--A reviewer of a rave has a reasonable point: "There were definitely more girls wearing awesome revealing outfits than I have ever seen in Seattle, which brings me to the negatives: Why in the world were cameras not allowed?"
Results tagged “allthenews”
--Is there a street sign out there with your name on it?
--Galloping towards the new Narrows date.
-- Ironically, he was flying into town for a Goldfinger reenactment event.
-- Let's move more of our commute to the water, suggests West Seattle Blog.
-- Turns out it's crowded at the Pike Place Market. Plan your produce trips accordingly.
-- Seattle's home to a half restaurant? And you have to try it, along with 10 more?
-- Portland may be the home of half the names you hear on The Simpsons, but they still don't get a Kwik-E-Mart. What does that Nelson kid say all the time?
Photo: He is iamdonte. He takes pictures. And coins terms like AtlasGate.
-- What do Susan Paynter and The Stranger have in common?
-- "Let’s make for some kick-ass elementary and middle schools . . . and the high school issue should take care of itself."
-- One sin just got a little less taxed: 42-cents-per-liter liquor surcharge ends Sunday.
-- Jobster and the blogosphere aren't getting along these days.
-- Sonics fans, who last night were angry about the Ray Allen deal, are warming up to it after a good night's sleep.
-- "You're older than you've ever been and now you're even older." Happy birthday, Seattle Powerpop Blog!
-- "Arriving in Seattle has this magical quality that you don't find in many other cities."
-- "The texture of Seattle: Seattle feels, looks, tastes like the cinematic 1980s."
--Our Greg Nickels will ascend to the office of President of the U.S. Conference of Mayors in 2009.
-- Consumerist presents: Confessions of a Starbucks Barista. Commenters say: she sounds like a PR flack.
-- An Event Apart is in town.
-- Metro buses unwrapped, then partly rewrapped.
-- Up-to-the-minute updates on Seattle Web 2.0 popularity. Quick, someone give them venture capital.
-- Dig your trench coat out of your closet -- the Noir City film festival is coming to Seattle.
-- The Kingdome was no Busch Memorial Stadium.
-- Next up for Connected Ventures? A shot-for-shot remake of the Disturbing Behavior trailer.
-- Listen to
-- Seahawks super-blogger Mike Sando, plucked from the Tacoma News-Tribune by ESPN.com, says his au revoires.
-- So is Josh Rouse actually the "perfect fit" for a Seattle soundtrack?
-- Just call us the Bureaucracy Kid, fastest passport processors in the country.
-- 5000 cars: Microsoft breaks ground on the western hemisphere's second-largest parking garage.
-- Fracas, kerfuffle, or much ado? The great Starbucks Juicy Raspberry saga moves to Starbucks Gossip, garnering 169 comments (so far).
-- "Less glare"? Better than Metronatural.
--If Shawn Kemp pitched a reality show, SupersonicSoul thinks it would go a little something like this.
--David Postman of the Seattle Times saw Sicko over the weekend and talked with Michael Moore about it.
--Someone wrote a 1700-word complaint letter to Starbucks because their partner couldn't get his Raspberry Soy Mocha. The world has officially jumped the shark.
-- "This building is a Macintosh. Most buildings in downtown Seattle are PCs."
-- Mike Webb: still missing.
-- Starbucks: Jones Soda is out, Izze is in.
-- Hotel 1000 violates Scalzi's Law of Hotel Internet Connections -- but that's a good thing.
-- "If I ever get a hearty recommendation from the Stranger that says my movie is crap save for the art direction, please punch me."
-- Speaking of, their "Month of Sundays" inspired Malcolm Smith's gorgeous set of Seattle church photos. Also, disappointment.
-- Calling all gurgitators: Top Pot Doughnuts meet competitive eating.
-- Why isn't the Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce losing classified ad revenue?
-- Don't drive naked. Or embracing. Or drunk.
-- Another day, another luxury condo project breaks ground.
-- Seattle's gotten so expensive people are fleeing to Indianapolis.
-- Seattle ites buy more sunglasses per capita than any other city in the US? OK. A Seattle radio station was the first in the US to play a Beatles song? We're skeptical.
Image: Popcorn Neon by taminsea.
--A former Redmond church leader is being charged with child rape.
--PETA says Hansa's death proves zoos aren't the right place for elephants.
-- Someone who managed to score a ticket to the Beastie Boys show recaps the concert.
-- The eyes of the basketball world are focused on the Northwest.
-- How a menu item is bjorn. Er, born.
-- Colbert was right: America's #1 threat touches down on I-90 in North Bend.
-- Do you think kink? Probably.
Northwest Folklife Festival by pdgibson, from the Seattlest Flickr pool.
-- "Best Media-Affiliated Sports Blog" two years running? Congrats, Seahawks Insider.
-- 100 years after Seattle took the city over, Wallingford transplant Archie McPhee urges you to free Ballard.
-- This was no boat accident.
-- Can Rainier Avenue drivers be scared straight -- by billboards?
-- JetBlue, Expedia. Expedia, JetBlue.
-- Ken Jennings discovers the saddest sentence on Wikipedia.
--In Wallingford we all fight to be the last on the bus "You go first" "No, you go first" style. Don't know about the rest of you.
--This is just a really nice story about two Seattle women becoming friends in the 1930s.
--Hegelian dialectics are no problem for the Stranger's Charles Mudede, but Doobie Brothers lyrics are Greek to him.
-- We're not that rainy? Next you'll be telling us Chicago isn't exceptionally windy!
-- ...but will you be able to fold it into an electric paper hat?
-- Which SIFF film panels will be worth your time?
-- Rick Neuheisel: Great recruiter, right? Actually, not so much.
-- Former KIRO talker Mike Webb is AWOL.
-- "If you got a whole bunch of girls in sweaters, that's not necessarily going to work for Greek row."
-- NYC asks: What's a WaMu?
-- Lycopene, schmycopene, says Fred Hutch.
-- Sometimes parenting brings out your best. And sometimes...
-- Neko Case will be on the tee-vee tonight, with M. Ward.
-- Mike Sando's early look at the Hawks roster suggests Kelly Herndon could soon be out of a job.
-- Starbucks' favorite Beatle? Paul. NVL me, dead man!
-- In 1914 postcard stamps cost $0.01, but Seattle was still a beautiful place lots doing.
-- Rock, scissors, paper, cake, blue whale, Jupiter.
Image is one of the many hilarious choices available at Some Ecards.
--Online airfare soothsayer Farecast sheds that pesky "beta" label.
--A locked VW does not make a good babysitter.
News from a day where we spent hours looking for a two-cent stamp.
Notes from a day when even Iranians are probably paying more attention to Blake Lewis than to Dick Cheney.
--PETA would say all whale watchers are terrorists.

Isabella Rossellini Brings Green Porno to Benaroya