Week Around the -ists

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Week Around the -ists

September 4th, 2008

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Photo: SkyscraperSunset.com

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It's Got to be the Morning After

September 4th, 2008

sp-298x232-stmarysla052.jpg-The Bay Area will send two teams to the Big Dance starting with the Stanford Cardinal who are a #3 seed in the South and will play Cornell in the first round. Cornell? We didn't even know they played basketball. The only thing we know about Cornell is that it's amazingly beautiful and half the students attempt suicide (God only knows what'll happen if they lose). Also representin' the Yay Area are the St. Mary Gaels who have a #10 seed in the South and will play the U of Miami. For those of you sneaking peaks at work (if they don't block you), Stanford plays Thursday at 2 PM and St. Mary's plays at 11:30 AM on Friday. SFist will gladly agree that the Tourney is the best sports event in America but is easily annoyed by all the crap that goes with it, like the cute nicknames for every part of the Tourney or the fawning worship of coaches or the endless blathering on ESPN.

-The Sharkies finally lost a game after an eleven game winning streak as they lost in a shoot out to the Edmonton Oilers. BTW, we watched Clerks last weekend and couldn't help notice that Jay is sporting a Sharks baseball hat. We still think Randall's dissertation on the difference between Star Wars IV and Star Wars VI, the one about contract laborers on the Death Star, is one of the greatest bits ever put on film.

-The Giants lost a split squad game but are thinking that their new savior will super speedy Eugenio Velez. Between him and Rajai Davis, the Giants should be speed demons on the basebaths. Well, except for all the aging veterans on the team. Or the possibility Davis and Velez can't hit. But, hey, at least Zito pitched well.

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SFIAAFF: Behind Forgotten Eyes

September 4th, 2008

behindforgotten.jpgWe can't really say that we were happy to see Behind Forgotten Eyes at the SF Int'l Asian-Am Film Fest this year, which is a documentary about the experience of Korean "comfort women" forced into prostitution by the Japanese army in World War II, but we thought it was important to honor these women's stories and go see something that was pretty much guaranteed to be pretty upsetting.

The women's stories were pretty much to a one extremely disturbing, and the interview footage of Japanese veterans uncomfortably recounting their wartime sexual experiences was unsettling as well. The audience was in tears about halfway through and the crying level remained fairly constant until the credits rolled.

The movie, narrated by Lost's Yunjin Kim, definitely tells an important story in Asian and women's history that deserves to be heard, and outlines the women's ongoing quest for acknowledgment and apology on the world stage. However, there were plenty of elements in this movie that detracted from that message, which we'll get into after the jump.

For some reason, the filmmakers chose to illustrate these stories with what struck us as an extremely inappropriate animation of a typical comfort woman's biography, deliberately designed to look like a children's cartoon, as well as some extremely graphic photographs of women being raped (and of syphilitic men). Understood that both choices were intended to hit viewers in the gut with the horror of the situation - but, you know, we were plenty horrified just by the stories we were hearing and as a result, the cartoon seemed insulting and the pictures just seemed kind of exploitative.

In addition, the filmmakers provided very few details about the women's actual lives and the social situations they faced, beyond their brothel experience. How did these women end up captured by the Japanese? Were they in fact kidnapped, or were they sold out by their community, as some claim? What were their lives in Japan like? Are there children of comfort women from the brothels? Some women alluded to what sounded like remarkable stories of resistance during the war, none of which are followed up by the interviewers. How did the women get back to Korea when the war ended? Did they remarry? What do their families and post-war children think?

Maybe this is just a displaced reaction to the extremely upsetting story of the comfort women that we're so irritated with the movie itself, but we left the movie with more questions than when we'd started, and with a vague level of irritation that instead of following up with what seemed like logical next questions of these women (of whom the remaining survivors are now in their 80s and 90s), the filmmakers spent all that money making a weird and creepy animation story instead.

Behind Forgotten Eyes screens again next Saturday, 3/22, in San Jose.

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SFist Tonight

September 4th, 2008

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FILM: Head over to the Castro to catch Jacob Cheung's A Battle of Wits (Muk gong), which is, according to IMDB, an action-drama-historical epic focusing on a "battle during China's Warring States period...which spanned from the 5th to the 3th centuries B.C. Based on a popular Japanese manga, which was in turn based a Japanese novel inspired by Warring States history in China." Part of the 26th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival.

9:15 p.m. // Castro Theatre (Castro & Market) // $6-9

CLUB: Deco Lounge gives it up for the bears with Bearracuda - a party, it seems, for "bears, cubs, and other wildlife." Trannyshack's Heklina hosts the hairy festivities; Visa De Klein, Renttecca, and Suppositori Spelling perform for the large and in charge masses. (Free massages upstairs, too. Happy endings TBD.)

9 p.m. // Deco Lounge (510 Larkin) // $6

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"Not Even Jackassable"

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"Not Even Jackassable"

September 4th, 2008

We perused the recent SFist post about the pitiable state of San Francisco's streets with a certain sense of nostalgia for the good ol' days. You know, the days before this newfangled "asphalt paving" even entered the scene.

In the Year of the Gold Rush (1849-50ish), the city's population exploded from a cozy 500 citizens to almost 100 thousand - and not a single one of those gold-crazed invaders wasted a second thinking the state of the village's streets.

See, the streets in the good ol' days were good ol' dirt. And when the rainy season arrived, the torrent of horse, foot and cart traffic tearing through town trampled that sandy earth into a boggy quagmire.

How bad was it? Bad. Not to mention deep. Horses, mules, and countless drunken souls staggering out of saloons were sucked down into the street muck and drowned. This situation entered into legend, as historian Herbert Asbury writes, when "the mud at Clay and Kearny streets, in the heart of town, at length became so deep and thick that a wag posted this sign:

"THIS STREET IS IMPASSABLE; NOT EVEN JACKASSABLE"

In a vain attempt to ameliorate the situation, the city fathers (such as they were) dumped in piles of brush and tree branches, but any object that entered the muck slowly sank from sight and vanished forever.

Though the construction boom had caused the price of wood to skyrocket, streets constructed from planks eventually began to appear. This was an improvement over mud, but wooden streets - though reducing the risk of drowning (!) - were slippery when wet, prone to break under horses' hooves, and (on the rare occasions when they were dry) quite flammable. San Francisco's six major Gold Rush-era fires (1849 to 1853) sent miles of costly plank streets up in smoke.

That sixth fire must have been the charm for the city fathers. In 1854 that the miracle of the paved street arrived, first appearing on the block of Kearny Street between Clay and Washington, where City Hall (originally the Jenny Lind Theatre) once stood. Whew!

Bicycle over and pay your respects ... but watch the potholes.

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Kimberly Guilfoyle-Newsom-Villency Gets Fugged

September 4th, 2008

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So, like - hmm. Wow.

Former First Lady of San Francisco and current Fox News on-air talent gets nailed over at Go Fug Yourself today, and rightfully so. Now a New York City resident, she was caught in this ensemble at some sort of American Museum of Natural History's Annual Winter Dance.

While we find it hard to believe that Guilfoyle-Villency - who does, in fact, posses almost impeccable fashion sense from what we've seen during her halcyon days as queen of SF - would wear something like this, did she attend Mission High? Because that is very Mission High.

Jennifer, your thoughts?

Update: She attended Mercy High, a Catholic all-girls school. Hot.

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Film du Jour

September 4th, 2008

 

 

We're sure most of you fresh kids have already caught this, but if not: behold. We came across it over at Spots. (An aside: did you know Gavin's Chief of Using Lawn Sprinklers At Night, Wade Crowfoot, is engaged? Pft. The nerve.) About the above ad, she writes:

Um, could they be more fabulous? No, they couldn't. I want to be friends with them and invite them to Sunday Dinner and take them to Le Club.

Totally.

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SFIAAFF Review: A Thousand Years of Good Prayers

September 4th, 2008

1113-2.jpgLast night's screening of Wayne Wang's A Thousand Years of Good Prayers on opening night of the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival was a sheer delight. The film is based on Bay Area author Yiyun Li's book of short stories. Wayne Wang was there to present the film to us, and then he and star Henry O answered questions after the film. Afterwards, everyone headed over to the Asian American Art Museum for the big opening night Gala.

The film kicked off SFIAAFF's spotlight tribute to Wayne Wang. Wang will be in person at all screenings of his films: Princess of Nebraska-sister film to A Thousand Years of Good Prayers, The Joy Luck Club, and Life is Cheap... But Toilet Paper is Expensive.

Read about the film, the Q&A and the Gala after the jump!

The Film

In A Thousand Years of Good Prayers, actor Henry O's portrayal of the main character Mr. Shi, who steps foot in America for the first time to visit his newly divorced daughter Yilan (played by Faye Yu) in Spokane, Washington, had us laughing and crying at practically the same time. We could empathize with his quest to get to know his daughter again, whom he hadn't seen in twelve years. We had much less empathy for Yilan, perhaps because her relationship with her father reminds us of our own father/daughter relationship. We know that makes no sense, but human emotions are a strange thing. And that's why we loved this film.

The two seem to revert back to their roles from twelve years ago, except that Mr. Shi has recently learned to cook and prepares large meals for Yilan each night. He still comes off as a strict, pushy parent who gets it all wrong, and Yilan is a sullen teenager who lies about her life and stays out all night to avoid connecting with her father. Mr. Shi is left to find connections with the random and colorful people in his daughter's town, but he tells her he'd rather "see the America that you're happy in."

The most lovely relationship that Mr. Shi has takes place daily on a park bench with an Iranian widow, who has come to Spokane to live with her son, daughter-in-law, and their newborn son. Through their limited English, they have a very touching connection.

Mr. Shi and Yilan do end up coming to a subtle closure when Mr. Shi finally is able to talk about the past, which he had always refused to do before. "It's a struggle just to survive. I only want to talk about happy things." Yilan had felt that because she was never exposed to the negative aspects of her parents' relationship, she never learned how to have a relationship of her own. We can definitely empathize with that.

The Q&A

When asked about his inspiration with taking on the film, Wayne Wang said he found himself in a similar situation when he and his wife got married and didn't tell his parents. They came to visit and did some snooping, like Mr. Shi does in the film, and his father said, "How can you get married with only $3,000 in your savings account?" Although it was annoying at the time, Wang said he can now see where his father was coming from.

When asked whether he has any daughters of his own, Henry O said he has two, but he's much gentler with them than Mr. Shi. But he does have one daughter over thirty who isn't married, and he worries a lot about her. O lived through the Cultural Revolution, which was brought up in the film, and he also lives in Spokane.

The Gala

The Gala was a huge hit, with delicious sushi, dumplings, and fruit and cheese. We hear there was alcohol but couldn't get anywhere near the table all night. There was an obvious joke made at one point about elbowing people to get up front, like the elderly Chinatown ladies. We didn't need the drink anyway.

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SFist Interviews Benjamin Shwartz

September 4th, 2008

bs6.jpgSF Symphony Resident Conductor Benjamin Shwartz will lead the SF Youth Symphony on Sunday at Davies Symphony hall, in a program by Prokofiev, Bartok and Haydn. The orchestra musicians range from 12 to 20yo, and none of them was old enough to attend Benjamin's previous venture: Mercury Soul, a blend of classical music by 20th and 21st century composers with techno beats, performed, of all places, in a club, Mezzanine.

The mix sounded intriguing, and when we showed up there, there was a line the length of a football field out at the door. Alas. But the place was packed with a young, hip crowd there to see for composer/DJ Mason Bates spinning some neat beats. Shwartz was there conducting some chamber ensembles into pieces by Ligeti or Webern, and those are the composers that we had heard of; the rest was even more far out.

We asked Benjamin if his concert on Sunday was not too staid, after the invigorating Mercury Soul performance.

He laughed, as if Bartok or Prokofiev weren't 20th century enough. "This is part of the program going on tour this summer," he said, "and we're taking this and the next concert with the Youth Symphony to Europe in June and July. Bartok and Haydn, we don't play very much. It's all great music, and the youth orchestra has a different responsibility and a big and loyal audience. It's an educational institution, and it's part of our mission to introduce the musician to the canon of classical music. We try to play them new music as well, but in building an orchestra, we need to build the skills to play new, old music, and playing Haydn, Beethoven, develop the skills of an orchestra more than Bartok. People have to expand a rythmic sensibility to play Bartok, but it does not build the sound of an orchestra the way that Beethoven does. So with the SF Youth, we're a bit more conservative than other programs, we're more pedagogical."

Photo credits: picture of Maestro Shwartz (getting out of jail?) by Jennifer Hui Bon Hoa above; below Mercury Soul and Mason Bates by Guru Khalsa.

How about Mercury Soul, that was pretty cool, wasn't it?

"We were pretty stunned at how well everything went, given the number of moving parts and number of problems that could arise. Things went smoothly as planned and envisioned and we were delighted."

He added that the project "came about my meeting Mason Bates. We started talking about putting that project together. It came about asking ourselves: what do we want in a new music concert? We have felt trapped in new music concerts that were not fun and not an interesting concept. We would not want anyone to feel trapped in it. Also, we were trying to bring this music to a new kind of audience. There's been plenty of efforts to bring new music to classical music audiences. It has not worked very well. The people who love Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, do not necessarily like Ligeti. Mason and I share the thought that it's the non-regular symphony member, who might be more open minded, more attuned to this kind of music. That's the group that we were trying to reach."

mercurysoul1.jpgAnd reached they did. Of course, playing music in a club, the audience was half-focused on the music, half-focused on getting drunk. We tried to listen carefully, but some just hung out with a beer in their hand. "We thought about that," says Benjamin. "We were trying to reach out to new audiences, specifically to people who had no idea about Ligeti, Dennehy, and we reached a lot of people that were excited. We also reach a lot of people who were not interested, we knew this would happen. It's fine with me, I hope that as we do this again, people would have a better idea for what we are up to, maybe more of the interested people and less of the people who where just out there for a beer. The old concept of music making, it's only in the 20th century that the concert hall became what it is today (silent, religious, dark). Mozart was not played in silent halls with arms folded, people were booing, cheering, eating drinking, it was quite a scene! Having that kind of openness in a venue, during a concert, it is a positive thing. We're not disappointed that some people decided to have a beer during some pieces, and listen during others. We did not feel that they had to watch everything with rapt attention. We're trying to provide the opportunity to hear the music. The turn out was spectacular, there were too many people there, it might have been a more musical environment if the crowds were thinner. I had to cut through the crowd, to get to Mason's rig, and talk to Mason, that was challenging to have that many people. It tends to make people bristle a bit."

As for the pieces they played, "we wanted a variety of things," he said. "The only ‘old' music was the Ligeti and Webern, between 50 and 80 years old. Everything else from the last 10 years. There are so many kinds of music, so many different styles. We could not have a little bit of everything, but we went for a sampling that gave a feel for the variety. So it could have been a whole concert of minimalism, or of serial avant-garde surrealism. The Tenney was quite accessible, an easy piece to listen to, the Dennehy was an extremely avant-garde, punk-influenced piece, also both written in the last 10 years."

Punk? "Dennehy is a composer that is skating the boundary (like Mason Bates) between classical and other musics. Mason is electronica. Dennehy is influenced by punk aesthetic, in your face, extremely aggressive, underground outsider feeling about his music."

mercurysoul2.jpgWe had seen Benjamin get off the podium during his Peter and the Wolf concert, to play the bass (not to sweep Mrs Brady off her feet, as SFist Rita reported). "Oh, you went to that concert! Yeah, the bass is one of my instruments. I played the piano, the flute and the bass as a kid, and I got interested in composing and conducting came last." So we had to ask about Mason Bates' impressive bassist, MarsBassMan, who jammed on top of Mason's beats. "MarsBassMan's name is David Arend, he and Mason met at Juilliard, they play together regularly."

Did Beni say that he used to compose? "Yeah, I was for a while very active as a composer, and I decided at some points that my skills were better spent as a conductor." He did study with Stockhausen, who "is absolutely insane, I mean, he was, it's sad to hear about his passing. He was a genius. He talked of not being from this planet, of being from Sirius, and being here to bring us otherworldly music, and as outlandish and silly as that may sound, there's some truth there. He was not interested in anybody else's music, he wasn't a scholar on Beethoven, or anybody else's music, even modern music. He wrote his dissertation on Bartok's sonata for piano and percussion, but he lived in his own very unique, perplexing, dazzling world of music.As a teacher, he was incredible in explaining his own work, his technique, his tools, his tricks. His composing process was shockingly labor-intensive. there is not a note in Stockhausen's output that is haphazard, out of place, that's here for whimsical reasons. Everything is thought-out, planned out. It might sound haphazard, but it's very methodical. And he was totally nice!"

Just like you, Benjamin!

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Celebrate L. Ron Hubbard's Birthday By Protesting Church of Scientology This Saturday

September 4th, 2008

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Yesterday, it seems, was L. Ron Hubbard's birthday. Hubbard, as most of you know, is the author of the wildly successful Dianetics and founder of the Church of Scientology, a religion in which you achieve higher faith by giving them progressively higher dollar amounts. He would have turned 97 today. Born in Tilden, Nebraska, Hubbard served in World War I, attended George Washington University, was a member of the Explorers Club, and at some point came to the conclusion that purple alien unicorns ruled the Earth many moons ago. Or something like that.

It should come as little surprise that Hubbard was born under a Pisces sun.

Tomorrow, Saturday, there will be another anti-Scientology rally at the Church of Scientology headquarters in San Francisco. The same group responsible for last month's Scientology protest, Anonymous, will serve as hosts to this rally, which is aggressively titled "Operation Party Hard." The festivities commence at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Church of L. Ron on Montgomery Street.

B.Y.O.B.

 

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Halloween In the Castro Cancelled Forevermore?

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Halloween In the Castro Cancelled Forevermore?

September 4th, 2008

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Our sources tell us that Halloween in the Castro as we knew it is now dead. Long live a dull and tedious San Francisco.

Although supervisors promised us that Halloween in the Castro would return for 2008, it turns out that it will not make a spooktacular comeback; in fact, it won't return at all. The event is no more. Dead. It seems that the Entertainment Commission - whose job, it seems, is to prevent entertainment from happening within the 7×7-mile radius of San Francisco - has come up with the brilliant idea that the bombastic and very San Francisco holiday, Halloween in the Castro, will be finished.

So, will the Castro be on lock down every Halloween? We're dying to find out. And we're disgusted. How about you?

To recap, last year Halloween in the Castro was canceled, which saw all of the neighborhood's bars and clubs close down as the predominately queer neighborhood tunned into a police state for the night. (To re-live the non-drama, visit SFist's live-blogging coverage of Halloween 2007 here.)

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SFist Tonight

SFist Tonight

September 4th, 2008

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COMEDY: A popular comic among the homoseuxally-inclined male, Margaret Cho returns to her home town to wow, shock, and slap the knees of her adoring and rabid fans. In addition to bringing on the funny, she sometimes touches the heart, too. Aw. Liam Sullivan (AKA, Kelly, the guy who did that "Shoes" YouTube hit.) (Can't make it tonight? Don't fret: she performs through Sunday.)

8 p.m. // The Warfield [3187 Mission] // $35-$65

CLUB: Over at the Argus Lounge in the Mission, eclectic musician and noted C.S. Lewis fans, DJ That Hideous Strength, spins tonight from his assorted record collection filled with a sundry of rare tunes.

10 p.m. // Argus Lounge [3187 Mission] // free

OPERA: Giacomo Pucci's classic La Bohème (i.e., Rent but from, like, totally a long time ago) makes audiences weep tonight over at the Fort Mason's Cowell Theater. Expect soaring arias, lots of crying, and [spoiler alert] a fantastic stabbing-death finale.

7:30 p.m. // Fort Mason, Cowell Theater [Herbst Pavilion, Marina & Buchanan] // $32

Photo: Austin Young

 

The listed events were chosen by the editors of SFist and brought to you by the Click Here2009 Toyota Corolla.

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Brace for Sunday Streets, Sloths

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Brace for Sunday Streets, Sloths

September 2nd, 2008


Click the image above to view the full photogallery.

And here we had envisioned Sunday Streets as some quaint throwback to yesteryear, with city residents spinning parasols and sipping Mint Juleps while strolling leisurely across the (imaginary) lawn, Gatsby-style. Instead, residents will have their lazy asses handed to them with cardio Latin dance, soccer drills, and breakdancing; hula hooping, aerobic boot camp, and a reenactment of Michael Jackson's Thriller dance. And more. Schedule of activities here. BART, Muni, and mappage here. Warm it up, SF.

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Thursday PM Linkage

September 2nd, 2008

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["The mighty Tower Theater" courtesy Curbed SF Flickr photog mark j roquet]

· Found: cat. "Is not housebroken! :(" [dbqp]
· Potrero Hill Muni porn: our "wilted flower" [Infospigot]
· Man pees on building, goes (back) to jail [SF Gate]
· TV: Showing some Sunset love [Sparkletack]
· Weird, people don't like shit on their street? [SFist]

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Curbed National: Don’t Fear The Reaper

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Curbed National: Don't Fear The Reaper

September 2nd, 2008

And now, a look at what's happening elsewhere in the Curbed Nation.

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1) The value engineering reaper again descends upon New York's future PATH Station at the World Trade Center, designed by celebrated Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. The newest dilution? Columns in the previously column-free main hall. Perhaps still in denial, Cal said (surely through gritted teeth), "the project retains all of its fundamental beauty." No, no it doesn't. [Curbed]
2) Currently under construction: new condo lofts in Los Angles offer 20 ft ceilings, a cool contemporary design, and a floating fireplace. Also, we live in the future. [Curbed LA]
3) Los Angeles buildings get space-invaded by French hipster artist in welding mask. Yep...just another day in the City of Angels. [Curbed LA]

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Golden Gate Bridge Barrier: Back With a Vengeance

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Golden Gate Bridge Barrier: Back With a Vengeance

September 2nd, 2008

2008_07_GG-nets.jpgLast seen banished to some corner of San Francisco's idea purgatory, the Golden Gate Bridge suicide barriers have returned, stronger than ever. Well, relatively. Final results from the bridge district's online survey are back, and in a reversal of previous numbers, most people are now in favor of some sort of barrier. Here's what we mean by "most people": collectively, the five barrier designs in the survey garnered 50.13 percent of the vote, beating out "no barrier," which got 49.87 percent, by a hair. A really, really thin hair. How the tides have turned - only a week ago, 55 percent voted against the proposal. The favorite: Option "1A," a vertical 8-foot bars added to the outside handrail. (Close behind, a horizontal net.) The district's board will likely vote on a proposal in October or November, with a possible construction beginning a year from then. Change is nigh?!
· Suicide barrier gaining support [Examiner]
· Extreme Preservation: No Net for GG Bridge? [Curbed SF]
· Public Sounds Off On Bridge Barrier Designs [Curbed SF]
· Golden Gate Bridge Barrier Renderings Revealed [Curbed SF]

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Presidio's Too Far? Hike the Faux Trail: The Presidio Trust is taking a...

September 2nd, 2008

The Presidio Trust is taking a break from their CAMP brouhaha and having a day of good clean fun at Sunday Streets - by building a "mock trail simulating the Presidio's great outdoors" at the Ferry Building Plaza. Seriously - no sarcasm - that's kind of neat, actually. How about a mock contemporary art museum so everyone can see what the fuss is about? OK, that was a little sarcastic. [SF Sentinel]

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Spotted: Shitshow-for-All at 1999 Oak Street

Spotted: Shitshow-for-All at 1999 Oak Street

September 2nd, 2008

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San Francisco, social Utopia or free-for-all detritus dump? Such was this week's condundrum, as our readers sent in sighting after sighting of artful garbage arrangements. Today brought this proverbial cake: "Taking street dumping to a whole other level," read the subject line for this snap of 1999 Oak Street. Note the supplemental reading materials- all the comforts of home, on the street. [Curbed Inbox]
· Spotted: "UnHauled" on Valencia Street [Curbed SF]
· Reader Rant: Let's Play the