Vanishing New York

It’s become apparent to me only living in New York City for a short time, 4 years, that the true flavor of NYC is loosing out to pure capitalistic greed and money. The style, art, creativity and nightlife all seem to be stifled in lieu of those that have vs. those that create. This is apparent in the club scene where the underground is less prevalent, pushed to the outer borrows and unfortunately into more residential areas with less fan fair. It’s persistent in the art and fashion scene which is being cornered by “elite” artists and designers rather than good style and expression. It’s prevalent in the celebrity chef restaurants rather than the highlights of local ethnic fair.

As rent and housing prices continue to escalate here in the city, only those with disposable capital can afford to live here, which means more foreign buyers are coming in and those in high finance are only able to afford to buy, pushing to the outside the locals that have been here for years.

True are the hours and the options of this fine city, but I’ll continue to fight for the local store owners, the underground clubs and art galleys, for quality street art and fashion. One blog I recently found also is trying to highlight the New York that’s is lost. Check it:

Vanishing New York

Maxed Out on Netflix

With the biggest banks falling down like bowling pins from the giant ball of bad financial decisions, so are most Americans (Citibank, Bear Sterns etc.). I’m too not alone when I say I have more debt that I’d like to have. When you live in NY, there’s so much out there to tempt you to spend: events, parties, fashion, bars, plays, movies, shows, whores, and food to name a few. Recession headline loom as home prices fall, gas prices continue to rise as do basic necessities like milk and beer.

All these thoughts have been strummed up this week when I finally rigged up my entertainment system to a wireless computer viz S-video connections. I can now watch all streaming videos, movies and TV (full screen) on my TV in surround or stereo sound. This is sweet! No more need to go to any video store, pay for on-demand or even buy porn! Neflix on demand service has become a reality and the picture is great.

So my first movie on demand was a documentary (not many of the blockbusters are available on demand for fear from the movie industry that the consumer will steal/copy them, and they wouldn’t make money). I watched Maxed Out, a frightening look at the rising level of personal and national debt in the USA with a huge emphasis on the victims as well as the banking tactics that contribute to the mis-education and coercion of the consumer to continue deeper into that debt with misleading offers or revolving door credit.

Typical consumers feeding into the hugely powerful societal push for the best, newest, biggest shit find using that plastic for a new shirt or the latest unique line of sneakers or a new flat screen is enticing. I’ve good about controlling my will power by not participating, partly due to a conscious choice to reduce my debt, increase my capital (get liquid), and focus on financing some important personal goals like our wedding and more travel. It’s bit-my-tongue tough to do this in NY. I hold back from that last $12 whiskey (my body thanks me though in th morning), I only by brand names at century 21 or stick with smaller, lesser known fashion designers (1Aeon), or opt for a smaller tapas spot rather than the steakhouse for Tuesday dinner (if I’m not chefin it up at home).

Maxed Out had also a very striking quote that is important to consider when voting for all future federal, state and local political candidates:

“The government spends more [of the national budget fund] on interest payments [to the national debt], than on homeland security, education and healthcare combined.”

National Debt Clock in NY, IRS BuildingAs of today, the national debt is over 9 TRILLION dollars. The only president in the last 35 years to attempt to reduce the national debt was Clinton in 1999, when we had a budget surplus. At that time the debt was a little over 3.6 TRILLION dollars. Now I hear all the time from my banking institutions, creditors, family and industry professionals that having a high debt and more so growing that debt is a VERY bad thing… so I can’t imagine as smart as we assume our politicians to be, that we continue to grow this.

Either way, I’ll continue to eat well in a more cost friendly way, I’ll continue to live well in creative ways but I do hope our future leaders look to do the same for the American people: get creative in reducing our debt without sacrificing services like police, fire departments, security, education, healthcare, libraries, and parks. We’ve already seen the results of sacrificing public services, in Katrina, infrastructure failures (bridges), and limited funding of our national recreational parks.

Anyhoo… if you don’t have it, get Netflix, reduce your tv watching usage (it’s all crap anyway except for Meerkat Manor, Current TV or Fuel TV), check out this flick and save your money – you’ll be needing more of it soon.

Ghosts in the system

The other night I was short on cash and lost my ATM card so I decided to take the subway back rather than a cab. I get down in the track and there’s not a sole on the platform. I think sometimes just having the unruly bum or a few tourists around is much more comfortable than the silence pierced by the occasional water droplets or rat scurrying noises. Creepy: