Travel
Denver’s Famous Author, and Good Times at the Matchbook
We got a chance to hang around the city like citizens, not journalists, yesterday as we began our Sunday in Denver. We met up with my old friend Peter Heller, and his wife Kim, who have lived here for 15 years. The last time I saw Pete was my last […]
In Denver, the Question is…Where Did You Come From?
We met up with Rochelle Jones, a young publicist who works for Visit Denver and who grew up in Colorado. That’s a big deal here in this land of “where did you come from,” she told us. Most people she knows is from somewhere other than Colorado. It’s a city […]
Denver’s Already Amazing!
Some days are better than others. Today, March 23, 2017, has been a great one, and it’s not even half close to being over. I woke up at 4:30, after a surprisingly restful sleep, and the flight non-stop from Hartford was a cinch. The train is a very short walk […]
Departing for Denver Thursday, for a Ski Train and Good Times
I head out the door tomorrow at the crack of dawn for an exciting trip to Denver Colorado. I’ve been fascinated with Denver after my last visit there in 2012. Back then I was hosted by my old friend Peter Heller, and he joined his wife Kim and showed me […]
Jimmy Breslin Knew How to Take the Pulse of the City He Loved
With the passing of Jimmy Breslin, one of the finest newspaper writers to ever clack out a crackling lede on a typewriter, I recalled how fond I was in my earliest years of his writing. I was introduced to Breslin when I got my first job pumping gas in Blawenburg, […]
A Sick Day Forces Me to My Bed All Day Saturday
I don’t take that many sick days, usually about one or two every year. Today it’s a Saturday and I’ve resigned myself to just let myself be sick, though it makes me feel totally disconnected with the rest of the world. There is something about spending the whole day in bed […]
Junkyard Planet Tells the Story of Scrap Recycling Around the World
I’ve been enjoying reading a book I heard about after someone left a comment on Facebook. It’s Junkyard Planet: Travels in the Billion-Dollar Trash Trade, and was written by Adam Minter, who has a particularly relevant background for his topic. Minter grew up in a family of scrap dealers, and […]
Lunch Pals and Breakfast Buddies Fight Loneliness
I read an interesting and slightly depressing report today in the Boston Globe. It said that the number one cause of early death among middle-aged men was not cancer, nor heart disease…but loneliness. WOW. This correlates with another survey where thousands of men were interviewed over a period of 75 […]
CityBiking from Williamsburg to Downtown Brooklyn
I had a highlight of my recent stay in downtown Brooklyn, Citybiking. I met a friend up in Williamsburg, and after a most excellent lunch at Aurora, we walked around and checked out the funky shops, huge condo developments, and hand-painted billboards, up close. I walked a mile or so […]
This Is Not Your Father’s Porn
I read an article about the pornography industry that indicated that the profits are getting smaller and smaller as the business faces the same headwinds that affected the music business. The business is down…way, way down, from the lofty heights before the tubes. And the tubes are what is draining […]
Brooklyn Is My Next Stop
I am looking forward to a short little trip on Sunday, to the nation’s fifth largest city….Brooklyn, New York. I’ll be staying at the Marriott Brooklyn Bridge, between the Heights and Williamsburg, for two nights. I’ve enjoyed visiting the Park Slope neighborhood a few times, and every time I’m there […]