I love the colors out here, I love the fog, too it’s hard not to when you grow up in the fog, you just appreciate it too much. They’re sounds he knows well, given he’s lived in Sunset since he was 1 and never plans to move - partly because he couldn’t part from his dear friend Karl. RELATED: Meet the second generation owner behind San Francisco's Musée Mécanique “Magical Murphy’s Windmill” spins on a simple crank system, whereas the titular piece, “Sunset in Motion,” features a street scene with oversized arcade buttons that move streetcars back and forth, as well as play sound effects ranging from warning sirens to car alarms. The creator wished the fog had a way to defend itself. But our Karl-in-waiting felt these friends were wrong. They called it the fogpocalypse, and the friends lamented another day ruined by the fog. It’s part of the fun and what makes it interesting.” Soon after, the creators friends were complaining about a classic bout of bad Bay Area weather. “Unlike the Victorian era, you don’t attempt to hide the mechanism anymore. “One of the things that I wanted to do in my art show is to show that it’s not magic,” he says. To truly randomize the six Magic Eightball-style responses, Beutel wrote computer code that he displays on a poster next to the machine. His ode to San Francisco’s cloudy forecasts, “Ask Karl the Fog,” is modeled after the type of vintage penny arcade fortune teller games you can find at Musée Mécanique. Some of Karl’s 355,000 followers felt ghosted for the past 10 months, and his mysterious disappearance created a void in San Francisco’s weather-watching community. Today’s decision is a travesty for those who give birth and need to make important choices about their own bodies and lives. RELATED: ‘ The Last Black Man in San Francisco’ director creates map of the city featuring things he loves I still have a gift for the city tonight, but I need to talk about what was announced this morning because it impacts everything, including Pride.
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