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Welcome to the new amNY.com! Our redesigned blog format features the latest New York City news, culture, entertainment and sports news.

January 6, 2009

Funky Flatbush store closes its doors

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Hekima Hapa, left, and Ngozi Odita dress a model for a fashion show that the boutique owners hosted in November at the Brooklyn Masonic Temple in Fort Greene. (Jefferson Siegel)

A huge thanks to Harriet's Alter Ego for re-energizing the Park Slope/Prospect Heights stretch of Flatbush Avenue with its offbeat fashions. But alas, it has become the latest victim of the "very sick" (President-elect Barack Obama's words) economy. Snap up the boutique's trends for as little as $20 or $30 before it closes its doors on Jan. 10.

-- Emily Ngo

Popeyes adopts to its Chinatown environs

Jefferson Siegel sends along this image of a Popeyes Chicken shop on Delancey Street near Essex Street. Notice the sign. Jefferson asks: What would Mao say?

January 5, 2009

Report: alcohol fuels multiple sex partners, STDs

drinkcover.jpg By Marlene Naanes and Emily Ngo

Michelangelo Franqui learned about the dangers of binge drinking last year when he woke up with his shins aching.

“My friends had to drag me up the stairs because I was passed out,” said Franqui, a 22-year-old from Corona, Queens, who has since sworn off heavy drinking.

And so Franqui wasn’t surprised at a city health department report released yesterday detailing just how dangerous binge drinking can be for New Yorkers — particularly when it comes to sex.

According to the report, heavy drinkers in the city tend to have more sex partners and are more likely to get sexually transmitted diseases. It’s a finding that common sense has long dictated: If you drink too much, you make poor decisions, including ones in bed.

“Everyone knows that moment when you wake up and regret what you’ve done,” Franqui said. “You just look at the person next to you in bed and regret it.”

According to the report, 15 percent of adult New Yorkers binge drink — defined as having five or more drinks in one sitting — at least once a month. In fact, a binge drinker is three times more likely than a nondrinker to have two to four sex partners in the past year, according to the health survey. Binge drinking men who have sex with other men are particularly at risk, doubling their likelihood of having five or more sex partners in the past year.

Continue reading "Report: alcohol fuels multiple sex partners, STDs" »

New York City sets sights on Bollywood

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Mumbai's Bollywood is a fast-growing industry and New York City hopes to capitalize on some of that success. (Getty)

By Rebecca Wolfson
Special to amNewYork

New York is on a blitz for Bollywood bucks, but faces plenty of competition from neighboring cities also looking to woo the booming Indian film market.

In October, Katherine Oliver, the commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting, was in Mumbai to meet with Bollywood leaders, a trip that coincided with the opening of a city tourism bureau there.

“We thought it would be good to learn more about this growing market and bring their projects to our city,” Oliver said. Unfortunately for Oliver, Philadelphia’s film office is also on a mission to attract Indian films, as are a number of cities worldwide.

Continue reading "New York City sets sights on Bollywood" »

Viral video: Rejected at center court

This guy has the courage to propose to his girlfriend on the court during a Houston Rockets game and then gets his heart broken in front of the crowd, mascot and basketball players.

January 4, 2009

Daydream yogurt shop brings new flavors to city

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Toppings at Daydream yogurt shop are one-of-a-kind concoctions. (Alison Joyce)

By Garett Sloane

Somewhere in Gwen Butler’s mind there is a cranberry doused in Grand Marnier. She thinks about passion-fruit caviar and how the juice-infused capsules would pop on the tongue.

Butler is obsessed with the next topping she might offer at her newly opened Daydream frozen yogurt parlor in the East Village.

“Sometimes you have to tell her when to stop,” says Gregori Pena, the chef at Daydream who is charged with executing Butler’s fantasies, which sometimes come to him via text message at 3:30 in the morning with missives like: “How about soaking the Craisins in a Grand Marnier syrup? To plump them.”

To stand out in the crowded fro-yo market, Butler developed the chef-driven yogurt concept that turns the simple craze into something more gourmet.

Continue reading "Daydream yogurt shop brings new flavors to city" »

Special election set for Feb. 24

By Jason Fink

Voters in Queens and Staten Island head back to the polls next month for special elections to fill three vacant city council seats.

An election will be held Feb. 24 for seats that were held by Joseph Addabbo (D-Howard Beach), Hiram Monserrate (D-East Elmhurst) and Michael McMahon (D-Staten Island).

Addabbo and Monserrate were elected to the state Senate while McMahon was elected to the House.

The Feb. 24 contest will be non-partisan. Regular primaries and general elections for four-year terms will be held in the fall.

The winners of next month’s election will serve until Dec. 31.

John Travolta, wife, mourn son's death

By Jason Fink

A “heartbroken” John Travolta and his wife, Kelly Preston, broke their silence today, two days after the sudden death of their teen-age son, Jett, expressing gratitude for an outpouring of support.

“Jett was the most wonderful son that two parents could ever ask for and lit up the lives of everyone he encountered,” the couple said in a statement. “We are heartbroken that our time with him was so brief. We will cherish the time we had with him for the rest of our lives.”

The Hollywood couple remained holed up in their townhouse at the Old Bahama Bay on Grand Bahama Island, where the 16-year-old was found dead Friday morning.

Officials have said that Jett apparently suffered a seizure, collapsed and hit his head on the bathtub.

Continue reading "John Travolta, wife, mourn son's death" »

Bloomberg, in Israel, shows support for Gaza strikes

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Mayor Michael Bloomberg stands next to remains of rockets, fired from the Gaza Strip, displayed at the police station in Sderot. AP photo by Ariel Schalit

By Jason Fink

Mayor Michael Bloomberg made a surprise visit to Israel today, where he expressed unequivocal support for the nation’s military action in Gaza and had a close call with an incoming rocket.

Traveling with Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-Bayside), Bloomberg met with top Israeli officials as well as New Yorkers living in the town of Ashkelon. While touring a military building in Sderot, near the Gaza border, the mayor’s party was rushed to a shelter when a missile warning sounded. No one in the mayor’s party was hurt as rockets landed about a mile away.

Bloomberg was forceful in his defense of Israel, which yesterday moved ground forces into Gaza after days of air assaults, which the government says were a response to rocket attacks by Hamas.

“Governments have a responsibility to protect their citizens,” Bloomberg told CNN. “In New York City we would do nothing less than use all of our resources to keep you safe.

Arab and Muslim organizations condemned the remarks, accusing Bloomberg of ignoring the more than 500 killed in Gaza since the Israeli strikes began nine days ago.

Continue reading "Bloomberg, in Israel, shows support for Gaza strikes " »

amNewYork letters to the editor

Rick Warren shouldn’t give invocation at inauguration
Barack Obama’s civil rights blunder stands unchallenged by the rule of law. With no apology or change of heart by Obama, he invited Pastor Rick Warren, whose ministry preaches against equality before the law for gays and others under the guise of religiosity to give the invocation at Obama’s inauguration. Besides being yet another glaring argument for the principle that religion should be separated from government, Obama’s stance that he may legitimize and empower religious bigots by inviting the apostle of anti-gay bigotry is a giant step backward for civil rights and egalitarianism.
— Michael Meyers, executive director, New York Civil Rights Coalition, Manhattan

Israel and world news coverage is lopsided
Re “War to the bitter end,” Dec. 30: A day after you devoted half a page on Gaza, while allocating no more than 30 words to the killing of dozens of women and children in Afghanistan and totally ignoring a similar killing in Iraq, you devote a third of a page to state that Israel is still attacking Gaza, including a photo of Palestinians observing an explosion, then you allocate 30 words in the briefs to report the massacre of 180 innocent people in the Congo who were seeking refuge in a church. Either you consider that only deaths caused by Israel are newsworthy or you want to focus solely on Israel. One can’t help but come to the conclusion that you have your own agenda.
— Jacques Hakim, Manhattan

MTA, ATM: Opposites in more ways than one
We all know what an “ATM” is. It is just “MTA” backward. The only difference is that an “ATM” gives you money and the “MTA” just continues to take it away tenfold.
— Nancy Miller,Glendale

New Yorkers sticking to their vices

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By Emily Ngo

At Twins Pub in midtown, there is no sign of the economic downturn. Bill “The Doctor” Leary is doling out beers and smiles just as he always has.

“People are out, being festive, drinking like always,” said Leary, a bartender at the pub.

Alcohol, alongside other vices like tobacco and gambling, is historically recession-resilient. As other sectors crumbled, their sales in New York have held steady, even increasing in some cases.

“I guess in hard times, people turn to that,” said Twins Pub patron Barry Sweeney, 50, who smokes and drinks despite the financial strain. “I could be saving $20 a day.”

More than 80 percent of American consumers spent the same amount or more on booze in 2008 compared to the previous year, according a Nielsen Company survey, which calls them “an affordable luxury.” Cheaper drinks are faring best. Value wine sales (those costing less than $9) increased 5.3 percent in the last quarter of 2008, Nielsen reported.

Some New York revelers are hardly opening their wallets at all. Traffic at MyOpenBar.com spiked to 100,000 visits in December, doubling since the previous year.

Continue reading "New Yorkers sticking to their vices" »

Viral video: Two minutes of motivation

If you need some motivation, this video compiles 40 of the most inspirational moments in cinematic history into a two-minute clip — from “Braveheart” to “Rocky.”

January 1, 2009

In a rough economy, to divorce or not to divorce?

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(Photo by Jefferson Siegel)

By Marlene Naanes

It’s not love — but rather money — that’s keeping Milton Sandoval and his wife married.

The tough economy is increasingly making it harder for many New Yorkers like Sandoval to afford a divorce, experts said. Couples are finding they cannot finance separate households with the loss of a job, reduced income or increased cost of living.

“You just don’t want to be divorced, and then you don’t have any more money,” said Sandoval, 30, a waiter who is living with his parents in the Bronx in order to save enough to divorce his wife of four years.

Sandoval said that he has been forced to take a second job in medical billing because the poor economy has drastically driven down his tips, typically the heart of a waiter’s income.

Couples “are stuck and they don’t like it,” said Karen Zager, a Manhattan psychologist who specializes in parenting and relationship issues. “They’re living together unhappily and fighting, which was driving them apart in the first place.”

“These are harsh measures for harsh times,” said Zager, who is counseling people on how to live amicably with their spouse until they can divorce.

Continue reading "In a rough economy, to divorce or not to divorce?" »

Baby girl is city's first of 2009

By Jason Fink

Grace Pak entered the world a mini-celebrity this morning, becoming New York City’s first baby of 2009 and scoring a hospital visit from Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Born nine minutes after midnight at New York Hospital of Queens, the six-pound-three-ounce Grace spent her first morning basking in the spotlight of TV cameras.

“She did it,” her father, Daniel Pak, told reporters. “I'm very happy.”

She is the first girl in her family, with three older brothers.

Continue reading "Baby girl is city's first of 2009" »

What New Yorkers were asking about in 2008

Ask.com shared with Urbanite dozens of top-searched 2008 queries in New York that address the most random, most embarrassing, most creepy, and most concerning aspects of city life. Here are 10 of the more interesting bits:

Is it illegal to spit on someone in NY?

Who is the Naked Cowboy?

How do I remove auto dealership decals?

Are M-80s illegal in NY?

How do I block my phone number?

Is it illegal to photocopy currency?

How do I induce labor naturally?

Is it illegal to street race in NY?

How can I stalk someone?

How do I pass a polygraph?

-- Aline Reynolds

Man shot three times walks into Queens hospital, cops say

By Jason Fink

A man in Queens walked into Elmhurst Hospital early this morning after being shot three times, police said.

The man, who was not identified, was still being treated nearly 12 hours after the shooting, which happened around 4 a.m., according to police, who provided no details about the incident.

A published report said the man was shot outside a bar in Corona and then walked nearly two miles to the hospital.

A police official said the man had been uncooperative and that police were waiting at the hospital today for a chance to interview him. Police said his condition deteriorated in the hours after the shooting.

No arrests have been made

Trash bash: New Year's party brings tons of garbage

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Sanitation workers clean up trash in Times Square this morning. AP photo

By The Associated Press

One million revelers packed into Times Square plus a ton of confetti and countless noisemakers equals a whole lot of garbage - about 40 tons, according to the city Department of Sanitation.

Cleanup crews hit the streets shortly after midnight today following the 2009 ball drop. Sanitation spokesman Keith Mellis said 163 people worked until 8 a.m. to sweep up the party trash, and a new shift started at 11 a.m. to tidy the area.

Because of the wind - nearly 25 mph gusts throughout the city - the department wasn't quite sure how much trash was strewn about, but Mellis expected a little more than last year's 40 tons. The Times Square Alliance, which puts on the event, said about 1 million people attended.

The biggest cleanup challenge is shooing away the massive crowd so crews can begin work, Sanitation Commissioner John J. Doherty said.

"It takes a while," he said. "Last night was a windy night. There's probably confetti as far as the East River."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg was out early today praising the department's work and expressing optimism about 2009 despite the economic gloom of 2008.

"There were an awful lot of good things that took place in 2008," he said. "Fewer people went to bed hungry, fewer people slept without a roof over their head, democracy continues to work in this country."