By the mid 70s the Times Square of midnight
cowboy
Joe Buck and taxi driver Travis Bickle had made the Times Square of the
V-girls, shooting galleries,
penny arcades, and funky museums look quaint.
In the 80s the arsonists,
crack cocaine dealers,
chicken hawks (pimps who controlled boy hookers) and AIDS-positive
muggers were terrifying.
From the 40s through the 80s, however, there is a remarkable
consistency to
statements about the dirtiness and social degeneracy of Times Square by
municipal authorities, the
daily tabloids, and The New York
Times. Their mantra was that it harbored criminal parasites
who used it as a base from which to infect the healthy community.
However, during the 20th
century, such public places were part of the business of the city.
Civic officials cannot
afford to eliminate vice. Police and politicians limit access to it,
keeping it out of sight of
respectable citizens and allowing
those who want it (who include many respectable citizens) easy access.
The Mafia “kingpins” of the prostitution, gambling, and dirty-book
rackets are confederate with
not only police, politicians, and real estate moguls who provide them
space, but also
with those who provide financial backing, make loans, encourage money
laundering, and give
tips to the vice merchants about entering legitimate businesses and
investing.
These men easily trumped the booksellers of the 40s and 50s, just as
Ford and Disney, with Mayor
Giuliani’s help, were able to trump them. Thus 42nd Street vice finally
gave way to the family-friendly environment the corporations needed for
their offices, shops, and restaurants. Its
executives can adjourn to upscale strip clubs with as little concern
about embarrassing themselves as
Garment District high rollers had when they reveled in Café
Society’s night spots and the “sex
circuses” in Midtown’s classiest apartment buildings. The elite always
has its privileges. A classy
working and playing environment is still one.
Until recently, the rest of us with prurient
leanings had to shop under the disdainful gazes of Billy Graham, Father
McCaffrey, or Donald Wildmon at the 42nd Street
dirty book stores and sex-and-violence theaters. However, perhaps not
any more. As book
stores and movie theaters get condemned on the basis of the subjective
criteria of their
“negative effects” on surrounding businesses, bulldozers have been
having a go at the vice areas of
Boston, New York, Washington and Baltimore. Ironically, these
developments further democratize,
rather than suppress, sex-related businesses. Entrepreneurs now favor
internet and phone sex, sex
boutiques, hotel room cable TV, Hollywood’s NC17 films, day spas for
men, and gentlemen’s
clubs. It’s an Everyman’s “pornocopia.” Porn kingpins are no longer
pariahs like Eddie Mishkin,
Bob Brown, or Moe Shapiro. They are more sophisticated, and more
respectable. With the
mainstreaming of pornography into popular culture, sleaze is on the way
out.
Politicians, property owners, and media moguls can take a very dubious
credit. They have eliminated
the transgressive atmosphere
of a Times Square, where criminality and creativity shared a common
border, and where one felt guilty for being there, and yet free from
the moral consensus which
spurred him to visit.
