Aaron W. Gordon
@agordon.me
12K followers 190 following 41 posts
Data reporter at Bloomberg News. Usually writing about transportation and cities. Opinions are my cat's. Clips and contact info at agordon.me. Signal: awgordon dot 89 Newsletter, non-fiction book recommendations: https://buttondown.com/Booktime
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agordon.me
Certainly a lot of the slow bus problem in Manhattan is due to traffic but it a few weekends ago it took me 30 minutes to go 35 blocks on one of these local routes with no traffic whatsoever.
agordon.me
Since I've moved to Manhattan it has really sunk in just how useless the non-SBS buses are if you want to get anywhere faster than walking. The north-south routes stop every block or two! The bus literally travels 10-15 bus lengths at a time, up and down Manhattan. It's so stupid.
agordon.me
I've actually found the criticism of this hire to be remarkably laser-focused on what she has actually done!
agordon.me
Some Personal News:
airlineflyer.net
Bluesky glitches are fun but also not that far off from reality
agordon.me
True New Yorker quizzes are fun and all but there is only one question in the actual True New Yorker test: Do You Take The Subway?
Reposted by Aaron W. Gordon
agordon.me
A fun game is to ask people what they think "independent" journalism means and/or to rank various sources on a scale of independence. Answers vary wildly! www.nytimes.com/2025/10/06/b...
agordon.me
Junk mail has a pretty stable definition: Unsolicited commercial offers. The junk mail industry says they would be out of business if everyone thought it was junk. And they would be if the USPS didn't offer them artificially low postage rates to compensate for the ~1% conversion rate!
agordon.me
I once did a bunch of archival research on the origins and history of junk mail. This talking point—that not everyone has the same definition of "junk"—was used by the junk mail industry for *decades* to fight anti-junk mail policies. (It's also not true. ) www.nytimes.com/2025/10/02/t...
agordon.me
Back when I did this kind of thing, the pitch for why more NYC newsrooms should have dedicated MTA reporters—not even "transportation" generally, just MTA—was that the MTA's annual budget was larger than that of 10 states.
ndhapple.bsky.social
You see this particularly in the crime discussion nationally, but folks outside of New York City (and often times in New York City) do not grasp the scale and scope of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
reinventalbany.bsky.social
NEW Report: States that voted for Trump got billions from MTA Spending

Companies in red states by U.S. Senate seats received more than $3.5 billion in MTA payments over 14 years. States that voted for Trump in 2024 received nearly $7 billion from the MTA over this period.

buff.ly/Yxt4KZ6
agordon.me
These seem like smaller ifs to me than Riding The Subway 12 Times A Week Every Week of the Year
agordon.me
Doesn't the flexibility of the one-week structure counterbalance the lower 30-day rate? Because with the 30-day rate, if you get sick or accidentally re-up the month you go on vacation, you're paying for rides you don't take. That doesn't happen with the 7-day cap.
agordon.me
The amazing thing about the hundreds of billions of dollars being spent on AI development is it doesn't even include all the externalized costs like higher electricity prices for hundreds of millions of people.
AI Data Centers Are Sending Power Bills Soaring
Wholesale electricity costs as much as 267% more than it did five years ago in areas near data centers. That’s being passed on to customers.
www.bloomberg.com
agordon.me
I say this because Eric Adams is not just a one-term mayor in a city that rarely has them. Had he not dropped out he may well have had the lowest vote percentage of any sitting politician running for re-election in modern US political history.
agordon.me
One thing to know about the "Eric Adams Is The Future of the Democratic Party" takes from 2021 is not only were they obviously wrong at the time, not only are they embarrassing to the authors now, but they are objectively among the most wrong takes in the history of political punditry.
agordon.me
Watched The Odd Couple movie with Lemmon and Matthau (so good) but the biggest laugh of the night came halfway through was finding out Matthau's character, with an 8 room apartment on the top floor of a West End Drive doorman building, was a sports columnist writing about the Mets.
agordon.me
Great story. Many similar lessons for buying trains, too.
davidzipper.bsky.social
In the US, even a “cheap” transit bus costs 2-3x more than in Asia or Europe -- and one agency may pay twice as much as another for nearly identical vehicles.

In Bloomberg, I explored a ripe opportunity to improve transportation by applying Abundance-coded, supply-side reforms.

🧵
Why US Cities Pay Too Much for Transit Buses
A new paper argues that lack of competition, demand for custom features and “Buy America” rules have driven up costs for transit agencies in the US.
www.bloomberg.com
agordon.me
Funny you mention it (maybe you knew this) but the Bloomingdale branch is attached to a DOH facility which is also part of the redevelopment plans.
agordon.me
This is my (new) neighborhood and it makes so much sense. It is adjacent to massive newish redevelopment so the scale is in line with surrounding development. Also the branch, while functional, could use some modernization.
agordon.me
If you're on a Mac the best way to OCR a page of a PDF or image is take a screenshot of it then open it in preview. You can then highlight and copy/paste. This also works surprisingly well with images/PDFs of spreadsheets.
agordon.me
I have spent more time than I care to admit bashing columnists whom I don't hold in high regard. Gina was never one of them. It's a shame that there appears to no longer be room for knowledgeable local columnists who actually love the place they write about. We need more writing rooted in love.
ndhapple.bsky.social
The last columnist focused on metro at a New York paper hangs it the spurs. This sucks. — www.nytimes.com/2025/08/29/n...
It’s the End of ‘Big City.’ New York Will Be Fine.
www.nytimes.com