Bryan is looking for guest bloggers so naturally I signed up. My first post is here, about him, me — and microwaves. He's got a bunch of categories around food, cooking, restaurants, New York City, digital strategy, technology, shopping and more. Contact him at his blog if you're interested.
Showing posts with label Bryan Fuhr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bryan Fuhr. Show all posts
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Monday, December 27, 2010
2010: What I Saw, Read and Experienced
At the end of each year, I catalog books, films, museums, movies and more that I was lucky enough to experience. For me, it's a good way to keep track, take stock and also suggest to others. This year was especially a big travel year with jaunts to Istanbul, Israel, the West Coast and multiple trips to France, including Paris and Provence. Will probably update more as more things come to mind. Sorry if it formats like crap; trying to update the look of the blog at the same time.
Also: Be sure to see Bryan's great holiday message around food on his blog.
BOOKS
Fiction:
- Freedom, Jonathan Franzen
- This Is Where I Leave You, Jonathan Tropper (good family funny)
- Attention. Deficit. Disorder, Brad Listi (and my tnb publisher/editor)
- Super Sad True Love Story, Gary Shteyngart
- Then We Came To the End, Joshua Ferris (Finally read this — hilarious)
- Overexposed, Susan Shapiro (My writing prof)
- Imperial Bedrooms, Bret Easton Ellis
Nonfiction:
- The Mesh, Lisa Gansky
- How the States Got their Shapes, Marc Stein (interesting)
- Everything is Going to be Great, Rachel Shukert (funny essays)
- How Did You Get this Number?, Sloane Crosby (funny essays)
- A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, David Foster Wallace
- Everything Is Wrong with Me, Jason Mulgrew
FILMS
- Precious (January). Disturbingly good.
- An Education (January). Haunting.
- Client 9: Eliot Spitzer. Couldn't get through the second half but a good history.
- Exit Through the Gift Shop: Banksy. Is it true or not? Love the mystery.
- Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work. Good rental.
- The Kids Are All Right. Love strong women.
- Kick Ass. Surprisingly funny.
- The Social Network. This was surprisingly good.
- Greenberg. Funny, but not that funny
- Iron Man 2. Silly.
- Eat, Pray, Love (August). The food is as pretty as Julia.
- Fair Game (November). Good melodrama, acting. Love spies.
- The King's Speech (December). Stunning and funny.
- Tron (December). Fun to watch but weak plot. Galactica spoiled us for Sci-Fi.
- Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps (December). Just awful.
- Somewhere — (December) Stunning Sophia Coppola and Stephen Dorff.
ART & MEMORIALS
- Israel: Well, the whole country is a dig. Not sure if I'd consider Masada a museum, but it is a UNESCO site and a huge experience. Yad Vashem of course too. (Incidentally, one cannot find shaving cream in Safed.) Just go if you haven't. Some photos here.
- Lisbon: The Museum of Tile/Azulejo (Seriously)
- Istanbul: Hagga Sophia, Basilica Cistern (stunning), a 16thC Synagogue with permission in advance and too much time at the Four Seasons. A few photos here.
- The Modern Kitchen, MoMA, New York
- Le Louvre, Paris (November)
- Avignon: Palace of the Popes (July); the Museum of Corkscrews
- Raymond Depardon photography at Le Biblioteque Nationale Mitterand, Paris (November)
- Julia Child's Kitchen, Smithsonian, Washington, DC (October)
- Rally for National Sanity in Washington, DC. (October) Unique experience on The Mall. Thank you, Julia, for flying in for it.
- Carmen, at the MetOpera in HD (January)
- David Sedaris reading at the Apollo Theatre (November) Hilarious. He also collects jokes.
- Jonathan Franzen reading from Freedom at McNally Jackson
- Pop-Tech in Camden, Maine (October). Science meets social engineering. Read the TFT post.
- Agency.com Wake. The very very final end of a very long story.
- Delivering the keynote on creativity at Belgium Direct Marketing Association in Mechelen, Belgium. Read the TFT post.
- A week at The Cleveland Clinic in Ohio (Thanks, John)
- Sam's Bar Mitzvah (!)
- The Search for the World's Greatest Salesperson, including two live TV interviews in Australia and Philadelphia. Story behind the experience here.
- Shorning of the Sheep at Blue Hill at Stone Bars
- Creative Workshop at Chateau du Touffou.
- Gay Youth Pride Concert (December). Charming, but not Glee.
- Ben Folds performance at The Beacon, NYC (December). This surprisingly sucked.
- The lights of Dyker Heights with Eitan and Dina. (December)
FOOD EXPERIENCES (gets its own category)


- Lunch with Bryan Fuhr, Julia and Rachel at The French Laundry (October).
- Lunch under a tree at vineyard Michel Schlumberger
- Thanksgiving in Paris :: Le Retour VII. This year, the theme was Renaissance. Still not exactly sure why. Ann's photo collection here.
- Learning to eat Raclette with Bridget and Thomas
- Eating at Bisto Au Coin, Washington DC, forgetting we were there 10 years ago
PUBLISHED
- "How to Talk to My Dog", The Bark
- Embrace Branding, The Jewish Forward
- "Spare Me Your Shekels", "When Should We Get Naked?", "A Good Sport", in The Nervous Breakdown
- "Second Chances" on This I Believe about how my first boss Dennis Ferrone taught me to write ad copy.
- Tons of columns in The Faster Times, now bi-weekly.
Saturday, February 27, 2010
I in stanbul
Bryan Fuhr and I were in Istanbul. Jotting down experiences & places before I forget them:
26 Thursday — Bryan and I walked to Ortakoy Pier until we could check into our room. Nap. Cab to Taskim Square to walk along Isikai Cardessi, the main pedestrian shopping street. (more Flatbush than Champs Elysées) Western chain stores. Big crowds. Had rooftop drinks at 360, a modern bar/restaurant in the Masir Apartments followed by dinner at Boncak in the little streets nearby. Good local, inexpensive place, seafood. "Full of cheer" remembers BJF.
27 Friday — Started with breakfast at the hotel before taxi to hunt for the 15th Century Ahrida Synagogue in Balat, the Jewish quarter. We had secured permission to attend in advance and a had a 1030a appt. The taxi driver had no idea where it was or what it was and was about to drop us at a Greek Orthodox Church until we realized that the cross is probably not the right symbol on the door. Took another 20 min. before we saw the Hebrew letters. There was no answer at the gate to the synagogue complex but a man found us there and went to get the woman with the key. She arrived with four dogs, very pleasant but odd. It wasn't a tour but an self-serve appointment. She double-checked our identity and showed us in, pointing us to the sanctuary. "No photos," they both reminded us. The sanctuary was imacculately restored with benches and a raised podium, a Sephardic tradition. Bryan says it was like being in Noah's Arc, which is an apt description in Turkey, especially considering the Sephardic design can connote resembling the boats used to transport them there from Spain and North Africa. We stayed just a short while, and on the way out asked if we could make a donation. She realized I meant Tzedakah and went and got the Tzedakah box. Glad we set this up in advance since it was an unusual and meaningful detour.
Asked our next taxi driver to go to the Grand Bazaar. "Gate 1" we said, just like the concierge recommended. The bazaar was exciting and nicer than I expected. Only a few doors in, we found ourselves in a carpet store (SLRD predicted "You'll buy a rug even if you don't mean to") and, then, there we were in their larger gallery around the corner having Turkish coffee and traditional tea. Omar, Kurdish, from southeast Turkey introduced himself, and explained the tradition of making rugs. We learned a lot about what to look for in terms of stitching, color, the use of carpet (introduced to hurt the animals less whose back it was draped across). It was fun and not much pressure though we realized we would buy something which was fine. The stories and knowledge were worth it, anyway, plus his line about dowry and finding a wife: "First, look at the mother; then get the daughter." We decided on a rather unusual inexpensive rug for our foyer -- minimalist, using goat hair and black sheep ink. We left happy and with it in a smart, portable tote.
At some point, we realized we had been in the Arasta Bazaar, not the famous Grand Bazaar. We were embarrassed, of course, until we read in one of the books that this was the alternative bazaar for those overwhelmed by the Grand one. Now we felt like insiders. The afternoon was wandering the rest of Eminonu and the old city, finding the real Grand Bazaar (where I shot a Short Take - will be up soon; Youtube is blocked here), the Spice Market (less aromatic and impressive than we expected, though we did arrive during prayer and lunch hour when things got quiet) where I tasted my first non-allergic Turkish Delight candies.
28 Saturday — Started the morning with a 20-minute ferry ride from right next to our hotel to the Asian Side to Kadikoy. It was a commuter ferry so it was fun. Bryan wouldn't let me sing "Let the River Run" but we did get great city views and perspective about the city's relationship to water. Passing the Selimiey Barracks where Florence Nightengale lived and worked, we spent only a few minutes in Asia but went to the old Haydarpasa Railway Station where the Orient Express used to pick up service. There, we got a ferry back to Eminonu, where we climbed up to the Sultanahmet and visited the Haghia Sophia, Justinanian era structure which was later turned into a mosque. The church is stunning and beautiful and the book says for over a thousand years, it was the largest enclosed structure in the world. Afterwards, we crossed the street to the Yerebatan Cistern (underground cistern), which is a stunning marvel. You can wander among the underground water system and at the far end, see two unusual Medusa sculptures, one upside down and one on its side.
Spent a little more time wandering the Sultanahmet, sitting in the park, visiting the other Four Seasons Hotel (good bathroom spot) and then wandered back down the hill and crossed the Galata Bridge. I thought this famous crossing of Golden Horn would be more significant but it was kinda gross and just crowded with fisherman. We walked up the edge of the other side to the Istanbul Modern where we stopped for lunch in the nice bistro. Explored the museum a tiny bit but then cabbed back to the hotel for R&R before going out again in Beyoglu for dinner to Changa.
29 Sunday — Bryan and I started the day with an architectural tour of mosques via Context Tours (same amazing travel tour we used in Rome). Also on the tour was the wife of a colleague who's also a fan of this tour company. The first was 16th Century Sehzade Camii (Prince's Mosque), then the dramatic and enormous Suleymaniye Camii, built just 10 years later, then down the hill to the 17th Century Yeni Camii (New Mosque), which has the distinction of having been built by a woman (a Sultan's mom, if I remember correctly). Max, our guide, made special note of the increased use and different use of tile throughout the mosques.
Walked across the Galata Bridge, taking the funicular up the hill to shopping street Isiklal Cadessi again where we hunted for the cool little cafe, Kafe Aya (photo left by Bryan Fuhr), Max had recommended to us for lunch. It's on a little side alley right off Yenacarsi Cadessi, off the main drag of Isiklal Cadessi. "Take a right at the ugly monument at the intersection of Isiklal and Yenacarsi Cadessi and a quick right at the bookstore" were Max's directions.
Took a taxi back to the hotel and ended up in one of those situations everyone talks about but now we've experienced first hand. the driver took a very long route back (via the beltway) to our hotel, resulting in a fare about triple it should be. When we were far north of the Bosphorus Bridge, it was blatantly obvious to us. We called him on it but it was a challenge with the language barrier. We got back to the hotel and told the valet about it to help us negotiate out of it. We explained what happened and offered what the fare should be from the Taskim area and got him to take it.
Bryan's headed to the Hamam and oh, no, work starts now.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)