Saturday night zenith / nadir

Highlight:

Walking back to my apartment, at about 4:00 in the morning, I pass a guy on my block standing next to the open door of his car, blasting hip hop into the night at top volume. A young woman, in pajamas, pokes her head out a nearby window to ask politely if he might turn down the volume. The guy flips her off. Before I can say something, her upstairs neighbor, a gentleman easily in his 70’s, pops out his window as well, and, in true New York style, lets fly with a barrage of eggs. Car guy jumps into his vehicle and gets the hell out of there.

Lowlight:

After several rounds of drinks, one of the Cunningham dancers admits to having recently ended a ten-year relationship with her former high school calculus teacher.

“Why did you finally end it?” someone asks.

“I don’t really know,” she replies. “After a while, it just started feeling really derivative.”

steeped vacillations

On the way to a breakfast meeting this morning, I was thinking a bit about how we can adapt to nearly anything, how the initially painful eventually becomes so commonplace as to not even register with us.

In particular, I was thinking about the shower in my apartment; the building is rather old (built, I believe in the mid-1860’s), and it often seems the water heater was added not long after. During the winter, with hot water split between heating the apartments and heating water from the showerhead, the shower temperature fluctuates wildly, from literally scaldingly hot to so cold I’m often afraid the water may freeze mid-spray. As a result, my roommates and I have all developed elaborate shower dances, learning to leap back against walls when the temperature swings beyond the painfully tolerable.

Whenever we have overnight guests, they invariably complain – how can we possibly stand to use that thing each day? But, in truth, I rarely give it second thought. My little bathtub ballroom has, by now, begun to seem the normal way of life. If nothing else, all the jumping and dodging provides an easy morning workout.

freeloading nyc

A new addition to ‘troublemaking’ in the ‘plus’ section of the site, covering how to live the good life in the Big Apple, on the cheap.
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As Times columnist Charlie LeDuff famously observed, “New York is a lot like a shit sandwich. The more bread you have, the less shit you taste.” Sadly, with the cost of city living perpetually on the rise, that observation holds now more than ever. Which isn’t to say, however, that our fair city can only be enjoyed with a wad of $100’s in your back pocket. With a bit of ingenuity, and a willingness to depend on the proverbial kindness of strangers, anyone can live the good life in New York for essentially no money at all. ‘How?’, I hear you ask. Read on.

like living inside a firetruck

Over the past few days, my roommates and I have been busy prepping for our upcoming All Hallows Eve shindig, transforming our humble apartment into the Hell’s Kitchen Museum of Curious Deaths.

Somewhere along the way, Colin suggested we paint one of our two living rooms red, and before enough common sense set in to stop us, we had picked up a few cans of “Lipstick Red” paint and a few rollers and brushes.

The results, I must say, are remarkably better than I expected. Observe Colin putting the finishing touches on the second coat:

103003 red room.jpg

We’re so pleased, in fact, that we’re thinking of turning the second living room blue. Eggshell begone!

easily pleased

I must embarrassedly admit to a surprisingly strong feeling of accomplishment when a subway pulls up such that one of the doors opens precisely in front of where I’m standing.

honestly, i really *should* be batman

Continuing my trend of playing superhero, I took a few punches this evening while stepping in to break up a fight on the A train between a drunk construction worker and a homeless panhandler.

For reasons that weren’t entirely clear, the construction worker started swearing at the panhandler somewhere just below 42nd street; by the time we hit 34th street, they were chest to chest, screaming into each other’s faces. As the rest of the passengers pushed back towards the far ends of the car to avoid the confrontation, I slowly inched my way up to the two, just in case.

At some point, the construction worker just started swinging, and after a few shots to the face the homeless guy basically crumpled. As the construction guy reared back for another solid John Wayne, I stepped in from the side, grabbing his collar and opposite sleeve in a solid underhook. With the momentum of his cocking back to throw the punch, I was able to push him backwards several feet, then brace well enough that I could keep him (despite his larger size) a few feet away from the homeless guy. After a bit of flailing at me, the construction worker seemed to calm down enough that I could keep the two separated until we hit the next station, at which point the homeless guy booked it out of the car, and I followed suit. Don’t know what happened to the construction worker, though as several passengers that disembarked with me started relating what had happened to the station manager, I suspect he was pulled at the next stop.

Fortunately, the homeless guy got out with just a bloody lip and a black eye, and I left feeling no worse than at the end of kickboxing practice. As I headed up to the stairs, though, an older woman who had been on the car stopped me. “It was a wonderful thing you did back in that subway,” she said, continuing “I would have jumped in to help you myself, but I didn’t have anything heavy enough in my purse.”

karmic circle

While waiting to meet a friend outside the restaurant where we’d be having dinner, I ended up chatting briefly with a gentlemen visiting NYC from Arizona, recommending several tourist attractions as well as the restaurant at which I was about to dine (the lovely Caff

searching doggedly

New York is a city full of dogs. More than any other urban center I’ve visited, it teems with canine companions. Mornings and weekends, the streets are lined with a vast array of sizes and breeds out for much-needed walks, their poop-scooping owners closely in tow.

Each time I see one of those dogs pass, I’m inevitably struck by the similarity between the dog and its owner. Head to any park in the city, and the old claim – that people look like their pets – is immediately and empirically observable as true.

Which, over the past few years, has been a cause of slight distress to me. Because, while my current travel schedule and living situation don’t easily accommodate a four-legged friend, I’d certainly love to pick up a pooch at some point in my not-too-distant future. And, frankly, I had no real idea what sort of dog would be my match. Obviously, such decisions beg the question of who does the adapting; do people start looking like their dogs, dogs like their people, or do both meet somewhere in between? Whatever the answer, it certainly seemed to me imperative to find a dog that might bring out the very best parts of myself.

So, this evening, while procrastinating on completing a major business document, I set out to wade through the furrier parts of the internet, searching for a breed from which I might one day draw a dog of my own. After several hours search (sadly, I’m not kidding about that time tally), I’ve settled upon the rather definitive answer: I am, apparently, a beagle person.

Beagles, it seems, are quick, clever, happy and curious, though fare rather poorly in obedience training, having an unusually strong sense of wanting to do things their own way. Small, slender and muscular, they need lots of exercise, bore easily if not mentally stimulated, and seem to have a knack for getting into trouble by following their nose.

Who knows. Next time I have work I’m trying to avoid, I might even set out to preemptively find some good potential beagle names.

bob and weave

I’m endlessly fascinated, on rainy days, by the silent air-rights negotiations held, via hand feints and furtive glances, between people passing each other while holding umbrellas on crowded streets.

inside scoop

Also earlier this evening, I headed to The Living Room on the Lower East Side to catch a number of unsigned music acts, some of which were remarkably, surprisingly good. The experience solidified an ambition brewing in my mind for some time: a Cyan-affiliated music label, one wise to the current tech-affected state of the music world and ready to put that understanding to musician- and fan-friendly use.

As ever, developments posted here as they emerge.

(Seriously, though: if I don’t shoot for combined Tech/Film/Movie mogul status, who else is going to give Steve Jobs a run for his money?)