When the story first broke that Dan Snyder was considering taking legal action against the ownership of the Washington City Paper, there were a scattered few who wondered whether Snyder was pursuing the suit as some sort of perverse publicity stunt. It doesn't make a whole lot of sense, I know. But, think about it: we have been talking a whole lot about Dan Snyder in the last couple of weeks -- and a piece today by new WaPo sports columnist Jason Reid lends at least a little credence to the theory.
Is Dan Snyder's Defamation Lawsuit A Publicity Stunt?
Adu Bound For Benfica
, Former D.C. United prodigy and lightning rod Freddy Adu is off to Benfica of the Portuguese League, reports Steven Goff at the Soccer Insider. When Adu came to United at the tender age 14, his arrival inspired fanfare within Major League Soccer that has only since been surpassed by some British geezer. After three up-and-down seasons with United, Adu was sent to Real Salt Lake for a major allocation (a powerful tool in MLS...
Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse
While SFist cringed at the fatal dose of crime littering the Bay Area, it found solace in Hillary Clinton's San Francisco campaign headquarters opening, which featured loads of exposed mammary glands. In other news, SF Taxi Commission ruled that Satan's cab must keep its (in)famous medallion number, 666; and in an un-fashion-forward frenzy, San Francisco Fashion Week (chortle) bars bloggers from covering and getting smashed at their shows and parties, respectively. Also, they found a...
Popcorn & Candy: Feeling Hot, Hot, Hot
DCist's highly subjective and hardly comprehensive guide to the most interesting movies playing around town in the coming week. Indie: Sunshine A group of astronauts are on a suicide mission to save a dying Sun, lest the earth perish as well. While it may sound like a plot suitable for Michael Bay's Armageddon 2: Bigger and Hotter, in the hands of director Danny Boyle (Trainspotting) and his 28 Days Later screenwriter, Alex Garland, it may...
Photography Protest in Silver Spring Tomorrow
In times when security fears, whether justified or not, begin to creep over our lives, it's important to remember that the tiny chipping away of legitimate rights can be a slippery slope to unwarranted governmental authority over our lives. We wrote in June about photographer Chip Py's experience in downtown Silver Spring, as well as Kate Mereand's similar confrontations all over D.C., and their subsequent formation of DC Photo Rights, a Flickr group dedicated to...
Melody Gardot Pays a Visit to D.C.
In her publicity photos, 23-year-old singer-songwriter Melody Gardot is usually seen wearing a pair of dark sunglasses that one initially assumes are a part of a well-cultivated look. In fact, Gardot wears the glasses because of injuries she suffered when she was struck by a car while bicycling home in her native Philadelphia. Prior to the accident, Gardot worked part-time as a cocktail pianist while studying at Moore College of Art & Design. While in...
Arts Agenda: Fake It 'Til You Make It
>> Artomatic comes to a close this weekend, after five long weeks of inundating us with massive quantities of art, free performances, lectures, concerts, film series, demonstrations and workshops, and spirited community building that even your old summer camp counselor couldn't match. If you haven't gone down to Crystal City yet, the old Patent Office location is only a few blocks from the metro, and the art fair only rises up every two (sometimes three)...
Big Chair, Big Ideas
Just how do you recruit a 19-year-old woman to live in a studio apartment atop a big chair in Southeast Washington? This was the incredible feat achieved by Charles Wendell Curtis, who the Post profiles in an obituary today. Curtis was the man who built Anacostia's 19 1/2 foot tall Big Chair in 1959 to promote his family's furniture store. The original chair -- when built touted as the World's Largest Chair -- was replaced last year by an aluminium replica, after time and weather had taken its toll on the mahogany version. But it maintains its status as an area landmark.
Three Stars: The Vita Ruins
You've read about The Vita Ruins on DCist before. You may have even seen them perform at our 4th Unbuckled concert. When all that buzz was going on about the band, they'd only had a few (literally -- Unbuckled was their third show) performances under their belt. Since then they've built up a reputation that's allowed them quite a bit of luck in booking shows and getting people talking. But the Virginia natives are...
Capitals Review, Part I: A Season Forsaken
When your alumni game features less than one former player for each year your franchise has played, and none of them play goalie, something might be wrong. The 2006-2007 season was a chance for the Washington Capitals to take a long, sometimes painful look at the prospects it has drafted and traded for in recent years. Over the season, the team discovered that these young players were generally young, inexperienced and insecure. With the right...
John Doe: Not Too Cynical, Not Too Schmaltzy
A new "old musical" may sound like a contradiction in terms, but that's exactly what Meet John Doe, now playing at Ford's Theater, is. At first, one might wonder if we need a show that takes us back to the days of classics like Kiss Me Kate and Sweet Charity, but with such intelligent lyrics and such a satisfying blend of hope and cynicism, John Doe is more than a nostalgia trip, and doesn't have...
The Weekly Feed: Keep It Away From The Grill Edition
Ain't Named Passion For Nothing Once again, the men of Passion Food's restaurants (TenPenh, Ceiba, D.C. Coast, and Acadiana) get out of their kitchen kits for a nude romp through 2007. Mr. Kliman over at the Washingtonian lets us in on what's underneath the aprons of some of Passion Food's cookmen, like Acadiana sous chef Anthony Piscioneri and TenPenh chef de cuisine Cliff Wharton. Though most aren't totally naked (though I hear Mr. October, Ceiba's...
Jim Graham's Underage Club Crusade
Councilmember Jim Graham (D-Ward 1) is well known for being thoughtful, energetic, and responsive to the needs of his constitutents. He lords over the District's most diverse and vibrant ward, participating in discussions on everything from transportation to crime to consumer and regulatory affairs. It was no surprise, then, that Graham dove headfirst into last Saturday's tragic killing of 17-year-old Taleshia Ford at Club 1919. He quickly informed constituents of the night's events, pushed Police...
Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse
Sunday. Usually, a quiet, contemplative day in the Blogosphere. But not here in the Ist-a-Verse. Nonono! Just look below and see all of the wild and crazy stuff our staffs are up to. In Austin, bands are beginning to confirm for SXSW and the rumor mill is up and running. Good thing, too, because we all know how much Austinites love live performances. Austin also found itself in the national spotlight, with Longhorn Legend...
The Homeopathy Monument
Washington is full of monuments to famous people -- Washington, Jefferson, Einstein, Hahnemann. Hahnemann? Not a forgotten vice president or a general, Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann was the founder of homeopathic medicine. His impressive monument, located at 16th and Massachusetts NW near Scott Circle, isn't too helpful -- it says "HAHNEMANN" on the top, as if everybody knows who he is. There are also a few Latin and German sayings (he was born in Saxony...
When Avant-Garde Becomes Mainstream
Doilies make things look precious, dainty and cute, like snowflakes without the hassle of puddles. They look good on mantels, under candelabra and posh clocks. But doilies made from cheap paper simply look tacky when they frame paintings — exactly the look Marcel Duchamp wanted when he hung the Société Anonyme’s first show in New York in 1920. The Société Anonyme: Modernism for America, currently showing at the Phillips Collection, is the first visiting show...
Two Hours Early? Try Two Days!
Washington is a city that likes to fly a lot. With members of Congress and Hill staffers flying to every corner of the country, added to the travel habits of the rest of the D.C.-metro populace, it makes for some busy airports. As anyone who has traveled in the past five years knows, even arriving at the airport the recommended two hours early sometimes just doesn't cut it. As the Washington Post reports today, don't expect that trend to get any better, D.C.
In My Country There is Problem
We're awfully sad today at DCist headquarters, after learning this morning that we missed out on spotting Borat (the faux-Kazakh reporter portrayed by comedian Sasha Baron Cohen) trying to gain entry to the White House yesterday, though sadly, to no avail. His visit to D.C. was a brilliant piece of publicity timing, coinciding both with the first official state visit of Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev, as well as the upcoming release of his new film,...
Out and About: Weekend Picks
FRIDAY: >> Mike Doughty's band, which we assume will in fact include Mike Doughty, are taking the 9:30 Club stage tonight for a show that as of this writing is still not sold out. If you people need a reason to go above and beyond his music, allow us to present into evidence Exhibit A and Exhibit B. Oh, and Exhibit C: DCist's awesome interview with him back in September. With Kevin Devine, 8 p.m.,...
Morning Roundup: Moderation In Gouging Edition
Good morning D.C., and happy Earthday Eve (if that's a thing). It looks like Mother Nature will be providing plenty of mud in which to celebrate the observance: the weekend forecast is for rain, rain and more rain. Md. Gets Electricity Rate Relief: WTOP reports that Governor Ehrlich has reached an agreement with Baltimore Gas & Electric to forestall the 72% rate hikes that had been looming for Maryland utility consumers. Customers opting into the...
Small Plates: The All-Beef Edition
Buck's Has a Cow Over at DCFoodies.com, our restaurant-reviewing pal Jason Storch has run into some legal trouble. It seems that he received a cease-and-desist letter from an attorney purporting to represent Buck's Fishing and Camping. What did Storch do to deserve this? Did he too loudly insist that chef Carole Greenwood stop stalking him through his television set? Did he open a restaurant next door called Jason's Hunting and Whitewater-Rafting? No, it simply seems...
Commuter Tax Measures Introduced
Almost two weeks ago a federal appeals court ruled that a District attempt to impose a commuter tax on the legions of out-of-towners who make their living within the city's borders was unlawful, a violation of the powers of the U.S. Congress to oversee and regulate the District's affairs. While the decision wasn't unexpected -- after all, like it or not, the District is fundamentally a Congressional colony -- it dealt another blow to the...
Morning Roundup: At Least It's Friday Edition
Good morning, D.C. This lovely shot of some Eastern Market gourds was posted to DCist photos by easement. We'd love to tell you that we're in for the sort of brisk autumn weather that this photo evokes. But today's going to be cloudy, and tomorrow's going to be rainy. And, in even less cheerful news...
Real Estate Market in D.C. 'White Hot'
When we first received a press release from one David Jenneson, Canadian writer, stating that he had plans to put the deed to the White House up for sale on Ebay, we thought, gee, this guy must be crazy. But sure enough, there it is, with the bid as of 2:45 p.m. today at around $15,000. With the estimated value at $106 million, seems like a steal to us.
Lesbians Here, There, Everywhere
How do you best diffuse negative publicity? Well, according to Rev. Willie F. Wilson of the District's Union Temple Baptist Church, you do so by identifying a problem so grave that it necessitates being labeled a "national emergency." And what emergency is that? Young, African-American lesbians. Wilson, a firebrand preacher, community activist, former mayoral candidate, and executive director of the Millions More Movement, first stepped into hot water when in a July 3 sermon he...
A Borf-In at Dupont Circle
Anyway, though as far as we could tell John Tsombikos wasn't there, the Borfites were happy to chat with anybody who showed interest, even the police. Just another Saturday in Dupont Circle. More pictures can be found here.
John Roberts and the Illegal French Fry
We've had some good times with WMATA over the years, haven't we? There was the time some guy was eating a candy bar while entering a station and was arrested. Or the time WMATA officials handcuffed a talkative pregnant woman? And, of course, there was that lovely moment when a 12 year-old girl ate a french fry on a Metro platform and, as a result, was searched, handcuffed, put into a paddy wagon, and kept in the juvenile processing center for three hours. Ahh, Metro. Happy golden days.
The Wall Street Journal on Adult Kickball
Over at the DCKickball blog the players seem to resent being in the shadow of the WAKA league. Our last post about kickball summarized a City Paper cover story on the "war" between the two leagues, and elicited some comments, including one who observed the events were "Once again proving the point that white professional DC is the home of high school ex-student body vice presidents," and another upon hearing about the length of time spent drinking after games asks "should you at least spend time PLAYING the sport?!"
'Dog Days' Moved to Winter
Thanks to a friend of DCist, who passed along the info that "Dog Days", the debut novel of Ana Marie Cox, has been moved from an October 2005 release back to January 2006. The word from Riverhead Books, Cox's publisher, is that she is "behind." But given the timing of the normal publishing cycle, "Dog Days" should have been sent to the printer some time in the next four weeks -- with the complete manuscript delivered for editing a month or so ago. Perhaps Riverhead are more liberal with their deadlines, but we wonder if the final draft turned in by Cox needed heavier editing than expected. Another possibility is that Riverhead have delayed the book's publication in order to drum up publicity independent of that other D.C. blogger-turned-author. Everything about this seems a little fishy, especially given Ana Marie Cox's month-long hiatus to write back in February. DCist emailed Ms. Cox directly, but has not received a reply.
Coming Up at 11: iPod DJ Night
When the Post covered Cricklewood Massive's iPod Jukebox night with a cover story in February we thought the night had surely hit a pinnacle of publicity. Last night we were proven wrong: D.C.'s WUSA 9 sent intrepid reporter Nancy Yamada "in the District" to Cafe Saint-Ex to see just what all the fuss was about.

