Rock The Bells 2010: Worth the Wilt

Lauryn Hill at Rock The Bells on Sunday

I’m on a bit of a D.C.-high after learning about new Zoo babies, so I can’t resist crowing about another recent surprise which put the “Delightful City” in D.C.

On Sunday, I was at the final concert date for the 2010 Rock The Bells tour, held at Merriweather Post Pavilion. Rock The Bells is an annual hip-hop festival which always promotes “surprise performances” at their engagements and this year, they delivered, pleasing a crowd filled with 13-year olds– and their parents.  This year’s show was notable because each of the headlining acts performed one of their most popular albums in its entirety (interesting aside: three of those albums from A Tribe Called Quest, Wu-Tang and Snoop were all released in November 1993).

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National Zoo Welcomes Four Lion Cubs!

Smithsonian

The National Zoo's Shera, after giving birth.

Huzzah! There are new baby animals at the National Zoo. Last night, four lion cubs were born to first-time mother Shera. They arrived between 10:30 pm and 2:30 am.

This is especially wonderful for the Zoo and its fans because of the tragic loss of the last lion cub which was born there in May– who shared a father, Luke, with the current babies. Born to Shera’s sister, Nababiep, the single cub died after just 48 hours when a straw awn from its bedding became lodged in his lung. The Zoo has instituted changes, since then:

“Since the unfortunate death of Naba’s cub, we’ve investigated various alternative bedding options,” said Rebecca Stites, a lion and tiger keeper. “The use of bedding is imperative as it protects the cubs from trauma during the first fragile weeks of their lives. We’ve provided Shera and her cubs with shavings and soft hay with as few awns as possible.”

Good to know. The Zoo says the cubs will be visible to the public by late Fall. For those of us still suffering from Tai-Shan withdrawal, this news is delightful.

Air Quality? Today, Code Red.

The Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments said that today will be a Code Red day (a warning to limit strenuous outdoor activity) for air quality in the region.

Screen shot from Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments

As someone with terrible allergies (which induce asthma), my ears generally perk up when I hear the words “Code Red”, but after visiting the MWCOG website, I discovered something that surprised me– “Red” isn’t the worst color! PURPLE is. Red is “Unhealthy” and Purple is “Very Unhealthy”. Things could always be worse, apparently. Achoo!

Mendelson Trails Brown in At-Large Race; More Mistaken Identity

Last week, we mentioned that DC voters might be confusing Michael D. Brown, a last minute candidate for the At-Large Council seat who is running against Phil Mendelson, with Michael A. Brown, a Council member who is not on the ballot this year. Michael D. Brown is white, Michael A. Brown is black. A new poll of Democratic voters from the Washington Post finds that Michael D. Brown is now leading Mendelson by 17%. Brown has a 12% lead among likely voters and is popular with African Americans. Via the Washington Post:

The numbers also show Michael D. Brown, who lives in Ward 3′s American University Park in Northwest, registering his strongest support from residents who live east of the Anacostia in Wards 7 and 8. More than half (51 percent) of polled voters there say they favor Brown; 11 percent say they back Mendelson. More broadly, support for Michael D. across the city tracks almost exactly with Michael A.’s showing in the 2008 election results.

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Tasty Morning Bytes- Ranking Teachers, Rejecting Fenty, Real Housewives of DC

Good Morning, DC! While you were hitting the snooze button, we were compiling delicious links for you to enjoy with your hopefully hearty breakfast.

Real Housewives of DC: Cat Ommanney’s ex is classy, embarrassed about show. “I have very few regrets in my life, but this is the one.” Once, he points out, if you Googled “Ommanney,” you would have discovered three centuries of naval admirals going back to his great-great-great-grandfather. Now you find rumors about the marriage breakup and snarky tattling on the show.” (The New York Times)

Is Michelle Rhee becoming a force in D.C. real estate? “…homeowners who never used to dream of sending their kids to local schools are giving them a second chance. Meanwhile, parents who can’t afford to buy in the ritzier districts are wondering when—and whether—Rhee’s reforms will pay off for schools where gentrification only recently arrived.” (Washington City Paper)

About Glenn Beck’s rally to “Restore Honor”: Theocrats > Libertarians? “…Tea Partiers and related right-wing activists have often been split, just below the surface, between competing factions — largely secular libertarians who focus on fiscal issues and the scope of government vs. religious-right-style theocrats who are still inclined to fight a culture war. Saturday’s gathering seemed to suggest the latter contingent might have the edge.” (Washington Monthly)

In case you missed it: “Poll shows D.C. Mayor Fenty getting more credit than support in primary race against Gray” A great read from WaPo this weekend– “Catherine Magruder, 59, a poll respondent from Anacostia, in Ward 8, summed up her choice: “There is a lot of things [Fenty] did do good, but I prefer, what’s his name? Gray.”" (The Washington Post)

The L.A. Times ranked LA teachers. What if WaPo did it, too? “Teacher’s unions have now found an enemy even more loathsome than Michelle Rhee: the Los Angeles Times. On Sunday, the LAT published a database that included information on 6,000 Los Angeles teachers, who were ranked according to “their effectiveness in raising student test scores.” Local and national unions blasted the paper.” (slatest.slate.com)

As U.S. troops leave Iraq, an officer honors the memory of a young interpreter “Roy’s head came up to my chest, and baby fat rounded out his face. He had cheeks so smooth that I could tell he had never shaved. I thought about asking him his age, but I didn’t want to offend him during our first meeting. So I asked him why he had become an interpreter. I’ll never forget his answer.” “One day the Qaeda came to my school. They say, ‘You are not students anymore! Put away your books! Now we show you the path of jihad!’ My two best friends say to them, ‘We are students trying to learn. We don’t want to do the jihad.’ ” “And then?” Roy gave me a wan smile. “Then, they gather the school in one place, they kneel them down, and they cut their heads with the knife.” (The Washington Post)

Dino owners looking for a second location in DC “Gold says he sees a lot to admire about what’s going on in Columbia Heights, which he describes as a “very vibrant, discerning neighborhood” and notes would be “geographically very convenient to Dino.”" (tbd.com)

Voters: Fenty “ain’t mad atcha”!

Though it’s a few days old, my Twitter is abuzz (again) with references to this video produced by Ron Moten for his pal, the Mayor: “Don’t leave us, Fenty”. If you can’t (or don’t want to) watch it, I’ll summarize it by saying that Moten borrowed BLACKstreet’s hit from 1996, “Don’t Leave Me” to create his jam. I can’t be the only one who thought of Tupac’s “I Ain’t Mad Atcha” when I heard the familiar melody, not when both BLACKstreet and ‘Pac sample the same song (“A Dream“) from DeBarge.

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Union Station’s Great Hall Could be Greater

Center Cafe

Kevin H.

Update the wooden Center Cafe? Why not?

I’ve been thinking about the majestic Great Hall at Union Station lately, especially after reading this City Paper piece about proposed changes to it. The change which is generating the most comment involves modernizing the Center Cafe (pictured at right) and opening access to the basement-level food court below it; a glass structure connecting all three levels via swirly staircases and elevators would facilitate this. The City Paper says the concept is “reminiscent of New York City’s 5th Avenue Apple Store”, but I don’t get that from looking at this rendering. Do you?

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Vote Early, not Often

Ballot Box

NewsHour

Early Voting started today!

Lining up forty minutes early to cast your choice? Looks like DC is excited about early voting. Via WaPo:

D.C. election officials reported that at 7:50 a.m., about 25 people were already lined up Monday morning to cast their ballots in D.C. — the first time residents have been allowed to vote early in primary elections. Voting was slated to begin at 8:30 a.m…

Today through Friday, voters can cast their ballots at one site — One Judiciary Square, 441 4th Street, N.W. Beginning Saturday, Sept. 4, four additional early voting locations will open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. They are:

  • Chevy Chase Community Center, 5601 Connecticut Avenue, NW
  • Hine Junior High School, 335 8th Street, SE
  • Southeast Tennis and Learning Center, 701 Mississippi Avenue, SE
  • Turkey Thicket Recreation Center, 1100 Michigan Avenue, NE
  • That sounds simple enough. Not so simple? Remembering that you can vote on Labor Day but NOT on the set of Sundays which fall on September 5 or 12.

    Tasty Morning Bytes- Electric Rides, Pretty Patios, Gage-Eckington Park gets…that…dirt off its shoulders

    Good Morning, DC! How many of you are half-deaf from being up front at Rock The Bells last night? Just us? Okay, then! On to the news:

    Fenty supporter interrupts Gray rally with megaphone on Twitpic The title is almost more arresting than the picture, but yeah. Interrupted! (twitpic.com)

    Metrocurean’s Five Favorite Hidden Patios in DC “These urban oases are some of the city’s best tucked away patios, shielding guests from the hustle, bustle and bus exhaust of city sidewalks.” Poste, The Gibson and Georgetown newcomer Puro, too. (metrocurean.com)

    Graham: Gage-Eckington Park will go forward “The LeDroit Park community has been fuming ever since Barry placed his hold on the park at the end of July. Graham himself took to the listservs to chastise his colleague. “This is an outrage, and a totally needless delay in a very worthwhile project,”" (tbd.com)

    Electric carmaker Tesla to open D.C. store “City officials hope Tesla’s arrival on K Street will also enliven downtown retail. D.C. Deputy Mayor Valerie Santos said in an e-mail that the company has “a very Park Avenue, high-end feel” and that its entrance shows that D.C. “bucks the trend on the decline of retail options in other metropolitan cities.”" (The Washington Post)

    Update on Incident Involving a Falling Death from the Building Above Petworth Metro “First and foremost the Washington Post/AP story claiming that MPD was investigating a stabbing of Mr. Eric Wright is completely inaccurate” (Prince Of Pentworth )

    And this one, just because it’s Monday– John Mayer Calls Out HuffPo, Labels them “Dangerous” “The reason I’m calling you out instead of all the other magazines that make stories up out of thin air is that In Touch and Star Magazine aren’t concurrently writing pieces about Pat Tillman or WikiLeaks…” DCentric Warning to those gentler souls: there be four-letter words and potentially offensive language here. (jhnmyr.tumblr.com)