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RIP Franchises of our youths
(07-18-2025, 12:54 PM)Greg Wrote: Oy to the vey. CBS made a big mistake not firing him immediately. This story won't go away.

Or maybe a deliberate “fuck you” to the administration. Malicious compliance.
In the Tudor Period, Fencing Masters were classified in the Vagrancy Laws along with Actors, Gypsys, Vagabonds, Sturdy Rogues, and the owners of performing bears.
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This plus defunding NPR & PBS. Fuck our government.

I’m now torn about Paramount - y’all know what a Trekkie I am. And SNW just started s3. It reminds me of The Simpsons & Fox (but I could easily let go of The Simpsons). In a weird way, Homer Simpson was the financial foundation that fortified Fox News. 

Right now, our only additional subscriptions art Paramount+, Criterion & PBS.
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Quote:[Image: 2025-08-12-Seabright-Murray-Street-Bridg...1434&ssl=1]
Mayor Fred Keeley (left) talks with Seabright and harbor business owners after a tense city council meeting on Tuesday. Credit: Kevin Painchaud / Lookout Santa Cruz
Posted inBusiness & Technology
‘This is an emergency’: Seabright and harbor business owners demand relief from Murray Street Bridge closure
by Lily Belli3 hours ago
Quick Take
At a tense and emotional Santa Cruz City Council meeting Tuesday, Seabright and harbor-area business owners warned they are on the brink of shutting down due to the Murray Street Bridge closure. Seabright Social is closing, and more than a half-dozen business owners vented their deepening frustration with how the City of Santa Cruz prepared and communicated as the vital bridge was about to close for repairs.
Seabright and Santa Cruz Harbor-area business owners took the mic, one by one, to tell the Santa Cruz City Council that they are on the verge of shutting down due to the closure of the Murray Street Bridge
The atmosphere in the council chambers was tense and emotional on Tuesday afternoon as eight business owners expressed their frustrations. Their main complaint: a lack of support from the city. 
Representing about half of the businesses in the lower Seabright neighborhood, the business owners cited their frustration with what they characterized as a lack of communication by the city about the timing and duration of the bridge closures. They said they felt little meaningful support from the city, and now are facing the very real possibility that they could have to close the doors of their businesses. 
“We are down significantly,” said Charles Maier, the owner of The Crow’s Nest, one of Santa Cruz’s most longstanding and iconic restaurants. “This whole thing is an emergency for the businesses around there, but really the whole community is suffering.”
[Image: 2025-08-12-Seabright-Murray-Street-Bridg...C571&ssl=1]
Java Junction owner Michael Spadafora (left) and Charles Maier, owner of The Crow’s Nest, expressed their frustrations at a lack of support from the city. Credit: Kevin Painchaud / Lookout Santa Cruz
“I am having a worse summer this summer than I did during the pandemic,” said Laurie Negro, the owner of Betty Burgers, a local chain with locations in Seabright as well as Pleasure Point, Santa Cruz and Aptos. “I have cut 50 hours per week [at the Seabright location] in the middle of summer. I have never done that in 20 years.” Without the support of summer income for the upcoming slower winter months, she’s worried that she might have let some employees go. 
Business owners need immediate relief in order to stay open, they said, in the form of financial support from the city or an increase in foot or vehicle traffic. They asked if the bridge could open to two-way traffic with the aid of a stoplight, rather than eastbound traffic only, when it reopens in February. Others asked if they could be excused from paying city taxes until the bridge reopens in 2028 in order to lower their overhead costs, and an extension on temporary permits for outdoor dining structures, which are set to expire on July 1, 2026, among other suggestions.
Above all, business owners collectively wondered why the city hadn’t anticipated the dramatic effect the construction on the Murray Street Bridge would have on area businesses, and why there were few meaningful measures taken to ameliorate the steep decrease in foot and vehicle traffic. The bridge is undergoing a three-year retrofit and will be closed both ways through at least February, with another full closure planned later next year.
Seabright Social is the first business to close as the result of lower foot traffic due to construction. Several business owners and Steven Lino, who owns the building, said that the restaurant, once a neighborhood hub, planned to close on Sept. 1. Jon Bates, who co-owns the restaurant with Keikilani McKay, confirmed to Lookout that it will close because of the bridge. 
[Image: 2025-08-12-Seabright-Murray-Street-Bridg...C620&ssl=1]
Patrice Boyle, owner of La Posta in Seabright, started a petition to open the rail bridge to pedestrians and cyclists that has amassed more than 1,500 signatures. Credit: Kevin Painchaud / Lookout Santa Cruz

“We were doing really well. When the bridge closed one way, we lost about 15% of sales. When it closed both ways, sales dropped by 30%,” said Bates. “We saw that this was going to continue for the next three years, and knew it wasn’t tenable for our business.”
Patrice Boyle, the owner of La Posta, questioned whether the Italian restaurant would be able to celebrate its 20th anniversary next year. “This bridge is potentially terminal for us, and I don’t think the city really appreciated the effects of what this would do,” she said. 
Boyle emphasized that the businesses in the area needed relief immediately, and that so far, the city hadn’t followed through on some of its promises. Restaurants like La Posta operate on razor-thin margins, and are already grappling with increasing costs, tariff stresses and immigration fears. 
In late July, Boyle created a petition to open the rail bridge that runs parallel to the Murray Street Bridge to pedestrians and cyclists, and it has amassed more than 1,500 signatures. In order to do so, the city would need to get permission from the Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission, which owns the bridge. Last week, Santa Cruz transportation officials agreed to explore the possibility. 
[Image: 2025-08-11-Murray-Street-Bridge-5.jpg?re...C520&ssl=1]
The Murray Street Bridge will be under construction and fully or partially closed through early 2028. Credit: Kevin Painchaud / Lookout Santa Cruz

Java Junction owner Michael Spadafora has coffeehouses in both the harbor and Seabright neighborhoods, and said sales have declined by more than 25% since late June, when the bridge closed. “This is an emergency, and you guys aren’t looking for serious alternatives on how to handle this. You have not done anything to help the businesses prior to this starting,” he told the city council. 
Mayor Fred Keeley appeared frustrated at how Councilmember Sonja Brunner, who represents District 2, which includes the Seabright and harbor areas, was handling the crisis. He gave clipped responses as she attempted to bring a motion that expanded relief measures for the area. He called a five-minute recess for her to clarify her motion with the city clerk. 
Eventually, the council voted to explore several supportive measures and report back at its Sept. 9 meeting. These include:
  • expanding Santa Cruzer electric shuttle service and Santa Cruz Metro bus lines to the Seabright area; 
  • exploring financing options, like sales tax relief or loans;
  • extending temporary outdoor dining permits; 
  • traffic control to allow two-way traffic on the one-way lane over the bridge; 
  • seeing if there was any way to shorten the timeline of construction. 
This is not the city’s greatest moment, said Keeley: “I think that this was foreseeable, and I’m unhappy that it took so long to get to where we got today. It should have been here months ago. I’m not happy about this.” However, he said he feels that things are “moving in a good direction” following the meeting. 
Crow’s Nest owner Maier said he hopes the city will come up with solutions that will offer relief to business owners, their employees and the public: “Hopefully they can come up with some solutions that help not only the whole community getting across town, but also the businesses and employees that are affected now, and if it keeps going, who will be affected even more.”

Seabright Social was previously Seabright Brewery, which first opened when I was in grad school at UCSC. I was saddened by the ownership change. When I first moved to the Cruz, Jingles & I would hit them up for their happy hour (he loved their salmon & calamari bites - I loved their oatmeal stout). When it switched to Social a frew years ago, I was disappointed at first but then they held some dancehalls (which never took off) and I got into their food. They did a good prawns & grits. 

Murray bridge is a major artery to cross the harbor. It is where DM &the Yeti's dear SJSU teammate, Ben Doniach, died in a bicycle accident.
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No input from Brady's Yacht Club dive bar?

--tg
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(08-13-2025, 12:41 PM)thatguy Wrote: No input from Brady's Yacht Club dive bar?

--tg

Man, that place is immortal. Open from 10 to 2am and I’ve never seen it empty. I think it’s where the Lost Boys hang out now that they’ve grown into men.

I’ve never been in there.
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I thought the Lost Boys never grow up...

--tg
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Yeah, yeah, right, right, right…

But when they do, they end up at Brady’s
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Just heard Betty’s Burgers downtown is closing. They say Seabright will stay open but that’s gotta be impacted by the Murray bridge closure.
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Having a sad. I didn't hang out here much, but I did go a few times, once for a memorial for a dear friend. 

Quote:Legendary San Francisco bar and venue closes after over 60 years
By Timothy Karoff, Culture ReporterAug 18, 2025

A Tenderloin landmark, popular among San Francisco’s punks and writers, has closed its doors. Edinburgh Castle, the two-story Geary Street dive, poured its last drink this month, ending a decades-long run starting in 1959.
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Tay Kim, who has owned the bar since 1999, first confirmed the closure to Broke-Ass Stuart. U.S. Bank foreclosed on the property in February after the bar’s owner allegedly stopped making payments on a loan, and Edinburgh Castle went into receivership in June, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. (SFGATE and the Chronicle are both owned by Hearst but have separate newsrooms.) SFGATE was unable to confirm the bar’s exact date of closure, and Kim did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.
The pub, recognizable for its rare indoor smoking room and the Scottish flags lining the walls, made for an ideal filming location for a classic barroom shot. Scenes from “Venom” and “So I Married an Axe Murderer” were shot in Edinburgh Castle. The bar was also a hub for the local arts scene. Edinburgh Castle was a venue for at least one Noise Pop concert, plus scores of punk shows in the early 2000s.
“In the early 2000’s when I was finally old enough to attend bar shows, Edinburgh was one of the best spots for underground music in the entire city,” Fred Schrunk, co-owner of the Knockout, wrote in an email to SFGATE. “Whoever was booking back then really had their finger on the pulse of outsider music.”
“Really sad to see it go,” Schrunk added. “Hopefully whoever takes it over does something remotely cool with the space, but I won’t hold my breath.”
In the wake of the pandemic, the bar remained an occasional concert venue, hosting recent shows for Psyched! Fest and Tenderloin Music and Arts Festival. Earlier this month, Edinburgh Castle hosted a three-band concert, advertised as “Cumbia at the Castle,” and had another concert planned for Aug. 23, which has since been canceled.

[Image: ratio3x2_960.webp]
Owner and bartender Tay Kim takes a moment from behind the bar for a portrait and some amazing stories from his classic San Francisco bar Edinburgh Castle.
Kevin Kelleher/Special to SFGATE
The bar also enjoyed a spell as a literary hub in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Local writer Alan Black, then-Edinburgh Castle’s bar manager and bartender, brought fellow authors into the bar’s orbit, including Irvine Welsh, the Scottish author of “Trainspotting.” The bar hosted four months of sold-out play performances of the book before it was adapted into a 1996 movie that went on to earn critical acclaim. At one point, the bar hosted regular readings with local writers, as well as visits from established pens like Aimee Bender and Pushcart Prize winner Kim Addonizio.
Tay Kim started working as a waiter at the pub in 1994 and became owner in 1999. He purchased its building in 2010, and in 2019, Kim listed Edinburgh Castle for sale for $3.995 million, a deal that included the business, its building and its liquor license. Business was slow, Kim told SF Weekly at the time, in part due to the city’s changing demographics. “Different crowd, not a drinking one,” he said. “In the past it was more of a band watching, drinking one but they’ve either started families and/or moved out of the city. The recent ‘tech’ transplants are not drinkers or social.”
Apparently, the business did not change hands, since Kim remained the Castle’s owner until this month, when the bar closed for good.
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Sadness. I haven't been since my SOMA days, but I always enjoyed it and the fish & chips
In the Tudor Period, Fencing Masters were classified in the Vagrancy Laws along with Actors, Gypsys, Vagabonds, Sturdy Rogues, and the owners of performing bears.
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(08-19-2025, 04:40 PM)Dr. Ivor Yeti Wrote: my SOMA days

That's a good title for your memoir.
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Sounds like a memoir from a character in Brave New World
the hands that guide me are invisible
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Perhaps we are all characters in Brave New World now…
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10 points to KB for a literary reference that I recognized
In the Tudor Period, Fencing Masters were classified in the Vagrancy Laws along with Actors, Gypsys, Vagabonds, Sturdy Rogues, and the owners of performing bears.
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DeFib This closed downtown. This is a major bummer for me.

 I’ve been recerting my CPR there since I moved to the Cruz a dozen plus years ago. They were the best - professional, efficient, & courteous. 

I have to recert this December and now most find a new place.
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