Thursday, February 26, 2009

Celebrate the Recession! A "Modern Day Depression-Era" Fundraiser


The City Reliquary is a small and funky Williamsburg museum with a community conscience. Tonight they are hosting a fundraising event called "Brother Can You Spare Some Rent?" which will feature a fortune teller, a "Pie the Landlord" booth, Depression-era movies, beer and old-timey drinks and DIY fingerless gloves (for when the heat does off in your apartment and you need to keep warm while applying to job after job online). All this quirky entertainment is under $5 and goes to a good cause.

Here's the info:

Friday February 27th 7-11pm
The City Reliquary Museum,
messages@cityreliquary.org
www.cityreliquary.org,
718. R.U.CIVIC (718.782.4842)
Getting there:
Ride Yer Bike! or
L train to Lorimer St.; G train to Metropolitan Ave.; J, M, Z train to Marcy Ave.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

'Til Debt Do Us Part


In case you weren't depressed enough about being unemployed, poor, and lacking in career prospects this recession, don't worry: soon your relationship will fail too.

It shouldn't come as too big of a surprise that unemployment, foreclosures, and the realization that middle age will be spent caring for aging parents abandoned by social security aren’t exactly conducive to romance and love-making.

Just before valentine's day, American Public Media's Marketplace interviewed someone from the National Foundation for Credit Counseling who confirmed that through the years, the court documents have shown that financial distress is one of the major causes of divorce. In Forbes magazine, University of Chicago Business School economist Gary Becker agreed that, "recession has always been a factor raising divorce rates."

This TIME magazine article explains a few different theories for the link between recession and divorce. And as this article tells it, many women are bailing because their moneybags husbands aren't worth so much any more (by now many of you have heard about these girls, who were ready to call it quits as soon as their banker boyfriends got laid off). But it turns out, the breadwinners are just as likely to initiate the divorce, since they have less to lose now on alimony. One divorce lawyer quoted in the article said "I've had several clients come to me recently and say, 'I've wanted to get divorced for years but didn't want to give up half of my business. Now that my business is not worth anything, wouldn't it be a good time to do it?'"

For richer and what now?

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Ebay + Recession = Zilok


A new website takes a page from the ebay/craigslist book to create a forum for peer-to-peer renting. Offering everything from electronics to party supplies to heavy duty maintenance tools, Zilok.com fills that niche in the market for the items that so many people want or need for just a few uses. Use it to get some rent a plasma screen for your next superbowl party ($250/day for a 42 inch in manhattan) or fancy camera accessories for between $3 and $40/day (a fisheye lens goes for $6/day in manhattan.)

The best part of this website is that takes the monopoly power out of the hands of companies like U-haul, which have traditionally been the only place to find a van rental for a day or two (believe me, I moved this summer and looked everywhere.) On Zilok I found moving vans available in California for $85/ day whereas my U-haul experience broke the $300 mark.

But that brings us to the downside: based on the availability of items on the site, it looks like Zilok started on the west coast and is only gradually making it over to the east. All the more reason to start using it now. Offer up for rental those items that cost you more than you should have spent, and in a few uses they'll have paid for themselves! That's what I call shopping for the recession.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Bitter Old People to Gen Y: "You are Not Special."

As the economy has plummeted in recent months, unemployment has jumped to a 16-year high of 7.2 percent.

The rate of unemployment is, not surprisingly, higher among 20-somethings than any other age group; still, the recent increase among that demographic is actually the same as the increase across the board (slightly over 2%). Someone at MSNBC seems to think their story noteworthy nonetheless, and wrote an article practically bubbling with vindictive glee at the plight of today's 20-somethings.

“This is the most educated generation, and they were told, "You're special,’ ” notes workplace consultant J.T. O'Donnell. “Well … they’re not special, and they end up going out into the professional world and finding this out.”

Ouch.

Now, I am not this woman's therapist, but if I were I would have to suggest exploring some resentment issues. Eve, we're sorry that you couldn't get a job right out of college and you had to work your way up from the local obit column, but taking it out on miserable unemployed college grads isn't going to solve your inferiority complex.