The staircase is near death. One last flight left to demolish. I'll go down there today and think about the countless Friday nights it was our place.
Here are photos from yesterday. The top one is from 2012. If you like it, a print is available for sale here.
If you enjoy my stories please check out my memoir, "I Hate the Dallas Cowboys - tales of a scrappy New York boyhood." Available at Logos Book Store or online at Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
The book has 109 Amazon five star reviews out of 109 total reviews posted. We're pitching a perfect game. My old world echoes TV's "The Wonder Years" ~ just add taverns, subways and Checker cabs.
You can also purchase my photography portfolio, "River to River - New York Scenes From a Bicycle" on Amazon.
Thursday, July 30th, I'm telling a story at Walter Michael DeForest's show at Ryan's Daughter, 350 East 85th St. @ 6pm. More info to follow.
Here's an excerpt from my memoir called, "Ripple."
My formula for a perfect Friday night
in May 1970: One friend and three dollars. One dollar was for gas, and two dollars were for
two bottles of Ripple Red ($1.78) and two bags of Wise BBQ Potato Chips (20
cents).
Buddy McMahon and I left LaSalle Academy at three o’clock and took
the #6 Lexington Avenue Local uptown to 23rd Street. Then we walked
east to the Sanitation Department pier at the river’s edge. Parked way in the
back of the long shed, hidden between two dumpsters, was Buddy’s car, a white
‘65 Mustang convertible. Buddy slowly backed it up. I got in. His Dad was a gem
letting Buddy drive illegally with his new learner’s permit. It was illegal
because there was no licensed driver in the car, myself included.
“Pass me the baseball,” Buddy
said.
I put my hand under my seat and
found the hardball and gave it to Buddy. He stuck it in a place that kept the
driver’s seat from flopping backward and forward. The broken seat, along with the
bald tires and several other cosmetic and mechanical issues, made this car an
affordable pleasure for a 16-year-old working part time as a Daitch Shopwell
delivery boy.
As we drove cautiously up First
Avenue, I noticed the five-degree chassis alignment problem that Buddy had
mentioned. It felt like we were in a parade and the car was facing the adoring
crowd on the sidewalk while we motored straight up the road. It was a pain in
the ass to put the rusted top up, so we left it down even though it had started
to drizzle. The busted radio provided no tunes, so at red lights we’d try to
idle next to someone playing our kind of music.
On
80th Street, we found a parking spot in front of St. Monica’s School.
Buddy sprinted up the stoop of his building, and I ran home to my grandmother’s
on York Avenue. We needed to get into our weekend uniforms -- pocket T-shirts (our
regular purchase from Arbee’s Army & Navy store), dungaree shorts, and Converse
sneakers -- and I needed to grab my radio.
Twenty
minutes later, I met Buddy at 82nd Street and First Avenue. We
planted ourselves and waited for someone special. The first would-be guy we
asked gave us the finger.
Then
Buddy sighted a usually friendly party. “Here comes Jojo.”
We
quietly cornered Jojo under a candy store awning -- like two junkies on a buy.
“Hey,
Jojo, can you buy us two bottles of Ripple Red?”
Jojo
looked at his watch, made a face like we were making him constipated, and said,
“OK, but quick. Give me the money.”
We
snuck a peek at the transaction through the edge of the store window.
On the way down to the river we bought
the potato chips at Eddie’s Market on 80th Street. It was still
drizzling. We targeted the spot below the 81st Street Staircase on the East
River. Under dry cover with our legs
dangling over the water, we eased in, relishing our Friday ritual, an al fresco
dinner with WNEW-FM on the radio dial.
3 comments:
If you didn't like Ripple, there was Thunderbird and Sneaky Pete.
yes, on Thunderbird ~ what was Sneaky Pete a nickname for?
and how about Mad Dog 20/20 (Mogen David) & Colt 45 for the extra kick
Sneaky Pete was a brand name for an inexpensive wine. there was also another called Twister
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