As the icy pre-summer season has melted, it's time to celebrate with rooftop adventures. Come and get lost in the giant maze, hang out in a tee-pee, ring around the rosie, dance, and have fun -- one or all of these. Cheap-o liquor, plus music by DJ Justin Kase and DJ John.Come out and Play:
The Come Out and Play Festival takes over the city streets of the Lower East Side and beyond, providing a forum for new types of public games and play. Play a lost Olympic sport, smash piƱatas, pimp and build bike lanes, battle for New Amsterdam, battle for Gotham, recreate famous NYC movie scenes, get cozy with strangers, wield walkie talkies, and more in a weekend of bizarre, fun, and awesome games. All events are free, some are family-friendly, and you can play as few or as many games as you can handle.Polka:
I thought you might like to list this polka show I'm doing on Saturday at the Bowery Poetry Club. It's a live concert by the Ja Ja Jas, the rough and tumble polka band I play in with Joe Exley, and we're recording it for a future album release. You know there's a Grammy for best polka album? There is, and we mean to win it. There's a lot of audience participation involved in these polka shows so the audience is really an extension of the band (sing-alongs, synchronized clapping, locked-arms swaying, you know the drill). Not to get all artsy on you vis-a-vis oom-pah, but it's much more of an experience than a standard rock show.Slide Lecture -- The History of Bicycling in New York City:
Bike New York (the good folks who bring us the Five-Borough Bike Tour) and I teamed up to urge the Museum of the City of New York to host this slide lecture tracing the rich, but largely unknown, history of bicycling in New York City. Cycling historian and author David Herlihy will recount the bicycle crazes of the 1860s and 1890s, the Six Day Races held at Madison Square Garden, the pioneering campaigns by bikers -- not motorists -- for paved roads, and much more. Celebrate Bike Month by exercising your mind as well as your body.Eats:
Grub, a cheap, simple dinner for strangers and co-conspirators. Rubulad home base, 338 Flushing, at Classon, Brooklyn. G train to Flushing or Classon stations, J,M,Z to Marcy, B61 bus to Flushing. First and third SUNDAYS, 6:30p doors, 7p dinner; $pay what you want, and bring your own booze.Williamsburg Spelling Bee:
Compete for bar tab at a real adult spelling bee, every other MONDAY, 7:30p; free, Pete's Candy Store, 709 Lorimer St., Williamsburg, Brooklyn.Drink N Draw:
Art. Nudity. Beer. We provide the beer and the model, you bring your drawing tools of choice. 3rd Ward, 195 Morgan, Brooklyn. Second and fourth WEDNESDAYS 8-10.30p; $15, or $20 for two.Apron Making Workshop:
Are you the hostess with the mostest? Or is grilling more your game? Either way our Apron Class is perfect for you. In this class you'll make a full apron with contrast front pocket, neck ties, and waist ties. You'll learn to make edge stitched pockets and also tackle hemming both inside and outside curves. This class requires basic sewing skills. Preregistration required.Introduction to Basic Divination:
Divining, or dowsing as it is often times called, is the ultimate sustainable battery-free technology for getting the latest information. It is an ancient practice that was used by many cultures and continues to be used today. In the workshop, participants will be given an overview of basic divining and learn how to make their own divining rods from wire hangers and drinking straws.This is a mere sampling, more or less arbitrarily chosen. I'd probably not attend any of them were I visiting NYC this weekend. But I'd probably be doing something equally random and interesting.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2008/05/new-york-ny/3523/
