New York drivers are bastards. That was the first thing I experienced upon heading in to Queens in rush hour. Nearly died at least 5 times.
Arriving at the Miller residence we were relieved to both be alive and also be greeted so warmly. Stephen, another of the 1998 Mississauga-Leek exchange has an awesome place in Queens, a stones throw from the most spectacular 24 hour diner and the metro, and just a couple of stops into the thick of it in Manhattan. More importantly, Stephen along the way somehow managed to pick up a Maggie. Maggie is lovely, somewhat like Mr Nip had outdone himself with Mrs Nip, Mr Miller is McGuigan vs Tyson, and winning.
The pair of them could not be more wonderful and they even took us to the local Mexican joint (these Canadians love a spicy taco) but not to be outdone by his Toronto counterpart, this one had a michelin star. It was delicious. Stephen has not changed one bit in the best way, at one point sex with 79 year olds was discussed (apparently it was his thing, but only for oral, pre-Maggie of course). A good sign that always confirms that you are among top drawer personages is the feeling that one can make jokes about such things comfortably. He also found us a stable for the Black Beauty, even though the dude who told us the price would be about 25 bucks for the whole stay suffered from some sketchy mathematics skills, she was tucked up safe and sound.
New York is a pretty spectacular city. Maybe they were reading this and got the city prepped, or it’s just pretty nice, but that disparity and nonchalance towards it did not seem so prevalent on our trip to Manhattan. A city that at every turn sparks the fires of nostalgia in a brain like mine, for every corner has something or other that makes me remember something I watched in the movies some time. The people mostly seemed friendly, did get annoyed by those tourist attraction sales hordes at the exit of each station but that is only a minor inconvenience. Times Square was somewhat undersized in my opinion. Having seen it on the TV and come to know the grandiose nature of things here in the LOL, I expected more. Instead it was a small place with an awful lot of advertising. I mean, I only expected a large place with an awful lot of advertising and a good smattering of oddballs, but it was somewhat the let down. The stroll around Central Park was a delight, images mostly of Kevin McCallister evading the Sticky Bandits being my overwhelming thoughts, somehow that remains the most iconic despite the multitude of movies and shows filmed there. The Natural History Museum on Central Park West is a true gem.
It includes the Hayden Planetarium, famed as much for it’s too cool for school curator Neil deGrasse Tyson as it is for it’s brilliant stuff about quasars and the like. It also includes many fossils, bones, cultural histories of the natives among many others that were wonderfully interesting, but I was, surprisingly as I am no general fan of the taxiderm, very taken by the animal scenes with the native species preserved as if plucked in their prime from the very wilds from which they came (to be fair, that might be exactly what happened, Roosevelt, pioneer and conservationist he was, still loved to take one or two specimens from their beautiful lives, to stuff and mount for all and sundry) and plonked in a strange room full of cases, much like a less warped version of Lopez’s dreams in the Cell.
Unsurprisingly as a rotund individual with a love for the nourishment, I took away a couple of other culinary experiences from New York. The diner breakfast, food wise nothing extravagant, but served up in three piece attire, with coffee and a smile in a chromed temple to the food from a griddle or fryer. The most stereotypical place you could imagine nestled below the subway track a cacophony of glass, metal and New York truckers that make the pretty standard standard of the food unimportant.
The other thing is pizza. The New York Slice. Conny and I very nearly came to blows over my desire to chow down on some authentic cheap as chips New York Slice. After traipsing around a bit (alone as Conny was in belligerent mood) I found a suitably dodgy looking deli and got exactly what I expected in all it’s deliciousness. Conny got none. Because that is all she deserved.
It was definitely a humbler to go to the former site of the World Trade Center towers. To walk around those memorial waterfalls, seeing the names of all those poor souls lost many of whom ran in to help, if you don’t well up a little you are somewhat below human in my eyes. It hit me like a whopper to be fair, entire crews of people giving exactly their all to try and save lives. It truly shows the very best of the American spirit and even the human spirit at it’s finest. Yet the very same place serves to remind us of the exact opposite. The very worst ideals and ideas that mankind can have. From the dubious (at best, shameful and evil is probably closer to the point) politics surrounding all that caused such events and is the catalyst for all the problems sweeping through the middle east today to the queues of laughing and joking folk ready to hand over money to visit the “attraction” that is the 9-11 museum and equally as sickening those happy to take it. Obviously it could be argued that the money goes to helping victims etc, but we all know better. It could also be argued that the museum serves as a catalogue of events and an educational monument to a history so horrific it could not possibly be repeated. However, in that queue I only saw a bunch of people “doing New York”. I might well be being overly judgemental, but for a place that I see as a sombre place of reflection turned into a money spinner and something to enjoy. Didn’t sit right with me at all.
All in all though, New York is a wonderful place. Conny and I have decided we could, despite our limited love of cities, spend more time there. We will indeed be darkening the door of our illustrious hosts once more!





























































































































