Dorothy Gambrell, from Cat and Girl Comics

Chronogram received a gratifying shout-out in the Metropolitan section of the New York Times on August 5. In an article chronicling the โ€œBrooklynization of the Hudson Valley,โ€ we were referred to as โ€œgreen, hip, and upscaleโ€ in a sentence stringing together Dia:Beacon, the Culinary Institute of America, the areaโ€™s colleges, and the Omega Institute as examples of a shared urban arriviste sensibility. Peter Applebome, author of the pieceโ€”titled โ€œWilliamsburg on the Hudsonโ€ in print and โ€œHipsters on the Hudsonโ€ onlineโ€”describes the Brooklynization process as โ€œthe steady hipness creep with its locavore cuisine, its Williamsburgian bars, its Gyrotonic exercise, feng shui consultants and deep clay art therapy and, most of all, its recent arrivals from New York City.โ€

Weโ€™re grateful to the Times, and Peter Applebome (whom both the Jason Stern and I spoke to) for the kind words. Itโ€™s flattering to be grouped with the institutions we admire most, and to be singled out as a publication of note.

As pleased as I am, the piece makes me sad. I donโ€™t question the premise of the article. As financial writer Daniel Gross posted on Twitter: โ€œThe NYT, tiring ofย  โ€˜Brooklyn is awesomeโ€™ articles, turns to โ€˜place to which Brooklynites flee is awesomeโ€™ articles.โ€ย  The Gray Lady has a weakness for the thrill of discovering trends in out-of-the-way locales like Brooklyn and the Hudson Valley.

The problem with the article isnโ€™t the faulty logic behind schlepping out a dozen exurbanites who say things about the Hudson Valley like: โ€œThereโ€™s nothing I canโ€™t do living here, and itโ€™s nice to fall asleep and wake to birds singing rather than trash trucks rolling down the street.โ€ And Applebome, to his great credit, takes an offramp on the Hipster Highway to talk to some disaffected and economically challenged locals in Beacon and Hudson about the lack of jobs before setting back off again toward NoBro (or โ€œNorth Brooklyn,โ€ what one Beaconite now calls his town because of the influx of peeps from New York).

The point missed is simply this: the Omega Institute, locavorism, artist rebels, Chronogram, the CIA, even deep clay therapy, have all been resident in the Hudson Valley for many years. These things werenโ€™t packed in an overnight bag with a Dave Eggers novel and a six-pack of Pabst Blue Ribbon by missionaries taking the train up the Hudson. Maybe they were brought in by someone from New York years ago. Who knows? We all have to be from somewhere. I myself am from that bastion of the un-hip, Queens.

And while we may lack many of the amenities of city lifeโ€”odd public transport, Korean barbecue, professional basketballโ€”the Hudson Valley is chock-full of creative, hardworking folks who canโ€™t be defined so narrowly by the Times, nor can they be displaced by those who can. The beauty and ugliness of everything in the Hudson Valley cannot be summed up in 2,500-word piece in the Times. Thank goodness.

Many thanks to Dorothy Gambrell, who allowed us to reprint the โ€œTall Talesโ€ cartoon from her entertaining Cat and Girl series (updated twice weekly at www.catandgirl.com). Itโ€™s worth noting that in the final panel, the word โ€œBeaconโ€ was originally โ€œPortland.โ€ Maybe Oregon will be the next frontier for all those Kings County pioneers. I can see the headline now: โ€œCarroll Gardens on the Columbia.โ€

Yo Brooklyn!

Dorothy Gambrell, from Cat and Girl Comics

Brian is the editorial director for the Chronogram Media family of publications. He lives in Kingston with his partner Lee Anne and the rapscallion mutt Clancy.

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