local government aiding business when it produces a return for the locality. Every one of our employees, including my family, spends virtually all our income in the city. We shop here, eat here, pay our rent, use the MTA, and all those expenses roll right back into the community economy, to the benefit of all of us. It’s the multiplier effect of storefront businesses. It isn’t a huge sum of our economy taken by itself, but it is integral to the fabric of our city. THE JOBS WE CREATE AREN’T TECH JOBS BUT OUR JOBS OFFER A TOEHOLD TO YOUNG PEOPLE COMING TO NEW YORK, OFTEN TIMES TRAINED IN THE HUMANITIES AND HEADING FOR CAREERS IN THE ARTS OR OTHER CULTURAL INDUSTRIES; TO STUDENTS, ARTISTS, DANCERS AND WRITERS. WE HAVE BEEN EMPLOYING YOUNG NATIVE NEW YORKERS FOREVER TOO, OFTEN AS A FIRST JOB. Publishing and bookselling have long been a significant part of New York City’s cultural and economic foundation. Book Culture does a lot more for our communities than act as an economic engine. As an organization, we can take an empty storefront and spin it into a wonderful community asset that transforms a neighborhood. That takes vision, creativity, courage and entrepreneurial talent. This is a set of qualities that a city, any city or community, ought to reward and empower. THIS COMBINATION OF TALENT AND INDUSTRY, SO COMMON IN SMALLER BUSINESSES IS TOO OFTEN OVERLOOKED AND NOT GIVEN THE SUPPORT AND NURTURE THAT IT DESERVES. THE CAPITAL POOLS THAT ALLOW PROJECTS LIKE AMAZON’S NEAR ENTREE INTO NEW YORK OR BUILDING PROJECTS LIKE HUDSON YARDS AREN’T AVAILABLE FOR SMALL BUSINESSES LIKE OURS. BUT THEY OUGHT TO BE. We have been financed by credit card, by 30% a year interest loans and by remortgaging our home. For too long we have accepted that businesses need only serve their profit orientation as though it were an obvious fact, a natural law of the 21st century. As someone dedicated to our city and nation, as a leader building a company, and its culture, as a parent and citizen, I know we can do better. Book Culture as a business is dedicated to serving the community it inhabits. This orientation to the common good rather than extracting wealth is the crucial distinction. We do not reject large business, or internet commerce, but WE KNOW THAT WE CAN’T BUILD A FUTURE BY ACCEPTING THAT BUSINESSES SIMPLY EXTRACT AND ACCUMULATE. WE NEED TO SUPPORT A CULTURE OF BUSINESSES THAT SERVE OUR COMMUNITIES HOLISTICALLY. And we need to move to a greater diversity of ownership not towards more consolidation. The families that own America’s 2 largest retailers, Amazon and Walmart, just 2 families, have accumulated over $250 Billion in privately held wealth. That is a 1⁄4 of a $1 trillion! This grotesque inequity is one of the gravest dangers posed to our democracy, the civil society and the communities we hope to build forour children.
As a parent who has served as treasurer of our schools PA I have grown to see everything as a teachable moment; what are we teaching our children? What are our values here? If each of those families had only, ONLY, $1 billion, we could have spent $2 million for every single public school in America. But what really sets off the distinction for our future America is that these 2 companies, like so many others, still arrive in our communities with their hands out asking for more. And they arrive in our governments by way of lobbyists asking them not to represent our children and the best future we hope to create for them. They arrive to continue to pile on to the wealth of the shareholders. It doesn’t have to be this way. Companies like Book Culture, that are entwined with and dedicated to their communities, offer a betterway forward.
Lastly, Book Culture contributes simply by being what we are, storefront businesses active in a community. WE ADD TO THE STREET LIFE AND JANE JACOBS’S IDEAL OF A NEIGHBORHOOD WHERE PEOPLE INTERACT, FACE TO FACE WITH EACH OTHER IN THE SIMPLE CONDUCT OF OUR LIVES. Our shops light up the evening streets with a welcoming inviting space. We provide a place for parents and children to visit together and engage in books. We are a place for quiet, or conversation, discovery andreflection.
We need financial help to continue our transition. If you run the city or the state or if you have the means to assist, or even if it simply means calling and emailing and writing to the local city council member where you live and the mayor and governor,please do so.
THE PRICE OF DOING BUSINESS DOESN'T HAVE TO BE INCURRED BY THE PEOPLE. THE PRICE OF DOING BUSINESS SHOULD BE MORE ABOUT SERVING OUR COMMONWELFARE.
Sincerely,
Chris Doeblin
Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 7:34 AM5
comments
Labels: upper west side MONDAY, JUNE 24, 2019SHOW WORLD TO HIVE
After going
, going
,
going
,
Show World is so very gone. On 8th Avenue near 42nd Street, the buildings that made up Show World and its neighboring businesses are wrapped in scaffolding anddemolition shrouds.
_today_
The interiors have been completely demolished, but the buildings will remain, renovated into something called The Hive, "AN $80 MILLION BOUTIQUE OFFICE AND RETAIL PROPERTY," according to The Real Deal,
geared to "attract technology, financial and media tenants." So what else is new? _architect's rendering_ In the Commercial Observer,
The Hive speaks for itself, describing itself as "authentic" to theneighborhood.
"On the inside," it says, "you will find a hip, urban interior featuring exposed hardwood floors, brick walls and steal columns throughout. THE HISTORIC CHARACTER OF THE BUILDING REFLECTS THE ROLL-UP-YOUR-SLEEVES WORK ETHIC THAT DEFINED THE SUCCESS OF THE MANY COMPANIES THAT CALLED THIS NEIGHBORHOOD HOME." Roll up your sleeves? More like take off your panties. _1976, John Sotomayor/The New York Times_ Richard Basciano, New York’s former "prince of porn," opened Show World in the mid-1970s. It featured a circus theme, the interior decorated with weird clowndolls .
After Giuliani’s 1995 zoning ordinance to restrict adult entertainment businesses, Show World soldiered on, its naughty bits whittled away piece by piece. By 1998, the live girls were gone and the theater space was leased to an off-off-Broadway company that performed Chekhov plays on stages where naked girls once performed live sex acts, including Face Shows—as the sign said, “Let our girls sit on your face.” (Here's an NSFW look inside in 1980.)
_2003_
_2003_
The original, main section of Show World Center vanished (mostly) in2004
and became a family-friendly entertainment place, featuring comedy and light horror (Times Scare). However, right next door, a smaller ShowWorld Center
remained a XXX joint, a sort of annex to the original. Along with video peeps, dirty DVDs, and toys, you could also find rooms full of (almost) nothing but crossword puzzle books -- by order of former Mayor Rudy Giuliani. When he passed his unconstitutionalordinance
against sex shops, part of the ruling stated that a store would be considered X-rated if 40 percent or more of their stock or floor space was in adult materials. As the Times reported at the time, the sex shops complied--by loading their spaces with just enough non-adult materials to qualify them as not X-rated. So you could wander through Show World, up and down front and back staircases, into warrens and hallways, from one room to the next, passing through smut and crossword puzzles. It was a strangeexperience.
That Show World went up for lease or sale in 2008, but did not closeuntil 2018
,
after the death of Basciano in 2017.
The end had arrived. _Show World main lobby, 2003_ _Show World main lobby, 2018_ Gone with Show World are a number of other businesses, including those in Three Hundred Three Towers. With the entrance around the back, it held offices and apartments, possibly an odd hotel--I could never quite figure it out. I don't know where its people were displaced to._2011_
_2018_
What remains of Show World and its neighbors will be just a shell, all its dirty, unfettered history gutted and remade for a new population. But it's all okay, because "Working at The Hive ," says The Hive, "will impart a sense of pride and authenticity." It's going to be so authentic, in fact, the architects have rendered a new retail establishment called AUTHENTIC--just in case anybody thinks The Hive is anything but. Also, these people playing ping-pong on the roof! Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 11:50 AM3 comments
Labels: times square WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 2019PARIS THEATER
VANISHING
When the Ziegfeld closed, the
Paris became Manhattan's last single-screen movie theater. Now, according to Deadline,
it will vanish.
It is "EXPECTED TO SHUTTER IN LATE JULY, according to the buzz on the Gotham arthouse theater circuit," they write. Located just under Central Park, next to the Plaza Hotel, "The Paris is owned by Sheldon Solow, best known for the prestige building 9 West 57th Street. It has been booked for years by Bob Smerling, who didn’t return phone calls. The presence of throwback houses like The Paris is dependent upon the goodwill of the handful of family owned real estate companies that dominate Manhattan. That theater occupies prime real estate that could most certainly be used for other purposes and draw high rents." This, after the recent loss of Lincoln Plaza Cinemas,
speaks to two problems with this city: The rents and the rents. Maybe someone will step up and save this one. Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 2:19 PM6
comments
Labels: midtown
TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2019THREE LIVES REOPENS
After weeks of being shuttered by the Department of Buildings, and having to sell books on the sidewalk,
the Three Lives & Company bookstore reopens today at 10:00 AM. They write, "Although it was a fun change of pace for us to be selling books on the corner during our impromptu Three Lives Sidewalk Shop, and we thank each of you who stopped by – whether to browse the books or just give us some words of encouragement – it is wonderful to be back in our proper space and surrounded by our belovedbookshelves."
Now please support them and go buy some books! Posted by Jeremiah Moss at 7:34 AM0 comments
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