Shhhh! Blog

What's happening in Washington and Inwood

Mar 21
2010

Peeps on tour (part 2)

Posted by admin in Untagged 

Contributed by Elizabeth Lorris Ritter

Well, it was another full day of uptown tourism with my Peeps©!

We started our afternoon at the Trinity Cemetery, a former Revolutionary War battleground (there’s a marker for the Middle Redoubt, where occurred “some of the fiercest fighting of the battle of Washington Heights”) and now “home” to the remains of Ralph Ellison and Jerry Orbach, whose remains were hard to find among hundreds of similarly-faced above-ground crypts.

Mar 17
2010

Peeps on tour!

Posted by admin in Untagged 

Peeps at Park

Contributed by Elizabeth Lorris Ritter

I had an interesting afternoon touring uptown with my visiting peeps!

First we checked out the Harlem waterfront from the Sherman Creek street-end parks (this is the one at W. 203rd St.). We were going to do a little kayaking, but at the last minute they chickened out (“chicked out”?) b/c they were afraid of melting. But they admired the view of Fordham across the river.

Mar 09
2010

On economic development when it works

Posted by Mike Fitelson in Untagged 

Shhhh!

Erik Roberto, owner of Erik barbershop on W. 207th Street, thought he was paying too much rent. At the end of each day, which sometimes didn’t end until two or three in the morning, he said he only earned just enough to pay his bills.

Feb 23
2010

On pizza, politics and Peeps

Posted by Daniel P. Bader in Untagged 

peeps

Shhhh! Self-proclaimed pizza guru and blogger Slice Harvester has dedicated 16 pages of the very first print edition of his zine of the same name to Northern Manhattan’s pizzerias.

Feb 11
2010

On snow storms and cyber storms

Posted by Mike Fitelson in Untagged 

Shhhh! Feb. 10’s blizzard is a perfect snapshot of how newspapers are coping with the 21st-century realities of publishing on pulp and online.

Jan 26
2010

Shhhh! On tourism “In the Heights”

Posted by Mike Fitelson in Untagged 

lin and ortega

It’s a question that local community and business leaders have long asked each other: Why don’t our neighborhood institutions, businesses and restaurants enjoy the benefits of a more robust tourism industry?

Up here we’ve got world famous artwork at the Hispanic Society of America. An unparalleled collection of medieval art at the Cloisters. Two of the city’s oldest buildings in the Morris-Jumel Mansion and. The fabled rock where Manhattan Island is said to have been purchased. Malcolm X’s memorial. An Olympic lineup of activities on track, land and river. Enough stories of immigrants starting over in the New World that we should anchor our own Ellis Island off Tubby Hook. Dyckman Farmhouse

There’s no doubt that Northern Manhattan can weave countless narratives to entice legions of tourists in search of authentic cultural experiences.

Jan 12
2010

Shhhh! On Thai, Dominican-French, couch potatoes and other food for thought

Posted by Mike Fitelson in Untagged 

Stroll

Shhhh!

Perhaps it is the ongoing spat between the Food Network and Cablevision, or Bloomberg’s new plan to cut the salt content of what New Yorkers eat, or the collective craving of 200,000 Northern Manhattanites who suddenly find themselves on New Year’s resolution diets. Whatever the reason, most of the Shhhh! items that came over the wire last week were food related.

While 2009 saw the closing of several of the community’s anchor eateries, the local food industry is ramping up for a series of high profile openings by some of our most successful restaurateurs.

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