SF News Day Around the Bay: Tenderloin’s Black Cat Jazz Supper Club Reducing Its Hours Because of Crime An early morning Bay Bridge toll plaza shooting left one woman injured, DA Jenkins won convictions on a man accused of attacking two women in SoMa, and the Black Cat jazz bar is scaling back its hours over crime concerns.
SF News Tenderloin’s Black Cat Jazz Bar Broken Into and Robbed — Twice In the Same Night The island of swank in an ocean of Tenderloin known as the Black Cat jazz bar suffered a break-in and burglary in the wee hours Tuesday morning, and once police cleared the scene, people promptly broke back in and robbed the place again.
SF Politics London Breed Going Maskless at Club Became a National Story; Should It Have? Should Mayor London Breed have been called out and excoriated for not having her mask on while out at a music venue with friends last week? Discuss.
Arts & Entertainment Video: Steph Curry Played Tambourine With A Jazz Band At The Black Cat Last Night @stephencurry30 thanks for coming to #blackcatsf we loved having you in 🏀🏀🏀 always good taking shots with you 🍾🍾🍾 A post shared by Khalid Mushasha (@khalidmushasha) on May 12, 2017 at 3:00am PDT Warriors
SF Restaurants, Food & Drink Inside Black Cat, A Stray Spot Of Swank In The Tenderloin Swaggering up to a Tenderloin corner where, by contrast, area denizens typically stagger and stumble, Black Cat (Eddy and Leavenworth), a new restaurant arrival, is an already lively — if unexpected — destination. Announced in
Arts & Entertainment Photo Du Jour: SF's Black Cat Bar Comes Back To Life In Shoot For LGBT History Series A photo posted by Dustin Lance Black (@dlanceblack) on Mar 9, 2016 at 8:12pm PST "After three long years of research, interviews and writing, it’s now time to leave home and
misc SF Halloween...Over? Now that there will be no city sanctioned Halloween debauchery in the Castro, Civic Center, or anywhere else, it'll be exciting to see the police state that's sure to erupt come 10/31.
Arts & Entertainment SFIFF: <em>Edgar G. Ulmer: The Man Off Screen</em> If this review were an Edgar G. Ulmer movie, it would be covered in fog, have a sweeping orchestral score (public domain of course), and SFist would be a nihilistic outsider desperate for