Sunday, September 11, 2011

The Viewing List 2

Another selection of slide shows and video’s that have caught our attention and interest while trawling across the far reaches of the Internet over the past week. Enjoy…

George Harrison Documentary Premieres at Telluride
Charley Rogulewski, writing for Rolling Stone magazine reports on the new Martin Scorsese documentary on George Harrison called George Harrison: Living In a Material World.

If it is anything like Scorsese’s brilliant 2005 doco, Bob Dylan: No Direction Home, the 210 minute (3 1/2 hour) two-part documentary will be pretty much everything a George Harrison fan could wish for.

The film, which was five-years-in-the-making, premiered over American Labor Day weekend at the Telluride Film Festival, and coincides with the 10-year anniversary of Harrison's death in 2001 from lung cancer. The documentary, which will begin airing on HBO starting October 5th, was made with the full support and cooperation of Harrison’s widow, Olivia, and son Dhani, and includes interviews with her, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, Tom Petty, Klaus Voormann, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle and Eric Clapton, among others.

Below you can see the official trailer for George Harrison: Living in the Material World.
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Read the full Rolling Stone article here…

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Highlights of Harlem (slide show)
Starting with the City College of New York, and ending with the Harlem Market, the Travel Channel has put together a 17 stop slide show of the some of the best landmarks that Harlem has to offer. In between you get the iconic Apollo Theater, the Hue-Man Bookstore (said to be the largest African-American bookstore in the country), a selection of restaurants and eating establishments (Make My Cake, Chill Berry, and Food for Life Supreme), and arts and cultural institutions (the Studio Museum in Harlem, Lenox Lounge, and the Maysles Cinema).

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The Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art
Recently I wrote about the Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art on Staten Island, New York. Although the video below was broadcast on the Time Warner Cable program On The Beat, and talks in part about a now concluded 60th anniversary exhibition, it provides a great introduction to the museum.

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Concert for George Concert for Bangladesh George Harrison - Dark Horse Years 1976-1992
Bob Dylan - No Direction Home Chronicles: Volume One Bob Dylan - Don't Look Back (1965 Tour Deluxe Edition)

World Trade Center in Figures

I love this infographic on the History website, about the new World Trade Center. It provides much essential information about the building and site. For example:
 

  • It is estimated that when it is completed, the complex will attract 3 million annual visitors

  • Once completed the WTC complex will consist of six office buildings

  • The memorial itself will include a plaza and museum

  • The site will also include a performing arts center

  • And it will include a new state-or-the-art transit hub

  • The World Trade Center in Figures:

  • 1 full office floor per week is built at peak construction

  • 2 Private developers

  • 16 acres (6.4 hectares) - the size of the WTC site

  • 19 Public agencies involved in construction

  • 33 designers, architects and consulting firms are involved in construction

  • 45 seconds - the time it takes to rise to the top of 1 WTC

  • 71 elevators (five high-speed lifts moving at 2,000 ft per minute)

  • 101 contractors and sub-contractors are involved in the construction

  • 104 floors

  • 400+ swamp white oak trees have been planted on the the new plaza

  • 408 foot antenna (a rotating beacon flashes the letter 'N' in morse code)

  • 1,362 feet (observation deck at the height of former WTC Tower 2)

  • 1,368 feet (glass enclosure at the height of former WTC Tower 1)

  • 1,776 feet (the height of 1 WTC represents the year of American independence)

  • 2,500+ workers are involved in construction on an average day

  • 2,983 names etched into the bronze papapets surrounding the pools

  • 7,500 tones - the total weight of all trees

  • 45,000+ tons of structural steel (six times as much as used in the Eiffel Tower)

  • 450,000 gallons of water - the amount of water that can be held in each pool

  • 2.6 million square feet of office space

  • 3.1 Billion - the cost of rebuilding


  • And one more thing
    If every member of the 1 WTC construction crew tried to travel down to the ground for breaks, it would take nearly half a day. To prevent delays, restroom facilities and even a sandwich shop are raised up to each floor by a hydraulic lift as work progresses.

    Click here to see the full image...  Thanks to History.Com for this infographic and information.
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    World Trade Center: Past, Present, Future 102 Minutes That Changed America World Trade Center - In Memoriam

    Saturday, September 10, 2011

    The Reading List #2

    Welcome to my weekly roundup of the some of the more interesting discoveries I’ve made as I wander the digital highways and byways of the Internet.

    (Left) Blog of The Week: Daytonian in Manhattan

    Tom Miller, the writer behind this site describes himself as "A transplanted Buckeye.” Tom moved to New York in 1979 and immediately fell in love with it.

    “I've never stopped being a tourist, [and] never stopped finding the charm and uniqueness of this city," he says.

    Tom has turned his love for New York City and his continuing search for its “…charm and uniqueness” into one of the best online collections of information about hundreds of New York’s unique buildings and architecture. What I particularly love about the site is that for the most part, instead of writing about the tallest and most famous of New York’s buildings, Tom has focussed on hundreds of smaller structures the guide books overlook. In fact, these are buildings that millions of New Yorkers and visitors walk past every day and never give a second thought to – assuming they gave a thought to them in the first place.

    While the Daytonian in Manhattan site design could do with a makeover, there is no question that the content is factual, well researched, and fascinating. There is enough content on this site to fill two guide books and I have suggested as much to Tom in an email. At the very least, a little reworking of the content would make an excellent eBook or two, and could even be rejigged into very handy iPhone and iPad applications.

    The site would be greatly enhanced if Tom could put together some walking tours utilising his blog posts. At the very least, better label of blog entries would make searching across the site for buildings in say, Greenwich Village much easier, since this seems a bit hit and miss at the moment.

    Despite these caveats, Daytonian in Manhattan is a site I return to often. Check it out for yourself…

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    Three years ago, a narrow pine door, edged in bright blue paint and covered with some 242 signatures, resurfaced in a storage space of the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. The door turned out to be from a popular Greenwich Village bookstore that once operated at 4 Christopher Street. The door was removed by the manager when the shop closed in 1925 and bought by the Ransom Center in 1960, after a dealer spotted an ad in the Saturday Review asking, “Want a door?”

    What is so special about this door? It seems that the bookstore was a popular hangout for some of the most famous writers, artists, poets, dancers and actors of the early 1900s. Furthermore, it became somewhat of a tradition for many of these creative figures to scratch their names into the door panels. Among the 242 signatures on the door are the names of Theodore Dreiser and John Dos Passos;  also there is Emily Strunsky, a childhood friend of George Gershwin. Emily is credited with giving Gershwin a copy of DuBose Heyward’s novel “Porgy,” which of course Gershwin later turned into Porgy and Bess.

    There are still many signatures on the door for which little or nothing is known about the signers – and this is where you, dear reader, come in. Thanks to the Internet, you may be able to identify one or more of the signatures or signers, and thereby help to fill in the blanks with regard to many of Greenwich Village’s most famous denizens.

    Jennifer Schuessler is an editor at the Book Review, and wrote this article for the New York Times. Visit the University of Texas web site and check out the signatures, bios, and play detective.

    Note: New York Times articles are eventually only available by subscription. As of this posting, the article referred to above can still be viewed online.
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    Photo: © Paul Taggart for The New York Times

    
    Just in case anyone reading this has a spare $2.25 million lying around, this home at 110 Longfellow Road in Staten Island's, Todt Hill is up for grabs. The home was used in the movie "The Godfather."

    Thanks to the New York Times for this tip…

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