coldbrain + nyc   14

BBC Four - Storyville, 2011-2012, Deadline: The New York Times
Documentary which goes inside the newsroom at one of the most venerable publishing institutions in the world, the New York Times. Director Andrew Rossi gained unprecedented access to America's pre-eminent news factory during one of its most tumultuous years, as the film follows its struggle to survive in a year where Wikileaks emerged as a household name and other newspapers folded. Led by people such as David Carr - a firebrand journalist and former crack addict - can the foot soldiers of this bastion of old media keep up with the torrent of information that is the world wide web?
publishing  newspapers  newyorktimes  nyc  davidcarr  economics  television  documentary 
november 2011 by coldbrain
Manhattan Trade School for Girls: Report cards from the 1920s and the stories they tell. (1) - By Paul Lukas - Slate Magazine
I discovered the cards in 1996 (more on that in a minute). I found them fascinating, but I didn't have a good sense of what to do with them, so for a long time I just kept them as curios and occasionally showed them to friends. Eventually, though, I decided to track down some of the students' families (including Marie's). Even after doing it numerous times, I still find it a bit surreal to call a stranger on the phone and hear myself saying, "Hi, you don't know me, but I have your mother's report card from 1929. Would you like to see it?"
1920s  manhattan  nyc  school  history 
september 2011 by coldbrain
‪New York: The Royal Tenenbaums house‬‏ - YouTube
The Royal Tenenbaums is set in New York, but not really. The city viewers see in the film certainly looks like New York, but the names have been changed and, in at least one case, an iconic landmark covered up. Consequently, the house that Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) bought in the winter of his 35th year is located on Archer Avenue in the film, not in Harlem on Convent Avenue at 144th Street, as it is in real life.
wesanderson  theroyaltenenbaums  nyc  film 
july 2011 by coldbrain
After the Gold Rush - Album Cover Location
In the book: Shakey: Neil Young's Biography ((c) 2002, Random House) author Jimmy McDonough writes that Bernstein, 18-years-old at the time, was "shocked" that Neil chose that photo for the cover. Bernstein described it as an "accidental shot" of Neil walking through Greenwich Village (during an outdoor photo session) and he even "solarized the print in order to hide its soft focus."
neilyoung  afterthegoldrush  albumart  nyc  greenwichvillage 
july 2011 by coldbrain
The Best Thing I Ever Done HQ on Vimeo
Hailed as the “godfather of Brooklyn pizza,” for forty five years Domenico DeMarco, Italian émigré and father of seven, has been slinging pizzas in his legendary corner shop, Di Fara. Employing five of his children, Dom works tirelessly from morning until night hand crafting each and every pizza himself while his kids take orders and manage the mob of devoted pizza aficionados. The Best This I Ever Done is a portrait of DeMarco and his beloved pizzeria, an exploration of his rise to fame and an ode to pizzaioli who take their time to 'make it right.'
inspiration  video  nyc  pizza  brooklyn  food 
october 2010 by coldbrain
8-Bit NYC
A map of NYC in true 8-bit Zelda style.
nyc  8bit  fun  cartography 
march 2010 by coldbrain
The Falling Man - Tom Junod - 9/11 Suicide Photograph - Esquire
"Do you remember this photograph? In the United States, people have taken pains to banish it from the record of September 11, 2001. The story behind it, though, and the search for the man pictured in it, are our most intimate connection to the horror of that day."
culture  terrorism  photography  9/11  usa  nyc 
january 2010 by coldbrain
The Hipster Grifter | The New York Observer
"It’s likely that when Kari Ferrell walked into the Vice magazine offices in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, last month to interview for an administrative assistant job, they thought they’d hit the jackpot. Ms. Ferrell—petite, 22 years old, of Korean heritage—had a huge tattoo of a phoenix across her chest and a cute pixie haircut. She was talkative, funny, charming, adorable. She had a tattoo on her back that read “I Love Beards.” She told them she’d been working for the New York office of the concert promotion company GoldenVoice, which puts on huge rock festivals like Coachella near Palm Springs, Calif., and that she’d moved to New York from Utah just a few months earlier. They hired her on the spot."
society  crime  fraud  hipster  grifter  nyc 
november 2009 by coldbrain
Rands In Repose: The Makers of Things
"In the late 1800s, the Brooklyn Bridge was built with no power tools, no heavy machinery, and only a basic, evolving understanding of how to make steel. It’s not these facts, but the stories surrounding the facts that inspire me when I take a good, long stare at a suspension bridge."
technology  creativity  history  life  bridges  nyc  engineering  innovation  construction  design  ideas  howtobuild 
november 2009 by coldbrain

Copy this bookmark:



description:


tags: