Such extreme exhaustion -- do deeply traumatized from being assaulted by Dr Andrew Fagelman receptionist and NYPD abuse - md and police both more than fail me I did not understand this piece "The Mysterious Mr. Rechnitz" by David Goodman is in today, Sunday's NYT which means larger readership.
That makes twice on a Sunday my YouTube work part of a big article. How ironic because my YouTube channel was wrongly and illegally removed before the mayoral election where only I predicted 5 months in advance Bloomberg may not win due to voter anger.
First big article ran in Sunday's hard copy on Giuseppi Logan. They even included a photo of us together sitting on the bench Tompkins Square Park.
Google returned my work and gave me a written apology which is rare because I am rarely to ever given apologies ususally false blame. We pleased to get this write-up with link to my video I yet view which I am proud of. I scooped everybody which Josh pointed out as he asked me to remove my work. He looks cute and he comes across sincere and beautiful. No way I am removing the video. I loathe the taxi lobbyist Maureen Connelly for pushing Josh to remove my work.
"The Mysterious Mr. Rechnitz" by David Goodman in a yet another controversy because the elusive philanthropist tried to get Troy to remove her YouTube interview with him. News media outlets looking for a photograph of Mr. Rechnitz after the announcement resorted to one of the only pictures they could find: an image of Mr. Rechnitz, hair sticking out from under a knitted cap, taken from a 2009 video interview.
Mr. Rechnitz had tried to get the video taken down before and after the announcement, said Suzannah B. Troy, 50, an artist who shot the clip and posted it on YouTube. “I’d appreciate it if you would please take that video down,” he wrote to her in July in an e-mail, which she provided to The New York Times. “It’s a pretty unflattering shot the media grabbed from the video.”
She refused. “It’s authentic; you look like a Williamsburg hipster,” she remembered telling him. (Ms. Connelly later released a more buttoned-up studio portrait.)
Here is the photo referenced in the previous article and The New York Times gave Suzannah B. Troy photo on-line but not in the print version which started on the front page and ended with Troy's photo on the last page of the A section.