NEWSBEAST TUMBLRS

10:44 AM, November 1st, 2012

“Soon, with the constant waves crashing against the building, I could see the floor getting wet and the water rising,” Walentas said. “The only lights were in the carousel building. Then at 10:30 they started to flicker. And I said, ‘oh no.’”

Jane Walentas spent 30 years restoring a carousel, then watched as it was almost washed away by Hurricane Sandy. Almost

10:41 PM, October 30th, 2012

hragv:

Williamsburg bridge. Brooklyn on left, Manhattan on right, and the lights stop directly in the middle of the bridge. Manhattan is still dark. (at North 5th St Pier)

Reblogged from annie werner
5:44 PM, October 2nd, 2012

Mapping NYC’s Republicans

datanews:

As the Republican National Convention kicked off in August, we put up this map locating the concentrations of Republicans in NYC, a notoriously Democratic stronghold:

At the time, we promised to post the data we used to make the map. Then we got swamped!

But here’s the shapefile with the data embedded. As the map above says, it’s based on voter rolls and district lines as of April 2011, and filters for people who’ve voted since 2004. That’s because an “active” voter is generally considered someone who has voted  over the course of the last two presidential elections.

- By John Keefe

Reblogged from Data News
3:32 PM, September 20th, 2012

ryanhatesthis:

ronan-aodhan:

Four Years of Homicide in Brooklyn

With 2.5 million residents, Brooklyn is the most populous of New York City’s five boroughs. An independent city until 1898, Brooklyn remains famous for its history, its thriving ethnic communities, its architecture, its diversity, and its long-standing influence on America’s artistic and creative culture. Although developers seek to sanitize and gentrify parts of Brooklyn and the city government seeks to fudge crime statistics for the same purpose, Brooklyn remains for many people infamous for its crime.

The map portrays the locations of over six hundred homicides that have taken place since 2009 - 149 in 2009, 184 in 2010, 171 in 2011, and 113 so far in the year 2012. This is an incredible decrease since the years of decades past - in 1990 the stretch of north Brooklyn from Williamsburg to East New York had seven hundred homicides alone, far more than the entire city had in 2011. Due to widespread public misconception about historical decreases in crime, where crime occurs, who commits crime, who are the victims of crime, and how crime is recorded and studied, it remains a criminologist’s duty to portray the reality of crime in a locale accurately. Each marker represents one victim; multiple homicides are designated by a number.

  • Green markers indicate white victims - generally on this map, Italians, Jews, Russians, Irish, Albanians, and other European-descended persons
  • Blue markers indicate African-American victims
  • Orange markers indicate Latino victims - generally on this map, Dominicans, Puerto Ricans, Colombians, Cubans, Mexicans, et al
  • Red markers indicate Asian victims - generally on this map, Chinese, Indian, and Pakistani persons.
  • Purple markers indicate Middle-Eastern or African immigrant victims - such as Ethiopians, Arabs, Nigerians

Most obviously, the innermost neighborhoods of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brownsville, Bushwick, Crown Heights, and East New York remain the most troubled with homicide, and nearly every victim is a young black male. Radiating outward, even neighborhoods that have experienced gentrification like Williamsburg, downtown Brooklyn, and Cobble Hill suffer murder rates far higher than comparable neighborhoods in Manhattan. Flatbush Avenue marks a clear racial divide both in population and in victimology: in the south Brooklyn neighborhoods of Bensonhurst, Sheepshead Bay, and Gravesend there is a preponderance of both white victims and white killers, in a large part due to the influences of Italian and Russian organized crime. Despite the image of Brooklyn as wholly consumed with homicide, there are enclaves like Borough Park, Bay Ridge and Park Slope where homicide is quite unknown - all of them tending to be affluent neighborhoods with a history of being unwelcoming to outsiders of race and class. One difference between the modern day and the New York of the past is that as more wealth is concentrated in the hands of fewer people, the affluent can afford to segregate themselves in heavily policed communities, even when those communities exist through the displacement of original residents - they can avoid the effects of poverty and marginalization through the protection afforded them by state violence, without having to confront the harsh realities that many residents of New York face on a daily basis.

To see this visually is so frightening and insane and then breaking it down by race makes it even sadder and more upsetting.

Second of two Brooklyn posts

4:17 PM, September 13th, 2012

picturedept:

BEAUTIFUL BROOKLYN

A great photo essay from this week’s Newsweek International.

Photographers Gaia Light and Alessandro Cosmelli moved to Brooklyn from Italy in 2007, immersing themself in the American experience by traveling through the city by bus. In the summer of 2010, inspired by Robert Frank’s From the Bus, New York, the team embarked upon Brooklyn Buzz, a photographic series looking out from the windows of mass transit to embrace a gritty yet vibrant neighborhood, and a renewed expression of the American Dream.

To see more from the series visit NEWSWEEK.

The book, Brooklyn Buzz, is available for purchase through the publisher, Damiani.

Hey, that’s where we live! 

Reblogged from Picture Dept
3:40 PM, April 30th, 2012
inothernews:

Via DNAInfo.com, here’s more on the transplanted Brooklyn Nets of the NBA:

The Nets officially moved to New York City Monday, and began selling merchandise emblazoned with a new black and white logo designed by the Brooklyn rapper. The logo features a shield shape that includes “Nets” in thin lettering above a basketball with a “B” in it.
“The Brooklyn Nets logos are another step we’ve made to usher the organization into a new era,” Jay-Z said in a statement. “The boldness of the designs demonstrate the confidence we have in our new direction.”
… The team’s website also went black and white, and incorporated the iconic shape of the Brooklyn Bridge and the phrase “Hello Brooklyn,” which comes from the Beastie Boys’ “B-Boys Bouillabaisse” off the Paul’s Boutique album.


Not a huge fan, question mark? 

inothernews:

Via DNAInfo.com, here’s more on the transplanted Brooklyn Nets of the NBA:

The Nets officially moved to New York City Monday, and began selling merchandise emblazoned with a new black and white logo designed by the Brooklyn rapper. The logo features a shield shape that includes “Nets” in thin lettering above a basketball with a “B” in it.

“The Brooklyn Nets logos are another step we’ve made to usher the organization into a new era,” Jay-Z said in a statement. “The boldness of the designs demonstrate the confidence we have in our new direction.”

… The team’s website also went black and white, and incorporated the iconic shape of the Brooklyn Bridge and the phrase “Hello Brooklyn,” which comes from the Beastie Boys’ “B-Boys Bouillabaisse” off the Paul’s Boutique album.

Not a huge fan, question mark? 

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