Ed Hamilton

Ed Hamilton

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Ed Hamilton has lived at the Chelsea Hotel for over 10 years.
His fiction has appeared in Modern Drunkard, The River Walk Journal, SoMa Literary Review, The Journal of Kentucky Studies, Exquisite Corpse, Southern Ocean Review, Lumpen Times, Limestone , and No Umbrella.

Ed contributes the weekly "Slice of Life" column to Living with
Legends: Hotel Chelsea Blog ( www.hotelchelseablog.com).

Ed was born in Atlanta, Georgia and grew up in Louisville, Kentucky. He holds a BA in Psychology and an MA in Philosophy. He studied toward a Ph.D. in Philosophy at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he also taught logic, ethics, and philosophy.

Blog Entries by Ed Hamilton

Why the New New Yorkers Live in Glass Houses

3 Comments | Posted November 13, 2007 | 06:00 PM (EST)


Writers have been expending a lot of ink lately in trying to figure out who in their right mind would want to move into one of these leaky aquariums developers keep building all over New York City. The short answer, according to Penelope Green in Sunday's Week in Review section...

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Board-Directed Coup Topples Chelsea Hotel's Famed Manager Stanley Bard

Posted June 18, 2007 | 01:31 PM (EST)


The breaking news at New York's famed Chelsea Hotel is that managing partner Stanley Bard, and the rest of the Bard family, have been forced out by their board of directors. Starting Monday, an as yet unnamed new management company will take over the day-to-day operations of the hotel.

The...

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Sports & Blogging in a Surveillance Society

Posted June 15, 2007 | 11:47 AM (EST)


Louisville's Courier Journal is thinking of suing the NCAA for ejecting their blogger from a University of Louisville-Oklahoma State baseball game. What it comes down to, I suppose, is whether a blog is viewed by the courts as a sort of live telecast akin to TV or Radio, or a...

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Mini Cooper on Cutting Edge of Silliness

Posted January 31, 2007 | 11:24 AM (EST)


I knew there was something wrong with those Mini-Coopers. They're just too damned cute for their own good.

Now we learn ("Billboards That Know Your Name," Barnaby Feder, nytimes.com) that when you buy one of these cartoonish golf carts, you are automatically enrolled in a sinister...

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Artist Linda Troeller's TB-AIDS Diary Proves Sadly Prophetic

Posted January 18, 2007 | 02:17 PM (EST)


With the advent of AZT and the various drug cocktails used to treat the symptoms of HIV, we have become accustomed to thinking of AIDS as a manageable disease, rather like tuberculosis, seemingly well on it's way to eradication. But more ominous parallels between these two great epidemics of...

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All Aboard!: The High Line Giveaway

Posted January 3, 2007 | 05:27 PM (EST)


I've been waiting for some time for somebody to notice that the High Line project in West Chelsea isn't all it's cracked up to be. (For those of you unfamiliar with the issue, the Highline is an elevated park being built on old railroad tracks on the West Side...

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Crichton vs. Crowley: Dinosaurs, Pedophiles, and The Cult of Expertise

Posted December 20, 2006 | 11:38 AM (EST)


At first I laughed when I read of the novelist Michael Crichton's attack on Washington Political reporter Michael Crowley (Felicia R. Lee, "Columnist Accuses Crichton of Literary 'Hit-and-Run'", New York Times, 12/14/06). How utterly bizarre. It seems that in his latest novel, "Next," Crichton has invented a character, "Mick Crowley,"...

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Secret Police in an Open Society

Posted December 1, 2006 | 12:07 PM (EST)


Last weekend outside a nightclub in Queens New York, police fired fifty shots into a car occupied by three unarmed men, killing 23-year-old Sean Bell--a groom on his wedding day--and seriously injuring the other two. The operation was ostensibly a part of a crackdown on violence in Chelsea nightclubs; questions...

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Bush's Humiliation, Not America's

Posted November 20, 2006 | 03:55 PM (EST)


Since maintaining the status quo in Iraq is plainly untenable, the debate over what course to take seems to be boiling down to two options: pull out slowly in a phased reduction of troops, or increase troop levels and try to stabilize the country. But both these options will have...

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Shut Up and Do as Bush Tells You

Posted November 6, 2006 | 09:15 PM (EST)


With election day upon us, it couldn't hurt to remind ourselves once again of the differences between Democrats and Republicans, both the politicians who go by these names, and the voters who put them into office. While I was home visiting Kentucky lately, I chanced upon two letters-to-the-editor in the--unfortunately...

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Two Crises of Conscience: Mark Foley and Sgt. Ricky Clousing

Posted October 20, 2006 | 11:28 AM (EST)


I know I'm rather late in commenting on the Mark Foley scandal, but it's taken me this long to quit laughing. This is really what they call the chickens coming home to roost, now isn't it? Force of habit compels me to cheer for any revelation that exposes hypocrisy, even...

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Village Voice Sells Out, Supports Developer

Posted October 5, 2006 | 01:55 PM (EST)


It's a sad day--or should I say week--in the history of alternative weeklies. But I can't say I didn't see it coming. First, awhile back, the Village Voice fired a good chunk of it's long-time staff; then, more recently, they eliminated the last remaining columns focusing on National politics. Last...

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Bombing Funerals, and the Moral High Ground

Posted September 14, 2006 | 11:11 PM (EST)


The Pentagon is apparently taking heat for their refusal to bomb a funeral in Afghanistan. So I just wanted to be the first to commend the Army officers involved in the decision for their courage in standing up to the bloodthirsty lunatics in the White House who would bring our...

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The Depraved Conservative Mindset

Posted September 6, 2006 | 12:00 AM (EST)


I tore an article by Ralph Peters out of the New York Post a couple of weeks ago (Moment of Truth: Islamo-fascist terror could trigger a brutal western response, Aug. 20, 2006). I've held onto the scrap for awhile just so I could have time to sufficiently digest it--for believe...

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An Overview of the Iraq War and the Larger War

Posted August 21, 2006 | 03:44 PM (EST)


Well, let's see, where are we? First there was 9-11; hard to deny that that was the beginning. This outrage seemed to call for some kind of a response, so we invaded Afghanistan, and put our former buddies the Taliban--who we supported in their war against the Soviet Union--out...

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Schrager and Schnabel Unite to Conquer Old New York

Posted August 11, 2006 | 03:12 PM (EST)


The Gramercy Hotel used to be a place very similar to the Chelsea, down at the heels and full of bohemians and bohemian charm. But then the developer Ian Schrager gutted it and threw the permanent residents out on the street. Now it's an art hotel for the rich and...

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What do the Terrorists Want, and Can We Give It To Them?

Posted July 27, 2006 | 07:11 PM (EST)


It seems obvious that the terrorists want us out of Iraq--in physical, financial and cultural terms--and out of the Middle East in general. The World Trade Center, after all, was one of the most potent symbols imaginable of Western financial world domination. But there's a difference between what the terrorists...

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What Kind of Man is George Bush, And What is He Up To?

Posted July 13, 2006 | 04:43 PM (EST)


Gone are the days when we could wonder, half facetiously, if President Bush was as stupid as he seemed, or if he just thought the rest of us were stupid. Over the years a clearer, more nuanced picture of the man has emerged. Albeit deeply ignorant and intolerant, Bush is...

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Cowboys and Indians and to Hell With Art

Posted July 6, 2006 | 02:37 PM (EST)


The recent decision of the rent control board in Albany to allow a 7.5% increase in rental rates is only the latest affront to affordable housing in New York City. We have landlords emptying whole apartment buildings under various pretexts, and now this, not unexpected, increase. Of course, the politicians...

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Drag Summit Takes Place in Climate of Continued Violence

Posted June 26, 2006 | 07:47 PM (EST)


June is Gay Pride month. In New York, as in cities across the country, gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, transsexuals, and their friends will be marching in support of tolerance and diversity. It was in this spirit that my girlfriend and I attended Kings and Queens of New York City: A...

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