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Saturday, July 19, 2025

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Tagged with: San Francisco

Greta Snider’s experimental films pack a punk punch at the Roxie

16mm autoethnographies, found footage essays, materialist inventions, and recent projects focusing on human rights hit the screen

The stunning speculator profit in Ellis Act evictions

City report shows how much money gets made evicting tenants—and how little tenants get in relocation fees.

SF hotels aren’t bringing workers back. Is that a ‘lockout?’

Labor law is complicated, but some workers say they want to go back to work—and the unionized hotels aren't calling them.

An embarrassment of injustice: Innocent man pleads guilty to crimes he didn’t commit to get out of long prison sentence

José Inez García Zárate was found not guilty of homicide by an SF jury and has spent seven years behind bars. Now he's facing conviction in federal court.

Twice in 54 years, SF cops beat charges of racist violence

The alarming parallels between a 1968 trial and the Terrance Stangel case

Good Taste: Sorella introduces the Venetian way to graze

Our resident taster takes on cicchetti, a new snack service at Acquerello’s casual sister restaurant.

Another tech-worker dorm, this time in the Castro. Will the supes go along?

The new scam in real-estate development moves to 18th Street, with an appeal Tuesday/15. That's The Agenda for March 13-20

Screen Grabs: 50 years on, ‘Pink Flamingos’ is still a delightfully absurdist shock

Plus: Timely tales of Russian-European friendship and war, Unnamed Footage Fest, Hawaiian psychedelia, more

Under the Stars: Automatic returns, SF Music Day resounds…

Under the Stars is a quasi-weekly column that presents new music releases, upcoming shows, and a number of other adjacent items. We keep moving...

The Treasure Island toll is regressive, pointless—and still somehow alive

The developers got a sweet deal, and now want to make low-income residents pay for the ferry service they need to sell high-end condos.