For the purposes of cable news soundbites and superficial political campaigns, the world is often neatly divided between heroes and villains. And though we know that the real world is populated by flesh and blood human beings, complicated, conflicted, just trying to figure what to do next, that doesn't stop us from wanting heroes and reviling villains. We just can't help it... Here, then, is our NYC pantheon for 2010.
Daisy Khan
Baruch Herzfeld
Bike Saint
A few issues ago, we brought your attention to Herzfeld's near-saintly dedication to reconciling the Williamsburg Chasidic community and the Williamsburg fixed-gear community—for that effort alone, he's a hero. But that's not all: Herzfeld has also created a fund to help cover injured cyclists without health insurance, an all-too necessary safety net in this city, despite all the new bike lanes... Thanks, Baruch.
Automotive High Pistons
Football Team
We're all about bringing Friday Night Lights to Williamsburg, as the highly talented Automotive High School football team (go Pistons!) finally gets to play some home games at McCarren Park (rather than being forced to play an entire season on the road). The first game is September 25th (with game two scheduled for November 7th), and we'll be there to cheer on the hometown boys—and so should you...
Brooklyn Grange
Urban Farmers
From Ben Flanner, the former e-trader who brought you Greenpoint's Eagle Street Farm (the city's first rooftop soil farm), and the crew from Bushwick hippie-hipster pizzeria Roberta's, came—after brief setbacks owing to pestering permit problems—the city's biggest commercial rooftop farm. Since soil arrived by crane to the acre atop 37-18 Northern Boulevard in Long Island City last May, the team and a small army of eager volunteer farmers have grown and harvested veggies for local restaurants and their farm stands. Heroic cooks can get Brooklyn Grange crops at Brooklyn Flea, Roberta's, or by joining their good old-fashioned CSA.
John Lurie
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