Southeast Texas friends, please join us on Martin Luther King Day, Monday, January 15 for the MLK Day March in Orange, Texas, followed by our protest of the newly built Neo-Confederate memorial on MLK Dr.
The Orange chapter of the NAACP will be leading the historic MLK March beginning at 10 a.m. at Salem Church on W. John Ave. The parade will be followed by presentations at the Riverfront Boardwalk and Pavilion.
Click here for more information.
And then at 2 p.m., Tracie and I will head over to the Neo-Confederate memorial on MLK Dr. at Interstate 10.
The monument is located across from the Exxon station on MLK Dr. at I-10: Google maps.
Parking is available at the Exxon station or on 41st St. (my blue Ford F150 pickup truck will be parked there).
We will be on the corner with our signs (and water bottles) from 2-4 p.m.
For those who aren’t familiar with the insidious efforts of white supremacists and Neo-Confederates to make hateful iconography unavoidable, please check out this recent reel by musician and activist Dara Tucker.
Heartfelt thanks go out to everyone who donated to our GoFundMe campaign to raise an MLK billboard across from the monument in time for MLK Day. The billboard will continue to appear throughout Black History Month (February).
Feel free to contact me if you have any questions or concerns: jparzen@gmail.com or (917) 405-3426.
Thank you for your support and solidarity! We hope to see you at the march or protest or hopefully both!

Tracie and I share our heartfelt thanks with everyone who contributed to
In 2017, the group — the contemporary incarnation of the Ku Klux Klan — completed construction and began displaying the flags. Despite Herculean efforts by the City of Orange to block them, nothing could be done because the monument stands on private land.
One of the biggest surprises of my 2023 was how the NYC cityscape has changed since the closures of 2020.
As my buddy Doug and I enjoyed one of the best meals of my 2023 at Chambers in lower Manhattan back in May 2023, I couldn’t help but be reminded of what Susan Sontag once wrote of the 20th-century critical theorist and activist
As at least one critic has written, Sontag “yearned to be identical to her ideas, to display the punishing consistency of Weil, but her ideas jostled and sparked, exploding her sense of what she was, or wanted to be.”
If there were one person in the wine trade who has made a career of being identical to her ideas, it must be
Over the course of a career where she has created an entirely new and profoundly impactful role in the world of wine, she is at once a sommelier and activist, a restaurateur and a philosopher. But she hasn’t achieved this through high-browed essays, articles, books, or speeches. No, she has accomplished this feat through her sheer indomitable will to be identical to her ideas.
I could feel it in the way that the servers interacted with our party.
As 2023 comes to an end, Tracie, the girls, and I have so much to be thankful for.
One of the things that a lot of folk don’t know about the
Over the years, I’ve enjoyed many unforgettable lunches and dinners there. And the to-go gourmet deli counter is extraordinary.
Of course, no lunch at the Dispensa is complete without a post-meal visit to nearby Mt. Orfano and my friends’ winery Arcari + Danesi.
Fritos, chili con carne, Velveeta, freshly chopped white onions, and pickled jalapeños… It’s a recipe for a big bowl of wrong. And I loved every bite. 
There are restaurants where you go for good food, drink, and ambiance.
In February of this year, I had the great fortune of visiting my longtime friend Anthony Cerbone (in the first image) with a group of top wine professionals.
At the same meal, we also opened a 1969 Taurasi by Mastroberardino. It was a bit oxidized so we drank it as an aperitif.
Beyond fish tacos and one of my all-time favorite boat-to-table seafood joints, La Jolla, the town where I grew up, is not exactly known as a progressive or creative dining destination.
Marisi was our family’s first fancy meal of the year. And both Tracie and I loved the traditionally inspired but creatively driven menu.
But it’s the wine list by Chris Plaia that really takes it over the top. I remember when he was first working on his program, he told me that he wanted to bring natural wine to La Jolla. And he did, making him the first wine director to preside over such an ambitious program for the “beach and tennis” Tom Collins/Gin and Tonic crowd.
Tracie and I have been organizing protests of the