Start Spreading the (Bad) News

Could New York City be losing its place as the world’s foremost art emporium? The Art Newspaper thinks it may. The paper, which tracks these things, says that both customers and works of art themselves are turning up more frequently and more lucratively in London.

Hard-pressed New Yorkers of the non-hedge-fund/trust-fund variety may find it Read More

Events for October 17, 2006

The Temporary Commission on the Future of New York State Power Programs for Economic Development meets at the Empire State Development Corporation.

New York City Campaign Finance Board meets at 40 Rector Street.

Latino AIDS activists protest plans to increase rent for disabled people with AIDS on the steps of City Hall.

The Domestic Violence Read More

Events for October 13, 2006

Happy Friday the 13th!

Vito Lopez holds a Williamsburg Community Truck Stop to protest illegal truck traffic on the corner of Metropolitan and Bushwick Avenues.

Senator Jeffrey Klein and Assemblyman George Latimer call for the passage of legislation that would increase criminal penalties for vandalizing houses of worship at St. Frances De Chantal Church in Read More

Stone’s Film Shows New York’s Heart

Oliver Stone’s World Trade Center is a spectacular film about New York City, how it wakes up before dawn every day, how millions of people find their way into the city every day—and how it all came to a stop on Sept. 11, 2001. After so much talk about how and why the attacks took Read More

Levin Joins In

Gerry Levin joins his former New York Stock Exchange colleagues in trashing Eliot Spitzer, in a videotaped deposition linked on the Wall Street Journal’s law blog.

Most of what he says is hard to understand out of context, just one reason this won’t be going into an attack ad anytime soon, but it sounds Read More

Moving On From Ground Zero

By sunrise on Sept. 11, 2002, one year after the towers fell, the crowds were already thick at Ground Zero. A strange carnival had descended on downtown overnight, depositing a sea of mourners, babies clad in red, white and blue, politicians and doughnut vendors. Bagpipers had marched in from all corners of the city, some Read More