By Nancy Tartaglione
26.03.2020 - 23:29 / billboard.com
G-Eazy never forgets his Bay Area community, especially in a time of crisis.
Amid the coronavirus spread, the rapper and his Endless Summer Fund are teaming up with Larkin Street Youth Services to provide meals to local at-risk youth in San Francisco every day for an entire month.
Eazy, a Bay Area native himself, will be funding a local food truck, which helps those who cannot easily access meals from Larkin’s drop-in sites. The truck will provide lunch every single day for the next month.
"The
By Nancy Tartaglione
Phyllis Lyon, pioneering civil rights activist and LGBTIQ+ icon, who along with her partner of over five decades Del Martin became the face of the fight for same sex marriage rights in the United State, died at her San Francisco home on Thursday. She was 95 and died of natural cases, media reports said.
By Bruce Haring
Phyllis Lyons, left, and Del Martin were the grand marshals of San Francisco’s Gay Freedom Day Parade on June 25, 1989, the 20th anniversary of the Stonewall riots. They are founders of the pioneering lesbian organization the Daughters of Bilitis. Photo by Tom Levy / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris
On March 27, San Francisco music education nonprofit Women's Audio Mission (WAM) kicked off its first week of online-only programming with a "Virtual Hang" video call, where its community of women and gender non-conforming producers and audio engineers shared tips for staying productive in isolation.Over the next week, more than 300 people from across the country tuned in to four total online sessions held by WAM, including a vinyl DJing workshop and "Home Studio 101" class -- and now, founder
SAN FRANCISCO -- Golden Gate Park turns 150 years old on Saturday, and the huge party to celebrate San Francisco's beloved treasure will, for the time being, take place online.
By Jazz Tangcay
By Amanda N'Duka
"You never know who's going to stop by," Ina Garten, , says in her latest Instagram instructional video. "Wait a minute," she interrupts herself, looking a little wild.
A California doctor featured in the Netflix documentary Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak claims to have found a potential cure for COVID-19.
Best known for the unexpectedly soul-shattering San Francisco suicide doc “The Bridge,” indie filmmaker Eric Steel came out and came of age in 1980s New York at a moment just before AIDS devastated the city’s gay community. Such timing must have been surreal, to assume something so liberating about one’s own identity, only to watch in fear and uncertainty as this fraternity of newfound freedom collapsed around him.
Including a set from New York's CBGB's in 1989
David Hyman’s nearly 30-year law career can be traced back to the season he spent as a ski bum in Aspen, Colorado, before his first year of law school. When he wasn’t on the slopes, Hyman discovered a law firm in town specializing in real estate.
Adrian Brooks is a longtime LGBTQ rights advocate. (Photo courtesy Brooks)
JoJo has rescheduled her Spring tour dates that would have kicked off on April in Washington. In support of her upcoming album good to know, the pop star will now launch her 2020 U.S. dates on Nov. 1 at the Showbox in Seattle.
After serving as a staple of the San Francisco Bay Area nightlife scene for 30 years, popular music club Slim’s announced on Friday (March 20) that it would be ceasing operations permanently.