The New York Times
is talking about how hipsters are taking over San Francisco, and how the art
scene here is dead. I just smile and nod, since people have been saying a
version of this for decades.
San Francisco was born in revolution and chaos: taken from
the Ohlone by the Spanish, liberated into Mexico, planned and built by a
Spanish-English coalition, ceded by Mexico to the United States. It’s been
shaken by earthquakes, and economic and political upheaval, every twenty or so years.
I don’t think a silver bullet and wooden stake could kill
this town of “the cops, the crooks, and the big rich.”
Paddling on Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park |
Yes, it’s expensive to live here. It felt expensive when I
first moved here in 1979, and lived in a roach-infested one bedroom flat on
Post between Polk and Larkin for $400 a month. We lasted just a few months
before we fled for a cheaper city.
And yes, an awful lot of tech employees have moved into the
Mission and there’s been a kerfuffle of protest. Meanwhile, 4,000 additional
people moved into my neighborhood just last year. We didn’t make the news,
because OMI isn’t hip, hell, it’s just newly reclaimed from serious drug
violence. Its petite charms are yet to be discovered by the press and the
hipsters.
The view from my office in OMI |
Quiet, child-rearing techsters are moving into the OMI as
those originally forced to move here in the 1960s are selling
off their inherited properties before the next housing bust. It’s a quiet, orderly
changing of the guard, and I hope it happens just as slowly as it possibly can.
My neighbors on either side are sweet, wise women who help keep their kids’ lives together in
the face of still-rampant racism and underemployment. Nobody hates us over here in OMI, not yet
anyway. It’s not a badge of honor to be one step above drug-trade violence, but
I’ll take what I can get.
You can see where the hipster stereotype is coming from. At a recent visit to a Mission coffee shop, I saw a lot of
people in porkpie hats, completely absorbed in their
digital devices, ignoring the world around them. So I think the hipsters, who
are spending upwards of 70% of their income on rent, have a little more work to do
if they want to belong instead of be reviled. I know it’s possible, because I
see it in my OMI neighborhood every day.
San Francisco, the first beautiful thing I found after my
mother’s death, has artists and writers who live and work here without angels,
municipal, corporate, or private--it's not any more artistically dead here than when the Summer of Love morphed into the Winter of Dirty Sidewalks. Whether it's Noir City,
LitQuake, Outside Lands, or smaller salons and gatherings, we’re here, and
we’re creating every day—directly, or indirectly by supporting city-wise
initiatives like San Francisco Beautiful or 826 Valencia. Perhaps we could be
less iconoclastic, and instead grow better skills of cooperation with each
other but we’re not dead. Far from it, my friends. And, like the rollickingly open port city we've always been, we welcome you, whether or not you live within our 47 square miles.
Here’s a list of just some of the local writers’ activities you might can check
out:
What’s your favorite SF arts organization?