Beating a Busted Bugaboo?
Maybe there’s more to the Park Slope stroller mafia debate than points about how it shows how white people are jealous of other white people or assertions that negative stereotypes come from I-don’t-wanna-grow-up hipsters. Maybe, as Lynn Harris posits in yesterday’s Style section, Slope bashing is an elegy for a former New York: Brooklyn was…
Maybe there’s more to the Park Slope stroller mafia debate than points about how it shows how white people are jealous of other white people or assertions that negative stereotypes come from I-don’t-wanna-grow-up hipsters. Maybe, as Lynn Harris posits in yesterday’s Style section, Slope bashing is an elegy for a former New York:
Brooklyn was supposed to be Manhattan’s little burnout brother. When I arrived in New York, Brooklyn was the place you could reliably feel superior to, if you thought about it at all. New Yorkers don’t hate the Upper East Side in the same way because that’s old money, old news. But Brooklyn? There’s the feeling that yuppies in Park Slope are washing away Brooklyn’s grittiness and making it more like Manhattan, said Jose Sanchez, chairman of urban studies at Long Island University, Brooklyn. Brooklyn was supposed to be different. Park Slope, to some, now represents everything that Brooklyn was not supposed to be. That’s why our feelings about Park Slope are linked to our feelings about our entire city: our overpriced, chain-store city run by bankers, socialites and, it seems, mommies. The artists are fleeing and your friends, it seems, have become Park Slope pod people. (And they’re coming for you, too.) It’s starting to feel as if there’s nowhere left to hide. And that if we lose Brooklyn, we lose everything. Though actually, if you could keep hating Park Slope, that would be great. Maybe if it really falls out of favor, I’ll be able to afford to stay.
But maybe all press is good press.
Park Slope: Where Is the Love? [NY Times]
Photo by redxdress.
I don’t live in Park Slope, but I do live in Carroll Gardens for nearly 20 years. If the PS story is anything like the CG story here’s how it goes: When I moved here back in the day, in addition to the long-term residents, the “new” people were of a pioneering, creative spirit. They were not rich, they had a heightened sense of community, as well as a sense of local activism. We MADE this community. We organized children’s events in the park, like the Halloween haunted house, flea markets and weeded and planted. This is no longer the case. This neighborhood has now been mainstreamed. There are nannies in the park with the kids rather than parents, families leave town for weekends in the summer. It’s difficult to find volunteers to continue the traditions that attracted the wealthier set to the area. There are still some of the same great things, but it’s losing the small-town, creative feeling that attracted us years ago. I live here, so it’s not jealousy talking.
Yeah this story is completely played out. There’s even a Park Slope hate backlash. Next up: Cobble Hill…..They thnk they have the best pizza, who do they think they are?
This past Saturday, I’ve never EVER seen so many people on 7th Avenue. One out of every 10 people were seemingly on vacation from Germany or the U.K.
Seems the neighborhood has been invaded with European tourists this year.
But I did see a VERY cute Maggie Gyllenhall, husband Peter Sarsgaard and baby at the Greenmarket on Sat.
park slope isnt filled with chain stores….yet.
The author of this article started this blog a while ago:
http://www.brooklynian.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=40811&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0
I’m callin’ it right now.
This post is going to be the super duper gold medal winner, mama doozey of all posts…
(I’m thinkin’ somewhere in the vicinity of 280+)
Pretty spot-on.
Yawn. What’s next, reposting the entire contents of the Park slope Yellow Pages?
i’ve got a crisp $5 bill waiting for the first person who has anything interesting or original to say on this subject…