Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Donald Trump naked in Seattle, NYC, Cleveland, San Francisco, and L.A.

By Jack Brummet, Public Art Ed.

Photo via The Stranger  

A statue of a Donald J. Trump has been placed at the corner of 11th Avenue and Pike Street. The plaque reads: "The emperor has no balls."  

As it turns out, these statues now appear in San Francisco, Seattle, L.A., and Cleveland. The statues were created and deployed by the art activist group INDECLINE. Where next?

And when will the candidate freak out publicly about this?  Stay tuned. . .


source unknown

source unknown


source unknown


---o0o---

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Triple frontal nudity on the front cover of the Bay Guardian

By Jack Brummet, California Travel Editor


This weeks issue of the Bay Guardian featured an article on nude beaches.  And it was illustrated with three frontal nudes.  This is the free local paper in San Francisco, so whenever you walked on the street this week, you saw naughty bits popping out of news boxes everywhere. . .




Sorry, I am blocking out the good parts.  But I'm pretty sure if you're that curious, you could look here.
---o0o---

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

jack brummet drawing: Faces No. 146

I drew this in a meeting yesterday in San Francisco. Hardly any of the figures represent people who attended the meeting. 

Faces No. 146, by Jack Brummet - Click to enlarge
---o0o---

Friday, January 11, 2008

Five Greatest Cities In The United States

This is my current list of the Five Greatest/Favorite Cities In The United States. In order. As with all of my lists here, I reserve the right to change my mind tomorrow. Let's debate!


  1. Seattle.
  2. New York City.
  3. Austin.
  4. SF/Berkeley-Oakland.
  5. Los Angeles.

Five greatest cities not in the United States:



  1. Bucerias, Nayarit, Mexico.
  2. Rome.
  3. Madrid.
  4. Chora Sfokya, Crete, Greece.
  5. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
---o0o---

Friday, March 02, 2007

Earthquake!: Shakin' All Over In Berkeley


click map to enlarge—the red square is this 'quake

An hour after I arrived in Berkeley tonight, and settled into my hotel, the building started to rock and roll. The 4.2 earthquake, centered in Lafayette, while not so bad, was felt all around the Bay Area. Berkeley was the site (and epicenter) of another earthquake just last week.

Kron-TV says that "The earthquake shook basketball fans at Haas Pavilion on the University of California's campus in Berkeley. The crowd issued a collective "Oooh," as the building briefly shuddered during a timeout in Cal's game against Arizona, then cheered loudly while officials briefly delayed resuming the game."

We experienced dozens of earthquakes when we lived here, especially our year in married student housing in the Berkeley Hills. The Hayward fault ran--literally--through our backyard, and straight through the U.C. campus. We felt little earthquakes every day while we lived there. Fortunately, we had moved to Seattle by the time of the big quake of '89.

When I was 11, the Seattle April 29, 1965 earthquake (epicenter: Shelton) registered a 6.5 magnitude. I was outside at elementary school and watched the massive waves roll through the streets and saw cars bouncing up and down. I was in San Francisco during the April 24, 1984 Morgan Hill earthquake. I worked on the 10th floor of a 1905 skyscraper on Market Street. In that 6.2 quake, my building rocked for several minutes after the quake. It was 15 years 'til I experienced my next big one--the Seattle Nisqually earthquake on February 28, 2001--a 6.8 magnitude temblor, still vivid in my memory. While it's happening all you can think is "when's it going to stop?" As your intestines turn to jelly, you begin to wonder if this is finally the one we've all dreaded; if this is The Big One.
---o0o---