This weekend I took a trip to New York City. My friend is in the city for work, staying on the 33rd floor of a high rise a block away from the Empire State Building. Here are a few of my experiences.
American Idiot
I saw the Broadway Musical "American Idiot". For those that do not know this is a musical based on the album by Green Day. My discount rate seat was in the Orchestra Pit, so I got to see a Broadway show from an amazing view.
I always knew the album was telling a story. I had a hard time following the story because some of the pieces didn't fit together. One thing I got out of the musical was the realization that the album tells more than one story. The musical follows the lives of three young men and their life journey's. From military, to drug abuse, to a child at an early age and alcoholism.
My first feeling was one of inspiration. To get out and make a drastic change in my life. But as I watched all three of the characters in their journey's found hardship and eventually collapse. The musical ends with the trio returning home after their experiences, not with their tails between their legs, but with their heads held high because they had lived.
It was amazing how I felt a strong connection with the characters, and came back with a feeling of wanting to go back to the punk rock lifestyle. Even though they all experienced a collapse, they all had a major growth.
Who knew Green Day was so deep?
Coney Island Train
I visited Coney Island, because all of the shops have been given a notice to vacate by the 15th of this month. Now I am not sure if they are going for good, or just being "updated". I do know that the miles long wooden boardwalk will be torn up and replaced with cement. The area was like a ghost town, but apparently that was fairly normal for this time of year.
However, the most interesting part of this journey was the train ride to the station. Sitting across from me and my friend was an old man, that I would guess is probably homeless or at least very poor. The train line was under construction, and he talked to us a lot about how the rails had changed over the last 50 years. He recollected on the days of ceiling fans and tweed seats on the train.
The funniest part came at the end of the line. The whole time the man was talking about how the train operators didn't know how to do their job. He complained about how the man was bringing down the lowly people because they could not figure out how to properly spend money. This line was over 50 years old and was being fixed because the disrepair had gone too far. And while the trains were in brand new condition, they apparently always ran late because of the condition of the tracks.
Once the train stopped, every car opened their doors to allow the passengers off, except for the car we were riding. Eventually the old man left the car to try to find an open door, and we were allowed to leave. The metro police at the station stopped me and my friend and asked us whether or not the old man had made any threatening comments. Apparently his dissatisfaction with the operation of the line had resulted in death threats against the train operators, and there was an investigation. We explained that today he had seemed very friendly, and only a little bit "off". The metro police made a correct guess stating that today he probably didn't smell strongly of alcohol.
My friend and I agreed that the fact that this man had been riding the train since before the police were an itch in their fathers pants, kind of gave him a bit of a right to be upset. However, death threats aren't cool.
The Bar Scene
One of the best experiences in New York was the bar scene. Growing up in Los Angeles, I had become used to the idea that everyone in a bar thought that they were the center of the planet. In New York it was completely different. I was able to sing Karaoke in a crowded bar, because nobody in the bar had the ability to sing. They were all out there to have fun, not to get discovered. And the women would actually speak with the men. You could walk up to girl in the bar and strike up a conversation without the stuck up pretentious response common to women in bars in LA.
We attempted many times to get into a speak easy, or hidden bar, but were unable. It's not that we couldn't find them, but most closed at 4am, before we got there, or were too crowded to accommodate us. And the bars in New York are many. If you walk a block away you run into a different bar with a different crowd. People in New York get off of work and then want to head out to the bar. Unlike LA where it means an entire evening plan, New York was just walk down the block to the closest bar. And because of the large populace in a small area, and the fact that it gets really cold during the winter, the bars are local to people within a few block radius. When the weather is not bad, this makes for really easy bar hopping.
Other Sites
The best view I had of the city was from the living room of my friends apartment. I also walked around and saw some of the sites. I went through Central Park, the day before the NYC Marathon. I saw the Met. I saw Times Square. I hung out in the Trump Tower, where my friend works. I walked 5th avenue. I even went inside the library that they hid in on that crappy end of the world movie "The Day After Tomorrow".
Overall it was a fun experience. It was a short weekend, but I did a lot. If you get a chance, I recommend a visit to NYC.