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  #1  
Old Posted Aug 16, 2022, 7:41 PM
H2O H2O is offline
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This article is not specifically about Austin, but it got me thinking I think downtown Austin has rebounded very well from the pandemic. What do you think?

https://www.wweek.com/news/city/2022...c-study-shows/
I don't go Downtown as often as I did pre-pandemic since I no longer work Downtown, but when I have it seemed pretty normal to me. However, the study cited in the article has us ranked at 38th in recovery with only 53% recovery of activity levels.
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  #2  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2022, 1:27 AM
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I don't go Downtown as often as I did pre-pandemic since I no longer work Downtown, but when I have it seemed pretty normal to me. However, the study cited in the article has us ranked at 38th in recovery with only 53% recovery of activity levels.
Anecdotally, the number of office workers around during the day doesn't seem to have fully recovered yet. In the evenings however, everything seems pretty much as it was pre-pandemic. In fact, the evenings may even be busier than they were before.
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  #3  
Old Posted Aug 16, 2022, 9:49 PM
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Yeah every time I am downtown seems pretty normal and active to me.
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  #4  
Old Posted Aug 16, 2022, 10:34 PM
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Austin drive-in movie theater premieres new floating cinema on Lady Bird Lake

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/e...ady-bird-lake/

Don’t we do enough driving around here? Instead of a drive-in movie, Austin-born Blue Starlite Mini Urban Drive-in is offering two new float-in movie options on Thursdays, starting August 25, at the Waterfront Floating Cinema, and on Wednesdays once a month on a cruise.

At the fixed cinema on Lady Bird Lake, the 20-foot screen (about the size of a small lake boat) faces the city and the shore, so movie-goers can sit on a floating platform and watch films against the water, easily accessible by and to downtown — perfect for folding into the night’s plans. Landlubbers can stay there, while kayak, paddleboard, and canoe captains view from their personal craft.

Fittingly, one of the upcoming screenings (September 8) shows Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, but not before the chaotic film that made waves after its South by Southwest 2022 debut, Everything Everywhere All at Once (August 25, opening night). In between, on September 1, is the “Grease Sing-A-Long: For Olivia,” honoring star Olivia Newton-John, who died on August 8.

The second screen is mounted on the upper deck of a boat lent by Capital Cruises, showing both classic and recent independent films. The first film of this series is Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, on September 14. Snacks on the boat can be added when purchasing tickets online.

Both screens can also be rented for private events; up to 40 viewers can watch on the shore, while the boat can take up to 75. Blue Starlight rents a complicated array of its screens for private events, all of which except the lake screens seem to measure capacity by car.

These additions bring Blue Starlite’s total Austin locations to five: the lake, one downtown spot atop a parking garage on San Antonio Street, one with several showing experiences in the Mueller area, one called the Starbrite Cinema near East MLK Boulevard, and one in Northwest Austin with food by Garbo’s. Another new project by Blue Starlite brings programming from the eclectic, local Hyperreal Film Club, which is in residency at the MLK location starting September 4 with Pee-wee's Big Adventure.

Tickets ($20-40 on the dock, $35-$60 on the cruise) are available by screening at bluestarlitedrivein.com.
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  #5  
Old Posted Aug 16, 2022, 10:40 PM
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This Texas city is the No. 1 destination for Austin millennials on the move

(Houston. Its Houston.)

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/c...d-millennials/

For the most part, Austin millennials have stayed close to home after entering adulthood, a new report indicates.

At age 26, nearly 70 percent of people who were born from 1984 to 1992 and raised in Austin remained here, according to the report. That leaves more than 30 percent who moved elsewhere.

...

Bayou City was followed by San Antonio (3.1 percent), Dallas (2.8 percent), Killeen (1.3 percent), and Fort Worth (1.2 percent). These were the only Texas cities to surpass the 1 percent mark for the share of millennials born from 1984 to 1992 who had moved away from Austin. In 2022, these millennials are celebrating birthdays from 30 to 38.

These are the top five out-of-state destinations for Austin-raised, on-the-move millennials:

Los Angeles — 0.86 percent
New York City — 0.79 percent
Denver — 0.64 percent
Seattle — 0.50 percent
Washington, D.C. — 0.43 percent

The list of Texas places that sent millennials to Austin looks very similar to the list of places that gained millennials from Austin. The top five are Houston (6.7 percent of movers born from 1984 to 1992 who came to Austin), Dallas and San Antonio (3.7 percent each), Fort Worth (2 percent), and Brownsville (1.6 percent).

...

The researchers say 80 percent of young-adult movers in the U.S. had relocated less than 100 miles from where they grew up and 90 percent had moved less than 500 miles.
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  #6  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2022, 12:20 AM
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Google updated the 3D imagery for Austin.
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  #7  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2022, 2:44 AM
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Google updated the 3D imagery for Austin.
Nice...
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  #8  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 2:03 PM
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Four Historic Markers Approved for East Austin Mexican American Heritage Sites

https://austin.towers.net/four-histo...eritage-sites/

Four East Austin landmarks significant to the Mexican American cultural history of the region have officially received approval for state historical markers, according to an announcement this week by local nonprofit Preservation Austin. The sites, submitted for consideration as part of the organization’s East Austin Barrio Landmarks Project, represent part of an ongoing effort by local historians to document and preserve the diverse cultural heritage of these landmarks amidst the rapid growth of East Austin.

The approved sites include beloved East Sixth Street restaurant Cisco’s, the district’s Pan American Neighborhood Park, and two homes important to local Mexican American politics and activism — here’s a closer look at each site:
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  #9  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 2:05 PM
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Austin's treasured Trail of Lights unwraps return to traditional format for 2022 holidays

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/e...rmat-for-2022/

Here’s an early holiday gift for you: A beloved Austin tradition is returning to its normal pre-pandemic format.

The nonprofit Trail of Lights Foundation says this year’s Austin Trail of Lights will once again be a walk-through event rather than a drive-through event. In 2020 and 2021, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Trail of Lights let visitors drive along the trail but not walk along it.

“As we return to an in-person, interactive event, we cannot wait to share exciting new additions and Austin’s favorite longstanding traditions with the community at the trail,” says Nicholas Miller, the newly appointed board president of the Trail of Lights Foundation.

The 58th annual event, whose title sponsor is H-E-B, will be December 8-23 at Zilker Park. A sneak-peek party will be held December 2, while the Austin Trail of Lights Fun Run will happen December 3.

What began in 1965 as a small community gathering around a yule log now attracts more 400,000 guests a year. The Trail of Lights features more than 2 million lights illuminating Zilker Park, 90 lighted holiday trees, and more than 70 other holiday displays and lighted tunnels.

General admission will be free on seven of the event’s 14 nights; children under age 12 will be admitted every night at no charge.

In early October, the full calendar for the Trail of Lights, along with the ability to buy tickets online, will go live on the event’s website.
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  #10  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 2:18 PM
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Stunning Skyspace on UT Austin campus reopens with immersive programming

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/a...-music-events/

One of Austin's favorite art installations is back and better. After a brief summer closure, James Turrell's Skyspace, The Color Inside, is slated to reopen on Monday, August 22.

Welcoming more than 75,000 people each year, The Color Inside is a freestanding, naked-eye observatory located on The University of Texas at Austin campus. The pre-programmed light sequence fills the space with brilliant washes of color at each sunrise and sunset, causing the sky to appear in unimaginable hues.
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  #11  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 2:19 PM
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12 official and unofficial events to celebrate the rest of Austin Pride

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/e...-austin-pride/

One of Austin’s biggest commitments to weirdness is the entire month of August, which is the city’s very own Pride Month. Organized by the Austin Pride Foundation, this month actually only diverges from the national celebration for better logistics and bigger crowds, but it has blessed Austinites with an additional 31 days of gay, gender-expansive, true-to-yourself fun.

The beauty of Pride is the freedom to celebrate however you choose. For many in the community, that means visiting the usual haunts and strengthening that sense of kinship. But it might also mean branching out. Some of these events are LGBT101, some enable meaningful contemporary art, and some are just a good time by and for those who celebrate the community year-round.

All of these events are made to welcome all, so if you’re looking for a nudge to get out there with your friends, allies, and lovers, they’re ready for you.
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Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 2:22 PM
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What you need to know about aGLIFF 2022, Austin's LGBTQ film festival

https://www.statesman.com/story/ente...o/65406462007/

June might get its share of LGBTQ fun for Pride Month, but Austin's lucky enough to have a really gay August, too. Following the return of annual Austin Pride Festival & Parade celebrations on Aug. 20, the city's oldest running film festival marks its 35th edition with loads of queer cinema just a few days later.

When and where is aGLIFF 2020?

AGLIFF 2022 runs Aug. 24-28, and this year, its 85 films will screen at Galaxy Highland in North Austin. (There's also a virtual version of the festival, Aug. 29-Sept. 5.)
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  #13  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 3:30 PM
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Does anyone know why Austin Pride is held in August, and the rest of the US celebrates it in June?
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  #14  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 3:50 PM
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Does anyone know why Austin Pride is held in August, and the rest of the US celebrates it in June?
We celebrate both June and August. I’ve heard the parade was pushed to August at some point to allow more people (UT students) to attend.
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  #15  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 4:41 PM
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Does anyone know why Austin Pride is held in August, and the rest of the US celebrates it in June?
This is pure second-hand conversations, but I heard it was pushed to August due to conflicts with the State Track and Field Championships and the ROT rally.
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  #16  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2022, 3:23 PM
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Does anyone know why Austin Pride is held in August, and the rest of the US celebrates it in June?
Pride is typically celebrated In June. So why is Austin's 'official' parade in August?

https://www.kut.org/austin/2019-06-1...rade-in-august

Cities across the world celebrate Pride in June with parades and events to honor the queer and trans activists who put their lives on the line for gay liberation during the Stonewall riots of 1969. The event marked the start of the modern gay liberation movement.

But in Austin, the city’s “official” Pride celebration isn’t until August.

That led Stacy MacDiarmid, a self-described “enthusiastic ally” of Pride, to ask our ATXplained project: Why?

MacDiarmid is so enthusiastic, she bakes a Pride-themed dessert every year. Though the question has been on her mind for years, she thought this year – the 50th anniversary of Stonewall – was the year to get an answer.

She also wanted to make sure she baked a rainbow cake on the right day.

“I texted my friends to wish them happy Pride at the beginning of June, and then we laughed because we’re not sure it’s actually Pride,” she says.

Financial, logistical and functional

MacDiarmid guessed the main reason the parade is held in August is because the college students are back then.

I called Micah Andress, the president of the Austin Gay and Lesbian Pride Foundation, to see if she was right. The nonprofit has been responsible for the Pride festival and parade since 2010.

Andress says he gets the question all the time. The reasons Pride happens in August are threefold.

"There’s a financial aspect, there’s a logistical aspect, and then there’s a functional aspect," he says.

It costs $100,000 to host the festival and parade, he says. Vetted sponsors cover half the costs, but the rest comes from fundraising and ticket sales. For a smaller nonprofit like Austin Pride to be able to afford that, it has to draw out-of-towners in addition to locals, who will pay $10 to $150 per ticket.

If the parade were to happen in June like it does in most other Texas cities, he says, the nonprofit would have fewer big-name entertainers to attract festival-goers.

And entertainment is “what brings the crowds out,” he says.

Perhaps a less obvious reason the parade is in August, Andress says, is the cost for rain insurance in June. August is historically the driest month on record, so it’s a safer bet.

"We cannot afford rain insurance," he says. "It is ridiculously expensive."

MacDiarmid’s guess about why the parade is later – students! – was also correct. Andress says it takes about 400 volunteers to pull off Pride.

"Of those 400 people, about 95 to 96 percent of them are college-aged kids,” most of whom aren’t around in the summertime, he says.

All-year and all-inclusive

But Andress sees the parade as only one part of a year-long celebration of queer identity.

To raise money for the celebration, the nonprofit sponsors year-round events, like drag bingo, which he says can get “pretty wild.”

But he also recognizes the importance of the history of Pride. His group has held a Stonewall rally annually on the steps of the Texas State Capitol since 2010. In recent years, the event has also commemorated the victims of the Pulse massacre.

“[We are] reminding lawmakers in there that we are not second-class citizens. That we are not going anywhere. Y’all can make some noise for that,” Kelly Kline said during a speech at the rally last week.

This is a particularly charged year for queer rights. On Friday, an appeals court let President Trump’s transgender military ban stand. And since January, 10 trans women of color, including two in Dallas, have been killed.

A 2015 Gallup poll ranked Austin as having the third highest rate of LGBTQ residents among metropolitan areas in the U.S. But state-level protections for the 4.1% LGBTQ population rank low compared to the rest of the country.

That’s one reason why Andress has tried to make Austin Pride as inclusive as possible since taking over as parade director in 2011. For the first year, Black Pride will be running a ticketed VIQ (“very important queer”) section with an open bar, catered food and a DJ at Austin Pride. All funds will go to Black Pride.

At the end of the day, Andress doesn't see a Pride parade in August as limiting. He says MacDiarmid can go ahead and bake her rainbow cake whenever she wants.

“Pride is what you make it, it should be year-round. I don’t think it has to be in June to be celebrated,” he says. “I think it can be anytime you want it to be. Lady GaGa said that Pride needs to happen all year, and I’m like, ‘Yes, I’m so down for this!”
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  #17  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 4:42 PM
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And by conflicts, I mean lodging etc
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  #18  
Old Posted Aug 20, 2022, 4:21 PM
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Keep Austin Weird, right?!?
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  #19  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2022, 3:32 PM
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Great find, thanks!
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  #20  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2022, 1:36 AM
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So, there's a 2022 movie on Netflix called "Look Both Ways" that was filmed in Austin. They show the Paramount Theatre and Continental Club. I haven't watched all of it, but there are some Austin scenes here and there, and it takes place during SXSW.

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt14298328/
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