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Yuke ago

Every time I've ever read about how Alefantis got Buck's it makes me wonder a couple of things:

1.) How could he afford to open up an art gallery if all he was before, at best, was a restaurant manager (at the half shell)?

2.) It seems he at least used Greenwood, and at worst, completely conned her out of her own restaurant.

3.) To have expanded as rapidly as he has done means that again, at best, he has been money laundering, dealing drugs or something, and at worst...well, pizzagate.

I didn't realize that he had actually played a part with regards to Greenwood's art dealings. That obviously gave him info and an angle to get in. Then there's the stuff about supposedly getting caught with her son as well.

Shady, shady stuff. We'll crack this bastard one day.

KnightsofHubris ago

1.) How could he afford to open up an art gallery if all he was before, at best, was a restaurant manager (at the half shell)?

3.) To have expanded as rapidly as he has done means that again, at best, he has been money laundering, dealing drugs or something, and at worst...well, pizzagate.

This is not the best reasoning. "At best money laundering or dealing drugs," are you kidding? That's as far as your imagination goes? He couldn't have inherited a small amount? Or got an insurance settlement or sold some real estate?

Your faulty reasoning seems to come from the idea that it's expensive to open an an art gallery. It's not. All you need is a space with 4 white walls. You can get that pretty cheap, especially if you are not opening in a fashionable area. The main thing you need is connections to artists who would be willing to show in your gallery. If you are not going for the high end known artists, but up and coming unknowns this becomes much easier and cheaper to do. To get artists to agree to show in your gallery, you probably need to show them that you could get people who have money to see your paintings and hopefully buy them. Someone like Alefantis who has experience in the restaurant world could provide this. Artists like anyone else need a resume. Having a list of previous gallery showings looks good for you, it opens doors for you.

I just googled art galleries in the neighborhood next to the last cool frontier neighborhood in Brooklyn I knew about and yup, there's art galleries opening there. One of them is an old factory and when they opened it, it was in a loft. The folks who owned it lived there and there and would do exhibitions there. A lot of these places are just an empty space with four white walls.

septimasexta ago

CAROLE GREENWOOD QUOTE: ""One summer (2003-2004), the summer we turned Greenwood into Buck's Fishing & Camping, Dylan and I stayed with James and David at their grand house in Georgetown."" Taken from comment below.

James and David (Brock) were in a relationship at that time (2003-2004). The Strand was up and running in 2003. Carole Green got her promised show at the Strand in 2003. FROM ORIGINAL POST: "Artists, writers, politicos, lobbyists and educators gathered at Strand on Volta Gallery to celebrate the opening of cutting-edge works by three international video artists.....gallery owner and restaurateur James Alefantis said "Moving images are so stunningly contemporary. It has been incredible to see the response of Washington art collectors to this art form." Media Matters for America President and CEO David Brock, lobbyists Heather and Tony Podesta...were also spotted studying the video works displayed on TV screens and projected onto walls of the gallery."

VERY WEALTHY ELITES WERE IN JAMES' ORBIT AT THAT TIME. Was he recruited by art collector extraordinaire Tony Podesta? He certainly would have had funding and motivation.

septimasexta ago

"Rehoboth Beach, Delaware and to a lesser degree its immediate neighbors, Lewes, and Bethany Beach, have become the vacation spots for gays (and others) from nearby Baltimore, Richmond, Philadelphia, and above all D.C.....David Brock, founder of Media Matters for America, had a house there where he hosted Democratic Party fundraisers."

"William Grey, previous partner of David Brock, who lived with Brock in the lily white expensive neighborhoods of Georgetown and Rehoboth Beach/Henlopen Acres, before Brock partnered up with James Alefantis and bought a new house in the lily white and expensive Kalorama/Embassy Row neighborhood (where people of color are almost all either the help or Ambassadors), sure has a small internet footprint. (I’ve been to a gay Democratic fundraiser at the Rehoboth beach manse shortly before Grey’s civil suit forced Brock to sell it.) Other than his civil suit against David Brock for the return of antiques and art, he seems to have worked in pet rescue and adoption in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware and has now disappeared, with a settlement payment of $850,000 in exchange for silence about Media Matters’ alleged financial misconduct."

"David Brock, CEO of the George Soros-backed website Media Matters, dished out $850,000 to an ex-domestic partner after he was threatened with “damaging information involving the organization’s donors and the IRS,” according Fox News. In a lawsuit settled last year, Brock accused William Grey, his former domestic partner, of repeatedly threatening to expose him to the “scorn or ridicule of his employees, donors and the press in demanding money and property.” The Media Matters CEO claims he was forced to sell his Rehoboth Beach, DE, home in order to meet Grey’s demands. Grey responded to Brock’s lawsuit by denying that he “committed any ‘acts of blackmail.’” “Brock’s bitter legal battle with Grey, who is described in a Sept. 14, 2010, police report…as his domestic partner of more than 10 years, began after Brock began dating Washington, D.C., restaurant impresario James Alefantis about five years ago,” Fox News reports."

"Brock, 49, heads the non-profit Media Matters for America, which bills itself as a watchdog of the conservative media but has recently come under fire for allegedly coordinating with Democrats in what could be a violation of its tax-exempt status."

"Former Vacation home of Media Matters Founder David Brock, a converted inn house in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. Brock sold the home in May 2010. The current owner razed the house and divided the plot for two new properties." https://bighomo.wordpress.com/category/david-brock/

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/media-matters-boss-paid-former-partner-850g-blackmail-settlement#ixzz1ngzbAXXe