We care less about the royal them than we do about the royal you. Are you doing right? Would you like some music, dance, theatre, drag or DJed grooves to help you get through the days and nights. then ye shall have it. We proclaim fun.
ARTS
Bechtel Fest 8
Chicago s Broken Nose Theatre company presents a series of online plays; the annual festival of new short plays features an ensemble of femme, female-identifying, non-binary, trans and queer actors talking about things other than men; free, thru March 26. https://brokennosetheatre.com/
Broadway on AirBnB
Promotional-sponsored performances by a variety of talents: Tittus Burgess, cast members from
Bay Area Reporter :: Homing s In March 12-21, 2021
ebar.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ebar.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Why another surge could hit the Bay Area in the months ahead By Annie Vainshtein and Matthias Gafni
In so many respects, it’s looking like the worst of the pandemic may be over for the Bay Area.
Hospitalizations from COVID-19 are down dramatically and positive test rates have dropped significantly, too. Many counties reporting plummeting case counts are rapidly reopening. San Francisco may move into the orange tier, the second-least-restrictive, in just two weeks.
At the same time, Bay Area counties are getting deliveries of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, and the vaccination rollout at large continues to improve.
But even amid good news, experts still warn: Another surge may still be on the horizon.
Why another COVID surge could hit the Bay Area in the months ahead
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1of3Mostafa Hallaji, owner operator Pollo s, cleans tables and chairs with alcohol as he prepares for re-opening after Alameda County was moved to the red tier on Tuesday, March 9, 2021 in Oakland, Calif.Lea Suzuki / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
2of3John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert at the UC Berkeley school of public health, sits for a portrait inside his home office at his home in Lafayette, Calif, on Friday, March 27, 2020.Michael Short / Special to The Chronicle 2020Show MoreShow Less
3of3Dr. Peter Chin-Hong enters UCSF Medical Center on Friday, April 3, 2020, in San Francisco. Dr. Chin-Hong and fellow UCSF physicians are using Twitter to help educate the public about the frightening and evolving coronavirus outbreak.Noah Berger / Special to The Chronicle 2020Show MoreShow Less
Actually Cool Things You Can Do in San Francisco This Spring Thrillist 3/8/2021 © Photo by Michael Brosilow
We’ve officially been living in these dystopian times for an entire year, which is not exactly a fun anniversary to celebrate, but is hard to ignore nevertheless. We’ve gotten used to wearing masks everywhere we go, staying six feet apart from pretty much everyone, and may never wear actual pants again. Still, things are slowly starting to get back to “normal.” As of early March, we can even eat indoors, visit museums, and go back to the gym, a thing we likely all need to do if we ever want to fit into March 2020’s jeans again. We can also do all of this fun stuff, a lot of which is outside in case you’re still holding off on the whole indoors thing. We’ve got you and luckily, so does SF’s very mild weather.
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