February 7, 2005 Issue
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Cover Story
2 Blondes
By cannily crafting a narrative of prison redemption and recruiting appealing front woman (and Martha look-alike) Susan Lyne, the Martha Stewart empire may have saved itself from its founder’s mistakes. But what happens when the boss comes back
Features
Black Days at Black Rock
The firing of four producers over the Bush National Guard story has CBS News staff asking how the higher-ups got away clean�and marveling at Les Moonves’s bluff over his post-Rather plans. By David Blum.
Plus:
Target:Mapes
Mark Gimein reevaluates the woman behind the scandal.
Two Brothers and a Slingshot
The twentysomethings who laid CBS News low.
The Harvey Milk School Has No Right to Exist. Discuss.
After a dicey start, the country’s only gay high school has started to get its act together. But now a lawsuit filed by a state senator and supported by Evangelicals threatens to close Harvey Milk down�and some gay-rights advocates say that wouldn’t be a bad thing.
How Far Would You Go for a Piece of Real Estate?
During David Kirchner’s quest to buy the perfect Park Slope apartment, he broke into an abandoned building, lost his girlfriend, and traveled 4,000 miles to make a deal with the family that held the deed to his dream. A tale of real-estate obsession.
Strategist
Best Bets
Custom-stitched linens, plus Stella McCartney’s Adidas line
Economy of One
Duncan Sheik spends an imaginary $30,000 on vintage microphones and yoga retreats
The Look Book
Featuring a �German Quentin Crisp�
Market Research
From hand-carved Cartiers to Duane Reade ballpoints, a guide to pens
Mating
Avant-garde socializing with Soy Bomb
Real Estate
Détente between co-op boards and brokers
Shop news
Store openings this week
Ask a Shop Clerk
Sarah Pinto of H&M
The Best Seller
�Cookie� lingerie set
Sales & Bargains:
This week's hottest sales & bargains
The Restaurant Review
Greek cuisine at the Upper West Side’s deservedly popular Onera
In Season
A black-truffle recipe from a Ducasse chef
Restaurant Openings & Buzz
Week of Jan. 31, 2005: Plate, Della Rovere, and English Is Italian. Plus, a glorious choucroute.
Ask Gael
Compass Yet Again? Can I Trust You?
Pass the Vanilla Cognac
Un-blinglike uses of Navan, hip-hop’s cognac du jour
The Underground Gourmet
Sukhadia’s is a gift to midtown vegetarians.
Fat Tuesday
New York’s no New Orleans, but that’s no reason not to get in the bead-slinging swing come February 8.
Wing It
For a nonpartisan�and slightly less sloppy�Super Bowl Sunday, skip the cheese steaks and lobster rolls and order in some spicy chicken wings.
Auctions
Handicapping the Kennedy auction at Sotheby’s
Intelligencer
Intelligencer Gossip
Irv Gotti’s dirty laundry, Melania Knauss's best dress man, Daniel Boulud on B’way, and more.
It Happened Last Week
Although the iniquitous were mostly out of town New York was hit by blows of fire and ice that felt like divine retribution.
Remembering Their Godfather
Cesar Pelli, Bernard Tschumi, Rafael Viñoly, and others on Philip Johnson’s monumental achievements
Sting Like an Oscar Nominee
Hilary Swank’s boxing coach
The Worth of a Raise
Last month, the minimum wage in New York State rose from $5.15 to $6 an hour. Jada Yuan spoke with several minimum-wage workers about the change.
The Competition
David Barton picks a new gym
Columnists
The City Politic
Pataki stiffs the city so he can sustain his fiscally tough, tax-slashing rep with the national GOP. And Bloomberg is too polite to do anything about it.
The Culture Pages
Company Man
Big-time actor Philip Seymour Hoffman runs one of New York’s smallest (and coolest) theater companies.
Movies
Sundance buzz proves unreliable
Resident Alien: What Ever Happened to Hal Hartley?
Hal Hartley on trying to get his audience back
We Wuz Robbed
New Yorkers who were robbed of Oscar nominatins.
Theater Review
Sutton Foster is the only highlight of the awful Little Women
Hurlyburly Reviewed
The New Group’s revival of David Rabe’s Hurlyburly confirms it as a major play, so absorbing bit by bit that by the time its three hours seem overlong, it is over.
TV
Torture moves from dramas to the nightly news and back
Dispatchers: Joe and Harry Gantz
The art of procuring Taxicab Confessions
Pop Music Review
Manhattan fixture Antony’s favorite subject is, of all things, nature
Influences: Marianne Faithfull
Marianne Faithfull goes to the ballet with Mick Jagger
Classical Music Review
The Iron Curtain rises on twentieth-century Soviet music
Composer: David Lang
This week at BAM, the busy composer David Lang premieres Amelia, a furiously athletic pointe-driven work.
On Disc: The Audio Encyclopedia
More than 40 hours of hard-to-find live performances, featuring singers and conductors you won’t hear anywhere else. But wait, there’s more.
Book Review
The unjustly maligned work of the late Heather Lewis.
Overheard
What the Audience Really Thought about NBCC Nominations Party (vs. National Book Awards)
Comic Duo: Mike Albo & Virginia Heffernan
Performance artist Mike Albo and his partner, Virginia Heffernan, just published a comic novel about a classic New York phenomenon: a pseudo-friend whose backhanded compliments destroy the hero’s self-confidence.
Departments
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