Dec 22, 2007
Week Around the -Ists
Torontoist discovered their city’s most ridiculous holiday lights setup, with 80,000 lights and two––two!––synchronized music routines. Naturally, they snagged a video. Chicago tragically loses one of its most recognizable neighborhood icons, the pigeon man of Lincoln Square. LAPD leaves body in car at crash scene, then tows it. Massachusetts plus mullet equals PR mayhem. Londonist sleeps in a Haunted plague pit. UC Berkeley students strip naked and race through campus, NSFW floppiness ensues. Phillyist…
Jul 24, 2007
Takoma Park Votes to Impeach President Bush
No matter how you feel about a city known for its hippie culture or holier-than-thou aging baby boomers, you sort of have to love Takoma Park, Md. Commonly referred to as “The People’s Republic of Takoma Park” or “The Berkeley of the East”, the commuter suburb right on the border of the District is not only charmingly beautiful, but the people who live there wear their political proclivities on their collective sleeves so seriously they…
Jun 17, 2007
Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse
Happy Father’s Day! For those of you who have dads, are dads, or know dads, this one’s for you, from all of us at the Gothamist network. It was a week of bizarre, embarassing headlines at DCist. The trial of the local administrative law judge who sued his cleaners for $54 million over a pair of missing pants left everyone shaking their heads. Then the capital city was nearly brought to its knees, twice, by…
May 20, 2007
Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse
LAist is experimenting with blogging dates from J-Date, but finds the best men are found offline. Some date vicariously online and that is one reason why porn is big — really freaking big — so they ask if they should cover XXX since the heart of it lays in the city’s San Fernando Valley. A writer grapples with her food porn photography obsession, another gets censored on Flickr, one gets scooped by the LA…
Mar 26, 2007
Smithsonian’s Secretary Takes the Hint
The Smithsonian Institution’s woes have been front and center in the news lately, and now it has sent its first victim to the chopping block. In the wake of last week’s fairly crushing – though not entirely surprising – report on the state of the museums, Secretary Lawrence M. Small has submitted his resignation, announced today by the Board of Regents Executive Committee. Some have noted that Small may only be the first of the…
Oct 16, 2006
Reader, Meet Author
MONDAY Gary D. Cole built a career thriving at the apex of contradiction—CIA lawyer turned theatre artist, staunch conservative at Cal-Berkeley, a Bush campaign supporter who never let his politics get in the way of producing vital art. Those worlds collided after a Presidential appointment to the NEA was withdrawn because he once produced Poona The Fuckdog (a funny, smutty little play local theatre-goers may remember being produced by Cherry Red Productions). Cole retraces his…
Sep 30, 2005
Brendan Benson at the Black Cat
Brendan Benson’s latest album, The Alternative To Love, played heavily into this summer’s soundtrack. His name has been a frequent one on music bloggers’ lips (fingers?), especially with talk of his upcoming project with Jack White and the Greenhornes in a band called The Raconteurs. Suffice it to say, we were looking forward to last night’s show at Black Cat. The aforementioned Greenhornes opened for Benson (which brought all of the Raconteurs to D.C. this…
Jul 20, 2005
Two-Wheel Wednesday
Catchy title, no? While this may not become a weekly, if even monthly feature, today brings us two pieces of news that may be of interest to cyclists in the District. The District Department of Transportation is holding a meeting today to discuss the possibility of building a bike station on the west end of Union Station. The bike station — an innovative solution for cyclists currently used in Berkeley, Ca., Embarcadero, Ca., Palo Alto,…
Feb 01, 2005
We Examine the Examiner
Today was the first day of publication of the Washington Examiner, which makes them, as their publisher James McDonald points out, “the first generally circulated daily newspaper to be created in the Washington metropolitan area in more than three decades.” The newspaper was started by Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz, an evangelical Christian and supporter of the group “Focus on the Family.” (The same group that outed SpongeBob) The Post profiled Anschuntz in detail in November….