Bad sound plagued the set, which singer Julian Casablancas complained about in the middle of opening song "The End Has No End."
The crowd roared in agreement when he called it "crazy low"
Then things got awkward. Casablancas blamed everyone except his sound guy for the issue...
"I'm sure it's the law, or the festival, or some San Francisco law bulls—t," said Casablancas.
Then he revealed that he wasn't let into a San Francisco restaurant due to an issue with his vaccine card.
He also railed against San Francisco's disparity of wealth, asking for ten minutes of silence for inequality.
Then the band ripped into their song "You Only Live Once," which coincidentally starts with the lyric: "Some people think they're always right." bit.ly/3CqrZzX
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Valerie Kumra was sitting at her house in Dillon Beach, a small waterfront community off Bodega Bay, one afternoon when she heard an unexpected knock on the door.
A young couple stood in front of her, looking excited. “We’re here!” the husband exclaimed. sfgate.com/local/article/…
The couple had “rented” Kumra’s home after seeing an ad on Craigslist.
They had texted the alleged owners just 10 minutes before arriving to tell them they were almost there and they had responded that they would be there to greet them. sfgate.com/local/article/…
It all unraveled from there.
The couple showed Kumra that they had paid the scammer via bank transfer, they had signed a contract that included Kumra and her husband’s name and the listing even included extensive photos and a description of the home. sfgate.com/local/article/…
This Sunday was the wettest October day in downtown San Francisco since records began, as the deluge dropped over 4 inches of rain on the city. sfgate.com/california-par…
The "bomb cyclone" aka "atmospheric river" aka mega-drought-crusher drenched the Bay Area, but also brought life to the parched waterfalls of Yosemite and snow to the Sierra, resulting in some stunning imagery.
The highlights for the San Francisco 49ers during their 30-18 loss to the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday were few and far between.
Off the field, however, one fan’s outfit proved to be so entertaining that it garnered serious national attention. sfgate.com/49ers/article/…
In the third quarter of "Sunday Night Football," the game’s broadcast panned to a Niners fan in the crowd who braved the dreary elements brought on by an atmospheric river and wore just a swimmer’s cap and a pair of swimming goggles.
His dad, Dan Parish, tells SFGATE that not only was the outfit entirely his kid’s idea, but also that it was originally supposed to feature snorkeling headgear and pool noodles, the latter of which was vetoed by Parish.
Lake Tahoe’s water levels are back up above the natural rim, thanks to precipitation from the massive storm system that pushed across Northern California this weekend. sfgate.com/renotahoe/arti…
Data from the U.S. Geological Survey shows that water levels at the Tahoe City dam rose almost half of a foot in 24 hours. Meanwhile, more than 2 feet of snow accumulated on the mountaintops surrounding the Tahoe Basin.
A moisture-packed atmospheric river barreled across the San Francisco Bay Area on Sunday into Monday, drenching the region to kick off the rainy season. sfgate.com/weather/articl…
"It was about what we anticipated," said @NWS meteorologist Sean Hayes of how the storm unfolded.
"It was a strong event, anomalously strong for this time of year."
Meteorologist Jan Null of Golden Gate Weather Services created a Bay Area Storm Index that ranks storms by strength, based on wind and rainfall totals, using data going back to 1950.
The recent atmospheric river tied with two other events for third-strongest storm in 71 years.
The city’s only In-N-Out location was closed by the SF Dept. of Public Health (@SF_DPH) last week because employees “were not preventing the entry of Customers who were not carrying proper vaccination documentation,” according to a statement from #InNOut: sfgate.com/food/article/S…
The location at 333 Jefferson Street has since reopened, but indoor dining is unavailable, a spokesperson for In-N-Out told SFGATE.
Though the restaurant had posted signage informing customers of local guidelines — which requires indoor diners to show proof of vaccination, per @SF_DPH's order — In-N-Out's Chief Legal and Business Officer Arnie Wensinger said the chain shouldn't have to enforce those policies: