Look, we spend a lot of time around here talking about budget shortfalls, transit meltdowns, and the latest creative ways City Hall finds to light taxpayer money on fire. So let's take a breath. Last night's San Francisco sunset was, by all accounts, absolutely spectacular — and it didn't cost the city a dime.
Photographers across the city captured the kind of sky that makes you momentarily forget about your $3,200 studio apartment and the fact that MUNI was probably late again. Golds, pinks, deep purples — the whole palette stretched out over the Pacific like the universe was showing off.
Here's the thing about San Francisco sunsets: they're one of the few things in this city that consistently deliver on the promise. No committee meetings required. No environmental impact reports. No five-year implementation timeline. The fog rolls in, the light refracts, and you get a nightly masterpiece that would make the most jaded tech worker put down their phone — well, pick it up to take a photo, but still.
It's also a reminder of why people uproot their lives to move here in the first place. As one local put it, So I Married an Axe Murderer "was the movie that made me want to move to SF." Fair enough — between that film and every sunset photo that's ever gone viral, this city has been selling itself on vibes for decades. And honestly? The vibes hold up.
We're the first to point out when San Francisco falls short of its potential, which is often. But intellectual honesty demands we also acknowledge what this city gets right. And the views? The views are free, they're stunning, and they require zero government oversight to function properly.
Maybe there's a lesson in there somewhere.
Now if we could just get the Board of Supervisors to run as efficiently as a Pacific sunset, we'd really be in business.