All the subways stopped here: the 2 and the 3...the N, Q and R... the 4/5, the B/D and the C, and Fort Greene's very own G. The damn G, slowest and slimiest of all mass transport in NYC. Exiting the station up the escalator...
[Bruce] Ratner and Co. had promised affordable housing, local apprenticeships and seventeen thousand construction jobs and for an estimated billion dollars in private profit.
By the arena's debut, as one investor put it, "the Nets are owned by a Russian industrialist, the property sold to a Chinese conglomerate, and the public officials who advanced the project are nowhere in sight."
Well, that timing is off. The Nets indeed had been bought by Prokhorov before Barclays opened, but the sale of a majority stake in Atlantic Yards to Greenland USA didn't come until mid-2014, after which Greenland changed the property's name to Pacific Park Brooklyn, typically shortened to Pacific Park.
The public officials who advanced the project were around as of 2012, including Mayor Mike Bloomberg and Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, but yes, they and others were gone by the time of Londell McMillan's critical comments, which cane in 2018, not 2012.
Joe Tsai had finished buying out the Nets and their arena from the Russians... for what would be a grand total of $3.5 billion, the most ever paid for a sports franchise.Well, it's a team plus an arena company--yes, typically shorthanded to the arena, though it's nominally owned by New York State. And $3.5 million was reported by some news outlets, though no documents confirm any prices.
Sullivan ventilates Jay-Z's deals with the Nets, the NFL, and other sports entities, adding:
But there was a difference, too, between a fading class of what [sociologist] Dr. Ameer "Left" Loggins called The Hovites--a generation of athletes who were led to believe, as the Hova [Jay-Z] lyric goes, I'm not a businessman / I'm a business, man--and the too-rare athlete who was willing to lay his personal brand on the line for bold ideas and real action in the face of oppression. "And the Jay-Z who was the hired gun to appropriate gentrified Brooklyn on behalf of the NBA," Left said, "is the same Jay-Z who became a hitman to eliminate Colin Kaepernick from the NFL."
I don't think Jay-Z appropriated "gentrified Brooklyn."
Rather, he helped appropriate a much more amorphous, expansive entity of "Brooklyn" (as in this Charlie Rose interview), neutralizing resistance, especially in Black Brooklyn, and shouting out to Black Brooklyn icons.
And the extension of Jay-Z's endorsement helped neutralize or overshadow criticism, including from gentrified Brooklyn--at least the parts nearest the Atlantic Yards/arena site, that were the core of the project opposition.
In October 2012, I quoted NPR's Frannie Kelley, who observed:
The Barclays Center is fraught, but watching Jay open it was touching, and that night, I did not feel complicated about him.
Sure, arena promoters did try to appropriate gentrified Brooklyn, but only as part of a broader effort, as I wrote in a November 2012 Brooklyn Rail essay titled A Brand Called Brooklyn.
Or, as Jon Kelly, an editor at the New York Times Magazine, wrote in October 2012, The Nets and Brooklyn Deserve Each Other,:On the other side of the metal detectors was the Barclays Center, but also something bigger: the promise of Brooklynland, that utopia of renovated brownstones, craft beer, rich people, farm-to-table restaurants, pencil mustaches, Wesleyan sweatshirts and now, its very own basketball team. In Brooklynland, the Crown Heights riots never happened, and people grow up to become Lena Dunham.
Jay-Z was deployed in a deeper way.
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