I was watching a show about street food and they talked to a hot dog vendor in NYC. He started with one cart in the early 1980's after serving in the Marines in Vietnam, and said that by the late 1990's he had the most street carts in the city with almost 200.
Then Giuliani passed a law that each person could only have one permit, and he lost his entire business except for one cart. He set up by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and got harassed by the cops for his location. He kept moving his cart a few feet to technically comply with their orders and eventually they arrested him.
His vignette ended with a shot of his hot dog cart right in front of the door of the Met, and he said he was going to keep working till he was 90, and that the cops still give him a hard time.
I can't imagine a more horrible, anti-human place to live than NYC. The time and money they put into harassing a productive business owner instead of solving the millions of problems that plague that place- astounding.
What was the show? Sounds interesting, I wanna learn more about this guy.
A show about street foods from Netflix. I think it was the second or third episode. They did LA and Portland too, but that guy was the only one with distopian vibes to his story.
I hope you were pirating that show.
LOL. It's a relative's account. There are at least three households using it.
But I hear they're going to crack down on that soon. I'm certainly not going to pay, so it's not like they're going to get new customers out of that move, they'll just get the bandwidth we're all using back.