Harvard Square Loses An Institution: The Chair Club

Published September 1, 2010

A group of regulars set up chairs outside Cardullo's in Harvard Square to watch Red Sox game through the window on the shop's flat screen TV.  (Andrew Phelps/WBUR)

A group of regulars would set up chairs outside Cardullo's in Harvard Square to watch Red Sox games through the window on the shop's flat screen TV. (Andrew Phelps/WBUR)

Shock! Outrage! Wicked Local Cambridge reports:

No more TV: Cardullo’s shuts down Harvard Square’s iconic chair club

As news spread that Cardullo’s Gourmet Shoppe on Brattle Street had taken down its iconic big-screen television, members of the so-called chair club grieved the sudden passing of a coveted tradition.

“Shocked doesn’t even begin to describe how I’m feeling,” said Kelly Dugas Coveney, the First Lady of the chair club, an informal group of Red Sox fans who set up shop on the sidewalk outside Cardullo’s during games.

The sidewalk crowd would sometimes swell into the dozens. Ben Affleck and Dennis Leary were known to make appearances.

I had the pleasure of meeting some of the regulars in May for a WBUR story with Bob Oakes. (We loved them so much, Bob bought them a pizza.) If you haven’t already, stop what you’re doing and listen to this story. It’s as charming as it is hilarious.

Store president Donez Cardullo said the TV was removed as part of an ongoing effort to “clean up” the 60-year-old business.

“We’ve been working diligently to clean up the shop and regain our foothold in the food industry in Boston,” Cardullo said. “The time has come to stick to our mission, which is quality food and good service.”

Comments on the story are mixed:

cellrazor: How dare Cardullo’s not give any notice on something that was given away free and without promise. How dare they deprive the common citizen of their rights to sit on a lawn chair on public sidewalk blocking foot traffic while watching a display of programming which violates the terms of use against public broadcast. What is America coming to?

redbeard: I don’t tend to watch sports, but it always pleased me to see the ‘chair club’ and sometimes the positive feeling has spurred me to go into the store and buy myself a little treat, just because it reminded me of the fact that I like the place. I certainly won’t be AVOIDING Cardullos because of this, but perhaps I might not notice them as often, and noticing them while I’m on my way past for unrelated reasons is a prime factor in me going in.

What do you think? Have you ever walked past the chair club — maybe taken in a game from the sidewalk? Could this help or hurt business in crowded Harvard Square?

Wednesday Morning: Earl Closes In, T Tweets

Published September 1, 2010

What’s news on a hot Boston morning:

Cape, Islands Are Earl’s Most Likely Target

Weather forecasters are keeping a watchful eye on Hurricane Earl this morning, wondering if it will travel parallel to the New England coast and just give the area a glancing blow, or if it will move closer to shore, lashing the state with heavy surf, high winds, and rain. (Globe)

Cahill Committee Didn’t Pay State Tax

State Treasurer Timothy P. Cahill acknowledged last night that his campaign committee failed to pay an estimated $15,000 in state income taxes over the past decade, as required by law. (Globe)

If You See Something, Tweet Something

The T vowed to set up a Twitter page for customers to report crime tips after a Herald story about a tweeting T rider who posted a real-time photo on the social networking site of a man allegedly exposing himself aboard a crowded Red Line train. The man in the photo was later arrested. (Herald)

Don’t Breathe Too Deeply Today

The National Weather Service has declared an air quality alert for this afternoon, because the Boston area could see unhealthy levels of ozone as all that stagnant air just sits there, melting us with its slurpy tendrils of humidity. (Universal Hub)

Harvard Student Center Beckons Non-Believers

Across the street from the Catholic student center and not far from the Jewish Hillel house: It’s the nation’s first-ever “humanist” student center for atheists and non-believers, complete with a chaplain. (Radio Boston)

What stories are you following today?

What Does Boston Think Of Obama's Iraq Address?

Published September 1, 2010

There’s surprisingly little chatter in the Boston blogosphere about President Obama‘s Iraq address. All I could find is this piece in the Attleboro Sun Chronicle.

NPR’s Corey Flintoff reports a good summary of what’s behind us and what’s ahead. On Point recently aired a good discussion with top reporters Anthony Shadid and Liz Sly.

Is the lack of talk a sign we’ve moved on? Are we more worried about our jobs? What does Boston think of Mr. Obama’s Iraq address? Tell us in the comments, or respond in the “Assignments” section of our iPhone app.

At 90, Radio News Is Alive And Well

Published August 31, 2010

John F. Kennedy in a 1951 interview with WBUR (Boston University Photography)

That's what we call a "good get." (Boston University Photography)

In this, WBUR’s 60th year, Aug. 31 marks the 90th anniversary of what is believed to be the first radio newscast, Wired reports:

The exact headlines of that day are of no historical significance, but with this local newscast a nascent medium finally conveys a message so compelling that it would soon capture the world’s imagination as only television and the internet would, many, many years later.

It’s an interesting read about the slow ascendancy of the medium. Newspapers were terrified of broadcast news at that time; many decades later, the killer medium would turn out to be the Internet.

Meanwhile, large public radio stations like WBUR are thriving in the United States today.

Some people declare radio dead or dying. Northeastern media blogger Dan Kennedy recently argued:

The only reason radio is still hanging on is that the ubiquitous, wireless Internet hasn’t come to your car yet.

Terrestrial (AM/FM) radio might have its physical limits, but the medium of radio is going nowhere. Listening data show us that satellite radio and podcasts have barely cut into overall FM listening. And on the Web, online streaming remains WBUR’s single most valuable asset.

Radio is the ultimate multitasking medium. What else can you take cooking, running, driving? What medium is more intimate, more immediate?

Looking Back, Looking Out: The Boston Harbor Series

Published August 31, 2010

Bruce Berman, spokesman for Save The Harbor/Save The Bay, uses live seaworms to fish for striped bass on board his boat, The Shamrock, in Boston Harbor. (Lisa Tobin/WBUR)

Bruce Berman, spokesman for Save The Harbor/Save The Bay, uses live seaworms to fish for striped bass on board his boat, The Shamrock, in Boston Harbor. (Lisa Tobin/WBUR)

All summer long, WBUR brought you stories of Boston Harbor, once the commercial and cultural center of the city.

We walked along the Greenway, trapped lobsters before sunrise, sailed with pre-teen girls, camped in an artist’s colony, followed a record-breaking swim and unearthed Nazis in the harbor. We tried to explain where the Harbor has been and where it’s going, to tell stories that illustrate our special connection to the waterfront.

As a look back, we’ve put together an audio slideshow of the most memorable images and sounds from the summer. And we’ve compiled a list of all stories in the series, if you need to catch up.

What was your favorite story? What is your connection to Boston Harbor? Tell us in the comments.

Police: Another Driver Tries To Mow Down Cyclist

Published August 31, 2010

This is the second time this has happened in two weeks.

Cambridge police report (via Universal Hub):

On 08/30/10 at 11:04 PM, Ibrahim Zaoui, 34, of 449 Broadway in Everett was arrested after he used his motor vehicle as a weapon to strike a bicyclist on Mass Ave after an argument.

Zaoui is charged with attempted murder.

On Aug. 16, Brookline Patch reported:

A Boston man was arrested Saturday after police reportedly caught him speeding through Olmsted Park and trying to trying strike a bicyclist with his Lexus.

There is some serious tension developing between drivers and cyclists in this city, and it’s going to get ugly if we can’t figure out how to share the road.

Missing Soldier Makes For An Unlikely Connection

Published August 31, 2010

Curt wore this POW/MIA bracelet for years. (Curt Nicksich/WBUR)

Curt wore this POW/MIA bracelet for years. (Curt Nicksich/WBUR)

As a kid in Nebraska, WBUR’s Curt Nickisch wore an MIA/POW bracelet to honor a missing service member, Lt. Paul G. Magers, who was shot down over Vietnam in 1971. Curt never knew the man, but he wore the bracelet as a way to honor service and patriotism.

While vacationing in South Dakota this week, Curt made a startling discovery — as described in today’s Billings (Mont.) Gazette story, printed in the Boston Globe:

Nickisch said he always read every story he saw about MIAs. Two weeks ago, scanning headlines on the Web before work, he saw another MIA story and clicked on it.

“Seeing it was Lieutenant Magers — it was a shock,’’ he said.

The story said the remains of First Lieutenant Magers and his gunner from Oklahoma had been positively identified and were going to be returned to their families for burial.

He immediately called his sister in Idaho, even though it was 5 a.m. there. Speaking with her, he soon decided he would go to Billings to attend the funeral, and that he would present the MIA bracelet to members of Magers’s family.

Curt attended the funeral on Thursday and made a brief speech. Cool, huh?

Is It Over For The Sox?

Published August 31, 2010

Boston Red Sox batter Adrian Beltre reacts to a strike call during an away game against the Tampa Bay Rays on Friday, Aug. 27, 2010. (Reinhold Matay/AP)

Strike. (AP)

Dan Shaugnessey is sure of it:

We can all stop now. We can stop scoreboard watching, and doing math tricks, and harboring silly hope that there’s a big surge ahead that will thrust the Red Sox into the 2010 playoffs.

Better to cease with the torment now and accept the obvious. The Sox are not going to be in the hunt in October. The Boston baseball season is going to end Sunday, Oct. 3, at Fenway Park.

The Sox, decimated by injuries, are seven games back from the tied-for-first New York Yankees and Tampa Bay Rays in the AL East.

The Herald, too, makes this slightly less dire assessment:

There is, however, an acceptance of this reality: The Red Sox are a longshot to make the playoffs.

The first Patriots game of the regular season is just two Sundays away. It’s practically winter already. Just sayin’…

Are you keeping the faith in Red Sox Nation? Or is football on your brain? Shout out in the comments. And if you’ve got our nifty iPhone app, you can respond in the “Assignments” section.

Tuesday Morning: Newton North Opens, More Blood Shed

Published August 31, 2010

It’s a slow news day in Boston, with the exception of news just in from the Supreme Judicial Court about the ever-controversial Cape Wind project.

  1. SJC Gives Cape Wind Go-Ahead To Start Construction
    A divided Supreme Judicial Court ruled 4-2 this morning that the state has the power to overrule community opposition and grant the controversial Cape Wind project a suite of local permits it needs to start construction. (Globe)
  2. $197m Later, Newton North Opens
    It began as a simple renovation project. It ended up the most expensive public school ever built in Massachusetts. (Globe)
  3. Mass. Foreclosures Jump 80 Percent Over Year Before
    More than 1,200 foreclosures were recorded in Massachusetts in July, an increase of nearly 80 percent from July 2009, said the Warren Group, a Boston company that tracks local real estate activity. (Globe)
  4. Hurricane Earl Could Bring ‘Glancing Blow’ To Mass. Coast
    As Hurricane Earl makes its way toward the East Coast, the state emergency management agency is asking coastal communities to prepare… just in case. (WBUR)
  5. Man Accused Of Shooting Another In Dorchester
    A 27-year-old man is due in court today on charges he shot another man in the neck in Dorchester last night, police said. (Herald)

What stories are you tracking this morning?

Sound Bites, Monday: Hurricane Earl, Missing Cop

Published August 30, 2010

A National Weather Service image shows the projected path of Hurricane Earl.

A National Weather Service image shows the projected path of Hurricane Earl.

Afternoon news in brief from around the Hub:

  • Hurricane Earl is expected to brush the southern New England coast with rain and high winds. Kudos to Universal Hub for the best headline, graphic. (Universal Hub, Globe)
  • Former Red Sox great Roger Clemens pleaded not guilty of perjury in a steroids case. (New York Times)
  • Brookline police are looking for a missing officer. Thomas Shea has a gun and is “undergoing financial difficulties.” (WBUR)
  • A federal judge in Boston has begun hearing arguments for a new trial from Gary Lee Sampson, who faces the death penalty for a week-long crime spree in 2001. (NECN)
  • A Springfield has pleaded not guilty to charges of driving drunk and hitting and killing a 22-year-old man who was getting the mail at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday. (AP)
  • A golfer in Canton hit two holes in one in the same round. (WCVB)
  • The time machine at MIT has moved from the little dome to the top of the Great Dome. (Universal Hub)
  • White tigers are new to the Spencer Fair this year. (Telegram & Gazette)