logo
‘I Looked Up to See a Young Man With a Handlebar Mustache'

‘I Looked Up to See a Young Man With a Handlebar Mustache'

New York Times16-02-2025
Special Ingredient
Dear Diary:
After my daughter was born, everything felt hard. Even my quaint Brooklyn neighborhood began to sour for me. The stuffed raccoon on its hind legs in the coffee shop window, the plant store with only four plants, the fedora shop: It all seemed like a kitschy Hollywood back lot.
One day, I dragged my daughter in her stroller to a local sandwich shop where the sandwiches have clever names. Looking for comfort, I ordered the one simply called Meatloaf.
'Your baby is beautiful,' a man's voice said.
I looked up to see a young man with a handlebar mustache, a big smile and a tattoo encircling his neck like a shawl.
'Thanks,' I managed to say from within my fog while trying unsuccessfully to soothe my crying daughter.
At first, my sandwich — a slab of meatloaf slathered in a tangy sauce on a roll the size of a Nerf football — seemed like another test I would fail. I took a bite, then another. Then I devoured it.
'What's the secret?' I asked the young man as I ordered a second sandwich. I felt hungry for the first time in weeks.
'It's the pickles,' he said with a grin.
When I got outside, I found two cups of them inside my bag.
— Sarah Gundle
Keep Moving
Dear Diary:
It was a cold, windy day in December, and I was on my way home after taking the train to the city from a day spent in Philadelphia.
I was walking to the 34th Street R train station behind a family whose members were walking at various paces and taking up most of the sidewalk in a way that no one could pass.
'Ellen,' I heard the father say to his wife, 'put your phone away and walk faster! You owe it to the people.'
I could have hugged him.
— Kristina Moris
Tomorrow
Dear Diary:
My friend of 72 years and I stopped at a bodega on Broadway and 107th Street to buy lottery tickets. We don't play unless the payout is astronomical.
It was 9 o'clock on this particular Saturday evening, and we thought we were the only customers in the place. We asked the owner when the drawing would be announced.
Midnight, he said.
My friend and I agreed that we would be asleep by then and would have to learn the results the next day.
At that moment, a man dressed entirely in black whom we hadn't noticed standing in a back corner spoke up.
'No one promises you tomorrow,' he said without looking up from the gardening magazine he was reading.
My friend and I, both 79, were all too familiar with this wisdom. We exchanged knowing glances with the bodega's owner and politely thanked the man in black for his advice. He ignored us.
We went to my friend's apartment, where we tried, and failed, to stay up till midnight.
We learned in the morning that we had unfortunately not won the lottery. On the other hand, we had our tomorrow.
— Michael Weiden
Two Stops
Dear Diary:
It was a drizzly June night in 2001. I was a young magazine editor and had just enjoyed what I thought was a very blissful second date — dinner, drinks, fabulous conversation — with our technology consultant at a restaurant in Manhattan.
I lived in Williamsburg at the time, and my date lived near Murray Hill, so we grabbed a cab and headed south on Second Avenue.
'Just let me out here,' my date said to the cabby at the corner of 25th Street.
We said our goodbyes, quick and shy, knowing that we would see each other at work the next day. I was giddy and probably grinning with happiness and hope.
'Oh boy,' the cabby said, shaking his head as we drove toward Brooklyn. 'Very bad.'
'What do you mean?' I asked in horror.
'He doesn't want you to know exactly where he lives,' the cabby said. 'Not a good sign.'
I spent the rest of the cab ride in shock, revisiting every moment of the date.
Happily, it turned out that my instinct about it being a great date was right, and the cabby was wrong. Twenty-four years later, my date that night is my husband, and I know that if your stop is first, it's polite to get out so the cab can continue in a straight line to the next stop.
— Ingrid Spencer
Geography Lesson
Dear Diary:
When I was a freshman at Barnard College, my parents visited me from Indianapolis because my father, a radiologist, was attending a medical meeting in New York City.
One of his colleagues took us to dinner. Riding in a cab afterward, my father and the cabdriver were bantering when my father's colleague interjected jokingly.
'Please show some respect for Dr. Campbell,' he said. 'He is from the Midwest. Do you know where that is?'
'Yes,' the cabby replied. 'Between Fifth and Sixth.'
— Nancy Duff Campbell
Read all recent entries and our submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ellen DeGeneres Blames Trump for her Exodus
Ellen DeGeneres Blames Trump for her Exodus

Fox News

time5 days ago

  • Fox News

Ellen DeGeneres Blames Trump for her Exodus

Known bully and disgraced talk show host Ellen DeGeneres blames Trump for her US exodus. I'm Tomi Lahren, more next. Now I didn't vote for Donald Trump so that annoying loudmouth liberal celebrities would leave the country, but it's certainly a bonus perk! Especially in the case of known bully and disgraced talk show host Ellen DeGeneres. She told the BBC in an interview that while her and her wife's adventure to the UK countryside was intended to be part-time, after Trump won the election last November they decided to make it permanent. Lucky us! And the same sentiment goes to her pal Rosie O'Donnell who also fled the greatest country on the face of the Earth due to an election that didn't go her way! Rosie, of course, moved to Ireland and we all hope she stays there! But there's something pretty ironic about the places these disgruntled celebrities chose to flee to…they are in Europe.. and to places that are predominantly white and highly developed… They aren't going to Haiti or Somalia or the Gaza Strip… funny how that works, isn't it? Regardless, the USA is better without them in it! I'm Tomi Lahren and you can watch my show 'Tomi Lahren is Fearless' at Learn more about your ad choices. Visit

Ellen DeGeneres Did Move To UK Due To Trump: Opinion
Ellen DeGeneres Did Move To UK Due To Trump: Opinion

Buzz Feed

time6 days ago

  • Buzz Feed

Ellen DeGeneres Did Move To UK Due To Trump: Opinion

Hear me out...I feel kinda weird about Ellen DeGeneres hyping up England while confirming that she moved there because of the Presidency of Donald Trump. Shortly after the 2024 election, it was reported that Ellen and wife Portia de Rossi had moved to the Cotswolds, a rural area in England. It's worth noting that this was after her final standup tour and the end of her daytime show, following allegations of a toxic work environment. As per the BBC, when Ellen was recently asked at an event in Cheltenham, England, whether her decision to move nearby was motivated by Trump, she replied, "Yes." Initially, Ellen said that she and Portia bought the house to live in part-time. "We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, 'He got in,'" she said. "And we're like, 'We're staying here.'" "It's absolutely beautiful," she continued. "We're just not used to seeing this kind of beauty. The villages and the towns and the architecture — everything you see is charming and it's just a simpler way of life." "It's clean. Everything here is just better — the way animals are treated, people are polite. I just love it here," she added. "We moved here in November, which was not the ideal time, but I saw snow for the first time in my life. We love it here. Portia flew her horses here, and I have chickens, and we had sheep for about two weeks." Elsewhere, Ellen specifically mentioned LGBTQ+ rights in the US. "The Baptist Church in America is trying to reverse gay marriage," she said. "They're trying to literally stop it from happening in the future and possibly reverse it. Portia and I are already looking into it, and if they do that, we're going to get married here." I really don't want to make mountains out of molehills here: I'm sure Ellen is having a lovely time in England. But, as a Brit, I think some liberal Americans can be prone to adopting rose-colored glasses when it comes to issues in other parts of the world, when in reality the rise of far-right bigotry is very much a global problem. I just want to throw it out there, for anyone reading this, that the UK Ellen is describing is more complex than that. For one, it's worth noting that the UK is currently having its own issues with upholding LGBTQ+ rights. It's currently ranked as the second-worst Western European country for LGBTQ+ rights, 22nd overall in Europe (just below Estonia), by ILGA-Europe's Rainbow Map. Indeed, in terms of legal gender recognition, ILGA-Europe puts the UK as one of the worst countries in Europe. The main reason for this is because, in April, the UK Supreme Court essentially ruled that trans women aren't legally women. It's also worth considering that anti-immigration sentiment is also on the rise in the UK. Literally in this week, anti-immigrant protests in one part of England became violent — as the BBC notes, "Demonstrators on Sunday chanted 'send them home' and 'save our kids,' as projectiles were thrown towards police vans blocking the entrance to the hotel." Last August, riots happened across the country spouting anti-immigrant rhetoric. In May, the government published an immigration white paper, which proposes a number of increased cuts on immigration, such as reducing positions available for Skilled Worker jobs and doubling the qualifying period for permanent residence. As the proposals were unveiled, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that the UK risked becoming an 'island of strangers" without stricter immigration. He was subsequently accused of evoking Enoch Powell's "rivers of blood' speech, which warned against white people finding "themselves made strangers in their own country" (Starmer later apologized for the remarks and denied any intention of similarity with Powell). What I think is likely more accurate is "rich white cis lady finds life is better somewhere else," which, yes. Good on her for not being as inundated with news about the orange man! You can read more about Ellen's words here.

‘Everything here is just better': Ellen DeGeneres confirms she moved to the UK because of Donald Trump
‘Everything here is just better': Ellen DeGeneres confirms she moved to the UK because of Donald Trump

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

‘Everything here is just better': Ellen DeGeneres confirms she moved to the UK because of Donald Trump

Ellen DeGeneres has confirmed that she moved to the UK because of Donald Trump, saying, 'Everything here is just better'. At a conversation event on Sunday at Cheltenham's Everyman theatre – the comedian's first public appearance since leaving the US – broadcaster Richard Bacon asked DeGeneres if it was true Trump had spurred her decision to relocate. 'Yes,' she said. 'We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, 'He got in.' And we're like, 'We're staying here.'' DeGeneres moved with her wife, Portia de Rossi, to a house in the Cotswolds in 2024 after her long-running talkshow ended and she embarked on a 'final comedy tour' around the US. At the time, her move was described as permanent. A source told industry publication The Wrap that DeGeneres was 'never coming back' and was motivated by Trump, though DeGeneres herself had not confirmed the reasoning until now. DeGeneres told Bacon that her new home was 'beautiful'. 'It's clean,' she raved. 'Everything here is just better – the way animals are treated, people are polite. I just love it here.' She also expressed concern for LGBTQ+ rights in the US, hinting that she and De Rossi may get married again in the UK. 'The Baptist Church in America is trying to reverse gay marriage,' DeGeneres said, referencing an overwhelming vote by southern Baptists in June to endorse a resolution that would seek to overturn same-sex marriage in the US. 'They're trying to literally stop it from happening in the future and possibly reverse it,' DeGeneres continued. 'Portia and I are already looking into it, and if they do that, we're going to get married here.' Later in the talk, she added, 'I wish we were at a place where it was not scary for people to be who they are. I wish that we lived in a society where everybody could accept other people and their differences. So until we're there, I think there's a hard place to say we have huge progress.' At the event, DeGeneres also addressed the scandal that had dogged the end of her daytime talkshow Ellen after 19 seasons in 2022. In 2020, former employees accused DeGeneres of fostering a toxic work environment. She apologised to her staff and to the audience, and an internal investigation by parent company Warner led to the departure of three executives – but the show never quite recovered and ended amid declining ratings. Related: Ellen DeGeneres walks away from her talkshow empire and leaves behind a mixed legacy DeGeneres had previously commented on the controversy in her 2024 US tour, saying she was 'kicked out of show business' for being 'mean'. On Sunday, she made similar comments on stage. 'No matter what, any article that came up, it was like, 'She's mean',' DeGeneres said. 'How do I deal with this without sounding like a victim or 'poor me' or complaining? But I wanted to address it.' She said she had been misconstrued. 'I'm a direct person, and I'm very blunt, and I guess sometimes that means that ... I'm mean?' DeGeneres concluded that it was 'certainly an unpleasant way to end' her talkshow.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store