275 Capp St
San Francisco, CA 94110
(415) 558-8112
http://twitter.com/skylarksf The Skylark first opened its doors for business in December 1996, becoming one of the Mission's nighttime favorites. The stylish decor and cozy, dim ambience are attractions in themselves, but the strong drinks and great DJ's make the experience worth repeating. The Skylark has a great sound system and a cozy dance floor.
Amnesia is a cozy, red-lit room in the heart of San Francisco’s Mission District, but that’s the simple description. We like to think of Amnesia as a vessel. A working ship, maybe. Not the prettiest boat in the harbor, but she’s got stories. She’s sees more action in a week than others will see in a lifetime. Her hold is filled with experiences and, despite her name, her memory is strong. She remembers every undulation on the dance floor, every scream, every solo, every laugh and tear, and every shout for encores.
http://orthosurg.ucsf.edu/oti/outreach/programs/igot/
The Lost Church is a 501(c)(3) non-profit dedicated to Creating, Sustaining, and Defending Spaces for Live Performance. Our mission to open more 49-seat theaters in the San Francisco Bay Area, California, and throughout the United States. Our original TLC venue at 65 Capp Street, San Francisco, is a multi-media theatrical production house and intimate, yet energetic listening room. TLC produces content for film, stage and web; with a focus on live performance, and offers space rentals for special events in a unique and beautifully designed two-level venue. Americana, Folk, Magic, Punk, Comedy, Rock, Soul, Performance Art and Theater all find sanctuary at The Lost Church. "The Lost Church is a haven for adventurous souls hungry for new thrills in unexpected settings." The Bold Italic Doors @ 7:30pm and Show @ 8:15pm Nightly (unless specially noted) BOOKING/PRIVATE EVENTS: [email protected] (please email instead of messing on FB) All Other Inquiries: [email protected]
We are independent, open format radio in San Francisco. Check out http://rvpods.com for podcasts of our shows (stream, download or subscribe via iTunes) Tune in here: http://radiovalencia.fm/radiovalencia3.pls
Our mission is to bring the Bay Area music scene to the world by championing emerging and underground artists, partnering with local venues and festivals, sponsoring cool showcases and events, and reaching out and helping however we can. Our studio is located inside of The Secret Alley, a unique workspace that provides local San Francisco artists a place to collaborate, palaver, scheme and dream.
Workspace is a beautiful old industrial building converted into an arts facility. More than 22 artists now work in the building, in a range of diverse mediums.
Matt Barkin and Adam Ducharme are two Bay Area Filmmakers who have come together to dream up and produce creative film content for commercial, corporate, non-profit, fiction, and documentary projects
We are Video Free America, a dynamic, hands-on facility staffed by award-winning producers, directors and support personnel. Sure, we have the latest production hardware, sure, our programs win big awards. And yes, the New York Times and Variety have given us rave reviews. But it isn’t hype that got us this attention. It’s creative professionals dedicated to the content, concept and attention to detail you need to get the most out of production and post. Video Free America was founded in 1970 by videographer Skip Sweeney, as a place of artistic foment dedicated to pioneering the new genre called “video art.” This new form of expression forged an exciting dialogue with artists around the country, and his timely collaborations with San Francisco’s National Center for Experiments in Television and PBS affiliate KQED-TV. For over thirty years, Video Free America has excelled at innovation. Besides its award-winning television and corporate communications programs, the studio leads with such diverse projects as Skip Sweeney’s interactive video/performance production co-developed with actor and clown Bill Irwin for Seattle Repertory and performed on Broadway —or new media like “Psychic Detective,” an interactive movie developed with director John Sanborn. Video Free America personnel have produced, shot and edited hundreds of documentaries, travelogues, children’s features, dance and art performances creating programs for PBS and international broadcast. Commercial productions include TV spots, music video promotions, Public Service Announcements, safety and training tapes, digital entertainment and dynamic new media.
KQED, in collaboration with public radio stations throughout California, launched The California Report, a statewide radio news program, on October 2, 1995. Distributed from by KQED Public Radio in San Francisco, The California Report provides daily coverage of issues, trends, and public policy decisions affecting California and its diverse population. It is carried by more than 30 public radio stations from Arcata to San Diego and hosts bureaus in Fresno, Sacramento and Los Angeles. Many local station reporters are regular contributors to the program. The morning edition of The California Report, a 9-minute program, airs Monday through Friday. The Friday afternoon edition, a half-hour magazine, brings you in-depth analysis of the week's top news stories, sound-rich radio excursions and commentaries from voices around the state.
Gathering top innovators in video conversations to reinvent our world. We use the powerful new medium of group video to connect up a mix of smart, knowledgeable, innovative people from a wide range of fields to work on solving the big challenges of our time. We open up these live, in-depth conversations to audiences who appreciate the complexity of the issues and may want to add their questions and ideas. We then take the best insights and ideas to emerge from the conversations and produce compelling short videos, powerful graphics and written posts that can reach broader audiences.
Currently the writerly home to: Alison Bing, Joshua Citrak, Scott James, Ammi Keller, Paul Linde, Shana Mahaffey, Teresa K. Miller, Susan Pari, Raj Patel, Diane Weipert, and Doug Wilkins. (bios below) Alumni include: Sean Beaudoin, Melodie Bowsher, Michael Chorost, Michelle Gagnon, Jeff Kirschner, Eric Tipler, Rob Tocalino, Justin Torres, Bernice Yeung Alison Bing covers food, wine, and travel for BBC, Cooking Light, New York Times, and Daily Telegraph and has written 36 Lonely Planet guidebooks. @alisonbing Joshua Citrak. Never perfect grammar. Always perfect timing. You can find him on the web at slouchmag.com or @joshuacitrak. Scott James writes for The Bay Citizen and The New York Times. He’s also novelist Kemble Scott, author of SoMa and The Sower. @scottjames Ammi Keller wrote the zine Emergency, was a Stanford Wallace Stegner Fellow, and is working on a story collection set in post-Katrina New Orleans. Paul R. Linde, MD, is a San Francisco psychiatrist and author of Danger to Self: On the Front Line with an ER Psychiatrist. paullinde.com Shana Mahaffey is the author of Sounds Like Crazy, a novel about an Emmy Award winning cartoon voiceover performer who has multiple personality disorder. Teresa K. Miller, the Sanchez Grotto’s lone poet, has been published in ZYZZYVA and DIAGRAM, wrote Forever No Lo, and teaches in Oakland. Susanne Pari is the author of the novel The Fortune Catcher. Her work appears in The New York Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, and NPR. Raj Patel is a writer, academic, unlicensed hypnotist, and author of Stuffed and Starved and the international bestseller The Value of Nothing. Diane Weipert’s film Solo Dios Sabe premiered at Sundance, and she’s worked as a screenwriter with Eddie Izzard’s production company and actress Michelle Rodriguez. Doug Wilkins somehow founded the Sanchez Grotto Annex. He’s oversized and underbrained and reasonably pleasant to be around. Dogs like him.
FourTwoNine is a new kind of magazine—one that just so happens to be gay. Covering the latest news and innovations in culture and style and business and politics, FourTwoNine showcases how people are living in the context of the larger world. From stimulating conversations to inspiring stories, from the sumptuous work of our photographers to the singular voices of our columnists, from fashion to fiction to humor to travel to entertainment to design, FourTwoNine will continue to expand the partnership 429 has already so carefully cultivated with its members and subscribers. Our magazine stands alone as a publication for thought leaders in any industry.
Established in 2010, Purple Drop is a one stop design studio which provides solutions for all your designing needs.
Weird Beard Press is a recently launched publishing company dedicated to working with new, inexperienced, misunderstood, stymied, or simply frustrated authors who are interested in predominantly avant-garde subjects, that is, “the wonderfully weird and the weirdly wonderful.” We help our clients refine, promote, and sell their work, mostly online in e-book and print-on-demand (POD) formats. Most titles will be available for purchase on Amazon and other retail websites. If after reviewing your work, which we do confidentially and at no cost to you, we judge it to be publishable though in need of minor changes, any fees for editing are deducted from actual sales of the work.
Our world is your world at Rhys World Publishing. Have you dreamed of becoming a published author then Rhys World Publishing is the home for you... We specialize in publishing novels for all genres such as science fiction, romance, urban and erotica. Backed by more than 10 years of experience, you can count on our team of professional writers, editors, and graphic designers, to efficiently respond to your creative service requirements within the allotted time frame.