Ontario

Last Chance to See Giant Bryant Park Snow Globe

Last Chance to See Giant Bryant Park Snow Globe
Gothamist.

Tomorrow is the last chance to view what could possibly be the creepiest advertising campaign to hit Manhattan in recent memory, the world's largest snowglobe in Bryant Park.

Live actors dressed in ice-hockey, ski, and snow-boarding gear have been holed up in the two-story tall vinyl dome that's 20 feet in diameter since Friday to promote tourism in Ontario.  read more »

Make Way For Gosling

Ryan Gosling.
Denis rouvre/Corbis Outline
Ryan Gosling.

“My mom and sister are acting like they won the lottery.  read more »

The Afternoon Wrap: Wednesday

  • In the ongoing quest to find the city's scariest bar, the NY Press heads to the Navy Yard Cocktail Lounge, where ice-less $3 cocktails and Tupperware Cheez Doodles are a reminder of what Brooklyn was like before Hollywood came. [NYP]
  • Who knew Canadian real estate had become so exceedingly ritzy? In Ontario, for example, a "legacy home" on the market for $45 million comes with 14 acres--not to mention a baseball diamond and private pebble beach. [Forbes]
  • But the real French speakers have the real real estate prices: The average price per square foot of Paris' apartments is around $2,250*. (In other news: France says "non!" to non-chic megastores.) [Matrix]
  • *UPDATE: Our math was corrected (we kid you not) in an email from a former Goldman Sachs executive director: "Please note that 1 square meter = 10.76 square feet. Based on the correct conversion ratio, prices per square foot in Paris seem to be in line with New York." Is that true? Can any Francophile mathematicians set us straight?
  • Rendering of the Week: Frank Gehry's plan for the future United Arab Emirate Guggenheim is not your mother's Upper East Side museum. Does the photo above look like haute, techy, post-post-modern glory--or a pile of rubble? [Dezeen]
  • - Max Abelson

Curious Quasi-Memoir From a Superlative Writer

Alice Munro (b. 1931) is the author of 11 collections of stories and one novel.
Derek Shapton
Alice Munro (b. 1931) is the author of 11 collections of stories and one novel.

The title of this odd, anomalous volume comes from an episode early on, in which a Scots ancestor of  read more »