It's enough to make me forgive her for her anti-Trump rantings

Everyone deserves better

Everyone deserves better

Linsey Vonn's father is unimpressed with her third-place finish.

Her pride in the event wasn’t replicated by her father, Alan Kildow, who recently reconciled with Vonn after more than a decade of tension and little communication.
“It’s great skiing, but it reminds me of something that Buddy Werner used to say,” Kildow told USA Today Sports, referring to a US skier from the 1950s. “He said there’s two places in the race, first and last, and I only want one of them.”

I have two wonderful, beautiful daughters, and I thank God every day for the blessing they are, and that He's bestowed upon me. Poor Lindsey Vonn.

Gideon's back, and on WGCH!

Listen Now!

Listen Now!

I thought the station had closed down after its CEO was busted for his penny stock scam, but no, it's still alive, and they have brother Gideon at 11:00, when he'll be interviewing someone named John Boyd, Jr. about why companies are leaving Connecticut.

I hope Gid's not paying Mr. Boyd a stipend: I'd have answered the question for free.

UPDATE: OK, I''m listening: Gid and Jonathan Wilcox are opining on the market, and they're very funny.

Damn it, where's that PR campaign when we need it? Hedge fund decamps for Stamford.

Maybe not to Indianapolis, but what's the difference?

Maybe not to Indianapolis, but what's the difference?

And a big one, too.

One of Connecticut’s largest private equity firms has completed a quiet move from Greenwich to the Stamford waterfront, nearly a year after its founding CEO stepped aside who led the company’s investment of more than $30 billion in capital since 1983.
First Reserve is among the half-dozen largest, U.S.-based funds focused on natural resources, according to an August 2017 study by Preqin, having raised $12.8 billion over the past decade for investment in major energy infrastructure like refineries and pipelines, with the company having made some 600 investments over the years.
First Reserve is by far the largest of the five Connecticut companies to have raised at least $1 billion for investment in natural resources over the preceding 10 years, along with Alinda Capital Partners and Starwood Energy in Greenwich, Lime Rock Partners in Westport, and Commonfund Capital in Wilton.

On a somewhat related topic, Cliff Asness's AQR Capital is slated to receive (another) $5 million from his fellow Greenwich taxpayers. Love the guy, and appreciate that only a fool would turn down free money, but is this really how we should be digging our grave?

They're cunning, and they've licked us

Well gol' dang it!

Well gol' dang it!

Reader Captain Cob sent along this news of Air Lingus screwing Connecticut taxpayers. Or to be  more accurate, an account of our naive representatives bending over to receive a full wheel barrow up the rear. I am a huge admirer and fan of Riverside's Scott Frantz, but isn't he in charge of that airport? What gives?

During its first year flying to Dublin, Ireland out of Bradley International Airport, Aer Lingus missed its revenue goal, triggering a $4.5 million subsidy from the state, the Hartford Business Journal has learned.
The payment, which is pending from the state Department of Economic and Community Development (DECD), is part of a $13 million incentive deal inked between state officials and the Irish airline to woo it to Bradley, where flights began in Sept. 2016. Revenue subsidies make up the bulk of the two-year deal, at $9 million, with the rest comprised of marketing incentives and airport fee waivers.
Kevin Dillon, executive director of the Connecticut Airport Authority, said it's not uncommon for airlines to miss revenue targets built into the deals, which are designed to reduce the financial risks of a new service.
"I think from a revenue guarantee standpoint, this is typical," Dillon said. "You typically find that airlines have to draw on it."
The deal "absolutely" provides value to the state's economy, DECD Commissioner Catherine Smith said.
"I think there is a gigantic payback for the state — it creates jobs in the local market and I hear from business travelers who use it that they love to go out of Bradley," Smith said. "I would certainly have liked to not have to provide the full $4.5 million, but hopefully the full number won't be needed in year two."
Aer Lingus Chief Commercial Officer Keith Butler (who has since left the company) told HBJ in 2016 that the the airline hoped to fill 105,000 seats in its first 12 months. Bradley data shows that it filled about 77,000.
 

Pulling up steaks

I'm outta here

I'm outta here

The six acres of Nick Manero's estate at 110 Glenville Road, asking $5.695 million, are reported as pending. That's for four building lots, adjacent to the Sherwood Farms development, and I suppose some brave soul doesn't think paying that much for so little is crazy, but I personally would hesitate. Then again, I come from a long, long line of real estate dolts: landing at the southern tip of New Amsterdam, with the entire island beckoning, we settled on Staten Island. Two centuries later, offered a plot of land across from a swampy pond, great-grandfather Fountain passed, and someone else built the Plaza Hotel, and Central Park was developed quite nicely despite his refusal to help, thank you very much. So what do I know from shinola?

Informative article on Manero's steak house's closing here, for those interested in Greenwich history. My own memory of the establishment is that it was a tired old place, even in the 60s, when my grandmother would drag us there because they remembered and honored her as a film star, but served us the same dull food they doled out to everyone else. Still, four-bucks or so for a complete meal was a bargain, I suppose, and Granny was paying. By the time I returned to town as a young lawyer in the early 80s, the restaurant served mostly  as a dining hall for Greenwich Bar Association lunches (and Rotary Club functions which — I had some sense of pride — I avoided) and was way past its expiration date.

But, in its time, it was a true Greenwich landmark. Here's the Times' take on the place:

If Andy Rooney, the ''60 Minutes'' commentator who has turned complaining into an art form, stood in line to get in, there had to be something special about the place. 
Celebrities including Buster Crabbe, Arnold Palmer, Ivana Trump have eaten there. Johnny Olson, the announcer on ''The Price is Right,'' the television game show, was a regular, too. 
But after 62 years of selling steak dinners, Manero's Restaurant Steakhouse in Greenwich is scheduled to serve its last meal Sunday night. 
This spring, the three businessmen who bought the place from the Manero family in 2003 plan to start building condominiums on the property, which is on Steamboat Road, near Greenwich Harbor. 
Henry Pascarella, one of the owners, said there were too many other restaurants in town and that Manero's time had passed. ''It's sad that over the last few years it hasn't gotten the community support it deserves,'' he said. 
Bruce Davis, the restaurant's general manager, started there in 1965, driving a delivery truck for the original owner, Nicholas Manero Sr. Mr. Davis said that people came in droves to Manero's from all over the region in the 1960's and 1970's, and sometimes stood in long lines to get in. At its peak, it was serving about 1,100 dinners on Saturday nights, he said, and was doing $10 million a week in business. 
''I used to bring 50,00 pounds of meat a week here with the truck,'' he said. ''They came from everywhere, Westchester, Rockland County, the Bronx. When business was crazy in the 1970's, we were selling a complete filet mignon dinner, including an appetizer, garlic bread, fried onions, dessert and coffee, for $5.95.'' 
Mr. Rooney, who lives in Rowayton, was one of the regulars. ''It was a big, friendly place,'' he said. ''You usually had to stand in line. I don't care much for standing in line to get into a restaurant, but basically, for me, it was a place I could afford to bring four kids and my wife. It wasn't a gourmet experience, but it was dependably good.'' 
Mr. Davis said the volume of meat sold at the 600-seat restaurant and at its adjoining butcher shop allowed the owners to keep prices reasonable. He said the complete steak dinner now costs about $30. 
''What we didn't sell in the restaurant, we sold in the butcher shop, and vice versa,'' he said. 
Mr. Davis said that it was not only the prices that drew the crowds, it was also the flavor of the beef. ''What made the place was that we have an aging room, where we age the meat for up to 28 days,'' he said. 
When Mr. Davis began at Manero's, there were just four restaurants in Greenwich, he said, but as competition increased, business dropped significantly in the late 1980's. Since January, the restaurant has been open only on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights. 
Penny Monahan, a Greenwich selectman and a third-generation resident in Greenwich, said that she had been going to Manero's most of her life. She held two election victory parties there. ''It's unfortunate, because this kind of thing is happening all over our town to businesses by the water,'' she said. ''It's changing the character of our town quickly.'' 
Mr. Davis said that the butcher shop, which will close on Tuesday, had been busy since word of its final days got out and that he expected many of the restaurant's decades-old Formica tables to be occupied this weekend. 
''That was probably part of the problem, too,'' he said. ''The main dining room basically looks the same as the day I got here. We never changed. We never went with the times. Everyone wants clean and fancy these days.''

Fancy I can do without; clean is appreciated.

UPDATE: A couple of former Manero's butchers opened Greenwich Prime Meats after it closed, and have apparently sold it to a new owner. Great meat, sandwiches and fixings, and I recommend them, but here's a tip I learned from Cook's Illustrated long ago: you can "dry age" your beef by taking, say, a standard rib roast and placing it, uncovered, on a rack in the refrigerator for 3-7 days. I had just paid something like $180 for a dry-aged standing rib roast the previous Christmas when I read that , so the cheaper option held great appeal. Ten years on, I'm still serving up $80 rib roasts on that holiday, and have yet to notice a difference. 

I do the same thing with strip steaks, by the way, with excellent results. 

Jewish humor

Now THAT's funny!

Now THAT's funny!

For years, brother Gideon and I served the role as token goyim at a monthly nickel-ante poker game held at a Jewish friend's home. Aside from us, the participants were Jews, and telling jokes, rather than seriously playing cards, was the order of the night — a win or loss for the evening averaged about seven bucks — and we were grateful to be exposed to a rich heritage of the best humor in the world. Now an author has published a weighty tome on the subject. It seems a bit ponderous for a book that, after all, is supposed to be funny, but what can you expect from an academic?

This is from the book:

Interviewed once on German television, the late Robin Williams was asked, “Why do you think there’s not so much comedy in Germany?”
“Did you ever think,” Williams snapped, “you killed off all the funny people?”
Leave it to a Gentile [*] to summarize the Jewish experience in seven words.

One of my favorites which, so far as I know is not included in the book, but was contributed to our poker game by Joel Kaye, the group's token younger Jew — the rest ranged from 70-85 — goes something like this:

A gentleman in the Diamond District is struck by a taxi. A policeman makes his way through the gathered crowd and, shucking his jacket, gently places it under the poor man's head as they await an ambulance.

"Are you comfortable?" the cop asks.

"Meh; I make nice living", is the reply.

Tee hee hee.

* He was, however, considered "An Honorary Jew".

Had he been in a sanctuary city like Bridgeport or New Haven, he'd have been safe to continue his ways

"Who are we to say this gentleman doesn't deserve (yet) another chance?"(HaIR CLUB FOR MEN — Just noticed that our junior senator wears a hairpiece. NTTAWwt, of course)

"Who are we to say this gentleman doesn't deserve (yet) another chance?"

(HaIR CLUB FOR MEN — Just noticed that our junior senator wears a hairpiece. NTTAWwt, of course)

Illegal alien with a retainer hold against him for gun possession caught in Norwalk and will be returned to New Jersey.

NORWALK — Reports of an intoxicated man hanging around the South Norwalk Train Station led to the arrest of an undocumented immigrant who had fled from justice in New Jersey, police said.
Police responded to the Metro-North Railroad station in South Norwalk on reports on an intoxicated man who was “staggering around” and “falling sleeping on station benches,” according to police reports.
As police worked to remove the individual from the station, they learned that the man, identified as Elmer Lovato-Rosales, 30, was an undocumented immigrant and that he had a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detainer placed on him.
The detainer stemmed from an incident in Plainfield, New Jersey, in which Lovato-Rosales was charged with illegal possession of a firearm, police said.
Police placed Lovato-Rosales under arrest and charged him as a fugitive of justice. He was held on a $50,000 bond, and he is set to be extradited to New Jersey to face his charges.
ICE was also informed of his arrest, police said.

The citizens of Plainfield, New Jersey might want to ask who in their police force released this criminal into the general population in defiance of an ICE detainer order, but until the Supreme Court rules on the matter this June, I suppose that's their concern. 

UPDATE: Looked it up, and it turns out that Plainfield has joined with many other cities in the Garden State in declaring itself to be a "welcoming city" that will defy ICE detainer orders. I'd be neutral on that, if they would keep their criminals confined to their borders, free to prey on their own citizens, but leaving the rest of us alone, safe in our homes.

February 13, 2017 - Following US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in states over the past several days, the City of Plainfield acted today to protect vulnerable immigrant communities. The Plainfield City Council voted to be a fair and welcoming city, joining several other New Jersey towns and municipalities in declaring sanctuary status in the wake of Donald Trump’s executive orders.
"Plainfield has long been a welcoming community for immigrants and will remain so. Given the President's xenophobic campaign rhetoric and the news of ICE actions around the country, the City of Plainfield will be implementing clear policies to assure all residents that the role of city officials and local police is to serve our communities and we will not facilitate Trump's efforts at mass deportations," said Mayor Adrian Mapp.
The resolution passed by the city council resolves that local police and other agencies will not assist federal law enforcement agencies like ICE in identifying or arresting immigrants whose only alleged crime is related to their legal status [and illegal possession of a weapon, but that's a technicality]. The measure was introduced in response to concerns expressed by Plainfield residents with the support of local grassroots advocates.

It's obvious that " our communities" (plural? Really?) refers solely to the illegals in Plainfield, but I wonder how the rest of the residents feel about that? 

I'm so old that I remember when liberals denounced the concept of "states' rights" and the authority of Dixie states to defy federal law. Then again, that was also a period when federal judges felt compelled to enforce that law.

 

Say, here's an idea: hire another government bureaucrat to lure entrepreneurs to Greenwich

Let's hear from the little people!

Let's hear from the little people!

Bad as was Tesei's committing the town to a PR campaign that extolls the virtues of Greenwich to  the general public, give him this: he "only" committed $30,000 to the effort (those of you who just paid that much in property taxes last month may not find this a great use of your money, but hey ...). One of our Democrat BET members is advocating hiring a full-time employee to dress up the town.

Tony Turner, a Democratic member of the Board of Estimate and Taxation, has joined Democratic Selectman Sandy Litvack in proposing that the town hire an economic development officer. Litvack has questioned the effectiveness of an ongoing public/private marketing campaign called Think Greenwich and the work of the town’s volunteer Economic Advisory Committee, which are touted by First Selectman Peter Tesei, a Republican.
“A public relations campaign is not the answer,” Litvack said last week. “What is needed is a professional, experienced in economic development who will be able to analyze the landscape, create a plan to attract and retain businesses and lead the way.”
That is the same position that Turner has taken as chair of the BET’s Human Resources Committee.
“It became apparent to me that an economic development officer is needed for a variety of reasons, with the more important ones being business retention and better information for the Plan of Conservation and Development process,” Turner said. “Are we truly planning for economic development? I find little evidence of it.”
An economic development officer would work proactively with businesses and nonprofits to identify strategies for economic development, he said. Turner said he would want this to go hand-in-hand with the work every 10 years on the town’s POCD. He envisioned this position would lead an overall effort that included existing town employees and volunteers from the town’s public and private sectors.
According to a job description Turner had drawn up, the position would, “(Provide) leadership through broad community involvement which promotes the economic well-being of the community while understanding that a social and environmentally healthy community is vital to the local economy.”
Turner said he did not see economic development as a political issue. He said that the need for the position stands on its own and said the expense would pay for itself as the local economy grew.

In the entire history of liberalism, has there ever been a advocated program that didn't promise to  "pay for itself', and has there ever been one that accomplished that? Personally, I think we should thank Mr. Turner for his recommendation that we enlist town employees and non-profit organizations to make Greenwich more attractive to business, then send him home with a lollipop and a cuddly stuffed puppy. 

With our thanks for his service, of course.

Chickens, counting before hatching Department of

Pride (and TDS) goeth before a fall

Pride (and TDS) goeth before a fall

Lindsey Vonn, who before the Olympics began vowed to "represent the United States, but not Trump" (no Olympian represents the president of the United States, you self-righteous twit), and insisted that she would decline any invitation to visit the White House after she medaled, came in sixth yesterday.

I guess she'll be pleased to save the airfare.