Campus Man: College of Marin’s Jonathan Eldridge

Jonathan Eldridge grew up in Washington State, but his career in higher education has led him down the coast to Marin. At the moment, he is the tallest college president in California, at 6 feet, 6 inches tall.

What do you do? I’m the College of Marin’s 11th superintendent/president.

Where do you live? My family and I live in Upper Lucas Valley.

How long have you lived in Marin? We have lived in the county for about 10 years now.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work? I may be walking with our dog in the neighborhood; at my daughter’s swim meets; at the college’s amazing music, theater and athletic events; or losing golf balls at McInnis Park.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them? This may sound self-serving, but I’d take them on a tour of the college’s two campuses. Amazing views of Marin, great architecture, so many partnerships with Marin groups and agencies—and our students give a great sense of Marin’s bright, engaged future.

What’s one thing Marin is missing? I’d like to see a more comprehensive approach to climate action, which includes scaling transportation alternatives, embracing workforce housing and working collaboratively across sectors.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites? Take a class at College of Marin—there’s something for everyone!

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, who would they be? My son, Jack, passed away from cancer 10 years ago at the age of 10.

What is some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago? Conflict can only thrive if you choose to participate in it.

What is something that 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy? Probably my entire wardrobe!

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world? Ensure equitable educational opportunities for everyone.

Keep up with Eldridge at @presidenteldridge on Instagram.

Nish Nadaraja was on the founding team at Yelp, serves on the San Anselmo Arts Commission and wishes there were a class on Dungeons & Dragons he could take.

Your Letters, May 8

Rude Boy

Gosh, you have to feel tremendous empathy for the heroic Rudy Giuliani, who is on the hook, so to speak, for around $150 million in defamation dough, has been indicted in Arizona for trying to swing an election in favor of his NYC buddy and is having a heck of a time living on a monthly budget of $43,000.

Plus, he’s kinda been late on disclosing his living expenses and sources of income to the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and, having been disbarred in New York state and the District of Columbia, has to fall back on living off his WABC talk radio program income.

It’s a story of unimaginable suffering, and I’m counting on the Sun to create a fund to help the poor man out.

If all Marin County residents make a one-time one-dollar contribution, that’s $252,660 to get him through his ordeal, at least until he screws up another disclosure and the Feds blow up his bankruptcy deal. We owe America’s Mayor at least that much.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Black Kite Soars with Freestone Tasting Room

One would be forgiven if, like me, they didn’t know that “kite” is the name of a local bird species. For all my years in this area, I assumed it was, you know, a diamond-shaped aerial toy with a string.

So, admittedly, I was confused by the handsome bird of prey depicted on the wine labels of Black Kite Cellars’ brilliant bottles. Am I bird-brained? Yes. But I also know how to enjoy a good flight. And one of the best places to land is Jasper House in—wait for it… Freestone.

Named for famed local historical figure Jasper O’Farrell, Black Kite Cellars’ newly opened tasting room is the first in the west Sonoma County town’s historic district and a much-welcomed addition, perfectly integrated off a block shared by Wild Flour Bread and Osmosis Day Spa Sanctuary.

There, one can enjoy terroir-specific offerings expertly crafted by acclaimed winemaker Jeff Gaffner that serve to remind that world-class winemaking is alive and well in Sonoma County.

The newly opened Jasper House is the brainchild of Tom and Rebecca Green Birdsall, and the perfect complement to their family-owned Black Kite Cellars, which has produced site-specific pinot noir and chardonnay primarily from Sonoma County’s coastal appellations since 2003.

Architect Steve vonRaesfeld (vR|a Architects) and interior designer Julie Hawkins (Hawkins Interiors) created a space that’s at once sophisticated and bohemian. Those familiar with the vibe of Sea Ranch will feel right at home. And those familiar with fine wine will also feel at home and want to reside in the cellar.

Tasting experiences at Black Kite Cellars’ Jasper House include wines from the estate Jasper Freestone Vineyard (literally across a country road from the tasting room), as well as other Sonoma Coast and Anderson Valley wines, each showcasing their unique individual terroir.

Some readers may be familiar with the oft-lauded 2021 Black Kite Cellars Gap’s Crown Vineyard Pinot Noir, a medium-bodied, garnet-hued crowd pleaser with notes of black currant tea, a whisper of nutmeg and undergirded with a dry slate note that balances the cherry Life Savers tease on the tongue…

But do they know it has a sibling? Try the 2021 Black Kite Cellars Jasper Freestone Pinot Noir, which arrives on the palate with bright berry notes, a hint of spice and a gently herbaceous sigh shaded by winking minerality.

And let’s not forget the 2021 Black Kite Cellars Jasper Freestone Chardonnay, which hits the taste buds with a daub of lemon zest, a subtle sea kiss, apple flesh, pear and fresh gingerbread. It’s a beautiful, well-balanced wine and one of the many incentives to visit the Jasper House ASAP. And this is only the beginning. There are many more wines and many more ways to enjoy Jasper House—bring the flock.

Black Kite Cellars’ Jasper House is located at 12747 El Camino Bodega in Freestone and is open seven days a week, 10am–5pm. Tasting appointments may be made in advance or same-day. For more information, to book a tasting experience and to join the wine club with exclusive offers, visit BlackKiteCellars.com.

La Force and More in the North Bay

La Force to Be Reckoned With


La Force, the solo project of Montreal-based songwriter Ariel Engle, appears at the Sebastiani Theatre May 14 in support of her new album, XO SKELETON. The LP has earned praise and support from such outlets as The Washington Post (“lush pop and R&B tunes where warm tones swaddle heavy thoughts”). Engle is perhaps best known as the lead vocalist in Broken Social Scene since 2017 and can also be heard singing on the most recent album from Big Red Machine. She is touring as the supporting act to critically lauded singer-songwriter-filmmaker Caroline Rose. XO SKELETON explores such heady themes as the finality of death or whether another person’s love can or cannot bestow a sense of protection. The show begins at 7pm, Tuesday, May 14, at the Sebastiani Theatre, 476 1st St. E, Sonoma. For tickets and more information, visit bit.ly/rose-laforce.

Petaluma

Too Cool

Cool Petaluma, a nonprofit that inspires local climate action through community building, invites all residents to attend its Third Annual Resource Expo at the Petaluma Fairgrounds, 175 Fairgrounds Dr. The event is from 5 to 8pm on Tuesday, May 21. At the expo, local experts will share resources and answer community questions surrounding five main topic areas: preparing for emergencies, rethinking consumption, transforming transportation, improving buildings and restoring nature. “This year will be bigger and better than ever, with a new live stage for demonstrations and mini-workshops,” says Natasha Juliana, co-founder of Cool Petaluma. “Supplied with information and inspiration, we’ll all find it easier to continue on our journey to becoming more resilient and planet friendly—block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood.” More info at coolpetaluma.org/expo2024.

Marin County

Public Works

Marin County hosts its first-ever Public Works Fair on May 18, coinciding with the 64th annual National Public Works Week. This family-friendly affair showcases the vital role of public works in our communities and Marin’s infrastructure (FYI: Marin Public Works oversees 52 public facilities, over 420 miles of roadway, 56 bridges and eight watersheds). The festivities begin at 10am and run until 2pm at the Marin County Fairgrounds, 10 Ave of the Flags, San Rafael, and will feature activities for all ages, including demonstrations and interactive presentations to hands-on experiences and photo ops with heavy-duty machinery. High school students and their parents may explore the various internship opportunities available. Live music, face painting, games and snacks abound—and are completely free. Motorists are encouraged to utilize the Exhibit Hall parking lot at 20 Ave of the Flags in San Rafael. Or hop on the SMART train to the Civic Center station. For more info, call 415.473.6530 or visit bit.ly/marin-pub-works.

Novato

Hypno Comedy

Comedy hypnotist Gary Conrad brings his brand of subconscious satire to Novato’s Trattoria Ghiringhelli for an evening in which “volunteers come on stage, enter a hypnotic state and then experience Lewis Carrollesque scenarios in which they transform into famous singers, dancers, comedians and sports personalities; return to being five years old; switch genders; misplace their body parts,” according to promoters. Conrad has been seen on The View and has shared the air with Danny Bonaduce, FOX-TV’s Mancow Muller, Crook & Chase, Opie & Anthony, Rick & Bubba, Don & Mike and Ed Lover & Dr. Dre. Additional bonafides include stage time with such legends as Tony Bennett, Barbara Walters, Cher, Lenny Kravitz and even the late Tiny Tim. The show begins at 8pm, Thursday, May 10, at Trattoria Ghiringhelli, 1535 S. Novato Blvd., Novato. Tickets are $20. For more information, visit garyconrad.com.

‘Jukebox Empire’ at Book Passage

The truth will out is one of those maxims that puts an asterisk on family lore. The mechanism of its outing can be a commercial genetic test, a lost and found letter, or—in the case of writer and Emmy and Peabody Award-winning filmmaker David Rabinovitch—his own dogged curiosity.

For Rabinovitch, who lived in Marin County for decades (and now spends his time in Baja and the Pacific Northwest), the story starts with a legendary uncle who was essentially excised from his family history—until now.

There were breadcrumbs, however, and over a period of years, Rabinovitch was able to reconstruct a portrait of his charismatic uncle, Wolfe Rabin, which is captivating and ultimately tragic. The result is Jukebox Empire: The Mob and the Dark Side of the American Dream, an eminently readable accounting of an aspiring tycoon who partners with a racketeer to build a jukebox that makes millions, then takes the fall for the largest money laundering scheme in history.

Caught between the Mob and the feds in a plot to save the casinos in Havana from Castro’s revolution, Wolfe Rabin pulls the biggest money-laundering scheme in history, but his hubris leads to the conspiracy unraveling in a sensational trial.

Rabinovitch will appear at Corte Madera’s Book Passage next Monday.

“I’ve been incredibly curious to have a close relative, my father’s brother, who we never met. So it starts with that. And I have an incredible curiosity in all the work that I do,” says Rabinovitch, who’s no stranger to research-driven deep dives. His mini-series, The Secret Files of the Inquisition, required working with thousands of archival files relating to the Catholic church—in Latin. For Jukebox Empire, Rabinovitch obtained a “huge dump of files” declassified by the FBI. “Journalistically, it was very similar,” he notes.

“I’m like a dog with a bone that way; I can’t let go,” says the author. “But in terms of motivation, the deeper I got into it, the more incredible it became.”

Naturally, as a filmmaker, Rabinovitch initially intended to tell his uncle’s story onscreen. “I was writing a screenplay, and the more I got into it, I said, I can’t do justice to the material, the limitations of a screenplay, because screenplays are about what you leave out,” he recalls.

Now that the book is out and garnering raves (“…A scandalous, entertaining and worthwhile read” –Winnipeg Free Press), Rabinovitch and an entertainment industry colleague are working on bringing the story to a streamer near you.

“I think ultimately he’s a tragic figure. For someone who had so much promise, so much extraordinary ability,” says Rabinovitch. “He was one of those people, I think, that just lit up a room whenever he came into it. He turned his focus on somebody, and he had that charisma and that ability that made people want to believe him and want to buy into what he was promoting. So there’s kind of a turn. It’s a long, slippery slope, and I think he went down.”

When asked how he thinks his uncle would react to the project, Rabinovitch laughs, saying, “He’d probably want royalties from the book.”

David Rabinovitch will appear in support of ‘Jukebox Empire: The Mob and the Dark Side of the American Dream,’ at 4pm, Monday, May 13 at Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera.

Free Will Astrology: Week of May 8

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): When my friend, Jessalyn, first visited Disneyland as a child, she was smitten by its glimmering, unblemished mystery. “It was far more real than real,” she said. “A dream come true.” But after a few hours, her infatuation unraveled. She began to see through the luster. Waiting in long lines to go on the rides exhausted her. The mechanical elephant was broken. The food was unappetizing. The actor impersonating Mickey Mouse shucked his big mouse head and swilled a beer. The days ahead may have resemblances to Jessalyn’s awakening for you. This slow-motion jolt might vex you initially, although I believe it’s a healthy sign. It will lead to a cleansed perspective that’s free of illusion and teeming with clarity.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Keizoku wa chikara nari is a Japanese proverb that means “To continue is power.” I propose you make that your motto for the next four weeks. Everything you need to happen and all the resources you need to attract will come your way as long as your overarching intention is perseverance. This is always a key principle for you Tauruses, but especially now. If you can keep going, if you can overcome your urges to quit your devotions, you will gain a permanent invigoration of your willpower.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Do you believe there are divine beings, animal spirits and departed ancestors who are willing and able to help us? If not, you may want to skip this horoscope. I won’t be upset if you feel that way. But if you do harbor such views, as I do, I’m pleased to tell you that they will be extra available for you in the coming weeks. Remember one of the key rules about their behavior: They love to be asked for assistance; they adore it when you express your desires for them to bring you specific blessings and insights. Reach out, Gemini! Call on them.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): I’m taking a gamble here as I advise you to experiment with the counsel of visionary poet and painter William Blake (1757–1825). It’s a gamble because I’m asking you to exert a measure of caution as you explore his daring, unruly advice. Be simultaneously prudent and ebullient, Cancerian. Be discerning and wild. Be watchful and experimental. Here are Blake’s directions: 1. The road to excess leads to the palace of wisdom, for we never know what is enough until we know what is more than enough. 2. If the fool would persist in his folly, he would become wise. 3. The pride of the peacock is the glory of God. The lust of the goat is the bounty of God. 4. No bird soars too high if it soars with its own wings. 5. Exuberance is Beauty.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Cosmic energies are staging a big party in your astrological House of Ambition. It’s a great time to expand and intensify your concepts of what you want to accomplish with your one wild and precious life. You will attract unexpected help as you shed your inhibitions about asking for what you really want. Life will benevolently conspire on your behalf as you dare to get bolder in defining your highest goals. Be audacious, Leo! Be brazen and brave and brilliant! I predict you will be gifted with lucid intuitions about how best to channel your drive for success. You will get feelers from influential people who can help you in your quest for victory. (P.S.: The phrase, “your one wild and precious life,” comes from poet Mary Oliver.)

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Is it possible to be too smart for your own good? Maybe, although that won’t be a problem for you anytime soon. However, you may temporarily be too smart for some people who are fixated on conventional and simplistic solutions. You could be too super-brilliant for those who wallow in fear or regard cynicism as a sign of intelligence. But I will not advise you to dumb yourself down, dear Virgo. Instead, I will suggest you be crafty and circumspect. Act agreeable and humble, even as you plot behind the scenes to turn everything upside-down and inside-out—by which I mean, make it work with more grace and benefit for everyone concerned.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In my fairy tale about your life in the coming weeks and months, you will transform from a crafty sleuth to an eager explorer. You will finish your wrestling matches with tricky angels and wander off to consort with big thinkers and deep feelers. You will finish your yeoman attempts to keep everyone happy in the human zoo and instead indulge your sacred longings for liberation and experimentation. In this fairy tale of your life, Libra, I will play the role of your secret benefactor. I will unleash a steady stream of prayers to bless you with blithe zeal as you relish every heart-opening, brain-cleansing moment of your new chapter.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In the coming months, I will encourage you to keep deepening and refining the art of intimacy. I will rejoice as you learn more and more about how to feel close to people you care for and how to creatively deal with challenges you encounter in your quest to become closer. Dear Scorpio, I will also cheer you on whenever you dream up innovations to propitiate togetherness. Bonus blessings! If you do all I’m describing, your identity will come into brighter focus. You will know who you are with greater accuracy. Get ready! The coming weeks will offer you novel opportunities to make progress on the themes I’ve mentioned.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You could offer a workshop on the perks of wobbliness. Your anxious ruminations and worried fantasies are so colorful that I almost hesitate to tell you to stop. I’m wondering if this is one of those rare phases when you could take advantage of your so-called negative feelings. Is it possible that lurking just below the uneasiness are sensational revelations about a path to liberation? I’m guessing there are. To pluck these revelations, you must get to the core of the uneasiness.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): During the last 11 months, life has offered you unprecedented opportunities to deepen and ripen your emotional intelligence. You have been vividly invited to grow your wisdom about how to manage and understand your feelings. I trust you have been capitalizing on these glorious teachings. I hope you have honed your skills at tapping into the power and insights provided by your heart and gut. There’s still more time to work on this project, Capricorn. In the coming weeks, seek out breakthroughs that will climax this phase of your destiny.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Naturalist and author Henry David Thoreau declared, “We need the tonic of wildness.” Amen! In my view, you Aquarians especially need this sweet, rugged healing power in the coming weeks. Borrowing more words from Thoreau, I urge you to exult in all that is mysterious, unsurveyed and unfathomable. Like Thoreau, I hope you will deepen your connection with the natural world because “it is cheerfully, musically earnest.” Share in his belief that “we must go out and re-ally ourselves to Nature every day. We must take root, send out some little fiber.”

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): I have four questions and homework assignments for you, Pisces. 1. Is there a person in your inner circle who is close to ripening a latent talent that would ultimately benefit you? I suspect there is. What can you do to assist them? 2. Is there a pending gift or legacy that you have not yet claimed or activated? I think so. What would be a good first step to get it fully into your life? 3. What half-dormant potency could you call on and use if you were more confident about your ability to wield it? I believe you now have the wherewithal to summon the confidence you need. 4. What wasteful habit could you replace with a positive new habit?

Homework: What’s your favorite subject to fantasize about? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com.

Tu-Ner in Tune with Sweetwater

“Tu-Ner for Lovers” is the latest release from drummer Pat Mastelotto, guitarist Markus Reuter and bassist Trey Gunn.

Fans of King Crimson need no introduction to the trio, as they already released the highly ambitious Contact Information two-disc record set via the MoonJune Records label last August.

Although the new collection comes out just days before the guys hit the road starting on May 9 in Phoenix, Arizona, Marin County and its neighboring residents will be delighted to know the Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley is among one of the first five shows on their abbreviated itinerary.


For the uninitiated, drummer Pat Mastelotto has proven himself quite the ambidextrous drummer, having played with such disparate acts as Mr. Mister, XTC, David Sylvian, The Rembrandts, Kimmo Pohjonen, King Crimson and Stick Men.

Trey Gunn, who is known in many musician circles as the master of the Warr guitar, also has an impressive resume, having worked with King Crimson, David Sylvian, Robert Fripp, Brian Eno, Happy Rhodes, Puscifer, Tool and John Paul Jones.

Guitarist Markus Reuter is also a versatile musician, having conquered the Chapman Stick and then later the U8 Touch Guitar. Reuter has quite the catalog under his belt and has released numerous solo albums along with collaborating with Gary Husband, Robert Rich, J. Peter Schwalm, Mark Wingfield and Devin Townsend’s touring band.

Others may already know him from his work with Stick Men (also with Pat Mastelotto and Tony Levin from Peter Gabriel and King Crimson fame), TRUCE (with Asaf Sirkis and Fabio Trentini) and the fabulous Markus Reuter/Tim Motzer/Kenny Grohowski project.

We caught up with drummer Pat Mastelotto while in preparation for yet another run of shows.

Pacific Sun: Tu-Ner has a brand new album coming out May 3. How long have these songs been brewing in the background?

Pat Mastelotto: The new album coming out is taken from our live tour last September. They’re basically improvs. We do play songs and several from the King Crimson catalog that Trey and I participated in. We also do others from Trey’s back catalog, Markus’ catalog, some stuff from Tu and Tu-Ner, along with a Stick Men song. However, we are more excited to put out the freshest jams. We put some of the strongest moments together, mixed them in a blender and came out with a cohesive combination of tracks taken from several of the shows.

PS: You’ve been making music on and off with Markus Reuter for 19 years now. Will we see more music from the duo aside from Tu-Ner?

PM: We’re always up to this and that, so even behind the scenes we’re helping each other with different projects. Will there be another duet? I’m not sure. I couldn’t predict that right now, but I am trying to arrange a time for Markus to come join me and record later this year or early next year.

PS: Tu-Ner’s latest is fantastic but begs the question: Will you be playing these compositions verbatim or throwing in even more improv?

PM: Ha! Besides playing songs, we play some of the more epic King Crimson pieces that Trey and I were involved with, as well as some Stick Men material and stuff off of Trey’s and Markus’ solo records. However, the band is largely a vehicle for improvisation, research and development.

Will we play the last record “verbatim?” The short answer is no and highly unlikely. That stuff was all played off the cuff. It was improvised, and then we did some editing as it was being mixed. Those are all live performances. You can expect something very similar, but not the same. The shows are unique and vary depending on the vibe of the venue.

Tu-Ner plays Sweetwater Music Hall, located at 19 Corte Madera Ave. in Mill Valley. Doors open at 7pm, and the show kicks off at 8pm, Tuesday, May 14. Tickets are $30 advance and can be purchased at sweetwatermusichall.com. All ages are welcome. For more info, visit Tu-Ner.com.

Mariah Nielson: Curator, Art Historian

Mariah Nielson is the director of the JB Blunk Estate, as well as Blunk Space, a gallery dedicated to expanding the pioneering sculptor’s lasting legacy. She also happens to be his daughter.

What do you do?

Aside from my work with JB Blunk and Blunk Space, I’m also a curator and design historian.

Where do you live?

Inverness, in the house my father built using salvaged materials in 1959, the place where I was born in 1978.

How long have you lived in Marin?

I was born and raised in Inverness but moved away when I was 16. After almost 30 years living in San Francisco and Oakland and abroad (Japan, Paris, London), I’ve moved back home.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work?

On a plane or at the Blunk House.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them?

The Point Reyes Lighthouse, walk on South Beach, lunch at Marshall Store, coffee at Toby’s in Point Reyes Station and a studio visit with sculptor Bruce Mitchell.

What’s one thing Marin is missing?

Nimble public transportation and affordable housing.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites?

Don’t take the beauty and privilege of this place for granted.

If you could invite anyone to a special dinner, who would they be?

My father. I have a lot of questions to ask him about his work and creative process.

I’d also like to have dinner with Tupac Shakur and the writer Jacqueline Johnson.

What’s some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago?

Don’t worry.

What’s something that in 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy?

Sweatpants.

Big question. What is one thing you’d do to change the world?

Infuse all world and corporate leaders with empathy.

Keep up with Nielson via jbblunk.com and blunkspace.com or at @mariah_nielson on Instagram.

Nish Nadaraja was on the founding team at Yelp, serves on the San Anselmo Arts Commission and attempts to play pickleball at Fairfax’s Cañon Club.

Random City: The Curious Case of San Rafael

The city of San Rafael has a long and eclectic history, full of oh-so-many curiosities and curios to reflect on, celebrate and maybe even question. From the Museum of International Propaganda to the origin story of both Jedis and the highest of holidays, 4/20, San Rafael sure does pack a veritable pinball machine’s worth of points of interest from which to bounce.

The San Rafael of now is home to a vibrant and bustling culture and community. Its streets play host to some of the most delicious restaurants, super snazzy bars and a certain sense of joie de vivre that’s very unique to the city.

Current cultural hype aside, San Rafael’s real claim to fame may very well be in its undercurrent of well-rounded randomness. This city’s tidbits of history, culture and miscellaneous crisscross such a wide array of seemingly unrelated topics that to put them in one place is almost chaotic.

So, let’s embrace the chaos and jump right into this rabbit hole spotlighting San Rafael’s truly fascinating, multi-faceted cultural cornerstones.

This story, like many, is best if told from the beginning. And since Californian history didn’t spontaneously combust into existence with the arrival of colonists with writing implements, the real beginning of San Rafael has to start with an acknowledgment of the native civilizations and citizens who were local to the land long before colonization irreversibly changed the course of history.

San Rafael itself was officially founded in 1817 by Spanish settlers on a mission to, well, make missions. The San Rafael Chamber website describes this act of colonization by highlighting the benevolent origin story of the naming of San Rafael by Spanish settlers: “The mission and city are named for the Archangel Raphael, the Angel of Healing…[and] the mission was originally planned as a hospital site for Central Valley American Indians who had become ill at the cold San Francisco Mission Dolores.”

This description of Spanish settlers nursing Native Americans back to health sure is heartwarming. As is this totally neutral description of the success of the mission’s religious coerci—ahem, conversion: “San Rafael was later upgraded to full mission status in 1822. The mission had 300 converts within its first year, and 1,140 converts by 1828.” For an alternative source on the early history and diversity of San Rafael, check out the Friends of China Camp State Park website at friendsofchinacamp.org.

Leaving 1817 (the year Jane Austen died and both Henry David Thoreau and San Rafael were born, for added context), let’s instead fast forward a bit to a more modern timeline with significantly more upbeat facts.

In the 1970s, San Rafael took to the spotlight of strange claims to fame when the master of sci-fi movie making himself, George Lucas, arrived in Marin. Of course, just about everyone and their grandmother knows about this now historical tidbit of California’s cinematic legacy. But a list of San Rafael’s most amazing and strange things would not be complete without at least mentioning the crown jewel: the creator of Star Wars himself.

And although the streets of downtown are (regrettably) lacking in the kitschy Star Wars decor department, there’s no time like the present to start a new cultural trend of representing a more intergalactic spirit with cardboard cutouts or no-context Wookiee costumes.

But before anyone gets too comfortable talking shop about Lucas and Star Wars, it’s time to touch on another topic and embrace the chaos by pivoting to pot. To be more blunt, let’s talk about San Rafael’s historical ties with cannabis, hashish or, to use slang for the more old-fashioned folks out there, the devil’s lettuce. Stoners of every generation can rejoice in knowing that the term 4/20 is said to have originated in San Rafael, all thanks to a group of high school kids called The Waldos who, as legend has it, gathered daily to smoke weed together after school at 4:20pm.

Star Wars and weed may be part of what puts San Rafael on the map for famous factoids, but they certainly don’t overshadow the Grateful Dead’s historical spotlight. This rock band’s connection to San Rafael is a cultural cornerstone locals aren’t likely to forget anytime soon. But, as a refresher, the Grateful Dead are among the most renowned rock bands of the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s. While much of this band’s prolific career took place across the bridge in San Francisco, its ties to San Rafael are as local as local gets.

With drugs and rock ’n’ roll out of the way, we can finally focus on what really matters in San Rafael—the Museum of International Propaganda. It’s at this museum where visitors can get a shift in perspective through history’s most influential relics. And hey, who knows, maybe learning about propaganda and its international effects could be useful in the world’s current political climate.

Oh, and if all of these unrelated San Rafael facts aren’t enough to tickle readers pink, then perhaps what will do it is knowing that the 11th top employer in San Rafael is, according to Wikipedia, Guide Dogs for the Blind. That’s right—on a list with major medical companies and supermarket chains and other such Goliaths of capital gain stands a literal underdog of hundreds of people who make it their business to train pups and graduate guide dogs.

Then there’s the fact that the most recent and random piece of history that San Rafael can add to its cap of truly bizarre feathery folderol is a silver coin the size of a dinner plate.

So, between Star Wars, weed, propaganda, puppies, treasure and the Grateful Dead, what other cool claims to fame can San Rafael locals call their own? Well, aside from Frank Lloyd Wright’s celebrated design of the Marin County Civic Center, there’s also a lovely canal running the length of much of the city that, apparently, is not the ideal spot for locals to go swimming in to beat the heat this summer.

Instead of diving right into the canal, one can instead experience the plethora of unique attractions that make San Rafael such a fun city to live in and frequent. One such fun upcoming event is the annual Art Walk, where local artists and art lovers can enjoy the best of San Rafael’s inspired works. The Rebound Bookstore really embraces the random spirit of San Rafael, as well as its roots in cultural advocacy and art. On the opening night of this year’s Art Walk, for instance, Rebound Bookstore is opening its doors to host an Activist Photo Exhibit amidst the store’s eclectic decor and goods.

San Rafael’s overall randomness may seem unrelated, but it makes for a culturally rich city, community and culture worth celebrating and, even better, anticipating. After all, the city is likely to have more than a few more cool tricks up its sleeve.

Rafael Reborn: A City Renewed?

Last year, this time, I was sitting at Above Fifth, the rooftop bar at the AC Hotel, enjoying the drinks, apps, more drinks, and mulling the bright fate and future of the city of San Rafael.

I was with some media co-conspirators, and the question arose—is San Rafael experiencing a renaissance?

The consensus was that it might be, especially if we said it was. Admittedly, the shaping of public opinion is better suited to the work of publicists at best, propagandists at worst, and not from the purview of a jeroboam of journos (to use the collective noun).

But the question remains—is San Rafael having a renaissance? The answer is yes—but not because some bylined drunks can “copypasta” a press release. It’s because the city is perfectly poised as an equidistant destination between San Francisco and Wine Country on the 101, and canny local entrepreneurs have the good sense to capitalize on this fact by offering the best of both in a single municipality.

Why has it just happened now? Timing is everything—Wine Country price points and pretension had to overripen, and San Francisco had to hit the skids. If anything, a rooftop bar downtown is at least one indication a renaissance may be happening.

San Rafael has always been a happy place.

Consider this: St. Raphael, from which San Rafael takes its name, is the patron saint of “happy meetings.” (Of course, it can be debated whether it was a “happy meeting” between the missionaries and the people who lived here for a millennium prior, before the place was re-christened for an archangel.)

Also, does a renaissance—a rebirth—necessarily have to be preceded by a death? If so, when did San Rafael die so that it could be reborn? I’ll submit to you that it didn’t die per se so much as wrap itself in a chrysalis that it might metamorphosize like a butterfly—from a suburb to a city, perhaps even a budding metropolis in its own right.

This transformation, though quiet and slow, was inevitable, and now that it’s here, it beckons a flurry of culture, commerce and connectivity that promises a vibrant urban future. Or at least that’s the hope. No one can plan a city, but it can be made as inclusive as possible for those who want to be there, because a city is its people, from the ground floor to the rooftop bar.

San Rafael doesn’t need a media conspiracy to earn its wings.

Daedalus Howell is an AI, licensed by dhowell.com.

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