Sunday, November 22, 2015

Daisy Prince on Her Greenwich Village Apartment

The reaction to the protests at the University of Missouri, Yale, and other colleges have not escaped the eagle-like attention of the Weekly Hate Read. That class of pundits that exists like a crusty eczema on the face of society screamed bloody murder at the idea that students who navigate a cruel and unequal world might benefit from "safe spaces." The santorum spewing forth from the pusillanimous cry-baby contingent, drawn largely from that stratum of aggrieved and persecuted white, middle-class suburban journalism-school has-beens, has only sharpened our focus on the safe spaces of the Birkin bag set.

And thus this week our Grey Lady's Real Estate section delivers (and how) in the euphemistically titled column "What I Love," otherwise known as, "What I Bought with Blood Money and Cannot Sell Until It Appreciates Enough to Trade Up for an Appropriately Sized Estate in the Hamptons." This week gives us an inside peek into the life of one Daisy Prince, hapless yet upwardly mobile bobo:
When Daisy Prince and her husband, Hugh Chisholm, returned to New York in 2009 after eight years in London, they moved to Greenwich Village, where she had wanted to live since she was a college student in the 1990s. “I attended Barnard, and you spend most of your time trying to go downtown to a club or hear music,” she said. “And then when we moved downtown, I was like, wait a minute, I missed the memo — when did everyone move to Brooklyn?” 
Alas Barnard's curriculum, despite producing radical leaders and renowned scholars, must lack a program in subway ridership, since Ms. Prince spent most of her time there trying to get downtown. Thankfully, she landed in a marriage with the financier nephew of a baron best known for a passable biography of Siegfried Sassoon, leading her both to a tenuous claim to nobility and an apartment in Greenwich Village, thus obviating the need for transportation. Tragically for her, the center of cool had moved:
But Brooklyn would have been inconvenient for Ms. Prince, 40, who attends uptown cocktail parties and galas two or three nights a week in her role as the editor of Avenue magazine, which published its 40th anniversary issue this month. Started as a free magazine that was left in the lobbies of high-end buildings on the Upper East and Upper West Sides, Avenue provides a safe space for the One Percent.
Of course, cocktail parties and galas two or three nights a week near the Met would have made a forty minute subway ride to, say, Brooklyn Heights terribly inconvenient. But what more could be expected from a magazine that provides a "safe space for the One Percent"? Our quick survey of Avenue Magazine unearthed lines such as, "What can be more tiresome than planning a vacation?" (The next sentence: "It's time to go wild: get your private jet and fly to more than 200 countries of your choice.") Apparently this was not the article Ms. Prince was referring to when she touted Avenue's sense of noblesse oblige:
“We write about the positive things they’ve done,” said Ms. Prince, who has been the editor since 2012. “We are not a scandal sheet. To be in Avenue means you have done something significant, usually philanthropically. These are the leaders of this community, and by making them look good, we encourage people to follow in their footsteps.”
One such philanthropic act, supposedly, is the opening of the flagship store of "The Laundress" in Soho, an "eco-friendly brand of specialty detergents and home cleaning products." The Laundress founders Gwen Whiting and Lindsey Boyd are evidently leading the community in price point, charging $20 for a 32 oz. bottle of detergent (a "specialty product"?).

Who else leads this community? Well, one building alone, 740 Park Avenue, boasts several such well-known philanthropists noted for their works (good or bad, who are we to judge?) who've created their own followings. David Koch, of Koch brothers fame, lives there in a 18-room duplex he purchased for $17 million. (Here are some "Koch facts" courtesy of the office of Senator Harry Reid of Nevada.) Another such leader is Stephen Schwarzman, responsible for donations to the New York Public Library and Yale University in the tens and hundreds of millions, and also for piquant comparisons between tax increases and Hitler's invasion of Poland.

Yet we digress. None of this should detract from the article's focus on Ms. Prince, both a human Wunderkrammer of laughably outdated notions and an accomplished humble braggart. She also also happens to be eminently quotable.
  • On the living room of the four-bedroom Fifth Avenue apartment overlooking Washington Square Park: 
“It’s the part of the apartment we’ve put the most work into,” Ms. Prince said. “It was completely empty when we moved in.”
  • On the library: 
“We haven’t changed it at all,” she said. “I even bought the sofas from the previous owners. I’m very practical that way.”
  •  On the 11th edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, which her husband's great-grandfather edited:
“The 11th edition has a lot of fans [presumably dead?]; it’s considered the best edition [presumably because India was still part of the UK?],” Ms. Prince said. “I like that the shelf groans with knowledge.”
  • On family silver:
“I thought we should have some family silver.”
  • On cooking:
“I like to have a glass of wine and chat with my friends in the kitchen, and sometimes I forget to turn on the oven.”
Yet, in her world, she is a bit of a rebel, which provides the rest of us with an idea of just how jolting the pitchforks will be when they arrive on Madison and Park Avenues: "Reflecting on her decision to live downtown, Ms. Prince acknowledged that it would have been considered unconventional for the editor of Avenue at one time." This shift owes itself to the fast-paced hyper-gentrification of lower Manhattan, no longer a scary ghetto of the merely rich:
“The lines are blurring,” she said, citing the “super-fancy” condominiums being built on the site of St. Vincent’s Hospital by the Rudins, one of the “power families” in Avenue’s October issue.
But even Ms. Prince has a soft spot for the New York that was before, however devoid her love for working class lunch spots is of even an iota of class awareness and economic analysis:
“Now there are places selling crepes and Japanese ice cream,” she said. “But I miss Gray’s Papaya.”
One gets the sense that Ms. Prince, however, is mostly glad she must no longer calculate how long it takes to burn off the hot juices of a dollar hot dog at SoulCycle, if we generously assume that what she misses is actually eating at a Gray's Papaya and not just consuming its rough-hewn kitschy atmospherics. But at heart, there is more than a hint of fakeness in her nostalgia, much like in her family silver, for a block or two from her perch she can find a Papaya Dog on 6th Avenue. But something tells us she won't venture that far.

Waiting to accumulate assets is the worst

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Meet the Instamom, a Stage Mother for Social Media

The Weekly Hate Read must humbly apologize to its readers for a lapse two weeks ago resulting in our being scooped. In spite of a gamely take-down by Gothamist, we deprived our readers of what would have been a highly tasty hate read (think alpine Swiss quinoa and ostrich prosciutto with a side of school segregation and woe-is-me $1 million suburban mortgages). But to err is human, to hate divine: so we return to the task we must not refuse. This week brings us the grave matter of Instagram-fuled upper-class child abuse.

Enter a parade of children named Princeton, London, Grey, rendered in filters termed Slumber, Crema, Ludwig by parents who are spurred by a mix of dandified notions of breeding and commodification:
Regardless of how their time and money is being handled, the amateur child models of Instagram are already more famous on the Internet than most of your co-workers. There’s 4-year-old London Scout, with 105,000 followers; 2-year-old Millie-Belle Diamond, with 143,000; 4-year-old Michelle (154,000); Gavin (200,000); and the Mini Style Hacker (260,000). Then there’s the prince of Instagram: Alonso Mateo,with more than 600,000 followers. He recently attended the Dior show at Paris Fashion Week.
This may just be the diametrical opposite of Weird Twitter no one was asking for, except a rarefied sort of pedophile, one supposes:
Sometimes adults are drawn to the feed: people who post comments on their own Instagram pages like “Can I be her?” or “She’s become my style inspo” or “I love the hair!!!!”
Translation: "I am a a little bit of a pedophile"
Unlike Weird Twitter, a quick survey of the Instagram accounts revealed nary a reference to bowel movements or flatulence befitting of the two-to-five year old demographic. Yet the bucks at stake can be big with deals negotiated with Gwyneth Paltrow's company (which has spawned its own hate read cottage industry):
And marketers are also taking an interest. Athena Rotolo, who owns the Mini Life website, said she was pleased with the transactions she has struck with Ms. Cannon. “She requests certain items that fit in for the style of the shoot and then I send them off to her,” Ms. Rotolo said. “So instead of me having to hire someone and pay all those fees, it’s a mutual relationship.” 
The biggest star in this pageant of child image pimping is London Scout (journalist Hayley Krischer notes these are her first and middle names) who graced New York Fashion week in "a pink and navy faux fur coat, waving to a crowd of photographers":
“It was like she had her own little paparazzi,” said her mother, Sai De Silva, who runs the feed. London Scout is living #scoutstyle and schooling followers on how to #gettheLondonlook. And because London’s mother, 34 and a self-described social-media strategist, is as photogenic as her daughter, there are also the hashtags #mommydaughtermoments and #ScoutMomstyle.
#Vomit is all we can say. At least Ms. Krischer, chronicler of the "edgy tales from parenthood," is attuned to both the violations of childhood and labor law that might ensure. Enter the admittedly cute Princeton Cannon-Roberts and his mother, Keira Cannon, a pastry chef, perhaps the least offensive of the parent-child business partnerships covered:
But Princeton is not a teenager. He is 5 years old. A happy-seeming little boy, he played with his scooter, balanced on the curb, twirled in endless circles but only had so much tolerance for the professional photographer whom Ms. Cannon, 38 and a pastry chef, had hired to populate his Instagram feed, Prince and the Baker, which has more than 5,600 followers.
When the photographer attempted to coax him to pose for one more shot with the Brooklyn Bridge behind him, he gave her a polite, “No thanks.” It didn’t help that children were riding past him on scooters of their own, or bicycles.
Princeton might do well to avoid applying to his eponym in twelve years to avoid the appearance of redundancy on his resumé. But, as always, indulgences can sometimes be forgiven: Ms. Cannon is not only a pastry chef, but a military veteran who grew up in the South Bronx. His father, a graphic designer, also voiced reasonable-sounding concerns and a desire to limit overexposure.

But we spare no wrath or fecal discharge upon Angelica Calad, a Paltrow wannabe  whose son, at the ripe old age of two, already has garnered 112,000 followers (trigger warning: Ms. Calad dresses her infant children in culturally insensitive outfits):
“Taylen has become a brand,” said her mother, Angelica Calad, 33 and the owner and designer of POMP Kids, an online clothing business in Davie, Fla. Ms. Calad’s Instagram feed, Taylen’s Mom, is a devoted chronicle of Taylen and Aleia, Ms. Calad’s infant daughter, in high-fashion outfits. In one photo, Taylen wears a retro Esther Williams-inspired dusty rose bodysuit with ribbon shoulder straps, glitter-adorned bottoms and a bow tie. In another, Aleia wears peach merino overalls and a white-feathered chieftain headdress. 
If your head is not spinning, go read some bell hooks, Derrick Bell, or do whatever you need to do to deal with what just happened above. If you want to take action, just call Florida's Department of Children and Families' Abuse Hotline. For our part, we merely ask, what is a peach merino overall? Also, what is an Aleia? Why is Aleia in a "chieftain" headdress? As if all of this were not enough, Ms. Calad has partnered with what we can only imagine is a sort of anti-social, nihilistic terrorist organization whose acronym happens to also be KKK:
In the course of one weekend, Ms. Calad booked back-to-back shoots for Taylen and Aleia. She said she is also in talks to develop a network television show for Taylen and is branching out into home décor. But the real get is that Taylen is headlining the holiday campaign for Kardashian Kids Kollection, a relationship that began, Ms. Calad said, when she was approached by a publicist for the Kardashian line through Instagram.
Several child psychologists consulted in the article expressed concerns about developing these children "pro-social values" and preventing "higher-than-usual social anxiety" or the children starting "crave [attention]...in unhealthy ways." For their part, the parents are more focused on "online predators" with apparent lack of awareness of the potential irony that they are the online predators:
Regardless of the potential psychological effects, the mothers interviewed for this article said they feared online predators. “You never know who’s behind a profile,” said Mia St. Clair, 29, a professional photographer in Spokane, Wash. Her son Grey, 3, is at the epicenter of Grey’s Little Closet. They have over 28,000 followers.
Ms. St Clair's husband, also quoted in the article, is the "director of media and communications at Calvary Spoke, a church." (Apparently "media and communications" is the new word for proselytizing?) Well, they better start praying hard for little Grey's forgiveness.

Pageants are so passé

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Presented Without Commentary Vol. 1

We thank our hateful readers for continued support of the Hate Read. Your own hate reads and recommendations have both moved us and overwhelmed our capacity to digest hate-worthy articles. There's only so much bile to go around. Instead of our full edition, we will occasionally present a series of recommended articles so you can Choose Your Own Hate Read™. Please enjoy!

1. Julie Satow. For Foreign Buyers, Family Homes Over Trophy Towers, N.Y Times (Nov. 13, 2015).

Choice quote:
He recently purchased a four-bedroom condominium at the Astor, at 235 West 75th Street on the Upper West Side. He will move there with his family once his green card is approved. “New York is a very natural fit for us,” he said. “It is very affluent, very cosmopolitan and very multicultural, which is what we are looking for.”

The Upper West Side provides an unlimited supply of adult diapers



2. Joyce Cohen. The East Village Scene for Two Theater Students, N.Y. Times (Nov. 12, 2015)

The set-up: two 20-year old NYU musical theater students looking for a $3000 two-bedroom in the West Village. Deal breakers: walk-ups, dark bedrooms, no washer/dryer.

These two are working on a revival of Rent where the rent is paid by their parents

3. David Brooks, My $120,000 Vacation, N.Y. Times (Nov. 13, 2015)

The bottom line: David Brooks goes on a 24-day, round-the-world trip on a Four Seasons luxury jet to decide too much money can be a bad thing.

Taking a nap with the shrouds of authentic Buddhist monks from Bhutan
4. Robin Raisfeld and Rob Patronite, 50 Pantry Essentials for the Modern Gourmet, Grub Street (Nov. 8, 2015)

Hate Read Gold medal: $15 a quart broth.

Like, how do people live on food stamps?

 

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Thievery Corporation’s Eric Hilton Builds an Empire in D.C.

At the Weekly Hate Read, we appreciate a good dose of irony (or is hypocrisy?). Just as long as we're not overcharged for it. Sadly, for our readers in the nation's capital, it does seem that the prices for its liquid form are ticking up. How can it be? Well, as our favorite section in the New York Times reports, one half of the aptly-named DJ collective Thievery Corporation has set up a cartel of unbearably pretentious bars and restaurants in historically African-American neighborhood of Shaw that trade heavily on the clichés and smarm that are the coin of DC's burgeoning yuppie set.
Four of those establishments — the Brixton (a British-style pub), Satellite Room (an “L.A. style dive diner bar”), American Ice Company (rustic Americana) and El Rey (a taqueria) — are within a three-block radius of Montserrat house. Two were abandoned properties, one was a warehouse, the last a vacant lot. 
“I like going to an area that will be hot,” Mr. Hilton said. “I’m just baffled no one saw those abandoned buildings and open land surrounding the 9:30 club,” he added, referring to Washington’s venerable music hall down the block.
Of course, no one "saw" those buildings. Hilton bravely ignored the people around him. (The most recent "abandoned" building under attack is  434-unit public housing complex Barry Farm.) Hailing from Rockville, MD (household income $98,712), he had learned the trade of repackaging "culture" for the kind of jet set Muzak as a DJ:
[...] Mr. Hilton met Rob Garza, and the two began Thievery, an influential electronica act that melded jazzy electronic grooves with bossa nova, hip-hop, Indian rock, reggae and other international beats. Their sound defined a new genre of ambient electronic music, a kind of global soundtrack for the pre-iPod, late-’90s mélange of boutique hotels, cosmopolitan cocktails and colored mood lighting. 
“They have managed to stay successful in electronic music, which can be very fickle,” says Michaelangelo Matos, author of “The Underground Is Massive: How Electronic Dance Music Conquered America.” “They haven’t been tied to one sound, they can be a little fungible.”
No doubt Hilton realized that real estate is a "little fungible" as well and the immovable property equivalent of dubstep is just as bankable. No wonder his establishments became Obama administration favorites, blasé after another drone strike:
In 2007 Mr. Hilton opened Marvin, a Belgian-style diner at the intersection of 14th and U Streets in a space that was once a Subway franchise. The area, known in the early- to mid-20th century as Black Broadway for its theaters and restaurants, had just begun to rebound from the riots of the 1960s. Marvin became a favorite of young White House staff members from the first Obama administration. 
“He gave cred to an area that wasn’t going to get cred unless a local came in and understood it, and understood what would work there,” said Kate Glassman Bennett, a White House correspondent for the Independent Journal and a native Washingtonian. “I don’t think any of the stuff around 14th and U would have happened without him.”
Rather than name the restaurant Guantánamo in tribute to his benefactors, he availed himself of Marvin Gaye's memory, while also ignoring the continued existence of African-American people in the neighborhood. As one critic put it, "All are based on some facet of black history, some memory of blackness that feels artificially done and palatable." But let us not be too hard on Mr. Hilton. He did not single-handedly transform Shaw from 25% white in 2000 to 48% in 2010. Plus, he totally gets it, brother:
“I completely appreciate that perspective,” Mr. Hilton said. “When we named the restaurant Marvin, it was to remind people that Marvin Gaye was from D.C.” One bar was called Blackbyrd, for the 1970s-era jazz-funk group led by Donald Byrd, a musician and professor at Howard. (Its name and décor have since changed twice.)
Wikipedia apparently wasn't doing its job of reminding people of Gaye's birthplace. (Just joking, it was.) This is all the more rich since Thievery Corporation took the kind of pan-progressive "it's the system, man" stances endemic to creative "types," especially during the Bush era, penning tracks such as as "Revolution Solution":
The paradox of poverty
Has left us dismayed
Sliding democracy
Washing away

The toil of the many goes
To the fortunate few
The revolution solution
Oh, I've come to join you
If your eyes did not just roll a complete 720 degrees à la Tony Hawk, we can't help you. So much for the Eric Hilton of that era. Now he opens restaurants you can only go with a reservation, though he assures us the great thing is that there's all the types of people still:
“My favorite bar is the Gibson,” he said, referring to a quiet, unmarked speakeasy that he opened two doors over from Marvin in 2008. It is known for its reservation-only policy and Prohibition-era cocktails. 
“There is no really one type of person there,” he said. “You don’t really notice if people are hip or cool or professional exec types or fixed-gear bicycle types. Everyone seems to fit in.”
You could be hip or cool, profession or ride a fixed-gear bike! Amazing. But we're guessing if you tear up the streets of DC with a 21-speed bike, Chipotle might be more your speed.

Eric Hilton understands it if you think he's profiting from the lifeblood of minority communities