Bridgette Francis, High School Teacher

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The Basics
Age and occupation. How long have you lived here, where did you come from, and where do you live now?
I'm 24 and teach high school social studies and economics. Born and raised in Shaolin, NY (that's Staten Island for the hip-hop illiterate.) I moved around the city and Brooklyn for a while, but now I'm back on the Rock. I live in a semi-renovated 5000 sq. ft. furniture warehouse near the ferry with my sweetie and two big dogs. We make a lot of art, music and food at my place, which is nice. I figure after living in closet sized sublets, it's ok for me to gloat a little about my sweet abode. Stapleton is the best kept secret in New York City.

Three for Three
1. You emerged from the Staten Island punk/hardcore scene and now you're a NYC public school teacher. Can you describe how the former affected the latter?
The real question here is whether or not I can describe the connection without boring the hell out of whoever reads this. I've given two stories below, you decide which is the truth and which is a bunch of hooey:

a. Well, this old friend of mine Chris Jensen (I say old because he was probably like 6 years older than me back when I ruled the scene, I guess he would still be 6 years older than me...) was a teacher and activist and always took time during his sets to explain that if we ever really wanted to change the pesky system, that we actually had to get proactively involved in reforming it. He probably inspired me. Also, I used to like to mosh up front, so I'm used to asserting myself among people the general population might have reservations about. Most people are nice and just want to be respected. Except Skins, there was never any hope for them...

Mostly though, my decision to teach came about in college where I was inspired by great teachers and became aware of how good it feels to take control of one's own education. I had really good teachers and wanted to pass that along. It's a career that enables you to be an activist, an artist and a student until you retire. Summers off, too. I can't imagine doing much else.

b. Teaching high school is an easy way to hang out with cute boys all day and never grow up.

2. As a life-long citizen of the forgotten borough, please give me your real quick-take on the following.
Manhattan: Overrated. I hate midtown enough to dismiss the entire borough.
Brooklyn: Like the mom of Staten Island, with more diversity and culture. Where it's at, but Williamsburg and Park Slope get the Manhattan rating. DUMBO is on the fence...
Queens: The bus system in Queens is sub par. But Queens gave us LL and Jerry Springer, so it's all good. Plus, I work there.
Bronx: Home of the Bombers and I like the Mets.
Jersey: Wants to be Staten Island, but smells too bad to pull it off. For real.

3. You went to Eugene Lang College of the New School in the Village some time ago but do you have any advice for the Olsen Twins who'll be attending NYU in the fall?
Don't let anyone videotape you partaking in morally questionable activities, girls. That could ruin your political career! Also, if you order items separately at Burrittoville, the two of you can eat well for $5.40.

Proust-Krucoff Questionnaire
Please share a personal (and hopefully interesting) NYC taxi story.
One time I had a taxi driver tell me he used to train exotic animals. He swears he had a tiger as a pet. He also claimed to have been an animal handler on the set of The Birds. Apparently the way they got the crows to stand still was by lacing their seed with whiskey. The moral of the story is crows make belligerent drunks and taxi drivers have discovered the fountain of youth. (This guy was roughly 45-50.)

Time travel question: What era, day or event in New York's history would you like to re-live?
The heyday of Studio 54. That must have been something else.

9pm, Wednesday night - what are you doing?
Grading papers and watching the O.C.

What's the most expensive thing in your wardrobe?
Probably the big hoop earrings with my name in the middle. They were a gift.

Finish one of the four following sentences:
She took him to the Whitney Museum where Vladimir admired a row of...
orange traffic cones.
"They look like stupid hat!"
"Hats, Vlad, Hats! When you talk about more than one hat, it's hats!"

Where do you summer?
Nosara, Costa Rica.

What was your best dining experience in NYC?
I'm vegan so my choices are somewhat limited. But one time, when I was a waitress at McHales in Hell's Kitchen, Luke Perry's friend told me that he (Luke) thought I was cute. Then Dylan McKay blushed and took a sip of his Budweiser to disguise his "guilty as charged" smile. Beat that.

Just how much do you really love New York?
(arms wide stretched) This much!

Of all the movies made about (or highly associated with) New York, what role would you have liked to be cast in?
Holly Golightly, of course. Or Nancy.

If you could change one thing about New York, what would it be?
Lowering the cost of living would be nice, but only for people who need help. I guess my answer is to increase affordable housing for the working class and poor. Eat the rich.

The End of The World is finally happening. What are you going to do with your last 24 hours in NYC?
Have a great big party and tell everyone how much I love them. Celebrate our existence as the worlds greatest mysteries are revealed to us in awesome poetry.

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Comments (27) [rss]

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teaching is the hardest and most underrated job in the city. when i was 21 and fresh out of college, i taught chemistry at a high school downtown for one year. i was expecting an easy 9 to 2pm job, but it turned out to be a hellish 12 hour slogfest every single day. not to say that it wasn't fun- but people don't realize how hard teachers work.

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did those kids call you mr. dobkin? oh the memories of that fine school.

and damn, i didn't have any teachers that look like bridgette.

i wholly support this gothamist interview feature, especially if continues to interview such interesting (read - hot) women.

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1. You emerged from the Staten Island punk/hardcore scene

who is she? you guys need a "bio" section to your interviews.

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what is with the "Jersey: Wants to be Staten Island, but smells too bad to pull it off. For real."? as a jersey girl i constantly find myself defending staten island from uppity manhattanites who don't even know the borough exists. even so, we all know that the only reason some parts of jersey get a bad rap about their smell is the wafting fumes from the arthur kill and the fresh kills dump. please. staten island wants to be jersey. or worse - long island.

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she's too cool for williamsburg?

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Yeah, I'm with Maureen. New Jersey wraps its sheltering arms around Staten Island, the red-headed stepchild of New York City. I can't count how many times, as a Jerseyite, I told Manhattanites that "Staten Island's not so bad."

I too am confused/concerned...she seems nice and all, but who is this person and why is she different from my brother's fiance who teaches in the Bronx (alternate fir kashes)?

My take on it is that it's just new yorkers, big and small. no need for the bios/intros. Just one new yorker after another (and the only qualification to be a NYer is to live her, not be from here). Submit your brother's fiance and I bet Krucoff's monkeys will interview her too.

You see, there's this little-known and well-guarded list at the NYC Board of Ed that contains a ranking of the "celebrityness" of all teachers. Fascinating stuff I can assure you. I have access on account of my undercover NARC years (Rego Park, '91-'94) and a secretary who just can't say no to macadamia nuts. You'd be surprised who's teaching in the NYC public school system: Fran Tarkenton, Roberta Flack, Wes Anderson, and Helen Thomas, just to name a few. Naturally, they too are on the anonymity bandwagon for obvious reasons and use names like Mr. Bluegrass and Ms. MrrrMrrr. While none of you may have heard of Bridgette's legendary Staten Island status, she did rank over 100 spots higher than Old Hag's brother's fiance. Send along her info and we'll reserve her a spot too.

Of that I have no doubt...but COULD you give us a short bio? You know, those of us that grew up in the wilds of Jersey defending freakin' Satan Island? Cuz we still have no idea who she is.

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Who she is has no bearing on the matter at hand. She's the everybabe. The woman you made out with during your "I'm just trying to figure it all out, Mom" orientation week at Swarthmore. The mailroom floozy your boyfriend sucked face with at Holiday Party '94 just after he did two shooters and pounded fists with the lunchroom pizza guy. She's Halleluiah Mary and Go-Get-Em Gidgit riding the ferry to Mecca with the wind up her skirt. She's a doppelganger with double Ds. A bio would only adversely affect her chameleon powers. Let the magic ooze over you and set you free. To define her would be to define you.

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Why is it that if someone is outside the insular blogger community does she have to defend herself, to "be" someone? Can't she just be some cool chick who is worth her salt and hearing out?

Oh oh oh, you all want a BIO. Silly me, sometimes I can be so dense my friends call me Trigonometry. Okay, besides the aforementioned information like her name is Bridgette Francis, 24 years old, from and lives in Staten Island, went to Eugene Lang College, now a teacher...

She follows a strict vegan diet, she's awful at basketball but really tries hard, was once photographed in the Village Voice at a demonstration against police brutality, AND her brother is a NYPD cop. (the levels, the levels) I also *think* her sister lives in New Jersey and often wears a NY Giants sweatshirt when housecleaning on the weekend.

I hope that clears everything up!

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I'd still be interested in that punk thing she did, what was that?
and: why is there no weekend edition?

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my cat's breath smells like cat food.

No one must be famous! No one is insular! I was just tryin' to get a sense of the underlying narrative linking these interviews...and to hear more about the punk thing, as I am out of the loop and thought, as usual, that I was missing something.

Ah, the punk thing. I think she was just a "scenester" (is that still a word?) not a musician in her Staten Island youth. I don't know what else to add about that. I guess you were either part of it or not, and I wasn't. Do you wanna hear about the local punk bands I used to see at the Crofton Fire Hall growing up in Maryland?

Yes, absolutely. And tell me where a 30-year-old woman can go, because I'm bored.

So, is the overarching "missive" of these, "People I like hangin' out in the Ville"? This is fine, I just want to know so I am no longer confused.

And can you interview my brother's fiance Felicia next?

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Is Felicia hot?

Is Old Hag hot? I want to see a picture.

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Did you guys avoid putting comments links on the past couple interviews to avoid this kind of thread?

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Shut up anonymous.

I'm a morbidly obese shut-in with fractious hair and and even more incendiary complexion.Very pretty nails, though.

where were the teachers like this when i was in high school?

and why doesn't she answer the real question: how hard is it having 17-year-olds trying to mack you all day?

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