Top 10 WTF Muni Moments of 2013

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Every day on Muni is a WTF moment, so you know these 10 WTF moments that we’ve picked out from 2013 are the cream of the crop. If the photo above is any indication, our standards for WTF are pretty damn high!

10. “Moon over my shoulder” on Muni. Via Gary Whitta, who says, “I often see people on my Twitter feed complaining about their fellow bus patrons. It is to them that I present this.” Um…thank you, I think?

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9 Gorgeous, Jaw-Dropping Muni Photos of 2013

Forest Hill Station, Twin Peaks Tunnel

Feast your eyes with these nine gorgeous photos we featured this year on Muni Diaries. These are just a few of the many outstanding images that we’ve found via Flickr, Instagram, and your submissions. This is our humble thank you to all the wonderful photographers here in San Francisco.

1. Photo (above) of Forest Hill Station in 1955 via SFMTA archive photos. Original post: Muni, back to the future.

2.
Screen Shot 2013-11-25 at 8.06.13 PM

Photo by Daniel Hoherd. Original post: One day in West Portal, San Francisco.
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Muni driver gives the gift of patience

2-Clement
Photo by Ian Fuller

Muni rider Shoshannah bore witness to a perfect mix of Muni and the holidays. If this doesn’t warm your heart, see a cardiologist.

I am lucky to live close enough to my job downtown where I can walk to work most days. But yesterday, the Monday before Christmas, I had early morning appointment in Laurel Village. When I was boarding the 2-Clement, an elderly man with a cane was slowly making his way to the bus—it was obvious he wanted to get on the bus, too. I started to say something to the driver, but he had already seen the man and was ready to wait. When the man got to the bus, the driver was very kind and patient. He made sure that the man waited for the lift to be lowered and kept reassuring him that he wasn’t in a rush and to take his time. He asked him what his stop was, and when it arrived, helped him onto the lift and off onto the sidewalk in front the Jewish Community Center. The driver was ready to pull away, but when he saw that the man was going to have trouble getting into the building, he actually got off the bus and held the door open for him.

When I got off the bus a few stops later, I thanked him for having such a great attitude and wished him happy holidays. I learned that his name is Jason, and that he “has been out here for 18 years.”

I am sure that it being a quiet, pre-holiday commute day helped make this series of events on the bus possible. But even so, it was a beautiful moment that deserves to be celebrated. After almost two decades driving Muni, he could be bitter and detached but instead he is actively serving the public and watching out for those who need help most. Thank you, bus driver Jason, for reminding us that there are good people driving our buses, and for setting an example of patience that we can all learn from.

Good egg Muni driver, we salute you. Happy holidays!

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