In the ongoing war against smoking in New York City, the NYC Coalition for a Smoke-Free City is aiming to keep tobacco products out of pharmacies. They have been running these prescription-themed ads in newspapers and subways:

RxTobacco

No doctor would ever prescribe tobacco . . .

It’s a true statement and a thought-provoking ad. It’s also wonderfully reminiscent of this Fry & Laurie sketch:

Marketing Interview

BirthdayDoodle (2)

 

Who doesn’t love a good Google doodle?  When I logged this morning, I was excited to see this adorable version of their logo and wondered what famous person I shared a birthday with. I was even more excited when I moused over and realized the doodle was for me!

 

Aw, thanks Google!

Per the Motion Picture Association of America, more than 200 movies and television series are filmed in New York State each year.  One of the joys of living in New York is getting to see our fair city often on screens both large and small (Conversely, one of the downsides of living in New York is is having to deal with film sets closing off various sidewalks).  Even though New York is arguably the greatest city in the world, some filmmakers feel the need to take a little creative license with their portrayals of the city, giving us, what I like to call, Fictional New York.

 

Author’s Note: No spoilers, just good natured teasing. 🙂

 

Today’s slice of fictional New York is brought to us by Elementary on CBS.  Ladies and Gentlemen, may I present the K train:

The K Train

The “K Train” as featured on Elementary

Let’s start with the entrance: I have never seen a subway entrance with an awning like that; in fact, there are very few covered subway entrances at all.  Most are simple stairways with a bit of fencing, usually near the corner of the street.  You will occasionally see entrances on the sides of buildings (similar to the one in the picture), but the signs are very discreet, a simple sign above the entrance.  To me, it looks like they took the existing awning of the building and wrapped it in MTA branding, which makes me wonder, “Why did they make the effort to do so?”.

 

Now, to the contents of the sign: To most people walking around New York today, “K train” probably sounds more like a reference to recreational use of ketamine than something run by the MTA.  But they would be mistaken!  From 1985 to 1988, there was a K Train; it ran local on the Eighth Avenue line.  It also did not have a 57th street stop; nor did it go to Brooklyn (Watson and Holmes’ burrough, where they were in the previous scene).   If you live in New York, you likely know that the Eighth Avenue line (A/C/E) signs are a dark blue, much darker than this K Train sign.  That shade of robin’s egg blue is closer to the color of the yet-to-be-completed Second Avenue Subway.  With all of the existing subway lines, why did the show feel the need to create their own?

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