Also in the same vein the USA Today Best Beer City poll is back. Last time I saw STL was in 2nd place so vote to put us over the edge
https://www.10best.com/awards/travel/be ... uri/share/
https://www.10best.com/awards/travel/be ... uri/share/
Watched this last night. Felt like a gut punch. Knowing this is probably the biggest dose of information a lot of mildly informed citizens in this country will learn about STL in the midterm future made it even more of a gut punch.
I'll save you the 20 minutes and break it down for you in chronological segments:framer wrote: ↑Mar 16, 2021I thought about watching her on 60 Minutes, but I was too afraid of what I'd see.
By what metric? We have more police per square mile and per resident then pretty much every city.2020STL wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2021They didn't even mention that the police force is severely understaffed which is a huge factor in controlling crime
I was talking to my friend about this. She worked in the STL PD for 20 years. She said the number that is really needed in controlling crime is around 2000. I think it's important to remember that St. Louis is the exception when it comes to crime in cities. There were 262 Homicides in the city of St. Louis a population of around 300,000 yet in St. Louis county there were only 82 homicides with a population more than 3 times the size of the city.
Hear hear!symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2021^I'd say it seemed much more fair than I expected and Gardner came off as dedicated, honest, and compassionate. It is a terribly segregated city. We can't hide our heads in the sand and pretend it's all wine and roses. Police enforcement is, by all reasonable accounts, biased and uneven. I've personally heard again and again that your experience with law enforcement is very different if you're white than if you're black. I've personally heard police officers bash Gardner. I've personally heard police officers who were friends describe some of the ways training teaches officers to treat African Americans as an enemy to be distrusted. Jeff Roorda is a very big part of the problem.
I've also heard testimony that Gardner is smart and dedicated. From an attorney friend who worked very closely indeed with Chris Koester and knows her professionally. (He also had the opportunity to go head to head with Vice President Harris when she was the California AG.) Maybe Gardner's in over her head, but given the depth of the situation and the hostility of the department, the state legislature, and nearly everyone around her I think it's a miracle she's gotten as much done as she has.
She had my vote in the last cycle. She has it going forward. As far as I can tell she's tough and effective and the very fact that so many vile people are coming out swinging at her is a testimony to the fact that she's fighting the good fight. You might just be able to judge someone by the enemies that they've made. Well . . . she's made the right enemies.
It's a good interview. If it makes us uncomfortable . . . it bloody well should. You want to see a different headline? Help her do the job she set out to do. Reforming the police department is the right move. Ending cash bail, ending incarceration of non-violent offenders . . . these are good moves.
We don't need more police officers. We need better police officers. We need fairer police officers. We need more effective and trustworthy police officers. We absolutely do not need more of them. We have plenty.
We need more opportunities. We need more jobs. We need more teachers. We need more schools. We do not need more police officers.
The Muny, a St. Louis nonprofit that is the nation’s largest outdoor musical theater producer, is hoping to be able to seat a full-capacity audience of 10,000 for a slightly delayed season, starting July 5, with a full complement of seven musicals, albeit with slightly smaller than usual casts.
“Everyone is desperate to get back to work,” said Mike Isaacson, the theater’s artistic director and executive producer. “And our renewal numbers are insane, which says to me people want to be there.”
The St. Louis Shakespeare Festival, which performs in another venue in that city’s Forest Park, has much more modest expectations: It is developing a production of “King Lear,” starring the Tony-winning André De Shields of “Hadestown,” but expects to limit audiences to 750.
Well now we're getting somewhere!symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Apr 13, 2021Given that a bunch of tribes still play the game, maybe get a world series of Chunkey going again in front of Monks Mound once a year. With barbecue and beverages. I am completely down with getting the party going again.
WIth more modern shows, very few are "good" on their first episode. Pick a random episode from the middle of the run and then make a better judgment.framer wrote: ↑Apr 14, 2021I can't believe it lasted that long either. I watched the premier episode just for local curiosity's sake, but I thought it was awful, and never watched again.

