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Tish James

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Hometown Pride at Inaugural Brooklyn Marathon

Nearly 400 runners amassed in Prospect Park for the first Brooklyn Marathon since 1909.

Update: John Paul Montes, 24, of Carroll Gardens, won the marathon, with a time of 2 hours, 43 minutes, according to NY1. Kelly Gillen, 29, of Manhattan was the female winner, finishing in 3 hours, 14 minutes.   In the wee hours of Sunday morning, while much of Brooklyn was still sleeping, the borough's hardcore runners were awake, preparing for a marathon in their territory. "This is my turf!" said first-time marathoner and Park Slope resident Mary Audia. "I run here every weekend." Or, as Paul Nelson of the Prospect Park Alliance put it: "It's Brooklyn! You get to sleep in your own bed!" The inaugural Brooklyn Marathon, held in Prospect Park and organized by Steve Lastoe of NYCruns.com, had nearly 400 runners registered. And though …

Chicken Underwear

6:50 am on Monday, November 21, 2011

actually it made 2 loops of the lake and then 6 loops of the entire park follows by a loop of the lake again.   more ›

Friday, November 11, 2011

Tish James Defends Controversial Short Film at Brooklyn Museum

Says "censorship has no place in a free society."

Councilwoman Letitia James, D-Brooklyn, took a defiant stance against those asking the Brooklyn Museum to remove a controversial short film. "New York City has come to far to allow the 'Hide/Seek' exhibition scheduled to open at the Brooklyn Museum next week, a major museum show exploring gay themes in art history ... Freedom of expression is the pillar of democracy, and much is to be gained from the entirety of this show. Censorship has no place in a free society," James said. Part of an exhibition featuring works of art with gay themes, "Hide/Seek," an image created by artist David Wojnarowicz depicting a crucifix covered with ants has come under intense criticism by the Brooklyn Diocese of the Catholic Church. Wojnarowicz, whose diverse…

robin maltz

8:26 pm on Saturday, November 12, 2011

"Parksloper," you've responded to me before and I prefer not to have a discussion with someone hiding behind a moniker, but in brief: 1. The best strategy is to learn about the artist's intent, then you might have an informed opinion; and, 2. the National Gallery in DC, funded by taxpayers' $$ is filled with gruesome Christian imagery that makes this 10-second segment of a longer video seem tame.   more ›

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