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Anthony Weiner, Former Congressman, b. 1964

“It was like a Reform Jewish version of the Sharks and the Jets.”


Anthony Weiner (right), age 9, with his brothers.   

It’s hard for anyone who visits Park Slope now to remember, but that was an edgy community in the sixties and seventies. I could hardly afford today to rent the ­upstairs apartment in the ­duplex that my father and mother bought in the sixties for less than $40,000. Back then, your universe revolved around your front stoop. You know, you were either a Union temple kid or a Garfield temple kid. It was like a Reform Jewish version of the Sharks and the Jets, and we were a Union temple family.

But the life of a kid in New York City, it’s about making your circles bigger and bigger around your home. When you’d get a little older, you’d get on the F train and go to Rockefeller Center and tool around a little bit. I remember taking a train to West 4th and going to Rocky Horror. For the longest time, I just assumed the graffiti was painted on the subways when it came off the factory line.


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