Archive for June, 2006

Killer plays hide and seek

A lady in Bellevue woke up extra early this morning to watch some World Cup and found an alleged murderer hiding in her guest room [kiro]. I prefer to go searching for killers after breakfast, but some people are overachievers. She noticed her dog acting funny in front of the closed door of a spare room, and “When [she] opened the door and looked inside, she saw that the bed looked as if someone had been sleeping in it. She then saw the shoulder of the person who had been sleeping there, hiding behind a closet door.”

She thinks he crawled on the roof and through the window last night. Understandably, the thought of the guy in her house all that time kind of freaks her out. After she found him she ran outside and flagged down a police car, who summoned a SWAT team, who stormed the house. I don’t know what the bad guy was doing all of this time, because he certainly wasn’t sneaking back out the same window he came in. He was probably hiding behind the closet door with his eyes closed, muttering to himself about how he would have gotten away with it if it weren’t for that meddling old lady and her pesky dog.

Rest In “Indefinite Hiatus,” Sleater-Kinney


Sleater Kinney Road

Originally uploaded by ukslim.

As reported on other blogs, riot grrl megaband Sleater-Kinney is going on “indefinite hiatus.”

Sad day for Northwest music. Sleater-Kinney was a punk band for empowered post-feminist biseuxal women and the quiet boys that so wanted to love them. I’m sure Greg Nickels will order flags to half-staff, and Olympia and Lacey will close a certain road out of respect.

tuesday agenda: drink, love

It’s like a million degrees out in the shade and World Cup fever is wreaking utter havoc with your workday (Ronaldo! Zidane! already I need a nap), yet you still insist on having something to do on a Tuesday night?

  • Yesterday it was drinking for children, tonight why not down a couple of pints with the liberals? The local Drinking Liberally chapter offers a way for Seattle lefties to find each other in the vast sea of, er, other liberals in this pretty excessively blue-leaning town. Each week, politics watchers (and occasionally, politicians) convene at the Montlake Ale House (2307 24th Ave. E.) for spirited chatter, bloggery, and strategizing on how to turn this sinking ship around. [pikeplacepolitics]
  • Don’t like drinking democrats? Jami Attenberg reads at Third Place Books tonight at 7:00 [mb]

Other suggestions? Drop them in your upcoming or send a note to seattle.metblogs (at) gmail.com.

farecast : less private, still beta

Farecast Sample

Still planning your summer getaway? After months of an invite-only test phase, FareCast, a work-in-progress web service that predicts the best date to buy a plane ticket, has opened its search space to the public today. Because the site is still in beta, searches for roundtrip travel must originate in either Boston or Seattle; making it useful for locals trying to get out of town to most major U.S. destinations.

The site works by charting the lowest prices for a given itinerary over the last seventy-five days and using that data to advise users on the optimal date to buy. The algorithm provides an estimate of confidence and search results highlight lowest prices as well as additional advantages to be earned for online purchases.

If you’ve been salivating over the chance to check it out, love charts and graphs, or just need to escape our latest heat wave, this is a good day to take a look.

barfly: havana

175828443 12601701A8 M Havana, a new bar on the Pike-Pine corridor opened late last week. Some friends and I dropped in on Friday, where we found the bar remarkably and pleasantly uncrowded. That is, after we found the correct door [flickr]. I suspect that the relative quietness — most of the other patrons were there for a going away party, while the owner padded around in soccer slides checking out all of the angles — could be attributed to the fact that many other neighborhood bars were abuzz with those reveling in the weekend’s celebration of a certain deadly sin. Once people figure out that Havana (1) exists, (2) is open, and (3) learn where the entrance is located, I’m guessing that it will be something of a hit.

First, the space itself is pretty neat. You get in through an awning-covered parking lot entrance, pass through a small foyer to find a modest open dance floor. Large comfortable booths line the windows looking out on the underdeveloped stretch of 10th Avenue. The other sides are home to another seating alcove, a towering well-stocked faux-vintage bar, an and a ledge with barstools. From a half floor up [flickr], a D.J. worked his way through a PowerBook playlist. Below, occasional flurries of dancing broke out. Above, a small, well-placed seating area provided view of all the action going on below.

When she wrote about the bar earlier this month [slog], Hannah Levin noted that it was being built by Quentin Ertel, who’d previously managed Viceroy and Linda’s. Like those places, Havana succeeds in providing a transformative environment without succumbing to EPCOT syndrome (see the nice, but too-cute Cafe Metropolitain). Just as Viceroy instantly drops you out of Belltown and into an Ice Stormish rec room, Havana provides a dramatic change of scene from its lovably coarser Pike Street neighbors. High celings, hardwood floors, live plants, subtly classic decorations, nice paint, and that small dance floor set a mood suitable for drinking, chatting, and (if you’ve been imbibing and are not me) dancing.

As of Friday night, they were still working out the particulars of their drink menu, with only wine lists available. Still, the service was both friendly and helpful and our uncomplicated drink orders were quickly filled. I’ve also heard reports that the women’s bathroom has an amazing collection of mirrors; the men’s restroom was suitably unremarkable. As nice as it was to easily find a place to sit, I have high hopes for the bar’s success. It’s a great addition to the neighborhood.

edit: the bar has a website [havanasocial.com/]; it is located at 1010 Pike Street.

Good Neighbors, 1st in a series

The post about the gift to the Gates Foundation made by our own Samantha got me thinking about the idea of charitable giving and profitable businesses.

Maybe it has something to do with how much of my adult life has been spent living from paycheck to paycheck, but it’s important to me to know just who is to whom I’m giving my money when I purchase a product or a service. Whenever I can, I choose to do businesses with companies who demonstrate their good values by treating their staff well, by treating their customers & clients well, and by supporting their communities through charitable giving.

Hence this post, the first in what will be an irregular series on local businesses that I think show strong character by supporting our local communities in various ways. If you know of a local business that you think deserves recognition in this series, please use the suggest a story form to mention them.

And now, without further ado, the first “good neighbor” that I’d like to recognize is the Boeing Employees Credit Union, a/k/a BECU.

I first became aware of their commitment to community some years ago when one of my friends, a long-time BECU employee, invited me to join the BECU team at a charitable fundraising event. Over the years, I’ve been aware of a number of events in which they’ve been involved: BECU supports a number of programs, from providing financial education to local youth, financial support and education to local schools, low- or no-cost financial services to a number of local non-profit groups aimed at providing affordable housing, education and small business development, to supporting the Children’s Miracle Network though their “Credit Unions for Kids” program.

BECU employees are actively encourage to take part in volunteer activities to enrich the community. BECU supports employees who make cash donations by matching them dollar-for-dollar, up to $500 annually per employee. Additionally, BECU has a program called “Dollars for Doers” which provides $125 for a non-profit organization when a BECU employee volunteers at least 20 hours a year with that organization. Most importantly, BECU fosters an environment in which giving is seen as second nature, not a special occasion deal. By making supporting the community that supports them part of their routine course of business, BECU has proven to me that they are indeed an asset to our hometown.

One sunny afternoon: ArboretumWatch

I went canoeing this weekend, and hit the magic photographical trifecta — birds, turtles and waterlilies.
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ZooTunes: The good news and the bad news

Periodically I like to go to the Zoo website and look at the Zootunes page and congratulate myself on my good fortune, luck, and planning skills in getting tickets to some of the sold-out concerts.
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places in pieces, vol. 2

Tonight Gallery 1412 will be showing “places in pieces vol. 2″, a series of documentaries focusing on the mundane and peculiar. The intent of the films is to encourage the audience to “…revisit initial perspectives of the urban aesthetic.” The documentary is silent and will be accompanied by a live musical score as well as manipulated field recordings.

And if this sort of thing makes you hungry, fret not! Vegan treats will be provided after the screening.

places in pieces vol. 2
Gallery 1412
18th Ave and Union St.
Mon, 06.26.06
9:15 pm (running time 61 minutes)

new dog in the house : meet trooper

Trooper4 Clip
(slideshow [ap/king5])

Ladies and gentlemen, it is now officially o.k. to change out of your mourning garb. Since February, when beloved gubernatorial Pomeranian Franz was killed by a car [mb], Washingtonians have been without a First Dog. Today, our long petless nightmare has ended.

At a press conference, Christine Gregoire introduced us all to the newest resident of the Governor’s Mansion. Trooper, an eight-week-old Japanese Shiba, made her debut this morning and set off cuteness overload meters across the Evergreen State. KING presents a puppyrific slideshow and archived video to better acquaint citizens with the fluffy new First Pet [#].

edit: how weird is it that the P-I’s link to the story about Franz’s death now points directly to their new story about Trooper’s arrival? No respect for dead dogs.

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