-
Featured events- 06/02/2012 - 9th Annual Berkeley World Music Festival, Sat, June 2
- 06/02/2012 - EAST BAY OPEN STUDIOS 2012 // JUNE 2-3, JUNE 9-10
- 06/02/2012 - Chocolate & Chalk Art Festival, Saturday, June 2, 2012 (Rain Date June 9) 10AM-5PM
- 06/01/2012 - Hillside Club Concert - Beth Custer Ensemble - 'My Grandmother'
- 05/31/2012 - One Man, Two Guvnors from National Theatre, London
Berkeley sites
- 510 Families
- Another Bullwinkel Show
- Bay Nature
- Berkeley Accountable Schools
- Berkeley Afoot
- Berkeley Artisans
- Berkeley Blog
- Berkeley Chamber of Commerce
- Berkeley Community Fund
- Berkeley Council Watch
- Berkeley Daily Planet
- Berkeley High Jacket
- Berkeley Parents Network
- Berkeley Path Wanderers
- Berkeley Property Owners Association
- Berkeley Public Education Foundation
- Berkeley Public Library
- Berkeley Public Library Branch Improvement Program
- Berkeley Rent Stabilization Board
- Berkeley Startup Cluster
- BHS Development Group
- Buy Local Berkeley
- Cal Performances
- Claremont and Elmwood Kids
- Claremont Elmwood Neighborhood Association
- Downtown Berkeley Association
- East Bay Ethnic Eats
- Ecology Center
- Elmwood Merchants Association
- Eye on Berkeley
- Friends of Lorin Station
- Friends of the Berkeley Public Library
- In Dulci Jubilo
- Infospigot: The Chronicles
- Jewish Music Festival
- Lettuce Eat Kale
- McGee-Spaulding-Hardy Historic Interest Group
- Mental Masala
- Open Town Hall
- Osher Lifelong Learning Institute
- Rookie Moms
- Solano Avenue Association
- Telegraph Berkeley
- Telegraph Merchants Association
- The Berkeley Blog
- The Berkeley Diet
- The Daily Californian
- The Derringdos
- The Garden of Eating
- The Nature of Berkeley
- Thousand Oaks Neighborhood Association
- UC Berkeley Extension
- UCPD Crime Alerts
- Visit Berkeley
- What I Saw in Berkeley Today
Daily Archives: September 29, 2010
The Berkeley Wire: 09.29.10
Smackdown: Rick and Ann’s v. Bette’s when accompanied by tots [510 Families]
Robert Hass featuring at the Watershed Environmental Poetry Festival [Oakland Tribune]
L.A. Times reporter takes some heat at UCB Grading Teachers forum [Mercury News]
The Wire creator David Simon: writer-in-residence at Berkeley’s J-School [California Mag]
UC Berkeley freshman develops comic book focusing on people with disabilities [Daily Cal]
Photo: St Mary’s College High School, Berkeley by Alex Rez/Berkeleyside Flickr pool.
The Monthly turns 40
The Monthly, (formerly known as The Telegraph Monthly, the Berkeley Monthly, and the East Bay Monthly) turns 40 in October and has put out an anniversary edition pondering the question “What Makes the East Bay Unique?
The magazine’s writers have asked 40 “local luminaries” for some of their favorite memories of the region. As you can imagine, those interviewed waxed about the things that make Berkeley and the East Bay a special place: the weather, the food, the zany … Continue reading »
A mobile of banned books at Berkeley Public Library
This week is Banned Book Week and the Berkeley Public Library has erected a mobile of books that have been banned in various countries. It’s on display in the atrium of the Central Library through Oct. 31.
It’s the fourth year that the library has displayed banned books in this way. We spot The Da Vinci Code up there — the bestselling Dan Brown book was banned in Lebanon after complaints it was offensive to Christianity.
The … Continue reading »
Annie Leonard: So much stuff, so little time for fun
Annie Leonard says Americans are so obsessed with stuff that we’re trashing our planet, without making ourselves all that happy. Leonard, a writer and activist who lives in Berkeley, spends her workday exploring what happens to stuff and educating the rest of us on how we can put the brakes on conspicuous consumption.
Leonard traveled the globe for ten years, discovering all aspects of stuff, and produced an animated 20-minute video called The Story of Stuff that became an internet sensation — viewed over 10 million times in over 200 countries. The response to the video produced so many e-mails and questions, that she followed that up with a book, also called The Story of Stuff, published in March this year.
Jane Tierney sat down with the author last week and talked about why Leonard was worried living in Berkeley would make her go soft, why garbage feeds her soul and why we don’t all need a bundt pan.
You have talked about being neurotic about the lifecycle of stuff. Is there one particular type of stuff that makes for a more compelling case than another?
One of the top culprits is the production of electronics. It’s incredibly destructive. The mining of metals is linked to civil wars and human rights abuses in the Congo, and incredible environmental degradation. It’s responsible for the destruction of indigenous people’s habitat, and water supplies in Indonesia and South Africa. The production of metals used for electronics used to be in Silicon Valley, until people figured out how dangerous it was, and it moved to China. And these people [in developing countries] are showing up with increased cancer and birth defects.
And then there is the consumption of electronics, because of the speed with which we buy and chuck these things. The only product with a shorter life span than a cell phone is an ice cream cone! We just chuck them so fast. The average lifespan of a cell phone is less than a year. And most are still working. They have an over-identification as a status symbol.
I’m not against stuff. I’m against stuff that trashes the planet, or that poisons people, or with which we identify our sense of self-worth. Electronics have become such a premier status symbol that people buy them as a fashion accessory, rather than a usable item. Our e-waste is going to Africa, Asia. I’d say there’s room for vast improvements in the toxicity, and the out-of-control frenzy of our electronics. Our demand to electronics companies is: make them safe, make them last. We have a new film coming out on November 9th called The Story of Electronics.
Living in Berkeley, do you feel you are less isolated in your awareness of stuff?
Absolutely, and that’s good and bad. I’ve lived elsewhere in the world and didn’t feel like I was surrounded by allies. For a while, I didn’t want to live in Berkeley because I thought I would get too soft. We lived in “third world” countries for a number of years, and when we would come to visit our friends in Berkeley, I was worried that not seeing the day-to-day injustices of the world, I would grow soft. … Continue reading »
Where in Berkeley?
Know where this is? Take a guess and let us know in the comments.
Update 11.11am: Berkeleysider Laura is this week’s winner. She identified the photo as having been taken at the Pacific School of Religion on Arch Street just 12 minutes after it appeared on the site. Congratulations Laura!
Photo: Keoki Seu.













