There is a topic based index too, for some of those lazy people, in addition to the daily index. All photographs on a topic are usually in that section. Impatient ones can just click on the highlighted text to catch glimpses of the city through a photographic tour.
The Daily Dose |
IndexOAmerican Museum of Natural HistoryOBroadway OBrooklyn Bridge OCentral Park ODinosaurs OEmpire State Building OGay Pride OStatue of Liberty OLes Miserables OMetropolitan Museum of Art OMuseum of Modern Art (MoMA) ONew York University ONiagara Falls OTimes Square OWorld Trade Center |
Then came the difficult part. I didn't see any signs on the supervisor booth or the cab with the ubiquitous Visa or Master Card or the less common AmEx or Novus sign. To be safe I asked the guy whether they accept credit cards. I know they do in Ohio, Michigan and California. "Naah!" snorted the driver. So I walked back into the airport and looked for an ATM and found a non-BOfA where I shelled-out a few dollars service charge. I don't keep more than 20 dollars with me which is understandable once you realize that I live a few minutes from downtown Los Angeles. With the confidence of 100 greenbacks in the wallet I got into the cab.
I got hit with a smattering of some talk show in a language, which was new to ears from Los Angeles. With my knowledge of "Parlez vous Anglais?" and "Je ne parle pas Francais!", I did make out that it was French. For someone used to soulful serenades in Mexican, it was very new. The cab driver turned out to be Haitian. Haiti has Creole and French as the main languages. I was so tired from the red eye flight I actually missed the long and slow journey through the Holland Tunnel. We finally reached Greenwich Hotel with the cabby checking the map several times and finally dropping me a block past the hotel. I pulled out two twenties and gave them to him expecting some change back so that I can return some change as tip. The cabby disappeared just like the angel in the 7-11 advertisement with my forty bucks.
I grabbed a few winks before heading out to NYU to checkout our
meeting details. I have moved from Ohio State, which incidentally is
the largest single university campus in US, to USC, which is in the
middle of LA. The same sort of city shock exists between USC and
NYU. NYU is not only in the middle of Manhattan but it is in the
middle of everything. Unruly cabs and pedestrians (which I later found
out was the norm in NY), hippie hangouts in Washington Square and gay
pride on Christopher St. USC has a sort of academic enclosure where once
you enter the hypothetical boundary you feel as if you are part of a
student population. It wouldn't be possible to make out who is a
student in NYU area unless they have textbooks in their hands. After a
Japanese lunch on 8th avenue we decided to have a subway adventure
down to Battery Park. It turned out to be a damp squib, as it was
pretty easy to figure out which line to take and how to jump in and
out. Seonil and I realized why NY residents are in love with the
subway. It is really a very easy and efficient public transit
system. I guess there is a whole different city underneath Manhattan
with so many subway lines. I am actually surprised why
someone has not made a movie as yet on subway tunnels collapsing or
getting filled with water. "Volcano" has already toasted the Los
Angeles City in 1997.
After a few minutes strolling down Battery Park we strolled up
Broadway past the financial district. Broadway ends near battery park
next to the museum of American Indian
History. We had intended to walk all the
way till our hotel but NY decided to bless us with a sudden storm,
which had us scurrying into a shop for shelter. After spending 1/2 hr
to selecting a few postcards to justify our entering the shop we took
the subway back to the hotel. We had to rush back as I had arranged to
meet Aparna at my hotel. The
suite was stuffy as it was without a window just like most buildings
in Manhattan, so we decided to go for a stroll. New York does raise visions
of streets boxed in by tall concrete structures. The view from the street reflects accurately
the perceptive paintings of Georgia O'Keeffe.
When we walked out Appu
pointed out the World Trade Center and said, "Why don't we go to the
top of the world?" We picked up my camera and took the subway
downtown. The subway actually leads up into the WTC twin towers. We
argued a bit about who is going to pay for the tickets with two
conflicting criteria of me being a guy and Appu being the earning
girl. I let her finally win because Appu pointed out that she was the
host and I was the guest. It actually was pretty nice top of the world
with a nice sunset and the lights slowly coming on. We spent time till
well past the sunset when the Brooklyn Bridge was shining like a
necklace over East River. I convinced Appu
to stay back for a bite at
sbarro in WTC, before heading out to the subway to head home. Her
parents visiting from India were actually waiting for her at home. I
dropped Appu at her subway station before heading back on the same
route to the hotel. The next morning Appu told me that her father was
actually waiting outside the station for her. It was very nice to
exploit the fact that you can travel in the subway as long as you want
without getting out and you just pay once! And if you do have the time
between the trains you can enjoy live
music while you wait for a train. But most of the time it was
tourists like me who were hanging around the musicians while the busy new yorkers were
running past us.
It was nice to see that you can put your hand up and a cab would
appear to pick you up. But that was in the morning. I could have been
waving at someone and the cab would have appeared too. In LA you would
have to call in advance to get a taxi at your door in most of Los
Angeles. But it was in the evening of Friday when it was drizzling
after a 100 F day that I realized what hailing (rather flailing for) a
cab meant. None of them would stop even when I tried the idea from the
movies where I held up a 10-buck note in my fingers and waved at all
cabbies. That was when I realized that 10 greenbacks mean nothing to
cabbies in Manhattan. Off-duty means off-duty!
After a short discussion about NY and LA cities and their relative
benefits and problems, we headed midtown for a post-work
dinner. Dr. Prasanna picked an upscale "Pondicherry", with
French-Indian cuisine. It was a slightly hep and costly place but
since our advisor was paying we had some good food. I had three-course
meal of zucchini soup, chicken and almonds and pistachio pudding. The
pudding had a really nice and novel taste to it. I did end up shelling
out 10 dollars to the coat check lady as all the guys ahead of me
walked out after taking their heavy laptops and loaded bags. The lady
downstairs made a sly comment about tipping the person who had taken
the heavy bags off us earlier. I should have actually tipped the lady
who returned the bags. I had hesitated as I didn't have any dollar
bills in my wallet and I ended up paying 10 dollars to the lady
upstairs. The note brightened up Shaleen's face like a Christmas tree.
One thing I never did like about Manhattan and even a few other areas
in New York is the dirtiness. Streets and subways are full of paper,
rags, overflowing trash and stuffy smells. I have seen shopkeepers
cleaning the street in front of their
shops in the morning. New York would rate pretty low in cleanliness
among all the cities that I have been to. The situation was in stark
contrast to even Los Angeles which I would not claim to be the
cleanest city around.
Appu had to help her dad to get to a spiritual retreat in
Montvale. He missed one bus so we waited for him to get on the next
bus. Appu did upset her father by trying to give him one instruction
too many. Then we actually went back to Appu's place in Queens and had
some nice idlis her mom had made. I ate double of what Appu did before
we took the subway to South Ferry.
It was a weekend day and especially a really nice and warm day which had
the ferry to Liberty Island very crowded. There were the usual street
performers entertaining the crowd waiting in line. Appu's ear caught a
violinist playing the Indian national anthem. I could hardly hear it
above the sound of waves against the jetty. There were a lot of
Indians just like any other tourist spot in NY. Most people getting on
the boat were actually tourists and I could not recognize even half the
languages being spoken around me. The ride was not too long, but does
present a very flattering view of the Manhattan skyline.
The Statue of
Liberty was on the other side. It didn't look too huge to me. In Jerry
Springerish style the pedestal below the statue was actually as tall
as the statue itself. It was presented by the French in recognition of
the mutual cooperation during the French or the American
revolution. Seemed a pretty nice place to put it though. A lady called
liberty heralding the entrance to the new world! I guess it has
already been stereotyped in movies though I can't remember whether it
was a Chaplin movie or Scarface or An Affair to Remember. Nearby Ellis
Island used to house the immigration authorities where it would herd
all the people crowded in leaking tincan boats hoping to make it in
the new world.
We spent most of the time sitting at the base of statue and taking the
statutory tourist pictures. Appu has been
there six times already and
she tried desperately to convince me not to go walking up the pedestal
of the statue. Luckily for her, I was not really interested in getting
a treetop view of all the tourists around. After I gulped down a
lemonade and Appu sipped some bottled water to beat the heat, we took
the ferry back to Manhattan.
Since she was worried about her dad
managing to reach home safely we called up her home and decided to go
home for dinner. I thought I usually eat spicy food, but her mom's
cooking did manage unscrew if not blow my top. Appu desperately wanted
to see Fallen, as she is in love with Denzel Washington and also she
happened to see a bit of it before her scared friend made her walkout
of a theater. Since I had nothing else to do we went to rental down
the street and spent the night watching it. The movie convincingly
gave reasons as to why it was a flop when it came out. I waited for
Appu's father to return before I headed back to my hotel.
I got the scare of my life when the subway entrance was closed. How do
I get back to the hotel in the middle of the night? A cab from Queens
to Greenwich would be too costly. As I walked out of the station I
realized that I was on the Queens side of the track. The Manhattan
side of the subway gates were still open on the other side of the
street (there is a lamp on the top of each station which indicates
whether it is open or closed). I heaved a sigh of relief and took the
express to hotel.
The short walk from the subway station to hotel on Christopher street
was itself very interesting tonight. There was unusually large number
of people (couples) on the street. Even Saturday night did not seem to
be an excuse for the party atmosphere around and the barricades being
set up around the street. I was really surprised at how untouched I
was at not being in awe of all the gay couples around me. I seemed to
have been prepared to accept anything that NY city tosses out at me
including a gay pride street right next to my hotel and NYU. People
were handing out the Voice magazine to me while I was walking
down the street. All restaurants and pubs were sporting the rainbow
colors of the gay pride flag.
After the usual confusion with the incorrect billing for the room (the clerk
did not even know how to cancel a charge, she was searching for the
-ve button to credit), I left the bags with the clerk and headed
midtown to meet my city guide. Now Christopher street was in full
party swing. Balloons, radios blaring some songs I never heard before,
people with picnic baskets. I decided to take the risk of taking my
camera out at the street corner and photographing the Two potatoes
restaurant at Christopher and Greenwich (a block from hotel). There
were a couple of other guys also hanging around alone at the corner
without any partners. I was puzzled till I saw a guy take out his
camera on seeing mine and start shooting. Guess he was more afraid
than me. Still I did not have the courage to risk my camera even for a
couple of guys in thongs and started towards the subway in a hurry.
I made a brief stop at the Penn Central station to find out
about the New Jersey Transit train that I had to take in the evening.
Then I met Appu at the usual Trailways stop and we headed to the
Rockefeller center. It was a really nice and sunny day and
surprisingly the humidity was also lower than the day I had
arrived. Rockefeller center was just a
golden statue and an umbrella
studded courtyard to me. We heard more interesting music blaring from
the road. I had seen Lionel Richie on TV that morning in a street
concert and was excited to hear some similar street concert. We headed
over to Fifth Ave.
There are parades and then there are PARADES. What we saw was
incredible, funny, exotic, crazy and compelling at the same time. I
guess that also actually describes the big apple itself. It was the
gay pride parade replete with floats, stars, university groups (NYU,
Princeton, NJIT etc.) and drag queens. I am
sure even you cannot make out who is who by
looking at them. I really had to convince Appu that it was guy rather
than a woman. She was not even sure of why someone would be gay or lesbian.
Given some thought, it is not very difficult to understand someone being gay or
lesbian. Not in terms of sexual relationship but with respect to human
relationship. It is not a very difficult fact to realize that a guy
would understand a guy better and a lady would understand a lady
better. (I am not campaigning for the book "Men are from Mars and
Women are from Venus". :) Why should we be the judge of who is right
for another person. My policy towards such issues has mostly been
NOMB. I could not imagine how things would be in San Francisco which is
known as the gay capital.
One thing to note is that asking gays for directions or living in a
gay street would be one of the safest things for any girl to do if she
is single. No dirty
comments and no sexual harassment. Just for that reason having more
gays and lesbians in the office would be a great thing. (Sexual
harassment is not about sex, it is about POWER! Yeah, right! and I am
from timbuctoo.) I guess they have a problem with gays in army because
that is a potential distraction for the soldiers given the
predominantly male population in the army.
We hopped into a Chinese place, Wei Min Lou(?), for lunch. Appu said she
had wanted to eat there but had missed the last time. Nice cozy place
with decently good food. But we ended ordering a lot more than we
could eat as each dish turned out to be enough for two persons, than
just one. So the rest of the day we carrying around the packed lunch
with smell of Chinese food emanating from the bag. Having had a heavy
lunch we decided to go for a lazy stroll in Central Park than doing
something strenuous.
Central Park in the middle of Manhattan has the same sort look as the
green belt in front of IIT in New Delhi. It always surprises me how
those real estate sharks can let live such prime land in relative
greenery. Los Angeles has its beaches for a Sunday. New York makes do
with its central park. There were jazz
players, guitar soloists and Rollerblade
Dancers. People do rollerblade
in New York like Los Angeles, at least in Summer. The sculpted bodies and
the skimpy summer dresses are the same but you would be comparing a 27
mile skating track from Malibu to Long Beach with a few miles of track
in between pedestrian traffic in Central Park.
In spite of the number of people in the park, people in California and
especially Los Angeles are definitely more fitness conscious than New
York. I have seen on the average slimmer bodies and less beer
bellies. I even saw a beggar who lives on the streets (a regular at
Santa Monica beach) doing push-ups and had a very muscular body.
Just the year round sun and warmth which prevents from hiding your fat
in Winter will do wonders to your fitness regimen.
The Summerfest of free concerts in CP was a nice touch to draw and
entertain crowds. There were kids playing in the sand and moms
teaching them drawing with sand crayons while the band was playing. The group we listened was
very nice with several guys on the violin playing in synch. It sounded
very much as pick-me-up synthetic music. The open air stadium with
cane chairs was perfect for the loud music they were playing and the
small girls doing the line dancing with their moms.
Appu dragged me out of the park saying she had to go home and we headed
over to my hotel to pickup the luggage. After I picked up my bags we
headed to Penn Central for my train. After buying my ticket Appu left
for home and I flopped down next to a pillar waiting for the
train. The platform on which the train is going to arrive is decided
dynamically. As the time for a train gets near the waiting hall gets
crowded and everyones eyes are trained on the board announcing the
platform. Then there is a mad rush, as is usual everywhere in NY, to
the specific escalator.
I was taking the North Jersey Coastline (but I was heading south to
increase the confusion). I had some time left for my train but it
showed "Connection" instead of "On Time" for others. I chatted up a
young lady sitting next to me asking her about it. She expressed lack
of any idea what it meant. I gave her the usual line about being from
LA and that grabbed her attention. She was a marine and was posted in
29 Palms close to Palm Springs in the past. I could have never guessed
that she was a marine from her pink and orange dyed hair. I did not
dare to ask her though whether it was allowed. After a few exchanges
of polite talk about NY and LA, I strolled over to my train.
The trains are pretty good except for the signs of "Do not put your legs
on seats", even in an empty train. The ticket collector in the train
grabbed my tickets and left a piece of paper stuck on the seat. I
surmised that it tells him whether I have a ticket and where I am
supposed to get down. I finished the lemonade picked up in Penn
Station and got down to jotting a few notes and reading a book Appu
gave me as a gift - "The God of Small Things - Arundhati Roy".
The train rumbled on with voice prompts reminding every time there was
a station and asking us to check our belongings before we leave.
Long Branch station was a shock after NYC. It was deserted and dark
even as early as 10:00pm. I walked over to a Jersey Pride (which
seemed to be the equivalent of 7-11 in NJ) to call Tejas for the ride
home. With my luck riding high, his telephone was supposedly not
working and I ended up calling a cab. While I was waiting for the cab
I filled out the postcards to home and a few friends and posted them
at the post box on the corner. Tejas luckily decided to check
on me and the cab arrived just as we were pulling out of jersey pride.
We reached home to a nice apartment and after a brief chat and
introduction to Shivang (Devangs cousin from India), gulped
the Chinese food I had taken along. Devang had a few movie cassettes lying
around so watched Far and Away, a nice Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman movie.
It was a pretty cold night in New Jersey compared to the hot ones in
Manhattan. The concrete jungle might be absorbing the heat during the
day and not letting the steam out at night. I woke up early enough to
see an old oriental gentleman doing oriental calisthenics in the
parking lot. That pushed me to my morning crunches and push-ups which
I forget half of the week. I grabbed the early morning train from Long
Branch and then hopped on the subway to the American Museum of Natural
History. I was doing most of trip on the fly and decided on AMNH on
the train. One of the things I have to be grateful for is the AAA New
York guide which was really written for tourists like me.
One thing true about many museums in New York, including the AMNH, is
the size. It was so huge that very few can expect to do a good tour
and finish it in one single day. I really did not know what to expect
when I go to a natural history museum. The last time I had been to a
museum, other than SF MOMA and Columbus Art museum, was the Salarjung
Museum in Hyderabad (It is known to be a pretty good one and is the
largest collection in the world by a single person). For someone who
has not even seen the California Natural History Museum which has been
outside my office window, across the road, for about two years, it was
a pleasant experience.
I took the whole package deal with entrance fee, audio tour and IMAX
movie which was only $11.50 for students. The guy issuing me the cdrom
refused to believe that I was the same guy as in my drivers
license. Especially with my moustache off! "You look very different", he
exclaimed, and added for clarification, "and much better!". I wasn't
really impressed with his complement, till his assistant said, "And
you have lost weight too, look at the cheeks!". Her, I was going to
believe and gushed out, "Yeah! California does that to you".
I started out on the top floor with the dinosaur exhibits. "They are
all very huge exhibits and you can see them fast", the guy giving me
the CDROM said. The halls are arranged according to evolution as
Vertebrate origins, Saurischian Dinosaurs, Ornithischian Dinosaurs,
Primitive Mammals and Advanced Mammals. I had never before seen
Dinosaur remains except in "Jurassic Park". It
was fascinating to read
how dinosaurs evolved, adapting to the needs and nature, developing new
organs and shedding others. Fossils of footprints with some even
supposedly capturing the chase between different species seemed very
unreal.
It always baffles me how people take things for granted - either not
searching for our roots or actually looking for them. When you look at
an exhibit detailing the family tree of species, it is difficult to
realize the amount of scientific work that went into it. Darwin had
just seen the tip of the iceberg. Man spends so much time, money and
effort in enhancing his knowledge of the past. Is it going to foretell
the future? Is it going to enhance our life? Will it answer the
question of why we are here ? The museum explains how fossils are
excavated, studied and analyzed. How the mistakes made in one analysis
are corrected by the finds of more fossils. Some exhibits list how the
older mounting was done compared to the new one. The tail of one
dinosaur was lifted into air after seeing some footprints without any
drag marks for the tail behind. The most imposing exhibit, especially
after Jurassic Park, is the T-Rex (Tyrannosaurus
Rex).
One really wonderful aspect of the museum was the large number of
children with their parents in tow running from exhibit to exhibit and
reading the descriptions. A day in the museum will definitely be more
fun and educative than poring over photographs in the book. I fondly
remembered the childhood picnics to the zoos and museums when I was a
kid. Seeing and touching a dinosaur bone or a Shark jawbone was a far cry from trying to
understand from Crichton's descriptions or seeing Jaws. A very nice
exhibit was how
the evolution of horses was one of the easiest ways to trace the
migration of species and the continental drift. Kids loved the
holographic projections of the human body with different views showing
the skeleton, organs, and the nervous system (they are tough to capture on
film).
The short video on mammals was very informative too.
I learnt that the main distinguishing character of the mammals is not
giving birth to live offspring but the presence of three bones in the
ear.
The biodiversity hall, which was a new exhibit, was one of the
fascinating ones in the lower half. A whole room of mind boggling
variety of species was so ... mind boggling! There was a screen
showing how population growth has been happening for a few centuries
and projections up to 2025. One of the guys in the audience had a sly
comment on the lack of population in American sub continent till
1500. "All those Incas and Indians might not have been citizens", he
said.
After calling Appu and pestering her to meet me after work, I headed
over to the IMAX theatre for the movie Amazon. Though it was a very
nice movie it lacked enough punch. To make it appealing to the
audience, the story is told from the eyes of a couple of doctors - one
an Inca village doctor who heads to the plains and one a white man
looking for cures in herbal remedies. The photography and locales were
superb though, and captured the green world very well. It does leave a
message for the audience to preserve what we have.
I headed over to the civilizations section and decided to only finish
the Indian and Oriental section due to
lack of time. I guess that is
one aspect at which museums fail. No Indian (even Chinese too i think)
will come back happy with seeing any exhibit about Indian
civilization. I feel it is just impossible to cover all aspects of
a civilization using a few exhibits. The diversity, especially for
someone from that culture, is too wide to capture in a museum. It was
a nice introduction though for others who do not know anything about
Indian culture. But you shouldn't expect too much from exhibits which
spell Ravana as Ravanna. But at least museums know the
distinction between Indian and American Indian art.
A special African exhibit on Kalabari an african dance ritual
with steel masks was interesting. A video accompanying the display of
various steel masks and dresses explained the background of the
exhibit. The dresses and make up reminded me of the elaborate dances
of kathakali of southern India.
My neck was very tired at the end of the day with the camera and the audio
CDROM hanging down the front. I had spent so much time and was so
reluctant to move out finally that the cdrom guy had a worried look on
his face. "I thought you wouldn't come back," he said. I stepped out
just as they were closing the doors of the museum.
After licking up an icecream cone from the street vendor in front of
the museum I headed to walk towards midtown. The ways people earn
money! I saw a guy flagging down cabs for ladies coming out of the
museum and accepting tips from them. Since I still had some time
before meeting Appu I decided to walk a few blocks and then take the
subway. While walking down I noticed that the museum had a moorish(?)
look from the outside with turrets and ramparts. I ended up at the
usual Trailways stop from the subway to meet Appu.
We decided to walk over for dinner outside the station and ended up in
Times Square. Olive Garden below the coke
bottle sign was the choice
for the evening and we luckily ended up eating some nice Italian
dinner. The food and the virgin margarita was excellent though the
only complaint I had was that the waiter wouldn't hurry our order
in spite of telling him that I had to catch a train. Times Square is
very crowded and is definitely one place
which would remind people
from India of their homes. We took the usual
tourist photographs in Times Square before walking back to Penn
Station. I bought a T-shirt with NY logo as rubber print on it. (I had
decided I would do all the touristy things!).
After taking the NJT to Long Branch it was good to snuggle up in bed
after being on my feet the whole day.
Just before reaching the MOMA
I saw a Cathedral a few blocks away and ducked into it. There was an
afternoon service going on. I guess people were dropping in absolve a
few of their sins while also getting something to eat. I have been in
very few cathedrals before, and this one was huge! The thick pillars,
the high domes and arches, and the stained glass reminded me of the
vivid descriptions in The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett.
It must have taken a lot of time to perfect the design wherein the
pillars do not really obstruct the distance between god and the
praying folk.
After daring a couple of snaps without the flash I headed out to meet
Rama at MOMA. The building looked pretty small from outside compared
to the Natural History Museum. There was a special exhibition of
Aleksandr Rodchenko. Most of his designs were for the bolshevik
publicity. Article covers, propaganda fliers, military advertising
were some the common media of his expression. It wasn't painting but
more of graphic design, photocollage etc.
In the staple part of the museum there were the usual Picasso, Matisse
paintings and art. It was exciting to see live the Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon. I would very much understand someone writing a whole
thesis on the imagery in Henri Rousseau's The Dream or the
cut hair in Frida Kahlo's Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair.
Rama explained to me the significance of the earth colors in Matisse
paintings which were an influence from his African outings.
But the most interesting exhibition that I found was
that of Willie Cole. It should have been actually titled An artist
in search of a medium. Since Willie Cole needed to find a novel
way, he discovered(!) the clothes iron. His art consists of irons used
to burn cloth or even Ironing boards. I am
sure DaVinci and Van Gogh were turning in their grave at the concept
of modern art!
The selection of pop-art was the one I liked best in MOMA. They had a
good collection of Pollack, Warhol. Especially the classic Campbell Soups by Warhol. The collections
seemed to be similar to the those in SF MOMA. But the best exhibition
of Lichtenstein was the one I had seen in Ohio State University
campus. Roy is a graduate from OSU and his was one form of pop-art
which immediately draws your attention to the inadequacy of the print
medium. It seems to sort of echo the aversion I have to seeing
pixilated photographs on the web.
The best pieces among the remaining collection were the architectural
drawings by Frank L. Wright and Louis Kahn. There was the usual
section on chairs, ball bearings and vases. I guess the iMac would
soon take its place among the exhibits given the ravings of the
journalistic community in the newspapers.
While breaking for a bite at the cafeteria I called up Appu and
convinced her to call her parents to the city to go for a Broadway
musical. After we finished with the museum me and Rama headed out to
Trailways to meet Appu. By now the person at the magazine counter in
trailways station had started smiling at me while I browse through the
magazines while waiting for Appu. Once her parents arrived all of us
walked down to Times Square.
Appu made the choice of Les Miserables for us. She argued that
since we knew the story anyway, it wouldn't be a bad experience for us
in case we didn't manage to understand what they were singing! We
shelled out $40 for each of the $75 tickets at the discount ticket
center in Times Square. The unsold tickets for the evening shows go on
half-price sale at a couple of locations in NY for those interested in
catching some broadway show. Most weekdays you can end up getting
tickets for whichever show you want. But it is actually possible to
get the $15 tickets if you know in advance which show you want to see. I
was not sure of how the $15 seating was though.
We walked over to the Imperial Theater and
chatted while waiting for the show. Jekyll and Hyde was playing in the
theater opposite and Appu confessed that she had never heard the story.
I was tempted to buy the souvenir program that the usherers were
selling for $10 a piece. But I realized that it would be one more junk
book lying around in my house without any appreciation. So I decided
to stick to buying my usual mug to add to the collection.
The musical was a real visual and aural treat. I do not remember the
last time I had seen a live play other than on TV and screen. Sitting
in front of the stage and listening to people singing with their own
voices and dancing without any retakes was a exhilarating experience.
Weaving an epic story on a stage of couple of hundred square feet was
really an interesting montage. I was really surprised at the management
of the rotating stage and the moving props when I couldn't even grasp
a single movement at the darkened part. Of course, I guess what was
happening at the lighted front was a good distraction! The story
itself was no less an interesting facet to the whole experience.
Hunger, Passion, Love, Greed, Freedom, Sacrifice,
Truth, Crime, etc. - all set in
the backdrop of one of the most important events of history, the
French revolution. Both the Jean Valjean and Inspector Javert
characters really impressed me with their performances. The musical
was so entwined with the story that the songs never seemed out of
place even though some songs never advanced the story.
After a very satisfactory day we headed back home in the subway. I
spent the night in Rama's aptt as it was too late to go back to
Eatontown. After a warm bowl of corn soup and munchies I turned in for
the night.
I discovered that I had run out of cash. Typically in LA I withdraw 20
bucks at a time. In NY it is 100 dollars at a time but still I find
myself running out of cash all the while. I had to go around and find
an ATM to get some cash for the entrance fee.
The museum was already
teeming with people and I waited for the short guided tour.
Our wait was rewarded with a beautiful
long-legged intern from Columbia with a cute smile. She breezed us
through the museum walking us from one corner to the other while
giving us a sample of what the museum had. We moved through the
Egyptian hieroglyphics to the Chinese art. She explained the influence
Chinese art had on the European artists of later generations. After a
few expert comments on some 19th and 20th century paintings, a
Persian room and an English room exhibit etc. While we were running
around with the pretty guide there were a few people relaxing on the
floor and enjoying the view leisurely, possibly non-tourists or local student artists.
We finished our tour
with the stained glass pieces from 16th century. After describing how
the colored glass is developed/painted and put together we were
released to discover then museum on our own.
One of the nicest things about visiting the world famous museums is
getting to see in person great works which you have read or seen in
print. Rodin's Thinker was one such piece at
the Metropolitan. The 4 pieces of Thinker, Adam, Eve and Martyr
together in a single location! Then there was the usual Annenberg
collection of impressionist and post-impressionist painters such as
Van Gogh, Cezanne, Picasso etc.
Not having too much time I intended not to miss the south asian
exhibits. I headed to the second floor past Perseus holding Medusa's cut-off head. The
exhibits on Indian temples were really nice. But I was wondering at
the same time on how unimportant they were to me in India. The Qutub
Minar, the thousand pillar temple in warangal did not even deserve a
second glance when in India. They suddenly take much more importance
and significance once you see them across the seven seas in the Ny
Metropolitan.
Unlike MOMA, Metropolitan also had some descriptive sentences below the
title of each painting, sculpture or artifact. It is much more
interesting when you can know something other than just who did it!
The layout and the arrangement of the pieces was also more
interesting. I noticed that I was drawn towards the paintings for a
closer observation rather than feeling a stand-off attitude in the
arrangement. Alternate pieces were arranged into a depression into the
wall and I would unconsciously step closer to them. When you turn
towards the next painting its jutting out so everyone being lazy takes
fewer steps and are closer to the art than usual. Most photographs,
artifacts, paintings are arranged similarly except a few big paintings
which have to be seen from far.
The exhibit on Korean culture was recommended to me by Seonil, who had
seen it on the weekend before he left for LA. The wing was designed by
an award winning architect Kyu Sung Woo. I was really fascinated by
the illustrations of the books done in gold similar to the intricate
filigree(?) work in Indian art. Buddha does feature prominently in the
Asian exhibits including a 2 storey sized stone carving.
The art work in most of the Asian exhibits with some walls plucked off
the forts and temples in Asia does affirm that religion plays a
significant part in the development of art, music and dance. I could
see at least a score of the Nataraja statues. The really interesting
thing was also the way the exhibits were displayed using natural light
filtering through the roof. There was even a full fledged Jain mandapa
reconstructed in one part of the exhibit.
Metropolitan was even larger than the Natural History museum and i
suspect that I managed to less than one-sixth of the full museum. But
it was closing time and we were being announced out. But they did let
me stay for a few extra minutes in the store and I managed to find a
really nice replica of a 12th century Chinese mug for my collection.
The sun was shining bright with a cool breeze blowing when I stepped
out of the museum. The large number of steps outside the museum were filled with
weary tourists giving a rest to their legs. There were
wisps of white clouds down the street and there was a guy in front of
the museum entertaining the crowd. With a couple of cute teenagers ensnared from the audience,
he was doing some acrobatics. It is not very easy to describe the ecstatic
feelings on their faces.
I rushed to the subway realizing that I was a little late to meet
Appu. But the nice thing about subway is that there is a train you can
take whenever you land in the station. We walked from the port
authority terminal to the Empire State building intending to go up and
get one more sky view of NY.
Empire State building is actually one of the unsuccessful buildings of
NYC. Built farther away from the financial wall street district and
the World Trade Center, and also farther away from midtown Rockefeller
center, it was supposed to attract some of the business to its
area. It was not a great success as was evident when we walked around
it. Unfortunately the topmost floor was closed and I wasn't interested
in just gazing through the glass doors. We abandoned the idea of going
up and just munched on some dinner at Taco Bell before heading to Penn
Station.
Having become an expert at trains overnight, I was actually giving
directions to a long-legged blonde in the train on how to get to her
destination, which happened to be same as mine - Long Branch. After we
got down at the station and I was waiting for my ride home, she
plopped down on the bench too waiting for her friends.
Then in a
completely uncharacteristic manner she turned to me, asked me to watch
over her bags and strolled away to make a phone call. For people
living in Los Angeles who eye every other person in the bus stop as a
potential mugger this was a total surprise. I wouldn't even have
imagined a NY city person trusting someone alone at the stop with
their bags, but reconciled myself that Long Branch was a small enough village
for people to trust others.
After some sumptuous dinner which Rupal had prepared we all watched
Peacemaker before dozing off to sleep.
I missed the 1:50 transit train by a few minutes so I waited in the
station for the next one an hour later. The platform was pretty long
but there was an air conditioned cabin in the middle with seating for
a dozen travelers. While I was rifling through a book Appu had given
me, an Indian girl and a couple of Hispanic women walked in. The
Hispanic women were trying to figure out a way to get somewhere and
after some heated discussion turned and directed some question in
Spanish to me. I replied with the stock phrase that the USC tram
driver had taught me Se Na Habla Espanol. Oh! enthused
the woman, English?, she asked. When I nodded my head she
started asking questions. When I politely informed them that I was
from out of town, the Indian girl piped up and told them about the
buses they wanted to take.
Taking the cue, I asked the girl if she knew of any buses I could take
to Eatontown. She didn't have any idea but we did start off talking
about Los Angeles and New York when she knew that I am from the land
of the angels. She was carrying a Lucent Technologies bag and I was
really surprised when she informed me that she was a
freshman(freshwoman?) med school student rather than a working
girl. She was lugging around her stuff in her fathers bag and he works
in Lucent Labs.
I really wasn't sure if I should pile onto her for company and was settling
a couple of seats down. She bent over into the aisle and queried,
Where in India are you from?. I decided that she wouldn't mind
chatting for the hour and plopped myself into the seat next to
her. The hour passed pretty fast with discussion about med school,
Villanova University, University of Southern California and World Cup
Soccer. Amy (Amitha as she clarified) played in the sweeper position
for her school team and was very interested in watching the world
cup. But she missed all the matches that we angelites fortunately
caught on the Mexican channel in LA. The shouts of
Gooooooooooooaaaaaaal can never be substituted by the idiotic
red zone commentary of the American sportscasters.
Amitha was visiting her sister who was interning at JPMorgan while
finishing up her MIS degree at UPenn. I gave Amitha the spare NY
subway map that I had and pointed her to the correct line when we
landed finally at Penn Station.
Since there was still sometime for sunset, me and Appu decided to get
a bite at the Indian restaurant she was always talking about. We got
down the subway at Lexington and 29th and walked over to Pongal, a
south indian restaurant. Appu had mentioned the good looking
receptionist several times but she turned out to be far below her
hyped up description. The food was decent though and I tried some
Kashmiri Pulao and Palak Paneer.
We headed over to the Brooklyn Bridge. This was the
bridge that many a Yankee had sold to unsuspecting, gullible
visitors. It was a nice evening on the bridge with the sun setting
behind the city skyline. We hung
around chatting till the lights
started coming on. There were people rollerblading and biking down the
walkway of the bridge. The bridge was a maze of wires and poles with
old gas lamp shaped bulbs lighting the
way. We sat on a bench and contemplated life for a while before we
headed back home.
We ended up getting back late to the station and I managed to catch a
train reaching pretty late at midnight. After a bit of scolding from
Devang we saw the movie Pret-a-Porter, a movie based on the
fashion industry. It was a pretty boring movie except for the climax
scene where a designer decides to show the intrinsic natural beauty of
the human body rather than dress it up in exotic fabrics. I am sure
people would enjoy the beauty even if they did not appreciate the
message!
Thursday, June 25 & Friday, June 26
The next couple of days were a whirl with the meeting work where we
had to justify that we did something good with the research money that
we got and we will do something good in the next year. I also ended up
with a very valuable (price and memories) memento. I ordered a Pina
colada without specifying virgin. I took the costlier version
where you can take the hurricane glass home. It turned out that the
drink was laced with rum. I didn't realize that it was alcohol even
when I had to take a paper bag to carry the full glass gingerly. After
we walked back into the department I had to throw the drink down the
drain. I ended up with a 9-dollar glass though it does have a nice
Greenwich Village and NY logo on it.
Saturday, June 27
The meeting was so tiring that I ended up sleeping late. Which is
especially easy since the room I slept in did not even have a
window. I am used to waking up with the sunlight in LA. I called up
Appu and she decided that she would escort me to The Statue
that afternoon. We planned to meet in the subway station at the end of
the platform.
Sunday, June 28
The rumble of the subway beneath the building woke me up from my
slumber. Yankees (or maybe be just Manhattaners) would have no problem
adjusting to California. They would soundly sleep through all the
tremors from the San Andreas fault. After a shower and a quick bite
from the left-overs in the refrigerator from previous dinners, I
started packing up my stuff. People who stay frequently in motels
might not realize the difficulties in clearing out. For infrequent
travelers like me, forgetting a belt here, a toothbrush there or a
file in the drawer is very common. I gave some files to seonil as he
was leaving earlier to LA, lightening my load just a wee bit.
Monday, June 29
Tuesday, June 30
I woke up and decided that I would explore the art scene in NY and
called up Appu for her friend's number. Rama is an artist and agreed
to host me at the NY MOMA and explain a bit of the greek and latin to
me. We decided to meet at the MOMA at 12:00. Having taken an
earlier train and with time to kill, I checked out the AAA guide and
decided to hike up to the Sony Labs to see what it was all about.
The window displays with Godzilla and other jazzy stuff was attractive
but to my dismay I found that there was already a big crowd of school
kids waiting to get in. The line was already snaking around the block.
So I walked back to the MOMA dodging in and out of doorways to escape
the drizzle which kept going on and off.
Wednesday, July 1
The bed was so comfortable and the dreams so wonderful that I did not
move from the bed almost till noon. I dragged myself up realizing that I was
wasting time sleeping in NY. After a bath and a hearty meal of suji
upma which Rama had made, I struck out to the city. It was the turn of
the Metropolitan museum today. After taking the subway and getting
lost on Park Avenue for a few minutes, I reached Metropolitan by early
afternoon.
Thursday, July 2
Since I had not planned on doing anything for the day, I sat around
till noon before slowly getting ready to goto the city. Since it was
the day before the long weekend, Appu said that she would take off
early and meet me in NY.
Friday and Saturday, July 3 and 4
Niagara photos when I get time!
Sunday, July 5
Back in LaLa Land.
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Comments to kiran AT halcyon DOT usc DOT edu.