Sunday, April 24, 2022

Outtakes (11)

[Yes, that’s a photographer. And that’s a streetcar in the background. Outtake from the WPA’s New York City tax photographs, c. 1939–1941, available from 1940s NYC. Click for a much larger view.]

Uptown — it was Alexander’s. When this photograph was taken, there were just two Alexander’s department stores, both in the Bronx, at 2952 Third Avenue (the original store) and 2501 Grand Concourse (the intersection of the Concourse and Fordham Road). The Third Avenue Alexander’s sat in the middle of a block, right across from the El. This outtake must be showing the Grand Concourse store. I used to see it on my commute to Fordham College, at least until I discovered sneakier and faster routes than Fordham Road.

Here are two non-outtake tax photographs of 2501 Grand Concourse. There appears to have been a major addition and major renovations to the building. Perhaps that called for a return shoot. After all, these were tax photographs.

[From Fordham Road (I think) and from the Concourse. Click either image for a larger view.]

The 2952 address now houses Burlington, Five Below (games and toys), and Marshalls. The 2501 address now houses all sorts of stuff: an 1199SEIU Health Care Training and Child Care Center, a 24 Hour Fitness, a Capital One Bank, The Children’s Place, Concrete (women’s clothing), a Marshalls, a P.F. Richard & Son, a Social Security office, and a Verizon store. The department stores have become small malls.

New Yorkers and New Jerseyans of a certain age will recall the massive mural attached to the front of Alexander’s Paramus store. That location is now an IKEA store.

Related posts
Outtakes (1) : Outtakes (2) : Outtakes (3): Outakes (4) : Outtakes (5) : Outtakes (6) : Outtakes (7) : Outtakes (8) : Outtakes (9) : Outtakes (10) : More photographs from the NYC Municipal Archives

[I gave up on trying to figure out what’s going on with the rooftop sign. All I know is that all three photos depict the same address.]

Saturday, April 23, 2022

“Asperger”

A post earlier today mentioned that the maker of threats against Merriam-Webster and others is reported to have been diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome. “Asperger’s syndrome” is a fraught term, as an episode of the podcast The Allusionist explains: “Asperger.”

Threatening the dictionary

A California man has been charged for making threats to commit violence against various companies and individuals, including the ACLU, Amnesty International, Disney, Hasbro (maker of Potato Head toys), Land O’Lakes, USA Today, academics, politicians, school-board members, and a college president. Most startling, to me: the threatmaker made threats against Merriam-Webster over the M-W definitions of female and girl. The top lookup at M-W right now: female.

The affidavit in support of a criminal complaint describes the threatmaker as having been diagnosed with “Asperger’s syndrome, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and depression” and as taking “several psychiatric medications.” It doesn’t say anything though about where he might have gotten ideas about how to pick his targets.

*

September 16: “Man who threatened Merriam-Webster with anti-LGBTQ violence pleads guilty” (The Washington Post).

Today’s Saturday Stumper

The byline says Lester Ruff, but I found today’s Newsday  Saturday Stumper not especially easy. Where to start? 13-D, four letters, “Conversation starter.” And look: 16-A, three letters, “‘Special’ projects.” But then it was all the way down to 47-D, four letters, “Do laps, perhaps,” followed by hops, skips, and jumps from one region of the puzzle to another. But I got it.

Some clue-and-answer pairs of note:

3-D, four letters, “On-screen collection.” I think I understand the answer correctly.

11-A, three letters, “One’s luck.” Thank you, Thomas Hardy.

12-D, ten letters, “It’s used for pie preparation piercing.” We just talked about buying one, couldn’t find one in the store, and decided to stay with the implements already on hand.

17-A, five letters, “Pocket Fisherman purveyor.” Remembrance of things past.

26-A, fifteen letters, “What’s made for Jeopardy! contestants.” And Batman? Such an unusual answer.

27-A, seven letters, “What Groucho called himself, re his timidity.” Groan.

28-D, ten letters, “Food storage device.” My guess is that the term is disappearing along with the device so named.

37-D, eight letters, “Travel guide eponym.” I think of modernism.

40-D, seven letters, “Devalued, these days.” Yeah, but it’s made a comeback.

42-A, fifteen letters, “What’s made for Wheel contestants.” As with 26-A, an unusual answer. If there’s a theme that joins more than 26-A and 42-A, I’ve misseed it.

48-D, four letters, “Billionaire Barbadian, to her fans.” Wait — she’s a billionaire?!

My favorite clue in this puzzle: 14-A, five letters, “It fell from a horse long ago.”

No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.

[“Lester Ruff”: pen name of Stan Newman, the puzzle’s editor, used with easier Stumpers of his making.]

Friday, April 22, 2022

Potlatch, anyone?

Ian Frazier, writing in The New Yorker about cabin fever, recalls a time, forty years ago, when he lived in the rural isolation of northwest Montana:

A big excursion for me was to drive to the town of Kalispell, some twenty miles away. I was writing on a brand of paper called Potlatch. Such an interesting name for copy paper — Potlatch. I ran out of my first ream of it, and when I was buying more at an office-supply store in Kalispell I told the salesperson about potlatch — how it was a Native American word that meant a kind of party in which a chief or even just an ordinary person gave away stuff to other members of the tribe. “Giveaway” is a rough translation of the word into English, I told the salesperson. The potlatch was a system for showing status and spreading the wealth downward, I said. As I looked at the reaction on the salesperson’s face, it sank in that I was not in a normal frame of mind.
Jeez, that sounds like me on an ordinary day. It’s just the sharing of useful information. But I can hear my kids in the background — “Dad! Stop!”

Mingus centennial

Charles Mingus, bassist, pianist, composer, bandleader, was born on April 22, 1922.

I cringed last night hearing an NPR tribute characterize Mingus — straight off — as “the angry man of jazz.” I find it difficult to imagine NPR referring to anyone as the angry man of chamber music, dance, film, painting, &c. Sigh.

Mingus could be angry indeed, particularly about the indignities of the music business. And his music can be angry, yes — also ecstatic, romantic, sardonic, tender, tumultuous, urbane, and witty. It is, always, music of extraordinary imagination and beauty.

WKCR is playing Mingus round the clock through Saturday. To see Mingus in performance, these 1964 performances are a good place to start.

Related reading
All OCA Mingus posts (Pinboard)

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Our tube

Seen while flipping channels: Tom Fitzsimmons and George Petrie, as doctors, young and old, in the One Day at a Time episode “Julie’s Operation” (February 8, 1977). Familiar faces in new arrangements: one of the pleasures of television. See also these arrangements.

If the names don’t ring bells: Tom Fitzsimmons played “Ford,” Franklin Ford III, through all four seasons of The Paper Chase. George Petrie had countless film and television roles, but I know him from The Honeymooners, where he played a bankrobber, a janitor, a magazine editor, a psychiatrist, a fellow Raccoon, and busdriver Freddie Muller.

Lassie and Ted

TV intertextuality: Ted Knight appeared as Mr. Ventrilo, a traveling entertainer, in a 1959 episode of Lassie. Mr. Ventrilo’s puppet dog reappeared on the hand of a ventriloquizing Ted Baxter in a 1973 episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show.

But wait, there’s more. From the MTM episode “The Ted and Georgette Show” (January 22, 1977). Georgette has some bad news to tell:

Ted: “Nothing you could say to me could affect my performance out there.”

Georgette: “That’s not true. Remember the time Murray told you, just before the news, that Lassie was three different dogs? And you had to have ice pressed against the back of your neck before you could go out?”
In Mr. Ventrilo’s time, Lassie was indeed three dogs. From The New York Times:
There was the main Lassie, of course. But there was also the stand-in used in rehearsals, and a stunt double and the fighter dog (the dog who rough-housed with the main Lassie when the script called for a fight scene).
One more LassieMTM connection: Cloris Leachman, who played Phyllis Lindstrom, was the original Ruth Martin. Jon Provost, who played Timmy Martin: “Cloris did not feel particularly challenged by the role.”

Related reading
All OCA Lassie posts : MTM posts (Pinboard)

[An Oxford comma would make it clearer that the Times sentence is about four dogs, one of them not Lassie.]

From the Poetry Project

The Library of Congress has made available 420 recordings of poetry readings at the Poetry Project, St. Mark’s Church-in-the-Bowery. And that’s just what the Library calls “the first round.”

Learn how it happened: “Rare Book and Special Collections Division Digitizes 40 Years of Poetry Project Sound Recordings” (Poetry & Literature at the Library of Congress).

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Masks

From The New York Times: “Does My Mask Protect Me if Nobody Else Is Wearing One?” The short answer: Yes, but make it a KF94, KN95, or N95.

The link uses the Times “gift” option. You can share the link with anyone, whether or not they have a Times subscription, whether or not they’ve hit the monthly limit for free reading. And yes, the Times lowercases if in headlines.