Tag Archives: williamsburg

Reasons to move back to NYC — Pies ‘n’ Thighs

I’ve been saying that the one thing that would get me to move back to the East Coast would be my former local favorite: Pies ‘n’ Thighs. They closed down a few years back but they’re finally reopened as of today. I guess that means I better start packing my bags.

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Curly Oxide and the Hasidic Williamsburg

This American Life, from 2005, interviews Curley Oxide, a Hasidic Jew from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, about his two years of conversion into a mainstream lifestyle that led to his short-lived rise as a musician.

Chaim and Billy both lived in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, just blocks away from each other, in worlds that almost never collided. Chaim was a Hasidic Jew — he’d never heard pop music or watched MTV. Billy Campion, known as the rocker Vic Thrill, was the star of an underground band. Billy put Chaim, who took on the name Curly Oxide, into the band, and in just one year, he leapt from the 19th century into the 21st.

From what Billy implies, the outside world rarely comes in direct contact with the Hasidic community. If that’s the case, I find my past interactions with a Hasidic family to be more unique than I previously realized.

I remember one Saturday night, while riding to Mike Ley‘s house in Bed-Stuy, being stopped by a group of three Hasidic men on the side of the road. They waved me down while I was cycling down the street. I stopped abruptly when one man seemed to make eye contact with me. One moment I was riding through the dark empty streets in South Williamsburg, and the next moment I was walking down a residential neighborhood  with these three men as they were trying their best to explain that they needed my assistance. Their grandmother had somehow left the stove on during Shabbat, and now their entire home was suffocating with gas fumes. I walked into their home to see no less than ten to twelve people, all staring at me, the Chinese kid in a North Face jacket, jeans and some really dirty vans, that has suddenly appeared to help them turn off their gas stove. After shutting off the stove, I also helped them turn off the heater. I spoke with the grandmother, who was pretty much blind, and then the family offered me some cookies before I departed.

I wonder if that experience was something of a rare occurrence or, rather, somewhat common in an age of technology that’s hard to integrate into a strict religious lifestyle.

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The Billyburg Bust

williamsburg-map-850x870

NY Mag features the boom and bust of the Williamsburg condominium development fever that has left many sites stalled, or in foreclosure, in the wake of a declining economy.

There are already about 400 new apartments on the market in Williamsburg, and additional condos are completing construction every month. According to a study Maundrell released last month, 2,818 new apartments will have hit the market by the end of this year, with another 2,766 projected by the end of 2010.

It’s interesting to read this as a former Brooklyn-ite living in Williamsburg. The rent was absolute shit for the location and I could only assume it was because of the boom of development that inflated the price. Since moving back to San Francisco, however, I’ve heard a lot of folks discussing a move to New York for this year and the next. I wouldn’t be surprised if they all ended up in my old neighborhood.

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Williamsburg trustafarians

NY Times gets a hold of a few twenty-somethings struggling to get by in Williamsburg with the slumping economy.

It can be hard to see the signs of financial troubles in Williamsburg because residents are so loath to show that they had money in the first place. Robert Lanham, author of “The Hipster Handbook,” said in an interview that many newer residents tried to blend in with the area’s gritty history and dressed “half the time like they’re homeless people.”

Via @mlproject. (Sup Jack?)

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