New York Giants

Giants Draft for the Long Term

Kenny Phillips.
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Kenny Phillips.

After last year’s wildly successful draft that saw Aaron Ross, Steve Smith, Jay Alford, Kevin Boss and Ahmad Bradshaw all contribute to the Giants’ Super Bowl run, New York could afford to take some risks. This year’s edition was more about creating depth and looking toward the future.

Overall, the Giants addressed the few concerns they had, especially after an off-season that saw them lose three starters on defense. What they received were prospects with the raw talent to produce but some gaping holes in their skill sets. But they are Super Bowl champions, and they clearly aren’t setting out to remake the team right away.

Drafting Miami safety Kenny Phillips with their first pick will soften some of the blow of Gibril Wilson’s defection to the Oakland Raiders. Phillips is athletic and smart and has the kind of speed to cover wideouts as well as the agility to make open-field tackles. The knock on him is that he’s a little raw in reading coverage, but with New York signing Jaguars veteran Sammy Knight to shore up the safety position for the next few years, Phillips can develop and mature.  read more »

Giants Owner Jonathan Tisch Scored Touchdown for New York Tourism

Joe Fornabaio

Location: What’s the bigger accomplishment: The underdog New York Giants beating the undefeated New England Patriots to win the Super Bowl? Or, New York’s tourism industry rebounding after 9/11?

Mr. Tisch: I would say, for different constituencies, the accomplishments are about the same, and, actually, some of the lessons are the same. The lessons are that by working together, by putting aside your individual concerns, by always understanding the greater good, you can accomplish a lot.  read more »

A Wish List for the Giants' Off-Season

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Can the Giants repeat in ‘09? What does General Manager Jerry Reese have to do to keep the Giants’ momentum going this year and beyond?

Here’s how the world champions can accomplish both as they approach the offseason:

Re-sign Kawika Mitchell and Gibril Wilson

With a reported cap space of nearly $20 million, the Giants shouldn’t spend all their cash on the star-power coming on the market. Instead, the GM should cultivate his home field. Mitchell struggled at times this season as he attempted to get comfortable in Steve Spagnuolo’s scheme. But by Week 16 in Buffalo, the hard-hitting outside linebacker began fitting in nicely, showing some speed off the edge in blitz packages. Wilson could see what the rest of the league has to offer after showing versatility both against the run and in pass coverage. If the Giants aren’t able to show the former fifth round pick a long-term commitment, he might be on the way out. If that scenario occurs, plugging the gap at safety will become their new focus. Cowboys safety Ken Hamlin would be a great replacement if Wilson decides to leave.  read more »

Roger Director Adding Two Extra Chapters to Forthcoming Paperback Edition of Giants Book

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HarperCollins will rush the paperback edition of Roger Director's I Dream in Blue, an anguished love letter to the New York Giants from the perspective of a frustrated lifelong fan, to stores at the end of this month, according to Harper Perennial publisher Carrie Kania.

Ms. Kania said Mr. Director will add two chapters to the book, which came out in hardcover last September, to reflect the fact that the Giants actually won the Super Bowl on Sunday. Ms. Kania said Mr. Director, who has written about the Giants for this Web site, saw the game live and in person, along with his editor, HarperCollins executive editor David Hirshey.  read more »

STAT OF THE DAY: Manhattan Apartment Prices During Last Ticker-Tape Parade

A Lower Manhattan curb this morning.
Brooklyn Hilary via flickr.
A Lower Manhattan curb this morning.

The Giants had their ticker-tape parade this morning. The last time the city hosted a ticker-tape parade was for the World Series champion Yankees in October 2000. Back then, the median price for a Manhattan co-op was $340,000, according to research firm Radar Logic Inc. The median price for a condo was $535,000.

Giants Among Men

In the rich history of athletics in New York, the city has produced great champions in all four major team sports. Few victories, however, were as dramatic, memorable and surprising as the Giants’ last-minute triumph over the unbeaten New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII on Sunday.

If you believe in the redemptive powers of sports, if you appreciate the ways in which our games define our self-image and create bonds between families and generations, you understand why two million people gathered in downtown Manhattan on Feb.  read more »

Giants Fans at City Hall


A reader safely tucked into her office at One Centre Street sent this picture from far above the festivities celebrating the Super Bowl victory of the New York Giants.

"This is madness," writes the reader. "I'm already panicked about how to get lunch."

It took me about 30 minutes to work my way through the crowd, and I ran into Peter Vallone, Jr., who was having the same problem.

Direct from Red Hook! Confetti for Giants' Parade

My Name Is via flickr.

About 1,000 pounds of confetti will be delivered at 4 p.m. today to the garage of the Alliance for Downtown New York, to be used tomorrow to shower the Super Bowl champion New York Giants. The Alliance will deliver the confetti to Lower Manhattan office buildings Tuesday morning, according to a couple of emails I've gotten in the last half-hour from a Downtown Alliance rep.

The confetti is recycled packaging paper cut into approximately 10-inch strips and is being provided by the Atlas Material Company in Red Hook.  read more »

Cory Booker on the Clinton Machine, Obama 'Freight Train'

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EAST RUTHERFORD—Newark Mayor Cory Booker is predicting record Newark voter turnout, and high attendance throughout the state.

"We've got another upset coming on Tuesday," he said. (The Super Bowl metaphors are not gonna stop allllll day!) "We're back here not to rock the sports world like the Giants just did, we're here to rock the world!"

"We're going to be hitting hard as soon as the polls open," he said.  read more »

Giants to Get Plaque in Canyon of Heroes

Soon, the 2007-08 Giants get theirs.
wallyg via flickr.
Soon, the 2007-08 Giants get theirs.

The New York Giants will be honored soon with a new plaque in Lower Manhattan's Canyon of Heroes. The plaque, installed by the Alliance for Downtown New York, will join the 203 already embedded in the sidewalk along Broadway, from the Battery to City Hall. The plaques mark the ticker-tape parades that have traveled up (or, occassionally, down) the route.

The first ticker-tape parade was a spontaneous one marking the arrival of the Statue of Liberty in 1886. The last one, before tomorrow's scheduled parade for the Giants, was for the World Series-winning Yankees in October 2000.

Me and the Best Super Bowl Ever

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There was a moment, many beers into the Fox party on Super Bowl Eve, that seemed to sum up the conspicuous question mark known to New York Giants football fans as Eli Manning.

Up onstage the band kicked into Michael Jackson’s “Billy Jean,” and in visual counterpoint to the relentless bass line, two beautiful dancers wriggled on either side of the stage. They wore skimpy cheerleader outfits, white thigh-highs, and tight Eli Manning jerseys. Twin No. 10s.  read more »

Hail to the Patriot-Killers

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Where to begin giving credit for the Giants’ monumental upset of the New England Patriots?

The defensive line, maybe: Their ferocious pass rush knocked Tom Brady on his back all night, preventing the Patriots’ passing game from getting off any huge plays. From Michael Strahan’s jersey-grab to Jay Alford’s body slam with 25 second to play, the Giants were relentless. Even in the fourth quarter, when Brady began to break through the blitz with throws in the flat to Wes Welker and Kevin Faulk, the Giants kept up the pressure.  read more »

Needed: One More Evolutionary Leap for Eli Manning

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Nothing has been more amazing to witness during this memorable Giants campaign than the spectacle of Eli Manning putting together an entirely new skill-set in the space of his last four games.

As the Super Bowl looms, he’s turned from a shaky, inconsistent signal-caller into an elite quarterback capable of taking charge of a game. And each week, starting with the final regular-season game and continuing through the playoffs, Manning added something new.  read more »

The Giants and Their Legacy

When the Giants take the field against the New England Patriots on Sunday evening, fans will be reminded—for the umpteenth time—that the team has been to the Super Bowl four times, and has won football’s ultimate prize twice.

It’s a lie, and Giants fans of a certain vintage know it.  read more »

Looking Like Legitimate Champions

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The Giants proved they belong.

With an NFL-record 10th straight win away from the cozy confines of the Meadowlands, New York played like a team that deserves to be in the Super Bowl.

It starts with their versatility. The Giants faced one of their toughest tests yet, as Green Bay’s offensive line shut down their pass rush and gave Brett Favre time to work in the pocket. That meant that the secondary needed to play at its best and running back Ryan Grant had to be stopped. The linebackers and safety Gibril Wilson took care of the latter, holding Grant to 29 yards and forcing the Packers to rely on Favre’s arm. The Giants had trouble in the first half containing Donald Driver, especially when he tossed aside defensive back Corey Webster at the line of scrimmage and turned a short pass route into a 90-yard score. Nevertheless, they held Favre to short throws underneath on third downs (of which the Packers converted only one of 10 attempts).  read more »

Not the Same Giants

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The old economic adage, “Past returns don’t indicate future performances,” applies perfectly to Sunday’s NFC Championship.

The Giants team that faces Green Bay in a rematch has gone through major changes after the Packers spoiled New York’s home opener in Week 2. And it’s those added weapons that will give New York a real shot at beating yet another elite team on the road.  read more »

Underdogs, Nothing

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The theme of this season, and yesterday’s 21-17 victory in Dallas, is role reversal.

Ask the typical NFL fan in September of 2007 which Manning they thought would be in a conference championship game. The answer, inevitably, would be Peyton. But the older brother came up short Sunday against San Diego, and the kid brother is in the NFC finale.  read more »

No Reason the Giants Can't Beat Dallas

Ankle or no ankle, Terrell Owens is still a threat.
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Ankle or no ankle, Terrell Owens is still a threat.

Despite losing both regular season matchups against the Cowboys, the Giants are hardly an underdog against the NFC East champions this Sunday.

The focus on this game starts with the question mark surrounding Terrell Owens and his high ankle sprain, an injury that usually takes longer than two weeks to heal completely. While the 12-year veteran’s capability is projected at only 65-70 percent of full recovery, even at that level he’s a serious threat. Fans might remember Super Bowl XXXIX in 2005, when Owens was still recovering from surgery for a similar ankle injury: he had nine receptions for 122 yards in a loss to the Patriots. If it’s a meaningful game, Owens will not just play but will find a way to torture the Giants’ secondary all game.  read more »

Now That's a Quarterback!

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Who is that guy?

His name’s Eli.

When’d we get him?

Four years ago.

That’s not Eli. Eli threw interceptions. Fumbled. Missed wide-open receivers. Wore lead cleats.

Same guy.

Impossible.  read more »

Giants Adapt, Beat Tampa Bay

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With a surprisingly comfortable 24-14 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Giants showed a facet of their game unseen throughout the regular season: the ability to adapt.

They opened their Wild Card playoff matchup in Raymond James Stadium attempting to play to their strengths: they gave the football to Brandon Jacobs to set the pace and tone with a power ground game and rushed Jeff Garcia with blitzes. The Buccaneers responded in kind, crowding the line with eight defenders and utilizing quick routes and screens from Garcia to avoid the rush.  read more »

Giants vs. Tampa: Back to Basics

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers may look beatable with a 37-year-old quarterback and an aging defense, but both on the field and on the sidelines, they’re one of the smartest teams in the NFL.

In other words, when the Giants play in Florida on Sunday, it’s going to be a tight game with virtually no room for mistakes.

Jeff Garcia has turned back the clock to lead the Buccaneers without being flashy. While he’s racked up only 13 touchdowns all season, the former 49er and Eagle has thrown only four interceptions in 327 attempts and lost two fumbles throughout the year.  read more »

The Real Giants Show Up, Finally

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How did it take the Giants 17 weeks to figure out how to click on both sides of the ball, especially against the juggernaut Patriots? Maybe all it took was the extra motivation that came from the chance to stop a team from going 16-0.

While the perfect Patriots finally figured out how to break through the Giants’ blitz and aerial attack in a close, tense and entertaining 38-35 win, the hope is that New York will take what it has displayed in this game and maintain its physical intensity as the playoffs begin.  read more »

Beat the Patriots

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It’s true, technically, that the Giants could sit their starters this week against the Patriots.

But they shouldn’t.

Although a loss wouldn’t affect the Giants’ playoff spot, they need a win, or at least a good battle.

The Giants, who face a first-round matchup against Tampa Bay, must send out their starters and show that they can beat an elite team.  read more »

With Relentless Defense, Giants Are a Real Playoff Team

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Call it a pre-Christmas miracle, but the 10-5 Giants are now a playoff lock after overcoming four turnovers to win a windy, rain-soaked game 38-21 in Buffalo.

Most importantly, the Giants rediscovered their identity, which they misplaced after their six-game winning streak earlier this season. The Giants defense, helmed by imaginative coordinator Steve Spagnuolo, returned to a constant blitz, something they haven’t had much success with in their past three games, when they lacked the pressure to force turnovers.  read more »

A Most Unpleasant Task for the Giants

Jeremy Shockey is helped off the field after his injury Sunday, Dec. 16.
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Jeremy Shockey is helped off the field after his injury Sunday, Dec. 16.

As New York heads to the frozen city of Buffalo this Sunday, the football gods have set up a harsh game away from home that could end up costing New York more than just one loss in the standings.

Although the Giants have a 6-1 record on the road, they’re going have to deal this time with the elements at Ralph Wilson Stadium: sloppy with expected rain showers and plagued by swirling 20 MPH winds that will give kickers (and passers) fits. What all of that translates into is a game that will be won on the ground with gritty, physical play.  read more »

Giant Breakdown: My Sentencing Statement

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Your Honor, before sentence is pronounced, you said you’d allow me to stand up and say something to the court, and so I’d just like to state publicly that I’m sorry for everything that took place last Sunday evening.

I’m not making excuses for my behavior, Judge, but I think even you would have to agree with me there was no way the Giants, who were 9-4 and a virtual lock to make the playoffs, were going to lose Sunday night. No way. At home in the Meadowlands? To the Redskins? Especially knowing they have to go up to Buffalo next week and then play the Patriots in the last game of the year—and they could lose both of those games easily. In other words, lose this and maybe miss the playoffs altogether?

On top of which, Judge, I don’t have to tell you, the Redskins’ stellar safety, Sean Taylor, was shot dead a couple weeks ago, and at quarterback they had a guy who hadn’t started an NFL game in 10 years. These were the Redskins, the team we beat earlier in the year. The team we chewed up with Tiki Barber the time before that.  read more »

Losing Efforts

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Giants O Needs a Barber

CHARLES CURTIS

How ironic that on a night that Tiki Barber used halftime to revisit his stinging comments regarding Eli Manning’s leadership last August, the Giants lost 22-10 in a game in which they needed him the most.  read more »

Giants O Needs a Barber

Brandon Jacobs.
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Brandon Jacobs.

How ironic that on a night that Tiki Barber used halftime to revisit his stinging comments regarding Eli Manning’s leadership last August, the Giants lost 22-10 in a game in which they needed him the most.  read more »

The Giants' Two-Headed Monster

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Last week, against a subpar Eagles team, Eli Manning was able to eke out a victory by getting back into rhythm with banged-up wideout Plaxico Burress, who caught seven passes for 136 yards and a touchdown. But because Philadelphia pressured Manning throughout the game, tight end Jeremy Shockey was asked to stay at the line to block.  read more »

Giants Keep Winning on the Road, Barely

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What makes the Giants so effective on the road, where they are now 6-1 this season?

Yesterday’s 16-13 win over the Eagles answered that question somewhat, but not completely.

The Giants were able to take the Lincoln Financial Field crowd out of the game by keeping the Eagles’ best weapons in check and denying Philadelphia a chance to take advantage of the Giants’ ninth and tenth turnovers in their past three games. Similar to the last time these teams met, New York was able to contain Philadelphia’s explosive offense, ranked fifth in the league in total yards.  read more »

Beat Philly by Making It Easy for Eli

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If Eli Manning thought the pressure was unbearable last week in Chicago, wait until he faces the Eagles this Sunday.

When the Giants last beat Philadelphia in a Week 4, 16-3 victory, they struggled to put points on the board against a tough but banged up Eagle defense, ending the game with a scant 212 total yards. And that was when the Eagles were missing two playmakers in their secondary: cornerback Lito Sheppard and possible Hall of Fame safety Brian Dawkins, both out due to injury.

With those two back on the turf at Lincoln Financial Field, Manning will continue to feel the heat as he tries to rebound from an error-filled start last week against the Bears. Eagles defensive coordinator Jim Johnson employs a strategy that relies on blitzes from all different angles, with an ever-changing rotation of personnel thrown at the quarterback at unpredictable times.  read more »

Giants Beat Bears, Carry Manning

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Has the Giants’ coaching staff lost its faith in Eli Manning?

Following their 21-16 victory this weekend against the Chicago Bears, it may be hard to imagine that they’re considering taking the ball out of Manning’s hands.

But up until the 11-minute mark of the fourth quarter, that’s effectively what they did. The reasons for Coach Tom Coughlin’s lack of confidence were, once again, obvious: On the Giants’ very first drive, Manning picked up where he left off last week, attempting to force another pass down the middle of the field, resulting in an easy interception for Bears’ linebacker Brian Urlacher.  read more »

Giant Game Plan: Stop Devin Hester

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When the Giants step on to the hallowed ground of Soldier Field on Sunday, they’re going to be facing a one-man wrecking crew.

Chicago’s Devin Hester, the awe-inspiring punt and kick returner, is in his second year, but already has ten special-teams touchdowns in his career. He’s also the same player who burned the Giants last season with a then-record 108-yard return of a botched field goal.

Luckily, the Giants have weapons in their corner to neutralize Hester and keep him out of the end zone.  read more »

Giant Collapse

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Here we go again?  read more »

Giants Offense, With Subpar Burress, Does Enough to Win

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In New York’s 16-10 win on Sunday over a tough Detroit Lions team, two truths became clear. One is that the Giants can no longer depend on Plaxico Burress to make the big play. The second is that it might not matter.

The success of their revised aerial attack, one that doesn’t center around setting up Burress for the long pass-and-catch, will now comes down
to the trustworthy hands of a veteran and the speed of a burgeoning young receiver.  read more »

Trial by Bombardment for the Giants Defense

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In last week’s disappointing loss to the Cowboys, the weakness in the Giants defense was exposed by Tony Romo’s fleet feet as he scrambled away from every New York blitz package. And Terrell Owens was able to get behind the one-on-one coverage presented by New York’s corners all game long. In short, Dallas exploited the flaws in what had seemed an impressive Giants defense.

When coordinator Steve Spagnuolo sends Giants defenders out on to Ford Field against the 6-3 Lions, they’re going to deal with a similarly potent passing offense that they’ll have to contain in a must-win game.  read more »

Giants Lose, But Jacobs Shows the Way Forward

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As the Giants pass the midway point of the 2007 season, they’re starting to understand their identity. In their 31-20 loss to the Cowboys, they learned they have a quarterback who can’t remember to watch the play clock and a secondary that can’t be left to cover star receivers without help.

Going forward, they’re figuring out that that the key to winning football games and competing for a playoff spot is a flourishing running game, the alleged glaring weakness at the beginning of their 2007 season.  read more »

Mad Men

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After a post-Wembley bye-week, the Giants open the second half of their surprising 6-2 season with a vital game against the 7-1 Dallas Cowboys, who won the season opener between the two teams by a score of 45-35.

Here are five match-ups that will decide the outcome of Sunday afternoon’s battle:

Giants CB Sam Madison vs. Cowboys WR Terrell Owens  read more »

Despite Wins, the Giants Still Have an Eli Problem

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The most important thing for the Giants, one supposes, is that they won.

Their sloppy, rain-soaked 13-10 win in London allows them to go into a bye week having extended their win streak to six, thanks to a hard-working running game and a hard-hitting defense.

But the way in which they prevailed over a truly bad Dolphins team made one continuing problem glaringly obvious: Eli Manning. Manning completed only eight of his 22 passes for a mere 59 yards. (Yes, 59 yards.)  read more »

Giants' Three-Headed Sack Monster Strikes Again

Justin Tuck and Michael Strahan.
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Justin Tuck and Michael Strahan.

As television coverage of the Giants hosting the hapless 49ers in East Rutherford began yesterday, the first image we saw was gap-toothed Michael Strahan’s pre-game speech, with the obligatory request for a “New York Giants on three.”

The next shot was of Osi Umenyiora, Strahan’s partner at the other end of the defensive line. Realizing the camera was focused on him, Umenyiora winked, as if the NFL sacks leader knew what was about to transpire.  read more »

Un-Cranky Yanks

Brian Cashman Scouts Shortstop, Third Baseman: "Jeter would never steal signals ... A-Rod has too much information."
Philip Burke
Brian Cashman Scouts Shortstop, Third Baseman: "Jeter would never steal signals ... A-Rod has too much information."

TAMPA—Brian Cashman, the pale, wonky general manager of the New York Yankees, was perched on a  read more »

The Tisch Family

Bob and Larry Tisch were born in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, in the 1920’s.  read more »

The Tisch Family

Jonathan Tisch and Laurie Tisch.
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Jonathan Tisch and Laurie Tisch.

Bob and Larry Tisch were born in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, in the 1920’s.  read more »

Tricks With a Telescope Mar Great Pennant Race

Ralph Branca at Ebbets Field in 1951.
Kidwiler Collection/Diamond Images/Getty Images
Ralph Branca at Ebbets Field in 1951.

Editorials

Anti-Semite Fulani Fleeces the City    read more »

Editorials

Anti-Semite Fulani Fleeces the City  read more »

'The Hottest Place on Earth'--Hawaiian Tropic in Times Square


This is the official rendering. (Really, it is).

If Times Square and supermodels are your thing, get excited for tonight's launch party for--yes!--New York's very own Hawaiian Tropic Zone Restaurant and Lounge. Hooterific.

Petra Nemcova will be the host, and better yet an entire block of 49th Street will be transformed into a tropical beach. Seriously: "pristine sands, balmy Queen Palm and Banana trees, an inviting hot tub, surfboards and chaise lounge chairs, and a DJ spinning energizing tunes from atop a 16-foot lifeguard tower."

When does sand compete with a 16-foot energizing DJ? When there are 700 cubic tons it. Along for the launch of this new gourmet hot spot are sweet-toothed Dylan Lauren, plus sweet-handed Giants Amani Toomer and Michael Strahan.  read more »

You should head down, according to the website, because "this will probably be the most important career move of your life."

- Max Abelson

Mr. Mamet and Mr. Macy Make Misery in Edmond

Stuart Gordon’s Edmond, from a screenplay by David Mamet, based on his play, had been reportedly t  read more »

Mr. Mamet and Mr. Macy Make Misery in Edmond

John Abraham and Sarala in <i>Water</i>.
Fox Searchlight
John Abraham and Sarala in Water.

Stuart Gordon’s Edmond, from a screenplay by David Mamet, based on his play, had been reported  read more »

Letters

He Gets It   To the Editor:    read more »