This past week was my last before the fall semester
begins, so I went to New York City for a short vacation. It was six days well spent, but the trip was
not without its interesting moments.
Here are a few.
Waiting for a Ride
It was nearly two hours after my flight had
arrived in Newark, and counting. I was
beginning to despair of ever getting to my hotel.
I’d flown into EWR on the advice of a certain airline with public relations issues. It
touted Newark’s closeness to Manhattan as a selling point. I took the bait and was coming to regret it.
I had booked a shared shuttle to take me into
the city. I’d given my flight number and
arrival time and figured they would be waiting.
How could I have been so foolish?
I quickly learned EWR was an even worse
destination than it was a connection. Following the directions of one of the bevy of
red coated guides scattered about the airport, I and my luggage navigated the
maze of corridors and escalators and trains to the hotel shuttle waiting area
outside the terminal.
And I waited.
And waited, as various hotel vans came and went with no sign of one from
the service I’d booked.
After 45 minutes, it finally occurred to me to ask
another redcoat whether I was in the right place. I was not.
The first redcoat had been in error.
Convinced I would have to swim across the
Hudson to get to my destination, I dejectedly made my way back through the maze. Following the conflicting advice of several
more redcoats cost me twenty more minutes before I finally arrived at a
customer service desk at the airport taxi stand.
I presently found myself waiting in line for
one of the three customer service reps with one customer ahead of me. I silently prayed that I wouldn’t get the
surly young woman on the far left, who had just run off a guy who asked for
clarification of the directions she’d given him with a snarled, “Do you want me
to hold your hand and walk you there?” before she resumed playing with her
phone. I could see her point, I
guess. After all, that candy wasn’t going
to crush itself…
The fellow who waited on me called the shuttle
company for a van. He told me the van
would arrive in fifteen minutes.
An hour and twenty minutes later, my ride suddenly materialized. The driver was a
gentleman of uncertain south Asian ancestry with limited English. I was the last passenger and the van was
jampacked.
After a lengthy argument between the driver and
a passenger from New Zealand who had reserved her seat by phone on the flight
over and lacked the requisite paper receipt, we got underway.
The drive to Holland Tunnel took us through a bleak
industrial landscape straight out of the opening credits of The Sopranos. We crept along in bumper-to-bumper traffic
until we finally surfaced in Manhattan.
I’d chosen my Tribeca hotel specifically for its closeness to the
Holland Tunnel exit and its presumed ease of access for transportation. Another mistake. Despite (or perhaps because of) the aid of
GPS, the driver got lost immediately and we spent still another quarter hour
meandering through lower Manhattan.
Surrounded by yellow taxis whilst stopped at a
red light, I couldn’t miss the ads on the cab roofs. They were all from the Devil’s Airline
touting the convenience of its service to and from Newark.
Ah, the irony…
Chugged
Walking down a street in Tribeca I heard a
shout behind me. Then another. Someone was trying to get my attention.
Specifically, the guy calling after me was trying
to hail me with a rude comment mocking my appearance. I’m aware of my aesthetic shortcomings, but I
still get annoyed when they are pointed out to me.
So, I turned around and let out an audible
groan. The shaggy Millennial twit accosting
me was a charity fundraiser. You know
the kind, lurking on urban street corners intercepting unsuspecting tourists as
no self-respecting local would ever respond to their come-ons.
If you’re not familiar with the phenomenon,
large charities have taken to hiring fundraising firms to get pedestrians on
city streets to give up their credit card numbers for one-time or (preferably)
recurring monthly contribution to the cause.
The people engaged in this practice aren’t idealistic volunteers. They’re mercenaries, some of whom work on
commission.
This particular tool was huckstering for an
animal welfare organization. “You really
think you’re going to get money from me this way?” I asked him pointedly.
“Aw, c’mon, bro, you gotta admit it’s
funny. I mean, c’mon!”
“Am I laughing?
Bro? Think I’d give you anything
after that crack, even if I did support your charity?”
Shaggy suddenly got serious, dialed it back a
bit, and tried to rescue his spiel. “Do
you support us? Don’t you like puppies? Everybody likes puppies.”
“Yeah,” I said, turning away. “Roasted on a spit for dinner.”
Shaggy was momentarily speechless. Finally, he sputtered, “Dick!”
“Takes one to know one,” I said over my
shoulder as I walked off. “Happy hunting—bro!”
#Trumpocalypse
Stepping out of the St. Regis Hotel after lunch,
I headed west on East 55th Street, then turned right and started
walking up Fifth Avenue towards Central Park.
There was a small crowd of tourists clustered on
the sidewalk in the middle of the block.
Curious, I joined them to see what the fuss was about.
It turned out we were gathered outside Trump
Tower. What a commotion…a riot of phones
and selfies and pointing and oohs and ahs.
Never mind the RoboCop-like police
officers with carbines slung across their chests standing next to the
doormen. Never mind the dark-sunglassed
suits lurking nearby with fingers pressed to their earpieces. Never mind the trappings of incipient fascism. We were basking in the reflective glow of the
Narcissist-in-Chief’s gaudy monument to himself.
A celebrity building. Only in America.
The Connoisseur
Most evenings during my trip, I ended up at a
nice little Italian place in the West Village.
The food and service were good, but its main virtue was that it was open
past eleven.
Over the course of the week I’d struck up a
friendly, bantering relationship with the bartender. I’ll call him Raffi. Raffi’s in his mid-twenties, handsome, with
freeflowing shoulder length blond hair.
His accented English is charmingly idiosyncratic. I’m sure the girls all swoon over him.
I was finishing my dinner one night when a
customer strode into the bar from his sidewalk table. He was not happy. As soon as he set foot indoors, he bellowed
at Raffi, “Hey! Hey! I wanna talk to you!”
With an entrance like that, I just had to get a
look at the guy. A first glance
confirmed my suspicions. The bellowing
man was decked out in the regalia of The Asshole, middle aged white male summer
edition:
Flat cap concealing a balding dome? Check.
Salt-and-pepper half beard intended to convey
the message that while he’s mature, he hasn’t completely lost touch with his
youthful wild streak? Check.
Two-tone guayabera straining against a
noticeable paunch? Faded khaki pants and sandals? Check!
The following exchange ensued:
“The wine you served me and my guests was
disgusting! There was sediment in it!”
Raffi smiled appeasingly, “Sir, every bottle
has a little sediment. We can’t—”
“There was sediment! There was an unacceptable amount of
sediment! It spoiled my palate! I’m gonna be tasting that sediment all night!”
Raffi tried again: “Sir, we can’t avoid a
little sediment—”
“You’re debating me! Don’t debate me! I know what I’m talking about! I know wine!
I’m a connoisseur!”
He paused a second, his rant momentarily losing
its footing. “I used to be a bartender,”
the man continued, hoping this was the cherry on the sundae. Still, he figured he’d get in a lick or two
more.
“I know what I’m talking about!” the man went
on. He paused again, searching for a
forceful finale. “That sediment spoiled
my palate,” he finally sulked, just in case Raffi hadn’t gotten it the first
time.
“Maybe it was the way the glass was poured,”
Raffi ventured cautiously. “Would you
like a new bottle, sir?”
“Yeah, I want a new bottle! You shoulda offered me one in the first
place!”
Bellowing Man had his victory. And yet he just couldn’t let things go
completely. He still wanted to know why
there was so much sediment in his wine.
Raffi, frustrated and seeking to defend his establishment’s honor, strained
the remaining contents of the original bottle through a bar sieve to show it
wasn’t all dregs. Raffi was vindicated,
but Bellowing Man insisted on the last word as Raffi uncorked a new bottle for
him.
“Look, I know you’re just doing your job. But you debated me. You shouldn’t have debated me, you know?” Raffi nodded, knowing any answer might be
construed as further “debate.”
Bellowing Man’s tone softened. “Sorry we got off on the wrong foot. We can be friends, can’t we? Friends?”
He then shook Raffi’s hand in a classic bully gesture.
After the guy left, Raffi said to me, “Sorry
you had to see that. I’m sorry he
spoiled your meal.”
Raffi’s apology made me feel even worse for
him. “He shouldn’t have acted that way,”
I said with consummate understatement. “It
wasn’t your fault. He could’ve handled
it differently. Besides, you were
right. Every bottle has a little
sediment.”
“Thanks.”
Raffi refilled my glass. “Let me
make it up to you. This one’s on me.”
I finished eating, paid my tab, and ventured
out into the late evening warmth. I made
sure I left Raffi a generous tip.
© 2017 The Unassuming Scholar
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