Trip.com is an innovative planning tool that tailors recommendations for places to stay, eat and play to your specific tastes. It also allows you to share your great experiences with people who have the same interests as you; people in your “tribes.”
Trip.com’s TripPicks This Week feature empowers you to discover and take advantage of great events, openings and exhibits throughout the city each week.
Here are some exciting events and sites to check out this week in Downtown New York, courtesy of Trip.com. Visit the Trip.com site or download the app for more upcoming events.
Thursday, Jan. 19 – Sunday, Jan. 22 (check site for times)
Sometimes coloring outside the lines makes for great — and some would argue pure — art. The Outsider Art Fair brings together artists from across the world who share one defining quality: the guts to march to the beat of their own drum. Tickets start at $20.
Nose, sip and savor six different scotches at six different downtown bars during NYC Scotch Walk. Whether you like yours neat, on the rocks, or with a splash of water, you’ll meet plenty of fellow scotch enthusiasts to share a drink with. $55.
We all indulge in a little binge watching, but is the entertainment industry’s fantasy world the source of our societal problems? The answer may surprise you. Think Olio presents, “Inside the Entertainment-Industrial Complex: How Guilty Pleasures Take the Edge Off Reality” with J. Ward Regan. You may want to cancel your Netflix subscription…$20.00, with complimentary drinks.
Last Vegas may be sin city but the original sinner is New York. Join New York Local Tours as they take us through the streets of New York on a History of Vice and Murder Walking Tour. Explore the seedy past of Lower Manhattan and the legendary gangsters, “crooked cops” and “corrupt politicians” that shaped the city’s history and identity. Tickets are $25.
Trillfit’s annual Brunch-n- Burn event is a wellness party where participants sweat it out in two Trillfit classes (a“Beyonce-worthy” cardio dance class followed by a yoga class with a live hip-hop and R&B soundtrack by DJ Nick Bishop) then enjoy a complimentary spa treatment and close out with fancy brunch bites. Don’t forget the gift bag on your way out! $50
Ladurée Soho (SoHo) – Wednesday, Jan. 18 from 6:30 PM to 9:00 PM
Check site for participating stores: Saturday, Jan. 21 – Sunday, Feb. 5
The Valrhona Hot Chocolate Festival KickOff Cocktail party ($35) this Wednesday will preview “all of the festival’s inventive hot chocolates, along with savory bites.” After that, stop by FIKA NYC, Lafayette Grand Cafe & Bakery, La Maison du Chocolat, Mah-Ze-Dahr Bakery, BAKED, Almondine, Sugar and Plumm, Dominique Ansel Kitchen, Epicerie Boulud, The St. Regis New York and Patisserie Chanson to try out unique hot chocolate concoctions and help raise funds for Valrhona Clean Water Project.
Gogobot is an innovative planning tool that tailors recommendations for places to stay, eat and play to your specific tastes. It also allows you to share your great experiences with people who have the same interests as you; people in your “tribes.”
Gogobot’s GoGo This Week feature empowers you to discover and take advantage of great events, openings and exhibits throughout the city each week. Visit the website or download the app for more GoGo This Week upcoming events.
Here are some exciting events and sites to check out in downtown New York this week, courtesy of Gogobot:
1. Unicycle Festival
Check website for complete list of locations Thursday, Sept. 1 – Sunday, Sept. 4 (Check website for times)
Who says two is better than one! The Unicycle Festival celebrates the greatest invention of them all, the wheel. Just the one wheel… With tons of events throughout the five boroughs, pros and amateurs can enjoy monowheel fun with long distance rides, workshops, unicycle classes, performances, unicycle hockey, basketball, sumo and a trials. FREE
2. Marvel Trivia Strand Books (East Village) Tuesday, Aug. 30 from 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM
To celebrate the release of “Marvel: Absolutely Everything You Need to Know” Strand Books is calling on all comic book geeks for the ultimate Marvel Trivia challenge hosted by Lorraine Cink and John Sazaklis. Tickets are $15 and include admission and a $15 Strand Books Gift Card.
3. Salsa Week Haus (Tribeca) Wednesday, Aug. 31 at 8:00 PM
Dance, learn or just watch, however you choose to participate in this year’s New York Salsa Congress, don’t miss the salsa kick off Party at Haus, with complimentary hors d’oeuvres by GOYA Foods. You’ll also find us sipping and shaking our thang at Pitorro and Coquito Tasting at Port Morris Distillery. Check website for a complete list of events. Tickets start at $15.
4. 90s Shop and Sip Story (Chelsea) Thursday, Sept. 1 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM
If you have never been to Chelsea’s Story, it is a concept-store that every few months creates a unique themed shopping experience. This retail installation takes shoppers back to the 90s. Best time to check out Story is at the shop’s weekly Happier Hours on Thursdays where you can enjoy ‘90s-inspired foods and cocktails, get jiggy wit’ it to 90s tunes and shop for your all your favorite 90s memorabilia. FREE
We are totally obsessed with BreakFestival because it the only food event that allows us to taste a wide range of breakfast foods from all over the world. Over 10 chefs will prepare special breakfast dishes that include a twist on the traditional and global treats like Tunisian Breakfast Porridge Droh Sorghum with Halva and Rose Petals, Caribbean Bake and Codfish Sandwich and Cuban-Chinese Benedict with Chinese Sausage, Bok-Choy and Tomate de Arbol Hollandaise Sauce. $45 gets you all you can eat and drink!
6. Tango Nights Washington Square Park (West Village) Tuesday, Aug. 30 from 6-9pm
This Tuesday we are setting time aside for a night of tantalizing tango from Strictly Tango NYC Dance School. As novices, we are looking forward to the classes, music and open dance. Who knows, we might develop a real taste for tango, but at worst we’re going to have a fun time. FREE
If you know of great events happening in your neck of the woods that might be a fit for a future GoGo This Week column, please send details about the event to events@gogobot.com
Gogobot is an innovative planning tool that tailors recommendations for places to stay, eat and play to your specific tastes. It also allows you to share your great experiences with people who have the same interests as you; people in your “tribes.”
Gogobot’s GoGo This Week feature empowers you to discover and take advantage of great events, openings and exhibits throughout the city each week. Here are some exciting events and sites to check out in downtown New York this week, courtesy of Gogobot. Visit the website or download the app for more GoGo This Week upcoming events.
1. Multi-Arts LGBTQ Fest The Wild Project (East Village) Monday, Jul. 11-Sunday, Jul. 24 (check website for times)
The Fresh Fruit Festival is a celebration of LGBTQ art and culture. The multidisciplinary arts festival will feature performance art, dance, theatre, video, film, spoken word, graphic arts and music. The goal of the festival is to fight intolerance by showcasing the various aspects of the LGBTQ experience from emerging and established artists. Tickets start at $18.
2. Water Day Check website for complete list of locations Saturday, Jul. 16 from 10am-4pm
New York has so many waterfront activities that are waiting to be discovered. This Saturday hit up Hoboken’s Maxwell Place Park, Governors Island or one of a dozen other neighborhood locations for a day of free waterfront fun! Activities include kayaking, canoeing, rowing and paddling. There will be boat tours, food, music and plenty of hands-on water fun for the kiddies. FREE
No need to drop big dolla’ bills to enjoy New York’s fabulous rooftop pools. Every weekend the James Hotel hosts JIMMY Summer Pool Parties, where at 3pm the rooftop bar and lounge opens to guests and the public. Take in the views, enjoy a drink and take a dip, of course. FREE
So you think you can tell the difference between NY and NJ? Here’s your chance to prove it. These arch frenemies, always in competition, will battle it out to determine who makes the best beer. Spectators at this epic smackdown will blind taste craft beers from “brewers on both sides of the Hudson River and vote on who makes the best brew.” Tickets start at $25 and include beer tasting and light snacks.
Chuck Palahniuk’s new graphic novel, Fight Club 2, picks up the story of Tyler Durden, a decade after Project Mayhem. Get the book and meet the author at Strand Books. FREE
If you know of great events happening in your neck of the woods that might be a fit for a future GoGo This Week column, please feel free to email details about the event to events@gogobot.com
The Replacements was a rock band that broke almost every rule, refusing to conform to the majority of industry norms or do most of the things that a band is “supposed” to do. In spite of those questionable decisions, The Replacements remains one of the most popular groups among musicians and music critics. Green Day, Nirvana, R.E.M., Wilco, Ryan Adams, The Gaslight Anthem, and The Goo Goo Dolls are among the artists that have cited The Replacements — often nicknamed “The ‘Mats” — as a major inspiration. Lorde covered “Swingin’ Party” in 2013. “Bastards Of Young” opens the movie, Adventureland. “Can’t Hardly Wait” is clearly the inspiration for the title of the 1998 movie of the same name. Even if The Replacements aren’t currently-active as this article is being written in June 2016, the band’s music is as popular as ever.
Acclaimed music writer Bob Mehr took on the daunting task of writing a book about The Replacements. After nearly a decade of work, Bob’s work — Trouble Boys: The True Story Of The Replacements — saw the light day this year. He conducted hundreds of interviews with, including those with current and former members, even getting subjects that are known to be media-shy to open up. Bob’s research was so in-depth that he was able to access government records of original guitarist Bob Stinson’s difficult childhood. Ultimately, this is THE book for anyone that likes, loves and/or wants to learn more about the Minnesota quartet.
In support of Trouble Boys, Bob is hitting the road for a series of live events. On Wednesday, Jun. 8, Bob will be appearing at Manhattan’s Strand Bookstore for an appearance alongside Jon Wurster. Bob — who is also a music critic at the Memphis-based The Commercial Appeal, a contributor to MOJO, and a prolific freelance writer otherwise — spoke to Downtown about the book, his Manhattan appearance, and what’s ahead for him otherwise.
More info on Trouble Boys can be found online at www.replacementsbook.com, while Bob himself can be followed on Twitter via @BobMehr.
Bob (center) with Paul Westerberg (left) and Tommy Stinson (right) – photo by Bob Medcraft
How would you describe your upcoming event with Jon Wurster? Will he be performing music as part of that show?
Bob Mehr: No music at The Strand, rather it’s going to be a casual but hopefully entertaining conversation between the two of us. In addition to being a great comedian, as part of the Scharpling & Wurster, and a first-rate musician, with Superchunk, the Bob Mould Band and many others, Jon has a deep connection to The Replacements. In 1986 at 19 years old, he joined a group called The Right Profile, who were managed by The Replacements’ managers, and later worked with Replacements producer Jim Dickinson. Jon has an insider’s view of that era.
Also, he was one of the people I had read the book as I was writing the draft. He’s a scholar of rock and roll and has a memory like an elephant, and he’s an old friend. Given all that, we’re just going to have fun and wide ranging conversation on all things relating to the book and the band.
Where did the idea for this sort of tour come from? I mean, most book tours tend to feature an author reading part of a book, and maybe a 92Y-style panel or two…
BM: With all these events I’ve tried to mix it up in terms of the format and presentation, to tailor each “show,” as it were, to the city or the audience. Basically, in some places fellow journalists — author Robert Gordon, MTV’s Jessica Hopper — have interviewed me. In others, I’ve shown old film footage of The Replacements and talked and done audience Q&As. In certain cities I will be interviewing people who’ve been involved with the band over the years, like their A&R man Michael Hill, tourmates like The Young Fresh Fellows’ Scott McCaughey, or latter-day Replacements members Dave Minehan and Josh Freese.
When I can, I’ll also add a musical component. In Hoboken the other night, we had a great collection of artists, including Freedy Johnston and Dave Schramm and Dead Wicks, playing Replacements songs. Rather than just stand there and read, I wanted to make as many of these events as possible multi-media, multi-format happenings.
What was the first Replacements song you remember hearing?
BM: “Bastards Of Young.” I had no idea who The Replacements were, but I saw them performing it on Saturday Night Live –- a moment I devote a whole chapter to in the book — as a wide-eyed 11-year old kid. The power of that performance — so loose, raw and loud –- stayed with me for another year until I got my hands on their next album, Pleased To Meet Me. Then I was hooked for life.
A very young Replacements – photo by Greg Helgeson
Members of the band cooperated with you, giving access and all. At what point in the writing process did you reach out to Tommy and Paul?
BM: I reached out before I ever started writing. My whole intention with the book was to have the band and their intimates involved in the process. I felt that so much of what had been written about The Replacements was done from the outside looking in. I wanted to understand the history of the group from the inside out, and the only way to do that was with their direct input and participation. So I spent a good year-plus working to secure that. I was persistent, but I was also lucky in that I think Paul and Tommy were finally ready to look back on the life of the band, to really reflect and try to understand what the whole experience had meant.
What was the most challenging part of writing this book? Was it arranging all of the interviews and traveling for such? Was it researching things from multiple accounts?
BM: It was a process filled with a never-ending series of challenges –- many of them the result of me being a first-time author and making some first-time mistakes. But fundamentally, the massive scope of the book was the most difficult thing. I interviewed over 230 different people, some just once, others dozens of times. So I had hundreds, almost a thousand, interviews to transcribe. I also had access to the archives at Twin/Tone Records and Warner Bros. While it was a huge advantage being able to go through that mountain of material and documentation, the real effort came in synthesizing all of that information into a compelling and moving narrative. Hopefully, I managed to do that.
One of the reviews on the book’s jacket notes the book’s contents as being “heartbreaking and hilarious,” which also sums up a lot of the music by The Replacements. Do you think the band was ever sabotaging themselves on-purpose and not just for laughs?
BM: I think everything The Replacements did was, in large part, genuine and instinctive. Much of it was fueled by a mix of alcohol and fear, of four guys who were desperate to transcend their limitations -– as Westerberg put it, there wasn’t a “driver’s license or high school diploma” in the band. When that is the foundation of things, I think it makes for both high drama and low comedy, and that’s sort of how of the band’s career unfolded.
How far into the Replacements’ reunion was it before you knew that some conflict was going on?
BM: I don’t think there was, or is, “conflict” per se with Paul and Tommy. The reality is they have a long, deep, and multi-layered thing between them. It’s a brotherhood of sorts, a family bond, a creative partnership, a business relationship –- all of that. What they have is far more complex than most relationships, so it has its share of ups and down; it always has and probably always will. But as you saw during the sold-out and raved about reunion tour, the power of what they have together is something unique and magnetic. Ultimately their chemistry together will always win out over any issues they might have.
In general, is there something you wish more people knew about the band? Or is there something inaccurate that you’re tired of hearing being said about The Replacements?
BM: I didn’t have an agenda. With the book, I just wanted to tell a real story of people’s lives, rather than a tired rock and roll tale. While there’s lots of excess and excessive behavior detailed in the book, I wanted to show what was behind all that –- the pain and fear, and the hope and power of them as kids getting together to form this band, and the roots of where they came from leading up to that moment, and everything that followed after. If someone comes away from Trouble Boys feeling like they’ve be enlightened or even just entertained, that’s enough for me.
Are you already working on another book?
BM: Not yet. Having invested almost a decade of my life into Trouble Boys, I’m dedicating this year to being on the road much as I can and spreading the word about it. After that, then I’ll look to the next project. But I have to say, I’ll have a hard time finding a subject as rich and colorful as The Replacements.
Your liner notes are always great reads, in my opinion. When preparing to write an essay along those lines, do you have a regular creative process? Do you listen to the album endlessly?
BM: Sure, I listen to the album, and try and read everything about it –- particularly press and reviews from the period it was released, but also later assessments to get a sense of how perceptions of a record can change over time. Also, when I can, I try to talk to the principals involved in making the record and look at whatever studio documentation I can dig up. I really like the idea of writing about individual albums and sessions, though I always try and bring a sense of the larger context surrounding its creation. It’s striking the right balance between the micro and the macro that make those kind of assignments fun.
Photo by Kevin Scanlon
What does Bob Mehr like to do when not busy with writing?
BM: Well, between the book, my day job as music critic at the daily newspaper in Memphis, and freelance work for MOJO, there’s not time for much else but music and writing. But I do try and blow off steam playing basketball at a local college with a bunch of kids half my age. My body is wearing down and I don’t have the explosiveness I once did on the court, but my jumper is still at Steph Curry levels of perfection.
So far, what is your favorite album released in 2016?
BM: Well, I’m sort of biased and will throw in a personal plug here. But my wife, Coco Hames –- best known for leading The Ettes and Parting Gifts –- is about to make her first solo album for Merge Records, set for early 2017 release. I’ve been listening and loving her demos for the record. That’s really what I’ve been enjoying most in 2016.
You’re a native of Los Angeles, but live in Memphis. What is it that brought you down there?
BM: An offer to become the music critic at The Commercial Appeal, which was then owned by Scripps and recently became a Gannett newspaper. To be able to live and work and write about music in Memphis –- where blues was birthed, rock and roll was invented, and soul was perfected –- is basically a dream come true.
Finally, Bob, any last words for the kids?
BM: Just for them to check ReplacementsBook.com for more tour dates and events this summer.