Notes

Meatopia - Saturday, July 23

Amstel Light Meatopia, presented by Whole Foods Market is a celebration of meat, the “Woodstock of Edible Animals.” The event is on July 23, at Brooklyn Bridge Park, on a pier right out on the water. There will be over forty-five great chefs from all over the United States, half a dozen farmers, live music, and every form of meat cookery from whole roasted lambs and goats by the likes of Aaron Sanchez, Michael Psilakis, and Seamus Mullen, to Nate Appleman’s chorizo tostadas, to Michael White’s porchetta. Think Black Angus beef, Colorado lamb, Pekin ducks, Mangalitsa pigs, and so many other kinds of animals – all lovingly served up as everything from barbecue to steaks, and chops to sausages, satays, and stews. (Eddie Huang of Baohaus will by himself be cooking three different kinds of meat.) More important than the name of the breeds are the people who raise them – and they will be there too, talking about how they lived, what they ate.

What else? Expect live music, short lines (nearly twice the amount of chefs as last year, for fewer people). Whole Foods Market will be presenting the finals of its national butcher contest, onstage for all the meat-loving world to see. Cold Amstel Light will be flowing freely, on an all-you-can-drink basis for some ticket holders, and vended at fair cost (no gouging!) for others. There’s also an incredible VIP area for a select few, with food runners, three special meat dishes exclusively for top-tier ticket holders, and a one hour preview, before anyone else arrives, to have Amstel Light Meatopia, presented by Whole Foods Market to themselves.

The bottom line: from snout to tail, this is an unparalleled food experience, the most ambitious meat-centric culinary event in history. It’s in the open air, surrounded on three sides by water, at dusk in the most beautiful city in the world. Is there any where else you would want to be?

Date
Saturday, July 23, 2011

Time
5:30 PM – 9:30 PM (ET)

Where
Brooklyn Bridge Park
Pier 5
Brooklyn, NY 11201

TICKETS $72.50 - $130

20 Notes

Serious Eats All Star SandwichFest - Saturday, July 23

Join Serious Eats for the ultimate summer picnic as we celebrate our favorite sandwiches in New York City and induct them into the Serious Eats Hall of Fame. Is there any better way to spend a summer afternoon than Serious Eats-selected sandwiches, beer and dessert on Governors Island?

Sandwiches

Drinks

Our Maggie-Hoffman-selected beer fridge is full of craft brew favorites: Blue PointSmuttynoseFirestone WalkerRodenbachFoundersVictoryThe BrueryCaptain LawrenceSixpointElysianNebraska BrewingThomas Hooker, and more. We’ll also be pouring lots of delicious wine: MontinoreChanning DaughtersShawVOS Selections, and Bedell, and cider from Farnum HillFizzy LizzyRed Jacket Orchards and Counterculture Coffee complete our beverage line up.

Dessert

Serious Eats favorite Big Gay Ice Cream Truck and People’s Pops. Stay tuned for more menu developments!

We hope to see you on July 23rd - buy your ticket now before they are gone! To request a press pass, please  email presspass@seriouseats.com. If you’d like to join our team of wonderful volunteers, please email volunteer@seriouseats.com.

Saturday, July 23, 2011 from 12:00 PM - 4:00 

Governors Island

TICKETS $65.00

Notes

Gotham Girls Roller Derby Double-Header: Manhattan and Bronx vs. Boston - Saturday, July 23

Two Gotham Girls Roller Derby mini-bouts for the price of one!

The Mayhem test their mettle against the Wicked Pissahs and the Bronx Gridlock take on the Boston Blackouts, both from the Boston Derby Dames.  It’s a chance for the home fans to cheer for BOTH the Gotham teams against our New England rivals!

Note: Doors open at 6:30, first whistle is promptly at 8:30. One ticket buys admission to both bouts, each of which consist of two twenty-minute periods.

Saturday, July 23

8:30 pm

Hunter College Sportsplex B3 Gym (View Venue)
Lexington Ave. & 68th St.
New York, NY 10065
United States

TICKETS $19.00 - $35.00

2 Notes

‘The History of American Graffiti’ Book Signing with Special Guest TAKI 183 - Thursday, June 21

Forty years ago, an article in the July 21, 1971 issue of the New York Times ignited the graffiti movement in New York. With its profile on the then 17-year-old Demetrius, a Manhattan teenager who was known locally by his ubiquitous “tag” of TAKI 183, graffiti had officially arrived.
 
On the 40th anniversary of this article, July 21, 2011, TAKI 183 will arrive – again – at The Hole gallery in New York City http://theholenyc.com/ for a special event with Roger Gastman and Caleb Neelon, authors of a new book on the history of this colorful and influential art form – THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI, to which TAKI 183 wrote the foreword.
 
Taki, who has kept a very low media profile for decades, will be available for interview in conjunction with this gallery event. We hope you will consider a feature to celebrate the anniversary of the day that theNew York Times marked the arrival of a burgeoning art form. In an interview, Taki can share where he is now, and speak to the art form today, which is embraced by popular culture, but still controversial enough that the Brooklyn Museum recently backed out of hosting Art in the Streets, co-curated by HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI author Roger Gastman.
 
“It’s pretty cool that there’s people out there that say I’m a legend,” writes TAKI 183 in the foreword ofTHE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI. “It’s especially funny when that word gets around to my kids. Isn’t that what we all hope for in some way, to have something we’re known for? I’ll take it, until I get the Nobel Prize or something,” he said.
 
Gastman and Neelon, who, over the span of four years, interviewed more than five hundred key artists for the making of this definitive book, are respected authorities in the graffiti culture. Gastman, who co-curated the first major U.S. museum exhibition on the history of graffiti and street art at theLos Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, where the Art in the Streets is still presently on display, was a consulting producer on Banksy’s Oscar-nominated Exit Through the Gift Shop.The first to publish a comprehensive and accessible book that details the full history—from the 1800s to the present day—of American graffiti, the authors have insight into the world that TAKI 183 helped to create.
 
Jeffrey Deitch, the director of the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, said of their book: “ ‘Wild Style’ graffiti may be the most influential art movement since pop art. Roger Gastman and Caleb Neelon have written the definitive history of the origins and the heritage of the graffiti styles that emerged in Philadelphia, New York, and Los Angeles in the early 1970s and inspired young artists around the world.”
 
THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI, published by Harper Design in April 2011(hardcover; $40.00), is the definitive story behind the most explosive and influential art form of the last one hundred years. Unprecedented in scope, the book traces the evolution of the movement from its early freight train days to its big-city boom on the streets of New York City and Philadelphia to its modern-day influences.
 
“Graffiti is a much-maligned and misunderstood social movement, which I am proud to be a part of,” said actor David Arquette. “This book offers the definitive perspective on graffiti – finally, we have a historical textbook for the most colorful art form modern society has known.”
 
Featuring interviews with more than five hundred key artists and exclusive behind-the-scenes stories gleaned from over four-years’ worth of interviews, THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITIunveils the entire scope of American graffiti history, from forgotten street legends to the present-day stars: from TAKI 183 to IZ THE WIZ to SANE AND SMITH; from Barry “TWIST” McGee toREVOK; and historical figures, including for the first time, the story behind the WWII legend KILROY WAS HERE. Authors Roger Gastman and Caleb Neelon provide an insider’s perspective on the most popular trends and styles that have dominated the scene for the last fifty years, revealing the story behind the culture that spawned today’s street artists.

THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI is packed with over one thousand photographs—the majority of which have never before been seen—from more than two hundred photographers, most of whom also created the artwork. The authors have spent the better part of the last four years interviewing key figures in the graffiti world throughout America—from the bedrock cities of New York City,Philadelphia, and Los Angeles to more than twenty metropolitan hotspots, including Chicago, Boston, Miami, New Orleans, San Diego, and Seattle. Approximately 90 percent of the art in this book has never been published, and was sourced directly from the artists who lived the scene, giving the book a raw street vibe as authentic as the history it documents.

The foreword is by legendary graffiti artist, TAKI 183. Considered one of the founding fathers of the graffiti arts movement, TAKI 183has never before contributed writing to any book or media article on the subject. 2011 marks the fortieth anniversary of the 1971 New York Times article written on TAKI 183, “TAKI 183 Spawns Pen Pals,” that ignited the movement in New York City and cast TAKI 183 as the world’s first famous graffiti artist.
 
Despite many small niche titles catering to graffiti’s practitioners, there has never been a comprehensive and accessible book that details the full history—from the 1800s to the present day—of American graffiti.THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI is unlike anything ever published before on the subject. It is the category game-changer and the ultimate word on the medium as told from the artists who created it.


THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN GRAFFITI
 SIGNING EVENT

GRAFFITI LEGEND TAKI 183TO APPEAR AT THE HOLE 


Thursday, July 21, 2011
7-10pm

The Hole 
312 Bowery
New York, NY 10012

Notes

The Princess Bride - Friday, July 22

MY NAME IS INIGO MONTOYA, YOU KILL MY FATHER, PREPARE TO DIE. R.O.U.S’S - RODENTS OF UNUSUAL SIZE. My all time favorite film, “The Princess Bride” is screening  on Friday, July 22 on Pier 46 at 8:30pm.  Admission is FREE.

Notes

Free Ben & Jerry’s in Williamsburg - July 16

You’re invited to join the Ben & Jerry’s Scoop Truck on N. 6th Street in Williamsburg, July 16 from 11:30am to 2:30pm, for FREE ice cream, celebrity guest scoopers, live music, and a fun opportunity to give back. The founders of Flavorpill and local venue Lovin Cup have spent three years getting N. 6th its newly planted trees. While you dig into your free treats, help their project grow with flower planting, trash pick-up, and the unveiling of the first Make N. 6th Green community bench.  

Notes

Ice Cream Takedown - Sunday, July 17


20-30 scoops of Brooklyn Ice Cream for you to judge!  At the Bell House- July 17 at 4PM.  Want to know why it is July 17? Because Chief King Ronald Reagan decided in the 1980s that America needed it to be National Ice Cream Day.  And he even made July National Ice Cream Month

TICKETS HERE!

Sunday, July 17

 4pm

149 7th Street

Brooklyn, NY 11215 

1 Notes

Food Truck Rally in Prospect Park - Sunday, July 17

Head to Prospect Park’s Grand Army Plaza for the inaugural Food Truck Rally on Sunday, July 17. 

Participating Trucks*: 
Bistro Truck • Coolhaus • Cupcake Stop  •  Gorilla Cheese NYC  Joyride  •  Kelvin Natural Slush Co. • Kimchi Taco •  Mud Truck  •  The Red Hook Lobster Pound  •  Rickshaw Dumpling Truck  •  Souvlaki GR  •  Taïm Mobile  •  The Eddie’s Pizza Truck  •  The Treats Truck  •  Vanleeuwen Ice Cream • Wafels and Dinges

Sunday, July 17

11am - 5pm

Grand Army Plaza is formed by the intersection of Flatbush Avenue, Eastern Parkway, Prospect Park West and other streets. Click here to view this location on our Interactive Map.

By Public Transportation: (MTA map
• 2 or 3 Train to Grand Army Plaza station 
• Q Train to 7th Ave. Station (Flatbush Ave.) 
• B-41 or B-71 Bus along Flatbush Ave. to Grand Army Plaza 
• B-69 Bus along Prospect Park West 

1 Notes

Hudson River Park’s RiverRocks featuring tUnE-yArDs with Austra - TONIGHT

During her live shows, Merrill Garbus’ tUnE-yArDs thrills fans by creating drum, vocal and ukulele, yes ukulele, loops on the spot, layering sounds together into DIY masterpieces. Since the “lonely bedroom confessional” of Garbus’ solo debut, BirdBrains, some two years ago, tUnE-yArDs has grown fangs and claws, and a bass player. The result is the more precise, more concentrated, more vivid sound that is heard on the band’s sophomore album, whokill, which blends indie rock with hip-hop, reggae and afropop.

The Toronto-based trio Austra, comprised of vocalist/pianist Katie Stelmanis, drummer Maya Postepski and bassist Dorian Wolf, perform a dark blend of “big-beat-backed electro-pop” “suitable for both ritual incantations” and after-hours clubs.

TONIGHT

7PM - doors open 6pm

FREE

Pier 54
West 13th Street
(at West Side Highway on Hudson River)
New York, NY  10004

4 Notes

‘The Warriors’ Screening in Tompkins Square Park - TONIGHT

A battle of gigantic proportions is looming in the neon underground of New York City. The armies of the night number 100,000; they outnumber the police 5 to 1; and tonight they’re after the Warriors - a street gang blamed unfairly for a rival gang leader’s death. This contemporary action-adventure story takes place at night, underground, in the sub-culture of gang warfare that rages from Coney Island to Manhattan to the Bronx. Members of the Warriors fight for their lives, seek to survive in the urban jungle and learn the meaning of loyalty. This intense and stylized film is a dazzling achievement for cinematographer Andrew Laszlo.

TONIGHT

Tompkins Square Park

Gates Open 6pm

FREE

Likes