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Wednesday, July 16, 2025

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Tagged with: History

At Trans Film Fest, echoes of nightlife we almost lost to COVID

'Last Call' documents the magic of three beloved queer bars—El Rio, Aunt Charlie's, and the Stud—that might have disappeared

We all want local government to work—but for whom?

The Chron seems to think the plutocrats are the ones who ought to be in charge. That's never ended well.

Beep, beep: Meet your Muni drivers, colorfully illustrated

New art book 'Muni Is My Ride' captures the deeply committed, fundamentally human side of our daily public transport

Screen Grabs: ‘Priscilla,’ locked in a golden Graceland cage

Sofia Coppola's opaque tribute. Plus: Colman Domingo plays Civil Rights giant 'Rustin,' border-town education gets 'Radical'

Chuck Sperry screenprints rock history and the fight for equal rights, one poster at a time

A counterculture constant, from his work with Artist Television Access to Studio 4 and Bill Graham Presents

Under the Stars: Devo bids farewell at 50, RIP the 45 King…

Plus: Drum & bass on the rise, Aretha's stunning '70s streak, Aphrose soul from Toronto, more new music

The case for ‘So I Married an Axe Murderer’ as the best SF film of all time

North Beach cappuccinos, Alamo Square breakups, Fog City Diner, pre-tech rents—the 1993 Mike Myers film deserves the crown.

Screen Grabs: Doc Stories fest sheds light in these fact-challenged times

Plus: King Crimson at 50, escaping North Korea in 'Beyond Utopia,' Robert Irwin's diaphanous art, more new movies

Arleene Correa Valencia’s luminous art reflects family strains of Mexican migration

'Naces Así, Naces Prieto. No Naces Blanco' at Catharine Clark includes cross-border, father-daughter letters of love

Screen Grabs: American Indian Film Fest 48 brings superheroes and reckonings

The longest-running showcase of its kind kicks off with 'Bones of Crows,' about the devastation wrought by state residential schools