“I was sittin’ in Miami pouring blended whiskey down,
While an old gray black gentleman was cleaning up the lounge.
There wasn’t anyone around except for this old man and me,
The guy who ran the bar was watching Ironside on TV.”
True. But now that I think about it I had never heard of Coit Tower, nor do I remember having seen a picture of it, before I actually went to San Francisco and saw it.
One time I walked the entire length of Lombard Street to it, then went up to the top.
Yeah…where can I get some of that famous chili in SoCal? I thought I saw someplace that it was sold in cans in a grocery store, but I don’t know if it would even compare with the “real thing.”
…sorry, that’s about all I know about Cincinnati. Other than that’s where WKRP was set.
^^^Their website has an online store. You can order it in cans, or order the fixins’ and do it yourself.
And you’re right, nothing sold in cans compares to the real deal.
And you’ve never heard of the Reds?!! I’m referring to the Reds of (c.) 1970-76 and 1990, not the sad excuse for a team that we field today, though a couple of the kids would do well under new leadership.
It’s marked “citation needed,” and he rest of that paragraph doesn’t do anything to back up that claim. The fire nozzle theory is perfectly acceptable to me, given Lillie Coit’s love for the City’s firemen.
Thanks. I had to look this up and found Diego did 3 murals in SF:
The great Mexican muralist, Diego Rivera, painted his first commissioned mural outside of Mexico in San Francisco starting in 1930. “Allegory of California” was completed in 1931 and is located in The City Club of San Francisco, 155 Sansome Street, 10th Floor.
Shortly after completing “Allegory of California,” Rivera began work on “The Making of a Fresco Showing the Building of A City.” This mural is located in the Diego Rivera Gallery of the San Francisco Art Institute, 800 Chestnut Street (between Leavenworth and Jones). The most accessible of the three Rivera murals in San Francisco;
Perhaps the most impressive of the three murals painted by Rivera is “Pan American Unity.” This mural is “about the unity of the North and the South on this continent,” according to Rivera. Originally painted in 1940 at the Golden Gate International Exposition, the mural is now housed in the Diego Rivera Theatre at San Francisco City College.