Elsewhere in the 'ist-a-verse
By Staff in Miscellaneous on Jan 16, 2011 10:00PM
- SFist discussed these anti-Sarah Palin posters that, shortly after the Arizona shooting rampage, appeared in San Francisco.
- Shanghaiist was terrorized by a "Tiger Mom" called Amy Chua.
- DCist was all about poor customer service this week, ranging from a notoriously anti-customer chef posting YouTube videos criticizing her patrons to Metro operators urinating and defecating in the system’s trains and buses.
- In the midst of the tragic news out of Tucson, Bostonist found reason for hope. Organs from Christina Taylor Green, the 9-year old girl killed in Tucson, were donated to a sick girl from Boston. In other news, five members of the state parole board resigned after a man they released allegedly killed a police officer; Vicki Kennedy isn't running for Senate; there might be a football game happening Sunday afternoon, possibly as you read this.
- Seattlest lamented our city getting knocked off our literacy throne and watched a local park get drawn into the Amanda Knox saga.
- Gothamist found out why a City Council member wants to introduce legislation requiring bicyclists to get licenses/registration: It’s because of the jerk bicyclists. Councilman Eric Ulrich told us, “I have never, never seen a cop car pull over a bicyclist for running through a red light. I wish they would, because those are the ones who are creating problems every day in the city. If these people are not obeying traffic laws, they should be held accountable.”
- LAist readers rejoiced in Gov. Jerry Brown's executive decision to save California $20 million by snatching state-issued cell phones from public employees.
- Chicagoist’s readers were not happy with a 67 percent increase in the state income tax. The staff, meanwhile, interviewed the director of a new Stephin Merritt documentary; asked author Ted McClelland why he likes winter in Chicago; chatted with the creator of Vladimir Putin Action Comics; got a behind-the-scenes tour of the soon-to-open butcher shop, The Butcher and Larder; and Art Shay reminisced on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.