Tag: Huntington

Marky Ramone brings the blitzkrieg to town

Marky Ramone poses with his memoir.

Long Islanders filled Book Revue storefront in Huntington Tuesday night for a special appearance from Marky Ramone, drummer of the seminal punk band the Ramones.

Born Marc Steven Bell, the 62-year-old Brooklyn native spent 15 years drumming for the iconic band and has played with a variety of musicians dating back to his high school years. He is the only surviving member of the iconic group, and visited the North Shore to take part in a Q&A session before signing memorabilia and copies of his new autobiography, “Punk Rock Blitzkrieg: My Life As A Ramone.”

Leading to the night’s event, roughly 100 rabid Ramones fans anxiously awaited Bell’s arrival. Among them was Smithtown resident Cynthia Cone, 42.

Cone said that when she was a teenager, she dated a drummer who turned her on to the Ramones, and it wasn’t long before she was hooked.

“Their shows were so high-energy,” said Cone. “If you listen to their bootlegs, it’s almost like you hear the countdown, and then it takes you a second to register what they’re even playing because they were so raw.”

Despite not achieving the success they deserved while the band’s original members were still alive, Cone said there’s no denying the Ramones’ impact.

“You hear so many bands like Rage Against the Machine, and even hip hop artists [credit] the Ramones. They were just such a huge influence across the board.”

Bell started playing drums in 1971 for the hard rock group known as Dust and would later audition for New York Dolls before working with Wayne “Jayne” County and Backstreet Boys. Later, he played with Richard Hell and the Voidoids, joining the band for the recording of their first record, “Blank Generation.”

In 1978, while drinking cheap beer at the legendary dive bar and venue CBGB, Bell was approached by bassist and soon-to-be band mate Douglas Glenn Colvin, also known as Dee Dee, and was asked to play drums for the band.

Asked about being on the road with the Ramones, Bell shared his experience touring America in the band’s van and likened it to being trapped in a floating mental institution on wheels.

“We had our trusty Ford Econoline 15-passenger van and we all had our assigned seats, Bell said. “We had a lot of quality time together and we were all different individuals — maybe that’s why the music was so great.”

Later, Bell discussed his band’s role in the 1979 Roger Corman-produced cult classic, “Rock ‘N’ Roll High School,” a musical comedy in which rebellious teens get even with their school principal against the backdrop of Ramones musical performances scattered throughout the film.

“[Film director] Allan Arkush came to New York and saw us play [and] he loved it. We toured our way from the east to west coast in 1979 and the next thing we knew, it was ‘Rock ‘N’ Roll High School,’” Bell said. “Making the movie was interesting [and] it was pretty funny seeing four aliens, me, Johnny, Joey and Dee Dee, in the movie amongst the normals.”

See the original article here.

Street Artist Cuts His Own Path In Town

Travis Hunt, 38, holding one of his illustrations, is a Huntington-based artist who creates artwork out of discarded items and offers them to passersby in Huntington village. 

Some people slow down for a quick look. Others come to a complete stop, if only for a few moments, to take a closer look, and move on. Still others linger to observe the neatly arranged hand-drawn illustrations that line the brick wall outside Starbucks along Wall Street in Huntington.

Drawings of ancient warriors, Vikings and dragons leap from the paper on top of cardboard or sheets of white construction paper stapled to thick card stock, while interpretations of animals, limbs often extended outward and cut off at the corners of the page are complemented by trimmed bar fliers stapled to the canvas.

In Huntington village, Travis Hunt, 38, is either the guy you’ve always wondered about, or someone you’ve known for years simply as Travis.

His hair, matted and long, is tucked beneath an orange baseball cap that he wears backwards. Occasionally, he’ll scratch at his beard or shift his weight under his blue walking cane, but he will usually smile or strike up a conversation with anyone interested in his creations.

When he’s showing his work, Hunt, who lives in Huntington, is invariably sitting Indian-style due to his club foot, which he has had since birth. It causes him to walk with a limp.

In addition to Starbucks, Hunt can be found at Escape Pod Comics on Main Street, at The Book Revue on New York Avenue, or even hanging around on weekends near the farmer’s market. Vendors and regulars to those locations know Travis well, and likely have either bought or been given one of his artworks.

Before his parents’ separation when he was a young child, Hunt lived in upstate New York, where his father’s family resided. They would make trips to Long Island to visit with his mother’s grandparents. By 7, Long Island became his permanent home.

Remembering his time upstate fondly, particularly because of his exposure to nature, Hunt said the woods and wildlife populating the area surrounding his childhood home inspired him to become an artist.

“Because I’m from upstate New York, I like to do a lot of nature-based drawings of animals,” said Hunt. “But, I also grew up with dinosaurs, and I used to watch monster movies as a kid.”

Aside from nature, there are facets of popular culture that he also considers inspirational, including comic books, New York City graffiti and underground music.

Hunt has also been known to fashion sculptures out of tin foil and plastic and has also tried his hand at performance art, which includes juggling and magic routines he’s worked on to entertain young parishioners visiting Huntington’s Central Presbyterian Church.

Rev. David Aldridge, Central’s pastor since 2005, has known Hunt for seven years and first met him when he worked with the YMCA before that.

“Travis has become part of the fabric of Huntington,” said Aldridge. “He’s on the ground and people walk by him and they don’t see the attention that he gives to his art.”

“He takes a certain amount of pride to be able to take things that are thrown away and to make another use of them, to recycle them and to turn them into artwork and I think that’s pretty cool,” he added.

A small selection of original artwork created by Huntington artist Travis Hunt.

Hunt attended Flower Hill Primary School in Huntington and graduated in 1989. During the years he attended the school, he admitted to having a learning disability, while also being teased by other students because of his foot.

“There were a lot of people who looked down on me and told me that they didn’t think I could do anything, and I used to believe them,” Hunt said. “I had it tough. Back then, they didn’t have names for dyslexia and stuff like that.”

Feeling the pressure of school life and struggling to keep up with a demanding curriculum, Hunt would often daydream and sought the comfort that came with drawing pieces of imagery he’d imagined while deep in thought.

Later, he attended Manor Plains High School, which is part of Western Suffolk BOCES. Hunt said he attempted to learn multiple vocations, but found that it was difficult sticking to one field.

Following graduation from Manor Plains in 1998, Hunt went into janitorial work and was working with the Family Service League, which provides housing and health services for the homeless.

“I went there for a vocational work program, but at the same time I did food service there, and I had to work with some people that were mentally not there.”

He said that he tried studying automotive repair, “which didn’t work out so well,” especially because he would be picked on and teased by other students because of his disability.

He also tried electrical engineering, but he “kept burning circuit boards and all of that.”

Finally, a friend of his recommended a Dix Hills vocational school where they had an art advertising program, and that’s where Hunt says he felt most at home.

“It was really cool. I signed myself up for that program where you got to draw your own signs and you even got to write and publish your own comic book, which I thought was pretty cool,” said Hunt.

After a while, he connected with Skills Unlimited, a vocational school for the disabled, where he received job coaching that prepared him to work as a custodian at the YMCA, which he did for about 13 years.

“I mopped and took care of the garbage, but I also looked out for the kids there,” Hunt said. “I made stuff that was considered a waste of time back in my school, and it was a good thing that I worked at the Y because I wanted to show all of the kids that you can make art out of anything.”

Hunt’s own work has not gone unnoticed.

Menachem Luchins, owner of Escape Pod Comics, said Hunt was one of the first visitors to his shop when he opened three years ago and returned to go through the old comics and “talk about how much he used to love this stuff.”

“Eventually, within a month or so, he started showing me his art, showing customers his art and occasionally, when we’ve had big events, he’s come and talked to people about what he does and what he likes about it.”

Luchins said Hunt’s work is open to interpretation. Speaking about its general appeal, however, he says there’s definitely an “outsider art feel to it.”

Huntington resident Beverly Pribek, a customer at the Starbucks where Hunt shows his work quite often, said she always seen him sitting on the sidewalk observing the passersby.

“Huntington is an artsy town and it seems appropriate that people are sketching and drawing like Travis is. He seems to be using black chalk when he draws, and I often see him with his artwork sort of piling up on the sidewalk.”

She added, “I do see him as a fixture and he’s the only one I’ve ever seen doing what it is he does.”

Coffee house employee Todd Campofranco said Hunt “has a good soul and good intentions. He shares joy with people – that’s the way human nature should be.”

Travis says he believes in his artwork, but he doesn’t make a lot of money off of it – a few dollars a week on average – and he occassionally deals with harassment.

“I do deal with ignorance, but I deal with some cool parts, too. That’s why I keep going to work and I keep doing what I do. That’s just what works for me.”

See the original article here.

Huntington Keeps Pluggin’ At Retro Game Expo

Ben Farrell, 22, sells and trades video games and accessories at the Keep Pluggin retro video game event and fundraiser on Saturday, which he organized to benefit the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Huntington. 

Huntington’s first retro video game event was hosted Oct. 17 at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship. Gamers, collectors and vendors were welcomed for a day of gaming fun and fundraising, with proceeds going to the fellowship.

The event, dubbed Keep Pluggin, is the brainchild of Ben Farrell, 22, formerly of Huntington, an avid gamer and video game collector with childhood ties to the fellowship. 

In the months leading to the event, Farrell said that he was focused on acquiring video games and establishing relationships with dealers who he welcomed to attend the event for a fee of $50 per table. 

“The challenging aspect was just learning everything because I didn’t know anything about doing this kind of thing,” Farrell said. “There are a lot of awesome volunteers at the fellowship here, and I probably couldn’t have done it without them.”

He added that his video game expertise proved to be a valuable resource for event planners who would have had a difficult time running the event without him. 

“That’s where the mix really comes in well,” Farrell said, describing his working relationship with members and planners of the fellowship’s religious community.

Farrell’s father, Ken, is the owner of Just Kids Nostalgia, a company founded 35 years ago as a brick and mortar on Main Street in Huntington. The business’ physical storefront became a staple in the community, selling games and pop collectibles before transitioning to an online-only retailer. 

“I’m kind of aware of what the market has been in my generation, which is Howdy Doody and the like,” Ken, 65, said. “My son Ben has moved into the modern era, which is 80s and 90s video games, which is the up-and-coming market and makes Howdy Doody look like it’s over.”

Ken has seen his son and his own business moving into video gaming as a larger and more viable market, one that resonates more with today’s younger people, but admits that the store had an effect on his children, including Farrell. 

“I think it was a blessing because I was exposed to a lot growing up in terms of pop culture,” Farrell said. “And just the social aspects of life and dealing with people and owning a business, it was all just around me.”

Farrell said that he was about 10 years old when his father launched Just Kids Nostalgia, and that his experience helping his dad and brother as a child at the shop really shaped his interests, and later led him to use his knowledge to help benefit his community. 

“It was a good thing to be exposed to and I appreciate it a lot on the basis of being exposed to pop culture because I like knowing things offhand. I’ve always been around records and posters, movies and memorabilia so I kind of know a lot of stuff about that,” Farrell said.

Saturday’s event saw roughly 20 dealers and private collectors selling and trading a wide selection of thousands of retro video games from Centipede to Pac-Man along with classic gaming consoles like, Nintendo, Sega Genesis and Playstation. 

Keep Pluggin also encouraged free arcade play and had an assortment of old gaming consoles hooked to about 25 televisions located throughout the facility where both children and adults had the option of playing casually or competing for prizes. 

Sitting with his father, 9-year-old gamer Luigi Scolieri was one of those who attended the event. Luigi stared intently at a 34-inch TV screen while playing Donkey Kong on an old Nintendo Entertainment System and attempted to blast through the game’s levels to win the Donkey Kong competition.

“I think what they do here is really cool,” Scolieri said. “I usually play old games like Donkey Kong, which I’m good at, but I play Halo and Mario Kart 8 on the Wii U, too. I hope that I win this contest.”

Liza Burby, a former president of the fellowship’s board, said that she’s been a member for 28 years, and after seeing the risk of the organization’s annual renaissance former fair fundraiser, which she says was very weather-dependent and labor-intensive, she was willing to help facilitate Farrell’s gaming event project. 

“This is an old building and it takes a lot just to keep the lights on,” Burby said. “Demographics are changing with churches and I think every single church has membership issues and so we’re just trying to be as creative as possible with what we do to fundraise.”

See the original article here.

Little Shelter Opens Dog Park Thanks To $30K Donation

Dominick Dolce, a one-year staff member of the Little Shelter Animal Rescue and Adoption Center in Huntington comforts Polly, a boxer-pitbull mix waiting to be adopted at the shelter.

 A new dog park opened Oct. 6 for animals at Little Shelter Animal Rescue and Adoption Center in Huntington, thanks to a $30,000 donation from real estate firm Signature Premier Properties.

Established in 1927, Little Shelter was chosen by the Huntington-based Signature in recognition for outstanding service and participation in Signature Cares, a community giveback program overseen by Signature Premier owner Peter Morris and his colleague, Kathy Kirby-Viard.

“Every year, Pete and Kathy pick a charity that is important to them and important to the company and to Signature Cares, and this year it was all about the animals,” said Lisa Rosof, chief financial officer of Signature.

Rosof said that it all started with a phone call from Morris to the shelter asking their special programs manager, Arleen Leone, if there was anything Signature Cares could do for the shelter.

“We spoke with Arleen and she said, ‘Well, I know this could never be, but we have a hill that we would like to turn into a dog park for the dogs to run and play,’ and Pete said, ‘Let’s make it happen.’”

Work on the project began in the summer, where the 1.5-acre property on the grounds of the shelter underwent a radical transformation.

“The property was overgrown and it was filled with sticker bushes and it was really unkempt,” said David Ceely, Little Shelter’s executive director. “And what they’ve done is they’ve leveled it, and they’ve landscaped it and shored up all of our fencing so all of our dogs have this one-and-a-half acre piece of property to come off leash.”

Ceely says that the dog park allows dogs recreational playing time to bring them out of their kennels.

“The park will help prepare them for their new home and exercise them while they’re at the shelter, too,” Ceely added.

“A lot of people were involved in this,” said Rosof. “It took a lot of vision, it took a lot of thought, and it took time and caring to make sure that this project would be a success, and I’m happy to say that it is.”

See the original article here.

Blue Devils Fall, But Homecoming Smiles Shine

The Huntington marching band displays their shields in a showing of school pride during their parade march through the town streets on the day of the Huntington Homecoming event held on Sept. 26. (Photo / Jim Hoop)

The beautiful weekend weather served as an appropriate backdrop for Huntington High School’s daylong homecoming festivities Saturday afternoon, despite a 28-20 Blue Devils’ loss to Half Hollow Hills West.

Hundreds of people of all ages started the day off by marching to the beat of the Blue Devil Marching Band during a midday parade through the center of town and up New York Avenue.

The crowd’s destination was Huntington’s turf field, which hundreds of fans gathered around to watch the Blue Devils duke it out with the Colts of Hills West.

Huntington jumped out to an early 6-0 lead in the first quarter with 8-yard touchdown grab by Jahmik Curry, thrown by William Wright, which whipped the crowd into a frenzy.

The Colts responded, though, and the teams sat even, 14-14, at halftime. Hills West ultimately edged-out Huntington, 28-20.

But the Blue Devils’ halftime show was explosive.

A performance by the Blue Devil Marching Band, inspired by Dante’s Divine Comedy, incorporated rattling chains that accented a blaring horn section. Following the marching band, the Huntington Highsteppers performed before Alexandra Berwick and Dan Mollitor were crowned homecoming king and queen.

This year’s parade-float competition pitted each of Huntington’s classes against each other to see whose float best represented the homecoming theme, Dr. Seuss.

“I think it all starts with our kids when they’re building the floats for their class,” said Bob Piccola, of Huntington, father of two Huntington high schoolers. “It’s actually pretty neat when they take it through the town and the businesses open up their windows and are rooting everybody on.”

He added, “It all leads up to this homecoming, which is a pretty great thing for the town. It brings our community together.”

A panel of judges awarded Huntington’s sophomores with first place for their float inspired by “Horton Hears a Who.” The seniors and juniors took second and third place respectively with floats reflecting “The Cat in the Hat” and “The Lorax.”

As the homecoming festivities drew to a close, many people marched back to their cars with smiles on their faces, despite the Blue Devils’ loss.

“It was just a beautiful day featuring a fantastic turnout,” Superintendent James Polansky said to the crowd before kickoff. “Thank you to the many from all of our schools who participated.”

See the original article here.