Following a controversial trip to Cuba, Jay Z releases this song. Truth be told, I want to go to Cuba too! If Canadians can do it, why can't we?!
Hove!
Also, looking forward to Made in America!! Philly 2013!!
Know it All, Philly
Commentated news with a Philadelphia focus: Eats, Articles & Essays
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Dinner and the Iron Throne tonight at Old Eagle Tavern
Chances are you’ve already seen the Game of
Thrones season three premier at least once. And for most, once may suffice. But for those
with an insatiable thirst for fantasy the place to be tonight is Old Eagle
Tavern in Manayunk.
A replay of Sunday’s new episode may draw a few
fans, but it’s specialty brew and the medieval menu that’s really the news.
Old Eagle Tavern has obtained a stash of the
Ommengang Iron Throne, a collabo beer between the brewery and HBO. Ommengang
Iron Throne is a 750 ml bottle of blonde ale brewed with pils, honey malt and
red wheat. It’s the first of four limited release beers created for the third
season and is already sold out in most area shops [American Sardine Bar announced that they tapped a keg just yesterday, but there's not telling how long it will last].
Old Eagle Tavern’s chef Morgan Malachi has a
menu full of medieval fantasy with dishes including roasted turkey legs with a
fiery dragon sauce, a dragon egg appetizer (spicy deviled eggs) and dragon
chili sauced corn on the cob.
So pull up a stool and enjoy a horn of ale
that’s made from the stuff of legends. And while you’re eating your turkey leg,
don’t forget to thank the old gods and the new - for the long summer to come. Cause
here in Philly, winter is over!
Old Eagle Tavern 177 Markle
Street in Manayunk
Monday, March 11, 2013
Government Responsiveness & Twitter
I’ve always
been critical of Philly311.
Like Big Belly
trashcans, it works better in theory.
Calling 311 has
never led me anywhere near the department or answer to my question that I’d
been looking for. Only to a seemingly confused receptionist that I imagine is
referencing an outdated one-sheet of city departments and nonexistent
extensions.
To be fair,
that was a couple of years ago.
More recently the
city’s foray into technological responsiveness and transparency may actually be
working to the advantage of residents.
Here in Philly
we don’t have four seasons. We only have two: winter and road construction.
It’s been a
mild winter.
In terms of
street damage the lack of snow means less water freezing and thawing in the
cracks of the streets and less salt and brine to exacerbate the issue. So
unless Floridian sinkholes begin turning up, this spring should be smoother
than in years past.
But inevitably,
potholes happen. It’s the city and sometimes the road more traveled can be a
bumpy one.
I’m a writer.
Which means I sit online all day and read the Internet. All of it. Every day.
In bits and pieces, headlines and tweets. Sometimes I’m impressed. Generally I’m
not. Like I said – I’m a writer. And a Philadelphian. Which means I’m a
skeptic.
But today, I
was genuinely impressed.
A person tweets
a pothole picture/location to a neighborhood association twitter handle.
Neighborhood association tweets the issue to Philly311.
Not only does
the attentive employee manning Philly311’s twitter account pass the issue onto
the Streets Department, accomplishing what years of messages left on unmanned
phone lines have seemingly never been able to do. But they also had a moment to
respond to my undeniably snide inquisition as to how long the process of fixing
said pothole would actually take.
Long story
short:
If you see a
pothole, and tweet its location to @Philly311, they will respond with a Streets
Department tracking number of the complaint and a link where you can follow
along with the progress, online.
Who knew?!
“Initial
complaints will be investigated within 24 hours” and the hole will be “made
safe.”
Though permanent repairs don’t begin until the
threat of snow is long gone – usually in April, this immediate attention is a
thing of beauty… in theory, at least.
Like I said, I’m a skeptic.
But hey, if a tweet can get a pothole filled in
within 24 hours, just imagine the possibilities.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Military Aid & Thoughts on Spending
Since the newly appointed Secretary of State John Kerry returned from his first official Middle East trip, it’s been one announcement after another. Meets here, greets there; nine days and nearly as many countries. Kerry’s itinerary had him making stops in England, Germany, France, Italy, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar, with most of the European leg focusing on Africa’s violent conflicts.
The nation's top diplomat has returned bill in-hand having made aid commitments to regimes spanning millions of square miles.
For Egypt, Kerry promises a needed infusion. With one caveat: No guns. Humanitarian only. But it’s just an installment; some good faith, walking-around money. There was the billion in support promised to the victors during Egypt’s rebellion in 2011, but for now, of the $450 million on the table, Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy will receive $190 million.
There’s a cool $60 million headed to the Syrian rebels fighting against dictator Bashar Assad. That’s if it makes it; of the $385 million promised little is reported as being seen on the ground. Aid comes two years into the brutal conflict, a debilitating pace pointed out long-ago by critics. And there’s the same deal on this agreement. No guns.
We’ve also promised $3.1 billion in military aid to Israel. It's a little different on this one. Lots of money, all for guns. This continues what will be a decade-long $30 billion military aid agreement from the Bush era.
Within our own borders rebellion's a quality society actively works to suppress. Yet we support it internationally. Are we rebels? Or are we newly appointed diplomats with a passive charm? Considering our nation's dialogue on gun rights and safety, it would make sense that our policies at home reflect our behaviors abroad.
Back here in America, the ink’s barely dry on the government’s forced spending cuts. There’s turmoil amidst and the affects of our self-imposed sanctions have yet to be felt.
With all the time spent funding the rise of this leader or that, America's lost control of its most important foothold.
It’s time we got our house in order.
The neighbors can wait.
REFERENCE LINKS:
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Philly Council to hear testimony on student safety following January’s elementary school abduction
The safety of students within the walls of Philadelphia’s
schools has now come under fire. And when Philadelphia’s parents take the mic
in defense of their own, the Lord himself can’t stop the blow back.
On Tuesday, March 12, Council’s committees on public safety
and education will convene a specially scheduled public hearing on the
Philadelphia School District’s policy for the dismissal or release of students
to parents and guardians.
Hearings will begin at 1 p.m. at City Hall in room 400, in the Council chambers. Following the hearing, the joint committees will consider
what action should be taken to better verify the identity of persons who remove
a student from a Philadelphia public school.
There’s an unspoken societal agreement, even here in
Philadelphia that once a kid enters the walls of their school, he or she is
safe. Sure there’s still bullying and the occasional weapon, but by and large,
schools are a safe place.
It was a Monday morning in January that started just as any
other. Children across Philadelphia made their way to school, some walking,
some by bus and public transportation and others taken door to door by their
parents.
But on this January morning a woman disguised in a
traditional Muslim head scarf entered a West Philadelphia elementary school,
scribbled her name on a sign-in sheet and asked to take her daughter out for
breakfast. She proceeded to the child's classroom where she asked for the girl
by name. She then escorted her from the premises.
The woman did not show identification. And her decision to masquerade
in an Islamic veil has enraged the Muslim community, members whom gathered at a
February meeting of Philadelphia’s City Council to voice their disdain.
The unspoken societal contract has been broken. In the
process, a child was abducted and brutally abused, and the Muslim community has
been victimized. With hearings scheduled for Tuesday, the conversation about
the security of Philadelphia’s schools is just beginning.
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