Muni in the Movies: 40 Days and 40 Nights, 2002


Photo from: Buses on Screen (Nifty link, yeah?)

Last time we posted about Muni in the movies, a lot of you reminded us about other noteworthy Muni movie appearances. Sadly, we all missed a gem: 40 Days and 40 Nights (2002), starring Josh Hartnett and Shannyn Sossamon.

In 2009, SF Appeal reviewed the movie and its Lent-time propriety: Hartnett’s character gives up any and all sexual activity for Lent, then meets a cute girl in the laundromat. I watched a little bit of the movie on TV at 1 a.m. Saturday morning, and left it on because it was 1 a.m. Saturday morning. Then, suddenly, Muni!

In scene above, the lead actors sit comfortably in a parked coach in a Muni lot, which is almost as unrealistic as Hartnett’s spic-and-span bachelor pad and his not masturbating for 40 days.

But check out more of 40 Days and 40 Nights, starring Muni:

This may  have been the girlfriend who dumped him. I might have fallen asleep.

Ladies in their undies on Market Street, and a cable car!

Send us more example of Muni in the movies. A film festival might be in order!

AC Transit diary: Nice place to park a bus

AC Transit's new 3 Position Bus Bike Rack -3
Photo by AC Transit

Here’s an AC Transit story from Amanda, the human behind the nascent @actdiaries. Follow AC Transit Diaries, the latest in the Diaries clan (which includes @caltraindiaries and @bartdiaries).

A few months back during my transbay commute I changed things up and sat near the front of the bus instead of the center aisle, my usual. When we stopped at the Grand Lake Theater a helmeted bicyclist attached his bike to the front of the bus and sat down casually near the driver. The bus pulled away from curb and onto the 580 onramp without a hitch.

From where I was sitting I watched the bus driver hover above her seat with her foot on the gas inspecting the bike rack. While a near standing bus driver was odd, I rationalized that it must get really uncomfortable to be sitting all the time.

The bus continued to accelerate and we merged to the furthest left lane, which was still totally normal for our route.

After a few minutes pass the driver begins shouting back at the bicyclist “Sir! Sir!” “If this is your bike please come up here!”

I looked at the bike guy who now was wearing headphones and motioned that the bus driver was yelling at him.

The rider pulled out an ear bud and made a “Who me?” shrug and and sheepishly walked next to the driver.

“You didn’t attach your bike correctly!” She yells frantically. “See, its not on right!” she shakes her finger at the bike rack.

As the bicyclist starts to mutter a response, the driver checks the side mirrors and brings the bus to a screeching halt on the freeway.

Everyone on the bus, people who are usually quite chatty, go silent.

I look around and notice that we are parked in the fast lane; our driver didn’t even bother to pull over onto the shoulder.

She unbuckles her seatbelt and stands confrontationally next to the bike rider.

“You need to learn to put your bike on right, I can’t go on the bridge like this!”

She reaches over and presses the button that opens the door to the bus.

Oncoming traffic is whizzing by. She points out the door demanding the bike guy exit the bus and retrieve his two-wheeled ride.

At this point everyone on the bus starts shouting, defending the bike guy. “Don’t do it!” “No way!” “Are you serious?”

The rider backs up and sits back down, his own personal protest.

The bus driver sneers as us and leans out the open door, checks for oncoming cars, and shimmies spy style around the nose of the bus.

Everyone starts really FREAKING OUT.

People are now crowding the front of the bus to witness what may be this bus driver’s impending death.

I watch her wiggle the bike on the rack and then heave the bike frame over her shoulder. She barrels back into the bus carrying the bike and shoves it in the sitting rider’s direction. He catches it.

“Guess the rack was broken” she mumbles, turning the ignition.

Muni News: BART protest Thursday, Muni deficit, all-door boarding


Photo by Brian Brooks

  • One Injured After F-Line Muni Collides With Car (SF Appeal)
  • Muni aims to put new transit projects into gear (SF Examiner)
  • Protest Group Announces Thursday “Spare The Fare” Demonstration At Powell BART Station (SF Appeal)
  • Demonstrators Fail to Appear at Anonymous’s Latest #OpBART Monday (NSFW Slideshow) (SF Appeal)
  • Muni stabbing called unprovoked; suspect returns to the scene of the crime (SF Examiner)
  • San Francisco Muni already projecting $23M shortfall (SF Examiner)
  • Clipper Loses Nearly $700,000 a Year Because of Negative Balance Feature (Akit’s Complaint Department)
  • All-Door Muni Boarding Plan Gets “Warm Reception” From SFMTA Board (SF Appeal) || (Streetsblog SF)
  • Muni drivers are skipping work less often (SF Examiner)

Contest: Your Best Muni Line Review, Performed by Anna Conda!

So what do you really think of Muni? Write your wittiest, most entertaining review of a Muni line on the Muni Google Places page. Later this month, we’ll look over all of your reviews, and choose a winner, who will get a $100 gift certificate from Hog and Rocks, courtesy of Google Places!

Four more winners will get $50 each for your witty reviews!

The one-and-only Anna Conda will read/perform your review on stage at the Muni Diaries Reunion/Open Mic! Anna will help us choose the winning review, so go over to Google Places and let it all hang out. Use the hashtag #munidiaries to let us know you want your review considered for the contest.

Details:
What: Muni Review Contest on Google Places
Where: Muni Google Places
How: Write your wittiest review of a Muni line, using #munidiaries to enter the contest
Prize: $100 to Hog and Rocks and see your review performed on stage! Four more winners will receive $50 each. So get to it — we want to give you cash, oysters, or pork, or all of the above!

Muni Diaries Reunion Show/Open Mic!


Photo by ChipMonkey

Muni Diaries is hosting our very first Reunion/Open Mic show on Wednesday, Sept. 28! Come see your favorite performers from past Muni Diaries Live shows tell stories that ended up on the cutting room floor. Or sign up at the show to tell a Muni story and win a $50 cash prize. Admission is only $5 at the Elbo Room, and you get a FREE DRINK with your admission. You’re practically making money off of us, right?

Want one more reason why you should come to the first Muni Diaries Reunion/Open Mic show? For this show, we’re having a contest on the Muni Google Places page, where you are invited to write your most entertaining review of a Muni line. Use the hashtag #munidiaries to let us know that you want in. The best review wins $100 to Hog and Rocks courtesy of Google Places, and the one and only Anna Conda will read the winning review on stage at the show!

So save the date on your calendar, and see you at the Muni Diaries Reunion/Open Mic!

Details:
Muni Diaries Reunion/Open Mic Show
Wednesday Sept. 28. Signup starts at 6:30 p.m., show 7 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Elbo Room, 647 Valencia St. (between 17th and 18th Street). J, 12, 14, 22, 33, 49, BART

See recaps and videos of past Muni Diaries Live performances.

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