I knew I was in New York.
We had not yet left the airport, and I had already been yelled at.
We took a SuperShuttle
to Manhattan, and the driver dropped us off twelve blocks from our hotel, after
the man who sold us the tickets promised we’d be delivered right to the
door. A car we hailed drove us the remaining
twelve blocks, but charged us an exorbitant sum for doing so. Then, after checking into our hotel, we took
a cab to the Village for pizza. The cabdriver
got seriously lost along the way.
We had been in the city less than an hour, and already we had been lied to, egregiously
overcharged, and suffered the frustration of a cabdriver who did not know where
he was going.
And I loved every minute of it.
I am not being sarcastic here. (Computers should have a button you push to
insure readers that, even though you may sound
sarcastic, you actually mean what you are saying: “Control – NR”, for “No, really!”)
You need New York
to be like New York. Otherwise, why
bother going? You travel to the South,
“Do you have any pecan pie?”
“Nope.”
Then what you doing
there?
“Can we go to the Freedom Riders’ Museum?”
I mean, it’s interesting,
but it’s no pecan pie.
Visiting New York City without being insulted and monetarily
abused is like sampling an olive lacking that peculiarly oily-musty taste that
makes you not want to eat olives. You
might as well eat a grape.
We flew Virgin America
for the first time. Right from the
get-go, it was an entirely different vibe.
The check-in area sported huge arrangements of fresh-cut flowers, and
there was (like I know what I'm talking about) hip-hop music pulsing over the PA.
“Whoop! There it is!”
We weren’t going on a plane trip; we were going to a party
that plays old rap music! The ambience continued
onto the plane itself. Rather than
white, the in-cabin lighting was an iridescent purple. We weren’t just going to a party; we were
going to a party in a nightclub!
Thirty-five thousand feet in the air!
I felt so jazzed, when they asked if I was prepared to
handle the “Emergency Exit” duties that our seating location required, I
exuberantly replied, “I can’t wait!” I
would have said it anyway, because it’s silly.
But this time, I almost meant
it.
The one drawback was that the normally adjustable, overhead
reading lights were in a fixed position, requiring me to lean awkwardly to my
right, so as not to be reading in the dark.
But hey, who cares? You don’t go
to a party in a nightclub to read! This
was an entirely different experience.
One in which I’d be enjoying four hours and fifty-seven minutes of wishing I could read. (That one was
sarcastic.)
Before I jump into the specifics, I need to come clean about
my bittersweet reaction to the city. Of
course, my shameful ingratitude for the munificent bounties that have been
bestowed upon me in my extremely fortunate life will come shining through here,
but what are you gonna do?
Other than the time when I worked as a consultant on Lateline and, being a consultant, I felt
no responsibility whatsoever, whenever I tried to live in New York,
as I confessed in an earlier post, New York City has
unceremoniously bucked me off.
Subsequent visits to New York inevitably come with the
whispering reminder that I was never successful there. The very idea that I’m there strictly for
fun, carries the unspoken rebuke,
“…and not for work.”
“New York, New York” says,
“If I can make it
there, I can make it anywhere…”
I did pretty well in other places.
There? Not so much.
Incidentally, other than feeling depressed by it, I have
never understood that line.
“If I can make it
there, I can make it anywhere…”
What are they talking about?
New York City is the Mecca of finance, fashion, theater, art, journalism. entertainment,
publishing. If you made it there, why would you then choose to proceed to a lower rung?
It's like,
“I made it to the Yankees. Now it's, 'On to the Toledo
Mud Hens!'”
Moving on…
During our Thursday night to Monday morning visit – really
only three full days – I saw four plays and one movie. That’s a good month for me in Los Angeles, where you need to get onto a highway
to go anywhere, and inertia pins you to your chair at home, watching
ballgames.
Just walking in
New York is experiential delight. You’re
walking in Los Angeles – especially if you’re not walking a dog – and it’s
like, “What, is your car in the shop?”
Fifth Avenue in New York is Saks, and Bergdorf’s and Lord & Taylor. You walk down Lincoln Boulevard in Santa
Monica, and the big excitement is counting “Smog Check” operations. There is there of them in one block.
With your permission, we will stop here for “Intermission”, except
for a final observation. Over the years
I’ve been visiting, the tone in New York seems to have shifted, from acerbically
crude to airily whimsical. Where once
you saw posted signs saying,
“Spitting is a dirty, filthy habit. Don’t do it!”
there are now signs in the fenced-off grassy areas in
Central Park saying,
“Lawn closed for renovation.”
Okay, one more. This
happens because New York’s sidewalks are extremely crowded, and being from a
place where walking is generally a prescription meted out by cardiologists, I
really do not know the answer to this question.
What is the protocol for when a person in a wheelchair rolls
over your foot?
2 comments:
Unfortunately, much of New York has become a theme park for the wealthy. The last census showed that Manhattan (which is what we mean when we say New York) is now less ethnically diverse than it was in the last census. Those people got pushed to the outer boroughs or New Jersey.
It's still a great walking city, but there are no mom and pop stores anymore. Everything is about the newest restaurant, coffee place, fashion store. All the places look like they're filled with upwardly mobile, nicely dressed overachievers. Even in the East Village, it''s a vibrant restaurant scene. Much of the old Off-Off-Broadway scene is gone, because space is too expensive. Still, there is some theater, some new art being produced, but the street feeling of the New York of the 1970s - lively, slightly dangerous, off-beat types on every block, can be found in Brooklyn now.
"when they asked if I was prepared to handle the 'Emergency Exit' duties that our seating location required, I exuberantly replied, 'I can’t wait!'"
Pomerantz... top flight joke (pun actually not intended). I laughed out loud with great delight. In fact, so good was this joke, I felt it necessary to fully type "laughed out loud" for you.
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