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In Humboldt County, It's Redwoods Versus the Phantom Wall-Mart
Drive north from San Francisco for a few hours, and the 101 will gradually melt into a slim road between giant sequoia trees. You've found your way to Richardson Grove State Park, where you can see thousand-year-old redwoods, the South Fork Eel River, and lots of campgrounds, but you won't see any big box stores. That's thanks, at least in part, to the narrowness of the 101. With a...
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Police seek public's help after Pink Saturday fatal shooting
Responding to several violent incidents that occurred during Pride weekend, local leaders and police this week appealed to the LGBT community for help in combating crime. This year's Pride was marred by a shooting at the Pink Saturday street party in the Castro that left one man dead and two others wounded, a late-night assault against a former Mr. San Francisco Leather title holder, and a confrontation caught on...
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Puff Luck: Smoking Patios Stay in Bars, For Now
An Eagle Tavern patron at a recent cigar event. Photo: RichStadtmiller The open-air patios at Castro-area bars like The Pilsner and The Mix are great places to catch a little sun, meet up with friends, pick up a phone number or two ... and if you smoke, maybe develop a little erectile dysfunction. Although the health consequences of smoking are well known, LGBTs are 40 to 70 percent more...
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Shooting stuns Castro
Bevan Dufty was standing near the main stage at Pink Saturday when he saw the crowd suddenly turn and run. He instantly recognized what had just happened. "San Francisco has a homicide problem," the openly gay District 8 supervisor told the Bay Area Reporter. "The city has worked mightily to address it, and homicide has reduced significantly last year. But it hasn't gone away. And that problem came to...
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How the Semantic Web Can Connect News and Make Stories More Accessible
Tom Tague isn't content to let an article just be an article. "How do I take a chunk of text," he asked, "and turn it into a chunk of data?"He was speaking Thursday night at a panel discussion hosted by Hacks/Hackers, a San Francisco-based group that bridges the worlds of journalism and engineering. Coinciding with the 2010 Semantic Technology Conference, Thursday's presentation dealt with the Web's evolution from a tangle...
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Etiquette guru offers tips for Pride celebrations
Gay etiquette expert Steven Petrow has an important message for San Francisco Pride celebrants. "Share your water and sunscreen," he urged, "don't blow a whistle in someone's ear," and, if you're marching alongside a float, "don't hold up the parade to cruise someone on the sidelines, unless you're a very talented homosexual and can march and flirt at the same time." In the 15 years since he wrote The...
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Longtime Companions: Matt Baume meets the city's most unlikely pets
The sound of a sneezing rat was keeping me up at night. All would be silent, and then from across the room I'd hear it: a tiny "pff!" followed by two paws furiously wiping a fuzzy face. The sneezes belonged to Christopher and Robin, two little guys I'd picked up from a breeder a few months earlier. Why rats? Well, a dog was too big, I'm allergic to cats,...
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A Sneak Peak at the Presidio's Newest Trail
Hikers on the Presidio's newest trail. Photo by Matt Baume. There's no mistaking the signs of this year's late spring in the Presidio, with California poppies, beach strawberries, and beautiful (but invasive) calla lilies appearing in increasing numbers every day. But the Presidio is also experiencing a far more gradual and deliberate regrowth as well: that of its network of trails. "It's a really important part of the backbone of the park,"...
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Crime In And Against The LGBT Community Part Three: Improving The Relationship With SFPD
This is the third part of a three part series (parts one and two here) funded with the help of Spot.us.A POLICE FORCE THAT MATCHES ITS COMMUNITYThe SFPD's improved relationship with LGBTs is no accident. It's thanks largely to the work of organizations like the SF Police Officers Pride Alliance , a five-year-old organization that's grown to be the city's second largest police employee group.The Pride Alliance advocates on behalf...
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Crime In And Against The LGBT Community Part Two: Why Victims Might Be Reluctant To Report
This is part two (see part one here) in a three part series funded with the help of Spot.us. INVISIBLE VICTIMSTracking hook-up violence is particularly challenging due to a reluctance on the part of victims to come forward. Everyone seems to have a story about victims declining to file a report. "Not wanting to report is very odd to me," said Castro Community on Patrol Chair Greg Carey. "In one...
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Crime In And Against The LGBT Community: Hook-Up Violence
Part one in a three part series funded with the help of Spot.us.On May 18th at 5:41am, someone robbed a store at the corner of 18th and Castro. A week earlier, at 18th and Sanchez, there was a strong arm robbery on the street at 2:30am. And at 1:45am on May 9, there was a mugging involving bodily force at Market and Sanchez.That's an average rate of crime in the...
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The Mega-Guide to Everyone's June 2010 Election Endorsements: The Propositions
The results are in! In collaboration with Spot.us, we surveyed 135 prominent local politicians and political organizations to find out how they want to you vote, and the consensus on the ballot propositions is: yes, no, yes, no, no, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. (Don't remember what the props are? Here's your official voter's info pamphlet.) But that doesn't mean, obviously, that you SHOULD vote that way. Instead,...
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City Without Water: Muni Has Last Chance to Rescue San Francisco's Largest Watershed
Two men fished off the end of a pier at sunset on Saturday evening, their view framed by Sutro Tower, downtown highrises, and a rusting Bayview warehouse. Just a few feet away, a large yellow sign over the water, warning "Underground Sewer Crossing," served as a perch for gulls. The T-Third Muni Metro clattered across a grooved metal bridge over the water, and on the opposite bank, some kids skateboarded...
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Watershed Moment: Matt Baume dips his toes in the hidden waterways of San Francisco
There I was, drenched and freezing and all by myself, flailing through the underbrush in the Presidio in the middle of a storm. "Who wears sneakers to a downpour?" I asked out loud, curling my toes into icy waterlogged balls. And then I nearly stepped directly into the very thing I'd come looking for: Dragonfly Creek, one of the few remaining visible bodies of water in the city. I'd...
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Milk Club dinner celebrates progressive politics
This year the Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club's dinner marked a milestone: the first official statewide holiday in recognition of their club's namesake. But the club's 32nd annual dinner, attended last week at the Hotel Whitcomb by the leftmost members of the city's political community, was also a time to observe the organization's role in a wide range of progressive issues. "We're one of the few groups that connects...
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Golden Gate Park's Rhododendron Dell
Of all the ghosts haunting Golden Gate Park, the most frustrated might be John McLaren. When McLaren died in 1943 at the age of 96, he'd served as Golden Gate Park superintendent for 52 years, during most of which he lived in the stately lodge at Stanyan and JFK. His was a life distinguished by a devotion to trees and a hatred of statuary - so how did they...
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Code Sprint Yields Important Lessons for iPad News Apps
At a conference last weekend for developers of iPad news apps, organizer Burt Herman posed an unexpected question: "How can we make news more like finger-painting?" he asked.He was responding to a point made by Jennifer Bove of Kicker Studio, a product-design firm. She had just pointed out how satisfying it is to manipulate media on the iPad, comparing it to painting. "It's as close as we can get to...
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Harvey Milk Day Coincides with Prop 8 Repeal Strategy
With rallies, protests, dedications, and ceremonies across the state, it was hard to miss California's inaugural celebration of Harvey Milk's birthday. And if you live in a conservative-voting neighborhood, Equality California may have even brought Harvey Milk Day right to your door. Since the passage of Proposition 8 in 2008, EQCA has significantly beefed up its organizing for marriage equality by hiring a Marriage Director, opening field offices in conservative...
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The Resurrection of Yosemite Creek
"Nothing in the world is more flexible and yielding than water. Yet when it attacks the firm and the strong, none can withstand it, because they have no way to change it." --Lao Tzu There's something about San Francisco's bodies of water that people just can't resist. We abuse them, we bury them, we fill them in with rubble and toxins - and then finally when we realize the...
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Pressure mounts to pass ENDA
It's been 16 years since the Employment Non-Discrimination Act was first introduced in Congress, and according to organizers of a Tuesday rally at Speaker Nancy Pelosi's San Francisco office, it's closer than ever to being finally passed. Braving wind and a light rain, a crowd of about 100 gathered to call for a vote on ENDA. According to media reports this week, Pelosi promised LGBT leaders on Monday that...
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How You Can Join Fabulis' Team Of Hollywood + D.C. Power Players (So Long As You're Under 26)
Why is Fabulis, the newly-minted homo-social planning site, rubbing elbows with The Office, Grey Gardens, a tiny dachshund, and Bill Clinton's White House? And more importantly, how you can you jostle your own elbows into that scene? We've been talking about Fabulis for months -- from its boy-happy music video to its bank woes turned viral goldmine to its delicious Manhunt smack-down. When it launched a casual popularity contest...
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Is A Link More Valuable Than $25? The Bay Citizen's "Deal" For Local Bloggers
Boy oh boy, the Bay Citizen sure has put online writers in an interesting position. Here's the abbreviated version: BC is a non-profit news startup, flush with a $5 million investment from fiscal celebrity Warren Hellman. They're launching a Bay-Area-wide news site on May 26th, and they need content. So they held a meeting last Friday where they told the roughly 40 assembled independent writers that any time those writers...
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Back in the Saddle: Matt Baume learns to stop worrying and love city cycling
Upon completing my last gym class 15 years ago, I'd vowed to never again exercise in the presence of another human being. But then I inadvertently caught the bike bug. On my way up to the Fruit Shelf one day at Dolores Park, I glanced over at the bicyclists buzzing around Fixed-Gear Flats. "Could I do that?" I wondered, and was ready to answer "not a chance" when I spotted...
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Workshop to guide LGBT couples through separation
Confronting the end of a relationship is difficult enough, but for same-sex couples, the legal and emotional obstacles can be magnified. Overcoming those obstacles is the focus of "Separating with Heart and Smarts: LGBTQ Separation, Divorce, and Alternative Dispute Resolution." The free two-part workshop takes place at the LGBT Community Center in May and June. Organized by Our Family Coalition with support from First 5 and the San Francisco Department...
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Transit Cuts Tied to City Raids on Muni
soupstance via Flickr So long, Muni. It was nice knowing you. The agency is following up a string of service cutbacks and fare hikes over the last few years with -- you guessed it -- more cutbacks and fare hikes. One big drain on Muni's bottom line: other city agencies. A new audit released Friday by the city controller cites a $65.8 million tab for services like legal advice,...
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City Pressured to Respond to Transit Attacks
Thanks to pressure from local Asian community leaders, Muni and the SFPD may be stepping up safety on local buses and trains. People using the transit system have been involved in a series of recent high-profile violent attacks, specifically against Asian commuters. The most recent ugly incident came last week when two teens beat an elderly Asian man to death in Oakland. Previously, a group of teens threw a...
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Ex-Cop Used Police Training to Rob Banks
Getty Images Everyone should have a career to fall back on. For Santa Rosa police officer Robert Starling, that career was armored car robber. In his ongoing trial, Starling described how his police training helped him to plan successful heists. Knowing the armored car company's policy for shootouts enabled him to select an optimal weapon. His knowledge of police procedure allowed him to distract cops with phony 911 calls....
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Public Radio Investigation Finds Poizner's Claims Lacking
Mount Pleasant High School has a friend in Public Radio International's Ira Glass. This weekend, Glass devoted a segment on his show "This American Life" to a takedown of the claims made in Steve Poizner's book, "Mount Pleasant." In the book, Poizner claimed that the school was rough, dangerous, and full of under-achievers. Poizner also suggested that the school was known for its high rates of pregnancy -- while...
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D8 candidates mingle at LGBT brunch
Professional networking and hors d'oeuvres drew an estimated 210 LGBT professionals to a political brunch at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on Saturday, April 24, including several candidates for District 8 supervisor. The event, organized by dot429 and Equality California, was a chance to provide local LGBT politicians an opportunity to meet and mingle with their community. Founded approximately a year ago, dot429 facilitates face-to-face networking among LGBT...
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Pelosi Slammed for Photo Retouch
Nancy Pelosi's looking pretty good for a woman who celebrated her 70th birthday last month. A little too good, according to the Washington Examiner. Pelosi appeared on the cover of Capitol File this month, looking awfully youthful. What's her secret? Either she's a vampire, or she's received the airbrush treatment that's standard practice for any high-profile public figure. We're guessing it's the latter. Pelosi's defenders point out that The...
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Gays' Fight for Marriage is Far from Over in California
The announcement that gays, their families, and their friends had all been dreading came on Monday, April 12. A frantic signature-gathering campaign had officially failed, and Prop 8, the ban on equal marriage for same-sex couples, had just received a new lease on life. Back in late 2008, every progressive in California -- and beyond -- was riled up and ready to fight. Celebrations over Obama's presidential victory were dampened...
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San Francisco Could Find Downstream Benefits in Innovative Street Paving
Source: Chicago's Green Alleys Handbook During the heavy rainfall season, San Francisco faces some daunting challenges: Draining the water, keeping the roads from getting slippery, and containing and treating the runoff. Some storms are so severe that the city can't keep pace. That's when we see flooding in the Muni tunnels and sewage discharges into the bay. But the solution -- or at least part of the solution --...
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The Lure of the Creeks Buried Beneath San Francisco's Streets
Islais Creek Channel. Photo: Matt Baume (Editor's note: This is Part 2 in a 3-part series on the Bay Area watershed.) San Francisco may be getting new waterfront soon, thanks to ambitious projects currently being studied by the city's Public Utilities Commission, including proposals for daylighting, or uncovering, long-buried creeks and streams and creating open-air channels that flow alongside the city's sidewalks and streets. Top contenders for daylighting include: Islais...
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EQCA roundtable evaluates marriage messaging
Equality California's efforts to fine-tune its voter outreach continued last Thursday night at the LGBT Community Center, with marriage director Marc Solomon seeking community members' opinions on the future of marriage campaigns. In an informal chat, Solomon presented new research confirming that personal stories and one-on-one conversations are the most effective methods of moving public opinion in favor of marriage equality. The research was compiled earlier this year by EQCA...
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Bay Area Cities Rediscover the Creeks Under Their Streets
One of the proposed designs for Center Street in Berkeley, by Ecocity Builders (Editor's note: This is Part 1 in a 3-part series on the Bay Area watershed) The proposal to convert Center Street in Berkeley from an asphalt thoroughfare to a park-like promenade -- revealing a long-hidden underground creek -- is the latest twist in the interesting and often-controversial story of the Bay Area's heavily-modified waterways. The Center Street...
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Berkeley May Restore Centuries-Old Creek
Eco Citybuilders The Berkeley City Council has overwhelmingly endorsed a plan to radically transform Center Street. The project, to be overseen by Ecocity Builders, would turn the parking lot-lined thoroughfare into a pristine wildlife preserve complete with a babbling brook, stretching from the Downtown Berkeley BART to the UC Berkeley Campus. The plan is part of a movement known as "daylighting," whereby natural water sources, buried decades ago, are...
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Whitman and Brown Duel on Health Care Reform
Getty Images eBay CEO Meg Whitman wants to put the brakes on a "buy it now" button for health care. The conservative Republican gubernatorial candidate said Tuesday that she'd like the California Attorney General to sue to block the health care reform bill. For his part, the California Attorney General is unlikely to find her argument persuasive. Jerry Brown -- the likely Democratic contender against Whitman in the governor's...
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LGBT Center Saved by Cash Injection from Board of Supes
San Francisco's LGBT Center can breathe a sigh of relief: a likely loan from the Board of Supervisors will save the Center a boatload of cash. The pricey new building at Market and Octavia still owes about $3.2 million in debt, but a restructuring of their mortgage made possible by the Supes' loan will cut their repayments by about $200,000. Mayor Gavin Newsom opposed the transfer of funds, saying,...
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SF Transit Riders Union Holds First Meeting, Debates Priorities
Photo: Troy Holden Roughly two dozen attendees came out to the inaugural meeting of the San Francisco Transit Riders Union (SFTRU) on Thursday evening and had a spirited -- at times heated -- debate about how to make the fledgling organization a vocal constituency representing the diverse interests of Muni riders. Billed as an opportunity for the public to become familiar with the new riders union, the meeting functioned largely...
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Why Fabulis Iz Heer To Stey: The New Kid on the Gay Social Networking Block
Their name's mispeld, The Awl called them "retrograde," their dancing-gays video missed the mark, and nobody's seen their actual product yet. And judging from the results of a sneaky trick that we pulled during its beta launch, Fabulis.com is going to be a hit. Fabulis made a name for itself a month ago, when Citibank inadvertently did them the favor of shutting down their business account in a move...
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My latest atrocity concerns a flight of stairs.
Writing on a local real estate blog, I noted the repair of some holes in a hillside sidewalk-staircases, and compared the city's filling-in of crumbling concrete steps to a time that I had repaired a partially-disintegrated cake by stuffing it with bread and slopping on layer upon layer of desperate icing. I was pretty pleased with that analogy until it was published, at which point commenters let me know exactly...
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Tired: Slow Food. Wired: Slow Photography!
Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2 We've seen slow versions of everything lately: slow food, slow travel, slow shopping, slow dentistry. (We might've made one of those up.) But have you tried slow photography? It's like a yoga class for your camera. Long conversations with subjects, patient exposures, and delicate macros will lend your photos a new calmness and longevity -- so vital in these rush-rush go-go slam-crash rock-and-roll...
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SF Gov InAction: 'Special Tax' Not To Be Paid By 'Special Taxpayers'
Fact: the members of the Board of Supervisors meet to talk about governing and such at least once a week. Really! Will this finally be the week that they accomplish something? Probably not, but we salute their undying optimism. Keep plugging away, noble supervisors! You'll get the hang of it one of these days. Highlights of this week's meetings: advice for felons, Strangelovian restrictions on smoking, and ending the inexplicable...
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Freelensing! Turn any Lens into a Tilt-Shift or Macro
A great philosopher once told us, "first, you must first learn to focus without focusing." Or maybe it was our optometrist. Whatever. It's deep. That transcendental magic is at the heart of Freelensing, a photographic process that begins with the removal of your lens. Freelensers simply hold unattached lenses in front their camera's exposed sensor, and delicately tilt it until focus emerges. Hand-manipulating a lens will reinvent your focal...
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Muni Employees' Salaries Consume Around 80% of Agency's Expenses
Nobody likes losing their job -- especially Muni drivers, who have it pretty sweet. But times are tough, thanks largely to local and state leaders who raid transit whenever their pet projects need more cash. At the beginning of the month, the Appeal predicted that service cuts and fare hikes are not far off; and sure enough, Muni's new budget has us paying more for less service as soon...
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Muni Dead Pool: Will Your Line Be Cut Next?
Numerous bus lines face further cutbacks and possible elimination later this year, according to the SF Appeal's analysis of data recently supplied by Muni as part of its Transit Effectiveness Project. Lines most at-risk include the 24-Divisadero, the 28-19th Ave, the 28L-19th Ave Limited, and the 23-Monterey. Muni's always been strapped for funds, but in the past decade they've faced unprecedented budget shortfalls and rapidly escalating fare inflation. Fares...
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Party for Fashionable Nerds Cannot Compare With Harvey Milk Library Reception
There are plenty of worse ways to spend a Thursday evening than in the company of an open bar, nerds, and a brisket; and that's where we found ourselves last night, at the showroom of K&D Furniture near the baseball park. "Geek Chic" was pitched as a tech/fashion-themed party, and that's what they got: everyone was a little bit nerd, a little bit chic, and not unlike pretty much...
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The Appeal's Guide to Everyone Else's Guides: November 2009 Edition
Voting! Just like knocking on wood, rubbing a lucky penny, or wearing pants, it's one of those superstitious acts that somehow makes us feel safer despite the lack of any discernible benefit. Voting isn't easy, of course; because only jerks care about political news, most of us have no idea what's on the ballot or how we should vote. Making decisions is hard -- and that's why endorsements and...
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DocFest: Rabbit Fever
"It starts from a love of the cute and furry animals," explained filmmaker Amy Do, director of Docfest's Rabbit Fever. "Kids start with them as pets, and it just keeps growing." The Appeal chatted with Amy before the premier of her documentary Sunday night at the Roxie, and asked her the same question that absolutely everyone must: why on Earth have you made a movie about competitive teenage rabbit breeding?...
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Secret Weapon for Repealing Prop 8: Maine
Earlier this year, civil rights advocates celebrated when several New England states granted marriage rights to gay couples. But opponents are waging a campaign to eliminate the right to marry in Maine, and to eliminate rights like hospital visitation and death benefits for gay firefighters in Washington. These two battles could prove instrumental in California's upcoming battle to repeal Prop 8. The Maine campaign has shown care in learning...
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New Twitter Exec Fuels Speculation
What does it mean that Dick Costolo is Twitter's new COO? Observers are hopeful that Costolo will transform the service into something useful and appealling. Before coming to Twitter, he was the CEO of Feedburner, a service that allows websites to syndicate content and track subscribers -- sort of like a Nielsen rating for websites' news feeds. Those tools to measure readership and reach are exactly what Twitter lacks. Messages...
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Comics, Art Blend in Mission District
San Francisco's Mission District has entered a sort of Comic Art Renaissance lately, with last spring's opening of Caffeinated Comics and yesterday's launch of Mission: Comics and Art near 20th and Mission. Mission: Comics and Art is the brainchild of Leef Smith, a longtime comic reader and Mission resident. Back in October, his employer did him the favor of releasing him from wage slavery; and since his neighborhood had languished...
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Candidates Struggle to Make Twitter Matter
If the popularity contest between California's gubernatorial candidates is to be judged by Twitter followers, Gavin Newsom is beating Jerry Brown, with 994,857 versus 756,665 followers. Both are miles ahead of conservative candidate Meg Whitman's 3,093. And they all face stiff competition from the man they're trying to replace: Current governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has an army of 1,032,355. If you were to compare these numbers to the number of followers boasted by celebrities, Gavin...
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Before Boxer Battle, Fiorina Got Cozy With Iran
It's been a bumpy ride for Carly Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard who's planning to run against Barbara Boxer for her Senate seat in California. First there were questions about whether a company she claimed to run actually existed; then there were issues about her voting record -- or lack thereof -- and now it's emerged that under her leadership and despite a trade embargo, HP somehow found a...
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Clueless Newsom Touts Muni Performance
Recent reports that San Francisco's Muni is "more reliable than ever" are a real headscratcher to anyone who was caught in Monday's subway meltdown. Despite Muni trapping passengers with no explanation on Monday, Gavin Newsom's mayoral office/gubernatorial campaign just sent out a press release touting the agency's on-time performance. How could the Gavinator be so out of touch? Maybe it's because Muni's keeping the mayor's office in the dark,...
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Suburb Busting Ball Ban After 120 Years
Good news for the idle youth of Los Gatos: the city is in the process of decriminalizing an activty known, thrillingly, as "ball playing in the streets." The law, first enacted in the 1880s, prohibited Los Gatonians from throwing, catching, or striking a ball on a public thoroughfare. It may not be California's strangest law: according to one compilation of anachronistic orginances, in Los Angeles it's illegal to hunt for...
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Review: Comic Books are Hidden Gems at the Zine Fest
It wasn't really fair of us to go to last weekend's Zine Fest looking for comics -- they're not really the same thing, are they? But lately we've had our fill of the sharpies and scotch tape and fervent prose that is intensely personal and therefore almost completely incomprehensible. So it was with an eye for picture books that we wandered into what is charmingly called "The County Fair Building"...
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Activists on Fast Track to Repeal Gay Marriage Ban
With the goal of seeing a repeal of Proposition 8, California's ban on same-sex marriages, in the coming year, a group of civil rights activists from around the state met at San Francisco State University this past weekend. The debate between returning to the ballot in 2010 and 2012 has reached a fever pitch lately, with some organizations urging swift action and others seeking more time to prepare. Recently,...
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Prop 8 Deja-vu: Early Alarm Bells Ringing in Maine's Discriminatory Marriage Campaign
Anyone who thinks that we learned from our mistakes with Prop 8 needs to take a look at this TV ad that just started airing in Maine. In case you hadn't heard, the anti-gay people who took over marriage in California have packed up and headed east--literally, it is exactly the same company that pushed Prop 8 -- to try to take over Maine's equal marriage laws. And we're starting...
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Interview: Tales of Mere Existence's Lev Yilmaz
Feeling chipper? Well, we'll soon take care of that! Local artist Lev Yilmaz has perfected the craft of gloom in his comics and videos; he has a new book out, and he's presenting a dramatic reading tonight and tomorrow. We've been fans since before his work started appearing on SFist, so we're delighted to have an opportunity to interview him. Or at least, we'll try to be delighted. It's...
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San Jose to Feature Even More Volatile Gasses
San Jose is not to be outdone by Oakland's slight-less-smelly air and San Franciso's squeaky-clean city hall! They're going to start processing their organic waste, turning it into compost and methane at a plant sandwiched between a recycling plant and a solid waste processor. Sounds like a nice neighborhood. So what does this mean for San Francisco? We certainly produce no shortage of biological waste, much of it strolling...
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Can Richmond Put an End to 60-Year Stagnation?
Can we revive the recent conversation about faster Muni and growing population in the Richmond one more time? We'd like to point out this post about Transit-Oriented Design (TOD) on the blog of the same name. In a nutshell: Faster transit and denser populations go hand-in-hand: more space for people equals less space for cars, which equals more need for transit, traffic calming, and pedestrian amenities. Or you can...
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City Hall Getting Greener, But at What Price? (Hint: Nobody Knows)
San Francisco City Hall is an inescapable black hole! Okay, so everybody knows that already. But we're talking about electricity: every day, the building consumes power several hundreds of times greater than that of a residential building. Several HUNDRED times? How is that even possible? What is Mister Green Mayor DOING over there, splitting the atom? Fortunately, the Public Utilities Commission is working on cleaning up City Hall's act,...
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How to Have Good Clean Fun at Up Your Alley
Clean is the new filthy! This Sunday, menaced by the Newsom administration's war on fun, Up Your Alley has had to clean up their act a bit, lest they suffer the same cruel punishment as Halloween. So, new rule: NO LEWD BEHAVIOR. That means exposed sexing is a definite no-no; expulsion of bodily fluids is verboten; and nudity is, at best, iffy. But just because you can't have sex in...
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Plaza is Pleasant, but What to Call it?
No big surprise: the great new pedestrian plaza at Market and Castro has been extended for four more months. Well of course. Streetsblog reports "surprise and pleasure at how well the plaza is functioning" but who the hell is surprised that people would rather have a nice sit-down than dodge cars amongst baffling traffic lights? The conversation is now turning to making the plaza permanent -- it's still a...
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Century-Old Sludge Factory Continues Oozings Amidst Layoffs, Lawsuits
We're not sure what to gasp about first with this story, so let's start with the largest number: 107 years, the age of the oil refinery Richmond. Of course, the equipment itself isn't that old -- it's only been around for a mere 70 years. (Practically brand new!) Chevron wants to replace the old equipment with newer machinery that, the company says, is better and cleaner. That sounds nice,...
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Transit Under Attack From Highway Sympathizers, as Usual
California recently tried to take away $1 billion (billion!) in gas-tax funds from transit -- but no, the 3rd district court of appeal just ruled, the state can't do that. Voters approved the gas tax specifically to fund buses and trains, but so far Arnold's stolen $152 million from Muni, and $30 million from BART last year alone. The governor plans to appeal the ruling; so when fares to go...
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Cute NY Boy Talks Sexy at Local Theater, on Internet, and on TV
If you do not fall completely under the spell of Jeffery and Cole Casserole upon your very first viewing, then we have nothing to discuss. The show stars 2 giddy young lads in a NYC apartment, furiously bombarding a webcam with comedy and, well, that's it. And we love it. "It's recession TV," Jeffery Self, one of the show's stars, told us when we reached him by phone. That's...
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Does A Private Company Own Your Muni Arrival Times?
NextBus Information Systems responds to this piece here. Kind of. When Steven Peterson created Routesy, an iPhone app that lets riders see Muni arrival times, the last thing he expected was to hear was that Muni's real-time arrival times were actually the property of a private company located in the East Bay. But that's exactly what happened, when Alex Orloff, COO of a company calling itself NextBus Information Systems,...
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Local Palm Enthusiasts are Enthusiastic About Palms
On Monday, we pined for a walking tour of prominent local palm trees. And you delivered! Or more specifically, Jason Dewees, palm broker to the stars, delivered. He emailed to let us know about this fancy Google map that details the locations of over sixty amazing trees. We know what we are doing this weekend! Mr. Dewees, you have us eating out of the palm of your hand. Controversy...
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Even Today, Historical Failures Stifle Diversity
["What Message Does This Sign Send?" by jm3] Here is a topic that may generate almost as many angry comments as our post comparing the Mission and Marina: according to the Christian Science Monitor (and pretty much everyone else), blacks are abandoning San Francisco. Er. Um. Yikes. The evidence seems pretty much impossible to argue with: blacks make up 6.7% of the population, down from 13.4% forty years ago....
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Prefab Housemakers Undaunted
People sure are talking about prefab homes a lot lately. Sort of like scaling up your IKEA furniture until it's an entire building, these factory-built dwellings boast assembly-line efficiency that just isn't possible with on-site construction. The latest prefab headliner: ZETA Communities' experimental house in Oakland. ZETA (which stands for Zero Energy Technology and Architecture) is aiming to build homes that produce as much energy as they create, also...
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UCSF Opens New Cancer Research Building
UCSF celebrated the opening of its brand new Helen Diller Family Cancer Research Building yesterday afternoon. It's pretty much as noble a project as you'd expect from the name: studying various forms of cancer, the Mission Bay building will more than double UCSF's lab space. It is, to put it mildly, a very good thing. But the building's buzz isn't limited to the medical field: we're seeing a lot...
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There's an Election Today?: The Appeal's Guide to Everyone Else's Endorsements
Because Nate Silver won't respond to the saucy love letters we keep sending him, we've had to resort to this to get his attention: a statistical analysis of endorsements for Tuesday's election. (BTW: There's an election on Tuesday.) We combed through every major endorsement we could find -- about seventy -- and charted out who was saying yes and who was saying no. We counted newspapers like the LA Times...
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As they Stand on the Tipping-Point, Gay Couples' Advocacy Has Ever-Growing Impact
It seems like every day, there's a new online database of people who are publicly opposed to gays -- but each time it happens, the list is shorter and shorter. The latest one is in Arkansas, and it lists the folks who signed a petition to keep foster kids in orphanages rather than placing them with gay parents. (The petition was eventually voted into law, and is now being...
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Local Company 23andMe Knows What You're Made of -- but Does Your Doctor?
23andMe presents data in a user-friendly format. Someday, doctors may be able to drill deeper into the information to provide patients with more informed treatment. In the not-too-distant future, doctors won't just measure your height and weight -- they'll also peer into the little cellular hard drives that make you who you are. Genotypes are the next big thing in personal health care, and if we may sound like...
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Conversation About Prop 8 and Race at GLBT Center was Teeniest, Tiniest, Ever-So-Slightest Bit Productive
Before we get to the nitty-gritty, we just want to make sure that everyone knows that tonight's Prop 8 town hall at the Veteran's Building has been postponed indefinitely. We'll let you know if there's an update on that. Everybody got it? Okay, good. Now, on to the details: We'd say between 75 and 100 people showed up for the panel discussion "Prop 8 and Race: What's Next?" The title...
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More Prop 8 Protests Coming Up, but we See Worrisome Obstacles in the Immediate Future
So what's the deal with the next round of Prop 8 protests? Oh, we are so glad you asked. The next big one in SF is this Saturday at 10:30am at City Hall. The organizers put out a call for help -- they need folks to put up flyers, among other things. So, if you've got some spare time, what worthier cause could there be? There's also a protest...
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Let's Dream of a Tolerable Fisherman's Wharf
Oh, sure, you've seen all the coverage of Jan Gehl's plan to turn Fisherman's Wharf into something tolerable. But wouldn't you like to know more? The excellent SPUR is holding a forum TODAY about the city's plan to alleviate pedestrian-congestion by updating the neighborhood's 1950s-style freeway-inspired urban design: widening sidewalks, installing benches, and adding bike lanes, injunction be damned. After all, be honest: when's the last time you went to...
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Princess Gloves Come off in No On 8 Fight
A few days ago, there was a new ad released by the people backing Prop 8 (the ballot amendment that would allow an out-of-state group to veto whatever California marriages they want). The ad condemned gay marriage and featured "Professor" Richard Peterson (pictured at right) making a number of demonstrably false suggestions. You can watch the ad here -- don't forget to rate! Thankfully, the lawyers for No On...
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It's Time to Take Translink out Behind the Barn and Shoot it
Good news: Translink will be up and running on Muni in the late fall/early winter of 2007. Or at least, that's what Muni said last year, and surprise! It's still not working. (And before that, it was January of 2007.) Translink is the work of a company called ERG, Ltd (emphasis on the "limited"); and in the decades (decades!) that it's been bandied about, lots of other cities have...
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Giant Hulking Muni Takes a Terrifying Interest in Small, Innocent Transportation Authority
Well, whaddya know. No sooner did we lavish praise upon the SF County Transportation Authority than Nat Ford, head of Muni, decided that he might be interested in committing a hostile takeover of the SFCTA... thereby making the TA as flawless as Muni. Good idea! If our agency was melting down, and there was another one making us look bad, we might want to buy it and run it...
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Tenderloin Housing Clinic Moving to Evict Documentarian?
Update: See Paul's comment below about why they had to do what they did, and what they're doing about it. Are there quiet, law-abiding people on Sixth Street? Sure, but it's hard to stand out when your neighborhood looks like something out of Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome -- take a walk down 6th, especially at night, and you'll find yourself surrounded by brawls, the mentally ill, drug deals, screaming...
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Frameline 31: Starrbooty
Whoops, sorry we're so late getting this post up -- we lost our notes and tore up the house before resigning ourselves to the idea that somewhere, someone is going to find a notebook with "the lighter side of rape" scrawled across the first page. That comment refers to Give Piece of Ass a Chance, a new Bruce LaBruce short that preceeded Starrbooty. It's a speculative spoofing of the...
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Surprise: Parking Garage Company Wants to Build LA-Style Garages in SF
Say hello to your new next door neighbor: a parking garage. Petitioners are currently collecting signatures for a "build more parking" petition, but the terms are insane: it wouldn't just allow developers to install big garages, it would require that all new homes build on extra parking, at the expense of living space. Require! As in, the government says that you don't have a choice! More room for cars means...
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Interviews: Cocktail Artist Alberta Straub
Ever since Alberta, the best drink-mixer EVER, vanished from behind the bar at the Orbit Room, we haven't been back. It's been a dark, dry time. But now the bartendress-shaped void in our life has been filled by cocktailsonthefly.tv, Alberta's new webby home! The most important booze-slinger in town is now starring in professionally-shot drink-making tutorials, highlighting her talent for combining fresh fruit and top-notch booze. We're talking about...
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Muni Driver Celebrates Bring Your Girlfriend to Work Day
Muni drivers, caught on tape! Again! This time, the driver doesn't come off quite so sympathetically. We caught the 33 home last night after hanging out at a high school cafeteria, and what's this? Not only is driver 1870 flirting with a friend, but she's perched on his headrest and fussing around in his little driver's nook? Our Lois Lane instincts taking over, we whipped out our phone, turned...
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Why Does 511 Suck So Much?
Get ready to go down a transit rabbit hole. Last time we wrote about the crapfest that is 511.org, one of our commenters placed blame on military contractors. So we dusted off our Encyclopedia Brown magnifying glass to see just what's behind one of the noisiest, user-unfriendliest, pedestrian-discouragingest, bicyclist-overlookingest websites in town. The short answer: our local 511.org (just like five-elevens all over the country) is largely a project...
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Apocalyptic Adventures
How is it that you've never heard of The Ballad of Halo Jones? It's been around for about 20 years, so you have absolutely no excuse for not diving into this unjustifiably unknown sci-fi pleasure. The year is 4950 or so, and life sucks for a group of young women living in a messy unemployment colony called "The Hoop." Mean aliens, dangerous criminals, and inescapable poverty drive some folks to...
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Stuart "Fare Hike" Sunshine Fails Upward, Lands in Mayor's Office
We don't have anything funny to say about this one -- we're simply at a loss. Rumor had it yesterday that Gavin picked Stuart Sunshine to be his new Deputy Chief of Staff, and now the mayor's Director of Communications Peter Ragone (not to be confused with houseguest John Nelson) has confirmed it. Stuart will be leaving the MTA and moving to the mayor's administration, where he'll be "focusing on...
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SFist Interviews: District 8 Candidate Alix Rosenthal
When the Party-Party folks started agitating to Dump Dufty, we couldn't wait to see who'd step up to the plate. Who would dare run against a celebrated gay man in the gayest gay district of a city populated entirely by gay homosexual gays? Alix Rosenthal (pictured at right, hovering majestically above the treetops), that's who. Bevan, can you hover majestically? We didn't think so. Alix is an attorney and civil...
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SFist Interviews: Amandeep Jawa, Flashdance Boss
Dust off your dancing shoes, San Francisco! You DO have dancing shoes, don't you? No, your galoshes don't count. Wait, have you been wearing those since Folsom? Eww. Aaaaaaaaanyway, this Saturday, at 8pm on the Van Ness side of City Hall, a gaggle of frolickers plan to converge and dance. (Backup location: Patricia's/Hayes Green.)It's Flashdance Four, a temporary party hosted by local flashmobby gadfly Amandeep Jawa. He brings speakers and...
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Macho Adventures
Oh we've got some tough cookies this week, yes sir. Fresh from the macho shelves at Isotope and onto your manly plate come The Boys, about a group of vigilantes taking revenge against reckless superheros; The Savage Brothers, about a team of zombie bounty hunters; and Casanova, which is difficult to interpret but appears to relate to some kind of slick superspying. Let's kick it off with The Savage...
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Girl-Crazy (and Crazy Girl) Adventures
Jack is shy and artsy, which isn't helping him with his primary goal: attracting chicks. "Jack and Lucky," by bay-area artist Anthony Hon, chronicles the travails of a lonely, horny 20-something. Oh and also, and this is never explained but somehow doesn't seem all that out of the ordinary, he lives with a giant talking 300-pound cat. Like the talking monkey in Rob Osborne's 1000 Steps to World Domination,...
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Opening Tonight: Another Gay Movie
"Finally, we have our own gay American Pie," Frameline board member and friend-of-SFist Glenn Kiser said as he introduced Another Gay Movie. Frameline sneak-peek-screened the film last month to a sold-out audience, and now it finally opens tonight at the Castro. And, yeah, that's a fairly accurate description: it's a naughty, goofy, lowbrow romp (yes! that's right! a romp!) about a team of gay kids who want nothing more out...
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Castro Halloween Cancellation Update!
We've been closely following this strange attempt by Bevan & Friends to put a stop to Halloween parties in the Castro -- including private house parties. Check out the coverage of Bevan's Wednesday meeting on our Party-Party friends' site; party member Adam reports that the meeting was populated mostly by businesspeople, not residents, and that the primary complains were that revelers relieved themselves in locations other than restrooms, that hate...
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Dystopian Adventures
When we're reading comics about hard-boiled female reporters unflinchingly uncovering terrible secrets during a time of war, we don't want to see delicate ladies -- we want to see take-no-prisoners broads. Like the classic plucky Lois Lane, or like trousers-wearing Amy Archer in The Hudsucker Proxy, or like the tenacious Nina Totenburg. The character of Charlotte Hemming, in Ian Edgington and Matt Brooker's Scarlet Traces: The Great Game, does not...
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Doomed Adventures
You know how it is sometimes to look at photos from the 80s, where it's all cute young cheeks and happy tow-headed promise, and now twenty years later all the kids in the pictures have been worn down by their dreams falling apart and everything they love being taken away? (Or at least, that's how we feel when we listen to Bright Eyes.) So anyway, issue three of Joshua W....
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Marginally Engaging Adventures
Before we get to this week's comic books, we must first point out that Issue 2 of Kevin McShane's Toupydoops has, as the kids say, hit the stands. (We reviewed Issue 1 a few weeks ago.) This latest installment sees our heros standing in line to get into a club where, it turns out, everybody sucks. Poseurs and floozies and five dollar beers deflate their enthusiasm for Los Angeles, but...
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The First Rule of NextBus: There is no NextBus
Get ready to throw a cow-sized steak on the OMG WTF barbecue, because we've got Muni news that'll make your socks go up and down. You know NextBus? That thing that lets you know when the next bus is coming, so you don't have to memorize arrival times and count on Muni drivers adhering to schedule? And you know how NextBus only works right now for a couple of...
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S/M at the Movies and The Best of CineKink
We've said it before and we'll say it again: You are all a bunch of weirdos. There was probably no greater message than that to be gleaned from Saturday night's CineKink screenings; that all humans are strange and kinky creatures, and the ones who don't admit it are the weirdoiest of them all. The NYC-based fest flogs itself as a celebration of "alternative sexuality," a term almost as ambiguous and...
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Charo-Guitar is Whatever You Say
The only thing more shocking than Charo consenting to an interview with SFist is that there are people in the world who don't know who she is. For those philistines, here's a quick recap: Charo is a Spanish superstar of song, dance, and guitar, known for her eccentric catchphrase ("coochi coochi"), wild ensembles, a record-setting number of Loveboat guest appearances, and a speech pattern that is unpredictable, frantic, and...
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Interview: Jenni Olson
Maybe, like us, you weren't lucky enough to catch the Frameline screening of Joy of Life last month. But fear not: this Monday (the eleventh), Jenni Olson's narrative-documentary-ish film premiers at the Castro, and plays until the fourteenth. It's hard to pin The Joy of Life down to any one genre of film; it consists of contemplative footage of San Francisco, accompanied by a calm voiceover, reading what sound like...
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Tammy Faye: Death Defying
It's not easy watching somebody die, but Tammy Faye: Death Defying relishes every minute. Slow piano music, swooshy overproduced graphics, gosh-darn-it voiceovers by the lady herself, and crying -- oh God, so much crying -- might leave you thinking that Ms. Messner's the first person to ever need chemotherapy. A mundane follow-up to the incredible The Eyes of Tammy Faye, Death Defying strips away so much of Tammy Faye's...
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Fun with Buns
So, let's say that you've decided that your image needs an overhaul. Maybe your current look is wearing thin; it's just not you, the crowd is tired, the music sucks. And there's that nagging voice within us all that pipes up every now and makes us dream about one day casting it all off and growing giant ears, whiskers, and a soft huggable pelt. "I do it because it's fun,"...
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