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Introducing San Francisco
© Lonely Planet INTRODUCING SAN FRANCISCO A cable car trundles along Hyde St, with Alcatraz (p62) in the background Grab your coat and a handful of glitter, and you’re good to go in San Francisco. Here antics usually re- served for holidays and disco theme nights erupt spontaneously, and when all that damp fog and sheer delight hits you, this town will give you goose bumps. What with all the earthquakes and daydreamers, this peninsula keeps only a tentative hold on the planet, not to mention the continental US. But as any San Franciscan will point out, gravity is overrated anyway. With 43 hills and a population of free thinkers, crafty inventors and weirdos passing as normal, this city stubbornly refuses to be brought down to earth. Instead, reality is forced to rise to the occasion, with flocks of wild parrots taking to the treetops, ingenious meals by rising star chefs, and poets who just keep on riffing until their words take flight. San Francisco’s stratospheric booms and crashing busts aren’t for the faint of heart, but as anyone who’s clung onto the side of a cable car will tell you, this town gives one hell of a ride. SAN FRANCISCO LIFE Many visitors have the same first reaction to San Francisco as to the Mona Lisa: can it really be so small? This seven-by-seven-mile peninsula looms much larger in the imagination than it does in reality. Earthquakes and capricious city rules that limit building higher than the tip of the Transamerica Pyramid have forced big-name architects to get creative with small-scale museums, resulting in Mario Botta’s kaleidoscopic SFMOMA, Herzog & de Meuron’s copper-clad MH de Young Memorial Museum oxidizing green to match Golden Gate Park, and Renzo Piano’s 2 wildflower-domed, Hobbit Moderne design for the California Academy of Sciences. -
STOP AIDS Project Records, 1985-2011M1463
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8v125bx Online items available Guide to the STOP AIDS Project records, 1985-2011M1463 Laura Williams and Rebecca McNulty, October 2012 Department of Special Collections and University Archives October 2012; updated March 2019 Green Library 557 Escondido Mall Stanford 94305-6064 [email protected] URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc Guide to the STOP AIDS Project M1463 1 records, 1985-2011M1463 Language of Material: English Contributing Institution: Department of Special Collections and University Archives Title: STOP AIDS Project records, creator: STOP AIDS Project Identifier/Call Number: M1463 Physical Description: 373.25 Linear Feet(443 manuscript boxes; 136 record storage boxes; 9 flat boxes; 3 card boxes; 21 map folders and 10 rolls) Date (inclusive): 1985-2011 Special Collections and University Archives materials are stored offsite and must be paged 36-48 hours in advance. For more information on paging collections, see the department's website: http://library.stanford.edu/depts/spc/spc.html. Abstract: Founded in 1984 (non-profit status attained, 1985), the STOP AIDS Project is a community-based organization dedicated to the prevention of HIV transmission among gay, bisexual and transgender men in San Francisco. Throughout its history, the STOP AIDS Project has been overwhelmingly successful in meeting its goal of reducing HIV transmission rates within the San Francisco Gay community through innovative outreach and education programs. The STOP AIDS Project has also served as a model for community-based HIV/AIDS education and support, both across the nation and around the world. The STOP AIDS Project records are comprised of behavioral risk assessment surveys; social marketing campaign materials, including HIV/AIDS prevention posters and flyers; community outreach and workshop materials; volunteer training materials; correspondence; grant proposals; fund development materials; administrative records; photographs; audio and video recordings; and computer files. -
UPPER MARKET AREAS November 27Th
ANNUAL EVENTS International AIDS Candlelight Memorial About Castro / Upper Market 3rd Sunday in May Harvey Milk Day May 22nd Frameline Film Festival / S.F. LGBT International Film Festival June, www.frameline.org S.F. LGBT Pride/Pink Saturday Last weekend in June www.sfpride.org / www.thesisters.org Leather Week/Folsom Street Fair End of September www.folsomstreetevents.org Castro Street Fair 1st Sunday in October HISTORIC+LGBT SIGHTS www.castrostreetfair.org IN THE CASTRO/ Harvey Milk & George Moscone Memorial March & Candlelight Vigil UPPER MARKET AREAS November 27th Film Festivals throughout the year at the iconic Castro Theatre www.castrotheatre.com Castro/Upper Market CBD 584 Castro St. #336 San Francisco, CA 94114 P 415.500.1181 F 415.522.0395 [email protected] castrocbd.org @visitthecastro facebook.com/castrocbd Eureka Valley/Harvey Milk Memorial Branch Library and Mission Dolores (AKA Mission San Francisco de Asis, The Best of Castro / Upper Market José Sarria Court (1 José Sarria Court at 16th and 320 Dolores St. @ 16th St.) Built between 1785 and Market Streets) Renamed in honor of Milk in 1981, the library 1791, this church with 4-foot thick adobe walls is the oldest houses a special collection of GLBT books and materials, and building in San Francisco. The construction work was done by Harvey Milk Plaza/Giant Rainbow Flag (Castro & Harvey Milk’s Former Camera Shop (575 Castro St.) Gay often has gay-themed history and photo displays in its lobby. Native Americans who made the adobe bricks and roof tiles Market Sts) This two-level plaza has on the lower level, a activist Harvey Milk (1930-1978) had his store here and The plaza in front of the library is named José Sarria Court in by hand and painted the ceiling and arches with Indian small display of photos and a plaque noting Harvey Milk’s lived over it. -
Eureka! WWW .EVNA
CASTRO/EUREKA VALLEY N EIGHBORHOOD A SSOCIATION N EWSLETTER THE SUNNY HEART OF SAN FRANCISCO Eureka! WWW .EVNA. ORG The neighborhood association for the Castro, Upper Market and all of Eureka Valley since 1878 Volume 136, Issue 3 May - June 2012 www.evna.org www.PinkTrianglePark.org PINK SATURDAY AWARENESS up Market St. to welcome the Dyke CASTRO COMMUNITY ON PATROL OUTREACH March and their sound truck as they By Ken Craig, Vice Chair, By Sister Selma Soul, Member, join the festivities. We are actively Castro Community on Patrol The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence communicating this signifi cant Castro Community On Patrol (CCOP) The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence change through local media and social has been patrolling the Castro and would like to thank the members of the networks to better manage people’s Duboce Triangle neighborhoods for Castro/Eureka Valley Neighborhood expectations of the event. over six years now. Formed at the Association for providing us the In addition to the Dyke March sound height of some highly publicized opportunity to raise community truck we will continue to have music assaults in late 2006, the walking awareness about this year’s June setups throughout the event as we have volunteer safety patrol has become 23rd Pink Saturday celebration. We in years past. The music systems at an integral part of the safety and know that the key to securing a safe Castro at 19th, Castro Theater Parking security fabric of the neighborhood. and successful Lot, Castro at Working closely with the SFPD, the event is to 18th, Magnet, and Patrol Special Police, business and marry strategic Castro Country community groups in the area and planning efforts Club, will be with the City’s Safety Awareness with open and comparable to the For Everyone (SAFE) non-profi t constructive systems at these crime prevention organization, they dialogue. -
Article Under Her Eye: Digital Drag As Obfuscation and Countersurveillance
Under Her Eye: Digital Drag as Obfuscation Article and Countersurveillance Harris Kornstein New York University, USA [email protected] Abstract Among drag queens, it is common to post screenshots comically highlighting moments in which Facebook incorrectly tags their photos as one another, suggesting that drag makeup offers a unique method for confusing facial recognition algorithms. Drawing on queer, trans, and new media theories, this article considers the ways in which drag serves as a form of informational obfuscation, by adding “noise” in the form of over-the-top makeup and social media profiles that feature semi-fictional names, histories, and personal information. Further, by performing identities that are highly visible, are constantly changing, and engage complex forms of authenticity through modes of camp and realness, drag queens disrupt many common understandings about the users and uses of popular technologies, assumptions of the integrity of data, and even approaches to ensuring privacy. In this way, drag offers both a culturally specific framework for conceptualizing queer and trans responses to surveillance and a potential toolkit for avoiding, thwarting, or mitigating digital observation. Introduction When particular surveillance technologies, in their development and design, leave out some subjects and communities for optimum usage, this leaves open the possibility of reproducing existing inequalities… [But] could there be some potential in going about unknown or unremarkable, and perhaps unbothered, where CCTV, camera-enabled devices, facial recognition, and other computer vision technologies are in use? —Simone Browne, Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness (2015: 162–63) Around late 2014, I began to take note of a curious social media phenomenon: drag queens were posting screenshots to Facebook to highlight instances in which the platform’s predictive facial recognition algorithms incorrectly tagged their photos as one another. -
June 2013 Newsletter Office Phone: 415-554-6968 Email: [email protected] Website
***We are in the process of transitioning to a new newsletter software program. We apologize if you received this email twice.*** June 2013 Newsletter Office Phone: 415-554-6968 Email: [email protected] Website: www.scottwiener.com For more regular updates, follow me on Facebook and Twitter: March With Me At Pride! Please join me for the 44th SF Pride Parade on Sunday, June 30th! Don't miss out on all the colorful and outrageous fun that makes Pride a must‐attend event every year. For those who have never marched in the Parade before, this will be an In this unforgettable experience. Friends, families, children and pets are all encouraged Newsletter to join in the festivities. Date & time for the start of the parade are as follows: Sunday, June 30th Policy Work 10:00am Budget Update Pedestrian Safety To join us in the celebration, please email your name and mobile number to Adam Food Trucks Taylor at [email protected] or call my office at 415‐554‐6968. If you're CEQA Appeals interested in helping to organize or get other people involved, please contact Public Transit Work Adam. Don't miss out on this fantastic, only in San Francisco celebration! TIC Reform Entertainment Regulations Noe Valley Town Square Soft Story Update Parking Tax Collection Community Updates Policy Work Noe Courts Renovation Budget Update: Roads, HIV/AIDS Services, Clean Public Spaces and Parks Glen Canyon Rec Center We’re at the height of budget season, and I’m hard at work as a member of the Castro Streetscape Budget Committee. -
International Association of Pride Organizers 2019 Annual Report 2012 Annual Report
International Association of Pride Organizers 2019 Annual Report 2012 Annual Report InterPride Inc. – International Association of Pride Organizers Founded in 1982, InterPride is the world’s largest organization for organizers of Pride events. InterPride is incorporated in the State of Texas in the USA and is a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization under US law. It is funded by membership dues, sponsorship, merchandise sales and donations from individuals and organizations. OUR VISION A world where there is full cultural, social and legal equality for all. OUR MISSION Empowering Pride Organizations Worldwide. OUR WORK We promote Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride on an international level, to increase networking and communication among Pride Organizations and to encourage diverse communities to hold and attend Pride events and to act as a source of education. InterPride accomplishes it mission with Regional Conferences and an Annual General Meeting and World Conference. At the annual conference, InterPride members network and collaborate on an international scale and take care of the business of the organization. InterPride is a voice for the LGBTQ+ community around the world. We stand up for inequality and fight injustice everywhere. Our members share the latest news about their region with us, so we are able to react internationally and make a difference. Reports contained within this Annual Report are the words, personal accounts and opinions of the authors involved and do not necessarily reflect the views of InterPride as an organization. InterPride accepts no responsibility for the accuracy or completeness of material contained within. InterPride may be contacted via [email protected] or our website: www.interpride.org © 2019 InterPride Inc. -
Legacy Business Registry Staff Report
CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO EDWIN M. LEE, MAYOR OFFICE OF SMALL BUSINESS REGINA DICK-ENDRIZZI, DIRECTOR Legacy Business Registry Staff Report HEARING DATE DECEMBER 11, 2017 BECK’S MOTOR LODGE Application No.: LBR-2017-18-017 Business Name: Beck’s Motor Lodge Business Address: 2222 Market Street District: District 8 Applicant: Brittney Beck, Owner Nomination Date: October 2, 2017 Nominated By: Supervisor Jeff Sheehy Staff Contact: Richard Kurylo [email protected] BUSINESS DESCRIPTION Beck’s Motor Lodge is a local, family-owned motel located in the Castro neighborhood. Constructed in 1958 from the ground up by original owner and founder Will (“Bill”) Beck, Beck’s Motor Lodge was a small motel offering stays for 5 dollars per night in the quiet, working-class Irish neighborhood at the time. Beck saw an opportunity to create a car-centered motel along the Market Street. As the neighborhood progressed and underwent changes, the motel grew with it and eventually became embedded in the heart of the LGBT community in the Castro as a safe place for LGBT individuals who wanted to escape the confines of homes that were holding them back and did not understand them. Apart from hosting tourists and out-of-towners, the motel also opened its doors to patients at nearby hospitals visiting for special procedures and people visiting loved ones who are patients at nearby hospitals. In May 2010, Brittney Beck, granddaughter of Will Back, officially took over operations and management of the hotel, and she officially purchased it from her parents in 2011. Since then, Beck’s Motor Lodge has undergone a tremendous amount of renovations and improvements. -
Richard Skidmore Photographs
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c84f1xs3 No online items Richard Skidmore photographs Finding aid created by GLBT Historical Society staff using RecordEXPRESS GLBT Historical Society 989 Market Street, Lower Level San Francisco, California 94103 (415) 777-5455 [email protected] http://www.glbthistory.org/ 2021 Richard Skidmore photographs 2020-04 1 Descriptive Summary Title: Richard Skidmore photographs Dates: circa 1977-2006 Collection Number: 2020-04 Creator/Collector: Skidmore, Richard Extent: 1.5 linear foot (1 oversized box and 1 half manuscript box) Repository: GLBT Historical Society San Francisco, California 94103 Abstract: The collection includes over 800 photographic slides and photographic prints and negatives documenting various LGBTQ events in San Francisco from the late 1970s-2006. The images were taken by Richard Skidmore. Major subjects include Halloween in the Castro, Tricycle Races and The Mint, Pink Saturday, the Pride Parade, Castro Theater, and Folsom Street Fair. Language of Material: English Access Collection is open for research. Publication Rights Copyright to material has been transferred to the GLBT Historical Society. All requests for reproductions and/or permission to publish or quote from material must be submitted in writing to the GLBT Historical Society Archivist. Preferred Citation Richard Skidmore photographs. GLBT Historical Society Acquisition Information Gift of Richard Skidmore, January 2020. Additions in June 2020. Scope and Content of Collection The collection includes over 800 photographic slides and photographic prints and negatives documenting various LGBTQ events in San Francisco from the late 1970s-2006. The images were taken by Richard Skidmore. Major subjects include Halloween in the Castro, Tricycle Races and The Mint, Pink Saturday, the Pride Parade, Castro Theater, and Folsom Street Fair. -
The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz a Dissertation Submitted in Part
The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures By Katie Rebecca Horowitz A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Linda Williams, Chair Professor Catherine Cole Professor Judith Butler Fall 2012 Abstract The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric University of California, Berkeley Professor Linda Williams, Chair This dissertation responds to the frequent charge within academic and activist circles that queer theory is simply gay male theory cloaked in more inclusive language. Taking as its starting point an ethnographic case study of drag king and queen performance cultures, it challenges the efficaciousness of an everything and the kitchen sink approach to queer theorizing and organizing. This work constitutes the first academic monograph centered on queer life in Cleveland, Ohio and is also the first to focus simultaneously on kinging and queening, a lacuna at once explained by and demanding interrogation of the fact that these practices have almost nothing in common with each other. Despite the shared heading of drag, these iconically queer institutions overlap little with respect to audience, movement vocabulary, stage persona, and treatment of gender, class, race, and sexuality. The radical (in)difference between these genres serves as a microcosmic representation of the perennial rift between lesbians and gay men and highlights the heteronormativity of the assumption that all of the identity categories subsumed under (and often eclipsed by) the queer umbrella ought a priori to have anything in common culturally, politically, or otherwise. -
E Past, Present and Future of Drag in Los Angeles
Rap Duo 88Glam embrace Hip-Hop’s fearlessness • Museum Spotlights Ernie Barnes, Artist and Athlete ® MAY 24-30, 2019 / VOL. 41 / NO. 27 / LAWEEKLY.COM Q e Past,UEENDOM Present and Future of Drag in Los Angeles BY MICHAEL COOPER AND LINA LECARO 2 WWW.LAWEEKLY.COM | - , | LA WEEKLY L May 24 - May 30, 2019 // Vol. 41 // No. 27 // laweekly.com 3 LA WEEKLY LA Explore the Country’s Premier School of Archetypal and Depth Psychology Contents - , | | Join us on campus in Santa Barbara WWW.LAWEEKLY.COM Friday, June 7, 2019 The Pacifica Experience A Comprehensive One-Day Introduction to Pacifica’s Master’s and Doctoral Degree Programs Join us for our Information Day and learn about our various degree programs. Faculty from each of the programs will be hosting program-specific information sessions throughout the day. Don't miss out on this event! Pacifica is an accredited graduate school offering degrees in Clinical Psychology, Counseling Psychology, the Humanities and Mythological Studies. The Institute has two beautiful campuses in Santa Barbara nestled between the foothills and the Pacific Ocean. All of Pacifica’s degree programs are offered through monthly three-day learning sessions that take into account vocational, family, and other commitments. Students come to Pacifica from diverse backgrounds in pursuit of an expansive mix of accademic, professional, and personal goals. 7 Experience Pacifica’s unique interdisciplinary degree programs GO LA...4 FILM...16 led by our renowned faculty. Celebrate punk history, explore the NATHANIEL BELL explores the movies opening Tour both of our beautiful campuses including the Joseph Campbell Archives and the Research Library. -
UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title The Trouble with "Queerness": Drag and the Making of Two Cultures Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8jn2c44k Author Horowitz, Katie Rebecca Publication Date 2012 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures By Katie Rebecca Horowitz A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Linda Williams, Chair Professor Catherine Cole Professor Judith Butler Fall 2012 Abstract The Trouble with “Queerness”: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures by Katie Rebecca Horowitz Doctor of Philosophy in Rhetoric University of California, Berkeley Professor Linda Williams, Chair This dissertation responds to the frequent charge within academic and activist circles that queer theory is simply gay male theory cloaked in more inclusive language. Taking as its starting point an ethnographic case study of drag king and queen performance cultures, it challenges the efficaciousness of an everything and the kitchen sink approach to queer theorizing and organizing. This work constitutes the first academic monograph centered on queer life in Cleveland, Ohio and is also the first to focus simultaneously on kinging and queening, a lacuna at once explained by and demanding interrogation of the fact that these practices have almost nothing in common with each other. Despite the shared heading of drag, these iconically queer institutions overlap little with respect to audience, movement vocabulary, stage persona, and treatment of gender, class, race, and sexuality.