This mounting backplate, which once held a payphone at a Queens laundromat, is still available for purchase at payphone.com. $23. What a bargain.
In the last frame I think he is looking at me…
This payphone outside a library reminds me that I believe public libraries should have public telephone rooms where anyone could make a call. It would likely serve a very small niche of the public but it seems, to me at least, like a low-impact, low-maintenance service to offer, assuming there are limits on usage.
A brief look at the life and times of a 33rd Street TCC Teleplex payphone in Astoria. I don't remember using this one but plenty of other people did, and likely still would, if only they could.
Photos by Daniel Hopsicker, shot on Kodak Ektachrome VS 100 Film, expired in 2001. Beautiful images of an old Airlight style booth, with footprints in the snow suggesting the phone actually got some use while being partly snowbound.
One of my favorite payphone photos I ever got. A young woman takes a break from her job at Walgreen's to make a call at the payphone outside. Whose phone number is on the scrap of paper she holds in her left hand? Why does she appear to be so antsy?
Citizens are now required to keep their cell phones charged, healthy, and in their possession at all times, an unfortunate and potentially perilous denouement to the decades-long era of publicly accessible communications devices.
By request, and because I was genuinely preparing to resume this subject, I'm continuing my series of "Payphones Then and Now", starting with this shot of a phone at 36th Avenue and 37th Street in Astoria, Queens.
It turns out the great Rockefeller Center payphone is not as reliable as I thought. Recollections of one dirty trick that helped turn "COCOT" into a dirty word among payphone users in the 1980s and 1990s.
Some West Virginia payphone photos shot on black and white film, including a nice old wood phone booth at the Mountaineer Hotel in Williamson.
A video tour of what's left of payphones in Sunset Park and Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. At the end of this I make a rookie mistake in thinking that just because a payphone has dial tone that means it will work. Learn from my mistake, folks: Don't put your coin until after dialing the number.
I walked from Flushing all the way up to Bayside via Northern Boulevard, through Murray Hill and Auburndale, encountering only a small number of payphones in various conditions of disrepair. Here's a short video from an epic long walk.
I thought I caught a payphone goof in this short scene from the movie “American Psycho”, filmed in 1999. I noticed that the actor dials a number but it’s only 7 digits. I thought mandatory ten-digit dialing had been around a lot longer than it has. Turns out it was not made mandatory in the…
Closest thing to dial tone in this series is the infamous stuck key payphone at the 74th Street/Roosevelt Avenue/Broadway subway station. That phone has dial tone but its stuck * key makes calls impossible.
This phone always worked. I never knew it to be lacking dial tone. I think this and another PTS phone at the opposite end of the 7/N/W platform disappeared in January, 2018.
This incident proves, yet again, that people still need payphones, and would use them if they worked. New York is fast becoming a city where people like the man seen in this video are unable to do something so fundamental that most of us take for granted. He was unable to make a phone call. And also, some ramblings about the old Apology Line and recent activity regarding my acquisition of its original 212-255-2748 number.
Only three weeks after I captured these videos of Chinatown's last payphones it appears all or most of them are gone. I got to them just in time.
Without a single LinkNYC kiosk to replace the dozens of removed payphones Flushing residents can only hope for the best that their cell phones are always in their possession and always in working order.
This looks like a cool spot for a filming location should a director need or benefit from an authentic 1990s-era payphone with a dramatic backdrop.
This one's been moldering away in Bay Ridge for many years, and not inconspicuously. It's practically in the middle of the sidewalk.
I took the 4 to Fordham to check in on some straggler PTS payphones, as well as a couple of failures from the LinkNYC "Smart City" rollout.
In which I spotted something I have never seen in the wild before: A payphone TTY keyboard rolled out and, from what I could tell, in full working order.
Four pristine phone booths and a wall-mounted TTY, with now-non-working Pacific Telemanagement Services (PTS) payphones, inhabit the lobby of 347 Madison Avenue, an abandoned office building that once housed the Metropolitan Transit Authority's headquarters.
Found on a Harlem payphone today.
This tour, from yesterday, includes yet more discussion about PRAY and shots of some surviving PRAYphones. I hope I don't get boring with my PRAY ramblings but I genuinely find the stubborn survival of her messages on New York's payphones to be the stuff of legend.
People still use payphones. But we knew that already, didn't we?
My newly active YouTube channel caught the attention of some folks at PTS, who have been making fixes to non-working phones I've been documenting, and also offering explanations and technical details on some of the problems. Pretty cool.