Posts tagged ‘Travel’

April 2, 2011

Don’t Stay Home

Paul Theroux on the rewards of “travel during turbulent times”:

Tourists have always taken vacations in tyrannies — Tunisia and Egypt are pretty good examples. The absurd dictatorship gives such an illusion of stability that the place is often a holiday destination. Myanmar — yet another place recently traumatized by a deadly earthquake — is a classic example of a police state that is also a seemingly well-regulated country for sightseers, providing they don’t look too closely. (The Burmese guides are much too terrified to confide their fears to their clients.) Kenya’s 24 years under the kleptocracy of President Daniel arap Moi, which ended in 2002, never discouraged safari-goers, and in fact might have encouraged them to believe they were safe with so many conspicuous cops around. It is only relatively recently that tourists and hunters have begun to stay away from Zimbabwe. At a time when President Mugabe was starving and jailing his opponents in the ’90s, visitors to the country were applying for licenses to shoot elephants and having a swell time in the upscale game lodges.

By contrast, the free-market-inspired, somewhat democratic, unregulated country can make for a bumpy trip, and a preponderance of rapacious locals. The Soviet Union, with nannying guides, controlled and protected its tourists; the new Russia torments visitors with every scam available to rampant capitalism. But unless you are in delicate health and desire a serious rest, none of this is a reason to stay home.

 

February 28, 2011

Fez to London to New York

The night bus, like all night buses, made about five stops, including a lengthy dinner stop, before it finally got going. It also got stuck in the snowy mountain pass and we had to wait for the machine to crawl through and clear the road. At that point, I thought we’d be stop-and-start through the mountains until morning, but surprisingly, it was only an hour delay. At some point my ipod ran out of power and I thought I’d be awake all night, but shortly after that, I conked out and woke in daylight. It was the most restful night of sleep I’ve ever had on a bus, actually.

When we alighted in Fez, we took a cab to the medina area, and then walked around looking for a hostel. It took us a long time to find one. We were bleary-eyed and sleepy, it was early, and most of the people of Fez were pouring along the sidewalks on their way to school and work. When we found a hostel, the room wasn’t quite ready, so we walked into the medina for breakfast. We sat at a cafe and had really delicious Berber coffee and an omelet and a crepe with honey. Then, we returned to the hotel and had showers. After that, we decided to take care of all our errands first and then spend the day wandering around the medina eating everything in sight.

Which is exactly what we did: we found an internet cafe and checked our bags on Ryanair (they’re significantly less expensive if you check them online in advance) and then we went to the post office and mailed our post cards. Then, we walked all over the medina buying last minute gifts and eating a lot of things. We ate strawberries and avocado shakes and fried sardines and some sort of thick, sweet yogurt and fried honey pastries. We walked through to the courtyard where we’d sat before, and then back to the blue gate. By then, the sun was setting, so we had some tea and wrote in our journals and sat for over an hour watching the people walk past.

Then I took a ton of photos, including these:

busy cafe
dates
moto
preserved fruits
fruit

And then we found a stall which was making these sandwiches, consisting of a very fresh fried egg smashed in some bread, a bunch of fried potato croquette thingys, green chiles and harissa sauce, for about $.50:

delicious sandwich

After that, it was late, so we went back to our hotel. Our flight wasn’t until the next night at around 7:30, so we had a whole day to walk around the medina and eat more things. I took a lot of morning pictures:

carrots
spices
cats and shoes
man begging
medina

We had some fantastic pureed fava bean soup, more fruit shakes, dates, and another round of those sandwiches.

Eventually, it was time to leave, and we headed back to our hotel, where they’d called a car to take us to the airport. After inexplicably screwing up several times in the customs line, having our pen explode all over everything and getting yelled at a lot, we finally boarded the plane…and sat there for nearly two hours while we waited for ice on the wings to melt. This Ryanair flight was only slightly less insane than the last one.

We were staying with friends of R’s in London who had to work in the morning. We were supposed to take a bus to their house when we arrived in London, and then they would pick us up at the bus stop, but when we finally got to Stanstead, it was nearly 2am. We had been unable to contact them to even let them know we would be late, so R called from a pay phone now and told her friend, W, we’d just take a cab, but W said that would be very expensive and to just take the bus and call when we got to the station.

So that’s what we did. W and J, an incredibly nice couple, picked us up at nearly 4 in the morning and took us to their apartment, where W got out this huge, delicious Sri Lanken feast she’d made before they went back to bed. We were really happy to be there. We ate and then I had a shower, and then we went to bed, but R was so happy to see her friends that she got up at about 7:30 to talk to them before they went to work. And then I got up, because I realized we were in London, so we just went ahead and got dressed and headed out.

We took the subway to the area where Big Ben and everything are, and we walked around there and over the Thames. We were so tired that everything seemed really surreal.

Chaplin

Then, we walked to Borough Market, where we spent a couple of hours sampling food. They had a lot of mulled cider stands, and we each got a huge cup of that, and I realized quickly that I was getting really drunk – after all, we hadn’t had an alcohol in two weeks. This did not help with our exhaustion. We also had some very yummy pumpkin tortellini, after which, we really hit a wall.

We took a bus to somewhere near Picadilly Circus, and then we sat in a Pret drinking coffee for awhile, and then wandered around some more in a fog. This was my first time in London and I hated to spend it like that, but I was too exhausted to enjoy myself. And I’ll go back to London some day, anyway. It’s not exactly an unstable country or anything.

R and I wandered over to Chinatown, which was decked out for the Chinese New Year. This is how we felt:

really exhausted
R Chinatown

Then, we met up with W and J, who’d gotten out of work and they treated us to a really nice dinner at a Chinatown restaurant, after which, we took the train back to their apartment and sat up late discussing health care, as Brits and Americans tend to do when they get together.

The next morning, R and I caught a cab to Heathrow and boarded the plane. I was exhausted, but I didn’t sleep very much. I did watch The Social Network. When we finally arrived in New York, we tore off the plane and joined the customs line, where we had an aggravating experience, but at long last, we were done with that, and emerged into snowy, freezing, February New Jersey. Ah, to be home!

Personally, I would have been happy to turn right around (although I was very glad to reunite with Thomasina). Two weeks is maybe not enough time for me to travel, but it’s better than nothing. All in all, it was a great trip, and highly affordable – I took out $275 the first week we were in Morocco and $350 the following week (including bank fees), and that was all I spent for the whole two weeks we were there, including trains, buses, taxis, hotels, food, hammam and multiple tours, among other things. And we could have done it even cheaper – this involved us not bargaining at all or looking very hard for cheaper options, but just spending freely and not worrying much about anything, and we still didn’t end up spending that much. Our flight to London was a little over $600, which was the best fare we could find, surprisingly (flights directly to Morocco from New York were all at least $900-something, and mostly more than that), and the Ryanair flight to Fez ended up probably being about $100 each because of the baggage fees, but if we’d planned for that better, it would have been $19 there and $25 back. We didn’t spend much in London, either, because W and J put us up and even fed us (twice!).

If you are thinking about going to Morocco, I would recommend several things, the main one being, maybe wait a bit. But other than that, I’d say to brush up on your French, bring a compass and a good map, and then rent a car. Morocco is spread out and the best thing about it is the extremely varied, dramatic landscapes. Having your own vehicle would free you from having to spend all your time with creepy people in the tour industry, being forcibly taken to rug shops and hit up for small sums a hundred times a day. With a car, you could go where you wanted on your own time. There’s not much traffic at all anywhere, and apparently foreigners don’t get bribed by the police. Most places we went, there were big caravans of European senior citizens driving camper vans with their dogs and everything. Morocco is a cheap winter escape for retirees from the North country, and apparently there are a lot of inexpensive campsites everywhere to park if you’re traveling this way. I think doing that would be a whole lot of fun, and if I were to go back to Morocco, I’d probably rent my own vehicle and just hit the road.

But if you’re not confident in your driving skills, I’d still recommend Morocco. No matter how you do it, definitely make the effort to go to the desert (assuming you haven’t been before), even though it’s a whole long day’s travel there and back. It’s definitely worth the time.

(More pictures of our second stop in Fez can be seen here.)

February 14, 2011

From New York to London to Fez

I was at a goodbye brunch with friends when R called, having just realized that our flight from London to Fez, which we thought was a day after we arrived in London, in fact departed the same afternoon we arrived, meaning we would spend the day crossing from Heathrow to Stanstead, and arrive in Fez that night after a full two days of travel.

“How did we miss that?” R asked.

“I don’t know,” I said.

This was the first of many indications that R’s and my easy-breezy, take it as it comes travel style could result in some snags. But nothing we couldn’t handle! R’s boyfriend drove us to Newark and we were at the gate hours before our flight.

I had a major cold and had forgotten to bring cough drops, so I searched for them in the airport while R booked us a hostel in Fez using her ipod touch. The owner emailed back immediately saying that the hostel was really hard to find and he’d like to have a driver meet us at the airport.

“I’ll email him back when we get to London,” said R, and we boarded.

Our flight was practically empty, so we had plenty of room to spread out, which was great, although the giant, empty aircraft seemed a tremendous waste. I was too excited to sleep, so I watched Sunshine Cleaning and felt better about my life, and then I watched Grey Gardens and felt worse about my life. I also watched these two gangly aging rocker-types across the cabin from me consume a truly heroic number of cocktails. I agree with Louis CK about flying: life in the 21st century is a truly unbelievable adventure that is also clearly entirely unsustainable, so we should all revel in it while we can.

We landed at Heathrow around 7am on Sunday morning, went through customs and got on the tube. R used to live in London, so I didn’t have to think at all for this part of the trip, but just followed her around. She soon discovered that her international phone wasn’t working at all. Neither was her camera, and her ipod touch wouldn’t connect to any wireless networks.

By the time we arrived at Liverpool Station, we were both really feeling the lost night’s sleep. We tottered around in a fog, ate an 11am breakfast in a pub and then killed a few hours sitting in a freezing waiting room. R tried to get online again, but to no avail.

When we arrived at Stanstead, I found out all about Ryanair’s draconian baggage policy. I had ignored all the boilerplate in their many emails, but it turns out you can only carry one bag on a Ryanair flight, even including your purse. I had my big pack and then a smaller daypack that I thought I might want, and that had my purse and my toiletries in it. Combining the two was not an option. Turns out, if you do not check your bag ahead of time, Ryanair charges you over $50 to do it at the airport.

That sucked.

“I can’t wait to sleep on this flight,” I said to R, as we made our way to the gate, R still trying unsuccessfully to connect to the internet. The queue for our flight stretched down the terminal, its end somewhere out of sight past the horizon. We waited for everyone to board. We waited a long time.

Apparently, Moroccan people also agree with Louis CK about flying, but they agree in a much more active, voluble way than I do. You would have thought that our plane was filled with one giant, multigenerational family who loved each other more than air and had not seen each other in decades. This plane was a riotous party. People screamed and laughed and hugged and cried. Children careered up and down the aisles. The flight attendants were summoned continually to join in the fun. There was (I swear) disco music and strobe lights.

Meanwhile, I had slept for about 15 minutes of the past 48 hours. I employed earplugs and draped my sweater over my head, but there was no help for it. When R and I disembarked at Fez, we were in a mute daze of exhaustion. We saw palm trees and felt that it was warmer, but mostly we followed the people in front of us. We went through customs, claimed our bags, changed a little bit of money and wandered into the vestibule with no real idea what to do.

Then, we saw a man with the name of our hostel on a sign. We approached him and pointed to the sign. He turned around, and we followed him to his car, which was parked in a nearby lot. We got in. He drove us down many wide boulevards lined with lights and palm trees, with many well-populated roadside restaurants and gangs of teenage boys wandering along trying to hitchhike closer to town. There were also a great many pharmacies, lit up in green neon lights and marked with the crescent moon (the color and symbol of Islam – I’m not sure why these are used particularly for pharmacies, but they are all over Morocco).

We approached the medina, but passed up the many busy entryways for a deserted back alley, a sort of parking lot packed with men leaning against their cars. Our driver handed our bags off to some guys who were standing around, and we were told to follow them.

“There is no need to worry,” said one. “I work for the hotel.”

Too tired to argue, we followed these men into the medina.

There are no cars permitted in Fez medina, which is basically an enormous labyrinth of high walled, shop-lined passageways, splintering off into hundreds of narrow alleys leading up, down, around and backwards. The medina is impossible to navigate unless you live there, and at eight o’clock at night, it was very dark with few people about and no women anywhere in sight. It looked like this:

The men led us down one main avenue, past shops and food stalls and barbers, and then jagged into a dark, narrow alley, which looked like this:

From there, they turned down another, darker, rubble-strewn alley, and came to a halt before a large wooden door, unmarked by any sign. They unlocked the door and gestured into the pitch black beyond.

“After you,” one said. We went in.

The lights switched on, revealing a charming building with tiled walls and a sunken, central sitting room with a high, skylit ceiling.

couch of misery

“Welcome to Fez!” brayed our silent guide from behind us, turning on more lights, as the other guy ran off to the kitchen. “Now, we will all have tea!”

R and I sat on leather poofs around a low table and our friend placed himself before us and settled in to a long talk about Morocco, Fez, tea, and the elementary Arabic phrases we might like to know. “I believe all men are brothers!” he proclaimed. “Brothers, ikhwan. Can you say it?”

Eventually, we expressed as politely as possible that we were very tired and, while we’d love to continue our Arabic lesson, really had to go to bed.

“Of course, of course, you are tired! Come, come.”

But somehow, we ended up on the roof, being schooled in the history of the medina, the various sections of the medina, the mosques, the minarets, etc. etc.
roof view 1

tower

roof view 10

After we had excused ourselves a second time, we were led to our room, given our key, shown how the locks worked and where the showers were, and then our hosts said goodnight and went back downstairs.

I had first shower, and it was lovely. The shower was in a little red-tiled room, with the showerhead directly overhead in the ceiling, and it was steaming hot and I was so excited to go to bed and having a wonderful time, when I heard R wandering around, calling hello to no one in particular.

“What’s going on?” I called.

“I locked us out of our room,” she called. “But I can’t find them. I think they left.”

They had. We were the only people in the building, although there was also a cat, a very loud cat who’d been yowling since we got there (“She is so happy you are here,” our friend had earlier observed). Fortunately, I had brought my pajamas into the bathroom with me; unfortunately, our coats and warm layers were locked in our room with everything else.

So, we slept in the lobby – or rather, we lay awake freezing in the lobby – all night. I started out in a sort of carpeted loft-like area where the cat had clearly been going to the bathroom for the last thousand years, and where I tried to erect a sort of fort out of throw pillows. I huddled there as long as I could stand it, then I got up and searched the building for keys, finding none. I had no idea what time it was, or how long I’d been lying there. I had no idea when dawn would be. I took all the towels from the bathroom, went downstairs and curled on the couch in the other room from R (who, I noted, had found a blanket). I spread the towels over me and wrapped my jeans around my neck. The cat came over to yowl at me. I thought, maddeningly, of Grey Gardens.

At some point in the black predawn, the call to morning prayers came warbling through from above. R, the cat and I tensed for possible salvation, but we still had a long way to go.

Finally, finally, after the longest night I’ve ever spent, we heard keys in the door. A young woman came in, and we pounced on her.

“Why did you not call the owner?” was her first question, and we blinked at her.

“I thought that number was to here,” said R.

“You could also have emailed,” said the woman, picking up a spare set of keys that had been sitting by the computer all night and letting us into our room.

We slept until 2:00, then awoke to an amazing breakfast of various kinds of crepe-like pancakes that the woman had just cooked. It was warmer, too, now that the sun was up, and the lobby of nightmares looked pleasant and airy once again.
breakfast

After breakfast, we headed out into the medina. We spent a long day, wandering up and down busy thoroughfares and smaller alleyways, through vast, chaotic souks, and into quiet courtyards. There are a thousand boys in Fez that hang out just waiting for white people to walk by so that they can follow them around all day long trying to take them to the tannery. There is no way to shake these boys. Once they have seen you, they are yours forever.

“That way is closed, miss,” they will say many times. “Nothing interesting over there. Come with me. This way. Tannery.”

Sometimes, though, a boy will just materialize from an alleyway, announce where you are, and disappear again, which is more helpful. “You are in El Attarine Souk,” said one, before melting back into the shadows.
doorways
pots
me steps
A lot of burros have to get through the narrow medina lanes with goods piled on their backs. There is always a donkey just behind you, and it would like you to move. Also, sometimes a group of men have to move a very long steel beam around a very narrow corner. This will take awhile, and many would-be passers-by will have a lot to say about it.

We made our way to one end of the medina, where we rested awhile in this pleasant courtyard.

square 3
view
square 4
square 2

Then, we made our way back to the main gate, the Bab Boujloud, or blue gate, where we sat at a café, ate cous cous and watched the people going past.

us at dinner
cous cous
me at dinner

Before 8pm, we were exhausted again, so we decided to call it a night.

Miraculously, we found the alley where our hostel was located, but then, for some reason, we could not find the door. R and I had become of much more interest to everyone now that dark had fallen, and a gang of men followed us up and down the dark, deserted alley, to our extreme discomfort. Finally, we asked one of them where it was, and he told teenager to take us there, and then they all went away and left us alone.

We were relieved. But then we couldn’t get the key to work. While we tried, another gang of men gathered around us, making us far more uncomfortable than we had been before. Finally, one of them took the key from R and unlocked the door. And then they all immediately turned around and left. It was the strangest combination of harassment and helpfulness.

Anyway, that night, R and I managed to finally get a full night’s sleep in an actual bed. We agreed that we really liked Fez, and we decided to take the train to Casablanca in the morning.

(More pictures of our first stop in Fez can be seen here.)

October 19, 2010

LA v. NY

I recently visited LA for the first time ever.  I visited a friend over the Columbus Day weekend, and, while apparently three weeks to a month is plenty of time for me to make sweeping, authoritative observations about entire countries, I don’t feel like five days qualifies me to say anything about LA.  So, I’ll just compare it to New York, because traditionally NYers and LAers pretty much define their cities in opposition to each other.

Before visiting, I feared I’d want to move to LA immediately, because I love sunshine and warmth and hate winter and darkness (feared, because moving to LA would mean getting a car and driving for the first time in a decade).  But it turns out, I’m not as much as a sun person as I’d thought.  My skin doesn’t lie, apparently.  I kind of thought that everyone in LA would be as sun-phobic as NYers are – I mean, LA is the land of eternal-youth obsession after all.  My friends in NY would sooner attack their delicate facial skin with razor blades than sit in direct sunlight without a high SPF.  We are shade seekers.  But in LA, it’s all, ‘Let’s have brunch on the patio – no need for an umbrella!  Aren’t you hot in that sweatshirt and wide-brimmed hat?  Don’t you feel insane in that veil and poncho?’  And then there was all the driving – hours and hours of driving with direct sunlight just plowing through the windshield.  I felt like an ant under a magnifying lens.  I could hear myself sizzling and feel melanomas and sun spots springing up from deep in my dermal layers.  I could feel the thin skin around my eyes and lips shriveling into dry, crone-like crepe.

So, there was that.  But LA is really beautiful.  Just postcard pretty, everywhere you go.  And all the people are really beautiful, too, which is annoying.  It doesn’t feel urban, though – more suburban.  I always think I hate crowds here in NY, but being in such semi-deserted big spaces while clearly still in a city made me uneasy, like maybe someone had sounded an alarm and I hadn’t heard it.

Socially, LA is more outgoing than NY – I’m pretty sure I can say that definitively, even based on my limited experience.  I mean, twice while I was reading in public, a total stranger came up to ask what I was reading and introduce themselves.  And they weren’t even creeps, or crazy people!  Never before in my life has that happened, and actually, I liked it.  I wish I could always make friends without having to take my nose out of my book and initiate eye contact.  Otherwise, people do ask you what you do in LA and expect you to have an answer, which I hate, but they do that in NY, too.

Money-wise, rent isn’t that much less in LA, but you get a lot more for it.  My friends out there mostly live in gorgeous, sunny spaces with washer/dryers.  I thought food and alcohol was considerably pricier, but maybe that’s just because I’ve lived in NY long enough to know where and where not to go.  Thrift stores are much, much cheaper, and apparently, they don’t have bedbugs out there yet.

Overall, I think that unless you have a career-related reason to be in LA (which I’m sure most people do), it’d be better to live in Southern California, somewhere more remote.  There are definite advantages to being right in NYC, rather than outside NYC, but I don’t think LA itself is that much of a draw – it’s more the general atmosphere of the region.  NYC is a cooler city, but LA is more livable and a prettier place.  There, that’s my (terribly original) sweeping pronouncement on the subject.

Here are some pictures, and I’ll probably post more, too, at some point:

June 7, 2009

I’ve Been Reading: Lost Cosmonaut

Have you heard of Tatarstan, Kalmykia, Mari El or Udmurtia? Daniel Kalder bets you haven’t. In his travelogue, Lost Cosmonaut, he journeys to all four of these small republics in the wasteland of Southwestern Russia in search of nothingness. For Kalder (and for the reader), these locations’ complete and total lack of anything of interest makes them bizarrely fascinating travel destinations.

For the first dozen or so pages of Lost Cosmonaut, I found Kalder to be an annoyingly central narrator, but once he gets into the book, his tone becomes less forced and show-offy, and the rest of this travel narrative is as witty and informative as it is bizarre. Russia is one of the few countries that hard-core travelers will dissuade you from exploring – “Seriously,” they’ll promise. “See Moscow and St. Petersburg, but that’s it.” – and as such, I’ve always been curious about it. Thanks to Kalder, I now know that out there in all the bleak vastness, there are indeed some oddities scattered about: embalmed babies, a “city” built entirely for chess, mail-order bride warehouses, pagan rituals, and earnest community theater.

May 16, 2009

Uncrowded Oases in Greenpoint, Brooklyn

In New York, personal space is always at a premium. Until very recently, Greenpoint was an oasis for those who need their breathing room: conveniently adjacent to the non-stop party that is Williamsburg, Greenpoint was a less crowded, less expensive hood for those who prefer to have their fun and then go home. Unfortunately, it seems the hipsters have gotten hip, and with each passing year, there’s a little less room in Greenpoint.

If you’re willing to go a bit out of your way, however, there are a few places that seem to have escaped the influx.

It’s brunch on a Sunday, and Brooklyn Label and the Park Luncheonette have lines out the door. But there’s another option that always has seating. Head North on Manhattan Ave. all the way to Huron St. and have juevos rancheros or a breakfast burrito at chef-to-stalk Cody Utzman’s Mexican street food restaurant, Papacitos. Delicious brunch for under $10 (and great veg options), friendly service, and – now that it’s summer – the long picnic tables in the breezy garden can accommodate all your friends at once.

After brunch, it’s time to do some shopping. Don’t feel like strolling Franklin Ave’s boutiques with the Vans-shod masses? Just steps from Papacitos, check out The Thing, an old school thrift store that’s as packed with stuff as Bburg’s Junk, but not packed with patrons – possibly because the place is a dusty mess and the owners are cranky. But the basement is a sight to behold, crammed with thousands upon thousands of used LPs. If you’ve got money left, head South on Manhattan Ave. Weirdly, Fred Flare chose to open their first ever brick-and-mortar store at the random out-of-the-way corner of Meserole and Leonard. The store’s adorable, and the merch is cuter. But best of all, you and your pals will likely have the run of the place.

Shopping not enough cardio to work off your brunch, but don’t want to crowd into the Sunday afternoon Greenpoint YMCA sweat-fest? Try Otom Gym, a block away on Calyer. Cheaper than the Y (a recent summer special is around $40/month) and less crowded, but you will have to ignore the exaggerated grunts of the weightlifting, musclebound men who make up the majority of the clientele. For a peaceful (and free) workout, you can always go for a run in the park. If it’s nice out, McCarren Park is sure to be carpeted in sunbathers, but shady, smaller Monsignor McGolrick Park, East of McGuinness between Huron and Driggs is always quiet. There are more trees in McGolrick, a small dog run and a playground, as well as a sheltered pavilion and several interesting sculptures — check out the weird squirrel statutes on either side of the West gate, that appear ready to pounce.

Just West of McGorlick on Nassau is Brooklyn Standard Deli, Cody Utzman’s brand new organic mini-mart. In an area saturated with Polish delis, Utzman’s store is a Godsend for foodies, with locally sourced and organic goods at corner store prices, and sandwiches and prepared meals, plus Stumptown coffee, homebaked goods and a juicebar. The focus here is on vegan and vegetarian fare (though meat options are also available). All this, and more elbow room than The Garden.

But if you’re craving Polish (and in Greenpoint, who wouldn’t be?), but Old Poland and Lomzynianka are packed, check out Antek Restaurant on Norman, across from the library. This bare bones Polish cafeteria has no English postings alongside the Polish menu, but here’s a hint: there are English take-out menus on the counter. The dishes are huge, tasty and dirt cheap – like a hearty white borscht with a mound of mashed potatoes for $2.50 – and there’s plenty of seating where you can chill and watch Polish TV.

For dessert, skip the perennially packed Peter Pan donuts, and head North on Manhattan to the charming Cafe Riviera, where mammoth, flaky croissants and fruit-and-cheese-filled danish the size of hubcaps are on offer for only $1.50, and cafe au lait in a pretty glass mug is $.50. The seating is limited, the line is often long, but most people get their treats to go. If you do snag one of the marble-topped cafe tables, it’s a pleasant place to watch the foot traffic down Manhattan.

When it comes time to hit the Greenpoint night life, stay well clear of the drunken scenesters at Enid’s and Matchless. Rather, head up North on Manhattan to The Hideaway, a hunting-lodge-inspired bar with yummy cocktails and bar food, nightly specials and episodes of Planet Earth on the overhead TVs. The Hideaway is cozy, but there’s always an open table, and the patrons are more into conversing with each other than striking poses at the bar.

Don’t stay out too late, though – if you’re like everyone else in Brooklyn, you’ve got a long day of freelance work ahead of you! When it comes time to pay the bills, there are a number of places to squat in Greenpoint. Cafe Grumpy and Greenpoint Coffee House are well-known haunts for laptop-toters, but try Eat on Meserole at Leonard. This tiny coffeeshop-slash-record store has great ambiance and no customers. Be forewarned:  they’ve recently gotten rid of the wireless and ask that you not bring laptops – but hey, going offline can really increase your productivity!  Plus, unlike Grumpy, Eat has a delicious full menu. By your third visit, you’ll be besties with the staff.

To get to Greenpoint, take the G to Greenpoint or Nassau. (Or skip the crowded platform and lengthy wait at Courthouse Square, and stroll over the Pulaski Bridge instead!)

June 27, 2008

Because I Wish To Go…

…here are a bunch of cool photo galleries from around the world!

Iceland, Hotel Everland in Paris, surfing in the Amazon, Artists’ Playground at Sudeley Castle.

(all via Coudal Partners)

And, about Beijing’s Olympic Park:

For a nation that deeply values formal architectural symbolism, creating an iconic shape that simultaneously evokes Heaven (a circle) and the auspicious bird’s nest was genius on the part of the architects. But so mesmerising has it become that nobody mentions the small matter of the 2,800-acre Olympic park and 31 other venues surrounding it. This is probably a good thing. Because the “bird’s nest” might be the ultimate in architectural eye candy, but its neighbours are not. Architecturally at least, the Beijing Olympics are a flop.

(via things magazine)

It’s not just that Cindy McCain was a drug addict; it’s that she was a real jerk about it:

Cindy McCain stole drugs from a medical charity. It doesn’t get much lower than that. Worse still, she used her employees’ names to obtain drugs, and even enlisted some her her staff to pick up those prescriptions on her behalf. . . . One of the doctors who worked with McCain at AVMT lost his license to practice medicine over the diversion scandal. . . .Ironically, part of her diversion from criminal prosecution involved joining Narcotics Anonymous–which stipulates that an addict must make amends to those she has harmed. That’s not a step Cindy appears to have taken to heart in her dealings with her former emplyee, Tom Gosinski, the main whistleblower in this case.  Gosinski alleges that Cindy fired him from AVMT for knowing too much about her drug habit.  Gosinski also tipped off the DEA to McCain after he left the charity. He came forward in part because he was afraid that Cindy had filed prescriptions in his name, a suspicion that turned out to be justified.  When he sued Cindy for wrongful dismissal, she levied spurious accusations of blackmail against him.

This is interesting:  a blue/red map of the blogosphere.   (via Crooked Timber)

On the theme of escapism, 101 Movies to Avoid Watching Before You Die:

But my nomination is more serious: The House of Sand and Fog. I rarely dislike a movie enough to warn people against it, but this is one of the worst, and most unpleasant, movies I’ve watched.

See, now, I thought The House of Sand and Fog was terrific – characters with strong, high-stakes wants in direct opposition to each other, and all that.  But then, I’ve said it before:  I know jack about films.

May 23, 2008

I Have What the People Want

Whatever happened to that scandalous military analysts story that broke in the NY Times, and then utterly disappeared from the dialogue?

[It's] made the standard transition from “we don’t illegally manipulate the news” to “of course we did that, why are you still making a fuss about this old story”.

Also MIA: conservatives’ support for states’ rights:

Since the conservative ascendancy in Washington, many of these same people have stopped praising states’ rights and have begun burying them – not to protect citizens’ rights, but to take them away. The Bush administration and its Congressional allies have helped their friends in industry by enacting weak environmental, health and consumer regulations – and arguing that they wipe out more robust state protections.

The Christian dating site, Bigchurch.com, is owned by Penthouse:

It’s not like BigChurch isn’t about sex. It’s just more subtle than a site that’s explicitly aimed at swingers. BigChurch’s function is to connect people whose concepts of sex are tied so closely to faith and doctrine that it can be difficult to meet potential partners in more traditional settings.

There’s racism in Japan, and there’s also a parrot who, when lost, can tell you where he lives.

I am always looking for ways to get by with less sleep (ideally, I need about 14 hours per night to function properly). I also periodically have problems with insomnia, so I’m always on the lookout for causes: apparently, obese people are short sleepers. Wouldn’t you think it’d be the other way around?

What if all the “sleep hygiene” recommendations mean diddly-squat when the prime reason for one’s poor sleep is simply too much weight?

But then, on the other hand, I usually don’t eat enough, and will often wake up from sheer hunger at 2 or 3 a.m. and have to get out of bed and eat something, just so I can go back to sleep until a decent hour. So, you can’t win.

Is the Internet ruining humor?

Because the Internet lets normal people make as much noise as funny and original people, the lame humor that usually dead-ends in offices instead spreads like crazy.

The net doesn’t kill humor. People kill humor. (Incidentally, for the very best in original online humor content, click this link!!) [And, while I'm at it, do you agree with Jessa Crispin that "more misanthropes should write travel literature?" If so, then click this link!!]

Also funny:

The Wit and Humor of Immanuel Kant

…and others of the world’s shortest philosophy books.

(via The Morning News)

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