Tag Archives: The Boston Globe

Fenway in flux

This morning The Boston Globe is reporting that Mayor Menino is backing a plan to create a new street that would run parallel to Yawkey Way in the Fenway and join both Boylston and Beacon Street to help spur further development. Over the past 5-10years, the Fenway neighborhood has seen unprecedented development. Initially starting in the old Sears building on Park Street and in Kenmore Square but more recently in the Fenway neighborhood where mixed use developments have replaced vacant or decrepit buildings.

New tenants to the neighbhorhood include coffee shops, furniture and clothing stores and if the mayor gets his way (which he usually does) then this new development will be anchored on the Beacon Street side by the $500 Million One Kenmore Project which when completed will cover part of the Mass Pike I-90 and be book-ended by two projects on Boylston; one as yet to be named and 1330 Boylston, which just opened this week and includes more than 200 residential units, retail space and is the new home for Fenway Community Health Center (the largest GLBT health facility in the US).

This is a beautiful downtown neighborhood sandwiched between some of the country’s most respected hospitals and one of the city’s most affluent sections – the BackBay. The area has one of the city’s largest and most beautiful parks (the Fens), is home to Fenway Park and thousands of college students who attend universities both in and around the Fenway. The recent development has brought more life to the area, and I am excited to see how this latest project enhances the community.

Boston near tops in urban job growth

Boston.com is reporting that Boston was ranked 4th in urban job growth during the month of July. It was no surprise to read that education, health care, professional and business services, and tourism helped to create those job gains. The growth rate of just under 1% sounds pretty anemic to me but the article indicated that most urban areas actually reported a job loss so at least we bucked the downward trend.

For all sorts of depressing economic news, you can visit the Bureau of Labor Statistics and pretend like our government is that there really is no economic downturn and everything will be just fine if we all stay calm and do nothing.

Give me your tired, your poor…

The Boston Globe is reporting that the Armenian Heritage Foundation has “cleared a major hurdle” in its effort to have a memorial on the Rose Kennedy Greenway to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide which occurred just after the first World War and resulted in the death of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.

When the memorial was originally proposed by the Armenian Heritage Foundation, there was nearly universal push-back out of concern that every block on the greenway would result in a different memorial. However, the proposed memorial will also commemorate Boston as a city with a proud history of offering “hope and refuge for immigrants seeking to begin new lives”.

After reading the article in today’s Boston Globe, I’m interested to see the monument in person. Apparently the 12-sided geometrical sculpture is expected to open in the summer of 2009 and is being constructed in such a way that it will be able to be reconfigured each year to symbolize how immigrant communities continue to reshape our city and country.

I like the dual role of the memorial as both a tribute to immigrants and a somber reminder to those killed in a horrible genocide. The American public is very xenophobic at the moment and the debate about illegal immigration has shown an ugly and often racist streak that is not willing to acknowledge the reality of the situation or identify a realistic solution to the problem. This proposed monument embodies what I think we as Americans meant when we installed the plaque on the Statue of Liberty which says:

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me:
I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
I think that when a country allows itself to be ruled by fear, the results can be dangerous. I would not suggest that the United States would allow a genocide to result because of our current problems with immigrants and really all things pertaining to foreigners, but such horrible moments in human history can only come about when there is a deep distrust of “others”. History is riddled with these lessons and we can look to the Nazi’s in Germany looking to keep a ‘pure’ race (whatever that means), the horrible tragedies in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, or more recently the tragedies that continue in the Darfur region of the Sudan.

I know how great my country can be when we are at our best. I feel like Franklin Deleanor Roosevelt’s quote “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself” rings very true in the United States today. Although FDR was addressing the problems Americans were facing with the Great Depression, I think that the American public has been terrorized through half-truths and uncorroborated threats from the Bush administration into distrusting the rest of the world. So it is with anticipation that I wait for the new Armenian Genocide Memorial, because even if our society is not living up to our ideals, this memorial much like the Statue of Liberty will be tangible evidence of ideals Americans have upheld in the past and will hopefully strive to attain in our near future.

Kate Hudson in the N’hood

There are nearly a dozen or more trailers lining Washington and Union Park Street with film crews running around filming scenes for an upcoming movie starring Kate Hudson. I’m not sure what the movie is or if it is related to any of the filming she was doing here last fall, but it was surreal to see New York City cabs lining my neighborhood and huge movie lights lit up so bright that I had to shade my eyes when I walked by them. Earlier this morning, film crews were busy moving furniture around at Pho Republique restaurant while nearly a score of extras were pretending to eat dinner even though it was only 11:00am.

I’m sure more information about the filming will be reported in either the Boston Globe or the South End News, so if I find out more I’ll be sure to add it on my blog. Back in the fall I wrote about a bunch of filming that was going on in the Backbay in my entry called “Celebrities”. The increased filming was attributed to aggressive legislation the State of Massachusetts passed that gave filming crews tax credits when they filmed in the state. I’m sure the state is pleased to have all this filming and despite the tax breaks you can not deny that money is being spent (and from the looks of it – a lot of money). So kudos to the state for making this happen. For residents of L.A. and other major cities this sort of thing is probably old hat, but it still strikes me as a bit of a novelty.

Fighting GetMeTheHellOutOfHere Syndrome

Boston.com has been tempting all of us who suffer from getmethehelloutofhere syndrome with beautiful pictures from Brasil. For those not familiar with getmethehelloutofhere syndrome, it can be best described as a mental health disorder that begins to manifest itself shortly after the holiday season and grows into a full-blown epidemic in New England by early March. Those who suffer from the syndrome will tell you it is part depression, part cabin fever, mixed with an intolerable level of frustration from being cold 24/7. Personally, I blame this epidemic for single handedly causing so many surly faces and making the rest of the country think Bostonians aren’t friendly; we are really misunderstood because the medical community refuses to diagnose this horrible condition.

Anyway, kudos to Boston.com for doing their part to try and help Bostonians think of something other than depressingly low temperatures.

Rio de Janeiro is truly a blessed city with dramatic landscape and actual jungles that creep through a city that rivals New York City in size (actually it is larger than NYC). One of Rio’s most famous attractions Pão de Açúcar (Sugar Loaf) also is featured with a series of pictures that showcase the view of many of Rio’s beautiful beaches. The image at the top of this entry is of Sergio and me atop Sugar Loaf when we last visited the city in November of 2006. Iguazu Falls on the Brasil / Argentina border has to be one of the largest waterfalls in the world and is an excellent place to visit for a weekend. Niagara Falls is 1/5th the size of Iguazu which boasts a 500′ wide mouth and 2,300′ drop to create the largest waterfall I’ve ever seen. When Eleanor Roosevelt visited the site it is noted that she exclaimed, “Poor Niagara!” I would have to agree.

An evening at the ballet

To celebrate Valentine’s Day which occurred earlier this week, I attended the performance of Boston Ballet’s Romeo and Juliet on Friday night. I thoroughly enjoyed dressing for the ballet, sipping champagne in the beautiful foyer of the Wang / Citi Center before the performance and taking my seat to see what turned out to be one of my favorite visits to the ballet.

This was my first visit to the Boston Ballet in about two years, and I think it was my favorite performance to date. I freely admit that I lack the eye and training that some of my more ‘cultchad‘ friends have, but this was not my first ballet, and I can recognize good choreography, costume / set design and execution when I see it.

This was probably my favorite portrayal of William Shakespeare’s story. I would have never guessed that I would prefer a ballet’s interpretation over a play but the orchestra and elegance of the dancers really made it more romantic and ultimately tragic.

I had two favorite dances – the first occurring in the opening scene of the second act when a troupe of court jesters danced in the middle of town and the second occurring in the third scene of the same number act when nearly a dozen ballerina’s danced before Juliet in her bedroom after she had drank the friar’s potion to fool her family and avoid marrying Paris.

I lack the eloquence of the Boston Globe review which described the production as, “the whole package – elegant dancing, eye-popping pageantry, and vivid storytelling.” However, I could not agree more. I’m excited to return to see another ballet – it is really such a wonderfully special way to spend an evening.

An interactive guide to Boston

Boston.com has added a section to the travel tab on their website that offers visitor a virtual tour of Boston’s downtown neighborhoods. I thought it was pretty cool and hope The Boston Globe continues to develop the section. Aside from travelers, people looking to relocate to the area would find this interesting as would the casual visitor who might be looking to check out a part of town they have heard a lot about but may have never visited. Check out the section if you like by selecting the link I’ve added.