Cold Day in Chinatown gets Colder

I was walking down Elizabeth St one day near the Blood Church and as I walked past a traffic cop, I saw the usual counterfeit handbag singers with their lamented flyers pulling more tourists aside to show their wares. I supposed that the traffic cops don’t really care but Bloomberg does and he’s been cracking down. That same day, I had my shopping done and as I walked up another block, I saw a “scout” take a call and then broad cast a call. The next thing I know, 8 LV fanny pack wearing ladies scattered like mice when the lights come on.

It was another bust of the Chinatown counterfeit hawkers. As the crackdowns continue, the locals know a slow death of the gritty chinatown we all know is eminet. As the NY Press details, Canal St is in for a big change in the next 6 months: “Very soon, locals say, Canal Street will join Times Square, Astor Place, the Lower East Side, the Garment District and all the other former centers of down-and-dirty capitalist grit that have been safely gentrified.”

Picture was taken this week, on an evening in Chinatown when it was about 15 degrees F. This lady has her own plastic shield to protect her from the icy wind. This was my first take as she didn’t want to have her picture taken from the front. Ah well, I should have bought my mushrooms here first…
Read more here.
Day 29: Cold Day in Chinatown

Cash Rules Everything around Me. Dolla Dolla Bill Yall –
Wu Tang Vs. The Beatles – C.R.E.A.M.
[audio:http://fakepennycomics.com/blog/WVTB_C.R.E.A.M..mp3]

Stranger in a strange land

I know I’m not a true NYer in that I wasn’t born or raised here. In fact many “true” NYers may find my moving/existence here a detriment to their own old NY and a contributor to it’s demise into yuppie town USA. Being here only 4 years I do see the gentrification get worse in that favorite establishments of old new york close up in favor of Duane Reade’s, Bank ATMs, or trendy yogurt shops. Besides north Manhattan (harlem, washington heights etc., the last remaining ethnic neighborhood is Chinatown and it too is getting caught in the crosshairs of Bloomberg’s “revitalization” campaign.

Here’s a great story from The Onion reflecting on this phenom:

Strange, It’s Almost As If This Were Some Sort Of ‘China Town’

By Matthew Pinsky
February 27, 2008 | Issue 44•09

When I left the house this morning, little did I know what wonders I’d uncover. Hidden in the middle of fast and modern downtown New York was one of the strangest, most puzzling places I had ever laid eyes upon. From the weird Chinese-like writing on the storefronts to the odd Chinese-looking people on the streets—I know this may sound crazy, but it was almost as if I’d stepped into some kind of “Chinese Town.”

I don’t know any other way to describe it.

At first, disoriented and confused, I tried asking those around me where I was. Unfortunately, most of the men and women who passed by seemed to speak only a bizarre Asian dialect unknown to me, and those who could communicate were more interested in selling me exotic cologne out of a duffel bag. I looked around for any sign of familiarity: a Best Buy, a Barnes & Noble, even a Banana Republic. But sadly all I found in this foreign place, this—well, I suppose I shall call it a “Mandarin or Szechuan Gathering Area”—was one unfamiliar wholesaler after another.

It was like something straight out of the Orient. Specifically, a municipal district out of the Orient. One more or less 12 to 15 city blocks across. In a large American city.

Indeed, this place, this “Oriental Quarter” as I’ve christened it, was unlike any other I had visited before. The scent of fried dumplings and commercially available fireworks hung heavy in the air. Films available back home only in theaters were spread on sidewalk blankets by the thousands. And those T-shirts with the slogan “Shut Up, Bitch!” sold for nearly three dollars less.

It was truly unlike anything I had ever seen in my travels to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, Washington, D.C., or Las Vegas.

Unsure of whether I had mistakenly traveled halfway across the world or walked through some sort of mystic gate into another time and space, I found myself wandering without aim or purpose. For how long, I do not know, as the Rolex watch I had purchased during my ordeal stopped working almost immediately.

I do not know where this mysterious “Chinese Zone” came from, but there it was, in the middle of the city, like some bizarre “Asian Center for Commerce and Trade.” What it was called—this “Localized Community of Residents Originally from the Far East”—I haven’t the slightest idea, though no mere label seems capable of describing it.

Fatigued from so much walking and regretting the consumption of a rare local delicacy made of penguin and a wooden stick, I sat down on a nearby park bench to collect my bearings. It was then that I spotted amid the unfamiliar chaos what appeared to be another American. However, this man turned out to be a visitor from France who spoke a language even harder to understand than the one spoken by the Shanghai men.

What he was doing walking around this Chinese place, God only knows.

By the Lord’s good grace or luck’s kind hand, I somehow managed to locate the narrow exit portal of this godforsaken “Town of China” at the corner of Mott and Canal, and crossed back into my beloved homeland with great haste. I do not know if the wondrous foreign land I happened upon remains there still, though I would not be surprised if the entire “Densely Populated Asian Community That Follows the Customs of Its Home Country, But Is Nonetheless Ultimately Bound By the Laws of the State of New York” evaporated instantly as does a dream upon waking.

I write these words now so that one day my great grandchildren will read, with rapt fascination, this account of my travels through a place that cannot be described by a pithy, mutually agreed-upon nickname. But first, I must find my way out of this fresh set of wholly alien surroundings—a place I can only describe as a rather diminutive, yet strangely representative version of Italy.

Best Chinese Massage in NYC

Chinese massage in New York is the poor man’s spa. For around $25 a half-an-hour, you’re body will be handled vigorously by usually an older Chinese person without even a pretense of interest. Your body, relaxing into the slightly soiled table, will make crinkle sounds on the 1 ply paper and your sinuses will fill with fluid. Ah, relaxation. With so many places and so few regulatory committees, it’s always a chance you’ll come out severely disfigured.

* Update* From the now defunct Gridskipper: I’ve copied this post for Chinese massage parlors. Some may have gone away to call ahead etc.

Whole Body
Wu Lim Services: For a good full body rub down, try out Wu Lim Services on Grand Street. This massage parlor is located in a dimly lit basement with several beds next to each other. The masseurs will work out knots in your back and massage your neck and legs all on top of your clothes. If you prefer you can undress and wear a towel for the massage. $7 for 10 minutes; $11 for 16 minutes; $21 for 31 minutes; $32 for 46 minutes; $42 for 61 minutes.

Best Chinese Tui-Na: Not for the squeamish, Best Chinese Tui Na is an extremely intimate parlor on Lafayette with five beds in an open room. The women masseurs are stronger than you’d imagine so you can request a “medium” or “hard” massage. Like the other parlors, here you can either opt to take the massage with or without clothes, but either way you will be in a room with up to five other clients. $7 for ten minutes to $40 for an hour. (note this parlor may have moved now Bowery and called 88 Chinese Qi Gong Tui-Na on Bowery)

Back
Chinese Natural Therapy Center: Many East Village Streets have hole in the wall shops offering Chinese Massage and Reflexology. Though many of them can’t compare to the Chinatown massage parlors, Chinese Natural Therapy on East 9th Street is excellent. You only have to take off your shirt, as they only do backs. The women use baby oil for the massage and put hot towels on your back when they are done. $1 per minute.

Graceful Services: Fancier than the other picks, Graceful offers a whole slew of massage options from four hands massage (with two masseurs) to hot stone massage to stretching and reflexology. Graceful also has private rooms, a pleasant change from the open layout of most other places. $50 for 45 minutes, $60 for an hour.

Facial
Katy’s Face Spa: Katy’s Face Spa offers two facials, microdermabrasion, and a variety of peel treatments in addition to their massages. This place is a lot classier than the basement massage parlors, and you will always have a private room. $35 for a half hour.

Mezzanine Spa at SoHo Integrative Health: The Mezzanine features both Eastern and Western services, but their Wu Chinese Herbal Facial is one of their best choices. The rooms are all beautiful and Asian-influenced with bamboo and dark lighting.

Foot Massage and Reflexology
New York Day Spa: Though their reflexology treatment is a bit more expensive than the other massages, the spa claims it will a cure number of conditions including “sleep disorders, migraines, chronic back pain, arthritis, digestive and stress-related problems.” That’s quite a claim, but the art of reflexology or “zone method” massage has been helping people with these problems since 1913.

Chinese Qigong Tui-Na Center: The center offers a number of authentic Chinese services, but their foot reflexology is mind numbingly good. The massage here feels amazing but it is also supposed to stimulate all of your body’s organs and improve blood circulation.

Acupuncture
Zhang Clinic: Acupuncture has been known to heal a variety of ailments from allergies to back problems to arthritis. Dr. Zhang is a certified doctor from Shanghai and is trained in both Chinese and Western medicine. His clinic is one of the most reliable places in the city for some needlework.

China Acupuncture: The acupuncturists here are professionally trained and will be able to help you with stress relief and injury recovery. They also make office visits for more than five people. $50 per hour.