Showing posts with label journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label journalism. Show all posts

Monday, November 12, 2012

Bruce Ratner makes the Forward 50: "the developer had every right to trumpet himself as the King of Brooklyn"

From the Jewish newspaper the Forward, which places Bruce Ratner among the Forward 50 ("the new faces of Jewish power") for netting the Nets and the Islanders, and building an arena:
Bruce Ratner may not have Barbra Streisand’s voice or Jay-Z’s rep on the streets of Bedford-Stuyvesant. But the developer had every right to trumpet himself as the King of Brooklyn after his long-delayed Barclays Center finally opened its doors.
...Ratner, 67, didn’t put the bounce back in Brooklyn’s step single-handedly.
...The scion of a well-connected Jewish family from the Cleveland area, Ratner is loved and hated in equal measures for his grandiose plans to transform a gritty but communally valuable stretch of downtown Brooklyn into a fancy and financially valuable arena and string of condos.
But after successfully negotiating nearly a decade of tricky political maneuvering and stop-start lawsuits, Ratner could be forgiven for popping the champagne as Streisand and Jay-Z showered praise on his plans.
I'm not sure that Jay-Z and Streisand, both reaping revenues from the arena, are the arbiters. It's a rather gentle portrait. It might be enlivened by some excerpts from the profile by Neil deMause they published in May 2011.

It's it's not actually "a gritty but communally valuable stretch of downtown Brooklyn." How about a gentrifying area near downtown Brooklyn known as Prospect Heights?

New Nets website, The Brooklyn Game, launches, affiliated with YES Network; the start of a "new community and media platform for Brooklyn"?

Some competition for NetsDaily. A press release:
MAJOR NEW BROOKLYN NETS WEBSITE -- THEBROOKLYNGAME.COM -- LAUNCHES THIS WEEK
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Will act as the YES Network’s exclusive web partner for Nets content
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TheBrooklynGame.com takes over content and staff from the popular site, NetsAreScorching.com

BROOKLYN, U.S.A. -- Brooklyn has a world-class professional basketball team, and now the major independent website to cover it. The Brooklyn Game, a new digital media platform dedicated to the Brooklyn Nets, provides fans & readers breaking news, expert analysis, fan commentary, community tools, photo galleries, and more.

TheBrooklynGame.com will be the exclusive web partner for Nets content of the YES Network, the official broadcaster of the Brooklyn Nets. In addition to the new content, the site has absorbed the articles and key staff of NetsAreScorching.com, a popular site that covered the New Jersey Nets since 2009.

YES will use TheBrooklynGame.com content on YESNetwork.com and will promote the TheBrooklynGame.com on air and on YESNetwork.com.

The managing editor of the site is Devin Kharpertian, who last year ran NetsAreScorching.com. Several contributors from that site will contribute to The Brooklyn Game.

The Brooklyn Game was launched by Steven Waldman, the former founder and CEO of the award-winning site Beliefnet.com and former Senior Advisor to the Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, along with an all- star collection of Brooklyn-based editors including Larry Hackett, the editor of People magazine, Peggy Northrop, the former editor of Reader's Digest, and Michael Grossman, former Editor-at-large of Time, Inc.

“Brooklyn deserves a great home team, and a home team deserves great coverage,” said Waldman. “And fans need an independent, home-grown place where they argue, boast, trash-talk, and discuss with each other.”

"I've been obsessed with this franchise my entire life, and already this is the most interesting year they've had," Kharpertian said. "It's a truly unique moment. I'm excited to provide comprehensive and lively coverage of the franchise and its cultural impact."

“We wanted to partner with The Brooklyn Game because Devin’s analysis is among the best we’ve seen, and Steven’s background in new media ensures that this is going to be a high-quality site,” says Kevin Sullivan, Director, New Media at YES, which also airs the New York Yankees.

“As the Nets begin their inaugural season in Brooklyn, the timing is perfect to connectbring TheBrooklynGame.com withinto the YES digital media family and our where it will thrive alongside our many established brands and talents,” said Michael Spirito, Vice President, Business Development and Digital Media, YES Network.

The Brooklyn Game is part of a larger effort by Waldman and others to create an ambitious new community and media platform for Brooklyn.

The site will also publish a Facebook page and a Twitter feed with the handle @TheBKGame.
What's next?

Surely Brooklyn could use a "new community and media platform." (I've discussed this very casually with Waldman, whose work I respect.) I have to wonder, though, if the Nets are the pathway into that.

The Brooklyn Game has already done some good work. But let's see if their comprehensive coverage actually critiques Nets business practices--say, those $15 tickets. Will the YES Network be OK with that?

An Atlantic Yards connection

Interesting fact: a member of the web site's "Advisory Board and Partners" is attorney David Goldberg, who wrote the amicus brief in the 2005 Kelo v. New London eminent domain case on behalf of three Atlantic Yards supporters: Brooklyn United for Innovative Local Development (BUILD), Rev. Herbert Daughtry, and The New York City and Vicinity Carpenters Labor-Management Corporation, supporting the city of New London.

The brief made the not-unreasonable point that eminent domain can result not simply in replacing lower-income residents with higher-income ones, but in increasing density to accommodate a much larger number of people, as with Atlantic Yards.

Then again, such promises also can be used to usher in sweetheart deals. The benefits estimated in the brief--10,000 office jobs, 15,000 construction jobs, etc.--are no longer viable. Meanwhile, BUILD is going out of business, and the Carpenters have had a few ethical difficulties.

Friday, November 2, 2012

As Bloomberg collects kudos (The Atlantic, columnist Friedman), some convenient amnesia about the mayor's less-flattering side, again exemplified this week

Shepherding the response to Hurricane Sandy, Mayor Mike Bloomberg has had a strong week, bringing his mostly levelheaded, managerial attitude to the task of a daunting recovery. And, of course, he garnered headlines yesterday by belatedly endorsing President Obama.

At the same time, his casual comments three days ago in favor of the Brooklyn Nets debut were off-key and unwise, one day later reversed, with no acknowledgment of error.



Similarly, he maintained yesterday--despite very divided opinions in the city--that it would be a good idea to keep the New York City Marathon this Sunday, and that it won't redirect any (any?) focus from the city's needs.



That's Bloombergian certainty for you. In the video above, he suggests that, even if all the mass transit isn't back, there will be fewer people on the roads and thus the Brooklyn Nets game Saturday game should work.

A cover in The Atlantic

While Bloomberg makes the cover of The Atlantic's November issue (Brave Thinkers), the Bloomberg we know isn't all there.


The main acknowledged blot on his record--that astonishing arm-twisting for a third term--is dismissed rather handily in James Bennet's intro to The Bloomberg Way:
You could look at Michael Bloomberg—astringent, profane, irritated by small talk, impatient with the politics of empathy—and see a plutocrat whose billions have given him the freedom to say and do whatever he wants, even to change the law to run for a third term as New York City’s mayor. Or you could look a little further and see a more interesting pattern: a man who turned getting shunted off the fast track at Salomon Brothers—over to information technology, no place for a fledgling master of the financial universe—into an opportunity, creating an entirely new approach to getting traders the data they needed; who took getting fired as a chance to gamble his payout on this idea; who then took the billions he made and chose not to embark on a lifelong vacation but to step into the least-forgiving political arena in the country; and who has since governed New York assertively, putting himself in the vanguard of a generation of mayors who, at a time when the federal government is paralyzed, are testing new approaches to education, transportation, and public health. You begin to see a guy, in sum, who thinks for himself, but not only of himself.
Yes, there are reasons to admire Bloomberg, who's not influenced by outside wealth--except, perhaps, his comfort level with fellow billionaires and multi-millionaires.

Reasons for doubt

But what about Bloomberg's manipulation o nonprofit organizations--"reverse influence-peddling," in the words of Errol Louis, and described thoroughly by Michael D.D. White? That goes unremarked, as with Bloomberg's extraordinary comfort with real estate moguls and his casual, uninformed dismissal of dissent.

For example, what about Bloomberg's astonishing claim that the challenge in this country is more "education inequality" than "income inequality"? That masks the potential for numerous reforms, such as a tax on financial speculation.

Or what about some key metrics of stewardship, as New York Times columnist Michael Powell wrote 10/16/12:
As for New York, the mayor might consider crowing less and worrying more. Having wisely built up budget surpluses, the maayor has emptied most of his accounts during the economic storm. Tax revenues no longer come in above projections.
And he has become a sleepier fiscal shepherd. Once, Mr. Bloomberg fought for stringent union contracts. That time has passed.
The Bloomberg promise

As I wrote 10/10/11, in Bloomberg: "you promise users everything, then you build what you can and what you think they need", the mayor and developer Bruce Ratner share a penchant for making promises they can't keep.

In the film Battle for Brooklyn, as I wrote in my review, Bloomberg imperiously dismisses questions about the much-promoted Community Benefits Agreement (CBA), purported to guarantee affordable housing, local hiring, and minority contracting. “I would add something else that’s even more important,” the mayor declares. “You have Bruce Ratner’s word, and that should be enough.”

It wasn't. There's no Independent Compliance Monitor, as the developer promised. It's astounding that none of the elected officials who supported the CBA have called Ratner on this.

Bloomberg pro-life?

Wrote New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman 10/27/12:
That’s why, for me, the most “pro-life” politician in America is New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. While he supports a woman’s right to choose, he has also used his position to promote a whole set of policies that enhance everyone’s quality of life — from his ban on smoking in bars and city parks to reduce cancer, to his ban on the sale in New York City of giant sugary drinks to combat obesity and diabetes, to his requirement for posting calorie counts on menus in chain restaurants, to his push to reinstate the expired federal ban on assault weapons and other forms of common-sense gun control, to his support for early childhood education, to his support for mitigating disruptive climate change.
Not everyone saw Bloomberg's record as unblemished. One commenter observed:
Generally excellent, Tom. But Bloomberg? He just came out against Elizabeth Warren and for Scott Brown in Massachusetts. She conceived and helped create the Consumers Protection Bureau—surely that is "pro-Life in your sense; but Bloomberg says that is Socialism, leaning toward communism!!! Brown is a tool of the finance industry, and definitely cynical on pro-life/pro-choice, slicing and dicing in various statements but when asked who his favorite SCOTUS Justice is, he said Scalia. He has voted with the Party of Cynicism on substantive issues 74% of the time!
Another observed:
Bloomberg is certainly pro-choice when it comes to term limits.

Barclays Center round-up: Nets-Knicks rescheduled; $1M from NBA; the Guardian, Newsday, SBNation take on arena; is there a rivalry yet?

Well, the much-hyped first home game for the Brooklyn Nets, scheduled and reconfirmed for last night before it was belatedly canceled, has been rescheduled to Monday, Nov. 25. Yes, TNT will televise it nationally.

We're still waiting for the transportation plan to be announced before tomorrow night's opener against the Toronto Raptors, but people must be optimistic about that: prices on the secondary market have risen from $35 to $52 in a day.

And the NBA and its players maybe realized that they had a public relations problem on their hands. So they're both doing the right and, I'd say, some strategic p.r. From the Star-Ledger:
Following the lead of the NFL and its players union, the NBA and its players union, the NBPA, have jointly agreed to donate $1 million to the Red Cross and other organizations, including The Salvation Army, New York Cares and Jersey Cares, to aid those groups' efforts in helping people affected by Hurricane Sandy.
A shitshow near the arena

Will Leitch wrote in New York magazine, Tomorrow Night, the Brooklyn Nets Are Real:
If you've been around downtown Brooklyn over the last couple of days, it's been that much more clear why there was no way the Brooklyn Nets could have hosted that opener against the New York Knicks last night. We met a friend for a drink last night at Black Sheep, a bar just down the street from Barclays, at 9 p.m., and the whole front concourse of the arena was still packed with people trying to get on buses. (We sort of imagined them finally getting on one after showing up earlier that morning.) It was a shitshow already; trying to play a basketball game — an opening basketball game — would have been a nightmare. And that's not even accounting for the question of, uh, how anyone was going to get there. So: They will try it again tomorrow night.
Some arena round-ups

The Guardian's SportBlog (The Guardian!) offers Brooklyn Nets: NBA's newest franchise ends 55 years of hurt since Dodgers left: Team owned by Russian billionaire and rapper Jay-Z is set to bring major-league sport back to the most populous borough:
...when the Dodgers took off for Los Angeles, leaving behind a gaping hole in the hearts of their fans, never mind the enormous hole containing the undeveloped rail yards space which would remain virtually untouched while the borough went into a deep slide.
The functioning rail yards, which were never put out for bid, actually. The conclusion:
Yes, there are still protests about the project, about traffic and parking and more, but the Nets' public-relations battle is centered on developing a fanbase for a team that has landed smack in the middle of Knicks territory. According to one report, the team is paying $25 to store owners to put Nets posters in their windows that read "First Home Game since 1957". The subways are blanked with the new Nets colors and logos and the catchphrase "Hello Brooklyn", all designed to bring a hometown feel to the borough's new team.

Will it work? Yes – and especially if they win.
From Newsday, Brooklyn's Barclays Center: the food, the art, the shops. This article concerns only the interior of the arena--well, including some shops at the arena that are open to the street.

Reasons for protest

SBNation, Branding Brooklyn:
Those who protest the existence of the Barclays Center and the attendant development of Atlantic Avenue [sic] do so on three grounds: That the state displaced hundreds of residents via the use of eminent domain to secure Ratner's rights to the property; that the hoped-for affordable housing on Atlantic has yet to, and may never, materialize; and that the development of Atlantic will lead to runaway gentrification. The first complaint is plainly valid—eminent domain is brutal—and the second may become so, depending on what happens with those holes in the ground at the edge of Prospect Heights. The third complaint is crazy. This corner of Brooklyn gentrified a long time ago, which is why the most constant complaints about the arrival of the Barclays Center come not from long-time residents who fear rising rents, but from those residents whose arrival has caused rents to rise. (Full disclosure: I am one of those residents.)
I'd point to the Culture of Cheating.

The conclusion:
"The boys on the Knicks, maybe they're not from New York, but at least they want to come here," he said. “Just like people from all over the world want to come here. That makes it a hometown team. But the Nets? The Brooklyn Nets? The Brooklyn Nets is just a logo. Maybe one day it'll be more than that, but not yet. Not for a long time."
Is there a rivalry?

New York Times columnist Harvey Araton, Proximity Alone Does Not a Rivalry Make:
“No disrespect to them, it’s not a rivalry, not yet,” [Knicks center Tyson Chandler] said, before turning his attention to the Knicks’ opener at Madison Square Garden on Friday night against the Miami Heat, an opponent worthy of some good old-fashioned hatred, and at least as much envy.
Chandler was not being intentionally banal, merely contending that you do not declare a rivalry as much as you create one. “Two teams have to go through some big things,” he said, suggesting, for starters, a hot playoff series or two.
...The shortsighted benefit of Thursday night’s sensible postponement in the wake of Hurricane Sandy and far more pressing concerns is that the Nets were spared the embarrassment of hearing those familiar Knicks cheers in their sparkling new home after enduring them in three New Jersey arenas over three and a half decades.
Anecdotal evidence of turncoat Knicks fans aside, we will know with far greater certainty that the Nets have arrived as a true intracity alternative when a fair number of their Nets loyalists manage to storm the Garden and create a similar mixed crowd dynamic.
Well, maybe. There are a lot more Knicks season-ticket holders to make it tougher to "storm the Garden."