Larry Hosken: New

It's spelled "fascists," kid. You got the important parts right, though.

stenciled graffito on yellow crosswalk paint on asphalt. It reads: Facists wont stop until you [picture of crossing guard's handheld stop sign] stop them

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2025-08-25T14:17:41.542976

For years, I've enjoyed the sidewalk chalk art at 20th Ave and Irving (or, earlier, Judah) street in #SanFrancisco. Today, there was no sidewalk chalk art, so I looked up… and thus spotted a window sign telling me who the artist is: Kal Zakzouk. Apparently, he even got written up in the neighborhood paper, but I didn't notice (perhaps distracted by the many many unhinged letters to the editor that dominate that paper's feed)..

He has a gofundme for legal fees. If you've enjoyed his art and can spare it, maybe toss a few bucks his way.

sidewalk chalk art. There's a cute anthropomorphic beat wearing headphones with text 'let the beet drop'. There are four monkeys: see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil, and wearing headphones and staring at mobile phone oblivious to real world (no evil). There's Chinese text I can't translate, alas. And more. faded sidewalk chalk art. There's a lot going on here. Text in the background: We the sheeple. Text at the bottom: What they hate in you is missing in them. Depicted: A weightlifter lifts a barbell. He's standing on an upside-down wok that has one eye (which is looking up at the weightlifter). The weights on the barbell are peace signs. sidewalk chalk art: hexagon filled with a grid of triangles constructed from circular arcs rendered in colored chalk with a gradient heading out from the center. sidewalk chalk art. pretty surreal. an anthropomorphized egg has climbed a ladder and addresses a few neighbors. text below reads ¿dónde están los huevos?. text above is in Chinese which I can't read, but when I plugged 'where are the eggs?' into Google translate and tried a few dialects, I noticed the Traditional Chinese translation had a few characters in common. The neighbors... Well, there's a lady with a cloud head carrying a turnip. There's a caftan-wearing rainbow-headed figure carrying a chard? kale? leaf. There's a ✳-headed figure carrying a loaf of bread. There's a potato-bodied person covered with human eyes. The potato-eyes thing makes me wonder if I'm overlooking puns in the other figures. Off the the side, mostly out of frame: a snake (Happy New Year!)

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2025-08-25T13:58:38.316301

Puzzle Hunts are Everywhere: David Hill writes about gambling nowadays; but back when he lived in Hot Springs, Arkansas he was kind of a big deal in their Midnight Madness puzzlehunts. So maybe it's not surprising that he ran a puzzlehunt for serious sports bettors in Las Vegas recently https://davidhill.substack.com/p/not-fun-at-all-really

nerdy-looking David Hill is dealing blackjack, but the cards are weird: one has just a big star on it. Another, a triangle surrounding a star. Another has an arrow in a circle? Weeeeird

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2025-08-22T15:36:38.271780

A couple of things I saw on my roundabout walk to the supermarket in #SanFrancisco this morning:

sidewalk chalk art. There's a cute anthropomorphic beat wearing headphones with text 'let the beet drop'. There are four monkeys: see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil, and wearing headphones and staring at mobile phone oblivious to real world (no evil). There's Chinese text I can't translate, alas. And more. storefront window painted to advertise: AI integrated PoS system

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2025-08-24T15:56:05.777877

Book Report: Hella Town

It's a history of Oakland, California viewed through the lens of physical construction: buildings, roads, infrastructure, etc. I learned some things.


E.g. Why did San Francisco take off, population-wise, while Oakland stayed a sleepy set of farms for such a long time? OK, the Portola expedition stuck to the coast, so it makes sense that they'd establish a mission in San Francisco; and San Francisco had an OK port. But Oakland has a great port; and it's better-connected to more arable land. Why didn't Oakland become the hub?

Nowadays Oakland has a great port. That's the the result of a lot of dredging. Back when the Spanish first invaded, the waters around Oakland were shallow and marshy. If you convinced a seaship captain to sail into Oakland instead of San Francisco, that seaship would get stuck in the mud.


Nowadays, a lot of big businesses make stupid mistakes all together. One imagines an echo chamber of CEOs at their parties and group chats, talking each other into the most asinine schemes. Maybe that's not new. I read about Oakland's Mahogany Eucalyptus and Land Company planted a lot of trees in the Oakland hills, planning to use them for timber; but they chose a kind of tree that doesn't grow into good timber. I pinched myself: was I reading a book about San Francisco? Adolph Sutro planted a lot of eucalyptus around San Francisco, which turned into a nuisance; the trees grew fast, which would have been good from a quick-timber-harvesting point of view; but, alas, they didn't grow into useful timber.

Anyhow, sympathies, Oakland. Sorry about that big fire up in the hills some years back.


Back before BART, there was no commuter rail system from the east bay to SF; but before that absence, there was a different such commuter rail system: the Key System. When the SF-Oakland Bay Bridge was first built; one deck was for cars and one deck was for the Key System. But then the Key System wasn't working so well anymore. Train tracks were dismantled, replaced by buses; eventually taken over by AC Transit.

I always assumed this was some anti-train conspiracy of oil companies and auto manufacturers. That was a fine guess; oil companies and auto manufacturers have ruined many other things. But this book pointed out that I'd overlooked another wellspring of conspiracies: land speculators. The Key System itself was a sneaky ploy by real estate developers.

The Key System wasn't exactly an economically sustainable business. It often lost money. But it was owned by a real estate developer who was selling homes in Oakland. You could sell houses for much more money if homebuyers had an easy commute to their San Francisco jobs. So a little subsidy to the Key System meant making much much more money selling houses.

But when he had sold all those houses, he was no longer motivated to keep subsidizing the Key System. And thus it fell apart, and those homebuyers found out that they were going to have to figure out how to drive to San Francisco (and park there) after all.

Pretty sneaky.


Do sports fans in your cities try to attract teams by building massive sports complexes? Do they claim that these are wise investments that will, long-term, bring revenue to the city? The Oakland Coliseum had nine profitable years from 1966-1991; mostly it needed subsidies.


Oakland's politicians in power were pretty eager to tear down houses in not-white neighborhoods to build highways and BART tracks. This wasn't insane; racist whites had voted in Oakland's government. "Those people" in the torn-down neighborhoods already weren't happy. Surely Oakland's racist whites would appreciate the shorter commute times to their San Francisco jobs; surely they would re-elect Oakland's politicians for life, surely. And maybe that happened to some extent.

But many, many of those racist whites thought, I know I can tolerate a commute of N minutes. And thanks to this new highway/BART line, that N-minute commute could carry me further east, to one of these new developments in Contra Costa county. In the end, those highways and BART lines sped up white flight; and new politicians rose to power in Oakland.

Ha ha, kinda funny until you remember that those houses aren't coming back. Ah well.


A welcome bright spot: Eichler, as in "Eichler home," was willing to sell to minorities even before laws forced sellers to do that.

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2025-08-17T00:28:22.049770

Some things I spotted on my morning exercise walk:

dew-speckled sticker on metal. the rectangular sticker's contents are a square image above some text. the square image is of the area in front of the SF Conservatory of Flowers. Overlaid on the steps is a polaroid-photo-looking white rectangle containing a brown square. The brown matches the color of the steps leading up to the Conservatory. The polaroid-photo-looking bottom has text: SF Palette. The top-right corner of the Conservatory photo has text: @sfcolorpalette. The text are at the bottom of the sticker has a brown background. Its text reads SF Palette / #954535 / Chestnut cluster of bison hanging out on a fenced-in hillside. not sure if they look grumpy or I was just projecting garage door painted as a mural of birds and plants. There are ravens (or crows?) and other birds, uh, shorebirds? Sorry I don't know my birds. The plants are California golden poppies and, uh, nasturtium? Sorry, I don't know my plants, either. faded sidewalk chalk art. There's a lot going on here. Text in the background: We the sheeple. Text at the bottom: What they hate in you is missing in them. Depicted: A weightlifter lifts a barbell. He's standing on an upside-down wok that has one eye (which is looking up at the weightlifter). The weights on the barbell are peace signs.

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2025-08-24T15:42:50.678906

get_memes.py , bye

Back in 2023, there was this new-fangled social media thing called Lemmy. It was pretty cool but with an annoyance: its RSS feeds didn't embed graphics. Weirdly, they did include the text addresses of graphics that were embedded. So if you followed a Lemmy channel in your feed reader, instead of seeing pretty pictures, you just saw not-so-pretty nonsense like "https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/pictrs/image/75598c1e-c833-44b5-9bc4-cae93d2a3685.webp". It was pretty easy to write a little program to fetch some Lemmy feeds and create new feeds with embedded graphics, and I did.

Yesterday, my little program had a hiccup and before investigating that hiccup, I thought to check: Does Lemmy still do that annoying thing? Lemmy now embeds graphics in their RSS feeds, yay! At some point in the past couple of years, my little program became the workaround to a non-problem or ex-problem or something.

This morning, I shut it down. Thank you, get_memes.py . You were pretty handy for a while. 🫡 ← (That's the salute emoji, which might be difficult to distinguish from the not-smiling-face emoji depending on how big your text is.)

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2025-08-08T13:29:58.538399

Today I failed to find something scavenger-hunt-y at Lobos Creek Valley, but to make up for that I found a Presidio Field Note.

view of a valley from an overlook. low part of the valley has some pale low brush; further up the hill is sandy soil. trees surround the valley. beyond the trees to the north: Seacliff neighborhood mansions, Golden Gate strait. beyond the trees to the southwest: outer Richmond district buildings, Lincoln park boardwalk on sand among pale low shrubs and dry-looking flowering plants. On the edge of the board walk is a hinged piece of wood containing some interpretive text. The text is too small to read, but it's letting you know that this is one of the best places in SF to see a lizard, especially a Western fence lizard or a San Francisco alligator lizard

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2025-08-05T17:06:41.974475

Some things I saw on my morning exercise walk in #SanFrancisco 's Golden Gate Park.

fnnch's light-up Solar Arch got moved to a new spot. Back when it was on the east end of the park, walkers on Stanyan after dark would get surprised to see this lit-up thing shining through the trees. Now that it's in the new spot, I guess nighttime walkers on Fulton can have the same experience. (Not shown in the photo: an impressive caravan of trucks installing porta-potties for tomorrow's marathon. I couldn't fit the whole caravan into one picture, sorry.)

Naga the Sea Serpent is still taking shape. I waited around a little while for bubbles, but none seemed to be forthcoming. Something to look forward to, I guess.

Some tires with (Mayan-style?) art painted on in gold. I dunno what these are; didn't spot anything obvious on the Golden Mile web site. I'm not sure whether the big orange barriers mean this artwork is still being installed; or are meant to keep tomorrow's endorphin-addled marathoners from bumbling into them.

light-up arch on road in park. the road has a yellow sunburst painted on it. metallic-looking sea serpent statue wriggling in an empty pond in the foreground, a big vehicle tire with gold-colored art painted on it. In the background, a set of three tires, also with gold paint. Way further back in the background, a sort of golden sphere

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2025-07-26T18:14:56.174870

My library lets me use PressReader, a collection of magazines and puzzles, including a daily cryptic crossword. Maybe your library does, too. (The magazine selection seems weird to me, mostly European? Does Italy really need its own version of Wired? I gave up on the magazines and went back to the puzzle section.) Thanks to Bunnytown for pointing this out.

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2025-07-21T23:21:14.715355

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