USA | NYC
 


Day 320

Mid-November yellow

November 14th, 2012


Day 320

Felled by Lumberjack Sandy

November 14th, 2012



at Haffen Park in the Bronx

Day 320

Mechanical orange peeler

November 14th, 2012



In case you're wondering why someone would bother peeling off only the outer rind, here's an answer from Honduras:

Separating the rind from the pith allows you to suck the juice out of the orange without having to taste the rind.

These oranges are sold to "people on the go." Taxi drivers stick their arm out of their taxi and exchange money for an orange, people walking to and from work grab an orange for a quick refreshment. It's quick, easy, and delicious. After being peeled, they are split in half, and a bit of a salt and pepper mixture is added in between both halves. The orange is cut 95% through so both halves remain attached.

Day 318

Approaching Saint Paul’s

November 12th, 2012



About half a mile down the street, on the Mount Vernon side of the city line, stands Saint Paul's Church, an 18th-century structure that served as a Revolutionary War field hospital. Its bell, cast at the same London foundry as the Liberty Bell, was hidden during the war to keep it from being confiscated and melted down for military use — a story that calls to mind the World War II-era concealment of that statue of Columbus we saw back in Astoria.

Day 318

You don’t say!

November 12th, 2012



(Unrelated to the previous photo.)

Day 318

Gun Hill Fence

November 12th, 2012



Now with fences!

Day 318

Gotta protect your property

November 12th, 2012


Day 318

The Rag Factory

November 12th, 2012



If it's a Rag, we sell it!

Day 318

The Love Shack

November 12th, 2012



In New York, it's not uncommon to see kung fu movies, along with other forms of non-erotic entertainment, advertised on the outside of a sex shop. This seemingly odd practice is rooted in Mayor Giuliani's crusade to shut down the bulk of the city's adult establishments by pushing through a zoning law in 1995 that prohibited them from operating within 500 feet of residences, schools, places of worship, and each other.

During litigation that followed the passage of this law, the city's attorneys declared in federal court that they considered a business to be an "adult establishment" if more than 40% of its space or inventory was devoted to sexual entertainment. Once this definition had been stated on the record, many of the city's purveyors of pornography, rather than closing up shop or relocating, simply started stocking up on the sorts of things you see advertised above, reducing their overall percentage of so-called "adult materials" below the legal threshold.

The city decried this circumvention as "sham compliance" and passed additional legislation in 2001 to broaden the definition of "adult establishment". This new law has never been enforced, however; it's been tied up in the courts ever since its inception. These legal battles have pitted the city's Law Department against an indefatigable, and seemingly unlikely, opponent: a genteel East Side lawyer with the hilariously blue-blooded name of Herald Price Fahringer. Mr. Fahringer, despite his proclaimed personal distaste for the sex-entertainment industry, has been a steadfast defender of its First Amendment rights, even representing Hustler's Larry Flynt in the famous 1978 obscenity case during which Mr. Flynt was shot and paralyzed.

The city has ballyhooed its legal victories over the years, but Mr. Fahringer and his army of topless bars and adult video stores have prevailed most recently, convincing a State Supreme Court justice in August that the 2001 law is unconstitutional. The Law Department plans to appeal the decision, but, in the meantime, it will be business as usual at the city's emporia of booby mags and kung fu DVDs.

Day 318




Even after a few 50- and 60-degree days, there are still some remnants of the nor'easter that followed Hurricane Sandy.

Day 318

Looks kinda familiar…

November 12th, 2012


Day 318

Welcome to New York Portables

November 12th, 2012



This must be the showroom.

Day 318

Still Life with Pallets

November 12th, 2012


Day 318

Sittin’ in the woods

November 12th, 2012



Sippin' on malt liquor

Day 318

Hutchinson River

November 12th, 2012



This waterway is named for Anne Hutchinson, a "courageous exponent of civil liberty and religious toleration" who moved to the area in 1642 after being banished a few years earlier from the Massachusetts Bay Colony, a patriarchal Puritan society whose leaders considered her a "hell-spawned agent of destructive anarchy".