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Monday, November 16, 2009

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Anything to make a buck I guess.  Why does the Seinfeld episode featuring the "Peterman Reality Tour" come to mind?
Jeremiah Miller calls the time Barack Obama spent in New York "the lost years," because that period from 1981 to 1985 is not as well-known as his roots in Hawaii or his recent years in Chicago. To fill in the gap, Miller offers a tour of Upper Manhattan called "Obama's New York."
The two-hour $25 walking tour includes stops at Columbia University, a Harlem subway station, and the street where the man who now sleeps in the White House once slept in an alley.
"I became intrigued by the fact that not much is known about his life during this period, but this was a pivotal time for him," said Miller, 27, who uses proceeds from the tour to supplement his income as a struggling actor. "He was searching for himself. He felt he didn't fit in. That's why he came to New York -- to find community."

Obama even opens his memoir, "Dreams from My Father," with a scene in New York. It was the day he got the news that his Kenyan father was dead. Miller pauses on a sidewalk while leading the tour to narrate that dramatic opening passage from the book, and his talents as an actor shine through as he reads aloud Obama's recollection of the phone call from a relative in Kenya:
"'Can you hear me? I say, your father is dead.' ... That was all, the line cut off, and I sat down on the couch, smelling eggs burn in the kitchen, staring at cracks in the plaster, trying to measure my loss."

Miller reads another passage from the memoir while standing on 109th Street near Amsterdam Avenue, where, Obama wrote, "I spent my first night in Manhattan curled up in an alleyway." He was supposed to stay in an apartment at 142 W. 109th St., and eventually he did move in, but nobody was home when he arrived.
Okay. So there's a tour of "Obama's New York". How About a tour of Obama's Chicago?


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