Friday, March 11, 2016

Ultimate Guide to One Night in Denver


From best hotel to coffice, here’s where to go during your 24 hours in the Mile High City

As a native of course I’m biased, but from a purely objective standpoint, it’s true that Denver has (unlike me) really grown up in the last few years. With the Light Rail, breweries springing up everywhere and too many amazing breakfast spots to mention, spring is the perfect time to live it up for 24 hours in Denver. Here are the hot spots:

Hotel:

Operated by Denver-based Stout Street Hospitality Group, this small boutique brand can also be found in Winter Park, Dallas, Houston, Omaha and St. Louis, but its 17th Street location underwent a multi-million-dollar renovation last year. The building first opened in 1911 as First National Bank, considered (at 13 stories) Denver’s first skyscraper and essentially spearheading what we know today as Denver’s financial district. A half-block from 16th Street Mall and within a 10-minute walk of Larimer Square, it’s truly situated smack in the heart of downtown (but unlike NYC, you can pedal a bike amid rush hour here without your eardrums blown out by honking horns or feeling like you’re gambling with your life). Rooms are crisp and classy, adorned with black and white prints of the bank building in the early 1900s and equipped with spacious countertops, gas fireplaces and a separate bedroom that easily harkens the imagination back to what must have once been executive financial suites. There is a beautiful fountain on the lower level surrounded by cozy nooks for private meetings or romantic drinks. Possibly the most popping hotel pub in the area, Harry’s Bar is throbbing between 5 and 10 p.m., offering a full range of Colorado-only craft beers on tap.

Beer bar:

Meet warehouse chic with a college zest (minus the D-bag frat vibe) inside of what is arguably Denver’s most iconic landmark. Although the Tivoli Building now houses the Auraria Campus student center, it dates back to 1864 when Moritz Sigi began brewing a Helles lager/ale in the popular vein of his native Germany. The Good family took over the brewery and it became one of the largest in the country before prohibition. Then it closed in 1969 and reopened for a short stint as a shopping center. The brewery was resurrected in 2012 and in addition to Sigi’s classic brew, boasts handles of delicious hoppy ales, lagers, stouts and porters and serves tasty burgers, sandwiches and what might be the best brussel sprouts in Colorado.

Dinner and a drag show:

Very little has changed since this East 17th Ave. haunt changed its name from Hamburger Mary’s, besides maybe the awkward presence of several straight, older suburbanites attending the Friday night drag show. Still gay-friendly and slinging a tasty martini not to mention a large menu of affordable and tasty pub fare, M Uptown is a place of good energy all week with karaoke, Dolls with Balls Bingo and a huge patio for warm evening cocktails. It’s crown jewel is definitely the Friday night Cabaret show, when Joe Schmo, a heavy, balding, middle-aged dude stomps into the back room and emerges as a red-headed babe in stilettos, hosting a lineup of Dreamgirls trying their lip-synching skills to Taylor Swift and BeyoncĂ© while giving the front row guests from Littleton a lot of special attention.

Breakfast:

Not everybody is aware of the fact that Denver has pretty much every city beat when it comes to bomber breakfast joints. Although it now has locations all over the Front Range (including Fort Collins and Boulder), four in Arizona, two in San Diego and four to hit Texas, it’s flagship Denver Ballpark neighborhood spot is the one you want to hit for your 24 hours in Denver. Although the colony of squatters outside of the neighboring church is disturbing, there is free, high octane coffee to sip while wandering around waiting for a table. It is the home of the creative pancake flight, definitely the way to go since it’s impossible to narrow down to one choice (although the sweet potato cakes are still the best). The homemade jalapeno-infused vodka in the Spicy Bloody is the perfect eye opener and the omelets are like colorful mini architecture models. Even the toast and jam are delicious.

Coffice:

Do you have some work to bust out and sore need for a caffeine buzz? A Brooklyn blogger coined this term for cafes frequented by MacBook-toting Wi-Fi/coffee seekers. Situated in the vibrant Sante Fe Arts District, The Molecule Effect features a nice assortment of two tops, armchairs and even a couch. There is a rotating display of artwork on the walls and of course a strapping cup of steaming joe made from locally roasted beans, in addition to wine, beer, tall glasses of Kombucha and snacks.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Moving on


The time has come, people.

(Wait. Before reading, cue up this appropriate soundtrack by Brooklyn band Pearl and the Beard)

The calendar is about to land on that day that at one point seemed so far away … when I leave NYC.

As of next week, I will once again be a full-time resident of CO, residing somewhere (TBD) in or near Denver, preferably within quick and easy reach of the mountains.

Although I grew up in the Mile High City, it has changed a lot in the last few years and is now by many accounts (like this article), among the top most desirable and fastest growing cities in America. There was a time a few years ago when the prospect of living in Denver with its concrete and crowds would not whatsoever show up anywhere on the radar of my mountain-loving sensibilities. BUT. After three years here in the city (THE City), Denver doesn’t even feel metropolitan.

For example, when my GF and I were in the heart of downtown for her job interview a few weeks ago, in spite of it being 7:30 a.m. on a Monday with rush hour at its surliest, the space between lanes, the non-frantic stride of bike commuters and utter lack of honking horns felt downright peaceful.

Then there’s the Light Rail, which didn’t exist when I was a kid (when it was a long RTD ride from the ‘burbs to Wax Trax for my Siouxsie and the Banshees bootlegs).  I took it for the first time just last month from south Denver to Union Station. I found its cleanliness, uncrowdedness, efficiency, spaciousness and dearth of urine smell delightful.

I realize I’ve spent most of these blogs hating on NYC. Although I was expressing myself honestly, I feel slightly ashamed of that (not to mention it’s probably the reason Google hasn’t picked me up for sponsorship). The truth is, there are many things I’ll truly miss about the Big Apple.

What I’ll miss about NYC:

- Incredible ethnic diversity (few places in the world could have so many cultures represented as any four-story apartment building in Queens. Cool to walk down the street and hear five languages).
- Delicious and authentic ethnic cuisine everywhere (I’ll especially miss the Columbian, Indian and Greek)
- Pizza
- Late-night dining and drinking opportunities (not that we indulged in 2 a.m. dinner very often with the 5 a.m. wake-up schedule, but it was nice to know it was possible)
- At least three bands you love playing somewhere in the city on any given night
- Broadway
- Produce markets (especially the one in Astoria)
- The imminent possibility of seeing a celebrity or musician casually hanging out somewhere
- Beautiful buildings and bridges
- Orange is the New Black scene shots in our ‘hood!
- Bodegas that sell everything from microwave popcorn to drill bits

It might not be apparent by the last three years of sardonic posts, but I do actually love NYC. There is no place in the world like it – its talent, culture and energy are incomparable.


That said. there’s no question that I’m excited to peace out. But I plan to live it up (in a non-residential sense) upon each future visit. 

Stay tuned for more adventure stories in my new (old) city.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

The creepy, doormat-hating neighbor



Ever since we moved in two and a half years ago, our weird, anti-social neighbor has made an odd habit of kicking our doormat. It happens multiple times a day. Sometimes he kicks it all the way across the landing. Just about every time we leave the apartment or come home, the doormat is askew or sitting several inches from our door. It is obviously this neighbor. I have caught him in the act.

He is a skinny, older man who, when actually seen outside of the building, is scuffling along the sidewalk in a hoodie with a thousand yard stare and mouth half open, revealing about three rotting teeth. Early on another neighbor warned us that the man is insane. He is precisely what you would imagine when you envision a psychopath. Many times I have come home, fixed the doormat and gone inside, then heard a skidding sound, looked through the peephole to see his door closing or him entering his apartment. Then I opened the door to find the doormat kicked out of place.

All of the doors open inward, meaning that our doormat isn’t in his way. It’s no accident. Even when he’s not coming or going, there are times when he opens his door expressly to kick our doormat. We have no idea why he feels the need to do this. It must provide some sort of outlet for his boiling fury against the world.

Last week the Easter basket my parents mailed me went missing (yes, 30-somethings can still get Easter baskets). The postal records show it was delivered … but I never got it. Obviously someone stole it.

Suspect No. 1?

Oooh! Look at that tasty package just sitting there for the taking on top of that goddamned stupid, annoying, ugly, offensive, infuriating doormat!!

We considered posting a sign over the mailboxes with a message reading something like ...

“ATTENTION RESIDENTS. 

A PACKAGE ADDRESSED TO APT #D3 HAS GONE MISSING. IT CONTAINED JELLYBEANS, PEEPS, A VERY SPECIAL PAIR OF CHOCOLATE JIMMY BOYS AND A HEARTFELT PERSONAL NOTE. WE WERE RECENTLY NOTIFIED THAT A NUMBER OF THE JELLYBEANS IN THE PACKAGE WERE POISONED WITH A LETHAL DOSE OF STRYCHNINE. IF YOU ATE THE JELLYBEANS, YOU HAVE LIKELY ALREADY DEVELOPED A VIOLENT TWITCH AND HAVE LOST A FEW TEETH. YOU SHOULD HAVE YOUR STOMACH PUMPED IMMEDIATELY. 
GOOD LUCK AND HAPPY EASTER."  


Every time I come home and see our kicked doormat I am overcome by a tidal wave of ill will toward our next door neighbor. It must have been him.

Monday, September 22, 2014

New Yorkers are kind in their own way/My First NYC Bike Crash


By now I have tallied a fair number of miles riding around New York City on two wheels.

After several harrowing close calls involving near head-on collisions with shitheads obliviously turning left in their ridiculously sized SUVs while talking on the phone or dodging swerving cabs, opening car doors and partially covered manholes, I finally wasn’t so lucky.

 Only I was pretty lucky.

Several months ago I bought a Groupon for Citibike – that fleet of bikes available all over Manhattan that you can take and return at your leisure for a daily/monthly/yearly fee. They seemed like a great idea. But upon my first attempt to use them, as much as I wanted to love it, it turned out the whole system kind of sucks.

Citibikes come with many bugs and annoyances, the most obvious being:

A) No bikes at a station. Or, as the case may be, the absence of bikes at several stations in spite of the “real time” Citibike App telling you that there are bikes.
B) Broken stalls. Even if it looks like there are bikes at a station, for some reason, they are permanently locked into their stalls. Sometimes you don’t know this until the machine takes your money but fails to give you a bike.
C) 30-minute limit. If you are actually able to get a bike out of the stall, you only have a half hour to ride it to the next station without being charged for extra time. Again, sometimes the App will tell you stations have space to return bikes but in reality, they don’t. Or it looks like they do, but then the stalls are broken and you can’t put the bike back. With all the bullshit you go through just getting a bike, you usually have 17 minutes rather than 30, so instead of enjoying the journey, you’re frantically pedaling to your destination before time runs out.

None of that has anything to do with My First NYC Bike Crash. Except that I was on a Citibike.

Usually I ride my own janky bike ($20 on Craigslist), which presents its own set of dangers (eg: brakes that barely work, broken gears, wobbly wheels, etc).

But today, I had taken the train into Penn Station and was grabbing a Citibike to ride down to the harbor. Miraculously, it took less than five minutes to get the bike, but I was only on it for about 40 feet.

I was pedaling down the open pathway behind the line of Citibikes and looking at the upcoming busy intersection. Seeing a green light, I was just standing up to increase my speed when instead I launched over the handlebars.


It’s funny how in any kind of crash, the spinning-out-of-control-before-impact part of it can feel like it lasts about 10 years.

Even though my crash happened suddenly, during the 10 years it took to hit the pavement, I had a couple of thoughts. The first was looking down and realizing that it was a random parking block sticking out into the street that had brought my robust, 70-pound Citibike to a dead stop. And the second was to realize – while the panicky half of my brain was in AAAAARGGGGGH free fall mode – that there was a crowd of about 200 people at the street corner witnessing my crash.

“Fuck,” the observant part of my brain noted on the way down. “This is embarrassing.”

Happily, my ego ended up the most bruised part of me. Although I did land hard on my knee and tear my jeans (new ones, dammit) and felt incredibly sore all over the next day. It could have been way, way worse.

As I brushed myself off and started picking up my ridiculously heavy bike, keeping my head down to avoid eye contact with anyone, a pair of hands helped pull me up.

ARE YOU OK?

 I looked into the furrowed brow of a middle-aged man who spoke with a strong New York accent.
ARE YOU OK? he shouted again, genuinely concerned.

“Yeah,” I said. “Thank you.”

“WHAT HAPPENED? HOW DID THIS HAPPEN? OH! YOU MUST HAVE HIT THAT THING,” he pointed at the concrete block. “WHO PUT THAT THERE? WHY WOULD SOMEONE PUT THAT THERE? STUPID ASSHOLE!”

I thanked him again and walked away shaking and unsteady, but smiling.

Some stupid asshole put some block in my way that made me crash. Stupid asshole.


Anyone who says New Yorkers are cold, selfish and uncaring has not met enough of them to know any better.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Spin class VS the outdoors


These are the options I find myself weighing for my daily exercise each morning now that it is no longer the dreary Arctic here in NYC.
I had never attended a spin class before moving here, but given the discomfort of riding through the city in winter (you’re still gambling with your life even in the most glorious of spring conditions), I decided to give it a try. Now I am a weekly regular.
The energy and spontaneous dance moves of the spin instructors at my gym are truly uplifting. However, there was one drill sergeant woman who, rather than shout motivating axioms in coherent English (“YOU CAN DO IT!” “THERE’S MORE IN YOU!” “FASTER!” etc) would grunt loudly into her face mic, sounding not unlike an angry predator having sex (“HEF! HEF! GAH! GAAAAH! AW … SHIT! GEF! HEH!”).
The “Aw shits” were especially charming, and only vaguely indicative that she had any idea she was supposed to be teaching a class and not having her own lung-busting workout. After experiencing her class twice (giving it a second try because I had convinced myself the woman was just overwhelmed with psychological problems during that first class and not believing it could possibly be her MO) vowed never again to go to her class. Thankfully she is no longer instructing.

This morning’s class was taught by a sexy accented hulk of Latin origins. We’ll call him Mateo. He is perfectly sculpted (not that I’m into that sort of thing, but it does make the whole experience more pleasant) and has a way of shouting out numbers over the maxed out pounding club tunes that is almost indecipherable but perfectly fine because he’s aware of it and starts pantomiming while off his bike, shaking his ass and marching around the room.
Of course I have also been pedaling outside and my last adventure involved attempting to ride to the industrial wasteland of College Point (that has nothing to do with higher education at all and is in fact one of the city’s ugliest areas). It was actually a very enjoyable ride – down breezy residential streets in Corona and East Elmhurst and over Grand Central on a pedestrian bridge that spits you out directly in front of Laguardia Airport. From there you ride on a spacious and empty promenade along the water, which unfortunately reeks like hundreds of years worth of hepatitis-infused sewer waste. Once I reached the end of the promenade near the Worlds Fair Marina the only options were to ride up a variety of on-ramps into blaring horns and bumper-to-bumper traffic. Google Maps’ highlighted bicycle route failed to clarify this.
The destination was never quite crossed off my list, but there will be other attempts. To other parts of the city hopefully less armpit-like. The shockingly disparate (from interesting and relatively pleasant to sludge-infested and death-defying) cycling options are endless here. And there is always spin class to fall back on.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Maybe I’m a tree hugger after all


Contrary to my disgust for hippies and jam music, I do actually love trees. In fact, I’m not at all sure about how these things became mutually affiliated. In my mind, trees are natural, powerful, inspiring, strong, clean, fresh and beautiful whereas hippies are exactly the opposite on at least one count.

You sometimes don’t realize how much you appreciate trees until they don’t make a regular appearance in your daily and weekly routine.

There are approximately five trees on the entire block surrounding my apartment building. And one of them is now just a stump because it fell on my girlfriend’s car during Hurricane Sandy (dumb luck … I know). As trees go, this sort of dearth doesn’t really do much for a person in terms of yielding any ameliorative benefit. 

So, my love for and withdrawal from trees is probably at least half the reason I make a point to run in Astoria Park or bike in Central Park a few times a week. (The other half is because I’m getting fat. No amount of sea level jogging, yoga or pedaling makes up for the calories burned by hauling oneself up a mountain six days a week).

I biked to Central Park yesterday and the presence of greenery put my mind (well, the 2 percent of it that wasn’t toaster-in-the-bath sizzling from weaving through traffic in Manhattan to get there) at ease. Although it is mobbed with horse carriages and gapers on the weekends, the shared bike road through Central Park (no bikes allowed on smaller paths or trails) is gloriously open in some sections on weekday afternoons. I think about a full second elapsed at one point yesterday in which I didn’t see anyone else on the street. And Central Park’s assortment of trees and rock formations jutting out of the jade-green grass even bare a convincing resemblance to real nature.

It’s just too bad that it’s such a daunting journey across the East River and the eastern part of Manhattan to get there and back.

Although I think the stereotype of New Yorkers being loud, uncaring assholes is generally not accurate (except for the loud part … that’s 100-percent true), I do believe that certain New Yorkers are just salivating for confrontation. They honestly can’t wait to berate you for something.

Riding along a side street and turning onto 3rd Ave where there were construction barriers and wall-to-wall, blaring horns and traffic, I hopped onto the sidewalk for a few pedals to avoid getting wedged between a taxi and the barrier. You can get away with riding on the sidewalk in Queens – delivery guys do it all the time – but in Manhattan, it doesn’t fly. Within a split second of jumping onto the sidewalk (which was relatively empty, by the way), there were two older men holding little squirrel dogs on leashes, all ready to get up in my grill. The first one yelled “hey! What the fuck?!” as I rode by and the second one – as I slowly, carefully and in no way dangerously pedaled by him, screamed “IDIOT!” right into my face.

The serenity that the trees instilled in me was by now long gone as I pedaled home over the bridge listening to the amplified acoustics of dozens of drivers laying on their horns in stopped traffic. But I had to remind myself that I’ve yelled “idiot” at a lot of people in this city, both out loud and in the privacy of my crowd-addled head.

If you can imagine that in life, about one out of every eight or so human beings is a true idiot, then calculate that there are 8 million people in NYC … you’re dealing with a lot of idiots.

I’d rather be surrounded by trees any day. 

Monday, May 20, 2013

Even liberal NYC not immune to hate crimes

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Every morning a large, bespectacled, older man wearing a neon yellow safety vest hands out the daily NY Metro newspaper to people swarming up the stairs to the subway. He knows me by now and we smile at each other as I take a paper. The exchange is one of the small weekly instances of feeling some vague connection to this crazy city.
The Metro is nice because it offers brief snippets of big national stories, the occasional exclusive feature, previews of NYC entertainment and a high concentration of local news. There are also inexplicably graphic ads for things like varicose veins and open sores. These same image-heavy advertisements also appear on posters on the subway and on local commercials. I don’t really get the marketing value. They make me nauseous.
Sometimes the paper has amusing stories about thwarted attempts to jump off the Empire State Building (one guy poised himself on the sight-seeing ledge and then, when he knew everyone was watching, hurled himself off  but - Wile E. Coyote style - only fell one story to the wider platform below). But today it was really, really depressing.
First there was the story about a 14-year-old girl riding on a bus in Jamaica, N.Y. killed by mysterious stray bullets, another about a cyclist killed by a taxi in Brooklyn, another about someone who fell between the train tracks and then the worst – a man shot in the face in the WestVillage for being gay.
As most of you are well aware, I’m not thrilled about living in a concrete jungle with 8 million people – a glowing target for terrorist attacks, derelicts, spit on the street and a gazillion other possible dangers and revulsions not typically found in the pristine mountains of Colorado. But I am thrilled to live in a place that not only allows but celebrates same sex marriage, diversity and equal rights. 

I was reminiscing back to Friday night when my girlfriend and I passed through the West Village on the subway on the way home from a concert in Brooklyn, her asleep on my shoulder. I was thinking about how, had we gotten out at one of the West Village stops with the mob of people who typically flock to this young, cool, high-energy epicenter of diversity and acceptance that we would have probably been in very close proximity to where Elliot Morales followed Mark Carson and his friend down a busy street and without skirmish, shot Carson in the face because he was gay.
I realize that one takes a risk any time one leaves the house. Shit, even in your house, who knows when an airplane could suddenly fly into it or an anvil could land on your head the minute you lean out the window. Still, there is clearly a higher risk when you live in a place with such a high density of people. You never know when you can board some form of public transportation with a wall of people and fall victim to a gangster’s stray bullet or a terrorist’s carefully placed explosive. And there comes an even higher risk when you choose to ride a bicycle on the NYC streets (more terrifying, as I have mentioned before, then any steep, loose, rock-filled mountain bike ride I have ever been on. I do believe some of the taxi drivers actually TRY to hit you. Remind me to write about the time I got lost in a really shitty area of the Bronx and resorted to riding with one trembling hand on the handlebars and the other clutching my pepper spray).
But I never want to think that I’m taking a risk by allowing my girlfriend to fall asleep on my shoulder on the subway or by holding her hand as we walk down the street. I thought we had moved passed all that. Especially in New York. But I have to admit this story makes me very sad. And scared.
A part of me wants to march in the streets with all the gay people I know wearing rainbows, daring all the haters to come get up in my grill. The other wants to hunker down at home … taking my chances with falling anvils.