AltWeeklies Wire

The Dutchess and the Duke Break Hearts on Acoustic Stringsnew

Sunset/Sunrise is permeated by a much darker mood than the band's debut, She's the Dutchess, He's the Duke, but the follow-up succeeds by using the same simple arrangements.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  11-04-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Politics are Crippling California's Services to the Disablednew

In addition to being a lifeline for needy disabled Californians, the state Department of Social Services' In-Home Supportive Services program is a cash cow for Democrats. The program's political status has made it a target for Republicans, who characterize it as a bastion of fraud and corruption, and thus ripe for $1.1 billion in cuts.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Smith  |  10-28-2009  |  Commentary

Hey Obama, Where's the Justice in the Current Economic Crisis?new

Despite the president's promises of change, corporate crooks are still going unpunished for their roles in the financial collapse.
SF Weekly  |  James Lieber  |  10-28-2009  |  Economy

Meet Theresa Sparks, San Fran's Transgender Trailblazernew

In 2004, she became the city's first transgender police commissioner, and is now among the country's first openly transgender department heads. But Sparks is pondering a move that would be the biggest of all: becoming San Francisco's first openly transgender city supervisor.
SF Weekly  |  Lauren Smiley  |  10-22-2009  |  Sex

Jay Farrar, Ben Gibbard, and a Bad Actress Pay Tribute to Kerouac's 'Big Sur'new

On the One Fast Move or I'm Gone soundtrack, Farrar and Gibbard trade off singing 12 songs with lyrics taken from Big Sur, including lines from the poem "Sea" that closes the novel. Farrar admits to being intimidated at first to use Kerouac as his lyricist, until he settled into a stream-of-consciousness songwriting style.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  10-22-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Are Sea Lions Too Cute to Shoot?new

As the number of sea lions in San Francisco explodes, the creatures have bitten and bumped swimmers, poached fishermen's catches, sunk boats, and damaged docks. Many would like to see the nuisance creatures banished, but the potential for a public relations disaster is high.
SF Weekly  |  Ashley Harrell  |  10-07-2009  |  Animal Issues

The Weathermen's Ticking Time Bombnew

The investigation into a cop killing in the '70s leads to a Chicago law professor involved in the early stages of Barack Obama’s political career.
SF Weekly  |  Peter Jamison  |  09-18-2009  |  History

Those Who Know Him Best Say Gavin Newsom's Got the Wrong Stuffnew

As San Francisco's mayor gears up for his gubernatorial campaign, former supporters say he's "narcissistic," "thin-skinned," "disloyal," and "friendless."
SF Weekly  |  Ashley Harrell  |  09-09-2009  |  Politics

The YouTube-ification of Public-Access TV in San Francisco is About to Beginnew

California has joined some 20 states in largely letting cable companies off the hook for funding public-access TV. Dozens of cities have lost their stations altogether, and in San Francisco, the operating budget has been hacked to a fifth of its former level. And the old cast of kooky cable programmers doesn't like it one bit.
SF Weekly  |  Lauren Smiley  |  08-12-2009  |  Movies

SFPD Still Uses Unreliable Polygraph to Screen Recruitsnew

Polygraph examinations have constituted a routine part of checks conducted on potential recruits for as long as the SFPD's current background examination supervisor can remember. And it seems as if people are still fooling the machine.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Smith  |  08-12-2009  |  Crime & Justice

Unagi Keeps Hip-Hop Reference-Richnew

Unagi takes hip-hop on a maximalist ride that jells with his geography. He talks up living in the birthplace of Del the Funkyhomosapien, Hieroglyphics, and DJ Shadow, and his drive to "go for more obscure references than [sampling] the obvious song."
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  07-15-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Researcher Says White Folks are Fleeing MySpace for Facebooknew

Last week, a study showing that older folks have flocked to Facebook was all over the news. But word of an even more provocative trend waits in the wings: white flight from MySpace to Facebook.
SF Weekly  |  Lauren Gard  |  07-15-2009  |  Tech

Norwegian Death Metal Doc 'Until the Light Takes Us' Aims High(brow)new

Norwegian death metal is a fascinatingly dark corner of the musician-as-fanatic landscape. Until the Light Takes Us is an attempt to create the definitive film on the subject, but directors Aaron Aites and Audrey Ewell instead offer a passive, jumpy synopsis that's more artsy than insightful.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  07-08-2009  |  Reviews

Christopher Muhammad, the Man Who Cried Dustnew

Muhammad's fight with Lennar over toxic dust has resulted in a restraining order against him, an accusation that he's a shakedown artist, and grudging respect from his rivals.
SF Weekly  |  Lauren Smiley  |  07-02-2009  |  Environment

Toshio Hirano, the Tokyo Yodelernew

Hirano is a poorly kept secret who nonetheless provokes the protective nature of his followers. The night I was at Amnesia, one young fan showed concern that I would increase Hirano's exposure, shaking his head and saying, "But he's our local treasure."
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  06-17-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

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