Shared posts

11 Jan 23:54

Global house prices

by Economist.com

Audio and Video content on Economist.com requires a browser that can handle iFrames.

AN ENGLISHMAN’S home is his castle. Those castles, however, are among the smallest in the rich world: the average house size in Britain is just 86 square metres (925 square feet), around 40% smaller than the average American home. This fact has not dampened Britain's appetite for housing. As our interactive chart above demonstrates, between 2000 and 2006, British and American house prices were on a similar trajectory, rising by around 80%. While the roof subsequently fell in on the American housing market, British house prices continued to accelerate upwards, after a brief blip in 2008-09.

As our print article this week explains, much of this rise has been driven by the attractiveness of London as one of the pre-eminent world cities. House prices in London, as well as in San Francisco, Vancouver and Stockholm have risen by an average of 13% a year over the past three years, while national prices have risen by 7.5%. That is pushing affordability to its limits: between 2002...Continue reading

11 Jan 23:54

Police say no crime committed by men strolling through SE Portland neighborhood with assault rifles | OregonLive.com

by overbey
Of course they were from Medford.
11 Jan 23:51

Court: GameFly Is Right — Netflix Shouldn’t Be Getting Special Treatment From The USPS

by Mary Beth Quirk
(iantmcfarland)

(iantmcfarland)

GameFly has once again scored a win in its years-long crusade to prove that the U.S. Postal Service is treating Netflix like the popular girl while it had to pay out the nose for similar treatment. A federal appeals court ruled today that Netflix had an unfair advantage because it didn’t have to pay a penny to have its envelopes sorted by hand instead of machine, while GameFly was subject to hefty surcharges for the same treatment.

Handling the movie  or video game rental envelopes by hand is preferable because hands are a lot gentler than machines when it comes to sorting envelopes.

“Rather obviously, this is not without cost to the postal service. Nonetheless, the service provides it to Netflix free of charge,” wrote the judge.

GameFly had received complaints from customers of broken or damaged discs and thus, had asked to be treated just like Netflix. But the postal service was just like, nope, costing the company millions of dollars each year.

The court told the USPS it had better shape up and explain itself or fix the situation, and quick, reports Reuters. It didn’t tell the USPS how it should be handling disks but left it up to the Postal Regulatory Commission to figure out a solution.

“The commission must either remedy all discrimination or explain why any residual discrimination is due or reasonable,” wrote the judge.

Back in 2011 the commission had sided with GameFly but didn’t change anything, added the court. Maybe it just hoped no one would notice.

Netflix gets unfair postal advantage – US court [Reuters]


11 Jan 23:46

Twin Peaks Pageant Brings David Lynch Burlesque Back To NYC

by Jen Carlson
Twin Peaks Pageant Brings David Lynch Burlesque Back To NYC The 2nd Annual Miss Twin Peaks Pageant is happening on January 26th, and it's as close as you'll be getting to One-Eyed Jack's for a while. [ more › ]

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11 Jan 22:57

Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) guerrillas.



Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) guerrillas.

11 Jan 22:54

Overestimating, underestimating, whatever

by Mark Liberman

This post hits a trifecta of LLOG themes: the troublesome interaction of multiple negations with scalar predicates that we call "misnegation"; the flexible phrasal or conceptual templates we call "snowclones"; and the multiplication of careless variant quotations.

It started when a friend, in conversation, said something like "No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people. [pause] Or overestimating. Whatever."

To start with, I took a look around for other over-under confusions with respect to this quotation. The bulk of the versions use "underestimating the intelligence", but there are plenty of overestimations as well. From a N.Y. Daily News column:

For years the people who run boxing have ridden two axioms by P.T. Barnum all the way to the bank. The first being there's a sucker born every minute. And the second is that no one ever went broke overestimating the intelligence of the American people.

From a sports story in The Scotsman:

As H L Mencken, with reference to his fellow Americans, once memorably observed: "Nobody ever went broke by overestimating the intelligence of the public."

A Guardian correction:

In a story about drugs in sport - Exposure risks new batch of cheats, page 33, Sport, October 24 - we wrote: "As the consummate American huckster PT Barnum once said: Nobody ever went broke overestimating the intelligence of the American public." What HL Mencken said was "Nobody ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public."

Other replications vary in many other dimensions:

Nobody ever lost money by overestimating the taste of the American public.
No one ever went broke overestimating the intelligence of the American people.
Nobody ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American people.
Nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public.
No one ever went broke by underestimating the taste of the American public.
No one ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public.
No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people.
No one ever went broke underestimating the public intelligence.
No one ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American middle class.

There's no underestimating the intelligence of the American public.

And third, no one in Hollywood ever lost money by overestimating the intelligence of the American public.

I guess what P.T. Barnum said still holds true "no one ever lost money overestimating the intelligence of the American public".

So then I wondered what the original quotation really was, and where it first appeared. I didn't succeed in nailing down the answer to either of those questions, but here are some clues:

Vincent Fitzpatrick, 'H.L. Mencken', in Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol. 137: American Magazine Journalists, 1900-1960, 1994, gives the quotation in this form:

No one in the world, so far as I know — and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the plain people.

John Leland, Hip: The History, 2005, gives it this way:

No one in this world, so far as I know — and I have researched the records for years, and employed agents to help me — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the plain people.

Roger Lathbury, American Modernism (1910-1945), 2006, gives this form:

No one in the world, so far as I know . . . has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people.

Whatever the original really was, many people have produced creative variants. Among the many things that nobody (or no one) ever went broke (or lost money) by underestimating are these:

the insecurities of gay consumers
the gullibility of Facebook users
the need of Americans for the Effortless Solution
the vapidity of the American newsmedia
the anxiety women feel about getting married
the desperation of composers
the Bush administration's capacity for doing the wrong thing
Tony Romo's ability to absolutely puke away winnable games
the intolerance levels of the Daily Mail readership
the motivation of The American Freshman
students' calculational skills
the Christmas single market
the spine of congressional democrats

And among the many things that nobody ever went broke by overestimating:

the neurotic stupidity of Floridians
the foolishness of any given group of people
the laziness of the American public
the gullibility of the American public
the racism of Today's GOP
the self-absorption of the Democratic Party
the vulgarity of the American people
how bad people could be
the heartfelt panic that the average woman feels about her body
Americans' ability to value fantasy over reality
the treason of the democrat party
the desperate unhappiness of the American public
the political knowledge of the people
the appetite of Texans for red meat

Note that in both directions, the majority of these are things that on balance one would rather have less of. (I've put in red the quantities that seem clearly to be negatively evaluated.)

11 Jan 22:41

Trailer for Happy People

Trailer for the Herzog documentary Happy People.
11 Jan 22:33

Night Visions: Industry vets from Boston's after-dark scene

by russiansledges
JACKSON: Businesses own their liquor licenses. When they're worth $200,000 to $250,000, people want to protect their assets. If you present the not-so-radical idea that it should be easier and less expensive to get a license — which would lead to more choice, more culture, higher overall business growth — people with interest in the value of licenses may not want to change things.
11 Jan 21:39

It takes a village

Russian Sledges

"This is not shit, this is brilliant."--r.r.o.

It takes a village to raise a child, but only one maternal uncle to sell the child into slavery.

11 Jan 20:48

carprediem: allthefandomfeelings: For those who don’t get...





carprediem:

allthefandomfeelings:

image

For those who don’t get the joke, that wizard in the bottom gif is played by Sylvestor McCoy aka the Seventh Doctor.

I hate good wizards in fairy tales. They always turn out to be him.

11 Jan 19:18

The drinking habits of John Falls, aged 110 (1754)

by Emily Brand
Russian Sledges

“A few Days ago died in the Manour of Carrick near McGuire’s-Bridge in Ireland, in the 110th Year of his Age, John Falls, remarkable for having often drank two Quarts of Whiskey at a Sitting, and being afterwards able to walk home.”

This is the best obituary I have seen in a long time. But I do wonder if Mr Falls would …

Continue reading »

11 Jan 19:14

Honest John's Used Car Lot, John R. Clark, Jr.

by Boston Public Library

Boston Public Library posted a photo:

Honest John's Used Car Lot, John R. Clark, Jr.

File name: 06_10_014242
Title: Honest John's Used Car Lot, John R. Clark, Jr.
Date issued: 1930 - 1945 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 print (postcard) : linen texture, color ; 5 1/2 x 3 1/2 in.
Genre: Postcards
Notes: Title from item.
Collection: The Tichnor Brothers Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions

11 Jan 19:11

The Tip of the Spear

by editors

A reporter who investigated Scientology tracks down the man who once ran the church’s intelligence operations – and who may hold the secret to years of harassment (and the mysterious death of a pet dog).

Joel Sappell | Los Angeles | Dec 2012 [Full Story]
11 Jan 18:48

Truffled Potato and Onion Tart

by The Food in my Beard

I feel like I've been craving this tart for a few years, but didn't even know what the craving was. I tried to make something like this exactly a year ago, but it just came out weird. I finally nailed it this week. A simple thin shortcrust, a layer of heavily truffled mashed potatoes, some caramelized onion, and a sprinkling of blue cheese on top.


Tons of onions getting cooked down.



A simple shortcrust.



Mash up the potatoes with tons of truffle oil and butter and put them into the crust.



Then the onions followed by blue cheese.



This smelled amazing fresh out of the oven.



Top with a little drizzle of more truffle oil.



This is how you take simple ingredients and dress them up as something elegant.




3 yukon gold potatoes
1 stick butter
1 cup cream
a few tablespoons truffle oil
shortcrust pastry
6 onions of various varieties
blue cheese

Cook the potatoes in the oven until tender. Mash with the butter, cream, and truffle oil.  Set aside.  Make the shortcrust. Cook the onions down in some butter until browned, sweet, and delicious. Roll the crust out really thin and lay in a lightly greased tart pan. Add the potatoes, followed by the onions and blue cheese. Bake at 425 for about 20 minutes until the crust is cooked.  Drizzle with some more truffle oil before serving.

11 Jan 18:48

BEST FOURTH WALL BREAK IN TV HISTORY

by aishiterushit








BEST FOURTH WALL BREAK IN TV HISTORY

11 Jan 18:48

Melrose, Mass. Mayor Plans Violent Media Turn-In Program for Local Families

by james_fudge
Russian Sledges

I can get something for my shitty old dvds? sweet

Mayor Robert Dolan of Melrose, Massachusetts revealed on Thursday that the city will launch an initiative similar to one put forward and then canceled by community leaders in the town of Southington, Connecticut.

read more

11 Jan 18:46

Radiolarian Glory

by noreply@blogger.com (Laura Ottina)

Ernst Haeckel, portrait by Minouette
The renowned German scientist Ernst Haeckel (1834-1919) was an early proponent of Darwinism  who did much to popularize the work of the English naturalist in his home country.
His scientific works were praised by Darwin, even though their ideas diverged on several important points, 
and his books outsold On the Origin of Species. A member of more than 90 learned international societies,
 he was selected as one of the consultants to the Challenger Expedition, the first non-commercial
 exploration of deep-sea environment. He coined the terms "philum", "phylogeny", "Darwinism",
 and "ecology", and was the first to postulate a missing link between ape and man. 

Haeckel was a prolific writer and natural history illustrator, and focused his work on various invertebrates
 such as sponges, medusae and annelids. During the 1860s he published numerous taxonomic
 volumes describing hundreds of species of radiolarians, an order of unicellular marine microorganisms
 that forms part of the Ocean's zooplankton. His 1868 volume Natürliche Schöpfungsgeschichte
 (The Natural History of Creation) was a great success and gained him world recognition.
 Other titles include Systematic PhylogenyThe Riddle of the UniverseLast Words on Evolution
and The Last Link. As a scientist and accomplished artist, Haeckel was fascinated with patterns
 and symmetry, and found his inspiration in Goethe's belief that both art and science 
can lead us to understand the underlying truths of nature. 



Haeckel traveled around the world on his scientific expeditions, obsessively observing
 and drawing aquatic life forms and other creatures. From a series of more than 1000 engravings,
100 colored lithographic plates were chosen to be published between 1899 and 1904 in Kunstformen der Natur
 (Artforms of Nature), one of the masterpieces of 19th century naturalist illustration. 
While Heackel's depictions of higher animals look rather stiff when compared to the work of other 
artists/naturalists, the intricate forms of microorganisms allowed him to display his elegant, dazzling
 graphic talent and indulge in his inclination towards order, organization and geometry.
 Haeckel's delicate pencil and ink drawings were beautifully adapted for the book by the lithographer 
Adolph Giltsch. The subjects of each lithograph were carefully selected and elaborately arranged 
to emphasize the organisms' organization and symmetry. 







There was debate at the time on whether Hackel's marvelous life forms were over-embellished 
and idealized. Their sinuous lines are in fact closely reminiscent of the contemporary Art Nouveau style,  and he certainly utilised distortion, stylization and geometry in his descriptions of organic
 phenomena, often discarding scientific accuracy in favor of beauty and decorative effect.  




Art Forms in Nature was aimed at the general public rather than specialists, and each plate
 was accompanied by a short and accessible commentary. The stunning illustrations gave the book
 appeal to a wide audience, and in the decades before World War I the tome was a huge success. Haeckel's scientific reputation was tarnished when some of his theories were questioned and discarded
 due to lack of empirical support, misleading information, and possible data fabrication. However, his natural obsessions have never ceased to fascinate and inspire artists around the world.



11 Jan 18:46

Friday Likes 30

by Armin

Friday Likes

The first Friday Likes of the year come from Canada, The Netherlands, and Mexico and provide a good mix of lighthearted and serious and hand-made and computer-made.

Mylène Poisson

Mylène Poisson

For this Court of Master Sommeliers-certified sommelier, Montréal-based Caserne established a simpler than simple letterspaced wordmark that would be, well, boring on its own. Enter: wine. Probably time-consuming as hell but each stationery item is stamped with a glass bottom ring of red wine giving it a very authentic touch, particularly in the business card where the ring covers multiple and makes them all infinitely different. I'll drink to that. [More].

---

Alzheimer Nederland

Alzheimer Nederland

This was first shown in October of 2012 and for some reason I forgot to mention it. Designed by Studio Dumbar for Alzheimer Nederland this identity is not something I necessarily "like" like the other projects we show here. It isn't friendly and the execution is — you can't call it bad — just harsh and perhaps a little too real for lack of a better term. "The 'vanishing points'," explains Dumbar, "visualize the effects of dementia, while some people see them as a source of light and hope." In typical Dumbar fashion, the identity is expressive and provocative. Creative Review has a great interview with them about this project. [More]

---

Bonnard

Bonnard

Perennial Friday Likables, Anagrama, is back with another playful yet sophisticated identity. This time for a "Mexican french-inspired tea and confectionary shop" called Bonnard, after the painter Pierre Bonnard. The identity uses a limited set of macaroon-colored brushstrokes — paired with gold foil — against stark white backgrounds. Delicious all around. [More]

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11 Jan 18:46

Photo

Russian Sledges

"no idea what's going on here but I am entranced"-gg

ditto















11 Jan 18:45

TV Listings: Mythbusters

Discovery 8 p.m. EST/7 p.m. CST In this week’s special episode based on Death Of A Salesman, the gang tests how easily a man’s spirit can be broken.


11 Jan 18:45

Listen to Tom Waits and Keith Richards' Song for the Johnny Depp-Curated Pirate Compilation

by Carrie Battan

Listen to Tom Waits and Keith Richards' Song for the Johnny Depp-Curated Pirate Compilation

On February 19, Anti- will release the Son of Rogue's Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs and Chanteys compilation. Curated and created by Johnny Depp, Pirates of the Caribbean director Gore Verbinski, and producer Hal Willner, it's a follow-up to the 2006 compilation Rogue's Gallery

Among the artists featured are Patti Smith teaming up with Johnny Depp, Courtney Love teaming up with Michael Stipe, Iggy Pop teaming up with A Hawk and a Hacksaw, plus Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, Michael Gira of Swans, Broken Social Scene, Antony, and many more.

Tom Waits also teamed up with Keith Richards-- listen to their pairing on the track "Shenandoah", below.

11 Jan 17:05

Motherlode Blog: I Don't Want My Preschooler to Be a 'Gentleman'

by By LYNN MESSINA
Russian Sledges

"millenniums"

What's the harm in teaching little boys to respect little girls by letting them go first? For starters, it perpetuates millenniums of sexism.

11 Jan 15:06

Aerial Panorama Photo of New York City’s Central Park

by EDW Lynch

Aerial panoramic photo of New York City's Central Park

This incredible aerial panorama photo of New York City’s Central Park is by Russian photographer Sergey Semenov. The photo won the Major Amateur Award in the 2012 Epson International Photographic Pano Awards.

Aerial panoramic photo of New York City's Central Park

via The Atlantic & Todd Lappin

11 Jan 15:06

Beertone, A Beer Reference Guide That Looks Like a Color Swatch Book

by Rusty Blazenhoff

Beertone

Beertone is a detailed reference guide for beer that looks like a Pantone color swatch book. It currently catalogs 202 Swiss beers by their color and the folks behind it plan on expanding future versions to include beers from around the world. Pre-orders are being taken now.

The bright beers will start the guide ending with the dark ones. Each Beer will be presented with picture, description and of course its color Information, RGB, CMYK, Web, SRM( that’s the beer color scale). We are shooting each beer, bottle and the beer itself in a glass.

via Cool Material, Foodiggity

11 Jan 12:16

Love hurts: why there's too much romance on TV

by Sarah Hughes

So many plots, from Doctor Who to Homeland, Sherlock and Lost to Fringe, would be much improved by ditching the love interests altogether

When the Doctor shared a kiss with his newest companion this Christmas, my response was not "Aahh" but the distinctly unimpressed "Oh". My disappointment was nothing to do with Jenna-Louise Coleman's performance as young governess Clara Oswin Oswald but because I am fast growing tired of the notion that every show needs a sprinkling of romance to make our hearts beat faster. Some of them, I can't help thinking, would be much improved by ditching the love interests altogether.

Take Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Millions of viewers, myself among them, occasionally entertained ourselves during Buffy's early seasons by imagining a world in which our heroine forgot about her romances with Angel and Riley, and took a walk on the wild side with Spike. That idea started to look less attractive with season five, when Spike decided he actually was in love with Buffy, which proved borderline unpleasant to watch. Then came season six and as Spuffy unfolded, all undead sex with a frisson of violence, culminating in the attempted rape of Seeing Red – AKA the episode that must never be mentioned – it became clear that this was one romantic storyline that might have been better left unwritten, despite the chemistry of those involved.

Indeed, chemistry is often the worst reason for putting a couple together. From Blair and Chuck in Gossip Girl to Logan and Veronica in Veronica Mars, teen television is littered with examples of pairings that were more effective in theory than actuality. Whether that was because of ludicrous plotting (he sold her for a hotel but she still loved him) or a failure to think through the logistics of the relationship (they're at the same university even though he doesn't like studying or have any wish to be at college because … well, how else are they going to be together post-school?) these romances stumbled once they moved centre stage.

A similar failure dogged the reimagined relationship between Irene Adler and Sherlock Holmes in A Scandal in Belgravia. In contrast to Conan Doyle's original, with its meeting of equal minds – "To Sherlock Holmes she was always the woman … in his eyes she eclipses and predominates the whole of her sex" – Steven Moffat's updated story saw Adler revealed as little more than a pawn in the ongoing game between Holmes and Moriarty. As for sexual tension, the bromance between Sherlock and Watson remains far more convincing.

Moffat has form at bad romance: while some hailed River Song as the Doctor's soul mate, I always felt she worked better as the mysterious time traveller of the early Matt Smith episodes. By the time we reached The Wedding of River Song, the character felt like a pale imitation, rendered anaemic by love, offering up her heart to a Doctor who appeared obnoxiously ungrateful at best. "What am I doing?" she asked before their quickie universe-saving wedding. "As you're told," came the romantic reply.

And all the chemistry in the world couldn't save Homeland season two from being an ungodly mess of cliched bad romance culminating in poor Damian Lewis actually uttering a line about keeping "the lady of the house stimulated – intellectually". The show's writers, who originally intended to kill Brody off at the end of season one, resurrected him because they were fascinated by exploring the doomed central pairing. They should have stuck to the original plan.

Then there's otherwise excellent Fringe, increasingly bogged down in the intricacies of Peter and Olivia's relationship which all the alternative-universes in the world are apparently unable to kill. Even Joshua Jackson, who plays Peter, a man who knows something about interminable romances thanks to his start on Dawson's Creek, has admitted being less than enthused by the show's central love affair: "I was never a real huge fan of the Peter/Olivia storyline. All of Fringe is on this epic scale, and that seemed kind of banal to me at the centre of it," he told TVLine in 2011.

While Jackson has come round to the storyline since his character's self-sacrifice in season three, it still feels as if far too many episodes are wasted on shuffling the relationship through various permutations (she trusts him, she doesn't, she should, she shouldn't, he's using her, he isn't) although I have some hope that the show's creators will find an elegant solution in the series finale this month.

Whatever the result it's bound to better than Lost. Ask many people what the worst thing about the twisty Damon Lindelof/Carlton Cuse show was and they will answer you without hesitating: Kate, Jack and Sawyer. Yes, it's inevitable that if you're stuck on a desert island shifting through time some romance might occur – but was there really any reason for Lindelof and Cuse to create the most boring love triangle in history? A series of seemingly interminable episodes in which we hopped back and forth waiting for 'Freckles' to decide whether she preferred the dapper doctor with daddy issues and a burgeoning messiah complex or the charming con artist with a quick tongue and a well-hidden sensitive side.

The endless deliberations turned an interesting show into a boringly ordinary one, proving once again that you don't always need love to make the television world spin round.

So am I just an unromantic curmudgeon? Should every show have a sprinkling of romance – or are some better off keeping strictly to the non-romantic plot? Which are improved by love – and which are all the better for avoiding it. Have your say, as always, below the line …

Sarah Hughes
guardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

11 Jan 05:39

Amtrak's operating loss lowest since 1975

by The Associated Press
The $361 million loss for the year ending Sept. 30 was down 19 percent from the previous year.
11 Jan 01:04

Eater Inside: Flour Back Bay Oh-So-Close to Opening

by Rachel Leah Blumenthal

Click here to view the full photogallery. [Photos: Rachel Leah Blumenthal]

Looks like Back Bay folks will have to wait just a little bit longer for their taste of Joanne Chang-Myers' famous sticky buns. She tweets today that the about-to-open fourth Flour location is "still waiting for permits." The 45-50 seat space is pretty much complete, and the staff is ready to go, though, so stay tuned for news of the imminent opening.

· @jbchang [Twitter]
· All coverage of Flour Bakery + Cafe on Eater [~EBOS~]

11 Jan 01:00

Quote of the Day: But What About Peep-Toes?!

by Staci Zaretsky

If such a shoe exists, the parties have not pointed to it, there is no evidence that Already has dreamt of it, and we cannot conceive of it. It sits, as far as we can tell, on a shelf between Dorothy’s ruby slippers and Perseus’s winged sandals.

– Chief Justice John Roberts, remarking in a recent opinion on the specific degree of fabulosity that would be required for Nike to renege on its covenant not to sue Already LLC for trademark infringement. The Supreme Court opinion can be found here.

11 Jan 00:57

Wrestling Fan Andy Warhol Attends WWF Event At MSG In 1985

by Jen Carlson
Wrestling Fan Andy Warhol Attends WWF Event At MSG In 1985 If you thought Billy Corgan was the most unlikely candidate to get into the professional wrestling scene, then look no further than 1985, when Andy Warhol turned up on camera with some of the World Wrestling Federation's biggest names of the time. [ more › ]

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11 Jan 00:57

34 Illicit Photos From Deep Inside The Abandoned Domino Sugar Refinery

by John Del Signore
                                   Last month an impromptu group of "urban explorers" infiltrated the abandoned and very much off-limits Domino Sugar Refinery on the East River in Williamsburg. The massive complex, built in 1884, was once the largest in the world, producing at its peak 3 million pounds of sugar a day and employing some 5,000 workers. It closed in 2004, and was later bought by a developer who tried (and failed) to turn it into a luxury condominium complex. That project was abandoned amidst the economic turmoil of recent years, but was recently taken up again by Two Trees Management, which gentrified much of DUMBO. [ more › ]

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