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Curtis on Letterman: Sotomayor (VIDEO)

Written by Administrator   June,11,2009
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Curtis makes a guest appearance (via NY1) on David Letterman's new segment "Sonia Sotomayor Pronunciation Round-Up", watch here.

Learn how to pronounce her name correctly, click here.

 

Into the Belly of the Beast: The Underbelly Tour

Written by Administrator   May,27,2009
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I recently joined Curtis on one of his Underbelly Tours, a tour unlike any other. Most tours show the highlights of a city. Curtis’s tour, however, shows the lowlights of a city. He takes you on the subway up to the South Bronx, which was one of the most crime-infested areas of a city that was rampant with crime during the late 1970’s and 1980’s. He points out places where one would not dare go in those days and shows how these areas have improved, although he emphasizes that some areas shown on the tour are not perfect today.

As a lifelong New Yorker, I was afraid that the tour would be a tourist magnet, sucking in tourists to show them the supposed horrors of New York. Yet although there were some tourists, I was mainly surrounded by fellow New Yorkers. Indeed, you probably have to be a New Yorker to fully appreciate the dramatic improvement in the areas we visited. We saw neighborhoods that used to be run by drug lords, gangs, and pimps. Indeed, we saw shoes hung over a telephone wire, a sign that perfection has not reached the South Bronx. But it is fascinating to think, as Curtis points out, that things that we take for granted on street corners and in train stations, like ATM machines or pay phones, would not have lasted five minutes without being vandalized twenty years ago.

Equally surprising to me is the relevance of the Guardian Angels today. I had heard about the Guardian Angels before the tour but thought they were a relic from an era when New York was run by gangs, the government didn’t care, and the police were debilitated. Yet there are areas in the South Bronx where the Guardian Angels are still needed. New York has poured millions into rehabilitating Harlem and other neighborhoods, as Curtis notes, but the South Bronx has been overlooked, making the neighborhood, although better than it used to be, not ideal. For this reason, Curtis remains a sought-after star in the South Bronx. Scores of people came up to Curtis during the tour to shake his hand and thank him for all that the Guardian Angels do. Thirty years after their start, inner city residents still look to the Guardian Angels.

The new Yankee Stadium, the final sight on the tour, symbolizes how the South Bronx has changed over the last thirty years. But just as the Yankees still play in the South Bronx, other old relics still exist in the area, making the Guardian Angels not an old relic, but a necessity, in the underbelly of New York.

 

The Clash: Red Angel Dragnet

Written by Administrator   May,22,2009
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The year 1981, location lower east side - just two years after the start of the Guardian Angels. Curtis runs into The Clash patrolling the streets and opening admits he didn't who they were (then). Here is a link to a great article talking about The Clash and their song, Red Angel Dragnet. Apparently the Angels made a strong impression on them. Check it out!

From wikipedia: According to author Marcus Gray, the song Red Angel Dragnet was inspired by the January 1982 shooting death of Frank Melvin, a New York member of the Guardian Angels.[2][3] The song contains extensive quotes from the 1976 movie Taxi Driver's main character Travis Bickle, delivered by Kosmo Vinyl. Bickle sports a mohawk in the later part of the film and that hairstyle was adopted by Joe Strummer during the album promotion.

 

Twitter Video

Written by Administrator   May,20,2009
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To tweet or not to tweet. Yes, it's true, I Twitter... mostly for the radio show. For those of you who didn't watch Oprah and have not joined one of the fastest growing ways to communicate you might want to look into Twitter. And if your not sure watch this Twitter Video.

Follow me on Twitter

 

Curtis Remembers His First Recycling Center

Written by Administrator   May,20,2009
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I was green in 1968. There had not yet been an "Earth Day," there was no environmental movement. They hadn't even come up with the term recycling yet. I was all of 14 years of age.

Following in the footstep of my grandfather, Fedel Bianchino, I was collecting newspapers, rags and metal cans. Back then you were considered a junkman. By 1969 I had collected in the basement of my house 5 tons of newspaper, a half ton of metal cans, and I was just beginning to collect and separate bottles by color. You had to have tonnage in order for an industrial re-user of product to send a truck to pick it up.

Then on April 22, 1969 Earth Day was born. People created the term recycling and went about searching for people who were actually recycling garbage. They discovered me in Canarsie, Brooklyn. At that point they assisted me in organizing my whole neighborhood to separate and put out for collection bottles, newspapers and cans. I would pick it up with the help of local youth and then separate it, grade it and ship it out for recycling. It was the first official recycling center in the United States. If you look at my office where I broadcast at WABC you can see that I recycle everything to this day. I have been green for 41 years.

In 1976 while a night manager at McDonalds in the Bronx, I organized street clean ups though a group a volunteers that I created that was called the Rock Brigade. I convinced McDonalds that we were the primary business generating the waste and we had a responsibility to set an example by cleaning up everybody else's waste too. It was recognized throughout the city and culminated in an award given to us by then Mayor Ed Koch of the city of New York.

View Article: Sliwa Recycling Center

 
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