Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Half day!
It's another beautiful day in the city today, much cooler than Monday and Tuesday (mid-60s), but it still smells and feels like spring.
On my list of things to do with my extra couple hours today:
-Find a rolling screen for my window since they don't believe in window screens (or garbage disposals...) here. I enjoy living by myself, bugs, so stay out.
-Go for a bit longer of a run and workout today (4 days in a row, it's a new me!).
-Maybe get a bit ambitious for dinner rather than relying on Trader Joe to prepare it for me? Doubtful...
-Continue working on preliminary design/content for my hockey website.
-Laundry/ironing/general cleaning.
All of my local teams are officially done for the NHL playoffs after the Rangers and Devils both lost last night (that was even more disappointing than the Sharks, Devs, thanks fro making me feel a little better). In case you want to put money on which teams will lose next round, I'm rooting for the Ducks, Blackhawks, Penguins, and Hurricanes.
I enjoyed the brief day the Giants were at .500. Hopefully Timmay!! gets them back to even tonight.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Callling All Skeletons
The 2008-2009 season will just get filed away in the same part of my brain as:
-Garpenlov's cross-bar in round 2 against the Leafs in '94;
-The sweep by the Red Wings in '95;
-The losses to the Stars and Avalanche in '98 and '99;
-The thrashing by the Stars in '00 after upsetting the Blues;
-The loss to the Blues in '01;
-Peter Forsberg's OT winner at the tank in game 6 in 2002 (after Selanne's missed empty netter);
-The debacle of a season that was 2003;
-The loss to Darryl Sutter's Flames in the conference finals of '04 when they dropped all 3 home games;
-The fact that there was no hockey in 2005 to follow up the best run in franchise history;
-Cheech getting absolutely robbed in game 3 by Roloson with a shot to go up 3-0 in the 2nd round of '06;
-Hannan's failed clear with the sharks having a chance to go up 3-1 against the Wings in the conference semi's of 2007;
...and of course...
-Dropping the first 3 games of the Stars' series in exceptionally emotionless fashion and getting eliminated in a 4 OT game in 2008.
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If I had to rank which ones linger the most:
1) 2004, one round away from the Conference finals against our old coach and goalie. The closest we ever got to the Cup.
2) Oilers in the second round of 2006. The Sharks were the 5 seed, but seeds 1-4 all lost in the
first round, so we had home ice for the rest of the conference playoffs. After a couple great wins in games 1 and 2, the Sharks battled to hang around in game 3 in Edmonton to force OT. Cheechoo received a pass from Thornton across the slot with half the net to shoot at, hesitated on the release, and Roloson got across to grab the puck out of the top corner. The Oilers proceeded to completely dominate the rest of the series en route to four straight wins. Game 3 save:
And then there's Drew Remenda's speech after game 6:
3) Detroit in 2007. This is the year the curse of the Sharks finally seemed legitimate. I remember sitting by myself at the home games. The Sharks stole the first game in Detroit and traded wins in games 2 and 3. Game 4 at the tank with a chance to go up 3-1 in the series. The Sharks led 2-1 with less than a minute remaining when a Robert Lang shot squirted through Nabokov to force OT. With about 3 minutes left in the first OT, Hannan made a brilliant pass to Mathieu Schneider (yes, Hannan was playing for the Sharks at the time), who teed up a slap-shot from the point past Nabokov. Game, momentum, series. Anyone wanna relive game 4?
4) The conference semi's loss to Colorado in 2002 (the true beginning of our perennial run as Cup favorites). I remember being in the arena for game 6 when Selanne missed the empty net wrap around in OT (what Sharks fan doesn't?) and then watching Forsberg finish us off. Colorado went back home for game 7 at stymied the Sharks 1-0.
5) Garpenlov's crossbar in '94. Our first taste of playoff success. I remember sitting on the couch of my old house during my First Communion party (was that really 15 years ago?!) watching Jamie Baker receive Osgood's pass and put it in the empty net. That play is why I'm as big a Sharks fan as I am now. I remember listening to overtime of Game 6 in my mom's minivan waiting to pick up my brother from baseball practice. The Sharks were up 3-2 in the series with a chance to close it out, and I still remember Dan Rusanowsky's call as Garpenlov had half the net open and rang one off the crossbar - *clank* I can still hear it today...
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In time, I'll think about the Anaheim series, not so much on purpose, and give it its place in history.
Pros: Never appeared to have control of this series. Emotional cushion was a layer thicker (see: above).
Cons: Team was built to fulfill the weaknesses of past playoff failures; Home ice throughout the playoffs; Pronger and Selanne - enough said; lost many hours of sleep this season being 3 hours later on the east coast watching games.
If you're still reading me spewing my heartbreak here, thanks for paying attention. In the style of my favorite hockey journalist, John Buccigross, here's the part where I force hockey and music collide. As I was at the Alkaline Trio concert on Sunday (the night before game 6), they played their song called "Calling All Skeletons" and my mind couldn't help but wander to how fitting it was for the Sharks and their fans:
Here it is again, yet it stings like the first time, seems it never ends...
...Where did you go, when the lights went black?
I've grown to love your disappearing act,
do one more pretty please.
...Now the time has come,
I just wish I could erase
all the damage done, all this pain, all this heartache...
...And to tell you the truth, I've lost my faith in you,
You've gotta stop sneaking up on me,
And these unspoken lies appear at the worst times...
I've grown to love your disappearing act, do one more pretty please.
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Shameless plug (Netflix it):
As the years go by and the chances slip away, I start to feel more and more for Red Sox fans pre-2000s. Here's one of my favorite movies, sums up the feelings of being let down by your sports team over and over. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/318193/Game-6/trailers
Monday, April 27, 2009
McCarren Park
Things I love:
-The sidewalks are crowded with people just wandering around on a Monday night.
-In my 7 block walk from the park, I passed 3 leginimate record stores, at least a half-dozen vintage clothing stores, as many bars with their half-length windows open full of people watching the ballgame, plenty of great restaurants, a few art galleries, and a gourmet cheese shop.
-The stretch of Bedford lined with street vendors selling used records and books (and even the lady who always will tell your fortune).
-And all the while I could look west and see the Manhattan skyline.
Anyway, time to heat up my TJ-prepared dinner, do a little studying for the last part (*fingers crossed*) of the CPA, and sit on my couch listening to The Rosebuds on vinyl like the hipster-wanna-be that I am...
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Planting Trees in the Blogx
(Excuse the terrible title/pun but I can only title so many of these "Another Update" "What I've Been Up To" or "My Weekend")
So first off, don't people say that the one thing the east coast has over the west coast is that there are 4 seasons instead of just winter and summer? Well, A) I'm completely fine with just winter and summer, and B) Someone explain to me how it went from 50 degrees to 90 degrees in a matter of 2 days? That sounds like winter-to-summer to me...
Anyway, I got tree-cruited by my old SCU neighbor, Tera, to plant trees with the NYC SCU alumni group in Bronx Park on Saturday. Since it takes an hour+ to get there, and we had to stand around for 2 hours (read: "volunteer organizations" should be redubbed "volunteer disorganized-ations") before planting trees at 11, I had to wake up before 7am to get going so there was no big night out on Friday. On the subway ride up, I definitely felt more and more out of place as the street numbers got higher and higher. The SCU group was fun, and it was great to feel like we were contributing to the beautification of the city - even though I felt like we were planting trees in what was already a forest (and we weren't exactly in a part of the city I'll be frequenting). The river was cute though and maybe I'll have to do the cayak trip someday. We were part of some city initiative called "Million Trees NYC", whose mission is to plant a million trees in the city. As of posting, the website says 174,590 trees have been planted, which means they clearly haven't updated since Saturday because I think I put them well past their goal (you're welcome, Bloomberg). Anyway, all in all it was a fun day and I enjoyed the sunshine and the group.
So to summarize the month:
-Parents visited for the weekend, saw some plays - "God of Carnage - 5 stars", "reasons to be pretty - 3 stars", and "Accent on Youth - 4 stars". I'd recommend all of them though. Ate some good food - "Peter Lugers (easily the best steak I've ever had)" "Tribeca Grill (Easter brunch)" and "Blue Fin (some Good Friday fish)".
-Baseball season started, so I've been to 2 Mets games so far (decided against the Yankees). Citi Field is pretty cool, though it's no Pac Bell/SBC/AT&T Park. They do have a Shake Shack in the stadium which is absolutely fantastic.
-Staying up far to late to watch - and then fume about - the Sharks' collapses (it just wouldn't be late April otherwise). I'm generally an optimistic person, but I can only take so many (i.e. 5 - Calgary, Edmonton, Detroit, Dallas, Anaheim) years of missed expectations before I become a pessimist.
-Started preliminary design work on my pipedream of starting a hockey statistics website. It'll probably never get off the ground, but I always need a pet project.
-Went to a show down the block (I love to brag about that since I spent 6 years driving an hour to San Francisco to see shows) tonight - Alkaline Trio and Saves the Day. Odd that it was my first time seeing Saves the Day considering how many pop-punk shows I went to in high school and college. It's really fun seeing bands that I listened to in high school who are still around, and Alkaline Trio's the first one in quite a while.
Another solid month in New York. I think I can officially say that I survived my first NYC winter - which apparently was an exceptionally cold one too! I'll definitely be here for a few more.
Monday, March 30, 2009
Still Alive!
Since the last time I updated you (all 3 of you that read this), I've managed to fit in some fun stuff between work and work and work. I went out to Newark to see the Sharks lose to the Devils. It's a nice arena, but Barry Melrose was right.
We went to see Billy Elliot on Valentine's Day which was great. I'd definitely recommend it to anyone coming. I always love watching kids who are 10 years younger than me and 100x more talented than I'll ever be...
A couple weeks ago, I went up to Buffalo with Colleen to visit some of her family. Checked off my 3 must-do's: saw a Sabres game, saw Niagra Falls, and ate at the birthplace of the Buffalo Wing (which I have been strangely obsessed with lately). And for the record, "Let's Go Buff-a-lo!" is and always will be the best chant in all of sports.
This past week was a good one. I finally got to see a concert at Carnegie Hall! Colleen and I sat in one of those cool little boxes for the Morrissey show there. The show wasn't quite as good as when I saw him at The Fillmore, but just being at Carnegie Hall was enough to make my night.
The next night was one of the better concerts I've seen in a long time - Gaslight Anthem at Webster Hall. These guys are one of the best new (at least new to me) bands to come around in a long, long time. Seriously, check them out, no excuses.
I've been trying to avoid going to the same restaurants here since there are hundreds, but I've found some favorites I've been frequenting which says a lot:
-Fornino is a pizza place a couple blocks away from my apartment. Definitely my favorite pizza here by a long shot: Lombardi - prosciutto, wild arugula, parmesean, mozzarella. Can't be beat!
-Bagelsmith is the bagel shop right next to Fornino. Cinnamon raisin bagel with blueberry cream cheese at least 3 times a week - those old Folger's commercials about the best part of waking up are a lie.
-Great Jones Cafe is a cool little... well, cafe... down at Great Jones and Bowery. An amazing cheeseburger, sweet potato fries, and far and away my favorite wings.
-DuMont Burger is the only place that rivals Great Jones in the burger department. It's a couple blocks from me, and an equally huge and delicious burger. The Mac n' Cheese is pretty incredible too.
That's about all I've got, hopefully I'll be back to the blog world (I refuse to use the word blogosphere) soon.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Happy New Year?
-Made 3 trips back to CA - one for Thanksgiving, one for a wedding, and one for Christmas/New Years. All fun, but I'd much rather take one of those "Get Out of Freezing Weather Free" card now...
-Actually I'm adapting to the cold surprisingly well. There have really only been a handful of those days that make me spontaneously swear on the sidewalk days.
-Learned that wind chill really isn't a myth.
-Confirmed that it'll be a while until the novelty of snow wears off and I complain about it like everyone else... Sure the sidewalks and gutters in Manhattan are nasty, but it's not so bad.
-Taken a liking to Thai food.
-Seen a modern dance performance (Alvin Ailey for anyone in the know, which I wasn't).
-Been to the ER more times than in the past 12 years of my life (1 to be exact).
-Played ice hockey with people much, much better than me.
-Gone to a few Rangers games.
-Started Yelp-ing about every amazing restaurant I go to. http://malmassy.yelp.com
-Discovered that there really is a such thing as an amazing bagel.
-Lots of work around the apartment, it's almost done (aside from a set of curtains and hanging up my posters). I put a few extra holes in the wall when I attempted to hang a 9 foot curtain rod by myself, but beyond that, everything's still in one piece!
-Discovered the joy of vinyl (Colleen got me a record player for Christmas, love it!).
-Seen some amazing concerts - Bon Iver in particular.
-Started actually working pretty hard.
-Started working out again. It's hard to make excuses to lay on the couch when the gym is just 3 flights of stairs down.
-Finally (just this week) got my first haircut since moving - yeah, 4 months.
-Learned that there's still a such thing as "traffic" in my morning commute despite not driving to work. What takes me 15 minutes on off-hours can take 40 minutes at rush-hour.
-Realized that the bar has been raised for a quality bar (ok, I swear that's the only crappy pun I'll make this time)... like free wood-fire pizza with every drink or ski-ball...
-Finished the CPA exam.(!)
-Got into the zone of actually cooking myself dinner every night after work, which has slowly turned into never cooking for myself.
-Feel like I pretty much know my way around all of Manhattan (ok, I guess just from SoHo on up, but I'm still pretty proud of myself.
That's about it for now. I'll end like I do everytime - by promising to write more - but all 5 of you who read this know how likely that is.
P.S.
A blog just wouldn't be a blog (especially a blog from Brooklyn) if I didn't try to push some music on you. Here's my top 10 albums from 2008:
1) Conor Oberst - Conor Oberst
2) Death Cab for Cutie - Narrow Stairs
3) Sigur Ros - Meo Suo...
4) Bon Iver - For Emma, Forever Ago
5) She & Him - Volume One
6) The Cure - 4:13 Dream
7) The Gaslight Anthem - '59 Sound <-- Check them out!
8) MGMT - Oracular Spectacular
9) The Rosebuds - Life Like
10) Kay Kay and his Weathered Underground
11) Fleet Foxes - self-titled
12) The Helio Sequence - Keep Your Eyes Ahead
13) Alkaline Trio - Agony & Irony
14) Nada Surf - Lucky
15) The Hold Steady - Stay Positive
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Not So Weekly Update #2
So I already completely failed at making this a weekly blog, but I doubt anyone was actually counting on that. I’m finally getting settled and coming home after work instead of running various errands (productive or not) around the city. My almost-completely-Ikea/Crate&Barrel-furnished apartment feels like a home now, just lacking a few things like side tables and barstools for my half-counter/half-kitchen-table.
I spent my first 2 weeks here subletting in the Lower East Side and then the next 10 days subletting in the East Village, now I’m out in Williamsburg (the first stop in Brooklyn from the 14th street subway line). I’m only 3 blocks from the subway which I had severely underrated until I realized how unpleasant it can be to walk to the station when it’s below-20 (at least it’s not 20-below, but is there really much of a difference?) in the morning. There are about 40 apartments in the building, but only 10 or so of them actually have people living in them which is half-nice/half-eerie. At one of my sublets and at my new place I had some issues with hot water which was miserable. The only good that came of it is that I actually know what I’m going to say I’m thankful for at the dinner table next Thursday.
I’ve been doing my best to do fun things around the city, but that has mostly entailed going to concerts which feels new since most of the venues are new to me here. I went to a half-reading/half-concert thing at Highline Ballroom in Chelsea where authors who write about the music industry read between musical acts. I saw Passion Pit at the Music Hall of Williamsburg (which is 4 blocks from where I live, but the good shows all sell out in presales that I’m apparently not savvy enough to get in on) as a part of the CMJ Festival. I saw Conor Oberst (my favorite album so far this year) at Terminal 5 which is a crazy converted nightclub with 3 balconies and a giant disco ball (not to be confused with JetBlue’s new Terminal 5 at JFK that’s advertised all over the city). I checked out Kaki King - who’s an amazingly talented guitarist - with The Mountain Goats at Webster Hall which had a little bit of a Fillmore vibe to it. I’ve been to two Rangers games, and I’m starting to come around to them (hopefully the Yankees aren’t next). I haven’t even had much time to enjoy the nightlife beyond that, amidst all the lugging suitcases and furniture around town.
The most exciting "New-Yorky" thing I've done so far was stand in Times Square for two hours on election night with tens-of-thousands of people watching the results come in on all the news channels. I'll never forget the cheers and hugs or singing and dancing in the streets that night. I'm pretty sure the city actually never did sleep that night...
The weather was unseasonably warm for the first month that I was here, but this week has been unseasonably cold - which leads me to believe that it’s never actually seasonable. The highs this week were in the high-30s, while the highs last week were in the low-60s - quite a swing. There’s a chance of snow tomorrow, so maybe I’ll see what everyone’s talking about when they say the city is miserable and disgusting in the snow.
Christmas is starting to get in full gear here with the decorations in Grand Central and some shop windows getting the X-mas treatment. There’s an outdoor ice rink that’s free in Bryant Park which is a block away from my office, but I haven’t gotten the chance to check it out yet.
Fortunately, one of my graduation presents was the NHL online package, so I can watch the Sharks online if I stay up for the 10:30pm start and 1am finish. It figures that they have an amazing start the season I move away.
That’s all I’ve got for now, hopefully it won’t be so long before my next update. I’ll be back in California quite a few times in the near future for Thanksgiving, Christmas, and a wedding, so it’d better be warm there!
Listening to: Conor Oberst & The Mystic Valley Band
Watching: Mad Men season 1