Tag Archives: coffee shops

Leslie Buck

2010-04-30-anthora.jpgIs glory real if it’s anonymous? That’s one of the questions raised by today’s front-page New York Times obit for Leslie Buck, the designer of the iconic Anthora to-go cup, which has been a resonant symbol of New York street life since the 1960s. The cup is more ubiquitous now in imagination and memory than it is in life; demand has dropped, and the company that makes it only does so now on request. But any student of pop culture can tell you that’s the best kind of ubiquity there is — the kind that’s been detached from the vagaries of the real-world marketplace. A cultural artifact lives forever, on TV (“Without the Anthora, ‘Law & Order’ could scarcely exist,” says the Times) and on store shelves: I myself own six ceramic coffee cups emblazoned with Buck’s design. There’s a whole website devoted to selling them.

So who was Leslie Buck? Buck was 87 when he died on Monday, a survivor of Auschwitz and Buchenwald. He was a salesman for a paper-cup company and scrambling for a way to crack the New York City market when he executed the Anthora design in the mid-’60s. Greeks owned most of the coffee shops, he reasoned; why not a cup with classical motif, in the colors of the Greek flag? Here’s the great part: Buck knew nothing about art or design. Almost fifty years later his design for the Anthora cup is one of the most widely recognized in the world, or at least the world of people who’ve ever spent time in New York. (The name, by the way, represented a mangling of the Greek word “Amphora,” or vase.)

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Something Is Brewing Across America Today: The Coffee Party is Percolating

At over 350 small coffee shops across the country today, Americans are witnessing the birth of a new movement. It’s not Democrat or Republican, it’s not progressive or conservative, it’s not young or old. It’s not about issues so much as a new way of seeing politics. It’s not even the Coffee Party (full disclosure: I am a lifelong tea drinker); as someone said this morning, “We’re the Coffee, Tea and We Party.”

I attended the first organizing event of the nascent Coffee Party at an ungodly hour of a rainy morning in the welcoming Busboys & Poets coffeeshop in downtown Washington, DC. I had persuaded my friend Mary Panke to go with me, believing in her ability to think positive thoughts and to see creative solutions in every issue. I attended mostly out of curiousity and the cynical fear that the Coffee Party was attempting to copy the Tea Party’s tactics.

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