Recently in NYC Category

A9, Amazon's search engine, added photos to their new Yellow Pages service today. They drove around in trucks and took millions of GPS-tagged images, and then correlated them with addresses in their listings. Amazing.

Last month, Mike at the NYC photoblog Satan's Laundromat posted a bunch of photos of various Kennedy Fried Chicken stores around the city.

The Kennedy Fried Chicken phenomenon has interested me for quite a while, so I thought it would be funny to combine A9 with Mike's idea: use A9 to assemble a photo catalog of Kennedy Fried Chicken storefronts. Unfortunately, A9's photo survey didn't cover a lot of the neighborhoods where the stores are. Of the 20 "KFC" stores, only 3 (almost 4) are pictured.

Anyway, here's what I came up with:

kennedy fried chicken store

kennedy fried chicken store

kennedy fried chicken store

kennedy fried chicken store

Larger images.

A9 says there is another one at 536 E. 14th in Manhattan, but the photos of that area show only a palm reader and a Chinese take-out place. (You have to "walk left" to find the proper address.) Update: Thanks to Lia, who tracked it down on A9, it's now pictured above.

new york post family classics logo

Today's issue of the New York Post comes with a coupon that will get you a free copy of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain. Once a week for the next 15 weeks or so, you can buy the Post and get a coupon that will allow you to purchase, for $5.99, a new volume in the Post's "Family Classics Library." The Family Classics Library consists entirely of British and American books that are in the public domain, meaning anyone could print them up in book form without having to pay anyone anything. Relatedly, all of the books are available for free, in electronic form, online, from sources other than the New York Post.

If you look at the book's copyright pages, you will see that the books in the Post's giveaway are published by the "Paperview Group," which, as the pun in the company's name ("Pay Per View," get it?) implies, is a specialized printing company. Paperview, based in Belgium, makes money by printing newspaper inserts and special editions. Their website explains that they offer the Classics-promotion as a pre-packaged deal for newspapers. Judging from Paperview's website (which spells "literature" incorrectly, by the way), it looks like European readers get a more interesting range of books than Post readers do: one series features Stendahl's The Red and The Black, and another paper released a whole series of Nobel Prize-winning works.

The Post's books are a step or two above cheaply made: they are cloth bound, but the paper is of below-average quality and feels suspiciously like thick newsprint.

I've scanned in the cover of the Huck Finn edition [157 kb]. Only the cover features NY Post branding. The actual book is generic, free from any branding except a one-line reference on the copyright page. It's not clear what is being copyrighted. Perhaps the layout of the pages? I can't remember what the rule is on that.

Here is a list of the books that make up the Classics Library:

  1. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  2. Moby Dick
  3. Gulliver's Travels
  4. Alice in Wonderland
  5. The Jungle Book
  6. Frankenstein
  7. Edgar Allan Poe: Selected Tales and Poems
  8. Robinson Crusoe
  9. The Time Machine
  10. The Hound of the Baskervilles
  11. Treasure Island
  12. Emma (Jane Austen)
  13. The Wonderful Wixard of Oz
  14. Around the World in 80 Days
  15. The Christmas Stories (Charles Dickens)

They can all be yours for:

(14 x $5.99) + (15 x $.25) + $7.12 tax

That's a mere $94.73! Boy, it adds up. But your average price per book is $6.32. All things considered, that's not so bad. Dover Thrift Editions are a good alternative, but those are paperbacks and not as nice, but then again, they don't have the NY Post logo plastered across the front, either.

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