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Our Vibranium is our Culture
The good folks in SoMa Pilipinas have nonetheless been fighting to create a cultural hub for Filipinos in the Bay. In this TFAL episode, we talk to Desi Danganan of Balay Kreative, a local Filipino arts and cultural accelerator, and founder of the wildly popular Undiscovered SF. Listen as we discuss the strategies and challenges of building SoMa Pilipinas, how the Filipino American “creative class” is the key to their efforts, and the political growing pains of creating community.
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San Francisco Group Wants to Make Mid-Market a ‘World-Class’ Arts Hub
Right now The Mid-Market Business Association and Foundation are looking to raise $15 million to make this dream a reality. At the current moment the group says it has twice the amount of public money as it does private and is looking to raise more of both. A planning document outlined the budget over the next two years. Personally, I’d love to see this happen. Events like the UNDSCVRD Night Market and the Bhangra and Beats Night Market have already begun the process of revitalizing Downtown San Francisco with the arts. Having a substantial investment in the arts like The Mid-Market Business Association and Foundation plan would be enriching to all San Franciscans and visitors. Whereas, if they just tried to turn it into another tech hub or business center, all it would really do is enrich the already wealthy.
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This nonprofit cultivates Filipino entrepreneurship in SF’s South of Market district
Amid pandemic-induced business closures in San Francisco’s South of Market district, a ray of hope shines in the form of Kultivate Labs, a nonprofit on a mission to help revamp the neighborhood with Filipino culture.
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Your Favorite Filipino American Chef Was Probably a DJ or B-Boy Back in the Day
You can’t tell the story of Bay Area hip-hop without a tip of the cap to all of the Filipino Americans who helped shape the scene — from the legion of mobile DJ crews and B-boys/B-girls to the influential emcees, producers and graffiti artists. It makes sense, then, that the 2023 edition of Undiscovered SF, San Francisco’s preeminent Filipino American culture fest, is framed as a months-long celebration of hip-hop. This year is hip-hop’s 50th anniversary, after all. And as Desi Danganan — executive director of Kultivate Labs, the nonprofit that organizes the event — explains it, the Bay Area’s vibrant Fil-Am food scene today is itself deeply rooted in the community’s ties to hip-hop. Back in the ’80s, among Filipino Americans in the Bay, “everyone and their mom was a DJ,” Danganan recalls. Then there was a stretch of time when it seemed like everyone became a club promoter. Danganan remembers when he was in his twenties, the promotion crews running the nightclubs in SoMa were 90% Filipino.
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San Francisco nonprofit looks to revive a local district with Filipino culture
“First, [we were] trying to carve out space for Filipino entrepreneurs, but now space is not really the issue,” said Danganan. “It’s really about leveraging the activities of the Filipino cultural district. Before, we were just trying to squeeze in, and now, we’re the only ones who want to come in and try to revive the area.”
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San Francisco’s Filipino Cultural District Eyes the Dying Westfield Mall
The cultural district was established to uplift Filipinos in San Francisco—an ethnic group that's been pushed out of its neighborhood by gentrification not once but twice. Manilatown, centered on Kearny and Jackson streets, was more or less redeveloped out of existence, and numerous residential side streets in SoMa were later bulldozed to make way for SFMOMA and Yerba Buena Gardens. Undiscovered’s ambitions remain undiminished—if anything, there’s a major push to highlight third-wave Filipino food and its surprising array of vegan options. But the block party has to contend with a tsunami of media coverage claiming that the flourishing, if troubled, neighborhood is actually a dangerous dystopia.
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Vibrant Night Markets Could Get Easier to Launch Under New California Bill
Vibrant night markets studded with food halls are a staple in major global cities like Taipei, Hong Kong and Los Angeles. Now, a newly proposed state bill, AB 441, would make it even easier for food destinations like San Francisco to start and run bustling night markets. By eating away at some of the red tape involved with opening a night market, proponents of the bill hope these events can help turn the tide on the city’s slow economic recovery from the pandemic.
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Apply Now For These BIPOC Small Business Grants & Offerings
SEED Network (a project by non-profit Kultivate Labs) is distributing $2,500 grants (~$200,000 total) to eligible businesses that made $50,000 or less in 2019 and were adversely affected by the pandemic.
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Fil-Am creatives find home in San Francisco’s ‘Balay Kreative’
A pop-up arts hub in San Francisco provides a space for Fil-Am artists across the Bay Area to accelerate their brand and businesses. Rommel Conclara has this story.
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San Francisco’s Kapwa Gardens continues ‘cultural rebirth’
An ongoing series of workshops hosted by Kapwa Gardens on traditionally informed art forms is carrying on the Filipino American “cultural renaissance” in SOMA Pilipinas, Filipino Cultural Heritage District.
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How to Build a Filipino American Cultural Center Without a Roof
“Arts and culture, that’s the key,” Danganan says. “That’s going to be the anchor to really accelerate this kind of community engagement of coming back into your community, giving back and rebuilding it.” His vision is for Mission Street to become a commercial corridor of Filipino American shops, restaurants and cultural spaces.
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SEED Network announces grant for BIPOC businesses: Here’s how to apply
The nonprofit has given serious assists to San Francisco's entrepreneurs. Could your project use an extra four grand?
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How Fil Ams in the West Coast are engaging with Ilocano weaving as resistance
As a first-generation Ilokana immigrant, now based in San Francisco, California, I remember my whole family being gifted inabel blankets with our names on them. Yet I didn’t fully appreciate their significance until I immigrated and began exploring weaving as part of my own process of decolonizing and reclaiming the pre-colonial indigenous nature of Ilokano culture.
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Hundreds of Volunteers Turned a San Francisco Parking Lot Into a Healing Garden
Filipino-American artists and activists create a space to help their community recover.
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TNT Traysikel, a Social Sculpture of Protest and Solidarity
It’s called “TNT Traysikel,” a customized motorcycle and sidecar that cruises the streets of San Francisco Bay Area, complete with blaring karaoke music and every inch painted with cultural icons of Filipino American history in California.
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San Francisco’s Filipino Cultural District Keeping Hope Alive After a Tough Year
Businesses in San Francisco’s Filipino Cultural District were hit hard by the pandemic. But the cultural district is there to help the recovery start where it’s needed most.
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SoMa’s Kapwa Gardens Provides a Lush Space for Community Growth
Hella calamansi trees, a revamped school bus painted with a giant bird’s head and flowing curls of colorful feathers, and turquoise-purple everything—that’s what you’ll find at 967 Mission Street in San Francisco, an old parking lot turned art and wellness pop-up.
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‘TNT Traysikel’ symbolizes Pinoy art and diaspora in San Francisco
It’s not everyday you see the humble Philippine tricycle plying major thoroughfares in other countries.
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The Art That Defined San Francisco in 2019
SOMA Pilipinas is also hoping to gain a foothold in San Francisco by helping Filipino-owned businesses thrive. Republika SF, which just hit its $40,000 fundraising goal this year, is going to play a big part in that.