On The Bowery Whole Foods
StoriesThe always-readable 3 Quarks Daily dishes it out:
Dispatches: On The Bowery Whole Foods
First, a few words on the neighborhood. Inside the door, above
a landscape of crushed-ice, a long wooden board has been affixed to the
wall, the purpose of which quickly becomes clear. Fish, having
been selected from the tank in front, sail wriggling through the air,
hit the board, bounce, skitter along it, hit the far inside wall, and
fall to the ice below to be grabbed, alive, and filleted by the staff
in back. Below the plank that ensures the fishmongers’ accuracy,
the heads of large salmon, recently detached, continue to yawn and gawp
reflexively. In front sit wooden baskets of soft-shell
crabs, porgies, shrimp of all sizes, razor clams with their phallic,
protruding siphons, and numerous flatfish, all whole and waiting for
inspection by customers who wouldn’t think of buying a fish without
checking its gills for redness and pressing its scaly sides for taut
resilience. Squeezed between the wall and the crab and lobster
tanks sits a large black bucket, nearly the size of a garbage can, from
which the topmost of many layers of frogs stare up.
Such is a typical fish stall on Mott Street, in downtown
Manhattan. But many other food shops south of Houston Street and
east of Lafayette Street, of all cuisines and nationalities, share the
stall’s intensity, if not always the sheer directness of the
relationship between people and the animals they eat that obtains
there. In the window of Despana, a newish food boutique on Broome
that specializes in Spanish delicacies such as paprikas, olives,
cheeses, and oils, hangs a salt-cured pig’s hind leg, hoof and all,
unmistakably a severed mammalian limb, waiting to be sliced into
transparencies of Serrano ham. Inside Dom’s, a nearby Italian
grocer, chickens complete with head and feet (the better to be added to
to your stockpot) lie in cases beneath gamy homemade sausages that age
hanging from the ceiling. The Essex Market’s Dominican butchers
sell goat meat and oxtails, while pig stomachs and tripe are available
nearby. Not only the Sullivan Street bakery but the Balthazar
bakery, Ceci-Cela, the Falai bakery and several others turn out
impeccable breads.
Bangkok Grocery, the city’s best purveyor of galangal, shrimp
pastes, lime leaves, fish sauces, and other Thai ingredients, is a few
blocks below Canal on the San Francisco-esque, tilted Mosco
Street. Back up on Mott sits DiPalo’s, the legendary supplier of
the best Parmigiano-Reggiano and other Italian artisanal products in
this country. Catty corner from it one can buy the city’s best
Banh Mi, or Vietnamese sandwich, at Banh Mi Saigon Bakery. (This
opinion professionally corroborated by the always scintillating J. Slab
at The Porkchop Express.)
Vegetable sellers and more fishmongers from China’s Fujian Province
line Grand Street all the way to Hester, where a right turn brings you
to Il Labatorio del Gelato, New York’s most lauded ice cream makers,
and a little beyond that a wide-ranging chocolate shop where you can
find most of the finest single-bean productions of Michel Cluizel,
Valrhona, and other chocolate titans. Next door is Alejandro
Alcocer’s excellent food shop, Orange, and restaurant, Brown.
Over another block on Grand is Doughnut Plant, where Mark Singer makes
his grandfather’s recipes using organic ingredients. And back up
to Houston sits Katz’s, the pastrami champion of New York City.
Back west a few blocks on Houston is the new Bowery Whole
Foods. Is it just me who finds still finds appending the word
“Bowery” to such amenities as pricey supermarkets oxymoronic? Or
has the word Bowery already shed its downmarket connotations, or
rather, already accrued the upmarket status into which downmarket
connotations are now magically transformed? Whichever confusing
permutation it is, the branch itself comically interrupts perhaps the
densest, most diverse, and best collection of individual food shops in
the United States. Whole Foods, the American food economy’s
answer to Crate and Barrel, is no doubt a useful intervention in most
suburban contexts in which there are thirty enormous chain pharmacies
for every good butcher or fish shop. If you live on the exurban
outskirts of Columbus, Ohio, presumably Whole Foods appreciably
increases the diversity of available food.
But on Bowery and Houston, Whole Foods represents a much poorer form
of food diversity than what is already there. And, food shops are
not just food shops: they are a solidified form of the social
relationships that obtain between people in an particular place.
The unofficial little vegetable market that pops up on weekends on
Forsyth Street under the Manhattan Bridge represents a food culture of
inspecting produce and comparing adjacent vendors for the best price:
the entire cacophony of traditional market culture. It is the
product and instantiation of the middle and working-class residents of
Chinatown. But don’t think I am making an argument about
authenticity here. Whole Foods is in no way a less natural
emanation of a different class stratum: the professional and managerial
upper-middle people who flow into downtown in increasing numbers.
These people, and their needs for organic baby food, large amounts of
wildly expensive prepared lunchtime panini and salads, exist in
symbiosis with Whole Foods. As downtown New York tilts towards
this population, and its fauxhemian pretensions, there is a natural
influx of corporate franchises with bland, do-gooder brand identities
that serve the casual American elite from Seattle to Cambridge.
But the Bowery Whole Foods tells us something remarkable about its
shoppers: how ignorant they are of where they are and how alienated
they are from food. Perusing it, the thing that impresses you
most is the pervasive labeling, the enormous amounts of information
appended to everything. Everywhere are little identificatory
notes, signs overhead, brochures on what to do with their sausages (eat
them?), glossy photos of the smiling man who supposedly dredged up your
mussels or baited the hook upon which your (always already headless and
filleted) wild salmon met its end. This is food shopping for
people who have come to trust only that which is mediated by text,
addenda, explanations, certifications. It is a website come to
life, or a piece of life for those who prefer websites: each piece of
signage functions as the hyperlink that clicks through to a capsule
review.
I once served some sliced raw albacore tuna doused in soy to a
friend. I had bought the fish not far from Whole Foods from Alex,
the fisherman who had caught it and brought it the next day to the
Greenmarket. I’m lucky to live in a city where this is a humdrum
and everyday transaction. My friend, a film producer, remarked,
“This is great! But how did it get sterile?”
“Sterile?” I asked.
“Yeah. How does it get safe to eat?”
Food? Sterile? This is the alienation on which Whole
Foods depends. In the age of hysterical warning about the dangers
of food, it comes as a surprise to find that fish can be pulled out of
the water and eaten, raw. No anti-bacterial soap or release form
required.
There is something else alienating about Whole Foods: it posits a
universe in which we are all only consumers. The holism its name
gestures towards is not the holism of a community in which buyers and
sellers know each other. Instead, it’s purely about the foods
themselves: one’s interest in food is projected as only another form of
self-interest. Industrial organic food production has many of the
same faults as the conventional food industry; it doesn’t matter.
That organic food is roughly a third the price at socialist
institutions like the Fourth Street Food Coop, or the superb Park Slope
Food Coop, is also unimportant. These neoliberal shoppers prefer
the impersonal embrace of a corporate parent, disguised as some vague
moral goodness. Yet a principle like seasonality is sacrificed to
the lure of exotic, irradiated produce available year-round. Such
are the characteristics of the so-called “foodies.” Even the term
suggests a cute and infantile hobby. And it does seem infantile
to shop at Whole Foods while all around you sits the very food cultures
about which Whole Foods’ publicity materials fantasize.
Near Orchard Street, four blocks from Bowery and Houston Street,
sits Russ and Daughters, a small shop crammed with smoked salmon, cured
salmon, salmon roe, herring, chubs, sturgeon eggs, bagels, fruits and
candies, mustards, cream cheeses, etc. It is a legacy of a time
when the Lower East Side was the world’s single densest agglomeration
of people, and Jewish and Eastern European foodstuffs were for sale
from pushcarts up and down Orchard Street. The store started on
such a pushcart, but this is no neighborhood of Jewish immigrants
anymore. Instead, Russ and Daughters has survived by becoming the
best source for smoked fish and caviar in New York City, no mean
achievement. In a way, it and shops like it have produced the
very market they now serve: the teeming Lower East Side’s taste for
bagels and lox ended up colonizing the nation.
In a world in which we’ve been socialized to distrust the claims of
brands, we paradoxically require ever greater documentations of
authenticity, ever wordier mediations between ourselves and
things. We don’t trust ourselves to be able to divine with our
own eyes what an edible object is, whether it’s genetically modified,
whether it contains omega-3, whether it’s safe for our children.
But the Lower East Side of New York has lasted against this tendency,
thanks to the richness of its cultural inheritance. It’s also
due, frankly, to intrepidness of the people who have lived here, their
lack of a need for handholding, and their willingness to seek out the
new and the strange. There is something beautiful about the fact
that the greatest smoked salmon purveyor in the country operates on the
very corner from which the taste for the foodstuff emanated. It
is a rare and appropriate historical congruence, and to me it
represents what is fascinating and powerful about the food culture of
this quadrant of New York City. Whole Foods is not.
Bill Maher | March 7 2008 | Complete Show + New Rules
Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Iraq, Jeremy Scahill, Jobs, Joe Scarborough, John McCain, Mortgage Crisis, Ohio, Politics, Real Time, Rieckhoff, Subprime, terrorism, Texas, The Nation, Tullycast, Wall StreetFBI searches Hollywood home in NY blast probe but no link found
9/11, Berkeley, Bomb, Civil Liberties, N.Y.C., New York City, NYPD, Patriot Act, terrorism, Times Square
Article Launched: 03/07/2008 01:28:22 PM PST
LOS ANGELES—FBI agents scrambling for leads after the bombing of a military recruiting station in New York’s Times Square quickly had one in hand—literally.Members of Congress had been receiving letters in recent days that included a photograph of a man standing in Times Square with the words, “We Did It,” printed below the photo. It raised immediate suspicions after the early morning explosion, and the return address on the envelopes was the Hollywood home of lawyer David Karnes.
FBI agents pulled over the Harvard graduate Thursday after he left a workout at a gym, and after questioning him and searching the home investigators concluded he was not involved in the crime. It turned out that “We Did It” referred to the Democratic Party taking control of Congress in 2006.
Neighbors said plainclothes FBI agents sealed off the quiet, hillside neighborhood during the search, flashing badges and urging them to stay indoors.
The episode left Karnes’ shocked, but a day later he was trying to take it in stride, said his mother, Frances Karnes, 82, who lives in Orange County, Calif.
David Karnes did not respond to phone messages Friday, and no one answered the doorbell at his home.
Ironically, he wasn’t aware of the details of the New York bombing.
At first “he was in shock,” his mother said in a telephone interview. “I just spoke to him. He seems quite calm. He realizes it’s going to blow over.”
He’ll be OK. He wasn’t involved,” she said. “My son, he’s a very bright and intelligent man. He would never do anything like that.”
Nonetheless, the episode left the family rattled, since Karnes was as unlikely a bombing suspect as one could imagine.
Karnes, who is single, graduated from Harvard University in 1979. He went on the take a law degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and also earned a doctoral degree there in American history.
The lengthy anti-war letters were sent to as many as 100 members of Congress, officials said. Laura Eimiller, an FBI spokeswoman in Los Angeles, said “there is no evidence linking the letters, which contained no threat, to the bombing.”
Neighbors described Karnes as an outgoing man who liked to talk politics and wasn’t shy about expressing his liberal views. He was so generous, one said, he allowed a neighbor to leave a car in his driveway, no small gift in a city famously short on parking spaces.
Max Roth, a 25-year-old software engineer, used to live two houses away and was visiting the neighborhood Friday. Roth said Karnes was politically active and had tried to enlist him to write letters on political issues.
“He was very politically aware, politically active,” Roth said.
Frances Karnes said the she considered the saga “a big coincidence.”
“It’s just the most amazing thing I’ve ever heard,” she said.
Sen Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) revives campaign with Ohio, Texas wins
Barack Obama, Election 2008, Hillary Clinton, Ohio, Politics, Steve-O, Texas
MSNBC.com |
BREAKING NEWS
NBC News and MSNBC
updated 12:51 a.m. ET, Wed., March. 5, 2008
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton threw up a roadblock on Sen. Barack Obama’s path to the Democratic presidential nomination by winning the giant Ohio and Texas primaries, NBC News projected Wednesday morning.
“For everyone here in Ohio and across America who’s been counted out and refused to be knocked out, and for everyone who has stumbled but stood right back up, and for everyone who works hard and never gives up, this one is for you,” Clinton said at a raucous rally in Columbus on a night when she took both of the two major prizes on offer.
Clinton, D-N.Y., and Obama, D-Ill., split the smaller Rhode Island and Vermont primaries, according to NBC News .
Delegates to the Democratic National Convention are awarded proportionally, and those numbers will not be available until all returns are in. Going into Tuesday’s balloting, Obama led Clinton by 1,194-1,037, according to NBC News’ count.
Meanwhile, Sen. John McCain of Arizona wrapped up the Republican nomination after he won all four contests, NBC News projected. His only remaining serious rival, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, withdrew from the race Tuesday night.
Ohio results unclear amid confusion
In all, there were 370 Democratic delegates at stake Tuesday night, most of them in Ohio and Texas, where Clinton had banked on stemming Obama’s momentum.
Balloting was described as confusing across Ohio, where election workers reported a record turnout of voters asked to use new or unfamiliar methods to tabulate votes after the turmoil of the 2000 election.
Voting was also described as confusing in Texas, where nearly half of delegates were being chosen in evening caucuses after the polls closed. The Clinton campaign alleged that Obama supporters were confiscating precinct chairmen’s manuals at the caucuses, as well as locking out Clinton supporters.
The process did not discourage Texas Democrats, who, because the nomination remained open, had their first chance in many years to have an impact on the contest. It appeared that the turnout would set a state record, and some polling places were still open more than two hours after closing time to accommodate voters waiting in line.
“This is the first time that I can remember, maybe in the last 20 years, that voting in the Democratic primary, as I have, makes such a big difference in the national election,” said Robin Melvin, a voter in Austin.
Candidates hold bases in exit polls
Just a few weeks ago, Clinton had a strong lead in Ohio and Texas polls, and her campaign expected the states to stand as bulwarks against Obama’s string of victories that gained momentum on Super Tuesday.
Final polls going into Tuesday’s voting showed he had closed the margin significantly, but surveys of voters as they left their polling places in Ohio indicated that Clinton held onto her robust support from groups that have been the foundation of her candidacy, taking strong margins among white, blue-collar and older voters.
The Ohio exit polls showed that Obama did not do as well as he had in recent contests in eroding her support from those groups. Clinton also did a bit better among Ohio voters who chose their candidate in recent days, suggesting that she may have benefited from her aggressive attacks on what she called his lack of seasoning.
In Texas, the two candidates did best in parts of the state where they spent the most time campaigning — Clinton in predominantly Latino South Texas and Obama in major metropolitan areas and Austin, the capital and the state’s most liberal city. And they did well among their core constituencies.
Clinton ran especially strong among Latinos, whom she had counted on in a state where she and former President Bill Clinton have political ties dating to the early 1970s. Exit polls indicated that she was winning two-thirds of the Latino vote. Likewise, Obama won by strong margins among black voters, with a nearly 6-to-1 edge.
The difference may have been in the demographics: African-Americans accounted for 20 percent of the Democratic primary voters, but Latinos made up more than 30 percent.
“I think tonight’s going to be a huge night,” said Terry McAuliffe, Clinton’s campaign chairman.
“It feels very good,” he said in an interview on MSNBC. “I think we’re going to win both Texas and Ohio.”
But Obama sounded a confident note Tuesday night, telling cheering supporters in San Antonio that the race was still a toss-up.
“No matter what happens tonight, we have nearly the same delegate lead as we did this morning, and we are on our way to winning this nomination,” he said.
David Axelrod, a senior adviser to Obama, argued that the Ohio result actually demonstrated Obama’s strength, noting that pre-election polls showed him trailing Clinton by as many as 20 points just three weeks ago.
In an interview with NBC News, Axelrod predicted that the night would end up being a “wash,” saying nothing would be decided until primaries later in Wyoming, Mississippi and Pennsylvania.
Ohio, Texas critical for Clinton
Some of Clinton’s supporters — her husband, the former president, among them — agreed that she needed to outpoll Obama in both Texas and Ohio to sustain her candidacy.
“We’re going on, we’re going strong, and we’re going all the way,” she said.
But Obama was just as optimistic.
“We can stand up with confidence and clarity,” he said “We are on our way to winning this nomination.”
It takes 2,025 delegates to win the Democratic nomination, and slightly more than 600 remained to be picked in the 10 states that vote after Tuesday.
By Alex Johnson of msnbc.com with Andrea Mitchell, Shawna Thomas and Ron Allen of NBC News. NBC affiliates KPRC of Houston; KXAN of Austin, Texas; WCMH of Columbus, Ohio; and WKYC of Cleveland contributed to this report.
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02/29/2008 | Bill Maher | Complete+O V E R T I M E
Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Blogs, Broadcatching, Castro, Cuba, David Frum, Democrats, Dick Cheney, Douglas Feith, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, Farrakan, FISA, George Bush, Guantanamo, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Lobbyists, Nedra Pickler, Neocon, New York Times, Osama Bin Laden, Peter Hoekstra, PNAC, Politics, Richard Mellon Scaife, Rush Limbaugh, Saddam Hussein, Tullycast, Weekly StandardBill Maher | February 22, 2008 | Complete w/ New Rules and Overtime
9/11, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Blogs, Broadcatching, Castro, Cuba, David Frum, Democrats, Dick Cheney, Douglas Feith, Election 2008, Elliot Abrams, FISA, George Bush, Guantanamo, Hillary Clinton, John McCain, Lobbyists, Neocon, New York Times, Osama Bin Laden, PNAC, Politics, Richard Mellon Scaife, Rush Limbaugh, Saddam Hussein, Tullycast, Weekly Standard, YoutubePolice concerned about order to stop weapons screening at Obama rally
StoriesDALLAS
— Security details at Barack Obama’s rally Wednesday stopped screening
people for weapons at the front gates more than an hour before the
Democratic presidential candidate took the stage at Reunion Arena.
— Security details at Barack Obama’s rally Wednesday stopped screening
people for weapons at the front gates more than an hour before the
Democratic presidential candidate took the stage at Reunion Arena.
The
order to put down the metal detectors and stop checking purses and
laptop bags came as a surprise to several Dallas police officers who
said they believed it was a lapse in security.
Dallas Deputy
Police Chief T.W. Lawrence, head of the Police Department’s homeland
security and special operations divisions, said the order — apparently
made by the U.S. Secret Service — was meant to speed up the long lines
outside and fill the arena’s vacant seats before Obama came on.
“Sure,”
said Lawrence, when asked if he was concerned by the great number of
people who had gotten into the building without being checked. But, he
added, the turnout of more than 17,000 people seemed to be a “friendly
crowd.”
The Secret Service did not return a call from the Star-Telegram seeking comment.
Doors
opened to the public at 10 a.m., and for the first hour security
officers scanned each person who came in and checked their belongings
in a process that kept movement of the long lines at a crawl. Then,
about 11 a.m., an order came down to allow the people in without being
checked.
Several Dallas police officers said it worried them that
the arena was packed with people who got in without even a cursory
inspection.
They spoke on condition of anonymity because, they
said, the order was made by federal officials who were in charge of
security at the event.
“How can you not be concerned in this day and age,” said one policeman.
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