AltWeeklies Wire

Covering Their Tracksnew

San Francisco's Central Subway project buries millions of dollars in a deep dark place.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  04-02-2014  |  Transportation

Subterranean Rush Hour Blues: Behind the Soundtrack to Your Commutenew

A profile piece on the street musicians San Francisco commuters pass everyday.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi, Kate Conger and Rachel Swan  |  12-19-2013  |  Culture

Only One America's Cup Winner, But Many Losersnew

San Francisco poured millions into the event in hopes of catching crumbs off the table of a megalomaniacal billionaire. New Zealand, meanwhile, directly subsidized its yachting team with government funds, buying something akin to partial ownership of the product. These were calculated risks. Neither may pay off.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  09-25-2013  |  Sports

Top 5 Ways Bleacher Report Rules the World!new

Unpaid writers churn out terrible articles and the owners get a $200 million payday. It's a web success story.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  10-05-2012  |  Media

49ers Pissed Away Super Bowl Berthnew

So many times, we've been told that tragedies or deaths "put things in perspective" when it comes to organized sports. Really? Fans need floods and famines and terrorist attacks and senseless mayhem to remind them that there are more important things in life than the outcome of a ballgame? This is necessary?
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  01-23-2012  |  Sports

Double Drain: Program Pays Cops Pensions While Still on the Forcenew

Under a city program called DROP, San Francisco cops receive salary and pension at same time, sometimes earning up to $400,000 a year. Should they?
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  04-15-2011  |  Policy Issues

The Art of the Stealnew

Terry Helbling lived to collect art. Other people’s art.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  03-11-2011  |  Crime & Justice

Proposition 8 Overturnednew

Gay marriage on hold pending stay.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  08-04-2010  |  LGBT

I Endorsed This Tweetnew

Twitter, Facebook face political regulation.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  08-03-2010  |  Tech

Will a Big-Name Dem Run Away With the Attorney General's Race?new

You might intuit Rep. Jackie Speier, the frosh congresswoman from the Peninsula, doesn't like her new job in Washington, D.C. - if, before her first full term is even up, her name is appearing in a poll for another elected office.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  02-03-2010  |  Politics

Have San Francisco's Service Animal Laws Gone to the Dogs?new

In San Francisco, snakes, lizards, pit bulls, chickens, pigeons, and rodents have all been declared service animals, hauled onto public transportation, housed legally in city apartments, and, essentially, given the full run of the city.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  06-17-2009  |  Animal Issues

How 'Douchebag' Became Everyone's Favorite Insultnew

James Matisoff, an emeritus professor in UC Berkeley's linguistics department, concurs that douchebag's pejoration -- its change from neutral to negative meaning -- has snowballed in recent years. The culprits: Jon Stewart and his comedic brethren.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  01-07-2009  |  Commentary

San Fran's Plastic Bag Ban Has Left the City with More Pollution and Costnew

It has become apparent that many of the rationales used to justify the ban -- such as its benefiting the environment and alleviating the city's litter problems -- are not playing out in the real world.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  01-07-2009  |  Environment

The Origins of Biodynamic Wine Are Steeped in the Occult and Bad Sciencenew

Biodynamic wines' sign is ascending -- even if no one involved in making or selling them wants to volunteer information about the severed cows' heads or a bevy of other animal and vegetable preparations that read like a shopping list for Shakespeare's three weird sisters.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  11-19-2008  |  Food+Drink

SF's Academy of Art Enters the World of NCAA Athleticsnew

This month, the art school kicks off an intercollegiate sports program, fielding 12 teams in the NCAA Division II Pacific West Conference. And if the notion of an art school recruiting players for NCAA competition and doling out athletic scholarships strikes you as odd -- it is. The Academy of Art is the only one.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  08-28-2008  |  Sports

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