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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Jay-Z. Tampilkan semua postingan

Sabtu, 20 April 2013

Jay-Z not just one of TIME's 100 most influential, he's the cover (one of seven); tribute is by myopic Mike Bloomberg

It's stunning that, among TIME magazine's rather celeb-heavy list of the world's 100 most influential people, one of the seven most important--gracing one of seven covers--is Jay Z, Artist and entrepreneur, 42, under the category of Titans.


The tribute, dated 4/18/13, comes from none other than New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg:
Jay Z embodies so much of what makes New York New York. A kid from a tough neighborhood who grows up in public housing, overcomes lots of bad influences on the street, never lets go of his dream, makes it to the top — and then keeps going, pursuing new outlets for his creativity and ambition. When no one would sign him to a record contract, he created his own label and built a music empire — before going on to design clothing lines, open sports bars and, most recently, represent professional athletes. He’s an artist-entrepreneur who stands at the center of culture and commerce in 21st century America, and his influence stretches across races, religions and regions. He’s never forgotten his roots — “Empire State of Mind” was a love song to our city — and as a co-owner of the NBA Nets, he helped bring a major league sports team back to Brooklyn, not far from his old neighborhood. In nearly everything he’s tried, he’s found success. (He even put a ring on BeyoncĂ©.) And in doing so, he’s proved that the American Dream is alive and well.
Overcomes lots of bad influence on the street is a pretty gentle euphemism for being a drug dealer who went on--at least in his recording persona--to often celebrate that world. No "ethical pickle" recognized by Bloomberg.

And surely the mayor (or his minions) wrote this before Jay-Z issued his pissy, Trump-ish "Open Letter," claiming “Would’ve brought the Nets to Brooklyn for free/Except I made millions off it, you f---in’ dweeb."










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Jumat, 19 April 2013

Jay-Z, upon selling share of Nets, thanks Ratner, Prokhorov, Yormark; fans remain in thrall

Remember how writer Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah observed in December 2010, "Jay-Z is a natural orator; he can say much or nothing, and it not only sounds good, it also sounds heartfelt."

Yesterday, under the headline Brooklyn's Finest, Jay-Z posted a message on his Life+Times site about selling his share of the Nets:
Being a member of the Nets organization surpassed some of my greatest ambitions. It was never about an investment; it was about the NETS and Brooklyn. My job as an owner is over but as a fan it has just begun. I’m a Brooklyn Net forever. It’s been an honor to work with Mikhail Prokhorov, Dmitry Razumov, Christophe Charlier, ONEXIM Sports and Entertainment, Brett Yormark and all the wonderful people involved in making the Nets first class. My sincerest thanks goes to Bruce Ratner, who first introduced the idea of moving the Nets to Brooklyn. A thank you and deepest appreciation goes to the fans. You are the lifeblood of any team.
The Nets have made their mark on the NBA and as they enter a new era, Roc Nation does as well; as we embark on Roc Nation Sports. Our newest endeavor is committed to building the brands of professional athletes as we have done for some of today’s top music artists. For Roc Nation Sports to function at its full potential, NBA rules stipulate that I relinquish my ownership in the Brooklyn Nets. It was a tough decision but as I stated earlier, it’s not about ownership. Congratulations to The Nets on a great season and making the playoffs! I will always be a Brooklyn Net.
Remember, it's a business, and he's a business, man. (Though doesn't the Brooklyn move creation myth credit Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz?) If Jay-Z truly cared about the fans, he'd say something, for example, about the team raising the prices of the cheap seats from $15 to $25.

His fans, however, remain in thrall. Among the comments:
  • Good stuff. Jay-Z is so classy.
  • Proud of you!!
  • Nothing inspires me more than you. Many years ago you spoke about the nets and boom you made it happen . That's how I want to achieve in life. Now its on to to the next one!
Jay-Z's focus on brands makes him fit right in with Yormark, who said last August, “We are pleased that GEICO and Brooklyn support each other and we are excited to continue to partner with brands of excellence.”


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Sabtu, 13 April 2013

The Jay-Z frenzy: firing back at the Nets/Ratner (nah) while slamming "dweeb" who dissed him (and sliding toward Trump)


OK, so Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz's epic, Fidel-like final State of the Borough address dominated my attention yesterday, so I'm coming late to the media firestorm lit by what seemed to be a rather casual, if quite pointed, track issued by Jay-Z two days ago. Apparently anything Mr. Carter says can be huge news.

(See update at bottom: Jay-Z must not only sell his stake in the team but also the arena.)

The Daily News reported, in Jay-Z releases 'Open Letter': Rapper fires back at critics of his Cuba trip with Beyonce, sports business ventures in new song
In a new track recorded and released in 24 hours, Jay-Z insists he’s cashing out of the Brooklyn Nets — but not abandoning the borough or its arena.
“Would’ve brought the Nets to Brooklyn for free/Except I made millions off it, you f---in’ dweeb,” he rhymes in his new track, “Open Letter,” directed at critics from Havana to Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.
The message comes on the heels of Jay’s announcement he will sell his 1/15 of 1% share in the Nets so his new sports rep agency, Roc Nation Sports, can pursue NBA clients. League rules bar sports agents from owning NBA teams.
The rapper has already signed Giants receiver Victor Cruz and Yankee star Robinson Cano. But as Jay-Z raps in the track, he remains invested in the arena itself.
“I still own the building, I’m still keeping my seat/Y’all buy that bulls--t/you’d better keep your receipt.”
...A source in Jay-Z’s camp said the “dweebs” he referenced were not Brooklynites buying into the new team.
Likewise, a source with the Nets said the team doesn’t believe the lyrics were aimed at them, but rather at critics who’ve poked fun at Jay-Z’s tiny stake in the franchise.Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz said rap lyrics mean little to him. “I came to Jay-Z’s concert here for his first show, and my wife and I looked at each other and we barely understood a word,” he noted at Barclays on Thursday night after giving his state of the borough speech.
Pointed at the Nets?

There was a real-time frenzy in which several sports reporters thought Jay-Z's rather unclear rap pointed directly at the Nets. The Brooklyn Eagle wrote:
Is there suddenly bad blood brewing between soon-to-be former minority owner Jay-Z and the Nets? In a recently released song, "Open Letter", the hip-hop mogul, the 17-time Grammy winner and Brooklyn icon took a not-so-veiled shot at the organization, or at least one of the Nets' higher-ups. 
NetsDaily rounded it up as Shots fired? Jay-Z releases 'Open Letter' criticizing... his critics? The Record's John Brennan wrote:
There are a variety of opinions of what Jay-Z means there, but I think rapgenius.com has it right:
The “dweeb” in the lyric likely is the New York Times reporter who last August pegged the value of Jay-Z’s stake in the Nets at 1/15th of one percent (FAR less than had been speculated previously).
Jay-Z ripped that report last fall during his Barclays Center-opening concert series in Brooklyn.
So this lyric would be in keeping with that; I don’t see it as any more mysterious than that. Jay-Z no doubt enjoyed the perception of many that he was a major investor in the team, as it enhanced his reputation as a major player on that scene.
An empty complaint and a slide toward Trump

If so, it's kind of an empty complaint, since that article more than anything buffed Jay-Z. He wouldn't criticize management; they're all in it together.

The Brooklyn Game had a critical take that strikes me as quite reasonable but pretty much everyone else ignored, Is Jay-Z Sliding Toward Donald Trumpiness?:
Some heard it as made millions off "it" instead of "of." Either way, at the risk of over-interpreting a bunch of rap lyrics, it sounds like Jay-Z thinks:
a) He single-handedly brought the Nets to Brooklyn. I guess Bruce Ratner, Mikhail Prokhorov, Marty Markowitz and the many other people who have been agitating for a Brooklyn team for years, were irrelevant. The Nets came to Brooklyn because Jay-Z decided it should be so. And, "I still own the building." He was no doubt very important in creating the brand but even accounting for normal celebrity trash talk, this sounds a bit too much like The Donald.
b) Nets are suckers. Whether he's mocking a particular Nets executive or the entire deal, he's saying the Nets could have gotten his help for free but they paid him! Ha ha ha ha. (By the way, the Nets did just fine in this relationship: whatever they paid, they probably got their money's worth in terms of brand-buffing and publicity.)
It's quite possible that Jay-Z was mostly intending to push back at those who made fun of him for having a small stake in the team. That seems to have really gotten under his skin, which is a weird thing to care about. So he's saying, "you think I had a small stake! Well then how come I made millions! Still think I was used??"
But whatever his motivation, the combination of him selling his shares to go off and make some more money as an agent and this Nets-whack makes it slightly harder to think of him as the Nets Number One Fan in quite the same way. He was supposed to be our Spike Lee. This week, at least, he's sounding more like our Donald Trump.
"Rambling, mysterious" and profiting all along

The New York Post summarized it as Jay-Z’s Barc has bite, subtitled "Radio rap rant blasts critics of puny Nets stake":
Jay-Z’s got 99 problems — and he rapped about every one of them yesterday in a rambling, mysterious radio rant that blasted an unidentified “dweeb” who failed to show him enough respect.
“Would’ve brought the Nets to Brooklyn for free/Except I made millions off it, you f--kin’ dweeb,” the 17-time Grammy winner snarled about the Barclays Center in the middle of the hastily produced song, “Open Letter,” which was released on Hot 97.
From the Onion's AV Club:
Similarly chill about proper segues, he then transitions abruptly to the Nets controversy, saying, “Would’ve brought the Nets to Brooklyn for free / Except I made millions off of you fuckin’ dweebs.” And indeed, what’s more American than profiting from while simultaneously openly despising the nation’s dweebs? 
Also see the liberal and conservative takes on whether Jay-Z was boosting Cuba. 

Update: Jay-Z must sell arena stake, too

Forbes's Mike Ozanian wrote 4/13/13:
The song’s lyrics–”I still own the building, I’m still keeping my seat”–don’t jive with league rules. Not only will Jay-Z have to sell his tiny piece of the Brooklyn Nets, but he will have to divest his stake in the arena too due to his entry into athlete representation, according to sources familiar with the NBA’s regulations.
This isn’t to say that Jay-Z didn’t make the right move. He can now get a nice percentage on any deals his athletes get with the only significant capital being his time. And he gets out of owning a team and arena that are worth a lot, but will likely not be posting a net profit any time soon because of their high debt and the $500 million worth of bonds sold to finance the arena project.
In short, Jay-Z has shifted to a fat net margin business from very low margin assets. And yes, he can keep his seat at the arena.


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Rabu, 10 April 2013

Jay-Z's decision to sell fractional Nets stake means front-page treatment in the Daily News

Is Jay-Z "abandoning" the Nets, as the astonishingly plentiful Daily News front page suggests? No, he's moving on and up.

To quote the Daily News, "The rap mogul and NBA franchise figurehead plans to sell his small share of the Nets, as reported by Yahoo! Sports, because Shawn Carter wants to elevate his new career as a sports agent."

As his mentor from Brooklyn, Jonathan "Jaz-O" Burks, once said, "His loyalty is to his money."

Meanwhile, has the Daily News reported on how the 2,000 cheap seats for the Nets are, after one year, going from $15 to $25? Nope.


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Kamis, 04 April 2013

Roundup: rust at the arena; Jay-Z's sports coup; a BID emerges at Hudson Yards

They're still cleaning rust dripping from the Barclays Center facade, as indicated in the photo at right taken earlier this week, looking east along Atlantic Avenue not far from Pacific Street.

But that's not the big Barclays Center news. As ESPN reported:
New York Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano, who is in the final season of a $57 million contract, has left agent Scott Boras to sign with a company founded by Jay-Z.
Roc Nation, an entertainment company founded by Shawn Carter, also known as Jay-Z, announced Tuesday that it is getting into the sports representation business through a partnership with Creative Artists Agency (CAA). This arm of CAA will be known as Roc Nation Sports, which simultaneously announced that its first sports client is Cano.
So he's actually signing with Roc Nation and CAA. Adds ESPN:
Sources say Jay-Z himself is planning to be a certified agent, first in baseball and eventually in basketball and football. In order to represent clients in basketball, he would have to give up his small share of the Brooklyn Nets.
Jay-Z has always had a love for sports, but his passion grew through the Nets ownership and his 40/40 high-end sports bar in New York, which over the past nine years has become a hangout for athletes.
This even made the front page of the New York Times yesterday, which framed it thusly:

With a double-barreled announcement Tuesday that he was opening his own sports agency, and that he was stealing the Yankees star Robinson Cano from the most powerful agent in baseball, Jay-Z stands poised to shake up the sports world by offering athletes something they cannot find anywhere else: himself.
... It is widely seen as a savvy move that will capitalize on his success rebranding the Nets, and attract internationally known athletes, who double as some of his biggest fans. It also creates yet another potential windfall for him.
And what do the Nets think?
The Nets did not describe how Jay-Z’s new arrangement would affect his role with the team other than to say, “We fully support all of Jay-Z’s endeavors.”
Of course they do.

A BID in Manhattan

Meanwhile, as a planned Barclays Center-area Business Improvement District (BID) percolates along, consider the example, as DNAinfo reports, of Hudson Yards Business Improvement District Proposed for Far West Side:
The Hudson Yards Business Improvement District would levy an annual fee on commercial and residential property owners in an area slightly smaller than the space that was rezoned in 2005 as part of the effort to create Hudson Yards.
...Barbara Cohen, a consultant working on the project, admitted that there may be some challenges in convincing people outside of the Related Companies' Hudson Yards development to support the project.
"One of the things we're going to introduce to people is that the BID is more than the [Related] site — that's a reflection of the rezoning," she said.
....The proposed final budget for the BID would be about $3 million a year... there would be different classes of residential and commercial fees, each owing a different amount based on their property's assessed value and square footage.
The BID would have several responsibilities, including maintaining the yet-to-be-built Hudson Park, creating green space and other district-wide improvements, adding lights to now-dark pedestrian areas and even creating buy-local programs that tell thousands of new residents about existing local businesses.
...Cohen also admitted that it is unusual to set up a BID for a neighborhood that technically doesn't exist yet, but she said that the BID itself is meant to address evolving issues as the neighborhood grows. For example, it could help deal with issues that come up when a building is shuttered and slotted for development, but won't be torn down for months.
There's surely a logic to that. At the same time, a BID might also be used to manage public discussion of civic issues, bypassing elected representatives and community boards.

In the case of Brooklyn, much but hardly all of the new "neighborhood" exists, given the yet to be built 16 planned Atlantic Yards towers.


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Sabtu, 16 Maret 2013

In the Observer's list of Top 100 influencers, Jay-Z and Sharpton but not Ratner

Oh, snap.

The Observer's Top 100 influencers, part of its 25th anniversary issue, includes nine people in real estate (among six companies), but not Bruce Ratner, who arguably deserves to be on the list.

Hey, hasn't Ratner done a lot more than Donald Trump lately? (Well, Trump has a higher public profile, and his daughter is married to the Observer's publisher.) It must rankle that his sometime rival Gary Barnett of Extell Development made the list.

Still, two Atlantic Yards backers made the list, Jay-Z and the Rev. Al Sharpton, with unflattering details buffed out of existence.

The Jay-Z citation

Jay-Z and Beyoncé: Musical artist and entrepreneur
Jay-Z famously rapped that he has 99 Problems, but let’s be honest, people: he’s a chart-topping, Grammy-winning rapper; his music is indisputably part of the cultural New York playlist; he is the face of the Brooklyn Nets and Brooklyn’s place in sports; he’s married to BeyoncĂ©, queen of pop culture; he’s even buddies with President Obama. Oh, and he’s also a total philanthropist. So Jay-Z, you can brush as much dirt off your shoulder as you want, because we’re pretty sure you’re unstoppable.
The Brooklyn native entered the music scene in 1989 with an appearance on MTV. In 1995 he co-founded Roc-a-Fella records, releasing his debut album, Reasonable Doubt, a year later. From there he exploded, turning rap rhythms into mainstream hits like Izzo (H.O.V.A.), Dirt Off Your Shoulder and Empire State of Mind. In total, the rapper’s rhymes have earned him 14 Grammy Awards and album sales of 27 million. His pride in his roots and love for New York have impressed his image of the city on popular culture. He also helped deliver the Nets to Brooklyn.
Jay-Z has also used his fame (and ample funds) to help people. In 2006, in partnership with the United Nations, his world tour became a platform to raise awareness about global water shortages. He donated a million dollars to the Red Cross in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
A proud supporter and loyal bro of Mr. Obama, Jay-Z actively took part in initiatives to increase voter turnout in the 2008 and 2012 elections. And if that’s not enough social consciousness for you, he publicly came out last year in support of same-sex marriage.
And don’t forget his famous family. Last year, Jay-Z and the Queen B gave birth to Blue Ivy Carter—arguably the most publicized delivery since that of baby Jesus—thereby ensuring that Jay-Z’s empire would expand across future generations.
But for now, we’re certain that Jay-Z will continue to Run This Town for decades to come.
A "total philanthropist"? Didn't his biographer portray a capable and sometimes cutthroat businessman? As his mentor from Brooklyn, Jonathan "Jaz-O" Burks, suggested, "His loyalty is to his money." Hasn't Jay-Z shilled for his business partners? And, um, doesn't his wealth--and his rap--trace back to the drug trade?

The Sharpton citation

Al Sharpton: Host, MSNBC’s PoliticsNation Host, Radio One’s Keepin’ It Real
Al Sharpton wants you to know what he thinks. With his stentorian style of speaking, his stirring of the media pot, Mr. “No Justice, No Peace” Sharpton is an expert at harnessing attention and becoming the public face, though sometimes controversially, of civil rights issues. Though the genesis of the Brooklyn-born minister’s activist leadership was in New York during the racial tensions of the ’80s, Mr. Sharpton became a national figure, lending his presence and voice to protests and race-relations dialogue across the country. The former James Brown tour manager-turned-organizer founded the National Action Network, a civil rights organization, in 1991. He gave politics a shot with runs for New York Senate and NYC mayor, and a 2004 presidential campaign. These days, Mr. Sharpton’s resting his megaphone, with a steady gig returning him to the proverbial pulpit, this time preaching to viewers of MSNBC’s PoliticsNation and Radio One’sKeepin’ It Real.
Yeah, "the racial tensions of the '80s" includes things like the Tawana Brawley hoax.

Hm, didn't Sharpton--whose organization got funding from Forest City Ratner--help deliver the Nets to Brooklyn, by dissing the anti-AY stance of mayoral candidate Freddy Ferrer, whom he ostensibly supported?


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Selasa, 19 Februari 2013

NPR: "Inside Brooklyn's New Barclays Center" (and the larger issues not addressed)

Yesterday, NPR's All Things Considered offered team coverage for Inside Brooklyn's New Barclays Center, an eight-minute piece that, according to the blurb, aimed to address "Questions [that] remain on whether the new arena project delivered on its promise of helping to transform Brooklyn — and the Nets."

The background

So we learn about the "Brook-lyn" chant, the (lousy, to me) "locavore black-and-white cookies" in the arena, and we hear some exaggeration: "much of the footprint of the arena sits atop a once troubled and deserted area that the city had been trying to develop since 1968."

First, not so deserted, given the gentrification. Second, about half of the footprint of the arena sits on the the Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area (ATURA). Third, the city, while designating ATURA in 1968, did not try hard to develop it.

Here's a summary of Bruce Ratner's purported thought process:
You want to move the team to one of Brooklyn's most crowded intersections from the New Jersey Meadowlands. Your team hasn't had a winning record in seven years.
So you partner with a Russian billionaire. You engage in nearly a decade's worth of planning, and you're constantly aware of Brooklyn's reputation as Manhattan's lesser relation. You want to open the arena with a slam-dunk. Luckily, there's a fellow who owns about .075 percent of the team who can help with that.
That's a pretty quick hop-skip-and-a-jump over subsidies, tax breaks, and skirting of environmental review to get to Jay-Z.

The Jay-Z effect

Magazine editor Danyel Smith is quoted: "I think what Jay-Z and what Barbra Streisand represent for Barclays Center is, frankly, success, hard work, great music, hometown spirit, sort of a let's-go attitude."

Or, perhaps, also entertainers who distract from the larger story behind the project.

Smith later tells Frannie Kelley of branding the arena with Jay-Z: "It's major. It's huge. It's a pride-filled moment." (Kelley pretty much said the same thing last October.)

Underdogs and traffic

Yes, there's a mention of "some real underdogs," Freddy's Bar & Backroom, that were displaced for the project. And manager Donald O'Finn does get to say:
 "I don't want to be in that neighborhood anymore, and I want Brooklyn to have a basketball team. That's great. But what I don't want is I don't want millionaires when they want something to just be able to come and take it."
But the narrative is upbeat:
The construction of Barclays certainly caused disruptions, but the most dire predictions by the arena's opponents haven't all been realized.
That's true--there isn't gridlock at Atlantic and Flatbush avenues.

Then again, a look at Atlantic Yards Watch shows reports like this, from Saturday, February 16: "9pm and 2.5 hours of gridlock/blaring horns (some for 90 seconds at a pop) just ended."

In closing

The end is a little cheeky, recognizing that the Nets got good by spending big, and that a "slice of Brooklyn that plays the role of greedy underdog while raking in the bucks." But it doesn't touch the larger story.

My posted comment:
The issues addressed in this piece--the basketball team, the lineup of musical acts, the role of Jay-Z, the level of traffic--were not the transformational issues debated during the long battle over the Atlantic Yards project (which includes the Barclays Center).
(And, by the way, a look at AtlanticYardsWatch.net shows that there are still significant problems related to illegal parking and idling in the residential neighborhoods around the arena.)
Rather, public support was premised on jobs and housing. The 10,000 promised office jobs are off the table--three of four office towers were swapped for housing, and the flagship office tower is on permanent hold. The 15,000 promised construction jobs are hard to fathom--especially since developer Forest City Ratner has decided to use modular construction to save money. The "2000 arena jobs" include 1900 part-time jobs without benefits. 
The first tower is going up, two years after it was first promised, and it will contain 50% subsidized units. However, the small number of family-sized "affordable" units will go mainly to middle-income rather than the low-income households who marched with ACORN for this project.
There are also larger questions about public subsidies, tax breaks, and free land--as well as the highly suspect use of eminent domain to acquire land and the acquisition of cheap funding from immigrant investors seeking green cards (who were told, misleadingly, they were investing in an arena).
The NYC Independent Budget Office called the arena a net loss for the city. I call the process the "Culture of Cheating." All these issues might be part of a full midterm report.


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Minggu, 17 Februari 2013

Wall Street Journal's NYIndex ranks Ratner, Jay-Z high in their categories; Jay-Z also is top People's Pick

On 2/10/13, the Wall Street Journal published The NYIndex, "the top-100 people in the Greater New York area who are noteworthy newsmakers," with rankings based on mentions in news, coupled with "correlation to his or her industry's contribution to the gross domestic product" and also "a nominal boost based on their Klout scores, which is a third-party measure of social-media activity."

So it really has more to do with publicity than achievement, which is why, for example, the Trumps are on top. The article on development, in fact, stated:
Arguably, only one Brooklyn developer enjoys celebrity status: Two Trees Management, which created a neighborhood in Dumbo and wants to do so again soon at the Domino Sugar factory in Williamsburg.
Sure, Bruce Ratner's no celebrity. But he doesn't want or need to be one to pull the right strings--and why he was still number 4 last week (below) and this week.


People's picks

Below is the chart from last week. Jay-Z has already moved up a notch.


Arts & entertainment

Jay-Z has consistently been fourth in this list.



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Minggu, 10 Februari 2013

Video: Jay-Z (implicitly) saluted Ratner as a fellow hustler, likened NBA teams to "paintings for billionaires"

Jay-Z, in an 11/15/10 appearance on the on Howard Stern Show keyed to the release of his book Decoded, offered some illuminating yet strategic observations.

He implicitly saluted business partner Bruce Ratner is a fellow "hustler," described himself as having been an "incredible" crack dealer, claimed he wasn't intimidated by the suits, and likened NBA teams--money-losing then but not now--to "paintings for billionaires."

What's a hustler?

Howard Stern: A hustler means a guy who ends up... he can figure them out--

Sidekick Robin Givens: A master manipulator...



Shawn Carter (aka Jay-Z): That's part of it... a hustler is anybody--you can be a hustler--a hustler is anybody who gets up every single day and figures out how to make good for themselves in this society...

RG: Without the usual...

SC: A hustler is anyone who has the drive to make something happen for himself... 

That would surely encompass developer Bruce Ratner and partner Mikhail Prokhorov.

On the street

SC: For us, being in the street, a hustler meant we had to find a different way... there were no jobs available

HS: People might not understand you being a crack dealer, but it seemed like in your neighborhood--

SC: Anything without proper context... you can judge someone totally wrong... given the circumstances we were in... we made horrible decisions... you can see why a person can make such horrible decisions... just understand the circumstances and not just dismiss us as being just crack dealers...

HS: Describing Biggie Smalls... he identified that parents were scared now of their own children, that was a whole new generation... were you a great crack dealer?

SC: Incredible... not the best, but I was really good.

He went on to say, however, that the money per hour was pretty bad.

In the boardroom

Later, they asked Jay-Z about his journey.

RG: So when you walk into a boardroom, with a bunch of guys in suits who all went to college, you're fine.

SC: Yeah, because they've read a bunch of words, I've lived a bunch of life...



HS: Their law degree doesn't intimidate you

SC: It kind of evens out, whether you know it or not.

HS: Where'd you get that self-esteem from?

SC: My mom, first and foremost. just living life. Like, y'know, being in real situation and having to be a person of high integrity and honesty.

Not intimidated?

Then again, as the Times reported last August,
Mr. Ratner was wary. He often says he overcame his concerns about Mr. Carter’s more offensive lyrics — celebrating gangster culture and denigrating women — only after learning there were cleaned-up “radio versions” of the songs, too. And Mr. Carter, he said, appeared nervous about having to meet with David Stern, the N.B.A. commissioner, who asked him to discuss his guilty plea to stabbing a record producer in 1999. (Mr. Carter described the incident, for which he received three years’ probation, as a symptom of “the world I lived in once,” Mr. Ratner recalled.)
That was just four years earlier.

About the Nets

Stern first confused the efforts by the New York Knicks and (then-)New Jersey Nets to recruit free agent superstar LeBron James.

HS: About the Nets. They had contacted me at some point, 'try and get LeBron here, be part of a committee'.. I was part of this thing, try to get LeBron to the Knicks, I said, I'm not going to beg... did you make the major play for him?



SC: Well, he's a friend of mine... It's a different conversation for me and him.... For me, it was just, present the opportunity, and then let him make his decision.

Making money from the team

HS: Are you making any money with the Nets... It's gotta be profitable, right?

SC: No, It's not really profitable.

HS: It's just an ego thing?

SC: Yeah, NBA teams are like paintings for billionaires

RG: They don't make money, those teams?

SC: No, I mean, the Lakers, the Knicks, they're very few teams... the Knicks maybe make money, that place is always packed.

HS: Could you ever imagine at nine years old, you'd grow up to own a piece of a team?

SC: No, as a dream, it's hard enough to be a basketball player.

As it happens, Jay-Z has done very, very well with the team and the arena, leveraging his career, advertising, and a free suite. And the value of the team, thanks to the Brooklyn move and the NBA's new collective bargaining agreement, has skyrocketed.

And guess what--the public (city, state, national) has helped make that new arena happen, with tax breaks, direct subsidies and other support, achieved by... the hustler Bruce Ratner.


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Minggu, 03 Februari 2013

A history of Barclays Center giveaways: a year of free event tickets (yes) vs. a free suite for a year (not quite)

The Barclays Center got some positive publicity this past week for a giveaway, as in a Daily News article yesterday: She’s 1 in a million! Barclays Center celebrates its one-millionth guest:
Allison Barlow scored big at the Brooklyn Nets game Friday when she became Barclays Center’s 1 millionth customer — earning her two free tickets for every event there for a year.
...Jaws dropped, lights flashed and streamers exploded in the air as the modest mom passed through the turnstile for her second Nets game at the arena — leaving her husband and friends who accompanied her stunned.
...Barlow arrived at the arena around 7:30 p.m. — a 20-minute walk from her Park Slope home — and was promptly whisked away by Barclays owner Bruce Ratner.
...“All night long, people were saying congratulations,” she said. “Even before this happened, the center won me over. It’s great to see how Brooklyn it is.”
I suspect she was referring to the food, not the tax exemptions, financing scheme, public evasiveness, and Culture of Cheating.

Different promises and deceptions

The cost to give away two tickets to each event is surely acceptable, compared to the publicity value, especially if arena operators make it back on concessions.

Consider a previous promise that would have hit the bottom line, as explained in a 5/5/08 article in Crain's New York Business headlined Nets hold court on luxury suites:
Next week, the Nets will debut a prototype of their Frank Gehry-designed, $300,000-a-year Barclays Center corporate suites at a splashy party in their New York Times Building showroom.
To entice 185 of New York’s top CEOs to attend—and buy—the organization delivered a series of gifts over the past month, including a Tiffany key chain with a key, one of which will open a door to a free suite for the team’s inaugural season. 
Did arena operators ever announce a CEO who got a free suite? Nope. Surely they would have milked the publicity had it happened.

Consider how they milked the publicity of Jay-Z "buying" a suite--at least until it was revealed that he got it for free.


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Selasa, 22 Januari 2013

Nets-Knicks game makes tabloid back covers (and Jay-Z/Beyoncé front of Post), as Ridge Hill gets a pass

The Brooklyn Nets narrowly won the big game yesterday with the New York Knicks, evening the season series, closing the gap to one game behind their rivals, and capping a remarkable 11-2 resurgence under Coach P.J. Carlesimo, who replaced Avery Johnson, fired less than a month ago.

As the graphics at right and below indicate, the news made the back page of the city's two tabloids.

Well, it was the big Sports story locally.

Then again, it's curious how none of the city's newspapers have the interest and/or resources to write about the bizarre situation in Yonkers, where Barclays Center developer Forest City Ratner managed to create an apparently improper parking regime--meters and tickets--on private streets at its Ridge Hill complex.

The first couple?

Meanwhile, while most news outlets understandably put President Barack Obama (and First Lady Michelle Obama) on the cover, the New York Post went with... Beyoncé and Jay-Z.

The article was headlined Barack who!? Pols fawn over BeyoncĂ©, Jay-Z at inaugural:
Washington’s power brokers were star struck yesterday — not by the president or first lady but by the entertainment world’s first couple, BeyoncĂ© and Jay-Z.
Fawning politicians scrambled for the their cellphones to snap photos of the sexy siren and her hip-hop-mogul hubby at President Obama’s inauguration.
...Among those swooning was Rep. Peter King, the Long Island Republican who normally spends his time railing against terrorists. He was caught snapping BeyoncĂ© as she and Jay-Z strolled out of the Capitol — right past him — to take their seats.
...Twitter exploded with Beyoncé-mania as she belted out the anthem, leaving Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas clapping vigorously and fans on the Mall demanding an encore.
[Update: It turns out that Beyoncé lip-synched the national anthem.]

Well, America does like to be entertained. But surely Bruce Ratner, when in 2003 he signed Jay-Z up to own a fraction of team, never expected such good fortune.



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Senin, 07 Januari 2013

A bogus media frenzy over Jay-Z's "million-dollar" nursery at the Barclays Center

My "Barclays Center" news alert has delivered more than 40 articles, mostly from celebrity- or music-oriented web sites (but also the New York Daily News, which maybe qualifies as the latter), claiming Jay-Z 'rents $1 million nursery' or Lucky Baby! Jay-Z Rents a $1 Million Playspace for Blue Ivy.

They're all based on an US Weekly exclusive, Jay-Z Rents Luxe Nursery for $1 Million a Year at Barclays Center, which offers the following not-quite corroboration:
"Jay rents a luxurious basement suite for $1 million a year," a source says in the new issue of of Us Weekly, on stands now. "It has an area for Blue filled with toys."
Um, a suite is a suite, not a nursery. So if Jay-Z were using the suite briefly as a nursery, that still doesn't make it a million-dollar "luxe nursery." 

Also, while the Post reported that he was paying for his suite, the Times said he got it for free.

And I thought the Times, by not pointing out that contradiction, was being sloppy. Could that be as good as it will get in reporting on Jay-Z's role in the arena?

Oh, and btw, should Beyonce really be shilling for Pepsi? The Times's Mark Bittman doesn't think so.


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Senin, 31 Desember 2012

Atlantic Yards in 2012: A huge debut for Barclays Center; lingering taint and questions mostly pushed aside by arena events, pro sports, and lauded building

Reuters photo from first Nets home game
#HelloBrooklyn. (Or was that Crooklyn?)

The year 2012 marked a seismic shift in the Atlantic Yards saga. The conflict over the project, and lingering questions over the promises behind it, were mainly supplanted by celebration of and hype for the Barclays Center (and events within) and Brooklyn Nets.

Not only did most press coverage come from the sports and entertainment media, rather than the potentially more skeptical Metro pages, the buzz was compounded by something arena developers surely didn't imagine when Atlantic Yards was announced in 2003: social media.


Fractional team/arena owner Jay-Z--far more important than developer Bruce Ratner could've imagined--generated huge headlines and social media impact with his eight straight concerts, purported design of the Nets' black-and-white logo, and even a viral encounter with a lady on the subway. He even made the cover of the New York Times T Magazine supplement, interviewed by a genuflecting Zadie Smith.

Meanwhile, there was much paid media, with the Brooklyn Nets producing a skein of sponsorships and saturation advertising. Nets' merchandise flew off the shelves Even if it remains unclear exactly how much of "Brooklyn" has embraced the team, "Brooklyn" remains a potent signifier.

For Forest City Ratner, there was a value to the project delays. With no flagship tower looming at the intersection of Atlantic and Flatbush avenues, the arena and project make a more modest impact, and the temporary plaza seems public, the temporary oculus--with its digital signage--already iconic to some.

The new subway entrance
The enormously valuable new transit entrance is public, not buried within an Urban Room attached to a giant office tower. And the Atlantic Avenue/Pacific Street subway hub was not co-named with the name Barclays but rather saw Barclays Center replace Pacific Street.

Meanwhile, the march of other towers to the north on Flatbush Avenue has softened the impact of the planned Atlantic Yards towers, at least on arena block.

But no one's reckoned with the project as a whole; such renderings don't exist. (Remember planner Ron Shiffman's 2006 warning, “The density proposed by Forest City Ratner far exceeds the carrying capacity of the area’s physical, social, cultural, and educational infrastructure.")

Is AY done?

Atlantic Yards may seem done, as the controversy has mostly subsided, but it's not; the cumulative impacts of the entire project--not just the arena--are what alarmed people and, indeed, the lingering court case reminds us that there are 16 towers to be built.

The larger issues--the taint over the arena process--have been nudged aside by most though not forgotten. There were still protests.

And even the New York Times, which displayed notably variable coverage, cited that Bruce Ratner's " reputation for promising anything to get a deal, only to renegotiate relentlessly for more favorable terms."

I call this all part of the Culture of Cheating.

But even legitimate stories have been mostly ignored by the media: court decisions ordering the state to perform a Supplementary Environmental Impact Statement on the impact of a potential 25-year buildout; the demise of Community Benefits Agreement signatory BUILD, the failure to provide the promised 2,000 $15 tickets before each game. (Forget complicated stuff like the funding from immigrant investors.)

Could it hurt to have the Daily News as your partner on the plaza? Do media outlets depend too much on Barclays ads? Or is it just media fatigue?

Atlantic Yards, I wrote last year, "will be a case study in public relations." Developer Bruce Ratner this year claimed that, in 100 years, "No one will care what we had to do to make it happen." (Maybe, but for now, and we'll remember.)

Making their luck

Though arena developers--Forest City Ratner, with Mikhail Prokhorov's Onexim Group--spent big money on advertising and promotion, they did several things right, enough to ensure that most coverage--from a press generally willing to be spoon-fed--focused on the positive:
  • they hired SHoP to put that lizard skin on (and revamp) an Indiana barn of an arena (and none of the enthralled architecture critics mention the missing office building)
  • they hired locally and trained workers to be pleasant (though most jobs pay low, part-time wages)
  • they involved Brooklyn food vendors (though under the corporate umbrella of Levy restaurants, and at high prices)
  • they got it all open in time (though without the promised community events pre-opening)
  • they gave away tickets to local nonprofits (though the promise of 2,000 $15 tickets was something of a dodge, and there have been no community events)
  • big-name concerts were a huge success (even if promised monthly boxing turned into quarterly, at best)
Beyond that, Forest City announced an innovation in modular construction (thus avoiding questions about too little affordable housing and cuts in worker compensation if not hours).

SHoP, the hot local architecture firm hired has turned out to be a much better fit, after all, than Frank Gehry. The latter's fame may have been necessary to get Forest City support and publicity, but Gehry had the unfortunate habit of shooting off his mouth, cracking that protestors "should've been picketing Henry Ford" and calling Bruce Ratner "do-gooder, liberal," just like him. SHoP principals have been good, creative soldiers, fulling that $54 million investment (the new facade), made, as Forest City would say, "for public reasons."

Navigating the tight fit

Banners that came and went in Prospect Heights
There were big media bounces from headliners like Barbra Streisand, the Rolling Stones, Justin Beiber, and Andrea Bocelli--most but not all unlikely to play Barclays regularly. (Bieber will be back, as will Jay-Z).

Perhaps the biggest fear--Carmageddon from traffic jams--has been averted, thanks to use of transit and a heavy police presence, neither of which Forest City will pay for.

Still, there's little margin for error and, as documented steadily by Atlantic Yards Watch, out-of-control fans (as with Bieber), idling limos (especially from expensive concerts), booming bass (from a couple of bass-heavy concerts) and chaos on Park Slope streets (often), the nearest neighbors still bear the brunt of an arena encroaching on residential districts.

Building on Brooklyn

"Brooklyn will become a chant," promised the Nets' advertising and, indeed, it did, bolstered by a surprisingly good team anthem (but not by a cartoonish mascot). "September is just the beginning," promised another ad.



The Nets have been bolstered by two flattering tv/web series, The Association (from NBA TV) and Road to Brooklyn (from Jay-Z's Life+Times channel). Team owners have done their best to make a connection with the Dodgers.

Despite bad luck in the draft and free agency, the Nets achieved a rapid roster revamp, with Mikhail Prokhorov opening his wallet to (over)pay for Joe Johnson and re-sign Deron Williams. In November, that looked golden, as the Nets streaked to victory. In December, the team floundered, leading to the firing of the coach.

And there was more. Indeed, in October came the surprising news that the New York Islanders, mired in an antiquated arena on Long Island, would move to Brooklyn in 2015, if not sooner, and move to an arena distinctly made for hoops, not hockey--but able to take advantage of public transit and a lucrative TV contract.

Changing accountability landscape

Despite a significant moral victory in court, and a couple of protests, project opponents and critics generally diminished their activity. Though Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn and BrooklynSpeaks (and its component groups) were joined by others in the protests, the single busiest initiative, understandably, was Atlantic Yards Watch, tracking the impacts of the project.

The valuable compendium No Land Grab ceased regular publication after the arena opened, and a New York Times article chronicled those "exhausted" by losing the battle--but failed to point out the community victory in court and the ongoing need for oversight and skepticism.

“There’s nothing I want more than not to be involved,” Peter Krashes, active in AY Watch, told the Times. "The problem is, only when paid professionals working in the public interest are doing their jobs do I get to go away.”

Council Member Letitia James and state Senator Velmanette Montgomery appeared at protests. Council Member Steve Levin convened meetings about arena impacts. While the project may have a role in local politics--even State Senator Eric Adams and Assemblyman (now Congressman-elect) Hakeem Jeffries held a protests about delayed benefits-- the arena has an unmistakable gravitational pull.

There were more Brooklyn elected officials at the arena ribbon-cutting than at the 2010 groundbreaking, and a few different ones at the groundbreaking for the first tower, B2. And critics and opponents have been placed in the somewhat awkward position--which should be occupied by Ratner's allies--of pointing out the failure to produce promised jobs and housing.

January

Company fabricating arena's metal facade shuts down. Arena completion date nudged back; site work could continue almost to opening.

Atlantic Yards construction worker uproots "No Standing" sign to get free parking on Pacific Street.

Forest City Ratner says it's done nothing "inappropriate" in regard to the sequence that led to guilty pleas by state Sen. Carl Kruger and lobbyist Richard Lipsky. Well, nothing illegal.

MSBNC publishes a Mikhail Prokhorov profile by Robert Windrem, whose role as "Net Income" of NetsDaily goes unmentioned.

Times columnist Michael Powell describes Bruce Ratner as a "developer between legal clouds"--regarding the Yonkers case and the Carl Kruger case Betsy Gotbaum defends Ratner; it's a birthday present.

A look at the Nets' media strategies: a press release a day, never discuss ticket giveaways.

Forest City Ratner's designed lurker and his powerful familial ties.

Where's the Independent Compliance Monitor? Brooklyn Eagle gets evasive responses.

Elected officials Adams, Jeffries, Camara criticize lack of Atlantic Yards jobs, housing, seek governance reform. Montgomery, James missing. Adams & Camara probably won't get Forest City campaign cash any more.

Gerrymandering (like the "Bed-Stuy boomerang" for Atlantic Yards) is just fine for immigrant investor EB-5 projects, according to the federal agency in charge.

Former Atlantic Yards point man Jim Stuckey, who resigned suddenly from his NYU position, is sued for sexual harassment.

Groundbreaking for first residential tower again pushed back; goal of more larger units won't be met.

Transportation Demand Management plan delayed; Nets then survey fans. TDM plan criticized.

It turns out MWBE contracting numbers lag behind ambitious promises.

February

Even interviewed by a friendly publication, Bruce Ratner verbally "snaps" when asked about the non-arena parts of the project.

In his State of the Borough address, Borough President Marty Markowitz talks up the possibility of the Nets getting free agent center Dwight Howard.

Forest City Enterprises makes corporate shifts, finally installing majority of independent directors.

Carlton Avenue Bridge delayed, setting up breakneck pace to get it done; construction until 3 am. Arena said to be "slightly ahead of schedule," thanks to changed schedule.

New schedule for arena exterior.
Wall Street Journal graphic
Forest City executive Sanna's bundling for Bill de Blasio.
The perils from car stackers at arena parking lot: noise and delays.

Steiner plans 52-story tower, The Hub, near BAM and arena.

Appeals court argument on Atlantic Yards timetable case.

Investor buys building scheduled for second round of Atlantic Yards eminent domain, suggesting condemnation won't be coming soon. Six-story building planned at Bergen Tile site across from arena at Flatbush and Dean.

In City Limits package on Atlantic Yards, Bertha Lewis is said to claim "that that some who opposed the Community Benefits Agreement privately lambasted the idea of having a 'high-rise ghetto.'"

Goldman, Sachs seems to schedule a meeting of the Brooklyn Arena Local Development Corporation; it's canceled after some inquiries.

A mountain of soil on Block 1129.

The Mystery of Ridge Hill. The curiously timed departure of Forest City's Bruce Bender and Scott Cantone. Columnist Powell "tracks the tentacles of corruption."

Testimony in the Yonkers corruption trial suggests that Forest City Ratner had behaved in a questionable manner, offering political fixer Zehy Jereis a no-show job, with little checking up on him, after he got Council Member Sandy Annabi to change her vote. Forest City sure wasn't bilked.

The dailies mostly ignore the trial; even Crain's columnist Greg David notices. In Times article, Forest City flack gets to defend against unidentified "critics."

March

Ashley Cotton, Bruce Bender's replacement, is on board.

New Barclays Center video relies on Jay-Z. Marketing plan aims to sell Brooklyn as much as basketball.

Forest City's Sanna gets star treatment in The Real Deal.

Construction workers create more free parking near arena site.

Forest City takes firm step to modular plan.

Charlie Rose, sycophant, interviews Ratner about "Atlantic City Yards." Ratner's softball NYT interview; dodges question about housing configuration.

LIU, big arena supporter, to play at Barclays Center.

New Domino project in Williamsburg overextended; developer lacks Ratner's survival skills.

Forest City adds more 2BR units to first tower, but still lags behind promises.

Forest City aims to shrink planned parking lot.

311 complaints supposed to be assigned to 620 Atlantic Avenue.

Barclays Center advertising in CNG And other papers.

"Brooklynized" water coming to Barclays?

Nets Shop to be operated by adidas.

BusinessWeek looks at "dodgy" EB-5 program.

Times calls arena site the new "center of gravity" for Brooklyn.

The Occupy movement visits the arena site: "This is what kleptocracy looks like."

Watching the Nets in Newark: inexpensive, but no bargain.

Yonkers defendants found guilty; Forest City says case is not about the company's actions.

Bruce Ratner tells the Daily News, "For 100 years, this was a train depot in the middle of downtown Brooklyn." Really?

After complaints from neighbors, Forest City agrees not to use noisy hoe ram at night.

April

Final Nets games in New Jersey available for less than a buck.

Carlton Avenue Bridge could open "before asphalt paved," to save time.

Daily News moving Golden Gloves to Barclays. Jay-Z goes from Marcy to Barclays in new commercial.

Forest City? Good corporate citizen or relentless seeker of advantage? One-shot budget gimmicks, including Ridge Hill, part of Yonkers' fiscal mess.

Lots of office space in Downtown Brooklyn suggests little market for AY office space.

The journalist known as the Notorious Stephen Witt says he will try to avoid "personal axes to grind."

Brooklyn arena financing an exception to "the exception to the exception" in the tax code.

Forest City's 2011 lobbying bill jumps.

Prokhorov in Brooklyn--the conquering hero, to most but not all journalists.

Appellate court upholds decision ordering SEIS. Ruling, in a way, echoes Lupica. MAS on the wrong side of history by leaving BrooklynSpeaks.

Prokhorov admits to corrupt dealings but not lawbreaking.

Times op-ed criticizes EB-5 but suggests solutions are straightforward.

Times focuses on retail changes around arena, unskeptically quotes flack as suggesting "dreary rail yards" already transformed; bizarre graphic suggests arena is quite modest in size. Times publishes article on pseudo-scandal while scanting AY legal case.

Original architect Frank Gehry grudgingly admits that scale was an issue for project neighbors.

Forest City's malls identified as "crime epicenter."

Atlantic Yards cheerleader Zarzana, ex-union leader, indicted for organized crime.

Nets' ticket prices leap in move from NJ to BK. Arena/team CEO Brett Yormark cites a home-court advantage.

Community boards says Barclays Center liquor license requires community outreach. Locals want code of conduct. CB6 committee supports license, with reservations, resists bottle-service lounge Kemistry.

Narrow Dean Street sidewalks documented.

PHNDC's' ignored request to get public input before construction of the new parking lot.

Nets "brand identity launch: much new merchandise, and a new logo, which Yormark attributes to Jay-Z. The "borough is the message."

2,000 arena jobs? Not FTE. Looks like just 105 full-time arena jobs.

May

Sign on back of Ratner's retail outlet near arena: "Please don't urinate here."

ESD CEO Adams announces on-site arena parking halved, seeks way to formalize public input on AY.

Praise for candidate Jeffries ignores his AY role.

Letter to Mayor from Carlton Avenue resident who can't sleep at night. "Loud banging noises" predicted at arena site.

I break news that Barbra Streisand is coming to arena, talked up on Fox 5; Jay-Z performing "five" concerts.

Arena jobs to be filled not through BUILD but city's workforce center.

Railyard lights on all night to rush completion of Carlton Avenue Bridge.

The "moral limits of markets" and the Atlantic Yards impact.

Why did Forest City escape in the Yonkers corruption case? Conspiracy charge would've been tough to win.

The RPA's criticisms of (not well-described) Atlantic Yards, in an analysis of building the Next New York.

Leonard Cohen coming to arena; "everybody knows."

Park Slope, not so gentrified, in the 1970s.

A laudatory profile of Amanda Burden leaves out Atlantic Yards.

TDM plan released, focus on less parking, more service. Why the delay? Frustrations at meeting on TDM plan; no penalties for not meeting goals. Savings from scrapping free MetroCard. Questions pending. Gridlock Sam's contradictions (and history of praise). TDM documents released.

Neighborhood Protection Plan proposed, draws on Wrigley. Coverage round-up.

Sports Business Journal: 183 events set at arena.

Bad luck for Nets in NBA draft lottery.

June

Construction vehicles on local streets; cops parking on sidewalk.

In legal papers, Forest City says Atlantic Yards site "now cleared but formerly blighted."

Start date on permanent railyard pushed back 18 months. MTA says it leaves agency whole.

Construction workers like to hang out at kids' playground.

Sharpton claims Ratner's lived up to all his promises.

Fears of a Tight Fit for Brooklyn's Arena.

Not one but two hospital partners. Are sponsorship numbers solid? Nets pay for those "First Home Game Since 1957" signs in shop windows.

Clergy-led protest led by Committe for Arena Justice seeks oversight, penalties, compliance monitor.

The Brooklyn Flea as emblem of Brooklyn.

Forest City mulls plans to revamp its malls.

Judge says lawsuit against BUILD, Forest City can proceed on most counts.

Community boards weren't told about post-event alcohol service. CB8 seeks curbs on arena liquor license. At SLA hearing, CBs 2 & 6 support license; Forest City apologizes for poor communication over hours, says no bottle service planned.

AYW: Construction Alerts didn't warn of loud overnight noise. Video. Work on arena elevator and roof/facade goes 24/7.

Landscape architects' organization calls for greening parking lot. Parking lot work proceeds, despite stop-work roder; tanks "placed," not installed.

Actress Carmen Ejogo, Brooklyn mag cover subject, says she opposed arena but will bring her son, a big basketball fan.

The impact of Berman v. Parker on Atlantic Yards and historic neighborhoods nearby.

Court of Appeals denies attempt to appeal decision ordering Atlantic Yards SEIS. State more open to governance entity than Forest City.

Meeting on arena operations: parking, loading dock, metal detectors. No, Forest City won't pay for police. Nets games supposed to have 18,200 sellable seats.

Consistently inconsistent: Markowitz wants arena treated like any other facility.

Forest City's savings on nonexisting "NetroCards" will go to marketing, it seems, but numbers are murky.

T-shirt: "I'm still calling it Atlantic Av-Pacific St" emerges even before Barclays scandal raises the ante.

July

Construction makes Sixth Avenue difficult to traverse. No on takes charge.

Bob Diamond resigns. Barclays' claim: "we’re dirty-clean, rather than clean-clean."

Times front-page news: "Nets Move to Brooklyn with Legitimacy in Sight," confirmed by a sneaker store employee, NBA analyst, Nets official scorer, and longtime season ticket holder.

Third-shift work means "incredibly loud noises."

The arena: from a "venue for amateur athletics, graduations, etc." to Brooklyn Hoops/Show/Boxing/Family.

Famed Knicks fan and famed Brooklynite Spike Lee says, "I'm not going to get into the politics of the Barclays Center."

Jay-Z tickets go on sale, for suckers. Media outlets get played with news that demand for first three shows goosed two more.

Prokhorov will pay for stars, but Ratner won't pay for Independent Compliance Monitor, increased police coverage, permit parking program (part of Los Angeles CBA), new subway service, more.

Do Forest City Ratner's part-time job numbers add up?

Nets re-sign Williams after trade for Johnson. Bellowing Markowitz welcomes "Brooklyn's Backcourt" at pep rally, hypes rivalry with "Manhattan Knicks"

NYC DOT recommends no residential permit parking around Barclays Center. Is area near arena really like the Bronx around Yankee Stadium? Lots of reasons for doubt.

Flashback: Barclays' now-departed (because of LIBOR scandal) Bob Diamond at arena groundbreaking.

As retail near arena turns over, broker complains that neighbors are resisting "Hooters-type places."

After Knicks let Jeremy Lin leave for Houston, defections to Nets mount.

Confounding HDC hearing on first Atlantic Yards tower; housing partner says first building falls short but should proceed. Some subsidized rents look high.

Click and Park not quite ready for prepaid parking.

When development promises are undone, shouldn't there be a quid pro quo?

Absurdist Post columnist Peyser credits Ratner for almost single-handed rehab of Brooklyn.

From Atlantic Yards as "economic engine" to arena itself as "economic engine."

The dubiousness of naming rights deals--not just advertising but attempts to buy goodwill, says law professor.

Report validates neighbors' steady complaints about Atlantic Yards construction: "continual violations and difficulty with enforcement."

Atlantic Yards construction violations include cover-up of "documentation falsified by the contractor." Complaints have been documented.

Barclays Center seen as Downtown Brooklyn opportunity by DBP.

The modular plan versus Gehry's goal to not make it "look like a project."

Arena General Manager's departure is mysterious; no one wants to lose someone three months before opening. Arena was supposed to be completed by early July.

August

Daily News columnist Hamill says arena will become "entertainment pacemaker," forgets pledge of 10,000 jobs.

Prepaid parking still not working, though tickets sold.

Mayoral candidate Bill de Blasio channels Kruger, Golden in condemning those blocking development, cites support for Atlantic Yards.

Roof sponsorship signage coming to arena. State justifies Barclays roof sign/logo, saying it complies with "intent" of Design Guidelines. Ad seen as "extremely valuable piece of inventory."

Jay-Z shills for Budweiser while wearing Nets cap.

GEICO signs on; Yormark is proud to partner with "brands of excellence."

Carlton Avenue Bridge back on schedule, thanks to disruptive overtime.

Barclays Center sign is up, on Atlantic Avenue.

Accidents on Sixth Avenue.

DNAinfo reports: Barclays becoming a BK fixture.

Bruce Ratner tells WSJ: "We work just on the merits."

Front-page NY Times article salutes Jay-Z's role as "celebrity investor;" little room for skepticism.

Final TDM plan, delayed again, has a few tweaks; no Dean Street entrance to parking.Audacious timing: two important docs released after comment period. Transportation plan Q&A: no remedies if performance goals not met, sidewalks still OK, no measures to directly address on-street parking, etc. No response to question about lessons from Wrigley.

An idling 18-wheeler on Pacific Street.

Huge Times article/slideshow compounds marketing campaign: In Brooklyn, It's All Nets.

Barclays Center TV emerges.

Ratner says, in 100 years, "No one will care what we had to do to make it happen." Reporter describes Ratner as "pleasant" and "affable."

Broker says "Brooklyn" is bigger draw than arena.

Times quietly replaces misleading AY arena graphic. Times quotes Ratner as saying arena is a "month ahead of schedule."

Agency, developer wrestle over Atlantic Yards affordability, or why the first tower won't meet the pledges announced.

Mixed reactions to arena's rusted steel cladding.

Metro publishes Barclays Center special section, AKA advertorial.

78th Precinct to cover arena, malls; NYPD commander says they're ready. Less role for CBA officers who head other precinct councils.

Number of plaintiffs in BUILD lawsuit could expand.

SLA approves arena liquor license, but imposes 1 am cutoff, not 2 am as sought. Secondhand coverage  claims MSG/Yankee Stadium have similar after-hours policies.

Expunging "Pacific Street" wasn't the original plan, but defended as practical solution.

September

Atlantic Yards photography from Tracy Collins, painting from Peter Krashes.

What happened to the Atlantic Yards jobs?

Times delves into where Nets players live--outside Brooklyn--and might live, in the borough.

What's wrong with the common Barclays Center rendering? Unbuilt towers and a hovercraft perspective.

As wary neighbors worry about arena opening, Forest City nudges stance on permit parking.

Scrambling toward arena finish line; no "public events and tours" in early September as once promised.

NBA Commissioner Stern predicts revenue jump for Nets.

AY District Service Cabinet to be replaced by Quality of Life Committee.

"September is Just the Beginning" banners appear (and disappear) on Prospect Heights streets.

How Ratner backed off promises to build project in ten years and build conventional towers with union labor.

Markowitz finally explains why he claimed BK was "1000 percent behind Atlantic Yards."

Yormark and a very friendly Billboard interview. Jay-Z hyped in Times Style magazine.

Arena will comply with Bloomberg's limits on sugar drinks, still offers unlimited food option.

Daily News gets first look at subway entrance. Roof logo is in place.

Rail's Hamm says he's "trying to figure out how to come to terms with" arena.

Triangle building across from arena sells for $4.1 million.

As construction hits crunch time, increased truck violations, according to AY Watch. State backed off $10K fines. Ratner claims they did "a huge amount" to placate neighborhood. Arena gets belated TCO.

Brooklyn/L magazines on board with Nets. Times publishes hoops essay by former Forest City contractor Klores, doesn't mention connection.

First Community Sweepstakes program for tickets.

Umar Jordan, once a dramatic booster of AY, now says he's disgusted. Protesters at AYCrimeScene.com list demands, including oversight and new environmental review.

Oculus goes live. New garbage cans, recycling bins on arena block.

New Yorker critic Lange says arena creates "a whole new context."

Daily News puts Hamill's puff on the front page.

Developer's original Atlantic Yards map was quite different.

Times touts arena food. Yormark says Brooklyn story was "took good not to be told" and "moment's even bigger than I expected." Capital NY's McGeveran calls "beautiful structure" Ratner's "apology to Brooklyn."

ArtBridge is back, putting art on fences outside arena and TV lot.

New subway entrance means easier passage between B/Q and 2/3/4/5 trains.

Eric McClure announces No Land Grab to cease regular publishing.

How state agency withheld document giving Forest City 25 years to build Atlantic Yards.

Metro continues "Barclays Countdown."

Arena ribbon-cutting a big win for Ratner, with focus on impressive building. Before the event, a protest. Building's not quite finished. NY Magazine critic proclaims Barclays Center Is Brooklyn’s Ready-Made Monument (but gets spoon-fed on loading dock).

Brooklyn Paper/Courier-Life publish special section.

Markowitz says AY area "not a bedroom community," suggests project will be a "masterpiece of urban planning," says arena will "bring us respect that's long overdue." He claims arena has "good jobs." (A NNY critique.)

The hollowness of the AY CBA, especially when it comes to environmental monitoring.

The Carlton Avenue Bridge reopens.

The branded Barclays Center.

Where exactly are those promised $15 Nets tickets?

No "Brooklynized" water at arena.

Times takes balanced-ish look at "Hurricane Barclays." Times suggests activist Goldstein's just like Ratner, though the former's expansion is as-of-right. Softball Times Q&A with Forest City's Gilmartin.

Bike parking arrives at arena.

Barclays Center appoints Kelly Community Affairs Manager. ESD names Lynch for long-open Government and Community Affairs Manager.

Surprisingly tough NY Times profile of Bruce Ratner, though the lead is buried. Daily News says critics "filed 200 eminent domain lawsuits." (!)

Prokhorov gives $1 million to BAM.

CBA signatory BUILD on shaky ground, according to complaint to AG.

Times says Barclays Center has undercut MSG's price for performers, but doesn't always pass on the savings.

vigil before the arena opening. Groups call for reform, joined by Occupy and two who once "drank Ratner's Kool-Aid"

Daily News sponsors arena plaza. Arena plaza gets sign: "Welcome to Brooklyn."

Jay-Z and the Barclays Center debut: traffic flows, but paparazzi gridlock and Atlantic Avenue blocked. (Gridlock Sam said don't drive.)

The New York Times lets Ratner's flack get last word, makes curious revisions in its coverage, dropping critique of "crony capitalism" and emphasizing whimsy.

Second night of operations; no traffic jams, Atlantic Avenue overrun, idling vehicles. Pacific Street as staging area for police/fire.

That crazy roof laser hits FG Park, Wyckoff Gardens.

October

Arena operations rely on override of traffic lights.

Jay-Z says: "It's our m-f-ing time now"

NPR music editor: "The Barclays Center is fraught, but watching Jay open it was touching"

Times says ride over Manhattan Bridge took 2.5 times as long, but results from opening days support both "skeptics and believers."

Ratner claims "we've already bought all the land."

Critic Goldberger calls arena not extraordinary, but "a decent and at times strong building" with lots of branding. Why arena reviews should wait til after opening.

Gridlock Sam says it's fine to shut down Atlantic Avenue after events.

Barclays Center sponsors "Brooklyn Backstory" in Brooklyn Paper.

Forget the Haier Store; a Sugar Factory is coming to Sixth and Pacific.

CBA signatories all got suites for Jay-Z; Lewis's Black Institute auctioning them off.

Barclays Center as giant neighborhood sub-woofer, as bass from Jay-Z penetrates neighborhood.

Gratz on the Great Brooklyn Bait-and-Switch. Baker on "How to Steal a City."

Jay-Z takes subway. In final concert, Jay-Z brings out Beyonce, disses AY opponents, salutes Jackie Robinson's widow.

Long lines to see Globetrotters; security chief departs.

On Charlie Rose, Ratner calls arena a gift to Brooklyn.

Ron Shiffman wins Jane Jacobs medal, work with DDDB cited.

Arena ad: "extraordinary entertainment has a new home." On the plaza, a booth for videos to express fan enthusiasm.

Streisand concert: no Carmageddon, but lots of idling limos. Tents for the guests. Truck parks outside arena.

The Nets make Sports Illustrated's cover; was it just Prokhorov who gained from "connections, shrewdness, no-bid purchasing."

Subway entrance quiet for morning commuters.

The myopic New York mag critic, who called the arena a monument..

Jay-Z's video channel massages Atlantic Yards opposition away.

Arena says no more metal detectors for Streisand aimed to speed lines, not racial profiling. Post: arena to use wands, not metal detectors for now.

Operations rely on illegal, informal parking lanes on public streets, and honking.

No, it's not a $1 billion arena.

My visit to the branded Barclays Center, for first exhibition game. The "meditation room" is used to store wheelchairs.

Neighbors weigh in on community impacts, trucks, urination.

The drip-drop housing plan; yes, they're going modular.

Metal detectors back for free tickets, at least.

Voice names Barclays Center "Best Sports Venue."

Video series begin: The Association and Road to Brooklyn.

Grantland's breathless salute to the Nets' Brooklyn takeover.

Boxing inaugural a triumph, except for failed drug test and papered house. Early liquor cut-off and somewhat rowdy crowd. Won't be monthly as planned.

Forest City: "blighted" railyard won't get developed until four towers built on parking lot block. Developer says Prokhorov loan paid off, may sell share in Nets.

Does apartment site across from arena block deserve variance because of new context?

Islanders moving to Barclays Center by 2015. No impact on AY housing. Does move vindicate AY, or just the arena (and should NYC/NYS have driven a harder bargain)? For Islanders, key is revenue from luxury suites, premium seats, and TV.

Markowitz admits Atlantic Yards is "among the most contentious developments in America's history."

Times mag essayist: arena is a "shrine to Brooklynland."

Daily News special section honoring the arena includes belated apology to Globetrotters attendees.

Sensation electronica show twice pounds bass into residences near arena. State overseer for Atlantic Yards makes promotional appearance on behalf of Sensation.

Times says arena serves as magnet for yellow cabs; no mention of impact of limos/black cars.

Times critic Kimmelman salutes arena, disses rest of AY plan.

Storm places cloud over Nets-Knicks home opener. Game on schedule despite storm after-effects. Markowitz on board; Yormark promises transportation news. Bloomberg cancels game; Yormark does 360. NBA/Nets try to walk it back, claim they didn't think mass transit would be so hampered. Could a cop have told the mayor's office off? Game rescheduled, NBA/team unscathed.

November

Bloomberg collects kudos, but less attention for his single-mindedness re NYC Marathon, Nets debut.

Brooklyn Recovery Fund debuts, with $100K each from FCR, arena, Nets, but they don't deserve an automatic halo.

Nets win debut, Markowitz at ceremony; fewer impacts than at Streisand show, thanks to charter buses, other plans. Arena GM tells Times columnist discord is getting packed away. What happened to those $15 tickets?

Nets' new, good anthem is all about the borough, not the team.

From the Brooklyn Rail, my essay, A Brand Called Brooklyn.

At the Barclays Center, the value of dark lighting and the photogenic arena plaza (sans office tower).

The NYTimes: The Barclays Center's Media Enabler.

CBA signatory BUILD closes, in wake of funding troubles, allegations. Veconi on the use of the CBA as a wedge.

Bender and Cantone, ex-Forest City, rely on former contacts for consulting clients.

The bizarre BrooklyKnight mascot, cartoon borough defender, and comic book. The Prokhorov comic book.

Fair fight? "NIMBYs" in NYC (including DDDB) dwarfed by YIMBYs.

In While We Were Sleeping, authors, activists take on NYU expansion.

The Brooklyn Game website emerges, supplies content to YES network.

Screaming Bieber fans surround bus on Dean Street; after chaos, cops say they'll have a better plan; still, where do black cars go?

Lessons for Brooklyn in the Oklahoma City hoops fairy tale; most have forgotten the questionable origins.

Metropolis columnist Jacobs, longtime AY opponent, "grudgingly impressed" by arena, hopes for changed site plan.

BUILD's Caldwell defends spending that provoked complaint to AG, suggests it's "right for the people." Plus, some bitter exchanges.

The power of free tickets and giveaways. Behind the community tickets program; it helps to have gotten in early.

Deron Williams welcomed, but gingerly in Williamsburg.

In Yonkers case, Annabi, Jereis get prison terms; judge suggests Forest City's Ridge Hill "arguably led to a good deal of public good." Lawyer for Jereis suggested Forest City was big winner.

Sandy victims get an arena treat.

Barclays Center seen as not cannibalizing Jersey arenas, but what about Nassau Coliseum?


Forest City oddly challenges property assessments regarding arena and other AY property, then withdraws suit.

As predicted, Times reports on how Atlantic Yards opponents are exhausted; neglects to city court win, importance of civic watchdogging.

NYC rivalry amps up with Nets win over Knicks; Markowitz crows. He had said "there's no room" in BK if you don't support the team.

More hiring at the arena: enlarging the pool, or coping with layoffs?

With bank and unions on board; Forest City ready to go modular. FAQ on the first Atlantic Yards tower; it looks like it would cost $24M less than similar 80 DeKalb.

The metal does drip from the pre-rusted arena facade.

At meeting on first tower, questions about affordable housing, design, safety, oversight. Dean Street pedestrian passage narrows to 5 feet. 17 former footprint renters moving in.

December

New towers rising near BAM, with more affordable housing than first AY tower.

The NYC Power 100 and Atlantic Yards: many intersections.

A booming market for scalpers outside arena?

Jay-Z talks up Nets in GQ; video of subway encounter with "adorable old lady" goes viral.

Arena construction monitor, after three-month gap, finally issues report. Fortune loves the arena.

PR Week salutes arena's communications strategy, including three Times placements for first food article. (What about "35 lawsuits"?) Another three-pointer, as Times review published five days early.

Second meeting of Quality of Life Committee: oculus, lighting, idling are issues and limo parking won't go away.

New development fund will invest in first AY tower.

Times series and editorial on subsidies somehow excludes Atlantic Yards.

Architectural Record: facade makes arena "seem surprisingly in sync" but "can't be declared a civic triumph just yet"

In argument on legal fees in timetable case, judge seems skeptical of the state.

Seven firms that worked on AY are on city's watch list.

Barclays Center listed as NY Magazine's top Reason to Love New York. Urination problem not ignored.

Ebbets Field flagpole placed outside arena, with Robinson's daughter in attendance.

Brooklyn Gateway plan, responding to arena and area growth, suggests transportation changes, permit parking, congestion pricing, rapid response team.

Was Transportation Demand Management Plan too flawed to deal with limos/black cars?

Limos idling outside Stones concert. Cars on the Pacific Street sidewalk before Knicks game. Wrestlemania trucks on residential streets.

What's left in arena TCO? Unclear.

Nets' Joe Johnson featured in video, magazine.

The arena's mixed impact on retail neighbors.

My essay, Brooklyn's vaunted, tainted Barclays Center; that missing office tower and ignored RPA suggestions

Providing Brooklyn with the "civic amenity" of an arena.

At groundbreaking for B2 tower, narrative of innovation nudges asked questions about promises of housing and jobs.

The Barclays Center and the shift in perceptions, given the plethora of happy event-goers.

In holiday card, Markowitz salutes Barclays Center and those behind it.

Are cheap seats really for sale? Nets finally explain that, yes, total includes season tickets.

Supplemental EIS process finally starts with Draft Scope. Will it study blight and the potential for other developers?

After a spectacular November, Nets start losing big in December. Was city "under new management"? Coach Avery Johnson fired.


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