The Tenderloin Geographic Society

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Q: Why would anyone want to live in san francisco anymore, I mean it is no longer 1969. I was there back in the days, when every time you stepped outside your door it was a new adventure. You could rent the top of a house for 125 a month and live across the street from jan wenner.

Anonymous

This is a fair question for someone who hasn’t lived in San Francisco for quite some time, and perhaps one that I shouldn’t feel adequately equipped to answer, as I left that dear city owing to a distinct set of frustrations: cost of living, a growing unfriendliness and lack of concern for others, that much of the small and interesting was being pushed out in favor of the bland and expensive. Much of this yes, probably has to do with the dominant shift catering to an industry where you move for the money, regardless of your feelings for a place. San Francisco, when I moved there in the late 90s, was similarly situated. Then, if you wanted to live there, you made it work: you dug in and did so because you loved the place, or more specifically the idea of the place.
And yet: no one can truly live in a  city if they hew to the myopia of a hoped-for landscape, of a history that was and never again will be. Living in the memory of place is not so much living as aping what has come before, and whether part of the myth of the west or Manifest Destiny, San Francisco is most often approached for the history that one make. The rub comes when respect and awareness of precedent meets with a lack of care. And the blank stare is all the more offensive for your passion.

But you do bring up an interesting point, that anyone who comes to a place is, to some extent, looking for something. Me, I felt that it was a place I could get some work done. This was laughed off by a writer I knew in Los Angeles, who found otherwise during his early ’70s tenure. This neatly explains why he moved from SF to Los Angeles, where the question most often posed to a writer (when I lived there, at least) was “television or film?” In Los Angeles you were mostly left alone, whereas in San Francisco, the closeness of the city creates a kind of friction, perhaps the adventure of which you speak. As a native of a city that lacked a definable center, San Francisco was a means unto itself: it was a city sure of itself and its place in history, and what is more attractive to a young person?

It is still possible, this adventure, but even Herb Caen, interviewing a hippie outside the Drogstore (now Magnolia Pub), found that the young men came for the chicks, not for the enlightened atmosphere. Now the Bay Area is as it has been so many times in history, a place to find gold. Without question it has merits beyond its place in the business world, but in an environment where such values become all, the value system itself changes. Cities are not museums, despite our inclinations to make them so. But they are also places of organized chaos, and perhaps the chaos as you knew it has decreased. Jann Wenner picked up on a particular set of values and created a mythos through his magazine, just as ascendant tech companies hope to create a mythos based on monetizing, among other aspects, social concerns.

To speak about what currently counts for adventure, it is the kind that plagues places of great disparity. That there is more of a divide between those who can afford the place (or do so barely) and those who cannot results in crime. It also creates fear. As you might have gathered, I spent considerable time in the Tenderloin, where I saw both unimaginable offenses and acts of incredible grace. Many of my TL-based colleagues thought that tech would change the neighborhood for the better—I didn’t think so. What it would do is create a climate in which those who didn’t know how to properly occupy a city would meet those who were trapped by it. Whether I’m a pessimist remains on the table. The companies that are changing San Francisco can do so in a way that will leave a positive mark in history. They can take a stake in cultural, educational, and social institutions. Or, they can continue to ship their employees out to work, and bring them home to play in a place they take little stake in—until some of them fall in love with the place and force change, because that’s how it works.

I never owned the city, my adopted city, and never claimed ownership—but I couldn’t fault someone when they said it was their city. For something so beautiful, how could you not want to claim it for your own? San Francisco is like that. Forgive me for going on a bit longer than I’d intended.
In my new home, I have been spending so much time on the future present that I haven’t adequately reflected on what I left, and what I still don’t regret leaving. Nothing is fixed, and while the current iteration of San Francisco leaves much to be desired—by both of us, it would seem—I don’t think for a second that it’s so fragile that it will be ruined.

    • #San Francisco
    • #breaking the 4th wall
  • 2 years ago
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The Society isn’t gone for good, but will change tack and set up shop in a new locale; the name Tenderloin wasn’t ever meant to exclude components of any city, but having been founded there, offered a scrappy urbanism born of necessity.  The view from the gutter is at times good enough to afford the proper perspective, so the name stays, even if the city changes.
After getting settled in, The Society will return to regularly unscheduled posting.
Thank you in advance for treating each other with respect.

    • #ephemera
    • #breaking the 4th wall
  • 3 years ago
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It’s beginning to sink in. What am I going to miss?
Casa Sanchez’s Totopos. Acme Levain. Anchor on tap everywhere. Walking down to Capricorn Coffee on 10th for a fresh pound and a smile. 1058 Hoagies. Tomasso’s, Pi, and Arinell. Latin American Club,...
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It’s beginning to sink in.  What am I going to miss? 
Casa Sanchez’s Totopos.  Acme Levain.  Anchor on tap everywhere.  Walking down to Capricorn Coffee on 10th for a fresh pound and a smile.  1058 Hoagies.  Tomasso’s, Pi, and Arinell.  Latin American Club, Spec’s, The Attic.  Breaking into that private Russian Hill garden with the clearest jasmine-scented view of the Bay.  Literally missing seeing Low at GAMH by a few hours, Sigur Ros by a couple weeks.  That I used to commute by Cable Car.  Throwing firecrackers at drunken couples arguing under my fire escape after the bars let out in Polk Gulch.  Vowing to quit smoking after getting winded hiking up from Baker Beach, and staying quit.  Watching hawks circle Pomeranians in Sutro Park, and the turtles of Stow Lake craning their beaky faces toward the sun behind the fog.    
Until I’m gone, I won’t know the bone-aching love for my friends, who have become my family, who have made the last 15 years of my life the sweetest and luckiest, despite all those bitter and unlucky things that I can barely recall.  You know who you are, friends–you have helped make both this realm and the city a better place. 
 

    • #breaking the 4th wall
    • #personal archives
    • #Not goodbye
  • 3 years ago
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Welcome

There are those adventurous souls among you who utilize URL-type technology beyond the tumblr mainframe, and so perhaps you might have noticed that we’ve done up the place.  I believe that San Francisco people say “redesign."  While the Society digs are no longer located in an early ‘70s wood paneled office, they still can be found in a dormant undersea volcano off the coast of Divisadero.  
You’ll note that there’s more "functionality,” as some of you expressed a desire to participate.  As a good Socialist, who was I to say no?
But more importantly, what do you think?

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  • 4 years ago
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Q: What about the SFist column?

A few of you were wondering?  Sweet of you to notice, and we’re so terrible with your anniversary and birthdays. 

A bit of a vacation, really, if it can be called that.  Working, mostly, at the job that pays the rent, but will return sometime in October with renewed vigor. 

In the meantime, please enjoy the backlog to be found here.  Again, if enjoyment is the word for it. 
Meantime, it’s time for our Fall movie previews, which will be going up all week.   

    • #breaking the 4th wall
    • #sfist
    • #urbane studies
  • 4 years ago
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Thank you, friends, new (that’s a lot of new) and long-standing. If we were in a Japanese cartoon, this is the part where I’d earnestly shout “I won’t let you down!” and then I would nod solemnly, humbly, thinking on the gravity of the situation.
I...
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Thank you, friends, new (that’s a lot of new) and long-standing.  If we were in a Japanese cartoon, this is the part where I’d earnestly shout “I won’t let you down!” and then I would nod solemnly, humbly, thinking on the gravity of the situation.  

I can’t think of anything else to say to all the new–well, I can’t say followers, for you are not that.  You curious city-dwellers, you read, you care about the details, you look, and more importantly, you see.  You fall for the irrational nature of this place.  Or, you don’t care, but choose to stick it out, because truly, who doesn’t love a good story?  Perhaps you know a bit about history, or wish to foster a keener sense of  San Francisco and environs.  I bet you laugh at terrible puns, too: lucky me.

Anyhow: feel free to drop me a line, give me a high five, or tell me to shut it, but remember, this is your city, make of it what you will.  I suggest a narrative along the lines of an early Hal Hartley film, but it’s not always up to me, is it?

Yours in urban studies,

The Tenderloin Geographic Society

    • #okay
    • #breaking the 4th wall
  • 5 years ago
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The Tenderloin Geographic Society

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