Railroad Zaddy noshes on lobster salad while Charles Hogg hibernates.  An incisive look into New York City mayors past, present and future.  

Symbolically and physically, I left New York in 1995.  But psychologically and intrinsically, I am and always will be a New Yorker.  

New York leaves an imprint on you.  As Timothy Garton Ash said, we all have a New York in our minds, even if we’ve grown up half a world away from it and have never visited it.

I feel like for a long time, New York was in the news for all the wrong reasons.  I mean it’s never been a place that can be described as “calm” but in the past couple of years, it seems like it’s nothing but bad news coming out of there.  Imagine my surprise then, when a couple of months ago, some hope opened up.  A pretty sideways, intentionally and unintentionally at times hilarious mayoral race between Italian-American political veteran Andrew Cuomo and the fresh faced Zohran Mamdani.  With the addition of 1980s New York hero and red beret enthusiast Curtis Sliwa, it’s shaped up to be one of the most tumultuous and at times hilarious mayoral races since in years.

New York just seems to attract its share of politicians who do not fit the glad handling baby kissing milquetoast politician mold of say a person like Mitt Romney.  New York mayors become national figures a lot of the time.  I’m sure the mayor of Tucson, Arizona is a perfectly nice human being but whoever he or she is, does not inevitably become a public figure.  The mayors of New York, well, that’s a different story entirely.

Jimmy Walker, mayor during the roaring 20s, was a well known lyricist and clothes horse.  He was also hopelessly corrupt.  Fiorello LaGuardia, the little flower, five feet of pugnacious Italianess.  There was Abe Beam, all five foot two inches of him, who granted a 40 year tax abatement to the short fingered vulgarian.  Abe wasn’t around to witness what he had inadvertently unleashed upon us all.  Thanks Abe.  I guess.  

When I was growing up, we had mayor Ed Koch, who was fond of going around saying “how am I doing????”  I think Koch attended every public event in New York at the time.  My parents have a picture of him wearing a sash at the Polish day parade.  

New York turned when I was a teenager, with Rudy Giuliani becoming mayor and major league cleaning up the city.  A turning point really in the history of the city and this is some super specific New York stuff was when the Knicks got into the NBA championship playing against Reggie Miller and the Indiana Pacers.  Reggie vs Spike Lee was a watershed New York moment for all the reasons you can imagine.  Reggie trash talking Patrick Ewing.  John Starkes throwing the ball against the time clock.  The Rangers won the Stanley Cup the year before and the Knicks were good.  And Rudy Giuliani was cleaning up New York.  September 11 turned him into America’s mayor.

By the time I was living in DC, Michael Bloomberg was mayor.  Much was made of the fact that Bloomberg did not enjoy the goofier aspects of the job.  The New York Times, the paper of record, had to publish an article about how Bloomberg had been bitten by local celebrity Charles G. Hogg, Staten Island rodent weather prognosticator.  The incident forced the New York Times to publish the following brilliant headline: Reclusive Staten Island Groundhog Bites Mayor.  

But that’s not even the best Bloomberg related weirdness.  Bloomberg had a tendency of tacking on strangely pronounced Spanish to his press conference announcements.  No doubt Mr Bloomberg is a fantastic businessman but virtuoso of languages, he is not.  The fact that he didn’t even attempt to pronounce the Spanish correctly made it even funnier.  A complete genius created a Twitter called Miguel Bloombito, Parodyo.  At the time, he was El Mayoro.  Now he’s El Mayor Emeritus.  The tweets up there are absolute art.  Think of English through a Spanish filter.  

Around the time when the twitter account was popular, I was at my old job and would sit next to the little nepo baby son of the owner of the school I worked at then.  The school would receive phone calls from prospective students and the nepo baby would take the calls, speaking to them in “Spanish.” “Spanish.”  Miguel Bloombito Spanish.  “Si si, dos semanas learingo Ingles.  Vives con family hosting.”  I took to transcribing what he said with some Miguel Bloombito flourishes thrown in there.  Yes.  Gracias Miguel Bloombito.  Gracias por  inspiración!!!! Su twittero esta muy funnyo.

Next after Miguel Bloombito was the much maligned Bill De Blasio, who had groundhog problems of his own.  Miguel Bloombito had gotten bitten by a groundhog but De Blasio was implicated in the death of Charlotte Hogg, heiress to the vast groundhog fortune of dandelions, raspberries and tree bark.  De Blasio hadn’t been able to get a good grip on the celebrity rodent and had dropped it, leading to a lot of pearl clutching around the city.  No one really had anything nice to say about De Blasio, so I will refrain from saying anything about him here.  RIP Charlotte Hogg.  May your memory be a blessing to future generations.

The current mayor is Eric Adams.  Little good news has reached the shores of Boston from Adam’s mayoralty and since I haven’t been a resident of New York in 30 years, I will refrain from commenting too much on him.  As happens with many politicians, Adams was indicted, accused of accepting kickbacks from the Turkish government.  Interestingly, he insisted on being present with young gawd Luigi Mangione was being escorted back to New York to face charges for the whole CEO unaliving incident.  Luigi Mangione, the only accused criminal in the history of the NYPD whose mugshot was lit by Annie Lebowitz.

So like many before him, Adams was accused of all kinds of impropriety.  Unlike most politicians, he was kind of forced not to run for reelection. 

Which brings us to the current electoral campaign.  The race is between fresh faced Zohran Mamdani, passive aggressive boomer Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Śliwa.  Ah, Curtis Śliwa.  More on him in a minute.

Social media has turned politics into high comedic theater and this mayoral campaign has turned into the highest political theater.  In the preliminary rounds, the candidates were asked what foreign land they would venture to once they were elected.  Mayors of New York City do venture abroad quite a bit.  Absolutely in unison, the other candidates named a state in the Middle East that has been in the news lately.  Zohran said he’d be staying in New York to deal with the problems there.  Now putting politics aside, it showed how well media trained the other candidates were and how Zohran was still speaking from his heart, something you don’t really do in politics.  

As the campaign progressed, it got yet funnier.  The candidates were asked how much they paid for rent and what their weekly grocery budget was.  Cuomo’s suspiciously low budget drew comparisons to the meme featuring out of touch Rich White Lady Lucille Bluth’s clueless guess on the price of a banana.  But we haven’t even reached the best moment yet.  But first, a short aside.  

Curtis Śliwa entered the mayoral race as a Republican.  That does not have the same MAGA related connotation now in New York as it does in the rest of the country.  

I don’t know how to even explain Curtis Śliwa.  People like him don’t even exist anymore.  Śliwa never even graduated high school.  He was managing a McDonald’s in the Bronx in the last 1970s, when New York was a disaster.  Śliwa saw what was going on and started a paramilitary organization that patrolled the subways called the Guardian Angels.  They wore these characteristic red berets and jackets.  New York then was an utterly lawless place and the Guardian Angels did make it feel a little bit more safe.  

Śliwa ran for mayor in 2021 and well, he decided to re-enter the race this year, to the internet’s utter and complete delight.  After Cuomo and Mamdani got through the preliminaries, Śliwa joined the mayoral debates.  Again, the three candidates were asked the basic questions.  So gentlemen, how do you get around New York?  Mamdani, on public transportation and Ubers, Cuomo I’m guessing black car or Uber, but Śliwa.  Took it to the next level.  He said something like “I’ve avoided yellow cabs since I was shot by the members of the Gotti and Gambino crime families in the back of one in 1992.”  Śliwa had a similar response when asked if he had ever visited a cannabis dispensary.  It was a yes for Mamdani, a curt no for Cuomo and well, Śliwa had benefited from cannabis during his recovery from his shooting.  Because of course he did.  

Like I said, the internet is playing an interesting role in this election and of course the youngest candidate, Mr Mamdani, is using it in the most strategic way.  In a move that was nothing short of utterly brilliant, he got Morgan Spector from the Gilded Age to do a dramatic reading of an article about the horror the wealthy denizens of the Hamptons are experiencing with the prospect of the election of a Democratic Socialist like Mamdani.  Everyone called Spector “Railroad Zaddy” because he plays George Russell on the show, a robber baron railroad tycoon who is ruthless in business but loves his family.  

The whole thing is so incredibly meta.  Spector is very handsome and was done up in his railroad zaddy finest for the video.  All he does is read in the video and raise his champagne glass when the rich people sound particularly ridiculous or out of touch in the article, which is pretty often.  I’m not going to post the video here but I am including two screenshots of it:

New York has played a role in the life of my family for almost 50 years.  Half a century of existing and experiencing the city and its tumultuous ways.  I hope I don’t get cancelled for this but I kind of want Mamdani to win.  We need fresh faces with new ideas in America.  I’m tired of this gerontocracy that has taken over, half of whom probably think a banana does cost $10.  

Well anyway, you’ve read down this far.  Congratulations!!!! As a reward, you get to see the pictures I took from the top of a double decker bus in New York.  It was an amazing experience.  If you’ve never seen New York from this perspective, I would highly recommend it.  

I’m Bad at Being A New Yorker Now — A Retrospective Memoir Told In A Myriad of Meandering Paragraphs 

Recently, I went on a very pleasant three week vacation with my parents to the Cayman Islands.  It was a lovely return back to the island, after a trying year.  There will be a separate long, thoughtful blog entry about that journey eventually.  EVENTUALLY.

When I got back, I found out I had a bit more time off, so I decided to go to New York for a couple of days.  The trips always have self imposed guidelines.  I have to travel there the cheapest way possible and I can’t spend a ton of money while I’m there.  I have to do the maximum number of free things.  I don’t get a hotel room.  I sleep on my friend’s futon.  We do a two day literal marathon through the city.  And I have to get the cheapest eats possible.  If there is cloth napkin in sight, I am not interested.  

I kinda love doing these trips periodically.  Sometimes I get back from traveling and I still want to travel a little bit, I go to New York.  Every time I go there, I think the same thing.  I have such a complicated relationship with that place.  So complicated.

I came to a realization on my most recent trip.  I really think I am bad at being a New Yorker.  At this point, I much more of a Bostonian than a New Yorker.  I was in and out of New York for 13 years.  Now I’ve been in Boston for 16 years, almost 20 years including the time of my parents living here.  Again, I am so bad at being a New Yorker.  The city is so huge and overwhelming.  On my most recent visit, I got out of Port Authority and I could not get over the lights and the noise in mid Manhattan.  Consistently I cannot believe that I actually grew up in the city.  It’s wild to me because the city is so big and so overwhelming to me at this point.

To reiterate for a third and hopefully final time, I am really bad at being a New Yorker.  This cannot be disputed.  I am so used to Boston’s spaghetti thrown against a wall arrangement of its streets, so I get disoriented in the grid.  I don’t remember the order of the avenues anymore.  I use GPS to get places.  Don’t get me started on the subway.  There is no way I will ever like taking the subway.  I like the T.  It has this kind of vintage charm.  Maybe because I have so many memories from so many corners of this city with so many groups of people that I have come across here.  

I don’t have the same affection for the New York City subway.  It smells bad.  It is incredibly noisy.  In every other city I have lived in, the terminus stations are place names.  In New York, they are streets in different boroughs.  Living in Boston, I have seen or visited every single terminus on the system.  Well, except Bowdoin, but seriously, who has even been to that one?  A couple of years ago, I got bored and went to see the station to make sure it was real.  But in New York, I have no idea where those places are and it makes sense that the stations are in The Bronx and Brooklyn.  Doesn’t make that system any easier to navigate.  

I’m something of a connoisseur of public transportation systems in the world.  If I am going to a new city and I hear there is public transportation system, I look forward to taking it.  New station names, new train types.  I love that sense of adventure.  As I said in another entry, I was shocked by the fact that I would be boarding a green line in Salt Lake City to get to my hotel.  But any sense of adventure in New York really recedes when I get on the subway.

Oh and I had a really funny moment in the city where I compared New York City to Salt Lake City to my friend who I visit in the city.  That’s when I really knew I was in “I’m not a New Yorker” anymore territory.  I told my friend about how Salt Lake City didn’t smell like gasoline, the way New York did.  I told him about how you could see straight to the Wasatch mountains in Salt Lake City.  Wow.  I am so provincial now.  I’m comparing arguably the center of universe to a city 2,000 miles west that was founded by Latter Day Saint pioneers that could not be more different.  

In my greatest tourist moment, my friend got delayed at his chiropractic appointment and  to paraphrase Moby Dick, having little else to interest me in Midtown and a few nickels in my purse, I decided to go to the top of the Empire State Building.  I hadn’t been up there for a while and really hammered home how I need to finally turn in my “New Yorker” card.  

I’ve heard so many times, to an absolutely nauseating degree that REAL New Yorkers don’t go to the top of the Empire State Building blah blah blah.  Strong eye roll.  That is the most iconic skyline in the entire world.  Why would you miss an opportunity to see it from above?  That has always mystified me.  

I paid the money and went up.  Of course there were tourists up there but it was also a kind of overcast, cold day, so I knew the lines wouldn’t be too bad.  There really weren’t any.  Honestly, I felt lucky to be up there and to be able to look at this skyline from above.  

As I’ve gotten out into the world, when I tell people I grew up in Manhattan, people treat it like it’s an accomplishment of some kind.  But truly, where we grow up in an accident.  In our case, truly an accident because it’s where my dad’s boss moved his lab to after it was initially in Chicago.  I could have grown up in Chicago, if life had turned out differently.  We moved to New York when I was five years old.  When you are a kid, you just go where the adults go.  

There is no way to describe what growing up in New York in the 1980s was like if you weren’t there.  During that time, the first seeds of what we all call modern life were planted.  At the same time, so many 1950s things were in their very final days in the city.  All of those grand dame department stores still existed, like A&S, Gimbels, Lord and Taylor and B. Altman.  Macy’s was almost a poor relation to those grand dames.  These were palaces to consumerism and capitalism.  Those stores were beautiful inside.  Now just Macy’s remains, all the other grand dames shut forever.  

Yet though in the 1980s, some mix of forces created an environment that saw the development of what we now call modern life.  There’s a nostalgic documentary on PBS called “Trader” about Paul Tudor Jones, now a hedge fund titan, but in those days, a thirty something energetic upstart in red suspenders and an Oxford shirt.  And Bruce Willis’s high top sneakers.  As he says in the documentary, the man’s a stud.  Tudor Jones marked the beginning of the non-commodity based billionaire.  Before those days, to be rich, you had to have oil or some kind of commodity, or master something early that no one thought to do.  I watch the documentary periodically when I feel nostalgic for those days.  I remember seeing those guys in the red suspenders walking around New York, ready to take over the world.  

It’s a bit strange watching that little documentary because you see the very beginnings of our lives now.  At one point, you see Tudor Jones cross a street with one of the lieutenants from his trading firm and he reaches into his pocket to take something out.  We assume with our modern eyes that it’s a cell phone but it’s a very fancy looking calculator or a radio of some kind.  So many things are happening in that one scene.  They are almost like time travelers from 40 years hence.  One day people will have these handheld information portals in their hands.  

I love finding things like that that let me relive those days and that bygone time.  I also found a documentary podcast a few years ago called “the Just Enough Family” about the corporate raider named Saul Steinberg and his meteoric rise and spectacular fall.  His meteoric rise took place when we lived in the city and because my father’s idea of a good time on a Saturday was going to Central Park with two copies of the Sunday New York Times, which we would read together as a family, I remember this very clearly.  Saul lived at 740 Park avenue in one of imposing buildings that face the Metropolitan Museum and Central Park.  The protagonist of the story we watched unfold in the New York Times was not too far away from us.  

Steinberg was, and I dislike this terminology because it is really overused, a force of nature.  Some described him as a swashbuckler, which by all accounts is a pretty apt way to describe the guy.  He’s the sun all the other people in the family profiled in the podcast turn around.  I googled him and his wife, a very glamorous woman named Gayfryd Steinberg and all of these beautiful pictures came up.  In particular, I spent a lot of time analyzing a set of photos taken featuring Gayfryd at Malcolm Forbes’s 70th birthday party in Morocco.  That might be the most glamorous sentence ever written.  I don’t think I’ve ever seen a more glamorous and cosmopolitan looking set of people in my life.  I have a couple of sets of photos that I look at when I’m lacking in ideas or inspiration.  That set is definitely among those photos.

I listened to the podcast so many times because it offered an inside view of how those rich people I saw in New York living.  Here we were, these people from nowhere whose lives were very circumscribed by our financial situation surrounded by this profligate, over the top spending.  The Go Go 80s, right?  As a kid, those people looked extremely glamorous.  As an adult, having experienced a few things and learned a few things, I realized that all that glittered was not gold.  

I also remember seeing those preppy kids running around the upper east side, where we lived.  I looked up to them in a way.  I crossed paths with them a lot in my gymnastics classes and on our summer trips to Cape Cod.  In 1986, the city was rocked by a young woman named Jennifer Levin was murdered in Central Park by a person she knew and trusted.  It was called “the preppy murder” and was this murder case that received an inordinate amount of press coverage.  A particularly poignant moment in the documentary was Jennifer Levin’s best friend showing a picture of them together and saying what an innocent act taking the picture was, when less than a year later, Jennifer was gone.  

Jennifer Levin was almost a decade older than me and I wasn’t even a pre-teen yet when the case happened but it is very strongly stored in my memory, due to it having a connection to the area we lived in at the time.  I also remember how she was portrayed in the media, being blamed for this tragic thing that had happened to her.  The murderer, whose name I am not writing here on purpose was, in the wise and angry words of Jennifer’s best friend, portrayed as a symbol of white male beauty power money and intelligence. Mike Sheehan, the square jawed gravely voiced police detective on the case said the murderer had been in jail from the time he was 19 years old and is now knocking on 60, had just wasted his life. The voice of reason in a complete circus.  

The 1980s in New York was this almost volatile mix of preppies, aspiring Wall Street tycoons, graffiti artists and up and coming hip hoppers that gave the city this kind of magic that it no longer has.  What always strikes me on every visit is how every kind of off kilter and fun neighborhood where it was once possible to rent an apartment for a cheap price is now full of those awful empty glass towers where apartments are priced out of the reach of everyone except the most upper income person.  You can’t really have magic if you price everyone out.  That’s the sad part about visiting the city now.  It feels like the magic won’t come back because it’s simply too expensive to try to make it in the city as a creative person.

I wonder a lot too though why I had absolutely no interest in living in the city as an adult.  I think about this almost every time when I visit.  Why did I have no desire to do life here as an adult??? I just couldn’t see myself living in one of those anonymous high rises and going to Gristedes or Food Emporium to shop.  I couldn’t see myself riding that subway every day to some other anonymous office building.  I didn’t want my life to be a string of overpriced brunches and loud nights out.  None of that really suited me.  

I also could not have those same conversations over and over and over again.  Yes, I moved here when I was five years old and I went to high school in the suburbs.  “Oh so you aren’t a real New Yorker.”  I mean I’m sorry that I couldn’t convince my parents to leave Poland five years earlier so I could have been born in New York.  There were some really pressing concerns they were dealing with at the time.  And I could not hear for the umpteenth time that because we had lived in Westchester when I was a teenager, that I was “from upstate.” For some reason in New York, that’s some kind of an insult.  You upstate simpleton don’t understand us complicated city people.  No.  My dad got a job over there and we moved.  In my mind, when people said I was “from” there, they were saying it was ok what happened to me while we lived there.  They weren’t saying that but it was really annoying and I just wanted it to end.  I just never wanted to have this conversation again.  Enough was enough.

When I moved to Denmark when I was 20 years old, I loved it because I was completely disconnected from all of that.  No one cared the year I had moved to New York, so they could judge my “New Yorkness.”  We talked about other things and life, for a split second, felt normal.  

My friends who I visit in New York aren’t natives.  One is from Hawaii and educated in Indiana and then New York.  The other lived in Florida and came to New York 25 years ago.  Both are absolutely better at being New Yorkers than I am.  Both know the subway way better than I do, in that they don’t need to use GPS to navigate it.  They saw other parts of the world and decided they loved New York enough to make it their home base.  I saw other parts of the world and decided I wanted to be somewhere else.  

I look around Boston and I cannot imagine living anywhere else.  Life has opened up into a phase I had never experienced before.  I’m not out chasing anything anymore.  I remember thinking recently how my life settled down one day and all of the doors of the houses and apartments around me just opening.  I spent years living in places wondering who my neighbors were.  

I did spend about 3 1/2 years working in New York as an adult and I found it for the most part to be incredibly disappointing.  I wasn’t offered any mentorship or help or anything while I lived there.  It always felt like people were off somewhere living it up and I was alone in my sad little apartment.  I lived in Mount Vernon, in the Yonkers area of New York.  I guess all the “real New Yorkers” can chime in and tell me I wasn’t living in “real New York.”  Please.  Go ahead.  I can’t wait to hear what YOU have to say about ANYTHING.  I lived in this building in Mount Vernon and I never saw a single human being open a door or pick up their mail in that building.  Not one.  I never saw anyone leave for work in the morning, never saw anyone come back.  I never even heard my neighbors in their own homes.  It was strange, to say the least.  I think about that a lot when I’m hanging out with my community now.

There was also a little “downtown” area in Mount Vernon. There was an A&P there and a bakery, I think.  I went down there one time, I think.  I also did not cook at home very much.  

I lived in Mount Vernon in New York for a year before I moved to Boston.  I had this on/off phase when I lived and worked in New York of about three and a half years in my 30s.  It wasn’t a period for me that was particularly fruitful professionally or personally.  Sometimes I feel like that phase was like the low rated seasons of the television show where it had bad writers and almost no one watched.  It wasn’t even a period of time when I was taking a lot of pictures.  It was just in 2008, when I was living in that desolate building where I never saw anyone.  I look around at my life now and think — how is that even connected to that old life?  I lived in a neighborhood where I didn’t know anyone??? Now I can’t imagine living in a place where I don’t know half the people in my neighborhood.  I could have never pictured in my mind the people I would meet and become friends with. 

The other thing that always hits me when I go to New York is how growing up there made me love nature as much as I do.  I cannot overstate how happy I am sitting on that ski lift every weekend in that landscape covered in snow.  All of these years of skiing have not made that wear off.  If anything, that’s sharpened.  Standing on that black sand beach in Iceland in 2023 and staring at the Mars-like landscape on Antelope Island in Utah in 2024 filled me with feelings I never had in New York, staring at those glass manmade monoliths.  You see the hand of God in nature.  You see the hand of capitalism looking at those skyscrapers.  

Now I go to New York like a tourist, just like I go to Poland as a tourist.  I was born in Poland but I’m a tourist there.  I grew up in New York and went to elementary school, high school and college there and I’m a tourist there too.  I didn’t grow up in New England and had absolutely no connection to this area before I came to live here but this is home now.  And it feels good to finally be home.

Some pictures from my recent visit to New York.  Some really touristy pictures: 

Random people

As I have said up here numerous times, people do not like to be photographed, so I don’t usually get shots of them up here. Lately though with the new camera, I’ve been been doing this new thing where I just go out with the camera around my neck with my finger on the shutter. People are at their best when they aren’t posing. Now trust me many end of them end up looking like crap, but a few looked really great. Here was one that I really liked:

The look of amazement on the woman’s face was just so interesting to me. A close up:

This was another random one, just walking around, clicking the shutter:

I wanted this one above to look like someone I knew that I was taking a picture of. I really like this one. Another click the shutter wonder? OK:

And I guess if I am feeling the way the t-shirt above says, I’ll have to…:

To end this on a high note, I present these two:

And, to make it all “documentary gritty and all” I made it black and white:

I obviously did not sneak this shot. These boys saw me and said that if I gave each of them a dollar, I could take their picture. I thought I would get to pose them however I wanted, but they insisted on posing with their money. Those model divas. All about the Benjamins, I’ll tell you. They also mentioned something about me getting famous with that shot. Uh, yeah, little chance of that happening. But I am making progress in the whole “there are no people in these photos” thing.

This is just going to be a totally general kinda entry….

I just went to the NY to deal with special business, i.e. rejoining the world of the employed. I interviewed and interviewed and interviewed and would at the end of the day run to the safety of my beautiful Canon XSI. If only I could find a male equivalent of the XSI. Lovely to look at, reliable, etc. Well, I can dream, can’t I? Well, anyway, I took a ton of photos and my ton, I mean about 500. In a five day span. As usual, I liked about three of them, so I’m going to post the few, the proud, the ones I actually liked. I’ll try to categorize them, somehow.

First, some kind of Eastern Island statue:

Smelling what the wax Rock is cooking?:

Seriously, some of the best signs ever:

Look closer at the picture below. It says “through these doors walk the best people, ever, our customers.” Did I mention this is some kind of place that sells porn videos and probably “sundry items” whatever those could be?:

On the door of the next door neighbor of the friend I stayed with in NY:

Machito Novo, that is the dog in the photo below, have parents who are very proud of him:

Proud enough to ask for contributions for every photo you take of him. I wanted to get a proper photo of Machito, so his father (and I got the feeling he has two) came out, grabbed him by the harness and turned him around. A dog with a last name? Only in NY.

This one I didn’t really get. Is the big thrilled to be getting eaten?:

And of course, you can get your entire future read on 9th avenue, complete with Astroturf, to make you feel better:

A second first

Wait, who is this?:

OK, another chance to show my complete and total self absorption and vanity by posting a glamorous photo of myself. Well, and it also gives me a chance to introduce the newest member of my arsenal, the Canon Digital XSI. I have decided that in the 5 days I’ve had this camera that it is the greatest camera, SLR, digital or not ever invented in the history of the world. Or something.

But anyway, you, my viewing public can decide if the recent production from my new acquisition are good. Or not. Here goes:

In this picture above, this guy noticed I was taking his picture and decided not to run away. Believe me, after 10+ years of taking pictures, this is huge. More? OK:

I love these beams in the subway and I always try to photograph them. Usually looks like a blurry mess. I kind of like this photo. I’m not in love with it.

These however I do like, though they are from my usual bag of tricks. Boy, I do love the time exposure:

Time exposure of Grand Central, that is:

These were shot as 6 second exposures. The lens only goes to 22, so any exposures shot at a exposure time above 6 were blown out. Darn.

I took this shot:

And thought of all of my times, sitting in Sweden, watching Gossip Girl, homesick. I am indeed a weird creature.

I saw this and loved how the people looked, with the little coming in through the back:

Smith’s Bar:

To me, this had this kind of movie made in 2008 about the 1940’s production design model kind of thing going for it. Except it was the real place.

To close it out, some random people in Times’ Square:

Check out the slack jawed expression of the guy to the extreme left.