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An Eyesore and a Plague

Paulina Salmas and Jonathan Borducci

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At the turn of the 20th century, New York City's millionaires started moving to the suburbs in Long Island and Westchester County. They had enormous homes and just about everything money could buy. There was just one problem: they weren't alone. Around the same time, ordinary, middle-class New Yorkers started exploring the suburbs themselves. The millionaires were horrified to see commuters and tourists enjoying their suburban paradise. But the beaches and the roads were public: how could th ...
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Welcome to Briarcliff Manor! Like our regular episodes, this is the story of the incorporation of one of New York City's suburbs. It is a bonus ep because it's shorter and has less music than a regular episode (which you may recognize from previous episodes!). We are working on more full-length episodes in the same style as the first four. In the m…
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Bronxville wasn't exactly an estate village, since it wasn't incorporated under Section 33. (What is Section 33? That's the law that allowed rich people to incorporate their tiny neighborhoods as villages, which we talk about in the first three episodes.) But, like estate villages, the village of Bronxville was the passion project of one man, a mil…
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In 1910, New York State made it possible for tiny neighborhoods to incorporate as villages. Some villages incorporated to dodge local taxes, or escape a school district they didn't feel like contributing towards. But many villages incorporated to prevent outsiders - even people who lived just a couple of miles away - from enjoying the public beache…
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Welcome to the Sands Point bonus episode! In this episode, Jon and Paulina talk about: Making quotes sound different even when they're all read by one person (throw some vintage tone on the audio, and/or impersonate Winston Churchill) How much power the town supervisor had to stop the villages from incorporating (a decent amount, actually, although…
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In 1910, the New York State legislature made it possible to incorporate any neighborhood with at least 50 people into a village. (What is a village? We explain in Episode 1, but it's an unnecessarily cutesy synonym for "municipality." It's basically a very small city.) In Episode 1, we talk about how a wealthy landowner named Roswell Eldridge incor…
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Welcome to the Saddle Rock Bonus Episode! (If you haven’t listened to Episode 1 of this podcast, you may want to do that first, since we talk about how we made the episode here.) Jon and Paulina talk about recording the music for Episode 1 of this podcast: How to play drums when you’re not a drummer (step 1: never think about how awesome you sound)…
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In 1910, Roswell Eldridge had it all: cars, yachts, money, and a beautiful beachside mansion. There was just one problem... In New York, villages are a type of municipality. They were intended to be densely-populated places where officials could tax residents and provide infrastructure, like running water or sewers, with the proceeds. But in 1910, …
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In 1910, a group of rich people who owned massive homes in Long Island were tired of middle-class people moving to the neighborhood. The middle-class people wanted public schools, police departments, municipal water and public parks, but the millionaires didn't need any of this. They had private security, they sent their kids to private schools, an…
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Artist Rut Blees Luxemburg has been shooting the city for decades. With a particular fascination for the urban night, the London-based photographer is perhaps best known for shooting album covers for The Streets (Original Pirate Material) and Bloc Party (Weekend in the City). We sat down in her flat, on the top floor of a 60s tower block with panor…
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To celebrate the launch of EYESORE Issue 3, we took over The Silver Building in E16 on October 7 for a day and nights worth of activity. Prior to the big day, we sat down in the space to speak with Nick Hartwright, the man currently responsible for developing the former derelict factory into London's next major arts hub. As the brains behind The Mi…
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EYESORE had the pleasure of speaking with percussionist Sarathy Korwar about growing up in India, London's jazz scene and the influence of the urban in making his exceptional genre-melting debut album, 'Day 2 Day' released last summer via Ninja Tune.Mastering: Eden Poole - cargocollective.com/edenaudioIdent: Daniel Barker-Wyatt - @djgrapefruitRecor…
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Iain Sinclair is a writer and psychogeographer whose output over the last fifty years has made an immense contribution to the study of London and that of psychogeography in general. His most well-known book, London Orbital, told of his adventures walking around the M25 – the 188km motorway which encircles London. Now as he prepares to publish his f…
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