Reviews
Dope Art Parties, Outdoor Festivals, & Underwater Experiences in the Bay
By Kirsten Chen, w/ aluminum siding and grout work by alex mak It’s October in San Francisco, which means everybody wants to throw a party. This weekend you’ve got Hardly Strictly in GG Park, Blue Angels buzzing rooftops and piers, and all kinds of great art parties involving music, sorceresses,
Dope Art Parties, Outdoor Festivals, & Underwater Experiences in SF
By Kirsten Chen w/ aluminum siding and grout work by alex mak It’s October in San Francisco, which means everybody wants to throw a party. This weekend you’ve got Hardly Strictly in GG Park, Blue Angels buzzing rooftops and piers, and all kinds of great art parties involving music, sorceresses,
‘All About Nina’ Is The Powerful Story We Need Right Now
For those that follow me, you know that I’m a stand-up comedian along with being a writer on this very site. I’ve been involved in comedy for a little over a decade and I’ve come across all sorts of comedians along the way. I’ve considered myself an ally to women,
Chinese & Japanese Film-a-Palooza
By Peter Wong World film lovers living in the San Francisco Bay Area have the advantage of having expanded film-going opportunities. Such film lovers need not settle for seeing new Asian films on just a few, sporadic multiplex screens. Depending on the time of year, a Bay Area film festival can
Exploring the Innovative & Intriguing Oakland Coffee Scene
The Oakland Coffee scene is booming these days, there over 2,300 coffee shops and over coffee 17 roasters in the city now, and the scene is super diverse and interesting too. So much so that VisitOakland started interviewing the city’s coffee roasters and baristas to shed light on all the new
“The NUN” Is A Scareless, Messy, Catholic Nightmare
If you follow my writing here on Broke-Ass Stuart, you know that I am a huge horror fan. I’m a fan of all sorts of horror, good & bad alike. Whether it’s a major release or a new indie gem, I’m usually down to give it a watch. You’d also
Hopeful Stories in Dark Times: The SF Green Film Festival
By Kristin Tieche Many San Franciscans recall October 2017 as the beginning of the apocalypse. As fires raged in Napa and Sonoma counties, San Franciscans woke up to their cars covered with ash. The color of the sky morphed into an ominous shade of brownish orange. At hardware stores, N95