This weekend, NYC’s Rooftop Films is showing Seltzer Works, a film about New York’s last seltzer bottler.

In the early 1900s, thousands of seltzer deliverymen criss-crossed the nation, schlepping heavy glass bottles full of fizzy water to millions of thirsty customers. Today, with only a handful of deliverymen left in the country, the siphon machines at Gomberg Seltzer Works don’t turn like they used to. Most of the old customers have passed on (or moved to Florida). But there are still bubbles being made by third-generation seltzer filler Kenny Gomberg. In the short documentary SELTZER WORKS, the last bottler in Brooklyn fends off the supermarket seltzer take-over and honors this simple drink’s place in history. 

More info at SeltzerWorks.com. (via Brooklyn Based) posted on 07.15.10

This weekend, NYC’s Rooftop Films is showing Seltzer Works, a film about New York’s last seltzer bottler.

In the early 1900s, thousands of seltzer deliverymen criss-crossed the nation, schlepping heavy glass bottles full of fizzy water to millions of thirsty customers. Today, with only a handful of deliverymen left in the country, the siphon machines at Gomberg Seltzer Works don’t turn like they used to. Most of the old customers have passed on (or moved to Florida). But there are still bubbles being made by third-generation seltzer filler Kenny Gomberg. In the short documentary SELTZER WORKS, the last bottler in Brooklyn fends off the supermarket seltzer take-over and honors this simple drink’s place in history. 

More info at SeltzerWorks.com. (via Brooklyn Based)


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posted on 04.03.10 Fuck the Library

I am a woman of modest means. Also: I like books. This is why I found myself at the library on this pretty afternoon.

Specifically, I was at the New York Public Library branch on Mulberry Street in Manhattan. All around me today, people are waving their shiny new iPads. I’ve been on the fence about e-readers, but I can see the appeal of reading a book on one of these things.  My husband only asked me four times today what books he can download for me on his new device. Still, in the name of simplicity and thrift, I decided I wasn’t going that route. As a defender of things obsolete, I feel it’s my duty to keep the library light lit. Today, however, may have been my last visit. But this isn’t because of the iPad: It’s because of people.

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posted on 03.03.10 Happy Birthday, Word!

A few months ago, I did a debate at Word in Greenpoint, not far from where yo vivo con mi esposo bonito, qui es d’Espana, y mi pero pequeño, qui es Poodle-Yorkie. (Am learning Spanish! Very slowly!).

I love Word. I bet you have to pass some sort of “cool” test to work there. “No, we don’t. Because tests are inherently uncool.” That’s the kind of thing I think that someone who worked there would say. Word, word.

Some of their employees debated me about whether or not certain things would become obsolete, and they each kicked my bum. They showed up with notes and stuff. I thought that I could just get by using my book as my notes, but then I realized that they’d been able to read “my notes.” And they didn’t even have to buy the book! They could’ve just read it at the store! Damn. So, their arguments were more like rebuttals to things that I wrote and researched more than a year beforehand. In most cases, I decided my best option would be to use my turn to tacitly agree with their sides and then have my dad answer questions from the audience. I just always ask myself: What Would Amos Do? He’d yap, yap, drop and roll.

Anyway, the point is: the debate was great, Word is great, and Amos is very wise. But the original point of all this was that I was going to say that I just read that Word’s new online store will take twenty percent off your purchase if you write “Happy Anniversary, WORD!” in the comments section at checkout. The site is WordBrooklyn.com. I believe in eating local, and books are mostly made of plants. Smaller stores are so often overshadowed by Amazon, which has liberal views about shopping in my undies. But Word has so much more personality and is a much more pleasant addition to the neighborhood than another DuaneReade. Also, I believe in supporting any bookstore that has its own basketball team.

Question from the audience: Will books become obsolete?

Answer from me: There’s no way to know, but I really do think that books will become obsolete sooner or later. Probably sooner than later. A generation or so from now, I think they will seem like relics of an faraway time. The Kindle, the iPhone, and other kinds of feats of technology and design and engineering that are trying to do a job that paper seemed to do so effortlessly, are still leaning heavily on the design of books, and I think things will probably continue in that direction for quite a while. But, in many cases, it’s like a game of telephone: Most modern computers were designed so that we input information using a system almost identical to the typewriter. Because it’s something that people were used to. Early typewriter designs leaned heavily on the look and operation of the piano. Because it’s something people were used to. Pianos took major hints from harpsichords, which incorporated design elements of the hurdygurdy, which which which blah. Digital pictures are still rectangular because film was rectangular. Would CDs have been made round if records hadn’t been round? One thing builds onto the next until the innermost Russian nesting doll packs up and marries a snow globe.

I’m going to wager that my great-great-grandkids will read from left-to-right (if they speak English) on rectangular screens or tickers or whatever. The text will still mostly be dark and the backgrounds will probably white, just like printed ink on paper was. But I doubt they’ll be reading actual books like we read today.

As someone who loves books, I feel sad about this. At the Word debate, a lot of people were emotional about this subject. Thing is, I love books because I grew up with them. I was, in someway, conditioned to love them. If they yelled and jumped on the table and started swinging brooms every time I brought one home, I would’ve felt differently. My parents loved them—they’d been raised the same way. But we already know that there are plenty of kids in today’s world who can’t read, or don’t get read to, or rarely come into contacts with books at all.  There are probably more people in this category than ever before (at least, since the invention of books). Are these kids as likely to grow up to be book lovers? And what if the first kind of “book” they ever come into contact with is actually some kind of eBook? The nostalgic element of emotional attachment shifts to a new technology, just like I know plenty of people who geek out about computers from the 1980s but couldn’t care less about typewriters. Or hurdygurdies! Funny thing is that it doesn’t seem much of a loss to us in the now. And the vast majority of the people who sang the gospel of the typewriter (and scorned its descendants) are now dead.

I don’t remember what I was talking about any more.

Anyway, go to WordBrooklyn.com. Or to the actual store. Tell ‘em I sent ya! I love books. If I had one wish, I’d ask that that they live on forever as actual objects and not just as a vestigial design element. Either that, or peace on Earth.


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The New Yorker in me can’t help but ask:
Question 1: Are there any of these in NYC?
Question 2: Square-footage?
Question 3: What’s the rent and are utilities included?
Corrugated Steel Fallout Shelter Protects Against Most Mild Rainstorms, Probably - Fallout shelter via Gizmodo posted on 11.06.09

The New Yorker in me can’t help but ask:

Question 1: Are there any of these in NYC?

Question 2: Square-footage?

Question 3: What’s the rent and are utilities included?

Corrugated Steel Fallout Shelter Protects Against Most Mild Rainstorms, Probably - Fallout shelter via Gizmodo


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The New York MTA kindly asks that you refrain from using your boom box on the C train. Thank you for your cooperation. posted on 10.08.09

The New York MTA kindly asks that you refrain from using your boom box on the C train. Thank you for your cooperation.


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posted on 09.11.09 For all you upstate New Yorkers…

Tomorrow (from 10 to 2) and Sunday (from 1 to 4) I’ll be hanging out with my dog Amos and signing books at HiHo Home Market and Antique Center in lovely Gardiner, NY. Lot’s of stuff going on in the area this weekend: There’s a Gardiner day festival going on, a big used book sale on Main Street, and the Taste of New Paltz event at the Ulster Fair Grounds nearby. There’s also the Survival of the Shawangunks, an eight-stage triathlon that ends up at the Mohonk Mountain House. Exciting stuff, eh? Heidi, HiHo’s owner and the curator of the many beautiful displays in the various rooms at the shop, has collected a variety of obsolete objects, some of which will be on display at the signing, and some of which will be for sale. I was just over there and saw some mock-camera photo albums and cute address books she is offering up—they’re emblazoned with rotary dials.

Really, what will they think of next?


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posted on 09.11.09
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

On Wednesday, I had a radio-rific morning. First I went over to First Avenue and Houston to the HQ of EastVillageRadio.com. I’ve walked by the little glassed-in storefront hundreds of times, so it was exciting to actually get to go in! And be a guest! I spent an hour chitchatting with Hella and Ruth of the Hella Fabulous show. If you missed it, you can listen here. Halfway through the show, Hella and Ruth and I started obsessing about one obsolete object that we could see from inside the studio: the payphone right outside. Hella decided to go out and use it to call the studio to see if it worked.  She even got a guy on the street to give her a quarter to use. Not a bad way to make a living…

When a guy then showed up and started using the phone next to her, we pounced. Turns out he was no average civilian: He was a payphone repair man! He answered some of my pressing payphone questions. Tune in to hear the answers.

After Hella Fabulous, I biked out to DUMBO where, after paying some ridiculously high fines at the Brooklyn Public Library, I met Amber of the Hey Brooklyn show. I’ve uploaded the audio clip. Both Hella and Amber were quite keen on talking about the fact that body hair is becoming obsolete, so there’s a little bit of overlap in these conversations… Amber was particularly interested in discussing my recent $10 bikini wax. It seems that getting a $10 bikini wax and writing about a $10 bikini are both easier for me than talking about a $10 bikini wax. But I tried.

Thanks to all three ladies for a very fun morning.


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Once, one or two mayoral administrations ago, New Yorkers were very literate people. So literate, in fact, that they were able to read four letter words, such as Walk. And Don’t. When just one of these words was displayed, in white, they walked. When two of these words were displayed, in red, they walked. (But they walked carefully).  

Then, one day, these signs were replaced by pictorial LED signs that could, in theory, be understood by illiterates. However, they required a degree of interpretation: The man isn’t actually moving, but is his stick-like body supposed to indicate that we should cross the street? Then there is a red hand. “Touch a tea kettle,” it seems to say, “and your palm will look like this.” It’s a point that we should all consider when there is a Mack truck going at 40 miles an hour down Broadway.

Do you want your children to be safe? Do you want them to be literate? Do you want them to look adorable? Do you want to buy this shirt? Yes, you do. I’m told that if you look both ways before crossing, and then enter the code “obsolete” on the site, you’ll get 20 percent off… 

Now if only they had it in a size that would fit a 354-month-old… posted on 08.26.09

Once, one or two mayoral administrations ago, New Yorkers were very literate people. So literate, in fact, that they were able to read four letter words, such as Walk. And Don’t. When just one of these words was displayed, in white, they walked. When two of these words were displayed, in red, they walked. (But they walked carefully).

Then, one day, these signs were replaced by pictorial LED signs that could, in theory, be understood by illiterates. However, they required a degree of interpretation: The man isn’t actually moving, but is his stick-like body supposed to indicate that we should cross the street? Then there is a red hand. “Touch a tea kettle,” it seems to say, “and your palm will look like this.” It’s a point that we should all consider when there is a Mack truck going at 40 miles an hour down Broadway.

Do you want your children to be safe? Do you want them to be literate? Do you want them to look adorable? Do you want to buy this shirt? Yes, you do. I’m told that if you look both ways before crossing, and then enter the code “obsolete” on the site, you’ll get 20 percent off…

Now if only they had it in a size that would fit a 354-month-old…


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