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BRAWL, ‘ELEMENT X,’ SHOW IT’S TIME TO PULL PLUG ON NOW-DANGEROUS THIRD THURSDAY … WTBR LANDS A STURGEON, BUT ISN’T HIGH SCHOOL RADIO MEANT FOR HIGH SCHOOLERS, NOT ADULTS? … PITTSFIELD SUNS GEAR UP FOR OPENING NIGHT AT BWP … QUICKIES INCLUDE PONTERRIL SOLAR (YUCK) APATHY AND ‘LEFTOVER’ FUNDS (YUCK YUCK), AND CHAMPIONSHIP SPELLERS (SORT OF)

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By DAN VALENTI

PLANET VALENTI News and Commentary

(FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2012) — Should Third Thursday continue? No, THE PLANET says.

The riot on May 17 provided a tipping point, adding now a tangible element of risk to TT that wipes out its benefits that, though considerable, have diminshed in proportion to the unsavory element that has been noticed, now, at these communal gatherings. Once again, good, honest, decent citizens must pay for the crimes of the deadbeat few … except they aren’t so few, any longer.

Pittsfield Can No Longer Ignore the Rapid and Growing Social Decay

The influx of what once could be ignored — a frightening influx of an array of human repugnance who on a daily basis make North Street look like a Tim Burton film and on TT pile on the effect even more — must now be the dominant factor in deciding the fate of TT.

This increasing mass of human scum, bred in ignorance and proliferating in stupidity (and on the young side to boot), has taken over the downtown, keeping decent, respectable people away. One pattern noticed in recent TTs going back to last year is how, beginning around 7 p.m.-ish, the unsavory begin to stalk and gather in large numbers.

Face it: TT has become a draw for the degenerate generation. It is no longer a safe event.

Maybe you’ve seen them: tattoo covering flesh like paisley wall-to-wall carpeting, pants below ass-cracks, cleavage enough to provide spawning ground for a nest of bats, skinheads and rainbow hair, the single moms pushing babies from different deadbeat dads, the druggies and alkies, and the Dreaded Others — a catch-all category of everyone and everything that is unpleasant, undesirable, disagreeable, nasty, mean, rough, immoral, dishonorable, dishonest, unprincipled, low, shady, and crooked.

That, increasingly, is the face of downtown Pittsfield, one the entire Northeast came to know about courtesy of the headlines, stories, and film of the ridiculous riot on May 17. Ask yourself: If you had the opportunity to move to Pittsfield or locate a business here, would you, given the choice of many other communities doing so much better with civic life and at cheaper cost (communities like Syracuse, N.Y. and Newburyport, Mass., for example)?

The melee involving more than 100 crazed youths and young adults — 18 and 19-year-olds have, unfortunately for them, graduated chronologically into the “adult” realm — gave not only the event a black eye, but it generated negative publicity throughout the Northeast. Pittsfield? Oh yeah, that’s the PCB-infested Pitt where gang violence is out-of-control and where honest citizens can no longer venture downtown without fear of their safety.

On a Cost-Benefit Basis, What is the Cost of TT to Taxpayers?

Financially, does the event provide value for the expense taxpayers must deliver? Even before the May 17 impromptu playing of the Jets-Sharks rumble from West Side Story that flopped at the corner of Melville and North, many citizens and merchants had complained that the event was turning into a money sucker, replete with tacky food, amateur entertainment, and a growing carnival-sideshow feel.

With the added and real threat of violence, we need to seriously question whether the city, which in the upcoming budget sessions will claim to be in tough economic times, can afford to provide this monthly diversion meant to titillate those in the cheap seats. Store owners complain that TT is now drawing a freakish, side-show type of crowd. We all know what that means. People with discretionary income are staying away from TT, and the creeps, who take rather than give or spend, are infesting the event in growing numbers.

In some respect, it’s “no one’s” fault … and “everyone’s.” TT might reflect the inevitable decay now being seen in society as a whole, but the worst thing the city could do is to continue the pretense of the downtown “Renaissance.” Rather than stand by helplessly in the face of the oncoming Mongolian horde, Pittsfield can take assertive action by canceling TT.

One of our correspondents asked: What would we propose in its place? Our answer: Why does anything have to be proposed in its place? Are people so unimaginative and not curious to be able to fill a Thursday summer’s evening?

Getting back to the money, Pittsfield Cultural Affairs Director Meghan Whilden should provide Mayor Dan Bianchi and my right honorable good friends on the City Council with the Third Thursday books. What do they show? How much do the direct and indirect costs amount to? Those books should then be independently examined. Do the findings — that is, the hard data — make the economic cost-vs.-benefit case FOR or AGAINST Third Thursday?

Pittsfield Doesn’t Operate in the Abstract

In the abstract, TT sounds harmless and even beneficial. For most of its history, TT has provided a good measure of fun and enjoyment. In the city of Pittsfield, however, events do not unfold in the abstract. They unfold in gritty reality. The city is  reeling from nearly a generation of GOB destruction that have run the public schools into the ground, destroyed the economy, driven out respectability, left in tact one of the largest caches of industrial pollution in the world, and installed a cancerous political structure based on nepotism, favoritism, and corruption.

The corrosion now coming to flower is a generation of “newcomers” to town who are drug dependent, drug dealing, with criminal backgrounds, on welfare, mentally retarded, high maintenance, sponging off the public good, and sucking civic life away with their own irresponsibility.

As one of our correspondents asked, where were the parents of the 100+ Little Darlings who turned North Street in a battle zone? They are missing in action, too addled with crack, drinking their welfare checks, too selfish about their own fun, to be responsible parents. And that’s Element X in this discussion.

Element X: Changing Everything

We are seeing the first wave of a breakdown in society, one that is working its way through the Pittsfield Public School system and finding its unemployed, uneducated, ignorant young self on the streets with nothing to do and nowhere to go. There it litters, it loiters, and it sponges off taxpayers. That’s part of Element X.

Another aspect of Element X is the insane pace of life in 2012. Ask an honest teacher or educational adminstrator if smart phones are helping or hurting education. Are kids in the middle school more or less disciplined than they were even six years ago? Are they more or less respectful of rules and authority figures?

Cheap and sophisticated technology , which has the capacity for great good, has added an unrelentless, instant pace to life that wasn’t there even a scant few years ago. It has put capabilities into the hands of the young far beyond their ability to use intelligently (unless you think that pornography, video-game violence, desensitization to sex, etc. are good things).

Consequently, what no one else has addressed — which THE PLANET does here — finally must be confronted. Sure, it’s not 1958, when the city had nearly 60,000 people and 20,000 high-paying manufacturing jobs. But you know what? It’s not even 2006, six years ago, when Third Thursday could be conducted in safety.

In those six years, the seven and eight year old turned 13 and 14 years old. Add the lethal combination of bad parenting, easy access to drugs and weapons, too much technology, and not enough social guidance or direction, and guess what? Third Thursday is too dangerous to allow to continue.

Sure, we can make the June TT “safe” by installing metal detectors all over the place, frisking people, and putting every cop in Berkshire County on North Street, but that will just prove our point. TT cannot be held safely without heroic efforts and enormous expense to taxpayers.

Mayor Dan Bianchi: Pull the plug on TT, or risk one of two certainties: Either you (that is, taxpayers) have to pay through the nose for added security, or there will be continued trouble, perhaps with one or more people dying. Please, don’t force THE PLANET to be eerily prophetic once again. Pull TT, or there will be loss and mourning. 

It’s not 1958, but Element X tells us that we no longer even have “the good old days” of 2006. We are a city, and a society, out of control.

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STURGEON LANDS ON WTBR, TACONIC HIGH SCHOOL RADIO

Our good friend Bill Sturgeon announced that beginning Tuesday, he will be hosting a  radio show on WTBR 89.7 FM. The as-yet unnamed show will air from 8:30 to 10 a.m. immediately following “Good Morning Pittsfield” hosted by our right honorable good friend, John Krol.

Sturgeon says the show will feature “straight interviews” with guests “but will NOT be taking phone calls.” The emphasis is Sturgeon’s, a sly reference and dig to his troubles at WBRK AM 1340.

While it’s good to see more local talk, we have concerns about WTBR. The radio station was founded for the students of Taconic High School. It has gradually morphed, however, into a a sort of “last chance saloon” for adults who want to be on the air but, for whatever reason, are not on commercial AM radio or public broadcasting.

High School Radio Should be Run by High Schoolers, Not Adults

Either the adult programming is robbing students of the chance to do their own shows, or there is not enough student interest in WTBR to fill out the programming day. It has to be one or the other. There is no third possibility. If it’s the first, shame on station manager and student advisor Larry Kratka. If it’s the second, shame on taxpayers for funding a club students don’t care about. The $6,000 or so might be put to better use, say, as scholarships to BCC or restoring one of the city’s fading civic murals.

High school radio should be by, about, and for high schoolers. With all due respect to my good friends, WTBR should not be a landing place for adults who are frustrated air jockeys. If the kids don’t care enough to keep WBTR going, especially with an adviser as technically capable as Kratka, then it’s time for the station to sign off.

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SUNS LOOKING FOR TALENT, HOST FAMILIES, AS NEW SEASON NEARS

Pittsfield newest baseball team, the Pittsfield Suns, open the season at Beloved Wahconah Park (BWP) on June 7. The Suns are part of the Futures Collegiate Baseball League. They are managed by Jamie Keefe, who last season managed the Pittsfield Colonials at BWP. Keefe was named Can-Am manager of the year in 2011. He will also serve as Suns GM.

With the roster more-or-less in place (see team website, below) THE PLANET shares these announcements:

* Tickets for Opening Night and all home games go on sale beginning at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Suns office at BWP.

* The team is still looking for host homes for many of its players. Host families will received an honorarium of $300 and season’s tickets to all Suns home game.

* The Suns also need entertainers for the season.“Whether you are an established band or act, or a newbie looking for exposure for you and your group, we want to hear from you,”said Kevin McGuire, Suns assistant general manager and talent coordinator. “Clowns, jugglers, fire eaters, stilt walkers, bands, and dance troupes should get in touch with us right away—we want the Suns and Wahconah Park to be your launching pad to fame.”  Interested parties may email Kevin McGuire at kevin@pittsfieldsuns.com

* The Suns announced that tickets can be purchaded in person at the ballpark, by phone at 413-445-7867, or online at pittsfieldsuns.com.

* THE PLANET is looking for a baseball writer to cover Suns home games. Interested parties should send their qualifications to Europolis Management, PO Box 1268, Stockbridge, MA 01262.

It’s great to be welcoming another season of baseball to Wahconah Park. The Futures League will feature some of the nation’s top collegiate talent, some of whom will go on to be drafted by major league teams and graduate from the minors to the big leagues.

—————————————————

QUICKIES MOUNT UP

Here Comes the Sun — Speaking of Sun, does anyone other than the developer, CTC Electric, think a solar panel farm is the best possible use for the once-Edenic Ponterril recreation facility? Right, the Community Development Board thinks so. The board has approved the sun farm. THE PLANET thinks it’s another example of Pittsfield “settling” for the first thing that comes along. In this case, it’s the second. The huge condo development planned for the site never came to pass, even though it received the proper permits.

What ‘Leftover’ Funds? —With the federal wet kiss known as community block grant funds being reduced by Uncle Sam by about one-third compared to two years ago, the city will be in for “only” $1.1 million. Community Development Czarina Deanna Ruffer says the fund will be supplemented by $550,000 in “leftover funds.” Leftover from what? She didn’t say. Think anyone cares? Not one member of the public showed up for the hearing required by the feds. Even my Right Honorable Good Friends on the economic and community development subcommittee didn’t care. Two were missing, and one recused himself. That means that the five-member subcommittee had a grand total of two voting members present (Christine Yon and Kevin Morandi). They couldn’t even get a quorum. So exactly, Czarina, how important is this program? Not very, apparently. Apathy, apathy, apathy. And where in the heck did the Czarina gets more than a half a mill in “leftover” funds. We love that. She must have taken them home in a doggie bag from one of the downtown restaurants.

* Spelling “C-A-T” Easy for our Young Middle School Geniuses — In the city school spelling bee, won by Herberg, incidentally, young scholars had to spell “cow, pig, red, and black” in the practice round. We kid you not. The toughies were words like “neon, thirtieth, and pheasant.” It reminds of the Florida Department of Education, dismayed that only 27% of its fourth graders passed its version of MCAS. The Florida DOE decided to lower the passing grade by a third. With no added ability in reading, writing, or math, the students magically got “smarter.” Under the lower standards, 81% passed. Good Lord, what have we dun … er … done?

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HE THAT LOVES A ROSY CHEEK OR CORAL LIPS ADMIRE CAN REST EASY IN HIS HEART AND BASK COMFY IN ITS FIRE.

“OPEN THE WINDOW, AUNT MILLIE.”

LOVE TO ALL.

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Joe blow
Joe blow
11 years ago

I’m tattooed and have a very short haircut,does that make me a bad person? I don’t drink or do drugs and have never been arrested. My last speeding ticket was 20 years ago. Don’t judge a book by it’s cover!

levitan
levitan
Reply to  Joe blow
11 years ago

Hair is fun. You really can’t judge a person by hair. Next on my list of complaints, from my limited observation in North Adams, the mentally ill and disabled were vocal in their fear of drug dealers and thugs with whom they had to share apartments (by the good graces of our friends on Beacon Hill.)

Let’s not lump that group in with the undesirable pro/amateur crook.

Matthew
Matthew
Reply to  Joe blow
11 years ago

Dan said tatooed flesh like “wall-to-wall carpeting.” If you can fit that description, then yes, you will be a judged a little differently than the typical person. That’s just perception, and perception is reality. Sorry, you might need to accept that. Maybe you should read Dan’s column a little more “perceptively.” I remember when people used to say long hair was a possible sign of problematic youth, and now look at how that has changed. On you not drinking, doing drugs, or ever being arrested before, that’s awesome. Wish more people could follow that example.

JUST SAYING
JUST SAYING
Reply to  Joe blow
11 years ago

JB- Me too. That was an ignorant statement that DV made.

JUST SAYING
JUST SAYING
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

DV-
You know I am a Libertarian/Conservative. I believe in a traditional life style. But if someone else doesn’t, whatever. Don’t care.
I have a great job.
I shave my hair because I started to lose it young. I have a 3/4 sleeve and a half sleeve.
That makes me a bad guy?

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
11 years ago

WTBR should not be closed. It has kids on every afternoon and some evenings and is the BEST radio in the Berkshires.I think people pushing personal political agendas should be removed though.Krol is a propagandist and nothing more. He pushes the failed ruberto agenda and I’m sure Sturgeon will do the same. Let the kids run the talk shows and keep those two off the air.

taxmano
taxmano
Reply to  Jim Gleason
11 years ago

I agree with you Jim. I notice the Eagle gave has been taking letters agreeing with their postion, as well as giving Krol himself the opportunity.
What a sham.

Ed Shepardson
Ed Shepardson
11 years ago

The point you are missing is that the city is underwriting a station that is competing with commercial stations in the area for audience. These commercial stations pay taxes, hire and pay employees, donate to local charities, etc. What happens to these stations if WTBR captures all of the area’s listeners? I’m kind of a John Krol fan, but I think I’d be a lot happier listening to a student deliver the news. The experience might launch a few careers and keep some talented young people in the area.

Bull Durham
Bull Durham
Reply to  Ed Shepardson
11 years ago

WTBR is the least of any local commercial station’s financial worries. They are not competitors and don’t drain from the audience of BEC or BRK or any other stations. The demographic for commercial radio, especially in a small market, is now highly skewed to the ‘adult’ audience, 30 and over. They listen primarily to national talk radio shows, like Hannity and others.

I was a student at Taconic in the late 70’s and a member of then WTHS when it was only broadcast in the school through the speaker system, and was there when it became a ‘real’ station with a small transmitter (had to change its call sign to TBR because WTHS was already taken). Back then it was a feeder station that helped several students to eventually go on to real radio jobs. Unfortunately, with the way the radio employment market works today, that isn’t true anymore. It’s very difficult to get an on-air job in ‘local’ radio, because there are very few slots.

Satellite radio is what’s hurting commercial radio the most.

All that being said, it’s also very difficult for a station like TBR to fill all of its on-air slots, which is why they allow adults to do shows at times when the students can’t. Same is true in college radio – the MCLA station has several non-students doing shows, because without them there would be several blank spaces in the schedule… and dead air is worse than having adults do shows.

Ed Shepardson
Ed Shepardson
Reply to  Bull Durham
11 years ago

Bull,
You’re kind of right except when you are dealing with morning drive time and competing local programming as we are here. This time period garners the highest advertising rates.

Bull Durham
Bull Durham
Reply to  Ed Shepardson
11 years ago

I used to work in the business… for man years… the locals do not lose ad revenue in morning drive to WTBR listenership. Rates are not based on an actual audience number, because they no longer do Arbitron books for this market, haven’t for decades, it’s too small. You pay more for morning drive because it’s morning drive and ‘generally’ has the highest listening audience, but there is no way to quantify that any more unless you’re in a large rated market.

Ed Shepardson
Ed Shepardson
Reply to  Bull Durham
11 years ago

I’m aware that the county is not rated. That’s why I specifically asked what would happen if WTBR captured ALL the area’s listeners.. Again, with city assistance. I’d be willing to bet that, when selling their morning drive, local sales reps have already heard “nobody listens to you guys anymore, they listen to the Krol Show.”

Silent Majority
Silent Majority
Reply to  Ed Shepardson
11 years ago

Good point Ed. Let the students do the news and the shows, like you say, it might lead to not just a job but a career and a life. Don’t always agree with DV but he’s right, let the kids in kick the adults out.

Teecha Teecha
Teecha Teecha
11 years ago

Speaking of the typical citizen in the downtown area. Has ANYONE look at the family watchdog site for registered sex offenders? Dear God man there’s a plethora of rapists and child molesters in the north street/tyler street downtown areas. Unbelievable!

Scott
Scott
Reply to  Teecha Teecha
11 years ago

there is typically more sex crimes and offenders in more rural areas.

Shakes His Head
Shakes His Head
11 years ago

Hopefully the festivities at BWP will execute more proficiently this year with an organization that has experience running a baseball team.

nero played while rome burned
nero played while rome burned
11 years ago

Let the downtown businesses determine the fate of TT.

Get the adults off the school radio station..

Privatize the school system and administer the GED exam to all teachers-supervisors- and commiteeman-the results would scare you..

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  nero played while rome burned
11 years ago

And perform spot drug tests on those who rely upon taxpayers for their paycheck.

GMHeller
GMHeller
11 years ago

Mr. Valenti, if the Mayor and the City Council are so collectively spineless as to give-in to a rowdy mob by abandoning a monthly street festival, then flash mobs are the least of Pittsfield’s problems.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

It also seems to me that if Pittsfield city officials are going to allow violent mobs to dictate downtown cultural life, then the city is not just dying — it’s dead, and the punks are just picking over the corpse.

levitan
levitan
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

Heller,

Pittsfield isn’t dead. Neither was NYC in the bad old days of the ’70’s or Philadelphia in the ’80’s though it sure seemed so. It isn’t as bad as New Orleans with the Mayor taking orders from Washington and everyone screwing each other.

It’s just in a bad state. I blame asphalt projects. Stop the asphalt projects, cut the gov. in half, bring in a charter school, and you’d be amazed.

GMHeller
GMHeller
11 years ago

Mr. Valenti,
In Re: Bill Sturgeon’s new gig on high school radio.
It sure doesn’t say much for the state of broadcasting in Pittsfield that a daily call-in talk show that honestly addresses the issues-of-the-day is anathema.
Why are so many in the local power structure (Liberal Democrats, aren’t they?) so afraid of open public discussion?

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

@Heller,
Sturgeon won’t be taking calls on his new show, just as he wanted to not take calls at WBRK. He will spout the same nonsense Krol does every day, that all is good in Pittsfield except the Mayor and all was great under the phony ruberto. No accountability to anyone, just nonsense spouting.

Chet Murphy
Chet Murphy
Reply to  Jim Gleason
11 years ago

Yet you will listen to him Jim

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  Chet Murphy
11 years ago

No, I didn’t listen for the last 4 months he was on and won’t now.

teecha teecha
teecha teecha
11 years ago

GM – Because the liberal democrats can’t have a logical argument due to the fact that most of what they argue is illogical. When someone steps up to ‘debate’ an issue, they cannot rebute without attacking and whining about being victimized

Andrew
Andrew
Reply to  teecha teecha
11 years ago

It’s funny because you can’t go on Fox News without hearing Republicans whining about being victimized as well.

GMHeller
GMHeller
Reply to  Andrew
11 years ago

Is this ‘Andrew’ aka ‘Andrew Stevens’ aka ‘Praxis33’ again, the guy who lied about being a branch manager at Greylock Federal Credit Union and then spread misformation about GFCU?

Andrew
Andrew
Reply to  GMHeller
11 years ago

No. I was Andrew on this site before all that nonsense. I don’t have other aliases and I don’t troll people. Let it go.

levitan
levitan
Reply to  teecha teecha
11 years ago

I doubt few these days qualify as Liberal or Conservative. We have parties now.

bobbyd
bobbyd
11 years ago

I totally understand the concerns about TT. One of my children was recently on a field trip to see the manufacture of the Berkshire Carousel. He tells me they were told that concerns about susceptibility to vandalism has made it likely that it will not be located in Pittsfield, but that it will be housed permanently in the mall in Lanesboro.

If someone had a disease that was causing the loss of body parts, what would we say about a doctor who said the only recourse was to amputate before losing parts to the disease process? If there was no other choice and the procedure would eliminate the disease, putting the patient back on the road to health, great. If not, wouldn’t we expect the physician to treat the underlying disease and save as much function as possible?

Dawn
Dawn
Reply to  bobbyd
11 years ago

This town needs an enema.

Andy
Andy
11 years ago

HEY! I resemble that remark Dan! This washed up adult enjoys his Tuesday night time slot every week (if the school isn’t locked!)! It’s a nice roster of student and adult volunteers that take to the airwaves each and every week at WTBR to keep the station vibrant. Granted, some of the songs get played have been beat to death since the Carter administration, but in the end, it’s great alternative to the other local offerings. The days of commercial stations featuring almost all local on-air talent are gone, which is a shame. Sometimes WTBR is difficult to listen to, but for the most part it’s better than nothing. Satellite, ipods and on-line streaming are all killing commercial radio, it’s not just one thing.

Andy
Andy
Reply to  Andy
11 years ago

EDITED TO READ PROPERLY

Granted, some of the songs THAT get played have been beat to death since the Carter administration, but in the end, it’s great alternative to the other local offerings.

Andy
Andy
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Thanks, Jonathan Hanson and I try to make it fun and interesting. The “witty” banter, the music under the banter, Rappin’ Rodney, Rick Springfield along side some great underground music. It’s fun to do, that’s for sure.

Maxwell Edison
Maxwell Edison
11 years ago

I used to think Mary and Joe Kapanski meant “regular folks”. The kind of people who might enjoy the affordable fun of Third Thursday. But this post reveals that Mary and Joe Kapanski are really just a couple crabby old GE retirees who would bitch about not being able to park their Buick right in front of The Lantern during Third Thursday.

Chet Murphy
Chet Murphy
Reply to  Maxwell Edison
11 years ago

Max Good call!

Dee
Dee
11 years ago

As much as I avoid North Street like a plague, I don’t feel that cancelling future TT’s would be the answer. I think it would be better to go back to the original design (intent) and perhaps scale back some of the carnivale-type attractions. If it were to return to a more family-friendly environment then perhaps the slags would stay to the side streets until the respectable element scurries away at 8:00 p.m. That being said, I also think more than two bicycle cops should be patrolling the street. I know the days of beat cops is gone, but maybe it’s time to reinstate it.

Now onto the adults raiding the radio station. This just seems so desperate to me. Obviously local radio has no interest in the format that Bill Sturgeon wants to promote. Perhaps it’s time for him to hang up his microphone rather than forcing his way into a student station.

Scott
Scott
11 years ago

Face it: TT has become a draw for the degenerate generation. It is no longer a safe event.

No it hasn’t you seem to not like anything downtown you even scoffed at the skate park which gives young people an outlet.

gang violence is out-of-control and where honest citizens can no longer venture downtown without fear of their safety.

stop it just be careful at night.

Dawn
Dawn
Reply to  Scott
11 years ago

Dan suffers from acute old-man-itis.

GEE Whiz
GEE Whiz
Reply to  Dawn
11 years ago

DAWN suffers from acute too-scared-to-face-facts-itis. Must be PMS. Keep rocking the boat, DV. Your army stands ready.

Ed
Ed
Reply to  Dawn
11 years ago

The best part of suffering from acute old-man-itis is that the old man can accurately and truthfully say that he made it to old age. Can you even guarantee that you’ll make it to your next birthday ? You may never suffer from old-person-itis. Think about it. maybe he did something you’ll never see.

Scott
Scott
Reply to  Dawn
11 years ago

Dawn I was going to say the same thing! Dan, your age is showing.

chuck garivaltis
chuck garivaltis
11 years ago

Here’s a trip down memory lane with an eye toward the future.

The return of “upstreet” as a name to define a geographical area just dosen’t feel right. Upstreet is the area from Park Square to Madison Avenue. For a century it was a retail, financial, recreational street. It’s where parades and victory celebrations were held. There was community pride. Upstreet is the place where it all came together for adults and children. It was safe. There was a cop on the beat around the clock. It was a fun place. It’s when the Yankees had the Babe, Mickey and Yogi. Remember what happened when they departed? The Yankeees came in on the bottom. Times do change.

Upstreet was where one could meet O.B.Joyful, Charley the Runner, Danbury Dan, Bollicky Balls. O.B.Joyful was Pittsfields first long haired,, bearded/hippie. Charley the Runner carried his entire worldly possesions in the pockets of his oversized overcoat every day of the year. He was in his 60’s, always ran, and never gave up his dream of running the 25 mile Boston Marathon.How can any community replace these characters? Contemporary nicknames were Dudy, Bonzo, Meat Hooks, Sleepy, Poncho, Buff, Bug Eye, Tiger, Moose, Potatoes, Mouse, Beaver, Dill, Bones, Buddy, Rags, Peanut, Chico, Dangles, Toot, Spits, Brickhead, Scoop, Bourbon Joe, Potato man, Spec, Radar, Kracky, Baldy, Butch, Kirby. These names had nothing to do with ethnicity or physical characteristics, It was an era when boys, for whatever reason were given nicknames in childhood that stuck for a lifetime. Nicknames are also a relic of the past.Do you know any of these guys? I bet Jim McCaffrey is the only one who can identify 90% of them.

It was a time when the central meeting place for almost everything was upstreet. For youngsters the exception was sukmmer school vacation where the meeting place was your neighborhood park. Upstreet wasn’t just retail, movies and
recreation centers. It was an interesting, exciting place to visit. For all age groups it was where the action took place. To the horror of parents O.B. Joyful would give youngsters peanuts – the shell kind. The peanuts were tasty and fresh. Best hamgurgs and pie ever was at the Bridge Lunch and best priced dinners were at the Rosa. Frankenstein and the Muffy would scare you at the Kameo and Strand for a dime. But it wasn’t inflation that killed Upstreet. It was time marching on.

There’s no harm in trying to resurrect the feeling of community that existed when upstreet/downtown/North Street (whatever you wanted to call it) was the beating heart of Pittsfield. City officials are to be commended for their vision on cultural attractions. But without major retail anchors upstreet is never going to attract crowds with money to spend that is necessary to make the area a shoppers destination. The automobile, cheap gas,(compare us with Canada or Europe per gallon) ,and suburbia, have forever changed old downtown/upstreet centers.The new “upstreet” is Coltsville where thousands of shoppers from numerous communities spend time and money.

Maybe we should celebrate Coltsville as the new upstreet for Berkshire County. It has highway access, parking, breathing room, restaurants, retail destinations, and railroad access. And lots of shoppers.

What’s not to like about Coltsville? There are people who are spending, parking, and all the amenities that made our “upstreet” a long ago nostalgic North Street destination. Let’s face it. Even without O.B.Joyful, Meat Hooks, and Bug Eye, Coltaville is where the action is and will be for the foreseeable future.

Maxwell Edison
Maxwell Edison
Reply to  danvalenti
11 years ago

Coltsville is an agoraphobia causing geography of nowhere. It’s like Florida but without the warm weather.

Jim Gleason
Jim Gleason
Reply to  chuck garivaltis
11 years ago

Great piece, Chuck. I know who some of those guys are from my Dad. I’m old enough to remember upstreet as you describe it, in part.I was young in the 60’s and early 70’s and remember some of the things you describe.I remember going to Besse Clarke on Saturday, looking at the new baseball gloves and the latest basketball sneakers, wishing you had the money to buy the best ones.Having enough to go to Sub-N-Beef for a Big Beef sandwich and a soda, then going to the CYC or Club and playing ball the rest of the day. Good times that kids today will never know. The older I get the more I miss them.

Silent Majority
Silent Majority
Reply to  Jim Gleason
11 years ago

Nice piece by Chuck and good memories by Jim. I remember “upstgreet” it’s a place that today seems like a fairy tale. Remembering back.

taxmano
taxmano
11 years ago

Just finished watching the school committee meeting for a few good laughs, and I wasn’t disappointed. What a bunch of morons! The committee (except Terry), not the candidates.
What makes Alfie an expert at hiring people? Didn’t he almost get fired for never showing up for work? Except for his connections, he’d be out on his ass.
Also, the wear and tear is obvious on Jake the third now. He came across as surly and he looked ragged. Let’s be merciful and let him get out of town early.

levitan
levitan
Reply to  taxmano
11 years ago

What a bunch of morons!

I noticed that too.

chuck garivaltis
chuck garivaltis
11 years ago

Dan

What an oversight! How did I ever forget Itch? My old teammate and one of our great shortstops.

Coltsville traffic patterns can be improved. During my time on the city council I served with ward one councillor Art Dugas. Art was a GE engineer and he presented an improved traffic pattern to address the increased flow of cars. Of course, it was denied without a second look. Art was one of our better city councilors.You won’t be surprised to hear he was voted out of office.