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13 Feb, 5 tweets, 2 min read
Favianna Rodriguez is at the helm of the Que Viva camp, a BIPOC focused camp co-founded by Brooke Oliver, a former lawyer for Burning Man.

They’ve become a community outside of Burning Man with about 100 members.
sfgate.com/subculture-eve…
She’s been a fervent critic of the event’s leadership’s resistance to diversity initiatives.

In 2017, she told leadership the percentage of Black people at Burning Man was embarrassing. (Black people accounted for only 1% of attendees that year).
sfgate.com/subculture-eve…
“There were so many things about being at Burning Man that were beautiful." she explains, “and I had to make that space for myself in the midst of whiteness.”
sfgate.com/subculture-eve…
In 2019, Que Viva started a petition with a list of demands for the Burning Man Board of Directors.

They included anti-racism training for their staff and recruitment initiatives to attract more staff members and attendees of color.
sfgate.com/subculture-eve…
Rodriguez’s persistence has paid off, and Que Viva’s demands were met.

The organization is being more intentional about reaching BIPOC artist communities, reimagining ticket distribution and hosting a conversation series, among a host of other actions:
sfgate.com/subculture-eve…

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More from @SFGate

12 Feb
A fatal attack on an 84-year-old Thai man in SF. A violent attack of an 91-year-old man in Oakland’s Chinatown. Another one, targeting a man at a San Leandro bank. Graffiti outside of a Chinese school in SF.

That, and more, is just in the span of 2 weeks.
sfgate.com/bayarea/articl…
In recent weeks, a string of violence and anti-Asian sentiment has reached a breaking point.

It's disproportionately targeted vulnerable Asian seniors in the Bay Area.
sfgate.com/bayarea/articl…
The issue has also been pushed into the national spotlight as celebrities have spoken out against the attacks.

Daniel Dae Kim and Daniel Wu offered $25,000 for info leading to the arrest of the Oakland man who assaulted the 91-year-old man in Chinatown.
sfgate.com/bayarea/articl…
Read 8 tweets
11 Feb
Most of us have stepped off a bus or train at the wrong stop.

But what if a friendly face just told you that train stop was the right one, and all the signs were indecipherable, and cellphones didn’t exist, and you were three sheets to the wind?
sfgate.com/local/article/…
In 1977, 49-year-old German brewery worker Erwin Kreuz blew his life savings on his first flight — a once-in-a-lifetime birthday trip to San Francisco.

He’d seen it on TV, and he wanted to visit the Wild West.
sfgate.com/local/article/…
As his flight from Frankfurt stopped to refuel in a small airport in Bangor, Maine, before continuing on to CA, a stewardess who had finished her shift told Kreuz to “have a nice time in San Francisco.”

Her choice of words would change Kreuz’s life.
sfgate.com/local/article/…
Read 6 tweets
11 Feb
The first known cases of a COVID-19 variant originally found in South Africa were identified by Stanford University researchers in two Bay Area residents.

One was found in Alameda County and the other in Santa Clara County.
sfgate.com/bayarea/articl…
Gov. @GavinNewsom shared the news in a Wednesday press conference, making the point that while the state's infection rates and hospitalizations are down overall, the pandemic remains severe and people need to be vigilant.
sfgate.com/bayarea/articl…
Newsom said as of Wednesday, 30 genomics labs in the state have identified 159 cases of a variant from the United Kingdom and 1,203 of two variants from the West Coast.

The variant first detected in Brazil has not been found in California, he said.
sfgate.com/bayarea/articl…
Read 5 tweets
10 Feb
If you've never heard of a split bathroom, it's where a home's toilet is in one room and the sink and shower is in another.

They're common in old SF houses - and may be a product of the Victorian era's obsession with hygiene.
sfgate.com/local/article/…
When most homes in the Victorian era were built, there was no toilet in the home at all, since most people would have still used an outhouse.

Bay Area residents may have had their sinks and tubs installed years before they had added an indoor toilet.
sfgate.com/local/article/…
Once they were able to add the toilet, it may have made more sense to convert a nearby closet into a toilet room.

To learn more, @mcleantessa chatted to Bonnie Spindler, a real estate agent and "the Victorian Specialist" of San Francisco.
sfgate.com/local/article/…
Read 5 tweets
30 Jan
Sydney Hawes didn't expect to see the coat she'd hand-sewn in her Oakland studio on national tv.

The design director for the all-woman childrenswear brand iloveplum, Hawes joked she got up, “like, at the middle of the night” to watch the inauguration.
sfgate.com/characters/art…
With a sliver of hope, she saw Biden make his way out of the church.

Then, she saw a little faux fur-clad arm linked with VP Kamala Harris. And she screamed.

"I must have woken up all the East Bay," she laughed. The coat almost didn't happen.
sfgate.com/characters/art…
Faux fur was one of the first things that they ruled out, worried that it would be too fussy.

Then, Hawes saw the famous photo of Kamala Harris as a little girl, wearing a leopard coat. As soon as she saw it, she said, "everything else fell away."
sfgate.com/characters/art…
Read 7 tweets
29 Jan
Santa Cruz has three greenbelt open space preserves within its city limits, including The Pogonip.

It's a 640-acre expanse that features 17 trails, 11.5 miles of hiking, and a mix of ancient redwoods and the remnants of a country club and polo ground.
The city of Santa Cruz bought the land in 1989, just three years after The Pogonip appeared in cult vampire classic “The Lost Boys,” and turned it into the preserve Santa Cruz residents know and love today.

It's also home to a historic lime kiln, which remains mostly preserved.
Says @Grant_Marek, "Don’t get me wrong, it’s very cool. But it’s not the most amazing place that I’ve been in 37 years of living in California.

That’s actually just behind it."

sfgate.com/travel/editors…
Read 5 tweets

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