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Ocean Beach Protects Its Artists

 Source  October 15, 2025  0 Comments on Ocean Beach Protects Its Artists

By Lawrynce Cecio

From drum circles and art galleries to vibrant tattoos, Ocean Beach has always been a magnet for those of an artistic persuasion. Since its inception in 1887, when the area was then known as “Mussel Beach” and was founded to host concerts and events, OB has consistently served as a cultural hub for San Diego, a place where important art is both born and nurtured.

With San Diego Bayfest rapidly approaching this weekend, headlined by OB’s own Slightly Stoopid, a question came to light: What is it about Ocean Beach that has made it a source of some of San Diego’s most important cultural influences, and why does it continue to attract those seeking an artistic refuge?

The answer lies in the community’s fiercely protective, tribal past. To understand the OB of today, one must consider what came before.

Artist Bob Sorben, the creative force behind the iconic OB Seagull and many other famous graphic works, moved to Ocean Beach in 1942 and lived there until his passing in 2020. He, like so many others, saw something special in the area. He described an OB “ruled by locals,” where the defense of the beach town was “almost tribal.”

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Another Trash Fee Con in Your Mailbox Now

 Source  October 15, 2025  6 Comments on Another Trash Fee Con in Your Mailbox Now

By Lu Rehling

Really, can it get worse? Yep! Check your mailbox for your county property tax bill and get ready for more bad city trash fee news, even beyond the bait & switch that got us being billed for trash pickup in the first place.

Here’s that news: Even if you requested the lowest-price trash bin combo by the city’s deadline last month, you’re still going to have to pay more for the highest-price “level of service” for a full year. After that, not to worry, you’ll get a credit back for the over-payment. (Unless the city has its fingers crossed behind its back again, that is.) Just don’t expect interest. The city is grabbing your money now and promising to give some back later, after it’s had its way with it.

Of course, maybe you already know all about this charge that surprised me, because you thoroughly read (and managed to understand!) all of the legalese buried in a mailer that you got months ago–

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Pink Slime and the Phantom Newsroom: When Bots Like ‘San Diego City Wire’ Pretend to Be Your Friend and Neighbor

 Source  October 14, 2025  4 Comments on Pink Slime and the Phantom Newsroom: When Bots Like ‘San Diego City Wire’ Pretend to Be Your Friend and Neighbor

By Dan Weisman / The Escondido Grapevine  / October 12, 2025

San Diego’s got sunshine, surf, and—who knew—synthetic journalism.

Lately, a site called San Diego City Wire has been popping up in social feeds and search results, dishing out “local” tidbits about home sales, city meetings, and “community happenings.”

It looks like any of the old-school weeklies that used to land on your porch in a blue plastic bag. The headlines are tidy, the writing reads like your cousin’s Facebook recap, and the “About” page chirps about connecting and informing the community.

What could possibly be wrong?

Well, let’s start with the part they forgot to tell you. There’s no newsroom, no reporters, and nobody in San Diego actually writing those stories.

The Chicago Connection Nobody Mentions

Dig a little and you find that San Diego City Wire  is part of a national operation run out of the Midwest by a fellow named Brian Timpone—a onetime journalist turned automation entrepreneur. His company Metric Media, along with sidekicks Locality Labs and Franklin Archer, has pumped out hundreds of look-alike “City Wire” and “Times” sites from Maine to Maui.

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The Famosa Slough — a Wetland Gem in the Border Between Ocean Beach and Point Loma

 Source  October 14, 2025  1 Comment on The Famosa Slough — a Wetland Gem in the Border Between Ocean Beach and Point Loma

By John Carroll / KPBS / October 7, 2025

From its ancient past to its promising future, it’s a place for San Diegans to learn and appreciate nature. It is a place to immerse yourself in nature, a serene wonder, nestled in an urban setting.

It’s in the Loma Portal neighborhood and even though it’s 37 acres, you might never have noticed it.

It is the Famosa Slough, and when you stand on its banks, you’re likely to see and hear birds; depending on the time of year, more than 200 different species. It is a place with an abundance of fish and crustaceans, which attract a diverse range of birds that rest and feed here.

“We’ve seen 100 different species so far this year,” said Kelcy Coleman, conservation coordinator for the San Diego Bird Alliance.

“By the time December ends, we will have doubled that count over,” she said. “So we will have around 260 species by the end of the year, which means our fall migration, which is happening right now will bring in all of those species.”

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Mission Bayfest Is What San Diego Sounds Like — Oct. 17,18, & 19

 Source  October 14, 2025  0 Comments on Mission Bayfest Is What San Diego Sounds Like — Oct. 17,18, & 19

By Mikey Beats

Every year, when Mission Bayfest rolls around, I take a step back and look at what we’ve built, not just the stages, the lineup, or the logistics, but the feeling. The vibe. That thing you can’t quite put your finger on, but you know it when you’re standing in the grass at Mariner’s Point Park, surrounded by good people, great music, and the Mission Bay shining behind it all.

Bayfest didn’t come from a big agency or out-of-town investors. It came from three San Diego locals — myself, Dominic Coleman, and Joe Rinaldi — who grew up going to shows, throwing backyard parties, and wanting to bring something real to the city we love. We didn’t want to recreate Coachella or build some flashy scene. We just wanted something that felt like us.

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UC San Diego Gave Personal Information of Students, Staff, and Faculty to Federal Government

 Source  October 14, 2025  0 Comments on UC San Diego Gave Personal Information of Students, Staff, and Faculty to Federal Government

By News Writing Staff / The Guardian – UCSD / Oct 6, 2025

UC San Diego’s administration sent personally identifiable information of UCSD faculty, staff, and students to the University of California Office of the President, which sent said information to the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. This comes following a request from the OCR in its investigation into the UC’s handling of discrimination and harassment claims, especially in regard to antisemitism. UCSD and UCOP have not indicated whose information was divulged, nor when it was shared. As of Oct. 5, UCSD officials have not notified the individuals affected.

All the individuals are connected with the University, but their exact affiliations remain unclear. However, the Faculty Defense Group told The UCSD Guardian in early September that all the individuals had some relation to “complaints of harassment and discrimination.” On Sept. 18, The Guardian received confirmation that federal investigators have acquired names. No other details can be identified at this time.

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The social waiver wire: How fantasy football connects us

 Source  October 14, 2025  0 Comments on The social waiver wire: How fantasy football connects us

By Bradley Granieri / The Point – PL Nazarene University / Oct 8, 2025

Having a fantasy football team isn’t all that fun. But watching that team beat somebody else’s is thrilling.

I didn’t start playing fantasy football because I loved watching the NFL. Four seasons ago, I barely watched football. I said “yes” to joining a league because I was bored, and figured doing so would give me something mildly interesting to do in math class. But when the next season rolled around, I agreed again.

“It’s a fun thing to talk to your friends about, even though I don’t really care about football,” Kate Walter, a third-year applied health major, said.

Just like Walter, I don’t care all that much about the NFL, but I still sign up because it’s what happens off the field that makes fantasy football truly matter. It’s the community and competition that comes from it that keeps me coming back year after year.

When I started my first fantasy football team four years ago, I didn’t know how anything worked. I was a rookie, but I quickly learned the basics in a trial-by-fire period of just a few short weeks. What I learned was that fantasy football put me, the “coach,” in control of a virtual team composed of real NFL players who play against other virtual teams.

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Bernie Sanders: Trump Is Rapidly Moving Us Towards Authoritarianism

 Source  October 13, 2025  0 Comments on Bernie Sanders: Trump Is Rapidly Moving Us Towards Authoritarianism

By Bernie Sanders / Reader Supported News / October 12, 2025

Trump is rapidly moving us toward authoritarianism. While the country focuses on Trump’s illegal and unconstitutional ICE raids, his threats to arrest political opponents, the militarization of our cities and his crackdowns on universities and law firms, it is important that we not ignore what is happening to the American media landscape.

In recent years, a handful of media conglomerates have increasingly owned and controlled what the vast majority of Americans see on television, hear on the radio and read in newspapers. But it is not just corporate ownership of broadcast and print media.

As internet use explodes, we are also witnessing the growing concentration of ownership of our social media platforms. Elon Musk, the wealthiest person on earth, owns X, formerly Twitter. Mark Zuckerberg, the third wealthiest man in the world, owns Meta, which includes Facebook and Instagram. Jeff Bezos, the fourth wealthiest, owns Twitch, along with the Washington Post. And Larry Ellison, the second wealthiest man in the world and a key Trump ally, recently purchased Paramount, which owns CBS and other outlets. It has been reported that Ellison is planning to acquire CNN and is working with Trump in an effort to control TikTok.

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OB Post Office Has Removed Its Regular Outside Mailboxes — Victims of Government Shut Down and / or Cut-Backs? UPDATED

 Source  October 13, 2025  9 Comments on OB Post Office Has Removed Its Regular Outside Mailboxes — Victims of Government Shut Down and / or Cut-Backs? UPDATED

Editordude: Our good friend Judy Miller had a letter to the editor at the San Diego Union-Tribune printed the other day about the mailboxes in front of the OB Post Office — and it’s quite shocking actually. Here it is:

OB Post Office changes seen as unhelpful and dangerous

After 5 p.m., you can no longer mail a letter at the Ocean Beach Post Office. Outside, there used to be four mailboxes, accessible 24/7, but now there is only one, a strange-looking potbellied creature that is padlocked after 5 p.m.

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OB Historical Society: ‘Lot 9, Block 86 of Point Loma Height, Then and Now’ — Thursday, Oct. 16

 Source  October 13, 2025  0 Comments on OB Historical Society: ‘Lot 9, Block 86 of Point Loma Height, Then and Now’ — Thursday, Oct. 16

Join us Thursday, October 16, 2025, 7:00 pm, at the Ocean Beach Historical Society program “Lot 9, Block 86 of Point Loma Height, Then and Now“, at Water’s Edge Community Center, 1984  Sunset Cliffs Blvd., O.B.

One of the first houses on the hill, this beautiful old residence on Narragansett Avenue has been home to three generations of Ferol Henkels’ family. 

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U-T Editorial Board: ‘To force change at City Hall, all that’s needed are 21,051 signatures’

 Source  October 13, 2025  3 Comments on U-T Editorial Board: ‘To force change at City Hall, all that’s needed are 21,051 signatures’

San Diego U-T Editorial Board / October 10, 2025

On Oct. 3, a U-T editorial was posted that said the San Diego City Council’s decision to delay adopting huge water and sewer rate hikes at a meeting in which several members decried the high cost of living was a hollow gesture. Our warning: Even after a bait-and-switch campaign to force 226,000 homeowners to pay far more for trash service, the first-ever parking fees at Balboa Park and the San Diego Zoo, and the adoption of costly “dynamic” parking rates downtown, elected leaders were just getting started in trying to raise revenue by any means necessary. Doing so was an easier way for them to deal with their chronic overspending than taking on public employee unions by freezing compensation, utilizing technology to downsize the city work force or using “managed competition” to provide services more cheaply.

A day later, Councilmember Sean Elo-Rivera confirmed we were correct. At Politifest 2025, sponsored by Voice of San Diego, he called for the city to charge fees to tourists who wanted to go to Mission Bay and Torrey Pines Golf Course, and to add to the taxes already paid by owners of second homes and vacation rentals.

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