The Daily Feed

Virgin Mobile Fest Lineup Announced

virginfest.jpg

Set your calendars, people. July 24th, 10am, tickets become available for this year’s Virgin Mobile Free Fest on September 25th at Merriweather Post Pavilion. The very impressive bill, which you will be able to see for a grand total of $0, is Jimmy Eat World (whose new album is dropping around then), The Temper Trap, DC-based Electronic act Thievery Corporation, rapper Ludacris, indie darlings Pavement, Yeasayer, LCD Soundsystem and Matt & Kim, plus Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros, Joan Jett, and T.I.

These tickets always sell out. Be ready to exercise your clicking finger early on Saturday morning to get these tickets.

The Daily Feed

DC Among Top Cities For Young Professionals

Photo courtesy of
‘P1000012 [b&w]’
courtesy of ‘digital_don’

Forbes has named our fair city among the country’s top spots for young professionals, second only to Houston, Texas. Rankings were based on affordability, income levels, and the current job market. As our second place finish shows, general awesomeness was not taken into account.

Our 5.9% unemployment rate was the lowest of any city on the list, and our sweet starting salaries offset our higher cost of living. Thanks to the government, we also have a steady stream of job opportunities. Finally, lots of smarties from the nation’s top schools choose to settle here, apparently indicating a high degree of talent and ambition. Either that, or a lemming-like tendency of popped collars to follow their brethren. Forbes did not investigate this possibility.

The Daily Feed

Wait. It’s Still a Felony in Virginia?!

Photo courtesy of
‘Felony Franks (#1)’
courtesy of ‘JOE MARINARO’

I had no idea that this law was still on the books: “If any person carnally knows in any manner any brute animal, or carnally knows any male or female person by the anus or by or with the mouth, or voluntarily submits to such carnal knowledge, he or she shall be guilty of a Class 6 felony, except as provided in subsection B.” Really, you don’t want to read subsection B if you want to keep your breakfast down, but suffice it to say it involves keeping it in the family, if you get my drift. Anyhow, this is still law in Virginia. A Class 6 felony gets you “a term of imprisonment of not less than one year nor more than five years, or in the discretion of the jury or the court trying the case without a jury, confinement in jail for not more than 12 months and a fine of not more than $2,500, either or both.”

Are you as horrified as I am? I had no idea I was such a criminal. I had thought these laws were gone with Lawrence v. Texas a few years back, but there’s a story in today’s post about a Baptist Youth Pastor who was sexually involved with one of his charges, and he’s being held on $3,000 bond, and charged with sodomy.

So, I guess you can what the point of the story is, if you suffer from any law which makes no sense to you, hire the Garde Wilson criminal defence lawyers to lend you a hand at court.

Featured Photo

Featured Photo

Photo courtesy of
‘Looking Into the Past: Newsie, Willard Hotel, Washington, DC’
courtesy of ‘jasonepowell’

Sometimes, when you hit upon an idea, it just hits all the right buttons.

This photo is one of several that Jason Powell has put together. He takes old pictures, often from the Library of Congress, prints them out and then photographs them lined up with the modern-day location. It’s simple and it’s genius.

For this shot, the famous Willard Hotel serves as the backdrop to what the original picture describes as a “pugnacious little chap” who was selling the paper at the ripe old age of nine. Click through for more details, and make sure to check out the entire set.

The Daily Feed, WMATA, WTF?!

Metro releases not-terribly-useful online SmarTrip management

Photo courtesy of

courtesy of ‘Chris Rief aka Spodie Odie’

Today, at long last, you can view your SmarTrip usage history online at wmata.com.

That is, assuming your card is recent enough to have a 9-digit serial number. (Pad the beginning of the number with zeros if not.)

And assuming you remember both the zip code and phone number you used when you ordered it 8 years ago.  If you didn’t buy it from a machine. (How old IS that SmarTrip card, anyway?)

But if you can manage all those things… my friend, you are now able to view, online, all the places you’ve taken Metro to! In case you weren’t paying attention when you took Metro there!

So of course now that you see your card balance, you’ll want to add value. Except that you can’t, because that feature, the extremely advanced and complicated one one where you give them a credit card number to make a purchase, hasn’t been added yet. Let’s try that again:

So, now that you see how low your balance is, you can leave the office a little bit early to accommodate the amount of time you will STILL be spending in line at the one functioning SmarTrip machine at your Metro station of choice, because one isn’t working and the other is occupied by some tourist ignoring all the farecard machines and using the SmarTrip machine to buy precise-value paper farecards for the whole family using the bag of change he was keeping in the minivan. A nickel, a quarter, another nickel, wait, he dropped a dime… Aren’t you glad you left early?

Thanks for the useful information, Metro!

Edited to add: For maximum hilarity, watch your neighbors try and fail to use the new SmarTrip registration via the magic of Twitter Search.

The Daily Feed

New Ways to Pay for Parking Debut

Photo courtesy of

courtesy of ‘LaTur’

It’s pilot season!  No, that doesn’t mean that we’ll all be drowning in piles of scripts for television programs thrown over our transoms, rather it means that there are four different parking meter programs going on right now in multiple neighborhoods. There’s a new pay-by-phone option available in Dupont, Foggy Bottom and Navy Yard, which allows you to call in with a space number and pay via your cellphone and a credit card. There are new multispace meters on U Street, in Friendship Heights, and on the south side of the Mall. Confused yet? Yeah, me too. But if you see new meters, pay close attention and don’t just not pay. Several of these new zones have “enhanced enforcement,” which I picture is done with RPGs. Be wary.

Entertainment, Music, We Love Music

We Love Music: The Dead Weather @ 9:30 Club 7/13/10

The Dead Weather @ 9:30 Club 7/13/10
Andrew Markowitz photography.

Last Tuesday, The Dead Weather hit the 9:30 Club stage like a sonic hurricane. It is almost a week later and I am still completely, utterly, hopelessly gobsmacked by their incredible concert. I have been trying to process their over-the-top, in-your-face stage presence and pitch-perfect, rock-n-roll transcendence for days now; my entire music-loving spirit is still humming from witnessing this resonant performance. It was a performance that tapped into that deep-down love of rock-n-roll; that passion that dwells in the chest of every red-blooded music fan whose pulse beats to the rhythm. The Dead Weather put on a show that was a colossal celebration of the leather-clad, hair-in-eyes rock image and jaw-drop inducing, instrument-torture creativity. Their whole live presentation combined music and image so perfectly that it is impossible to imagine one without the other. Together these elements combined on-stage to create a brilliant set of music that I will remember for a very long time.

Continue reading

The Daily Feed

Check Out Your Dinner Spot

Photo courtesy of
‘health code violation’
courtesy of ‘Terwilliger911’

What’s the grotiest place you’ve ever had a meal in DC? I asked on Twitter this afternoon and heard “Full Kee” over and over, I figured I’d use the Chinese place on H Street as a test of the new Health Regulation & Licensing Agency Search Engine. It was better than I expected. They had five violations in their latest inspection, but three were corrected on site, and the other two, well, it’s a Chinese restaurant in Chinatown, containers are going to be labeled in Mandarin and Cantonese. But check out your favorite groty place in DC and tell us the results in the comments!

The Daily Feed

Top Secret America: Washington Post’s Intelligence Investigation Goes Live

Photo courtesy of
‘Census #4’
courtesy of ‘Chris Rief aka Spodie Odie’

Late last week, we had heard that the Washington Post would be planning a series on the intelligence contracting industry. As expected, the first articles of the feature launched this morning on WashingtonPost.com, and the biggest component is an interactive feature detailing just how broad a base of companies have a hand in the national security of the United States. The tool highlights some of the best results from its investigation into “Top Secret America” as it discussed the world behind the thousands of organizations involved in the field.

Spend some time with the feature if it interests you, but for a Cliff Notes version, Yahoo!’s new political and news blog, Upshot, has highlighted what it feels are the five biggest revelations (and be sure to click through so you can see Upshot’s justifications for the points):

  1. The U.S. intelligence system has exploded in size since the Sept. 11 attacks.
  2. Only a few officials in the Department of Defense have access to all of the top-secret activities and information.
  3. Agencies are collecting so much data that they don’t have enough translators or researchers to analyze it.
  4. Turf wars among agencies can prevent the sharing of information.
  5. This confusion has had real consequences.

Beyond these revelations, there are many reasons to take a look at everything compiled by the Washington Post team, which included more than a dozen different journalists. The innovative presentation of the data, taking full advantage of the interactive nature of the Web and allowing readers to search through it all, is very encouraging to see at a time that many print organizations are running the other direction from their consumers by putting up paywalls. If this is the future of journalism, I no longer fear for traditional media organizations like the Post.

The Daily Feed

Drink Away Rob Dibble’s Remarks

Photo courtesy of
‘IMG_0598’
courtesy of ‘MissChatter’

As Tom so observantly pointed out in today’s Sports Fix, Nationals MASN color commentator Rob Dibble is back in the booth tonight when the Nats take on the Cincinnati Reds in Ohio to continue their stretch of this road trip.

You either like Dibble’s comments or you don’t, but it’s safe to say the vast majority of verbalized opinions lean toward the “can’t stand to hear him say another word about an umpire calling an inconsistent strike zone.” All opinions aside though, the brothers Mottram over at Mister Irrelevant have devised a plan for making Nationals games on T.V. and Rob Dibble far more bearable than ever before. They’ve created “The Bob & Rob Drinking Game” in honor of MASN broadcast personalities Bob Carpenter and Mr. Dibble. Hooray!

We Love DC might be a little late to the party since the game itself was announced last week, but this might just be the opportune moment to jump right in and have some fun. Heck, it’ll make sitting on your couch watching the game feel even more like being at the ballpark with a beer in hand sans the humidity and packed post-game Metro ride. So why not, right?

A few stand-out “moments to drink” include: Continue reading

Sports Fix, The Features, WTF?!

Sports Fix: We Love Tennis Edition

Photo courtesy of

courtesy of ‘Chris Rief aka Spodie Odie’

Kastles
Record: 6-5
Last Two Weeks: 6-5
Place: 2nd in the East, one match back of New York Sportimes

If it’s July in Washington, that means Kastles Tennis.  The Kastles may be the smallest of DC’s pro sports teams, but they’re definitely one of the most fun.  Their season is delightfully fast-paced, starting just after July 4th, and running through this week, the pop-up tennis league, and the stadium over at 11th & H St NW, make for a wonderful outing. The Kastles are solid once again this year, with Venus Williams and Leander Paes returning to helm the squad in DC. Coach Murphy Jensen, who is every bit as crazy as he appears, is also back for a second season.

The Kastles started the season very strong, but have hit the skids in their last few matches, dropping matches to Boston, New York and Kansas City in the last few days. They’ve still got a shot at the playoffs, but will need some strong showing against Eastern division foes New York and Boston this week. Tuesday night former enfant térrible John McEnroe is in DC with the New York Sportimes (worst franchise name ever? check.) and then Anna Kournikova and the St. Louis Aces are here on Wednesday to finish out the home season. There’s the hopes of a second straight championship title for the Kastles, but they’ll need to come up big this week. Tickets are still available, and as much as it pains me to say this, the Kastles are Washington’s only championship pro sports team right now, so they could use a hand. Besides, Anna Kournikova on Wednesday, fellas. Continue reading

Interviews, People, The Features

She Loves DC: LiLu

(Photo courtesy: LiLu)

If you write a blog in this city then you should already know who LiLu of Livit, Luvit. If you don’t, you probably do but don’t know it yet. She was an organizer for the Bloggerational Ball when Obama won the White House; an editor for DC Blogs; and a part of the team over at 20 Something Bloggers.

When I first moved to the DC area and was looking for local blogs to read, I noticed that this “South-i-fied Masshole” frequented the blog rolls of most of the blogs I stumbled upon. Clearly this was one blogger I had to meet. I would later have the pleasure of meeting her at a BBQ and experience the monthly happy hours she puts on for other local bloggers.

Now she’s out to take her social media skills to a national stage. Recently Lilu was named one of 20 candidates to become MTV’s first ever TJ, or Twitter Jockey. Not only is MTV stepping it up in the social media realm, but they are continuing their tradition of straying away from playing actual music videos- who needs a Video Jockey when you can have a Twitter Jockey?

Continue reading

All Politics is Local, The Daily Feed

District AG Peter Nickles’s Heart Grew Three Sizes

Photo courtesy of
Peter Nickles, DC Government Photo

District Attorney General Peter Nickles is cracking down on delinquent landlords, recently forcing fixes at at Southeast apartment complex. Freeman Klopott reports in the Washington Examiner today that Nickles stepped in to get fixes moving for the 1,500 residents of the Marbury Plaza apartment complex. Nickles got involved after hearing many complaints about lack of air conditioning and other dangers, all while the management company had a $5 million loan for renovations.

“If they screw around on this, they can expect trouble from me,” Nickles told The Washington Examiner, referring to the landlord. “I’m not a bashful guy, and I will come down hard.”

The attorney general is often described by critics as being a ‘crony’ of Mayor Fenty, serving the needs of the mayor’s political career rather than District residents. Could this move be a way to bolster his own image, as well as Fenty’s? Probably, there’s less than two months until the primary and this is some good P.R. for Nickles. To be sure, Nickles says he may get involved in more cases similar to this.

Business and Money, Crime & Punishment, Life in the Capital, The Daily Feed

Erin Andrews Files Suit Against Marriott International

Photo courtesy of
‘Pumpkin Decorating Contest 2009 005’
courtesy of ‘dane brian’

ESPN sports reporter, Dancing With The Stars contestant and internet search sensation, Erin Andrews has filed a civil lawsuit against Bethesda-based Marriott International Inc., according to the Washington Business Journal.

The suit stems from the invasion of privacy committed by Michael David Barrett when he illegally videotaped Andrews in her hotel room and posted the nude videos on the internet.

Andrews is claiming that hotel staff gave out her hotel room number, and enabled Barrett to capture his illicit video.

The Daily Feed

14th Street Bridge Pattern Shifts Yet Again

Photo courtesy of
’14th Street Bridge’
courtesy of ‘tbridge’

If you drive into DC across the 14th Street Bridge every morning, you are a hardy, hardy soul.  Truly, your conviction to automotive transit must be a strong one.  For the last year and change, the construction project has turned the 14th Street Bridge into the commuting equivalent of a test of will.  This week, in an effort from DDOT and VDOT to further confuse, deter and otherwise make crazy those who might cross the span, the traffic pattern has shifted again.  The span is now divided in half, with the middle lane of the bridge blocked off, and two lanes going to the left and the right. I’m sure this is making for some confused commuting, so share your good stories, assuming you haven’t flown into a homicidal rage, in the comments.

Special Events, We Love Arts

Fringe 2010: Red Hood: once upon a wartime…

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Jenn has been doing our reviews for Capital Fringe 2010 in partnership with DC Theater Scene, but when scheduling and venue confusion prevented her from getting to this production I agreed to pitch in. As it turns out, this was my lucky break.

Red Hood just might be the perfect Fringe production. That’s not damning with faint praise – though most of us have different expectations from a Fringe show than we would more “traditionally” produced theater – that’s my way of saying that this is the height of what Fringe can be: an opportunity to develop and perform a fantastic work on a smaller scale, potentially as a step on the way to larger venues and audiences. It’s beyond a doubt that this production deserves a larger audience and longer run.

That’s not to say Red Hood is perfect. If I was asked to wield my red pen I’d have trimmed down a few aspects and extended a few others. This re-imagining of the Little Red Riding Hood – one of many through the years, including several in film – looks at the story through the lens of sexual assault and victimization and does so well. For myself the “wartime” component seemed tacked on, contributing little to the story other than a backdrop of a region in turmoil and a moment that drives Red to make a hasty decision, but perhaps it will work better for you.

It’s a minor quibble with the play that doesn’t detract anything from its other good qualities and the fantastic performances, directing, and stagecraft. The use of puppets in the show – who act as Little Red Riding Hood, her mother, and her grandmother – is wonderfully done, with the beautiful and expressive full-scale puppets creating another layer for the story and invoking the repeating cycle of victimization.

They’re well handled by everyone, but in particular Simona Curiurianu as Red seems to have been born to puppetry. The Wolf is just as brilliantly personified by John Robert Kenna, who exudes sex appeal and menace while moving through the set without seeming to be touched by gravity. Marietta Elaine Hedges gets her chance to shine as a sketchy pharmacist and Eli Sebley is the invaluable but never sufficiently appreciated utility player, picking up every other piece that needs to be precisely placed around the rest of the cast.

If my gushing has spilled over the edge of your monitor and gotten onto your desk, my apologies, but I can’t recommend this show enough. It’s the kind of thing that makes me wish I could go back and see it again for the first time. After asking myself multiple times over the last year “why does this need to be on stage?” it’s nice to have a show answer “because this is the only venue where all this could be accomplished.”

Red Hood: once upon a wartime
at The Shop at Fort Fringe,
607 New York Avenue NW

Remaining shows on Sunday July 18th at 8p and Sunday July 25th at 7p.