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Info2010

 

This summer, I'm traveling from São Paulo, Brazil to New York, NY as The New York Times's

FT

Check out the blog, and please also follow the Frugal Journey on Twitter. Wait, let me make that easy on you...

Follow frugaltraveler on Twitter

Here's the latest:

There's also a Frugal Traveler Facebook page and my personal Twitter feed, as well as the GlobalPost Brazil page, where a few more stories of mine will be popping up.

 

 

Old Stuff...

Friday, October 23, 2009 -- New York Times Travel section: Latin America issue

Long overdue update: I have a few pieces in the Times's Latin America special this Sunday, including this cover story on Minas Gerais, a 36 Hours guide to Montevideo, and travel advice for those headed to Rio de Janeiro and Paraty. Also, violence is up in Rio, and I talk about its effects on the Olympics in this podcast on the site of News Hour with Jim Lehrer. And the November issue of Wallpaper* is out, and I contributed several items in their "Fab 40" section about Brazil. Last month's Wallpaper* includes my piece on an amazing beach home architect Marcio Kogan built in Paraty. And the Brazil page of GlobalPost has all my latest from there.

Wednesday, August 5 -- Mid-Winter Updates

August is cold season in these parts, as you'll know if you've been keeping up with my Reporter's Notebook on GlobalPost. And in my last two GlobalPost features, I take on the formidable challenge of writing about President Lula and Senate President Jose Sarney. I've also had a number of Why We Travel interviews published in the NYT Travel section, including this one from Jordan which was one of my favorites. And here's my June column from TAM Nas Nuvens. I had a piece on cachaca in the July issue of Imbibe, but it's not online so you'll have to check out a copy at whatever public library near you stocks magazines about alcoholic beverages.

Saturday, May 16 -- Nouveau Brazilian

From tomorrow's NYT Travel section: anyone visiting Brazil can still find all the all-you-can-eat churrascarias you want, but they'd be better off trying out these spots. Also, check out Belo Horizonte's awesome bar food festival, in GlobalPost.

Friday, April 22 -- Seriously, and they dance tango naked and wear fruit on their heads

I got so sick of Brazilians telling me Americans thought the capital of Brazil was Buenos Aires, I decided to take matters into my own hands.

Tuesday, April 14 -- The April column in TAM Nas Nuvens

Here it is. If you've never tried sleeve juice before, you've got to read it.

Sunday, April 12 -- Baixo Augusta in The New York Times, Governador Valadares in GlobalPost, and new column in TAM Nas Nuvens

Here are the latest pieces from the last two weeks: a small piece in the Times Travel section on the bustling nightlife corridor a kilometer or so from where I live; the first of two reports from my trip to Governador Valadares, this one on the Paragliding World Cup; and -- my column in April's TAM in-flight magazine. I don't have a pdf of that one yet, but here's a photographic preview.

Wednesday, March 25 -- The Sean Goldman (kidnapping? custody?) case

It's been hard for me to believe that two countries with at least generally similar values systems can see the same case so differently. Is it the media's fault? If so, whose media?

Friday, March 13 -- Juruaia, Minas Gerais: 8000 people, 141 lingerie businesses

My GlobalPost dispatch today notes that though the Brazilian economy is shedding hundreds of thousands of jobs, the lingerie industry in this small town in Minas Gerais is doing just fine. Some of the latest financial news is in this Reporter's Notebook entry. And last week's piece was on possible regulation of the DJ industry.

Saturday, Feb. 28 -- Salvador - 36 Hours

This weekend's New York Times Travel section has my 36 hours piece on Salvador, but the real highlight is the slideshow by Lalo de Almeida.

Friday, Feb. 27-- TAM Nas Nuvens column

I finally got around to scanning my first column for the Brazilian inflight magazine TAM Nas Nuvens, the very day the February edition disappears from the seat pocket in front of you. Click here (or on the image) to see.

Friday, Feb. 20-- Carnival and Those Who Despise It

Out today on GlobalPost, interviews with the small but vocal minority of Brazilians who hate Carnival. Also, catching up on past work, I wrote the Brazil section of GlobalPost's World of Trouble feature on the global crisis, and have the last three Why We Travel interviews in the NY Times Travel section. (Click through the slideshow.). Plus, Notebook entries on topics like the Brazilian teacher fired for using "I Kissed a Girl" lyrics as a lesson on verb tense.

Friday, Jan. 30-- This week's GlobalPost dispatches

It's a tough choice -- would you rather read my latest work on interest rates or sex? Huffington Post chose sex. There's no accounting for taste.

Monday, Jan. 26 -- The Independent on GlobalPost

There has been a ton of press about GlobalPost, some of it even quoting me, but I especially liked the enthusiasm of the story in today's Independent, from the U.K..

Sunday, Jan. 25 -- Affordable Dominican Republic

The New York Times Travel section's annual Affordable Caribbean issue is out, and like last year, I wrote about the Dominican Republic. This time, it was the north coast towns of Cabarete and Sosua, with a detour down the Sabaneta-Moca highway to certainly one of the most unusual Indian restaurants around.

Wednesday, Jan. 21 --- Covering Brasilia and Washington

My latest GlobalPost story went up this afternoon, about a major housing headache in Brasilia. And yesterday, I was running around the Sao Paulo yesterday gauging reaction to the inauguration in Washington for my Reporter's Notebook.

Wednesday, Jan. 14 --- Reporter's Notebook...and Folha Clip

So far, I've posted daily entries on my Reporter's Notebook, which is GlobalPost's version of a blog. They've been, generally speaking, quick analysis on what's news in Brazil. Expect more diversified entries in the future, and please comment. Thanks to Nelson de Sa at Folha de Sao Paulo, who mentioned my article on Brazilian blacks in the age of Obama on his "Toda Midia" blog and in the print edition of Folha today.

Monday, Jan. 12 --- Global Post Debuts

GlobalPost is live today, and I encourage everyone to check it out and let me know what you think. I have three articles currently on the site:

Brazilian drivers spoiled for choice at the pump
For many Brazilian drivers, every trip to the gas station allows them to choose between gas and ethanol.

For Which It Stands: Brazil
Colorblind melting pot or racially divided society? Either way, Afro-Brazilian leaders welcome Obama.

Read All About It
In contrast with the U.S., newspapers are booming in Latin America’s largest economy.

Saturday, Jan. 10 --- Global Hype

GlobalPost launches Monday, and the publicity has started rolling in. Here are articles by the Associated Press, the Boston Globe, and AFP. I was interviewed via email for this story on PBS MediaShift. Three of my stories will be on the site when it launches, along with my "Reporter's Notebook" more commonly known as a blog.

Friday, Dec. 12 --- Last Weekend

The final Weekend in New York column is now up, and will appear in the print edition on Sunday. It's odd and a bit sad to have this happen while I'm far away, but then again, it makes the awesome slide show by Robert Caplin a whole lot less embarrassing.

Thursday, Dec. 11 --- A Close Shave...

...is not what I got when I took a straight razor shaving class at FSB Barber in New York. Man, being old-fashioned 's hard, and probably not worth it. Online, it's got a slide show. If you've got the print edition, the article is in today's Thursday Styles section. And save me a copy, the NYT costs $5 here..

Wednesday, Dec. 10 --- First GlobalPost Report...in Huffington Post

During its Beta phase, GlobalPost is publishing its work on Huffington Post's new World page. This is my first report from Brazil, on how Brazilian newspapers are thriving even as American papers are in trouble. All but four of the top 30 newspapers here have gained in circulation since 2007, and nine have gained by more than 10%. The newspaper Super Noticia, from the state of Minas Gerais, is up 36% from last year and is now the second-most read newspaper in Brazil, behind only Folha de S. Paulo.

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Tuesday, Dec. 9 --- From Sao Paulo

I have arrived in Sao Paulo, but my work continues to appear in New York. It's magic! The November 30 coumn was about three very cool New York cemeteries, including Green-Wood, which was a big tourist attraction in the 1860's. (What can i say, Disneyland was still a century away.) The last one was part of the 2009 ski issue.

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Wednesday, Nov. 26 --- Column Countdown

On November 16, I suggested a solution for rainy days in New York City: Grand Central Terminal. Should anyone be wondering, you can save 50 cents on your Donut Plant jelly doughnut by buying it at Joe, The Art of Coffee rather than Oren's. Plus, the coffee at Joe is better anyway. Then, on November 23, the column mapped out (literally) a day long tour of Manhattan by public bus, for the grand total of $7.50.Three columns left to go...

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Wednesday, Nov. 12 --- Introducing SethKugel.com 2.0

Hope everyone likes the new look. If you spot any flaws, broken links, etc., let me know.

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Tuesday, November 11

I had three pieces in the Travel section's Winter in the Sun issue: the column, which was about finding old Cuba in New York (since you can no longer find it in Cuba). Speaking of Cuba, Spanish tourist John Gomez was a great interviewee for this

Travel photo. And Koni Stores have advanced their plan to take over Brazil, since I last tried their hand rolls in March. For November 2nd's Weekend column, I decided I had run out of advice for one week, and asked tourists what the highlight of their trip to New York had been. And I got a great mojito out of it.

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Saturday, October 25

For the week of Halloween, I wrote about international sweets in the latest column. Also, a few Brazilians have written to me after reading about my upcoming move to Brazil in today's Folha de S. Paulo (not online). Actually, the article makes it seem like I am already there -- not true, as evidenced by the heavy sweater i am wearing today and the leaves changing color outside my window. See the article on my Portuguese page.

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Friday, October 17

As originally reported on the Portuguese page of sethkugel.com (scooped by my own website!), I have accepted a position of foreign correspondent for GlobalPost, a new online international news organization. I'll be moving to Sao Paulo, Brazil in December. Here's information on Global Post, and here's the bio they've posted on me. (Hmmm, that photo looks mighty familiar.) I will also freelance regularly for the Times and other publications.

In the meantime, Weekend in New York will continue to run into December, after taking this Sunday off.

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Thursday, October 16

For Weekend in New York, I test every restaurant, attraction or activity that I recommend. Not so for my piece in today's Styles section on men and Botox.

This past Sunday was the Travel section's New York issue, so my regular column compared New York City guidebooks. I also did a 36 Hours feature in which every activity listed was new in 2008. It comes with a video and a slideshow.

And though it only appeared online, on October 5th I wrote about how, with tix to Broadway shows well over $100, you can still see theater in New York on the cheap.

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Thursday, September 25

This week's column, available on the web today, is about hidden parks in Midtown Manhattan -- including a lot of places I had no idea existed before I started researching. There's a great slideshow that accompanies it, by Hiroko Masuike. I've also posted exclusive chocolate-covered-bacon-eating video footage from NY1 from last week.

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Thursday, September 18

This coming Sunday is the Travel section's Asia issue, so my column is about Asian New York, of course -- but about some of the smaller Asian immigrant groups you don't hear much about. Last week's was about eponymous shops -- or shops named after their owners. Oh and to see me eating chocolate covered bacon on TV, click here.

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Tuesday, September 9

Immigrant groups were the stars of the last two Weekends of August, first, the really awesome take out restaurants (and bakeries) in the West Indian blocks of Brooklyn south and east of Prospect Park. Then the discovery of the year, the live samba and pagode at Miss Favela's Saturday brunch as seen in this video. (Feijoada was awesome one time and mediocre the next time, but the ambience is unbeatable. Didn't mention this in the piece, but the owner noted that not only do Brazilians all think it reminds them of Brazil, but people from around the world say it reminds them of their own countries. Now that's an accomplishment.) Oh, the actual article mentions other Brazilian music spots as well. Finally, my piece on Bryant Park, in which I manage to write about Fashion Week without having to write anything about fashion.

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Wednesday, August 20

I make a guest appearance today in the Dining sections $25 and Under column, reviewing Israeli schnitzel stops along Coney Island Avenue in Brooklyn.

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Sunday, August 17

If you just read the print edition of last Sunday's Times, you may never know where to get that Brooklyn-Queens Expressway t-shirt you've always wanted. My column on unusual souvenirs ran only online. This weekend's column was about New York museums that highlight the city's history.

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Saturday, August 2

This week's column is about the three Brooklyn waterfront neighborhoods: Dumbo, Fulton Ferry and the extraordinarily odd Vinegar Hill. I have also have this little piece about Stockbridge, Mass. Last week's column was about sake bars, and here's the NY1 appearance where I talked about it.

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Friday, July 18

In today's Arts section, I have a piece on Juan Luis Guerra's lyrics, and the online version has translations of four of his songs, which were done with help on a few details from the artist himself and Ramona Hernandez at the Dominican Studies Institute at City College, who miraculously explained "arroz graneado" to me with help from her crack staff. Guerra plays Madison Square Garden tonight. My latest column, on juice bars, is also out today on the Travel website.

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Monday, July 7

Yesterday's column was about hotel bars, perfect if you're willing pay $22 a drink to have an outside shot at a view of the MoMA sculpture garden, and the previous week was about using your laptop + NYC wifi to find your way around the city.

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Tuesday, June24

Long overdue update--the last few columns:

June 22: NONMAINSTREAM SPORTS: Are You Ready for Some Gaelic Football?

June 15: COLOMBIAN CULTURE: A Fruit Shake, then Shaking to the Beat of Cumbia

June 8: The Bronx is More Than Just Yankee Stadium

The Colombian one got some press in Colombia, unsurprisingly, including this article in El Tiempo and Colombian radio networks, including W Radio and this clip from RCN.

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Monday, June 2

My column in yesterday's Times was on behind-the-scenes tours. Meanwhile, in the Southern Hemisphere, It was obviously a slow news week for the Brazilian press...you can see my appearance on the Programa do Jô last Thursday here (actually, the first nine minutes of it, but that's enough), and a cute article in Saturday's Veja, the Brazilian newsweekly, here.

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Thursday, May 22

This week's column is on Manhattan's hidden gardens, and I forgot to post last weeks, on Jewish arts in the city. Also, for anyone clicking in from Brazil, I'll be a guest on the Programa do Jô on May 27.

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Monday, May 12

The International Herald-Tribune just ran versions of both the column on music venues and the shopping article on Vila Madalena in Sao Paulo. Also, here's this weekend's appearance on NY1.

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Thursday, May 8

This week's column, about tiny spots to catch live music shows in the city, is part of the Travel section's music issue. Also, if you are among the 100% of my friends and 99% of humanity in general who missed me this morning at 6:20 on Univision, I'll be on NY1 this Sunday at 10 a.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m.

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Saturday, May 3

This weekend's travel section is now online, with my too-short piece on the ever-growing, ever-quirky shopping scene in Sao Paulo's Vila Madalena neighborhood with a cool photo of Ronaldo Fraga's store by Lalo de Almeida. I had to leave some pretty good stuff out, like Japonique (selling all things Japanese) and Toc Na Cuca (a cool art and design bookstore, 100% in English), both opened in the last few months.

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Thursday, May 1

Hey, what are you doing this Saturday at 7 a.m.? If you're answer is "Nothing, let's totally get together!" then read on. If not, come back next week. This week's column is about what early risers can do in the lonely pre-brunch hours of a New York City weekend. If you're still reading, you will be among the few interested in my appearance on Channel 41/Univision's "Al Despertar" news show a week from today. I should be on sometime between 6 and 7 a.m.

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Thursday, April 24

A water tower at MoMA, Indian art at the Met, and dirt at the American Museum of Natural History in this week's Weekend in New York.

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Thursday, April 17

Europe in New York is the theme of this week's column, to correspond with the Travel section's Europe issue that comes out this weekend. There's an all new Weekend in New York video as well.

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Thursday, April 10

It may appear that I have a new, obsessive interest in hard liquor, considering yesterday's cachaca piece and this week's column about martinis, online today. A mere coincidence of scheduling, I assure you.

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Wednesday, April 9

The Dining section today has my piece on aged cachaca, and a video tour of a cachaca-producing "alambique" in Brazil. Here's the version that ran in the International Herald Tribune, the Portuguese translation from UOL, and an article from BBC Brasil.

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Sunday, April 6

Today's column: stuff to do on Madison Avenue. Next week: martinis.

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Sunday, March 30

Catching up, here are the last three columns: there was this one on the best Irish bars in Manhattan, as picked by the Irish themselves; then, a surprising most-emailed list favorite, on tea, here. This weekend's is on flea markets.

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Thursday, March 6

This week's column on street art is out, along with a great slideshow by Robert Caplin. Lots of new stuff on the Multimedia page: this past weekend's NY1 appearance; and old television appearances on CUNY-TV's Nueva York, the WB11 news, and Brazil's Manhattan Connection (in two parts). Even a couple radio clips.

I'm gone for a while and won't be updating. I'm sure you'll survive.

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Sunday, March 2

Two other items of interest in the Travel section this Sunday: the Why We Travel photo and the Q&A, starring several of my knowledgeable Brazilian friends giving sage (or possibly erroneous) travel advice.

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Thursday, February 28

This weekend's column about Greek New York is out here. I'll be talking about it on NY1's New York Times Close Up this weekend.

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Monday, February 25

On NY1, I put English marmite on Dominican cassava bread for perhaps the first time in culinary history. Watch here.

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Friday, February 22

The latest column is on international grocery stores, and the accompanying video is online, with some embarrassing photos of my brother and me in the late 1970s. I'm on NY1 talking about it again this weekend, Sat. at 10 pm. Sun. at 10 am.

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Thursday, February 14

Couple new things. First, the column, on the islands of New York City (it's part of the Travel section's cruise issue). Also, a piece from this week's Viva New York section of the Daily News, on "In The Heights" move to Broadway. (Great show, see it.) Finally, I'll be on NY1 this weekend and next, regular times, 10pm Sat, 10am Sun.

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Monday, February 11

I talked about the museums piece on NY1 yesterday

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Thursday, February 7: Museums

Museums after Dark: It's Party Time in the Galleries is out today; I'll be talking about it on NY1 Saturday at 10 p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. Also, the folks at one of Brazil's major papers got a little lazy during Carnival and ran another piece in the "article about the New York Times's article" genre. You can read the always-amusing automatic Google English translation here.

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Saturday, February 2: Rock and Roll

The column is about rock music in New York City; here's this week's Why We Travel photo.

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Monday, January 28: Yesterday on NY1

Yesterday's appearance on NY1 with Sam Roberts, talking about the Korean column.

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SATURDAY, January 26: Carnival Options

Also in this Sunday's Travel section: a piece on lesser-known Brazilian carnivals. Here's a Portuguese translation from Ultimo Segundo. And I forgot to mention last week's Why We Travel photo.

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Thursday, January 24: Korean New York

Here's the latest column, with the accompanying video. I'll be talking about it on NY1 this Saturday at 10pm and Sunday at 10am. Also a couple new blog entries.

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Thursday, January 17: Winter Gardens

It's surprising pleasant to visit the city's botanical gardens during the winter, and that's even before the orchid show comes to the Bronx. Somehow I got them to use my photo, too.

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Monday, January 14: Family Blogging

The septuagenarian blogosphere is abuzz: family matriarch Judy Kugel has begun chronicling her eighth decade a few weeks early at www.70-something.com. Check it out.

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Thursday, January 10: Erotic Literature

Actually, Sunday's Weekend in New York is about libraries. But the last two lines really are about erotic literature.

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Tuesday, January 8: Small Step for Website Technology

A few recent NY1 appearances are now on the new multimedia page. Plus, a blog entry on the new Brazilian bakery that opened yesterday in Astoria.

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Thursday, January 3: Weekend in New York-- The Trilingual Video Edition

This coming Sunday's column about NYC's many contrasts is online, and so is the latest video. Also, check out the Dominican video dubbed in Portuguese and the Atlantic Avenue video dubbed in Spanish and Portuguese by MSN's crack linguists. Wacky.

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