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NYC – Things done (and things left undone)

A Travelogue through New York City, told (mostly) in Wikipedia Pages.  (I’ve left out the wedding stuff up in Westchester because … well, that’s a different topic.) THURSDAY Dave…

A Travelogue through New York City, told (mostly) in Wikipedia Pages. 

(I’ve left out the wedding stuff up in Westchester because … well, that’s a different topic.)

THURSDAY

  • Dave took the train from White Plains down to Grand Central Station (saw same, took many pictures). Met up with Doyce, Doug, Virg.  View of the Chrysler Building from outside.
  • Wandered by the Library. Looked at the lions.
  • Wandered around. Found Jack’s Bar & Grill (fancyish). Drank some beers.
  • Headed over to Times Square. Yow! Lights! Video! Lights!
  • Bachelor party at Dave & Busters.
  • Wander back to GCS, taking various blurry night time pictures. (It was the lighting conditions, honest!) Took the train back.

FRIDAY

  • Margie and Dave took the train down to GCS.
  • Went over to the Library. Ate lunch at the Bryant Park Grill.
  • Toured the Library a bit. Gorgeous place.
  • Couldn’t get a good view of the Empire State Building because of cloud cover.
  • Took the train back up to White Plains for the wedding rehearsal.

SUNDAY

  • Drove down to the city in our rental car. Dropped the car off at the Hertz garage which was, quite serendipitously, only a block from where we were staying, the Hotel Belleclaire, at 76th & Broadway (Upper West Side).
  • Took the 1 line subway down to Times Square. 
  • Wandered about. Went to the Gray Lines office to pick up our passes. We got a 48 hour pass for the uptown and downtown tour busses — double-deckers with open observation decks, which have hop-on/off privileges. In general, it went pretty well, even if there were some maddening difficulties around shift changes, getting on a bus that had room upstairs, etc.; once on, the tour guides were all good, and the routes were enjoyable.
  • Went to Avenue Q at the Golden Theatre.
  • Headed back up to the hotel, wandered over to Isabella’s for dinner.

MONDAY

  • Ate breakfast at the Manhattan Diner.
  • Walked over to the Natural History Museum along Central Park and picked up the Uptown Loop of tour bus. This went through the Upper West Side, through Harlem, down through the Upper East Side along Fifth Avenue.
  • From the south end of Central Park, transferred to a Downtown Loop — except that went ahead and dropped us in Times Square to pick up a different bus. Irksome.
  • Drove around downtown Manhattan, past Madison Square Garden, the Empire State Building, and then down through SoHoGreenwich Village, etc.
  • Eventually, the bus got down to the Civic Center. We got out there, and took a walk across the Brooklyn Bridge — well, about half-across, past the first span of cables, so that we could shoot back toward the city.
  • Returned to the bus route, eventually caught the next tour bus down (with a glimpse through other buildings at the WTC site) to Battery Park, from which we took the Staten Island Ferry in order to get a view of the Statue of Liberty.
  • Took the subway up to Grand Central Station. From there, we walked, past the Chrysler Building, over to the UN Headquarters. Lots of police parked in the area, and, sadly, all the flags were down. The place needs a paint job.
  • Caught the tour bus once again, which drove us past Rockefeller Center, and dropped us off back in Times Square.
  • Checked out the TKTS booth, but didn’t find anything we wanted to see. Margie boldly took us to consult with the concierge at the Marriott Marquis, who got us reservations at Frankie & Johnnie’s down the street for dinner. Which put us in great position to mosey across the street to the Golden afterward to pick up the photo I’d left backstage at Avenue Q.
  • Being stuffed, we walked back up Broadway to the hotel, passing Columbus Circle and the Lincoln Center along the way.

TUESDAY

  • Checked out of the hotel, stashing our bags there and making arrangements with the concierge for transportation to LaGuardia mid-afternoon.
  • Had breakfast at the Manhattan Diner again.
  • Walked to Central Park, then across it, to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Took the Highlights Tour for an hour, then did a bit of common browsing, then split up to maximize the things we both wanted to see. As previously suspected, one could easily spend the whole day (if not more) at the Met.
  • Running a bit late to get back to the hotel. Considered getting a cab, settled on a pedicab, which made it’s way over to the American Natural History Museum with us. The driver didn’t speak English very well, so I’m not sure if I stiffed him on his suggested fee (as Margie thinks) or gave him more than he asked (as I thought), but I tore a pants pocket getting out of the cab, so I guess we’ve even.
  • Hoofed it back, hopped in a town car, and we were off.

So that’s what we did, which leaves …

UPDATE: Pictures, pictures, pictures!

Continue reading “NYC – Things done (and things left undone)”

NYC – Avenue Q

So, after long months of hearing Doyce rave about Avenue Q, we got tickets for the Broadway performance (at the Golden Theatre) while we were out there. And, yes,…

So, after long months of hearing Doyce rave about Avenue Q, we got tickets for the Broadway performance (at the Golden Theatre) while we were out there.

And, yes, it’s a ton of fun, rollicking goodness, witty and funny and simple and profound.

Indeed, the simplicity of the show is both a weakness and a strength. It touches on such themes as love, sex, commitment, purpose, life, bad decisions, racism, schadenfreude, communication, integrity, careers, coming of age … I mean we’re talking Shakespearean stuff here in a lot of ways. And, like Shakespeare, it’s neatly packaged up in a low comedy package that seems treat everything lightly, yet leaves enough loose ends (“For Now”) to smack of much more reality than most TV dramas manage.

Like Sesame Street (the unabashed inspiration), the show has some actors who just play people, and other actors who play one (or more) puppets — usually standing, holding the puppet next to them. It’s like watching a movie with subtitles — do you watch the puppet or the actor? In the end you do both, in an odd, schizophrenic fashion, and it all works.

Some puppets are manned by two people at a time. The two main leads actually play two characters each (Princeton/Rod and Kate Monster/Lucy). If there’s a scene where both are on stage, they end up handing one puppet off to another of the actors, but do both voices. Even more schizophrenic (do you watch the puppet, the voice actor, or the puppet actor?), but, again, it all works.

I highly recommend it to anyone who would not be offended by enthusiastic (if non-graphic) puppet sex. It’s a great fun.

Then, afterward …

Continue reading “NYC – Avenue Q

About that sewer line thing …

They’re coming today to excavate and fix it — $4K if we’re lucky, $8K if we’re not. Joy.  So I’m working from home, since, quoth the statement of work. There…

They’re coming today to excavate and fix it — $4K if we’re lucky, $8K if we’re not. Joy. 

So I’m working from home, since, quoth the statement of work.

There will be a trench approximately 2′ wide x 8′ long (midyard). Everything in the way will be affected.

 

Ya think? We’re going to do some emergency iris removal, maybe a rose bush, when they arrive and describe the site of the carnage in more detail.

This repair does not cover any unforeseens such as cavities, cave-ins, buried debris, sprinkler systems, etc., etc.

 

I’m pretty certain they’ll hit a sprinkler line in there somewhere. Ah, well — I knew there was a reason (besides the weather) I didn’t turn on the sprinklers last week.

Final Frontier?

And let me tell you that hearing that the airline you flew out on (and, presumably, will fly back on) has Google News is always good for a few seconds…

And let me tell you that hearing that the airline you flew out on (and, presumably, will fly back on) has Google News is always good for a few seconds of adrenaline. Though kudos to Frontier for being the first to tell me (since, in a soothing and calm message that only made me immediately run to Google News (on my Blackberry, which was still working at that point) to confirm WTF.

Back at home

After a whirlwind three-day-ish tour of New York City, we’re back home. I have a ton of pictures to finish labeling — and, of course, a ton of mail in…

After a whirlwind three-day-ish tour of New York City, we’re back home. I have a ton of pictures to finish labeling — and, of course, a ton of mail in my in-box. I also have to get my Blackberry fixed or replaced. That latter is the real PitA right now.

More as I get word in edgewise.

I haven’t actually dropped off the face of the Earth …

… but Internet connectivity has been … dicey. 1. Wedding was appropriately and not-unexpectedly faboo. Best Man speech went, I am told, fine. Lovely bride, handsome groom, cute Kaylee, pretty church, nice country club,…

… but Internet connectivity has been … dicey.

1. Wedding was appropriately and not-unexpectedly faboo. Best Man speech went, I am told, fine. Lovely bride, handsome groom, cute Kaylee, pretty church, nice country club, yummy food, good champagne, fantastic band, all’s right with the world.  Pictures and text to follow at some future moment.

2. Down in NYC now at the Belleclaire Hotel, uptown west. 

3. Went to see Avenue Q this afternoon, which was both great fun in its own right and even more fun based on What Happened Next.

4. My Blackberry has locked up beyond my ability to fix it, which is intensely frustrating on multiple levels, not least of which is that I can’t post pictures on-the-fly to the blog, making it seem like I’ve dropped off the face of the Earth. Ugh. And, also, Rrg.

5. Lovely dinner with Margie tonight, both in terms of good food (at Isabella’s), and in terms of excellent company (Margie).

More as I get the chance, the inclination, and the connectivity.

Library Goodness

NYPL Rose Reading Room. It’s like the Platonic Ideal of Librariness….

NYPL Rose Reading Room. It’s like the Platonic Ideal of Librariness.

A nice romantic lunch

At the Bryant Park Grill, behind the Library….

At the Bryant Park Grill, behind the Library.

Times Square

Yow!…

Yow!

Tesla!

It’s electrical!…

It’s electrical!

Lion

At the New York Public Library….

At the New York Public Library.

Grand Central Station

My God, it’s real!…

My God, it’s real!

Looks like we made it.

“I can see my house from up here!”

Actually, I can see my house from the “Street View” here, on Google Maps, once I enter in my home address. Not an overhead shot, but an actual from-the-street view, just…

Actually, I can see my house from the “Street View” here, on Google Maps, once I enter in my home address. Not an overhead shot, but an actual from-the-street view, just like someone drove past and took a picture (which they did). 

I can also see my folks’ house (hi, Mom!). And Jim & Ginger’s house (looks like it was a KOA weekend when Google did the drive-by).

Not quite as creepy as this … yet … but still …

I need to remember this next time I’m going over to someone’s house I’ve not been to. One thing to know the address, another thing to know what the house looks like. Though the precision of the address functionality seems to be limited — my folks’ addy is off by a house, and we’re down the street a bit from our picture, too.

I’ve heard about this functionality, of course — and of amusing anecdotes about people being “caught” in the pictures who didn’t want it known they were ever at a particular location. But to see it for personal examples is a bit … interesting.

(via a co-worker who was a bit creeped out by it — esp. when a picture of her friend’s house showed her jeep on the driveway.)

“All my bags are packed, it’s ready to snow …”

Wait, that’s not how the song goes. Though that’s how the weather seems to be going preparatory to our flying to New York tonight (around Midnight). URGENT – WINTER WEATHER…

Wait, that’s not how the song goes. Though that’s how the weather seems to be going preparatory to our flying to New York tonight (around Midnight).

URGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO
515 AM MDT WED APR 9 2008

…SPRING STORM HEADING TOWARDS COLORADO…

.A STORM SYSTEM DEVELOPING OVER THE GREAT BASIN WILL MOVE ACROSS SOUTHERN COLORADO WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND THURSDAY…AND THEN INTENSIFY AS IT MOVES INTO THE CENTRAL PLAINS. SNOW WILL BECOME WIDESPREAD IN THE MOUNTAINS TODAY AND CONTINUE THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT. ACROSS THE PLAINS…RAIN AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS CAN BE EXPECTED BY THIS AFTERNOON TURNING TO SNOW LATE THIS EVENING CONTINUE INTO THURSDAY EVENING.

THERE CONTINUES TO BE UNCERTAINTY REGARDING THE EXACT TRACK OF THE STORM…AND ANY DEVIATION WILL RESULT IN WIDELY VARIED SNOWFALL AMOUNTS ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS AND PLAINS. THE POTENTIAL FOR HEAVY SNOWFALL AND STRONG WINDS MAY ALSO CREATE HAZARDOUS DRIVING CONDITIONS.

A WINTER STORM WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM LATE TONIGHT THROUGH
THURSDAY AFTERNOON.

RAIN WILL TURN TO SNOW LATE THIS EVENING WITH THE HEAVIEST SNOW EXPECTED EARLY THURSDAY MORNING. THE HEAVIER SNOW IS EXPECTED TO SHIFT EASTWARD OVER THE PLAINS THURSDAY AFTERNOON. SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF 3 TO 8 INCHES IS POSSIBLE BY THURSDAY EVENING. UP TO 14 INCHES IS POSSIBLE IN THE FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS.

 

Joy.

Looked at Bombs from Both Sides Now

I managed to catch about three 5 minute snippets of this Fresh Air article on NPR today. Fascinating stuff. Assessing the Human Cost of Air Strikes in Iraq : NPR …

I managed to catch about three 5 minute snippets of this Fresh Air article on NPR today. Fascinating stuff.

Assessing the Human Cost of Air Strikes in Iraq : NPR 

As chief of high-value targeting for the Pentagon, Marc Garlasco helped plan the targets of laser-guided bombs during the invasion of Iraq. Now a senior analyst with Human Rights Watch, he visits war zones where he assesses the damage being done to civilians by bombs and lobbies for greater deliberation in the use of air power. Garlasco has provided assessments for Human Rights Watch throughout the world, including Israel and Iraq.

 

Basically he was a recommender of bombing target locations and sequencing, based on strategic value and/or who (esp. from the “Deck of Cards”) was likely to be there, He moved from there almost overnight to working for HRW, including surveying on the ground the damage he’d seen done by satellite and Predator feed.

Garlasco manages to avoid glib answers (from either side’s perspective) and has some interesting bits to say about Afghanistan, too.

I intend to go back and listen to the whole thing.

“I make too much money to get stimulated”

That was the unfortunate phrasing I used in talking with a co-worker about my (not) expected economic stimulus check. Which I’m not expecting to get because we make too much…

That was the unfortunate phrasing I used in talking with a co-worker about my (not) expected economic stimulus check. Which I’m not expecting to get because we make too much money. Which is (a) what I was trying to say in an amusing way (though not quite that amusing) and (b) the sort of “problem” I suppose it’s not bad to have.

Okay, it was kind of funny.

So I guess I’ll just spend some of my filthy lucre to stimulate the economy on my own. Just to do my part, mind you.

On the other hand, if you’re expecting one of those checks — here’s a suggestion on what to “spend” it on. Or for a similar cause of your choice.

Lucky Thirteen

Yes, it’s been thirteen years since Abraham Lincoln married the most wonderful woman in the world. Oh, wait, that’s me, not Abe. But Margie’s still just as wonderful, if not…

Yes, it’s been thirteen years since Abraham Lincoln married the most wonderful woman in the world. Oh, wait, that’s me, not Abe. But Margie’s still just as wonderful, if not moreso.

In time the Rockies may crumble,
Gibraltar may tumble,
They’re only made of clay.
Our love is here to stay.
 

Happy Anniversary, my love.

No, I am not a Jedi Master

Wrong Dave Hill. If nothing else, I like making goo-goo eyes at my honey-bunny. And a Jedi may not make goo-goo eyes …  (via Ginny — no, nobody sent me…

Wrong Dave Hill.

If nothing else, I like making goo-goo eyes at my honey-bunny. And a Jedi may not make goo-goo eyes … 

(via Ginny — no, nobody sent me this link before you did.)

Living the blogging life on the edge!

Never knew I was a risk-taking devil-may-care adventurer, did you, flirting with death with each and every post I throw up here on my blog? In Web World of 24/7…

Never knew I was a risk-taking devil-may-care adventurer, did you, flirting with death with each and every post I throw up here on my blog?

In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop – New York Times 

They work long hours, often to exhaustion. Many are paid by the piece — not garments, but blog posts. This is the digital-era sweatshop. You may know it by a different name: home.

Basically, the article is about full-time professional bloggers and the high-tech stress (coupled with long hours and a sedentary lifestyle) they go through. Which I suppose is true (despite all the caveats and admitted ignorance the article keeps throwing up before moving onto the next breathless anecdote), but given that I am hardly working myself to death doing blogging, I guess I’m okay. 

I’m just an amateur, not a professional, and I won’t try this every waking hour at home …