Ben Ward, from the email:
In the past week or so some fantastic new art has been showing up all over town, some in the Mission, some over in Soma. Little paper cut outs, detailed in thick black marker pen, glued to walls and whathaveyou. No name, few titles.
I don’t really know what is going on with these cutouts, but I’ve been seeing them around the Mission as well and they are awesome. Take this one from Dolores Park:
More from the flickrs:
(Photo by Ross Harmes)
Plug1 of WHAT IM SEEING dot COM Troy just made a declaration that he’s killing off his old alter ego, flickr profile, and photoblog to start a new project, CALIBER SF. This photo project looks epic and I cannot wait for it to pick up some steam, but I’m bumming that the world will losing all that great content to some domain squatter. Seems like a waste…
From WHAT IM SEEING dot COM:
Which brings us to September of 2009 whereby I find myself in a conversation withBrad Evans, Stuart Dixon, and Julie Michelle: LET’S START A PHOTO CLUB.
“OK,” I said.
And with that, this will be the last letter I type as Plug1. As I mentiond before: “My name is Troy, and it’s nice to meet you.”
[Interlude]
- Plug1 and WHAT IM SEEING go away on 11/23 via expiration
- manual migration of ~10k images from Plug1 to Troy Holden: 6 months
- daily upload of 43 images/day: 23 in the AM, 23 in the PM
- ~62k images backlogged in processing
CALIBER is the new WHAT IM SEEING.
Did you ever wonder what you could learn? Apparently it has to do with foreign dong (thanks Kati J!):
ATA’s 4th Annual Film & Video Festival kicks off next week and there will be free workshops and not-free film screenings during the fest. Best of all, we have a free pair of tickets to give away. So, leave a comment with your best story remotely surrounding independent film and if we like it, you’ll get the tickets.
In the event no one tells us a story, the first person to comment “I’ll take the tickets if no one enters the contest” will get ‘em.
Artists’ Television Access celebrates original, independent and underground film & video with the 4th ATA Film & Video Festival on October 21, 22 & 23, 2009.
The festival will begin, Wednesday October 21, with a free workshop on experimental film exhibition and distribution, hosted by local experimental filmmakers and distributors.
On Thursday and Friday, October 22 & 23, ATA will screen two programs of short films. Both programs offer unique representations of the myriad facets of life and feature the work of local talents including Paul Clipson, Kerry Laitala, and Tommy Becker, and international filmmakers such as Maarit Suomi-Väänänen, Chris Kennedy, Laida Lertxundi and Martha Colburn.
The screenings will be followed by musical performances and the announcement of ATA Audience Awards.
Video installations will be displayed in the ATA store front window all month long and in the gallery during the festival!
ATA is at 992 Valencia at 21st Street in San Francisco. Doors open at 7pm every night. Screenings start at 7:30pm. Tickets are $7-$10.For complete information, including interviews with filmmakers visit http://festival.atasite.org/2009

I remember looking at the best goddamn street ever on Street View not to long ago, so there must be some fresh Capp-hate at 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway. Injustice!
SFoodie is better at journalism than I am.
Mission Mission wasn’t too far off, actually — at least as far as region goes. Instead of Vietnamese noodles, Magic Curry’s Brian Kimball confirmed the possible November debut of a new menu offering of Vietnamese-style rice porridge (cháo), an item he will make in collaboration with Mai Le of Banh Mai. And while he would not announce further menu ideas or plans yet, we get the feeling that you’ll be seeing a fun expansion of the Magic brand pretty soon.
Previously: Rumormonger: Magic Curry Man Starting New Vietnamese Noodle Venture
I love it when political graffiti is subject to interpretation. Is the artist saying that Obama’s follow-through with campaign promises is missing? His cojones? His body from the neck down?
(photo by KayVee.INC)
Update: Reader mcas tips us off to an original version of the poster than appeared a few years ago:
(Credit unknown)