11.21.2022

Rooftop Like We Bringin' '88 Back 🎵

I wanted to wish everyone a wonderful holiday week! YES, Thanksgiving is almost here, and that means whatever it means to each of us, with whatever we all may be feeling.


Historically, as a New Yorker, it would mean that I would party, with my wonderful friends, ideally while listening to VERY LOUD house music. Of course, that was a different time. To wit: I can illustrate with an anecdote about nitelife curation. Those who appreciate a good nitelife might agree, the best parties are the ones that not too many people know about. It should be what we used to call “HYPE” but not so much so that some complete outsider is going to show up and do something that ruins it for the rest of us. 


How does one strike such a balance? Imagine this: 4 or five people cruising through the early NYC evening* probably in a car the 2022 me cannot afford. We are checking our beepers for text messages, because we each have friends who know someone, who knows someone, who is throwing some insane underground party, and we are enthusiastically comparing notes, trying to develop a plan of action for the later part of the evening and early dawn.  One of us, the one driving, has one of those giant cellphones, and he uses it to call a phone booth, where there is a guy, in a silk, color blocked track suit and a lot of gold rings, who is giving out a password and the address of a good party, the kind we might deign to attend. 


But when TrackSuit  answers he sounds impaired, and keeps slurring his words, and we worry he is going to send us astray. Our guy driving, with the huge brick phone in his non steering wheel hand, waves it all off*, and calls 411. “Operator” “Yes, operator, do you know the address for *****…  Oh, there’s no address listed for that. How about, did’ya try wit a different spelling? No… OPERATOR, I NEED this information. Never mind. YO, Operator? What’s slammin’ tonight?” She hangs up.


Snapshot of the late 80’s, early 90s, NEW YORK CITY. Before all the revelers had a camera in their pocket at all times… I think of what may have become of these old friends… they must love the internet.


Wherever you are my beautiful party people, be safe, have fun. Remember the time & DESIGNATE A DRIVER. 💋, MCC,ESQ.


 





*Pretty sure that this is frowned upon nowadays. They call it “idling” and you can get a fine for it.

*Pretty sure that this is frowned upon nowadays. Back then it was not a regulated activity to speak on the cell while driving. 

10.01.2022

🫶 Sending Love Florida! 🫶

Sending Love Florida!


Are you sitting around, watching the Ian devastation on a screen and asking yourself, “What can I do to help!?” 



After reviewing the social media feeds of persons in authority in Florida, and conducting a few searches, my independent assessment is to approach this from two perspectives: 



For Floridians IN NEED OF ASSISTANCE, the Florida Division of Emergency Management shared this Tweet:



“If you or someone you know needs assistance or a safety check, please visit: http://Missing.fl.gov.” 


https://twitter.com/FLSERT/status/1576211864081510402




For those seeking ways in which to assist, donations to established organizations are a preferred, time tested manner of rendering aid. Read on for links* which contain suggestions in that area, as well as additional opportunities to assist our beloved family and friends in Florida. 




Links to articles listing places to make donations & additional resources: 


https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/weather/hurricane/fl-ne-hurricane-ian-how-to-help-20220929-fgop2u4kbferjkouy3276pgfwi-story.html


https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/09/29/how-to-help-hurricane-ian/10460045002/


https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/how-to-help-victims-of-hurricane-ian-in-florida





*Donor and volunteer opportunities have not been independently vetted. 

7.27.2022

Happy Birthday, Baudrillard 🎂

Birthday wishes are extended in honor of the noted late French philosopher, on what would have been his 93rd Birthday, from a time when the hyper real has, with certainty, taken on the significance Jean Baudrillard predicted. 

4.18.2022

Torta Isabella


2 packs unflavored gelatin

1 can (14 ounces) sweetened condensed milk

1/2 cup semi sweet chocolate

1/4 cup coffee

1 tablespoon butter or margarine

2 tablespoons whole milk or heavy cream

21 danish butter cookies

1 round glass 11 inch baking dish

Cinnamon & Nutmeg to taste




Bring 2 cups of water to a boil. Empty the contents of 2 envelopes unflavored gelatin into your round glass baking dish, add boiling water & stir until gelatin is completely dissolved. Add can of condensed milk & stir until smooth & completely combined. Add coffee & stir until completely combined. 


Arrange the danish butter cookies vertically along the circumference of the baking dish. Allow the cookies to absorb some of the liquid. Sprinkle nutmeg & cinnamon to taste. Refrigerate. 


After about 30 minutes, with a spatula, rearrange any errant butter cookies so they are evenly lining the dessert dish; some will remain submerged in the baking dish. Continue to refrigerate for 2 more hours.


Using your preferred method (I used the microwave) melt 1/2 cup semisweet chocolate. Separately, melt 1 tablespoon butter or margarine. Pour the melted butter or margarine into the melted semisweet chocolate & combine until smooth. When fully combined, add cream or milk & continue to combine again until completely smooth. 


Pour the chocolate  in a circular motion, over the existing hardening dessert in the glass tray. Continue to refrigerate for an additional two hours. 




Heeding an instinct for heritage this holiday season, this dessert I have devised is named in honor of my late grandmother. If your diet allows it, please enjoy it & happy holidays!




2.24.2022

Cheers to 15+ Years!

Fifteen years ago I devised a blog, “stanza28”. T'was born from an experimental desire to promote a pseudonymously published novel. Along the way I have been happy to actively solicit particular types of posts for the blog as well as to develop and receive blog post submissions from & with third parties.

With respect to my creative projects, "stanza28" has been in use for over two decades.

Since the novel’s first publication, a number of issues it addresses have come to prominence. Perhaps most importantly, the issue of police misconduct (the subject of my law school admission application essay, consciously dated on the birthday of a dear departed friend) has possibly finally achieved the due concern it merits. 


Also finally getting its due is the decriminalization of marijuana, an issue on which I have been of the same mind as many highly regarded medical doctors and now, more than thirty of our United States.


The novel’s main character “Sal” is an homage to my best friend from childhood who died in his twenties. His name was Antonio. The character in the novel is so named to facilitate deliberation upon the idea of “savior” in Latin, as well as that of “salt” (sal is spanish for “salt”) the subject of “The Salt Prince” folklore. 


Though I began writing the novel in my teens, it was alchemized and finally completed following an era of distress I experienced following Antonio’s death. Not one day has gone by in the more than twenty years since he left us that I have not reflected on what he might think about the current events of the day, or the popular music of the era or how we might have continued to share perspectives on our respective travels and favorite places of repast. His memory is the inveterate gauge by which I continue to benchmark morality, charisma, and character.

The Queens we shared and in which we grew up has been greatly transformed. Robert De Niro’s influence continues to be felt in our hometown. Recently, I am told, he is building an entire complex at the end of Steinway Street. When we were young adults Antonio had a small role in the crime drama film “A Bronx Tale” (which was De Niro’s directorial debut). The church in the background of that film is the school we attended together. In the days that film was being made, my childhood friends and I went about our young lives and curiously watched as our neighborhood was reshaped by antique cars and movie trailers. I was working at a music store and Antonio would visit me there between film takes. In order to extend some tribute to those experiences, around Thanksgiving 2020 a playlist was released on YouTube, featuring music referenced in the novel. 

It may be accessed for enjoyment here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLh5fWlc3GnpOK9qSkO5bzgYWSqbRASwos .


The character in the novel “Sarena” is also an homage, to another of my oldest friends from childhood. She also distinguished herself, by appearing in “A Bronx Tale” as well as by going on to work at a super prestigious law firm in Manhattan. Out of courtesy for her and her family’s privacy, I do not identify her by her given name. 


“Sal” and “Sarena” are fictional characters. The persons to whom they serve as an homage and I had, at times, extremely divergent views on the various topics addressed in the novel. We nevertheless loved each other dearly, and, until the iniquitous death, always showed up for each other. 


In order to examine the events the novel considers, incidents, locations  and quotes from “real life” were woven into the fictional piece of work. Literary folk call this "historical fiction" and its use is an excellent tool for teaching, generally speaking. 


In 2021 the Supreme Court found for Google (Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc., 593 US __ (2021).) in a years long litigation that considered “fair use”. Verisimilitude, so seminal to the process of devising narrative frameworks in fiction, is often the lens through which writers instinctively come to understand the concept of fair use. 


At this time, of all of the legal spheres upon which the novel impinges, the fair use SCOTUS opinion is the disposition which fills me with the most optimism and confidence for our shared future.


To live in an age where sharing ones’ perspective is so accessible, is the subject of a great deal of gratitude, joy, and consternation, for many. Often I have endeavored to share, via the blog, my experiences practicing law, in order to help overcome skepticism that my literary and creative agenda was of a particularly radical or otherwise marginal nature. I have tried to maintain a tone that would be appropriate and credible for a 21st century teenager and I have tried to be a voice I wish I could have had when I was seventeen.


Thanks to everyone who ever read the novel or the blog. I hope you are being “edutained.” If you knew Antonio, I hope you remember him with as much love & laughter as I do. 


Cheers to fifteen + years! XO

Martha C. Chemas, Esq.