36 Hours in Baltimore

By Charly Wilder (New York Times, 9/19/2012)

Clockwise from top left: L. P. Steamers, Windup Space, American Visionary Art Museum, Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum and a view from Federal Hill. Credit: Dennis Drenner for The New York Times

“You can look far and wide, but you’ll never discover a stranger city with such extreme style,” John Waters once noted about his hometown. Maybe that’s why Baltimore’s trumpeted glass-and-steel Inner Harbor development, with its chain restaurants, neon-loud amusements and brand-name shopping, feels so counterintuitive as a symbol for the city. But walk in any direction and the city’s charm reasserts itself. Indeed, Baltimore’s best draws tend to be left-of-center: offbeat theater, grandly decrepit neighborhoods on the cusp of gentrification, a world-class museum devoted to outsider art and a dive-bar culture that must be one of the nation’s finest.

Friday

3 p.m.
1. DIVINE INSPIRATION

There may be no better introduction to Baltimore than the extraordinary American Visionary Art Museum (800 Key Highway; 410-244-1900; avam.org), or AVAM, devoted to the work of self-taught and outsider artists. AVAM’s collection ranges in scale and tenor from a 10-foot mirror-plated sculpture of the drag icon Divine to “Recovery,” a moving self-portrait of an anonymous British mental patient that was carved from an apple tree trunk before he committed suicide in his 30s.

7 p.m.
2. CRAB HAPPY

Call it the great democratizer: it’s hard to find a Baltimorean who doesn’t enjoy wielding the mallet. L. P. Steamers (1100 East Fort Avenue; 410-576-9294; lpsteamers.com) is a purist’s crab house. There, waiters dump buckets of fresh-caught Old Bay-coated steamed crab onto brown paper for diners to whack, smash, pry, shuck and suck out the tender white meat. For two people, a dozen mediums ($50) and a pitcher of Baltimore’s signature swill, National Bohemian a k a Natty Boh ($9) should do the trick. Snag a table on the restaurant’s upper deck and watch the sun set over one of Baltimore’s best views.

Continue reading “36 Hours in Baltimore” at The New York Times.

The American Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore is devoted to the work of self-taught and outsider artists. Here, DeVon Smith’s “World’s First Family of Robots.” Credit: Dennis Drenner for The New York Times

Baltimore Scenes:  A museum for outsiders, the original Washington Monument and a diner are stops on this tour. Click to launch photo gallery.

Posted in 2010s, Dining, Museums, Neighborhoods, Nightlife, Roadside Attractions, Shopping | Leave a comment

The New York Times Travels to Baltimore, Predictably Mentions Beehive Hairdos

By Rachel Monroe (Baltimore Fishbowl, 9/20/2012)

The last time the New York Times travel section covered Baltimore, they portrayed the city as a Hon-tastic place full of “beehive hairdos and wacky museums.” Well, better than the Wire-retreads that the European travel sections tend to prefer, at least. But that was three years ago, which means our fair city is due for another travel treatment from the Gray Lady — and, hey, the one they just published this week isn’t half bad!

Journalist Charly Wilder starts her travel treatment off right, with a John Waters quote that we’ve always been fond of:  “You can look far and wide, but you’ll never discover a stranger city with such extreme style.” (Aww, shucks.) From there, Wilder goes on to dis the “trumpeted glass-and-steel Inner Harbor development” and instead trumpet Baltimore’s “grandly decrepit neighborhoods,” thus winning her points in our book.

Continue reading “The New York Times Travels to Baltimore, Predictably Mentions Beehive Hairdos” at Baltimore Fishbowl.

Posted in 2010s, Art, Dining, Museums, Neighborhoods, Nightspots, Roadside Attractions, Shopping | Tagged | Leave a comment

Seagull Craps on Orioles Relief Pitcher’s Cap

Real bird relieves self on cap of Orioles reliever Tommy Hunter

By David Brown (Yahoo Sports Big League Stew, 9/19/2012)

Orioles Magic takes many forms. An unbelievable winning streak in extra innings. A black and orange wrestling mask disguising the true identity of a pudgy superfan called Carne Cabeza. The return of Lew Ford. Batman getting banned from Camden Yards. A team with a payroll 60 percent as large as the New York Yankees still being neck-and-neck with them in the standings in late September.

And, in the Pacific Northwest during the early Wednesday morning hours, a Safeco Park seagull going No. 2 on the cap of Baltimore pitcher Tommy Hunter during the Orioles’ 4-2 victory in 18 innings against the Mariners. Baltimore improved to 14-2 in extras and moved into a virtual first-place tie in the AL East.

As for the bird-on-bird defacing in Baltimore’s bullpen (birdpen?), that’s the straight poop. And good luck, as reporter Dan Connolly of the Baltimore Sun posts via Sulia:

“I was minding my own business, not doing anything. I thought it was (reliever Luis) Ayala throwing stuff at me. You know, he usually does. So I didn’t know what it was,” Hunter said. “I just thought someone threw a piece of gum and hit me. It wasn’t a piece of gum, man. Everybody just started dying laughing. Then everybody said it was good luck. Then we won. … I was getting ready to go warm up and it went (plop) and I looked at it and everyone started laughing. I had bird (droppings) on my head.” He won the game while wearing the soiled hat.

Continue reading at Yahoo Sports Big League Stew.

Posted in 2010s, Baltimorons, Orioles | 1 Comment

Pat Moran wins an Emmy for casting on HBO’s ‘Game Change’

By David Zurawik (The Baltimore Sun, 9/17/2012)

Baltimore’s Pat Moran won an Emmy Award Saturday for casting on HBO’s “Game Change.”

It was the second for the woman who has cast virtually every major film and TV production done in Baltimore for the last 25 years. Moran was also nominated for her work on “VEEP,” the Baltimore-based HBO satire starring Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

“We won one and we lost one, but you know what? We won one, and that’s fantastic,” Moran said in a telephone interview from Los Angeles right after the creative arts Emmys were awarded.

“Game Change,” which was based on a best-selling non-fiction book about the 2008 presidential campaign of John McCain and Sarah Palin, was a critical and ratings hit for HBO. It was filmed in Baltimore during the summer of 2011.

Continue reading at The Baltimore Sun.

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