Main content
This programme is not currently available

You Must Take the A Train

Adam Gopnik rides New York's longest subway train, from Manhattan to the sea, famous in song and imagination. From 2012.

New Yorker columnist and author Adam Gopnik confesses to 'a perverse love' of his city's subway system.

In particular, he likes the two hour run of the A train from the tip of Manhattan to the Atlantic Ocean in the outer borough of Queens.

Along the way he encounters vendors, preachers, rappers, beggars and the homeless passengers who live in the subway cars and in the tunnels.

As a jazz lover, he celebrates Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn's song as an anthem of black migration. which imitates the sound of the train and insists:

"You must take the A train
To go to Sugar Hill way up in Harlem."

In 1932, punters queued to take the first A train ride as it went express along the west side of the city. It opened up suburbs, with a fast commute for workers in the Garment District, Times Square and in the offices and restaurants of Midtown. It also linked the dynamic established community of Harlem with the newer black neighbourhoods in Brooklyn.

Gopnik admits to enjoying the graffiti that spread across the subway cars in the 1970s and 80s, but acknowledges that this was a sign of how New York had lost control. Since most New Yorkers don't own a car and the subway is the artery of a city, that dysfunctional slide was disastrous.

It's only in the last 15 years that the system has become safe and comparatively pleasant again. For a reporter like Gopnik, it's a perfect way to indulge in people watching and the best subway line to get a real sense of the city.

However, depending on your mood, it can either be enervating or profoundly depressing, because it still reveals the seedy, aggressive, desperate and heart-breaking side of New York.

Producer: Judith Kampfner

A Corporation For Independent Media production for ±«Óãtv Radio 4, first broadcast in June 2012.

30 minutes

Last on

Wed 18 Aug 2021 02:30

Broadcasts

  • Fri 29 Jun 2012 11:00
  • Mon 16 Sep 2013 23:30
  • Wed 12 Jul 2017 06:30
  • Wed 12 Jul 2017 13:30
  • Wed 12 Jul 2017 20:30
  • Thu 13 Jul 2017 01:30
  • Tue 17 Aug 2021 14:30
  • Wed 18 Aug 2021 02:30