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New York, 11:27 AM
Wed Dec 2
52 posts in the last 24 hours

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05/02/09
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05/03/09
[www.amazon.com]
must be a pretty ... badass book? :D
05/03/09
05/03/09
Hah I wish Half-Price Books was even remotely as generous .. Oftentimes I'd take literally a car-full of books in for "appraisal", wait for my name to be called thinking I'm going to at least walk away with ten bucks, only to find they'll give me a whopping 45ยข ..
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05/01/09
elevator ride musta been a bitch though...
05/01/09
ah the glory days, before they built that facocta "plaza" for trash like Gwen Stefani to romp around on ..
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The building of gleaming cities throughout the dark night is something amazing, something done in just the last century. We moderns forget how tiresome and dreary and work-intensive "nature" was to the farm boys and girls who escaped all that in the 20th century. Today we fret about the energy costs of lighting our cities, but it's forgotten what a revolution that was- before the 20th century, "nature" held no special attraction- it was darkness, endless toil, vermin and crop failure, a waste of bright young people who dreamed of escaping to gleaming cities like New York. Sometimes we over-romantacize the past.
I just love this picture because it's the building of the splendor of NYC, the place where boys and girls could escape the farms and seek their fortunes among glittering modernity.
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05/01/09
But when you've been away, and you see the skyline of Manhattan, it always feels like the first time. NYC is incredibly democratic in that way, in the very best American sense. No, we don't really "win", because I often believe NYC is best enjoyed by people who don't live here all the time. I'm far from condoning clueless tourists, just saying that NYC truly is for everyone. And you'll have a fine time here too in the future, I know it. NYC really is rather magic.
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