Axios San Francisco

April 07, 2026
๐ We're mid-way through the week.
๐ค๏ธ Today's weather: Mostly sunny, with a high of 66 and a low of 52.
๐ง Sounds like: "Happy" by Pharrell Williams.
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Today's newsletter is 677 words โ a 2.5-minute read.
1 big thing: ๐ Through archivists' eyes
Gold Rush-era anti-Asian violence and the destruction of San Francisco's Manilatown are dark chapters in local history, and they may have been lost to time if not for community archivists.
The big picture: A new documentary by a third-generation San Franciscan explores these stories through the eyes of the people preserving them for future generations.
- "From the Ground Up," sponsored by the AAPI Civic Engagement Fund, premiered in March at the Manilatown Heritage Foundation and is showing again next week.
Artist and activist Leon Sun, one of the film's subjects, compares archving to traveling on a road through time.
- "Archiving is sort of like the gas stations on the way to keep you going forward [and also] a trail that you can look back on to see what happened in the past," he told Axios.
The 35-minute film follows four community archivists:
- Sun, whose photography captured the lives of everyday people during movements like anti-Vietnam War protests and Black-Asian solidarity.
- Manilatown Heritage Foundation executive director Caroline Cabading, whose work preserves the legacy of the city's Filipino enclave and its destruction after the 1977 International Hotel eviction.
- Barnali Ghosh and Anirvan Chatterjee of the South Asian Radical History Walking Tour, which touches on chapters like the origins of South Asian LGBTQ+ organizations and the life of activist Kala Bagai.

Behind the scenes: Director Katie Quan started working on the film a few years ago while delving into archives like the Bay Area hip-hop collection at the African American Museum and Library at Oakland.
- "Giving credit to archives doesn't really come naturally," Quan told Axios, noting that people often "pick and choose things" without thinking through how the materials are preserved.
- But they are crucial to filling in gaps for marginalized communities, she said, especially as attacks on DEI continue to escalate. "If we don't save our own history, no one else is going to do it," she said.
Case in point: Many people today are shocked to learn that there used to be a thriving, 10-block-long Filipino neighborhood adjacent to Chinatown, Cabading told Axios.
- "You have to remember on the community's behalf," Cabading said.
What's next: Watch "From the Ground Up" at its next screening at 7:30pm on April 16 at Clarion Performing Arts Center.
2. The Wiggle: City layoffs begin
๐ผ San Francisco is laying off 127 city employees across 18 departments as Mayor Lurie looks to reduce a yearslong budget deficit.
- Lurie has said he plans to cut 500 positions total. (SF Chronicle)
A man who posed as a rideshare driver to kidnap and rape four women faces 100+ years in prison following his conviction last week. (ABC7)
๐ฎ The team behind Bar Darling is opening a modern Mexican cantina called Lobalita in the former Tipsy location in the Marina. (Eater SF)
๐จ Minnesota Street Project in Dogpatch will host a permanent gallery dedicated to local artist Ruth Asawa's rarely seen drawings, paintings and other projects.
- The first exhibition will open May 9. (SF Examiner)
๐ณ๏ธCalifornia joined a lawsuit with more than 20 other states arguing that President Trump's new executive order on mail-in voting is unconstitutional. (KQED)
๐ Poems and short stories written by local students are being shown off inside BART train cars as part of a partnership with the literary nonprofit 826 Valencia. (SF Standard)
3. ๐ Where in SF was Shawna?

Clearly, I gravitate to spaces with red lighting. (Shoutout to Mr. Mahjong's!)
- Though in my defense, it's hard not to be drawn to this beautifully decorated cocktail bar, which features lotus motifs, red lanterns and leafy plants.
- It was the perfect ambiance for a night out with friends, one of whom was visiting from Portland. (He couldn't get enough of SF, obviously.)
๐ Hit reply to send us your best guess!
๐ Shawna is loving this "Trying to romanticize Caltrain like Japan" video.
โค๏ธโ๐ฉน Nadia is resting up.
This newsletter was edited by Geoff Ziezulewicz.
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