Muni Diaries’ Brand New Look

We’ve teased you about it for a while, but Muni Diaries has finally gotten a make-over! Don’t worry, it’s still the same site, just lookin’ better and workin’ smoother. If you read Muni Diaries from your RSS reader, today’s just like any other day so feel free to mosey over to today’s post. But if you read Muni Diaries from the web, here’s a little about the site’s new look.

First, our graphic designer and event emcee Suzanne LaGasa created our fresh new logo and set the look-and-feel of the new Muni Diaries — don’t you just love the little colorful people waiting for the bus?

Then, our master web developer Yen Pai brought you several site enhancements. You’ll see that we’ve added a rolling feature box at the top of the page that has the most buzzy stories of the day so that you won’t have to scroll down to see them. Click on the left and right arrows to see all the feature stories.

The “Latest on Muni Diaries” section on the homepage has all the posts, just like you saw on the old Muni Diaries. But if you want to read only stories, click on Diaries. To read posts about Muni news, click News.

Really, other than that, the site is very much the same as it always was. We still ask for you to send us your Muni stories. We still scour the news for stories important to Muni riders.

We know that this new look might take a little getting used to, but we hope you love it as much as we do. As with all things that we do on Muni Diaries, let us know if you have questions or feedback. We know you speak your mind.

And now, back to chronicling life on the bus.

Eugenia and Jeff

Tonight at Secession: Creating Graffiti History on Muni


Art By Nate1

Artist Nate1 is one of the many talented folks who will display their work tonight at Secession Gallery, where we are inviting you to see art, graffiti, and clothing, all inspired by Muni, BART, and our great city. Nate is also the owner and designer of New Skool, a kids’ hip-hop clothing line. He was a part of a wave of graffiti mural art that took the Bay Area by storm in the 1980s. To get you warmed up for tonight, I asked Nate to share a little about how he got started and why Muni and San Francisco feature so prominently in his work.

How did you get started in art?

I got my start in design and art through graffiti art as the co-founder of the legendary Master Piece Creators Crew in SF/DC. As a father, business owner, and artist, I try to use my experience with graffiti art to pass on tradition and show young and old what graffiti has contributed to today’s society via art and design and more importantly the mentorship process.

Why graffiti?

I got into graffiti art through hip-hop culture in the 1980s. I always drew as a kid, but not until I was fully aware of the graffiti scene here in the Bay did I really spend a lot of time drawing. The Bay Area graffiti scene was pioneered in the early ’80s by teenagers and I am proud to be one of them.

Muni is in a lot of the SF scenes in your work — why?

When I was a beginner or toy in the scene, like ’85, ’86, I can remember a lot of my peers scrawling their names on the inside of the Muni after school. The tag or signature of the graffiti writer is the bare essence of graffiti, and my mentor, Omen2, was definitely one of those kids that bus-hopped and left his name on the bus. From this, the art form progressed to more elaborate art pieces or murals, and so the seed was planted.

What else about San Francisco inspires you?

San Francisco is such a great city to do what I do. I own a kids’ clothing line and sell art pieces and freelance a little bit. That sounds ridiculous even to me! But in San Francisco this can definitely be considered a feasible formula to make a living. With two kids, 7 and 4, I have all the inspiration I need. Hip-hop music also definitely plays a part in my creation/production process. Lyrics of good MCs like KRSONE or Rakim used to be written on our large graffiti murals to narrate the message we were portraying.

Come see Nate1, Eddie, Duerone, and a great group of artists at Secession tonight. Come prepared with a short Muni tale and you can share it in our story tent. We’ll have our handy Flip there to record your story, to be published later on Muni Diaries!

Outbound at Secession Art and Design
Tonight, Friday, June 11, 6:30 p.m.

3361 Mission St (across from 30th St Safeway)
http://www.secessionsf.com/
Muni routes: 14, 49, J, 27, 24, 48, 67
BART: 24th Street Station

Reminder: Go offline tomorrow at Breaking It Down

Riders With Drinks
Photo of Tony Long from Muni Diaries Live! Riders With Drinks, June 2009, by RumNose

We realize that some of you (like us) plan. Some even obsess about it (like us). This post isn’t for you, though feel free to delight in it if you’d like.

No, this post is for the beloved rest of you out in internetia who’ve somehow (god bless ya) made it this far into the future and still don’t know what you’re doing this weekend. Again, we love you. And we want to see you at the Make-Out Room tomorrow night in what promises to be the best edition yet of Muni Diaries Live. This time we’re calling it Breaking It Down (perhaps for obvious reasons?), and check out this lineup:

Comedian Will Franken
Fun(ny) guy Johnny FunCheap
BART operator Kelly Beardsley
Vero Majano of Mission Media Archives
The delightful music of McPuzo and Trotsky
And last but not least, the Cock-Ts will return to … get us all in the mood.

And off-stage, Silvi from The Poetry Store will be our resident poet of the evening! Look for her with her type writer so you can get a poem written just for you.

As before, there’ll be a portion of the event in which we call for your (shortish) stories to be read on-stage. And we’ll ask the audience to use specially designed buzzers applause to judge who’ll win some seriously awesome prizes.

What can we say? Oh, we can say that it’s free to get in. But please tip your bartender! See you there!

Muni Diaries Live! Breaking It Down
Friday, April 23, 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. No cover!
Make-Out Room — 3225 22nd Street
Routes serving the area: BART 24th St. Station, 12, 14, 22, 27, 33, 48, 49, 67

Hot tonight: Streets of SF Filmic Journeys at SFMOMA

left hook
Photo by Flickr user captin_nod

Looking for something to do tonight? SFMOMA has a screening that features the streets of San Francisco. Bonus points from us if you spot Muni lines in the “filmic journey.”

Thank you, SFist.

Details:

Streets of San Francisco: Filmic Journeys

Tanya Zimbardo, assistant curator of media arts, SFMOMA

Phyllis Wattis Theater
7:00 p.m.

Throughout the 75th anniversary exhibitions, artists take up San Francisco’s cityscapes as subject and muse. This program of experimental films and videos from the late 1950s to the present offers evocative records of individual experiences of street life. These psychogeographic tours look at North Beach’s Broadway strip and the window reflections of a beat poet protagonist. We examine the Mission’s storefronts for evidence of larger neighborhood shifts, from gentrification in the 1980s to the current neighborhood use of the former site of a 19th-century amusement park.

$5 general; free for SFMOMA members or with museum admission (requires a free ticket, which can be picked up in the Haas Atrium).

Wanna Help Give Muni Diaries a New Look?

We’re about to give Muni Diaries a new look, and we want to make sure you love it too! Please join the Muni Diaries testing pool and give us your two cents on the redesign survey.

Not to worry — it will be the same site, same idea (you tell us Muni stories, we share them with the world) — we just want to make the look of the site clean and lovely.

As a thank you, one lucky, randomly chosen survey respondent will receive a free drink ticket to the Make-Out Room for our spoken word event on April 23.

SFWeekly Web Awards Tonight

Best Viewed Large
Photo by Troy Holden of CaliberSF, winner of SF’s Best Art Blog in SFWeekly 2010 Web Awards

Thanks to all of you who voted for us for the SFWeekly Web Awards! Alas, we didn’t win, and had no idea we were going up against Golaiths like Twitter and Digg’s Kevin Rose, but we appreciate your votes! We saw how much you loved us in the leaked web tally page, so thank you, everyone!

A big congratulations is in order for our friends on the winners list: Broke Ass Stuart, Thomas Hawk, MissionMission, FunCheapSF (come see the man himself at our event later this month), Laughing Squid (who generously hosts us), and the wonderful CaliberSF.

Now, back to our regularly scheduled programming…and don’t forget to send us your Muni stories and photos.

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