Good morning, RVA! Itâs 44 °F, and the next couple of daysâtoday includedâlook beautiful. This afternoon you can expect highs around 70 °F and maybe a couple of clouds, but tomorrow and Thursday (not Wednesday for some reason) we could see temperatures near 80 °F. Fall-like weather returns this weekend, though, so get out there and take advantage of summerâs (potential) last hurrah.
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This past Friday, the folks opposing Casino 2.0 posted these jaw-dropping audio clips from a radio program featuring Urban One Board Chair Cathy Hughes. Pulitzer Prize Winner Michael Paul Williams has the best recap of what the heck is going on here, but you should probably tap through and listen for yourself. Warning: The clips contain racist, sexist, antisemitic, and offensive language. First, as a white man, I definitely do not have the context or lived-experience to fully process or comment on some of the language used by Hughes and her fellow radio hosts to describe the local, Black anti-casino advocates. I do know, however, that I would be incredibly offended if someoneâsomeone with a serious amount of wealth, influence, and powerâspoke about me in that way on a public forum. The folks involved have since (briefly) apologized for the blatantly antisemitic comments directed at Paul Goldman, who has organized most of the opposition to this second casino attempt, but, as far as I know, none of the local advocates have received an apology from anyone involved. Second, Allan-Charles Chipman (one of the aforementioned local advocates) has a really nice piece in the Richmond Times-Dispatch explaining all of the hard, quantitative reasons why you should vote against Casino 2.0. Because heâs a better person than I am, he doesnât mention anything about the major concerns I have with the City working alongside a developer whose Board Chair regularly took part in racist, sexist, antisemitic, and offensive discussions on a public radio show. Will any of this impact the outcome of tomorrowâs referendum? I have no idea, but it certainly makes me feel good about my vote against.
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Back by popular demand: GRTCâs Rider Advisory Council! GRTC wants you!âŚif you are a bus rider looking to âbe a part of a team that meets quarterly to advocate on behalf of riders, work with GRTC on new initiatives, and generally improve the system.â As a deeply bus-oriented person, this sounds like a ton of fun to me. If youâd like to apply to join the Council, you can fill out the form online until December 1st.
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Today, City Council will host a special meeting to consider a paper about an affordable housing development on 44th Street, appoint an interim City Auditor, and, maybe most interesting, introduce four new pieces of legislation. This legislation, to quote from the agenda, will look at â(i) establishment of an inclement weather shelter at 1900
Chamberlayne Avenue, (ii) planning, development, and operation of a cultural space to be located at the Main Street Station, (iii) establishment of a new real estate tax rate of $1.15, and (iv) to amend a Non-Departmental agency line item in Fiscal Year 2023â2024 General Fund Budget.â Iâm especially interested in item number three, which would lower the real estate tax rate by five cents. I am suspect of the timing and have a bunch of questions! Why introduce a paper that would have a massive impact on City finances at a special meeting and why today? Is this related to the casino? Whoâs the patron? I hope weâll learn more this afternoon.
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Logistical note! This week is weird with state holidays celebrating both Election Day and Veterans Day, so youâll miss me in your inbox on Tuesday and on Friday. Since Iâll have the day off, Iâll use this space to give you one final reminder about tomorrowâs incredibly important election. You can check your registration status and find your polling place here. If you missed the deadlines to register to vote, donât worry: You can head to your polling place tomorrow, register to vote on site, and cast a provisional ballot. Thereâs absolutely no reason not to get out there and vote! Good luck, and Iâll see you on the other side!
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As the entire social media landscape starts to transition to whateverâs next, itâs worth thinking about the types of content youâre creating (and of course where that content lives). The below blog post is a great example of âstockââsomething thatâs still useful over a decade later; GMRVA is almost entirely âflow.â Iâd love to write more stock-type things, but Iâm not entirely sure what that would look like. Iâm open to suggestions!
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There are two kinds of quantities in the world. Stock is a static value: money in the bank or trees in the forest. Flow is a rate of change: fifteen dollars an hour or three thousand toothpicks a day. Easy. Too easy. But I actually think stock and flow is a useful metaphor for media in the 21st century. Hereâs what I mean: Flow is the feed. Itâs the posts and the tweets. Itâs the stream of daily and sub-daily updates that reminds people you exist. Stock is the durable stuff. Itâs the content you produce thatâs as interesting in two months (or two years) as it is today. Itâs what people discover via search. Itâs what spreads slowly but surely, building fans over time. Flow is ascendant these days, for obvious reasonsâbut I think we neglect stock at our peril.
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If youâd like to suggest a longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the olâ Patreon.
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If I was independently wealthy, I would just take pictures of found gradients all day long.
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