Web Junk
They're still vague, creepy, righteous and opposed to forgiving and forgetting. This is Occupy Philadelphia-related.
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| Harry Byrne |
Here's our "Pic of the litter" â the litter being City Paper's flickr group, submissions to which can be seen as an ever-evolving slideshow on the City Paper Photostream.
So please submit â you might even find your pic in this week's paper, as did this photograph of a guine Philadelphia bald eagle, shot by Harry Byrne on a stroll through the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge by the airport. This eagle is one of three that inhabit the park, Byrne told us.
Keep 'em coming!
Â
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Philadelphia, Philly News Now. Philly News Now said: Photostream: Call for photos and this weekâs âPic of the litterâ: Harry Byrne Hereâs our âPic of the litterâ â ... http://bit.ly/gTcWE3 [...]
So, my Netflix queue (I'm home sick, midway through a Dexter Season 2 marathon of awesomeness) helpfully provides a list of "Local Favorites for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania." And, well, I'd just throw your favorite movies up here on The Clog, because in my current medicated/bored state it seems a fun thing to do. What it says about this city of ours and its culture sophistication I will leave to your interpretation. As of note, I have neither seen nor heard of any of these. There are precisely two tempting enough to go into my instant queue; you can guess which. And really, two out of five isn't so bad. But really, Philadelphia R.Kelly?
No. 1: Noah's Arc: Jumping the Broom:
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2008 R 101 minutes
Over one fateful weekend at Martha's Vineyard, a fun wedding getaway quickly transforms into a literal hotbed of relationship drama for Noah (Darryl Stephens), Alex (Rodney Chester), Ricky (Christian Vincent) and Chance (Douglas Spearman) in this feature spinoff of the hit Logo TV series. A seven-year itch, a surprise fling with a college hottie, a closeted rap star and much more all factor into this wild and unforgettable vacation.
No. 2: Brooklyn Bound:
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2005 R 89 minutes
Hit with a mother lode of troubles, drug dealer Sean (Tommy Guiffre) decides to pull off one final score so he can make things right, then leave the streets for good. Things can't get any worse for Sean -- his girlfriend (Nicole Arlyn) leaves him, his mother (Christie Sanford) becomes seriously ill, and his best friend is hunted by loan sharks. When his impressionable little brother is arrested, Sean realizes it's up to him to save the day.
No. 3: Save Me
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2007 NR 96 minutes
When young gay man Mark (Chad Allen) hits rock bottom, the well-intentioned Gayle (Judith Light) and her husband, Ted (Stephen Lang), welcome him to Genesis House, a Christian haven for men like Mark to seek shelter and get on the right path -- the straight path. But problems arise when Mark's mentor, Scott (Robert Gant), becomes too intimate, prompting Gayle and Ted to face some uncomfortable realities about love, salvation and human sexuality.
No. 4: R.Kelly Live! The Light It Up Tour
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2006 NR 110 minutes
Filmed live at Oakland, California's famous Paramount Theater, this dynamic concert features a rousing performance by popular R&B musician R. Kelly, who sings his smash hits for an audience of thrilled fans. Kelly has sold more than 50 million albums worldwide and played to sold-out venues all over the globe. Songs include "Bump and Grind," "Fiesta," "Used to Me," "I Believe I Can Fly" and many more.
No. 5: Next: A Primer on Urban Painting
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2005 NR 95 minutes
Filmmaker Pablo Aravena scours the globe to document the changing face of urban graffiti and those who are elevating the form to new heights, from old-school tagging artist Lee Quinones to painters whose work can be found in art galleries. Candid interviews with academics, journalists, musicians and the artists themselves -- and footage of them in action -- tell the story of an art form undergoing a worldwide renaissance.
What's R&B without the R?
...and yet I sometimes wonder why I can't catch a break in this town as an artist myself.
I'm guessing you picked "Save Me" and "Next," which is a shame: "Noah's Arc" is trashy, but it's a lot of fun (and better written than "Queer as Folk"). Also, it's got Wilson Cruz. And no, we still haven't managed to put black and white gay people together on-screen at the same time.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Matthew Petrillo, Philly News Now. Philly News Now said: Aw. Penguins at the Philadelphia Zoo chasing a butterfly.: by patrick.rapa for The Clog, 2010. | Permalink | Add... http://bit.ly/d6ixzk [...]
Interesting situation here. The bicyclist was going the wrong way. On Market Street. And wearing some sort of helmet cam. Meanwhile, the businessman was stepping into Market Street without looking both ways and not at a crosswalk. Hence this wonderfully shot video of the two colliding.
Most remarkably, mere moments after both get knocked on their asses they get up and are only 20% mad. They kinda fess up to their breaches of bike/pedestrian etiquette. And go their separate ways. It's really... not how we usually do things around here.
There's a minor discussion brewing on Reddit about which guy could sue the other, should they want to. Judging by the video, neither party was feeling litigious about the whole thing, but who knows?
Most people ONLY look in the direction of oncoming traffic when they cross a one-way or multilane street. There's normally no reason to check the other way as none is suppose to be coming from that direction. That's why Americans in London tend to get hit by buses. I had someone grab me by the collar as I was about to step out into traffic because I had checked the "American" direction instead of the "British" direction. On a 2-way street you check the other direction as you approach that side of the street. There normally isn't any reason to waste your attention looking in the direction no traffic should be coming from. Although I guess with these salmoning bike messenger types who go against traffic we might have to change our behavior.
Yeah, he took it down because he realized he was "wrong." Maybe it was only posted for friends who found the incident comical that both parties agreed upon their mistakes. I am willing to bet the rider did not post this because they care what you think. The important thing about the content is that both parties ACTUALLY INVOLVED in the incident are fine, end of story. No one cares who Susie Philadelphia thinks is wrong or who Larry the Lawyer thinks would win the civil suit. Keeping in mind that the pedestrian states in the video that he is "okay," there is no injury, and no legal action. Maybe a $15 non moving violation for both people? Would that make everyone happy, or should it be left as the parties ACTUALLY INVOLVED in the incident left it? As a daily cyclist I am aghast that someone would use the word aghast.
I guess the cyclist who posted this video took it down because he realized he was wrong?
got another link? The video is private now.
Well, if a car did what the bike guy did then the driver of the car would get sued. Since bikes are considered moving vehicles and are supposed to follow ALL the rules that cars are, bike guy is at fault. No question.
Nice moustache.
yeah looking both ways before crossing the street...err um jaywalking...is a CRAZY notion. just look one way and walk into traffic and hope for the best.
bike cops ALWAYS ride the wrong way down the street and often cause accidents.
Bicyclist totally at fault. The second part of the title ("absent-minded pedestrian?") is wrong. It looks to me that the pedestrian DID look in the direction of oncoming traffic before stepping out. Why would one normally look in the "wrong" direction for a rouge bicyclist?I saw this yesterday, and as a cyclist, I am totally aghast at this guy's idiotic riding.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Nina Scimenes and Nina Scimenes, Philly News Now. Philly News Now said: Rogue Bicyclist Hits Innocent Pedestrian? Absent-Minded Pedestrian Walks Right In Front Of Bike?: Interesting situ... http://bit.ly/dlRHYq [...]
Biker is a condescending asshole. I sure hope he dies and does the world a favor.
As a former NYC bike messenger: 1. The biker is a tool 2. He actually takes his eyes off the road (looks far right) 1.5-2 seconds before the crash, eliminating any chance for reasonable reaction time to miss the guy to the right OR left (Left, no immediate danger, my choice) 3. You know pedestrians are not paying attention--cell phones, texting, looking up/down. 4. As a cyclist you have to assume invisibility, especially if you are going THE WRONG WAY on a one-way street. 5. He makes all cyclists look bad. Maybe the next time there will be a truck pulling out of an alley, and with his riding skills in traffic, we will see Natural Selection at work... Good Luck Loser.
Dude, aren't we at the point yet where hating on Philly is so cool that it's become uncool? Throwing in the a propos-of-nothing Philly jab is about as original as thinking your baby is cute, or having arms. Making a joke about Philly sucking is like making a joke about Creed sucking. Snoooooze.
But alas, Fake AP Stylebook's Twitter has taken the uncreative bait:
hell - But capitalize Hades. Lowercase philadelphia.
Ha. Ha. Ha. You know what makes you even more unoriginal, Philly haters? Philadelphians have hated on Philly eons before you got around to it.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Philly City Paper and Gab Bonghi, Philly News Now. Philly News Now said: Fake AP Stylebook jumps on the hate-Philly bandwagon: Dude, aren't we at the point yet where hating on Philly is s... http://bit.ly/9CCgX7 [...]
"Web Junk" is my new favorite category.
I love this blog.
I love Philly, I reckon it's one of the best kept secrets of our fair country. Consider caring less about what other people think; at the very least, consider not taking anyone's offhand dig at a city as if it were a personal insult. Hell, if you're feeling spunky, consider not caring about personal insults, too. It'll keep the gray hairs at bay, and reduce the acids in your tummy. Sweating the opinions of blogsters is a helluva way to spend your time on earth. How on earth did I get here anyway? Oh yeah, lookin' for something fun to do this weekend. Back to it!
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An article in today's DelCo Times nearly depressed me to death.
The headline: Joy of Wegman's arrives with new Chesco store
It's about a Wegmans (no apostrophe) opening up, one with an Irish pub in it. And people who don't even live that close to it are, like, really ecstatic. It's possible that the only way to do this thing justice is to go line by line.
EAST WHITELAND Feel the love.
Okay. East Whiteland? Seems a little on the nose. Love, meanwhile, feels kind of extreme for a supermarket, even a nice one, opening up. But as we'll soon see, it's the right word for the situation.
Wegmans' Malvern store opened on Sunday morning at 7 to a first-day crowd that lined the front of the massive 130,000-square-foot building, made a turn and continued out into the parking lot.
Look, people used to camp out for NKOTB tickets. To each their own and such. But. Nobody likes lines. Or crowds. The grocery store will still be there later.
Customers came from New Castle, Del., Newtown Square, Royersford and around the corner in Charlestown and Tredyffrin.
"My property values just went up," Tredyffrin resident Robin Gorneau said about the opening of the Wegmans supermarket, the first retailer in Uptown Worthington.
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You, madam, are a Martian, but that's okay because you appear to be living on Mars. Property values went up? Because you can now get pre-cooked rotisserie chicken at low low prices? (And values? Either she owns multiple properties or she's talking about a moral situation.) And it's the town's first retailer? And there's a place called Uptown Worthington?
Gorneau compared the opening day event to a microcosm of America saying she was there to support her neighborhood, her community and the great state of Pennsylvania.
Okay, now the reporter's getting swept up in the moment. Your paper is in DelCo. The store is in ChesCo. Have some self-respect. And this Gorneau character's giving me a confused-jingoistic Palin vibe.
Gorneau, who was minutes away from walking into the new store, the second in chain to feature an Irish-style pub, commented, "I may never cook again."
Robin, you settle the hell down right now.
Her husband, David Crowther, commented on what he considered a perfect week; BP's gushing oil line in the Gulf was capped and the Malvern Wegmans opened.
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Here's where we realize Gorneau and Crowther spouses with different last names? intrigue! are in a cult. Weakened by fluorescent lights and chef-prepared meals ready to go, they have given their souls over to the supermarket giant. The Kool Aid is just that cheap.
At 7 a.m. sharp, the first customers in the store were greeted by Wegmans' employees who shouting out the company cheer.
Let's ignore the typo and concentrate on this: There's a company cheer. And, when the economy's bad enough, you can pay people enough to shout it in a parking lot at 7 a.m.
Employees with cameras took pictures of the parade of customers as they came through the front door. Customers took photos of employees.
But when they went to upload the photos, they found their cameras had shut down and could not be revived,. The memory cards were wiped clean except for a single word document. In small type it read simply, "I was only a camera, but I deserved better than this."
Wegmans estimated about 1,000 people were in line before the store opened.
"It's a very nice crowd," said Jo Natale, Wegmans spokeswoman, who started her workday at 5:40 a.m. "We weren't sure what (volume) to expect on a hot summer day but we're just thrilled."
Hey, did you hear they stopped the oil leak?!
The Malvern store employs 650 workers gleamed from a pool of 6,000 who applied for jobs at the Rochester, N.Y.-based supermarket chain's newest location.
Wrong word? No! These 650 people gleamed from that application pool like pennies in a wishing well.
Wegmans Malvern store is one of several in the region. Its Downingtown store opened in 2003. Last fall it opened its Collegeville location, its first market with a pub. In 2012,
Wegmans plans to open a store in King of Prussia.
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Hi, welcome to the future. Pennsylvania, 2010. And I'm telling you it's great here. The air is clean, the water's clean, even the dirt, it's clean. Property values are way up, cooking is way down. And we have more excellent olive bars than any other planet we communicate with.
Uptown Worthington, a proposed mixed-use community of retail, residential and commercial, is being developed by O'Neill Properties of King of Prussia. The property was the longtime home of Worthington Steel, and before that, National Rolling Mill.
Now those former steel workers greet you when you walk in! Okay, that was cruel. I'm sorry.
The next retailer to open in Uptown Worthington will be a Target store. It is scheduled to open next Sunday.
Mass suicide in the parking lot. Wear a robe!
Rob Dukes of Charlestown documented the progress of the new Wegmans every step of the way since ground breaking in May 2009.
"I stopped by on Sundays. Took a picture every week from the same place in the parking lot," Dukes said, pointing to the spot.
Dukes presented the photo album to the store management.
But, flipping through, they realized it was just the word "WEGMAN" over and over again written in feces on loose leaf.
Dukes, who said he had shopped at the Downingtown store every day, expects to move his grocery shopping to the Malvern location which is closer to his home.
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Well, at this point you're invested.
Denise Foehl of Royersford "loves Wegmans. The produce is impeccable, the olive bar is awesome."
"Now, if you'll excuse me, I have tickets to The Sorcerer's Apprentice, which looks awesome as well."
Charlestown residents Marianne and Remo Caccavo were first in line, arriving at 4:30 a.m. Sunday.
In accordance with company rules, they were permitted to choose one Wegmans employee to keep as a pet. After a quick survey of the choices they selected Harvey Lewis, an 87-year-old retired steel worker.
The Caccavos have shopped at Wegmans Downingtown since it opened seven years ago.
With a Wegmans closer to home, they said they plan to have dinner at the pub, and then do their shopping.
That is, assuming the pub serves dinner at 4:30 a.m.
Gerry Hunt from Newtown Square is a regular shopper at Wegmans Downingtown but now expects to take her business to the new store
If the main theme of this article is that people are way too excited about Wegmans Malvern, the leitmotif is that Wegmans Downingtown is screwed.
Ethel Alves and her mother, Maggy, from New Castle, Del. want their own Wegmans in the First State..
Ethel Alves she wrote to Wegmans headquarters to inform them the abandoned Chrysler plant property was available.
That's very proactive, but I don't think Downingtown could take another blow.
Alves is a big fan of the supermarket chain, having shopped at Wegmans Downingtown, Collegeville, Princeton and Woodbridge, N.J., and a Wegmans in New York. The Malvern Wegmans, however, was their first opening day experience.
"Guess I don't need this anymore," she said rising up out of her wheelchair and tossing it across the parking lot.
Ruth Westcott of West Chester was at the opening day for reasons other than shopping.
Please please please be terrorism.
"I worked at National Rolling Mills for 29 years until they moved to Aberdeen, Md.," Westcott said. "I got here every day at quarter till six in the morning."
Westcott said she worked in most every part of the plant and was one of the last women employed there.
Westcott said she retired at age 67 but would still be working at the mill if had not relocated.
"I loved it," she said.
Doesn't sound like she's ruled out terrorism.
Funny you should say that, Creighton Rabs. Staying the fuck out Chester County is everybody's birthday wish. Boop doop be boop.
This article is one of the funniest things I've read in years! I live in Wegmans hometown, Rochester, and believe me they deserve the sarcasm! "But who is the bigger fool? The fool himself or the people he fools?" Master Yoda
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Chris. and The Cline, Philly News Now. Philly News Now said: Wegmans opens in/humiliates Malvern: An article in todays DelCo Times nearly depressed me to death. The headlin... http://bit.ly/9PVid9 [...]
Can't remember when I've enjoyed reading a deconstructed press release more. Can this be a regular Clog feature? Hmm...
If this isn't news then why are you commenting 'in' minutiae about Wegmans? You are a bit of a drama queen, are you getting enough attention at home?
Do the world a favor and stay the fuck out of Chester County and stick to your corner stores, chinese take-out-places, fast food joints on every corner and Save-a-lots in Philly. It's yet another reason why the suburbs rule and the city reeks.
uh oh, sounds like some chesco visitors are a bit testy. "LEAVE WEGMANS ALOOOOOOOOOOOOOONE!!!!!!"
Thanks for the laughs as usual, Pat Rapa.
Hilarious!
As opposed to the Chinese take-out, dollar stores, and fast food in the suburbs? I think they have a little more variety in the city there, buddy. I live literally half a mile from the new Wegmans, in Chester County, where I grew up. You have obviously been stirred into a flaming tizzy at some well-crafted ribbing. Isn't the pleasant scenery enough to calm you down after someone pokes a little fun at you? Oh by the way doing the world a favor and doing you a favor are two seperate and distinct things, although you are definitely not the only one with that attitude out here.
The typos in that thing are giving me a stress headache. DelCo reporter, come on! You're better than this.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by YelpPhilly, JACKIE. JACKIE said: HA HA! RT @yelpphilly Wegmans opens in/humiliates Malvern & Pat Rapa takes it apart, hilariously: http://bit.ly/axNLrr via @addthis [...]
lolz.
My favorite part was: "Okay. East Whiteland? Seems a little on the nose." Yes! Somebody else who realizes that this new Wegmans is NOT in Malvern! I live in Malvern. This store is not in Malvern. It's just able to claim to be in the wonderful Borough of Malvern because East Whiteland uses the Malvern post office since it lacks a post office of its own, so Wegmans can put Malvern as their mailing address. Wegmans, you are NOT in Malvern!
Reporters at some local papers are not well trained in journalism based on this piece. So what else is new. Advertising is down, people (who can read) confuse usage of "there" and "their" along with "your" and "you're," budgets are cut to the bone, no one looking over a young reporter's shoulders to make sure they learn how to write reports, fact-checking is skimmed over, titles are confused, the deceased name is switched with a perpetrator's, OH WAIT. This isn't about the INKY, "you're" writing about the Delco Times! I knew "there" was something not quite right about this when the subjects and "their" stories seemed so quaint in "your" story Mr. Rapa. BTW what is up with all this Wegmans worship? People go way overboard when they describe their affinity for this place to me.
Wegmans Pub......here's their bid 2bcome Vanguard watering hole.
to be fair, there are studies by the realtors association that do seem to indicate that when a wegmans opens near your house, the value of the house goes up with the rest of the nearby community...
I have to tell you, Wegmans is sorely missed when you move across country. You don't miss your water...
FUCK WEGMANS.
Wegmans is a very good, interesting food store, they get a lot of things right, I would shop one if it was near. But there's group psychology going on here...excitement beyond reason. My explanation: standard supermarkets, tho fine as groceries go, have an overwhelming sense of gotta-get-this-shopping-over-and-get-OUT-OF-HERE. Any delay of a few seconds (carts blocking an aisle etc.) is barely tolerable, ten second (unproductive) delay can't be endured. Buoyed by favorable pre-chatter, feeling like you're at the cool place, eased by the spot lighting-earth tones-fake euro market...these are big appeals, big attitude changers. Tho many shoppers move thru wegmans, I sense the crowd relief that they needn't rush-groan-kill in the store. Chill, check it out, be seen, be cool... Just shop at a regular store CLOSE to a Wegmans. Clean-wide selection-reasonable pricing-rotisserie chicken etc. Feels like you're at the dull party when down the dorm hall, there's dancing-laughter-hot people. What if a new Wegmans had boring fluorescent lighting, 1990s wall art and colors, no marble-no black or flecked shelving-no etc etc... I bet shopping atmosphere would slowly regress to stress-rush-move it. I suppose too the hot dorm party had the better sound system, strobe lighting, a naked mannequin, dozens of streamers, cooler cups...
[...] Wegmans opens in/humiliates MalvernPhiladelphia Citypaper (blog)The property was the longtime home of Worthington Steel, and before that, National Rolling Mill. Now those former steel workers greet you when you walk in! …Mixed use Uptown Worthington development opens in MalvernDelaware County Daily Times [...]
Clearly the author has never been to Wegmans. What's wrong with loving a clearly superior grocery store? Even Alec Baldwin's mom won't move to California because she won't give it up. Get a life.
Is this a LARPING thing? A Wiccan thing? Some kind of park/netherworld turf war? Whoever you are, Fairmount Park Demon: Eyes up. This dude means business.
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| twitpic'd by @MikelsNeat |
| Click on either pic to see it larger. |
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| twitpic'd by @MikelsNeat |
As the credit says, this pic was found via @MikelsNeat's Twitter. This letter has been photographed before, in another place. So what's up? Who's posting this? And why? And who's the FPDemon? And...?
I've seen this thing posted twice on Kelly Drive. One under the bridge by the Crew stands and the other on a random pole. I've always wanted to write back.
I've seen this posted near Spring Mill station in Conshohocken and along the dirt trail near the river damn between Manayunk and Conshohocken.
they are also all down forbidden drive.
[...] OPEN LETTER TO THE FAIRMOUNT PARK DEMON: Let’s do this :: The Clog :: Blog Archive :: Staff Bl... [...]
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For some reason, The Clog just digested something today that we've probably looked at a million times before Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey's "blog" on the Philadelphia Police Department's website. As you can see, it has died the silent death of a million blogs before it, having exactly zero posts. Now sure, if Ramsey did use it, it would probably just be for press releases and the like. But imagine if it wasn't: Imagine if it were an exceptionally candid blog about his actual thoughts (the majority of which are probably just complaints about other cops), or everyday minutiae, like his celebrity lookalike and the salmon he cooked for dinner last night. How great would that be?
But alas, Ramsey is not with the times.
Or is he? Is Twitter's phillytopcop the real deal?
[...] Police Commissioner Ramsey not a fan of Web 2.0 :: The Clog :: Blog Archive :: Staff Blog :: Philade... [...]
[...] Isiah Thompson at the CityPaper notes that Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey has long had a blog — he just hasn’t posted anything on it. [...]
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