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Weekly of the Week

So there's this blog tha t rates local weekly newspapers every week, giving the "Weekly of the Week" award to whichever one is most interesting ... or relevant... or, I don't know, good for some other reason. And this week, we got it, with this description:

Weekly of the Week: We were all set to give it to the Metro for a second week in a row, but the Guardian snuck up on us -- the Balazo story, plus all the descriptions of places to get Chinese breakfasts in downtown Oakland won us over! Plus: curse you, SFist Rain, for getting us addicted to America's Next Top Model!

Yay on us! Particularly since they mentioned a story in the FEAST supplement I edited. Yeeha!Feastbanner_2

April 05, 2007 in SF Bay Guardian | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

It's my baby

Check it out, yo. My first big project for the Guardian. Yup, I ate and drank a whole lot. I wrote some shit. And I edited everything. Yes, it was fun. And exhausting. And scary. Now I'm going to go nurse my month-long hangover.

(BTW, please note the cover. It's what I like to call "Sports Illustrated: The Salad Issue.")

April 04, 2007 in Dining, SF Bay Guardian | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Because I'm such a good, devout Jew

I thought I should post something in honor of Passover, that holiday of long long prayers and weird weird food and just four questions (unless you're in my family, in which case you do the whole thing according to the Reform-as-Reform-can-be instruction book, Passover in 20 Minues.) So here it is, my tribute to one of the most important holidays on the Jewish calendar:

Click here.

You're welcome.

April 02, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

And I was quoted on NPR

Mm070320extreme_embellishmen335x120Holy crap. My SB Indie story was quoted on NPR. And not just the story, but my name. My name on NPR. It's been a goal of mine for awhile to make it to NPR - who would've thought it would've been because of the Jerry Roberts story, a story I almost didn't do because of time constraints? Now all I have to do is write one <em>for</em> NPR. And, you know, do a cover story for Rolling Stone. Or GQ. Or Nylon. I'm easy...

March 30, 2007 in Writing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

And it was all lellow...

It's my birthday. And here's what my mom sent to me on this, the first day of my 29th year of my life, in reference to what I was doing the year I turned three:

Just for birthday fun, here's some excerpts from my calendar of 1981:

1-1   Molly says "lellow" for "yellow"
2-3  Molly "pistapeered" for "disappeared"
2-7  Molly loves to make up songs
2-18  Molly decided to pee and poop in potty!
3-1  Molly really understands counting - counts objects to 12.  Knows about 5
            phoentic sounds
        Molly and I see Fantasia.   "How pretty it is!"
3-11  Molly uses the word "meanwhile" correctly
3-14  Molly matches tone just right.  Can also imitate 3-note phrases - in register
               and direction
4-3  Molly wants a yellow cat named pickle, and dog named Joe.
       Molly can read:  baby, cup, spoon, apply, Molly, Sally
5-20  Robin says to Molly  "I don't like you"
          Molly answers  "I'm just standing here.  You don't have to like me!"
6-23  Molly says "3 take away 1 is 2, take away 2 is 1"
8-10  Molly spelled "sauce" on her own... "sos"/  makes up songs using guitar
          Molly conversing in baby talk like it was a second language.
8-18  "Let's keep that little baby"  (referring to Sally)
9-2  "I'm lucky to have a sister like Sally"
9-3  "Mom, I love you always"
9-17  When Justin almost took a toy, Molly said "that was close!"
9-18   Taught herself to use an abacus
9-23  "You know what mom?  I really appreciate that you love me"
9-25  Molly decided not to be nice to me when I got mad at her
9-27   "Do you want a lunchbox when you grow down and be a little girl?"
9-30  "Valenheart's Day!"
11-2  "The sky is blue.  I trick or treat in the morning.  I have something good to eat"
11-7  When throwing up:  "Here it comes again.  Why am I doing this?!"
12-1  Counts to 100 with a book!"
12-8  Very interested in making her bed and does it well.
12-15  "on the 5th day of Christmas my mommy gave to me, six loving hugs..."
            (continued to make up verses about everything she got and who gave it
              to her).
12-31  "You want to say "oh, damn it," Sally?"

March 26, 2007 in Regular ol' blog posts | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

I made Romenesko!

For media types, this is a big deal. Basically, Poynter is the mecca of all things media-related, and most editors and reporters check it (or receive newsletters from it) regularly. Romenesko keeps a running list of links to important/interesting/relevant stories around the country, and also sends out a newsletter to the same effect. And apparently, today I made the top of the list on the newsletter with my SB Indie story on the Jerry Roberts roast. Not quite a Pulitzer, but not too shabby either...

Link to post on Poynter here

March 15, 2007 in Regular ol' blog posts | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Roasting Former News-Press Editor Jerry Roberts

(published on SB Indie blog, March 14, 2007. Click headline below to see comments...)

Roberts Gets Roasted, Raises Thousands, and Provides Humor to Sad Situation
(Photos also by Molly Freedenberg)

Jerry Roberts (pictured)Jerry_roberts_roasthad his “Sally Field moment” on Tuesday night, March 13, when more than 167 people showed up at the swanky Field Club Lounge at AT&T Park for The Jerry Roberts Roast, an event that raised more than $30,000 for Roberts’ legal defense against the $25 million lawsuit News-Press owner Wendy McCaw has brought against him.

The event was appropriately held in the “living room of the San Francisco Giants,” as Roberts was a notorious supporter of the team while working at The Chronicle, and featured ballpark culinary fare like hot dogs, barbecued chicken breast, and potato salad. In the back of the space was an impressive silent auction featuring donated Giants’ goods (including an autographed Randy Winn jersey and autographed Matt Cain baseball), a number of photographs donated by The Chronicle and other photojournalists, a table of premium wines, gift certificates to Bay Area businesses, and two styles of McCaw-themed T-shirts: “I’ve been SUED by Wendy McCaw” and “I’ve been DISLOYAL to Wendy McCaw.”
Before the silent auction and walk-up sales, it was estimated that the event had already raised $30,000 for the Lawyers Alliance for Free Speech Rights, the fund established to defend those journalists who have become McCaw’s targets.

The highlight of the evening was the lighthearted, affectionate, and none-too-shy roast of the dashing, pinstripe-suited, and frequently laughing Roberts. It was emceed by former colleague Greg Lucas, who noted that throughout all of this trauma, Roberts has managed to keep his sense of humor — not only about his troubles at the News-Press, but also about the non-Hodgkins lymphoma he was diagnosed with in November. When asked how he’s doing, said Lucas, Roberts answers with, “Other than the cancer and the $25 million lawsuit, I’m doing all right.”

Guests and speakers included current and former employees of the San Francisco Chronicle, such as executive editor Phil Bronstein, former publisher Steve Falk, and reporters Greg Lucas, Steve Rubenstein, and Kevin Fagan. There were also former colleagues from the Santa Barbara News-Press such as Linda Strean and Josh Molina; editor and founder of Spot-on.com Chris Nolan; political consultant Gail Kaufman; former California State Senator John Burton; author, biographer and Washington Post contributor Lou Cannon; a representative from the Teamsters’ legal team; members of Roberts’ legal team; friends, family, and even a few supporters with no ties to Roberts or the media.

First up for the roast was Phil Bronstein, who was Roberts’ competitor at the San Francisco Examiner before Bronstein became his boss — and one of the main reasons Roberts left the Chronicle — when the papers merged. Despite their well-known feud, Bronstein has been vocal in supporting Roberts through this process — but that doesn’t mean he pulled any punches during his roast.

“I’m going to make this speech as brief as I can, kind of like my professional relationship with Jerry…and as painful as I can, kind of like…” he trailed off, met by laughter. He likened their working relationship as one of brotherhood, “like Cain and Abel,” and compared preparing for the roast to rectal exams, since “as a competitor and as a colleague, Jerry was so far up my ass.” He finished with a list of top 15 reasons — a nod to Roberts’ famous affection for top ten lists — he stopped working with Roberts, including a reference to the famous attack by a Komodo dragon on Bronstein at the L.A. Zoo with then-wife Sharon Stone and to a number of inside jokes about their short time together at the Chronicle.

Next up was Kaufman, who has known Roberts “and heard him complain” for 30 years. Though ribbing Roberts, her real punches were reserved for “stark-raving crazy” McCaw. “It makes me mad that a bored socialite billionaire is moving roughshod over our boy,” said Kaufman, to wild applause. “I think we’ll see Ann Coulter on Queer Eye for the Straight Guy before Wendy McCaw wins any Pulitzers.”
Former state Senator Burton took the faux optimistic approach towards the predicament facing Roberts, whom he remembers as a city hall reporter who was always “a straight shooter.” “The lawsuit…seems like a goddamned compliment to me,” said the notoriously foul-mouthed Burton. “He’s the only person I’ve ever met that’s worth $25 million when he quits a job.”

Things got a bit more serious as Cannon, wearing a powder blue suit and matching shirt, took the podium. The renowned Reagan biographer spent less time joking about Roberts and more explaining why this issue is a “way bigger deal than just some tiff in sunny Santa Barbara.” Cannon pointed out that this is a tough time for journalists, and that Roberts did what few others would have the courage to do: quit a job he loved — and led what Cannon called the “only mass resignation over journalistic ethics in the history of journalism that I know of.”Roberts_roast_crowd


He emphasized that though Santa Barbara, unlike San Francisco, is not a union town, the vote for the union was 33 to 6, also explaining to the mainly Northern California crowd that if it weren’t for The Independent and blogs like Craig Smith’s, locals in Santa Barbara wouldn’t know anything about this issue. Furthermore, Cannon explained that though he’d be happy to be at the event purely to support Roberts, more is at stake: fighting against a woman who plans to suppress freedom of speech by bogging journalists down in expensive lawsuits. “The only answer is to raise money to fight her in court,” he said. “In doing so, we’re also striking a blow for freedom of press.”

The litany of speakers concluded with Lucas joking about Roberts’ new position as publications manager at UCSB, displaying a headline from The Daily Nexus during Roberts’ first week on the job: “Vaginas run wild at V-day festivities.”

And then the well-spoken Roberts took his chance for rebuttal and thanks. He poked good-natured fun at each of the speakers, and at his predicament, uttering a joke some heard at an event at Victoria Hall last July: “How come I spent 32 years working in journalism, and nobody noticed till I stopped?” But in true Jerry Roberts style, he capped off his speech with one of his lists, this one an explanation of top ten reasons he took the job at the News-Press five years ago:

10) C’mon dear. I’ll kick back for a while and then fly into retirement
9) Santa Barbara is so cool! Do you know Rob Lowe lives there?
8) The future of newspapers is in responsible local ownership
7) It’ll be just like working for Nan McAvoy (former owner of The Chronicle, now an olive oil maker)
6) I might even get to be publisher!
5) There sure won’t be any unions to deal with.
4) No one messes around with my newsroom.
3) It’ll be better for my health.
2) How bad can it be after Phil?
1) What’s she going to do, sue me?

Molly Freedenberg, a frequent contributor to The Independent over the years, now works as the associate culture editor at the San Francisco Bay Guardian. Many thanks to her for this report.

March 15, 2007 in Molly Freedenberg, photographer, SB Independent | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Best. Story. Ever.

This is an actual story from the Lodi News-Sentinel, forwarded to me by my esteemed colleague G.W. Schulz. Story text follows.

Local jazz musician injured after leaping from burning motor home
By Layla Bohm
News-Sentinel Staff Writer
Last updated: Saturday, Feb 24, 2007 - 07:02:48 am PST

A jazz musician was injured Friday after jumping from a burning motor home driven by a one-time roller skating stripper from Lodi.

Francis Courtney, 60, a guitarist and singer for Stockton-based "Cradle of Sound," leaped from the motor home on the Highway 99 overpass at Peltier Road shortly before noon.

In the process, the 1979 motor home's brakes failed and the driver, Anthony "Tony" Luccketta, 49, had to stop the vehicle by crashing into a fence.

Courtney, whose band opened for BB King on New Year's Eve in Stockton, was taken by ambulance to Lodi Memorial Hospital with minor injuries, said California Highway Patrol Officer Roberto Iniguez.

Luccketta, who is still known for his roller skating stripper gig but now focuses on playing music, was not injured. There was no sign of alcohol involvement, Iniguez said, and the Coors Light beer can on the motorhome's dashboard appeared to be a decoration.

Hours earlier, Iniguez had tagged the motor home parked on the southbound side of the freeway, planning to return and tow it if it hadn't been moved.

The motor home had also been noticed by Angie Coberly, who lives in a cream-colored house just south of the overpass. Her attached garage was demolished last August when a man lost control of the big rig he was driving, veered off the freeway, hit a power pole and landed in her garage.

On Friday, Coberly happened to be outside in the sunshine when she saw the motor home heading east on the overpass. She saw the door "flapping" open and dialed 911 when she saw a figure leap out of the moving vehicle.

"And then I saw a huge bonfire in the middle of it," she said of the motor home.

The fire didn't spread and Luccketta escaped unharmed, making his way back to the overpass where his friend lay on the road.

Courtney's fiancee, Linda Wilcox of Modesto, had been following in her Dodge van and stopped on the overpass. Courtney was unconscious at one point, the shaken woman said, but he was later able to talk to paramedics as they placed him in an ambulance.

Coberly was still watching the commotion when a tow truck came to haul the 24-foot motor home from the scene. It was driven by the same man who had pulled the big rig from her garage six months earlier.

Contact reporter Layla Bohm at layla@lodinews.com.

March 15, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

I could be wrong...

...but I don't think people in San Francisco like cars very much.

Img_0182

(seen on a sidewalk near Golden Gate Park)

March 03, 2007 in Regular ol' blog posts | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

More stuff I wrote

I saw a couple of shows last night. Here's what I said about 'em. (Check out the rest of the music blog for other recent posts by yours truly.)

Img_0378

March 02, 2007 in SF Bay Guardian | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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