- The new publisher for the company that owns the [SF Examiner], the SF Bay Guardian, and SF Weekly looks an awful lot like "celebrity chef" Michael Symon. Am I wrong?
- An op-ed in the [Ocean Beach Bulletin] slams SPUR's Ocean Beach Master Plan for its lack of local voices.
- The Zeitgeist-adjacent skate park is now open, reports [Mission Mission].
- SF "Residents Are Putting a Crimp in Developers' Plans," says the [Wall Street Journal]. Sure, that's one way of looking at it.
- They've found the body of that San Francisco man who disappeared while diving for abalone this weekend. [Press Democrat]
- Drivers for Genentech shuttles are taking classes on how to best share the road with bikes, the first company to do so. Correct me in the comments, but aren't they also the only shuttles that clearly identify what company they're driving for, as opposed to just being big and dark and scary? [KCBS]
- San Francisco buys a bunch of property to make into parks. [SF Examiner]
- Geez, remember when it seemed like half the people you met in SF were in the Green Party (or at least supported one of their candidates)? What happened? [SF Weekly] explains.
- Long-time Bay Area resident Robin Williams has returned to rehab, "to fine-tune and focus on his continued commitment" to sobriety. [People]