Category Archives: Pro-PGH

Sweet (Pittsburgh?) Messenger Bag In Frisco

And now, I present you with a brief exchange via instant messenger.

Your dramatis personae: Brian is a friend of mine, and he’s one of those insane hardcore fixie riders you see on the street. (Note: A fixie is a fixed-gear bicycle, meaning, coasting is verboten – your legs go ’round every time the wheels go ’round. Why is this insane? Well, perhaps you haven’t noticed the hills around here… Ride a fixie for a year in Pittsburgh and you’ll probably be able to kick through a wall while drinking a beer and eating a sandwich.)

TheOptimist would be me, and there’s irony there. I think. See, when asked to define “irony” I reply with “sort of like iron”. Which explains a lot about my horrible writing.

Huh? Oh, yeah. Right. Here’s the IM exchange I promised a long time ago, in a paragraph far, far above.

[11:27] brian: i want this:
[11:27] brian: http://flickr.com/photos/aalpern/253384407/
[11:29] TheOptimist: schweet

THE END (roll credits)

Hey, look at that… a map of Pennsylvania, and a heart over Pittsburgh. Which I thought was kinda cool, so I contacted Adam Alpern, the owner of the photo on flickr. Turns out, he runs a custom messenger bag shop out in San Francisco, Zugster Bags. Zugster makes custom bags only, doesn’t really carry any stock, just makes bags as you want them, how you want them. I dig the made-to-order concept a lot.

So he made this one for a guy named Derek, who lives out in Frisco now, but apparently is a native of the area. And not only does Derek now have this fantastic custom bag, I’m told he also has a tattoo with the same design. Not much else is known at this time about the mysterious Derek, other than a clear love of home. Well, that and a good sense of humor, riffing on the song Tony Bennett made famous.

Let’s see… where around here might Derek have left his heart? If you have a guess, leave it in the comments. And Cardiac Hill in Oakland doesn’t count.

Anyway, Derek, if you’re out there, good job man. Nice bag.

I

In July 2006, Pittsburgh native Josh Cippel studied abroad in China and took along one of t-shirts. Here is Josh in front of the Great Wall of China, illustrating that love for the homeland never dies. (Is that too fascist? Oh well – viva la ‘burgh!) John is now wearing his I <3 PGH t-shirt as a student at Columbia Law School in NYC. Thanks for the photos, Josh! They're awesome!! If anyone out there has any evidence of Pittsburgh love in far-away and/or interesting locales, please let us know. We would be happy to post them!


“Duke of Ribs” at the Union Project

RIB COOK OFF!  Oh that is right, you read the heading correctly. As if I didn’t love the Union Project enough.

*”DUKE OF RIBS” COMPETITION AT THE UNION PROJECT*

COMPETE OR JUST COME AND ENJOY THE TASTES, SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF OUR FIRST ANNUAL RIB-OFF!!!

Where: Union Project, 801 N. Negley Ave., corner of Stanton Ave.
When: Saturday, September 30th, 11am to 3pm

Big Prizes, Local Celebrity Judges, “World of Soul” and DJ Omar-Abdul!

How: Enter at unionproject.org, the Union Station Cafe

Tickets are $5 and available at the event. Enter by 9/20!

More Info:412-363-4550 x 26 or hilary@unionproject.org or www.unionproject.org

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Article in The Economist about the ‘Burgh

Up alongside new elections in Thailand and the peace process in Burundi, the UK-based Economist magazine features a nice article about Pittsburgh. This is some nice ammunition to use when you meet some city naysayers …

“Among Pittsburghers 25-34 years old … 41.9% have graduated from university, placing the city among America’s top ten. More than 17% of those young people have also earned an additional graduate or professional degree: the fourth-highest share in the country, behind only Washington, DC (think lawyers), Boston and San Francisco.”

Thanks to Kevin for the tip. If you click on the link you have to watch an ad to see the full article … but shh, it’s also located below. Only the Economist could make the phrase “brutal arithmeticâ€Â? sound like a good thing:

economist

Pittsburgh
How now brown town?

Sep 14th 2006 | PITTSBURGH
From The Economist print edition

A former steel city is now proclaiming its cleaner land and clever minds

A FEW years ago, the Pittsburgh region was so desperate to hang on to its brightest young people that its boosters thought about running television ads featuring “Border Guard Bob, a patrolman who would have stopped youngsters on their way out of town and urged them to stay. Wisely, the boosters scrapped that idea. And increasingly it seems as though the worries were misplaced anyway. Many of the graduates from Pittsburgh’s 34 universities led by Carnegie Mellon and the University of Pittsburgh do stick around, and some of them are finding work in cutting-edge scientific fields. A couple of decades after the collapse of the local steel industry prompted many Pittsburghers to flee, the city has a rosier future.
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