Monday, November 7, 2016

Scenes from the 2016 NYC Marathon

img_8844-1

On the first Sunday of November, the world comes together to run through New York City. New Yorkers in all five boroughs take to the streets to cheer on athletes from more than 125 countries. Yes, I’m referring to the NYC Marathon. The city’s energy on Marathon Sunday is infectious. Many of the millions who live […]

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Friday, November 4, 2016

San Francisco Observations

san-francisco-from-coit-tower

I made quite a few trips to San Francisco during the late 90s into the early 2000s, but hadn’t been back in a very long time – probably close to 15 years.

Last week I was there for a conference and a long weekend and got to spend some time exploring the city. I won’t claim a comprehensive review, but I did have a few takeaways to share.

1. Fewer homeless than expected. Based on the rhetoric you read in the papers, I expected SF to be overrun with aggressive homeless people. This wasn’t the case. There were visible homeless to be sure, but no more than I remember from 15 years ago and no more than I see in New York. And they were not particularly aggressive in any way.

2. A curiously low energy city.  It’s tough to judge any American city’s street energy after living in New York, but San Francisco felt basically dead. Tourist areas around Union Square and the Embarcadero were crowded, and the Mission on a Friday night was hopping, but otherwise the city was very quiet. Haight-Ashbury was nearly deserted and many neighborhoods had the feel of a ghost town. It’s very strange to be walking around a city with such a dense built fabric but so few people.

3. San Francisco is too small to support a centralized economy.  The Financial District has a number of skyscrapers, and SOMA is awash in construction – the biggest changes I observed were in this district – but central San Francisco is too small to serve as a global city business center. And the city as a whole is not big enough to support that kind of a resident base. The bottom line is that San Francisco’s constrained geography renders the construction of a CBD in the style of a Chicago or New York very difficult.  Also, at only around 856,000 people – an all time record high – the absorption capacity of the city is limited. Contrast with NYC at 8.5 million, LA with 4 million and Chicago with around 2.7 million in much bigger geographies.  Also, the transport geography of San Francisco does not include the type of massive commuter rail system that NYC, London, Chicago, etc. have.  In short, I don’t see SF having the capacity for a much greater degree of employment centralization.

4. Major construction is undesirable in San Francisco. As I’ve written before, San Francisco is one of America’s most achingly beautiful cities with a very unique building stock. It’s also, like Manhattan, mostly fully developed. So new construction in most places would involve demolition of the existing building stock. No surprise SOMA is where the construction is, because there’s room to do it and/or lower quality buildings to replace.  To make a serious increase in the quantity of residential or office space would involve significant damage to the character of the city and would not in my view be desirable. Nor, given the point above about its small size, is it likely to make much of a difference anyway. It’s hard to see how the city of San Francisco itself changes its trends without an economic pullback.

5. San Francisco doesn’t feel like it has the services of a high tax city.  Taxes are high in San Francisco, but it many ways it doesn’t feel like it. In New York, our taxes are high, but the level of services is highly visible, at least in Manhattan. Just as one small example, SF’s storm drains were often partially blocked with leaves, and there were pools of standing water even on Market St. In NYC, BID employees or building supers regularly clear storm drains and sweep water into sewers. Our parks are in better shape. I was surprised to see that SF still has curbs with no ADA ramps. In short, while the city is beautiful and such, it doesn’t radiate the feel of high services.

6. Barrier and POP transit system. I ran into a curious situation while riding transit. Muni, the city’s transit agency, has a light rail system called Muni Metro. It runs as a subway under Market St. Because it runs on street elsewhere, the trainsets are pretty short. I rode the subway portion, which has a barrier system. But then on the train my ticket was checked again by a conductor. Why have barriers if you are running a POP system on top of it? I’m glad I saved my ticket.

7. San Francisco Opera. I attended my first opera in San Francisco. The San Francisco Opera is a very globally respected company.  The opera, Janacek’s The Makropulous Case, was very good. It was well-patronized but there were plenty of empty seats too. It has the feel of the Lyric Opera of Chicago, where the majority of attendees are subscribers. The average age was very high – much higher than the Met Opera, which although suffering a serious attendance problem draws quite a few young people. The SF Opera’s patron base is getting up there. I also took a look through the program. I did not see a single tech company on their list of corporate sponsor, nor did I see any tech names I recognized on their major donor list. Opera in San Francisco appears to be an old money affair, with the emphasis on old.  This doesn’t bode well for the future of this flagship cultural organization if it can’t find a way to tap into younger attendees and donors.  I’d have to caveat this somewhat given that my investigation is very limited. But this is a trend affecting many similar organizations.

 


from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/11/04/san-francisco-observations/

Living on $99K a Year in NYC + 36 Hours in Manhattan + Bungee Girl Changes Solo Travel for Women + More

manhattan

Would you take a trip alone? If you’re a woman who dreams of traveling alone but has yet to take the plunge because you’re just not sure, I get you. I had never traveled solo internationally until this past summer when I spent two nights alone in Paris and one night in Milan. Wouldn’t having the […]

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Social Media Censorship Reaches an Insidious New Level

Image via City Journal

Image via City Journal

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve read about the controversies over censorship on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and You Tube.

These sites are virtual monopolies that dominate online discourse. They enjoy the best of both worlds: editorial freedom to completely control the content on their sites combined with immunity from liability for what is posted there.

Their censorship rollout has recently been ratcheted up to the next level. No longer are they backing down readily when challenged, but instead are standing firm even in the face of bad publicity (or at a minimum requiring overwhelming outrage to make change happen).  Who knows what the next stage will be?

My latest article in City Journal is on this very topic and is called “You’ve Been Restricted“:

[Censorship] has affected a lot of conservatives—like Milo Yiannopoulos, banned for life from Twitter—but is hardly limited to them. Even hardcore leftist feminist groups have fallen afoul of the corporate censors. Facebook wouldn’t allow a blogger to promote her Facebook post about the history of menstrual products and banned a photo featuring a plus-sized model for a body positivity event. In many such cases, content is removed by over-zealous algorithms or malicious reporting of posts as abusive. Public complaint is often enough to force a platform to restore deleted posts or accounts. Recently, however, the social media giants have begun refusing to reverse their censorious decisions, even in the face of significant bad press.

That these firms seem so willing to censor should trouble everyone concerned about free speech. As should the fact that they’re increasingly turning to permanent lifetime bans of people they don’t like. It’s true that these are private companies, not governments. But their disproportionate market share—the local phone company currently faces more competition than do YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter—makes their actions a public concern.

Click through to read the whole thing.


from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/11/04/social-media-censorship-reaches-an-insidious-new-level/

Thursday, November 3, 2016

4 Things I’m Obsessing Over Right Now

bronx street art tats cru

Have you ever seen, tasted, or heard something and you can’t stop obsessing about it? I know, obsessions can be both good and bad. Hopefully these four things that I’ve recently come across are healthy obsessions, so I wanted to share. 🙂 “Keepin’ It Bronx” Last week I made the trip to the South Bronx, […]

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Wednesday, November 2, 2016

6 Practical Tips for Your First Trip to New York

times square

You’ve heard about it. You’ve seen New York on the silver screen. You’ve read about it in books. And everyone you know has been there. Finally, you’re making your first trip to NYC, but where to begin? Heed these travel tips, so you have a more authentic and memorable experience when you visit New York City. […]

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Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Where to Go for Good Seafood in NYC

pearl oyster bar

Having grown up between Hawaii and the Seattle area, seafood has always been one of my favorite foods. (I can easily polish off two pounds of crab legs myself.) Maybe that’s partially why I could never live anywhere too far from the coast – I need to know the freshest catches are readily available. Speaking […]

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