Feb 28, 2008
Late Night Shots Reality Show Updates
The Washington City Paper’s Angela Valdez provides a two-pronged update today to the monstrosity that could be the Late Night Shots reality TV show we told you about earlier this month. In a piece over at Campus Progress, she interviews Havva Eisenbaum, the producer of the pilot, who says that they’ve already had “nibbles of interest from networks” who might end up picking it up once the pilot is completed. Considering how many reality TV…
Jan 02, 2008
Killings, Gun Crime Up in 2007
With the books finally closed on 2007, we can take an official look at the crime statistics for the year. The Washington Post did so yesterday and found that, as expected, violent crime in the District was up last year as compared to the previous year. You can view some of the District’s 2007 crime data at the MPD’s site over here. It shows that 2007 saw 181 murders, up 7.7 percent from 2006, which…
Dec 28, 2007
D.C. Rates Well in Public Policy Roundup
Over at Huffington Post, Andrea Batista Schlesinger of the Drum Major Institute has a nice roundup of what she thinks are the best public policy initiatives of 2007. Number six on her list is the D.C. Voting Rights Act, and she has a solid grasp on why congressional representation for the District is so important:Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C’s indomitable delegate, can debate with the best of them, but without the D.C. Voting Rights Act, neither…
Dec 27, 2007
Morning Roundup: When Animals Attack Edition
Good morning, Washington. The week surrounding the holidays is almost always a certifiably slow news period, so you can bet good money every local media outlet in the country is shamefacedly relieved to be able to find their own angle on the terrifying fatal San Francisco Zoo tiger attack. Sister site SFist has the roundup of Bay Area coverage, and the Examiner steps up to the plate with the D.C. version of the story –…
Dec 26, 2007
Taxi Drivers Handing Out Surveys
The Washington Post says that taxicab drivers are handing out surveys to riders about the impending change from zones to meters. Drivers have until Jan. 8 to hand in public comments to the D.C. Taxicab Commission and the mayor’s office, which means that if you get in a D.C. cab between now and then, odds are pretty good you’ll be asked to complete a survey. We haven’t spotted one of the surveys ourselves yet, but…
Well ain’t this a kick in the pants? The Washington Redskins, faced with having to take the same long cut to the playoffs that they did the last time they found themselves all but eliminated and facing a slew of teams suddenly willing to play dead, took their act on the road to Minnesota and won 32-1421, in a game that was only briefly tense and was basically decided by an alert eye on the…
Dec 24, 2007
Morning Roundup: Fire and Reindeer Edition
Happy Christmas Eve, Washington. With the frenzy of last-minute shopping and travel out of the city largely complete, folks staying here for the holiday are being treated to a quieter, gentler D.C. than normal, and it turns out in more ways than one. Over the weekend the Post took a look at a recent decline in the murder rate, reporting that only nine homicides have been logged in the District in the 37 days since…
Dec 21, 2007
Go Home Already: To All a Good Night
>> The father of a 4-year-old boy who was shot to death in October was arrested yesterday and charged with killing the man believed responsible for the child’s death. [WaPo] >> The 15-year-old D.C. boy who is charged with hitting an MPD bicycle officer with a stolen limousine has entered a not guilty plea. [WJLA] >> DCPS students spell better than school administrators. [Examiner] >> The Washington Blade has endorsed Sen. Hillary Clinton for…
Dec 20, 2007
Sen. Landrieu, Earmarks and D.C. Public Schools
The Washington Post has a fantastic story on today’s front page accusing Sen. Mary Landrieu (D.-La.), in her role as chairwoman of the Senate’s D.C. appropriations subcommittee up until earlier this year, of forcing an unproven reading program on the District’s kindergarten and first grade classrooms in exchange for $80,000 in donations from the company that designed it. It’s a long story, but it’s worth reading all the way through. On the surface, it tells…
Dec 18, 2007
Council Gives Rhee Power to Say ‘You’re Fired!’
The D.C. Council voted 10 to 3 today to give Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee the power to fire nonunion central office employees. Council members Marion Barry, Phil Mendelson and Harry Thomas Jr. were the only votes against giving Rhee the power to fire. Thomas tried to get the council to approve an alternative bill that would have affected fewer workers, but the Council voted that alternative down 10-3 as well. The Washington Post story…