Archive for April, 2010

Rooftops of San Francisco, Part One

April 29th, 2010

San Francisco doesn’t have as expansive or as thrilling or as foreboding a skyline as a Hong Kong or a New York, but it does have a great skyline. Its buildings are sleek and cool and expressive, lots of them capped with interesting features.

(I write this while coming off a Ferry Building market-meal high: New York strip steak from Prather Meat Co., grilled pineapple and sweet fingerling potatoes from Farm Fresh to You … eating well is another big part of San Francisco’s aesthetic.)

I’ll keep adding to the collection as I continue to explore the city … so this is just Part One.

Snaps of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus

April 24th, 2010

This week I caught an awesome-as-usual show by the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, which performed “RockAria” at the Davies Symphony Hall. I’m a fan of the SFGMC — indeed, anyone who likes music, theater, drama — or, hell, 200 men — would be. I wish the pictures were a little less blurry, but hey, you still get the gist of the show. Rock On, Gay Men.

Urban Ziplining in Downtown SF (via British Columbia)

April 20th, 2010

The Tourism Board of British Columbia brought something extremely cool to San Francisco for a couple weeks this April: urban ziplining at Justin Herman Plaza. It was all part of Tourism BC’s “British Columbia Experience,” a travel promotion that included aboriginal dance, an art installation, and a 680-foot zipline between two portable towers. The zipline was free of charge for the first 500 people per day to show up by 10 AM and get a wristband.

Having ziplined in a rainforest in Laos, I am a hyooooge fan of ziplining, and of course tried to get a wristband. The very cute dude from Whistler with the cool accent, manning the Tourism BC booth, told me that people started showing up at 8 AM to get in line. When I arrived the next morning at 8, though, all 500 people were already there, and the wristbands were gone. “They started getting here at 5 AM,” the Whistler hottie confirmed apologetically.

I was a bit bummed at missing the chance — because no way would I be willing to wake up that ridiculously early for 30 seconds of zip-thrills — but the whole scene was fun anyway, even if you just wanted to show up, hang out in the sunshine and watch the action.

It was the centerpiece to a cool festival atmosphere downtown, and overall an effective way to get people enthused about checking out BC. I thought it was a great idea for British Columbia Tourism to capitalize on all the attention brought on by the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Games and do these fun promotions. A friend from Canada told me they had urban ziplining in Vancouver during the Olympics, and that all these knuckleheads showed up hours in advance there, too. Guess it’s not just an American thing!

So, I guess now I’ll have to go to British Columbia myself soon and zipline for real. I also have to mention that it seems every person from British Columbia is super cute — either that, or the Tourism BC board totally knows how to promote a location.  SOLD!

Getting my Bard On at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival

April 16th, 2010

I recently went to Ashland, Oregon to catch the award-winning Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Ashland is a pretty town just across the California border, in a valley ringed by picturesque mountains. There were both Shakespearean and non-Shakespearean plays featured, and I had time to catch two of the five shows currently running: Hamlet and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.

Having seen Cat in a couple of excellent incarnations, most notably at the Tennessee Williams/ New Orleans Literary Festival, I was pretty surprised that this version could possibly top them. But it did. One notable innovation was the set design, which remains typically static throughout the play, with all the action taking place in Maggie and Brick’s bedroom. In this production, the room switched perspective for each of the three acts, with furniture and props repositioned to demonstrate the different points of view of the main characters. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is nothing without a magnetic performance of Maggie the Cat, and Stephanie Beatriz absolutely did not disappoint in that area. Watching Maggie trying in vain to seduce her alcoholic, likely gay husband was at once mesmerizing, amusing and heartbreaking.

That said, I have to put Hamlet a bit higher on my personal scorecard. Dan Donohue makes a riveting Hamlet — I’m talking lean-forward-in-your-seat, hold-your-breath riveting — and the rest of the cast also killed, pun fully intended. (I don’t think I’ve seen an Ophelia go insane quite so compellingly as Susannah Flood.) Casting the brilliant actor Howie Seago, who is deaf, as Hamlet’s ghost father brought a layer of human poignancy to the show that I haven’t seen in any other production of Hamlet, ever.

In this show, Hamlet’s father was deaf, and so naturally, everyone close to him — his son, his wife, his brother — spoke sign language. The characters would break into sign language at key points when they were talking or thinking about the king, and in this way it brought the murdered man fully into the scene without him being present. It also added incredible depth to the relationship between father and son. At one point, Hamlet and his ghost father speak to each other entirely in sign language, and you don’t need to understand the signs to know what they are saying. The silent communication was an intimate, powerful way to convey Hamlet’s closeness to his father.

I also liked the decision to make Hamlet’s soliloquies happen in stop-motion — the actors would freeze and the stage would go dark while Hamlet spoke his thoughts aloud. It’s a cinematic treatment of the soliloquies that transferred really well to stage.

[Side note: I spotted Hamlet’s Dan Donohue and Cat’s Stephanie Beatriz walking hand-in-hand up an Ashland side street, and after doing some asking around, found out they're engaged — how cool! That's a whole lot of drama for one couple.]

Anyway. I highly recommend the Oregon Shakespeare Festival to everyone. Here are a few snaps from Oregon Shakes.

Hanging out at Games of Berkeley

April 14th, 2010

Recently I paid a visit to Games of Berkeley, a rad corner of Shattuck Ave. in downtown Berkeley. It’s one of those rare places to acknowledge that at every age, all of us need to play. This place has everything for kids and adults … fantasy/ roleplaying games to bar games to travel games to casino games to brain games to classic board games and much more, plus a clever and cool selection of toys. On a gray, morose, rainy Sunday, this place was a cheery blast of color and fun.

Play on!

The Best Six Things From In -N- Out Burger’s Secret Menu

April 11th, 2010

In many ways, California is a big insider’s club, as reflected by the “secret menu” at In-N-Out Burger. Here are the top six “secret menu” items … with a couple you don’t see on the In-N-Out Web site. :)

ANIMAL STYLE Burger/Fries — “Animal Style” means a mustard-grilled beef patty, covered in their secret sauce (kind of like a less tangy, more savory Thousand Island), grilled diced onions and extra pickles.

Animal-style cheeseburger.

NEAPOLITAN SHAKE — The thick, creamy chocolate, vanilla and strawberry shakes, offered separately on the menu, are layered together.

PROTEIN BURGER — Any regular burger on the menu is wrapped in a lettuce leaf, Atkins/ Asian-style.

GRILLED CHEESE — Cheese alone, sans burger, on a toasted bun and with any of the fixins.

FOUR BY FOUR — This is a jumbo burger of four beef patties, four cheese. At this volume of food consumption I’m not sure why you wouldn’t just get two double-doubles … less bread, I guess … but the point is, the choice is yours.

FREE STICKERS — When you order, tell them whether you want drive-thru-based fun stickers or an In-N-Out bumper sticker for your car, and you’ll get one free of charge.

Road and auto love in sticker form.

Road Trip – San Francisco to Oregon

April 9th, 2010

Despite all the traveling I’ve done in the continental U.S., I’ve spent relatively little time in the Pacific Northwest. I aim to fix that now that I’m spending a prolonged period of time in the Bay Area, and my first road trip involved a six-hour drive from San Francisco to Ashland, Oregon, a beautiful little town right across the California-Oregon border.

As we drove up I-5, the topography took the turn from lush rolling foothills to spiky, towering mountains, reminding me why I need to continue exploring the Pacific Northwest. Mountains have a way of conveying majesty in a way that the ocean, with its impossible vastness, cannot. A mountain is at once humbling and inspiring — finite, looming proof of how small and impermanent we are.

As much as I wanted to keep on driving up, up, up north, I was with other people and couldn’t just follow my whims as as I can when I’m traveling solo. Not that I’m complaining too loudly; Ashland is lovely and worth a few days’ time to stop and take it all in.

Cowgirl Creamery – Petaluma Creamery Tour

April 6th, 2010

Last week I had the pleasure of an inside peek at Cowgirl Creamery’s cheesemaking operation on First Street in Petaluma. The original creamery is located in Point Reyes, but high demand for the drool-inducing Cowgirl cheese compelled them to open up another creamery in 2008. When I dropped in last week, they were making their newest year-round cheese, Wagon Wheel, and their seasonal spring cheese, St Pat.

Here are some snaps of the Cowgirls’ creamery on the banks of the Petaluma River, plus a few shots of the finished products and of the Cowgirls, Sue Conley and Peggy Smith, guest stars at the recent California Artisan Cheese Festival.

Spontaneous Sonoma Drive

April 1st, 2010

Today I drove out to Petaluma to pick up some stuff I’d left there during the weekend. I had my day all mapped out in my head: what errands I had to run, where I needed to go to do them, what time I should stop and get some work done, little projects I had to finish … such a superproductive day this was shaping up to be! The rain had come earlier in the morning and dim clouds lingered on the periphery as a distant threat, but for the most part the blue skies won out, peeking from behind giant billows of white. As I drove into Sonoma County the landscape began unrolling around me in towering verdant hills dotted with lush trees, and I saw a sign that said OLD REDWOOD HIGHWAY.

Driving is a guilty pleasure of mine in which, for lots of reasons, I shouldn’t and don’t indulge much lately. I’m not talking about the get-here-go-there driving; I’m referring to highway driving, road-tripping, relaxing and listening to tunes and watching the outdoors roll by. Aimless drives without worrying about traffic signals, pedestrians, bikes, directions. So I passed the four Petaluma exit signs and — inner dialogue by now a shouting match between You Shouldn’t and You Should — turned onto Old Redwood Highway and drove into the sunshine. Hills. Wind. Trees, flowers, river crashing through a gorge down below the road. The Old Redwood Highway can get twisty and hilly and close, through ridges and between winery after winery, the hills rippling out on both sides lined with grapevines.

I didn’t get a chance to take many pictures; holding a camera up to the window for a few seconds while driving yielded the predictable results. I didn’t try this method at all on some of the more winding parts of Old Redwood Highway, because I didn’t want to end up in a ditch at the bottom of a hill, all for a bunch of blurry photos. I don’t suppose the camera could have captured the overarching peacefulness of the place, anyway. There’s a preternatural calmness about vast rolling hills made for cultivation.

On other parts of the highway, the hills expanded a bit and not all were wineries; I saw a fair number of horses and cows and other crops. It occurred to me that aimless cruising on a sunny day gives me that sense of travel that I crave when I’m settled in one place. Maybe, even though I was unquestionably blowing off some obligations, this was good for my General Sense of Well-Being. Which is essential for quality work, anyway, right? I was feeding the muse, dammit.

One photo I, regrettably, didn’t get: the billboard I passed that said MEDICAL MARIJUANA CONSULTATION, with a local clinic’s phone number. It made me wonder what such a consultation would be like. …

DOCTOR: “Do you get headaches? Neck aches? Back aches? Any combination of those?”
PATIENT: “Yes.”
DOCTOR: “Do you sometimes have trouble sleeping? Suffer from anxiety?”
PATIENT: “Why … yes. And yes.”
DOCTOR: “Do you find that you don’t eat enough Fritos, and are missing too many episodes of South Park?”
PATIENT: “Yes!”
DOCTOR: “Here’s your prescription.”


Ba-dump bump.