New York City

“As for Ike, when it rains, it pours for him. He cost the Mets with a mental mistake in the first inning, and did nothing at the plate afterwards to make up for it. … What more can you say at this point? It’s been a horrific season for h...
“As for Ike, when it rains, it pours for him. He cost the Mets with a mental mistake in the first inning, and did nothing at the plate afterwards to make up for it. … What more can you say at this point? It’s been a horrific season for him so far, and it’s starting to impact his entire game. If he’s not going to be productive on defense, either – which has been the case over the last few days – it’s hard to justify a place for him right now.” - Michael Baron, Metsblog - Final Score: Reds 4 Mets 3
about 1 hour ago
Protesters of antigay violence held a march in Greenwich Village that ended at the site where Mark Carson was fatally shot.
Protesters of antigay violence held a march in Greenwich Village that ended at the site where Mark Carson was fatally shot.
about 1 hour ago
No matter what happens with Madison Square Garden, this Penn Station, shown here in 1910, isn’t going to return. For the last few months, we’ve heard a lot about the future of Madison Square Garden and its relationship to Pen...
No matter what happens with Madison Square Garden, this Penn Station, shown here in 1910, isn’t going to return. For the last few months, we’ve heard a lot about the future of Madison Square Garden and its relationship to Penn Station. Community groups and various city stakeholders believe MSG should not be granted an unlimited license to operate about Penn Station, but there’s a sneaking suspicion that these efforts are fronted by those who care first about reclaiming a grand building for Penn Station and second about expanded transit access into and through New York City. The debate may soon come to a head with a time limit on MSG but also an out that could render the time limit pointless. In a story published last night on Capital New York, Dana Rubinstein reports on a gift for Madison Square Garden from the city that could arrive as early as Wednesday. Here’s her take: The city will in fact propose a 15-year renewal, rather than a 50-year one, which is in theory a victory for the planners. But the proposal also contains a major loophole: if the Garden meets certain conditions during those 15 years, it can get a permit to remain on top of Penn Station in perpetuity. Namely, the Garden would have to come to some sort of an agreement with the three railroads that run beneath it to make improvements to the station, like adding new escalators and elevators. If such an agreement were to reached, and the City Planning Commission’s chair (who is appointed by the mayor) were to approve it, then the Garden could remain where it is, on top of the ever-more-crowded Penn Station. Its special permit, in other words, would have no expiration date. “We think this exception would be a mistake,” wrote Robert Yaro, president of the Regional Plan Association, and Vin Cipolla, the president of the Municipal Art Society, in a letter to planning commissioner Amanda Burden last week. “Although the City Planning Commission cannot solve this problem singlehandedly, we would like to underscore that the only way to regain a train station worthy of New York’s status as a global city and to meet the needs of a growing economy and population is to relocate the Garden and build a new station from the track and platform level up.” Without knowing the full details of the agreement, I’m withholding full judgment on the deal. There has to be more to it than some new escalators and elevators as those are instead seemingly the centerpieces of the $1.6 billion Moynihan Station plan. Hopefully, there is more to it, and we’ll find that out on Wednesday. On the other hand, Yaro’s concern again seems to focus around the building, but if you read his statement closely, it’s more of an appeal to sensibility. He wants that new station from the track and platform level up, and that’s the key. New York City needs to redesign Penn Station from the bottom up, and if it comes with a new headhouse that looks nice and doesn’t cost an arm and a leg, then fine. If MSG can figure out a way to improve the track, platform and station concourse levels while maintaining an arena above ground, that’s fine too really. Simply put, we need to focus on the transit experience at Penn Station first. Of course, not everyone agrees. In The Post yesterday, Steve Cuozzo penned a persnickety piece on Penn Station. Comparing a potential new Penn to the absurdly expensive and functionally questionable buildings at Fulton St. and the PATH WTC Hub, he writes, “Penn Station remains tolerably clean, safe and functional. Its lack of sex appeal hardly justifies the cost and years of chaos that trying to beautify it would entail… Let Penn Station be Penn Station. Remember, many thought it a fine idea in the 1960s. Let it remind us that change is not always to our good.” But that’s quite right either. Penn Station has stretched the boundaries of functionality, and at rush hour, frequent users would que
about 2 hours ago
“Mariano Rivera pitched a clean bottom of the 10th. He now has 17 saves this season. He’s incredible.” - Too Many Home Runs, Yankees Beat The Orioles 6-4 | It’s About The Money
“Mariano Rivera pitched a clean bottom of the 10th. He now has 17 saves this season. He’s incredible.” - Too Many Home Runs, Yankees Beat The Orioles 6-4 | It’s About The Money
about 2 hours ago
mightyflynn: Juan Lagares May 19, 2013 Wrigley Field Chicago, Illinois Photo by Charles Cherney
mightyflynn: Juan Lagares May 19, 2013 Wrigley Field Chicago, Illinois Photo by Charles Cherney
about 2 hours ago
This post originally took place on August 18 of last year, which was when I started writing it. But I didn't finish it until now. For no good reason. This does not end well, but that's ok! Photos of submerged kite taken by Melissa. Me:...
This post originally took place on August 18 of last year, which was when I started writing it. But I didn't finish it until now. For no good reason. This does not end well, but that's ok! Photos of submerged kite taken by Melissa. Me: Melissa...MELISSA [points out to the Hudson River], THE KITE THE KITE1 Melissa: [turns to kite] AHHHH NO Me: OH MY GOD NO GET IT UP CANYOUGETITUP2 Melissa: AHGGHFJKDSJF OH NO Me and Melissa: AHHHARRGGHHH NOOOOOO3 Diana: [on the phone with me] ...Are you alright? Me: OH MY GOD OH NO NO NO Diana: [still on the phone with me] So...I'll head over soon... Melissa: I'M SO SORRY I JUST LOOKED AWAY FOR A SECOND Me: AHHH UHH UUGH BLUUUHHGGHRHR Some annotations to clear things up: 1) Response to seeing my kite flying dangerously low to the Hudson River. 2) Response to seeing my kite flying dangerously lower to the Hudson River. 3) Response to seeing my kite gracefully touching the water's surface, then getting swallowed by the water. You think flying a kite is all whimsical and fun, until your kite lands into a massive, swiftly moving body of water, and then it makes you realize, "So this is the pure horror a mother feels when she turns away from her only toddler for just a second, then turns back to see her toddler has disappeared. ...Maybe not into a river. That would be much worse. But yeah. It's just like that." The site of the kite drowning: Pier I off of West 70th Street. I had made Melissa in charge of keeping my kite aloft while I called Diana to coordinate meeting up on the pier. Elsewhere on the pier, Diana had already given her brand new kite a go, but after something like 30 seconds of exhilarating kite flying action it too experienced death-by-river. "Come over and join us; we've got a kite you can fly!" I assured Diana, turning right to give a nod of acknowledgement to Melissa—at which point I noticed the kite not majestically flying as much as lifelessly falling toward the river's surface, over a hundred feet away. And then the frantic yelling commenced. Refer to the dialogue above. But the kite wasn't dead yet. The string was taut; the kite was still attached to it. "We can reel it in!" Melissa suggested ever so optimistically. I like that about her—her beaming optimism in the face of probable doom. "It'll probably break," I deadpanned. Melissa helped me reel in the kite, gently pulling as I wrapped the string around the spool. The string held on despite the immense force of the water. Impressive. Maybe Melissa was on to something with that optimism of hers. We managed to pull the kite all the way back to the pier. Looking over the pier's barrier, we could see the kite "flying" just under the surface of the water, intact and full of potential to ride the skies once more. "I bet this is where it's going to break," I said. I'll admit that I felt a smidge of a smidge of hope, but I didn't want to show it. "No, no, this will work! We just have to pull it up slowly." "I don't know..." Pulled slowly, we did. We pulled and pulled; the kite felt heavier with each tug. In my mind, the kite willingly accepted the grasp of death. The cold, wet grasp. [snap] Oh f— The frantic yelling of watching the kite fall was replaced by dejected quietness. I couldn't remember the last time I felt less thrilled by something not related to a close brush with death (which is evidence of how extremely conflict-free my life is—I know). Melissa's kite was uncooperative. :( It took me a while to realize I overreacted in every way (aside from the initial bout of semi-intelligible yelling; that's just human instinct). Melissa surely felt worse than I did. Not only did her homemade kite not fly—the kite she had been excited to fly for weeks—but she also unintentionally sunk my kite, which I merely bought online and didn't have much of an attachment to. I'm ashamed that I almost let a kite—a fairly inexpensive one I owned for about four days,
about 2 hours ago
Carmelo Anthony could be destined for same Knicks fate as Patrick Ewing - zero NBA championships - NY Daily News:
Carmelo Anthony could be destined for same Knicks fate as Patrick Ewing - zero NBA championships - NY Daily News:
about 4 hours ago
High School Musical Merry Fuck Kill Forgetting Sarah Marshall Merry Fuck Kill Mean Girls Merry Fuc...
High School Musical Merry Fuck Kill Forgetting Sarah Marshall Merry Fuck Kill Mean Girls Merry Fuck Kill Total Number of Votes: 101 High School Musical – Vanessa Hudgins and Ashley Tisdale Forgetting Sarah Marshall – Mila Kunis and Kristen Bell Mean Girls – Rachel McAdams and Lindsey Lohan Ok so this is a special edition MFK.  Here’s the rules, sworn enemies in their movies, sworn to the fate you decide.  Because they were enemies doesn’t really mean anything, in the MFK world they won’t be.  So you get double services, you can kill a pair, have a threesome with a pair, and marry a pair. Marry – Forgetting Sarah Marshall Fuck – Mean Girls Kill- Princess Diaries Whoever programmed the MFK has it to say “merry” instead of marry. Cool?
about 6 hours ago
@KateUpton: Skateboarding in Yankee Stadium?! @zooyork this is crazy!
@KateUpton: Skateboarding in Yankee Stadium?! @zooyork this is crazy!
about 7 hours ago
“Ike Davis officially can’t even stand still. without screwing something up.” - @jasoncfry
“Ike Davis officially can’t even stand still. without screwing something up.” - @jasoncfry
about 7 hours ago