Just when you thought your college degree was a waste, this new study reveals that sugar daddies are more inclined to spend money on sugar babies with a collegiate education than those who have nothing more than a high school diploma.
In this non-scientific yet very depressing study, 83 percent of fresh-faced grads feel forced to choose an alternative path other than their chosen career after 49 days of unsuccessful job hunting.
And San Francisco (once the nation's Sugar Daddy capital) is not excluded. According to Seekingarrangement.com, a site dedicated to matching sugar daddies with sugar babies, the City by the Bay is the sixth worst place for hopeful college grads.
Airbnb started in San Francisco several years ago, and now it has people renting out their homes and properties in over 19,000 cities around the globe. It has booked millions of nights of stays in places all over the world. So, here at SF Weekly, we are bringing you some of the most unique, beautiful, quirky, outlandish and expensive Airbnb listings we can find in the City by the Bay. Below is the list for this week:
Lets Skip Sleep and Play Skeeball: Sure, this Mission fab pad has all the makings of a pretty successful Airbnb listing: Comfortable bed, clean facilities, fast WiFi, and plenty of street parking in a neighborhood with grocery stores, bars and coffee shops all nearby. But the two-time national Skeeball champion host, Joey, also ices the cake by allowing his guests to play nearly unlimited Skeeball for free during their stay. Consider it booked.
Kind of Space-y: Why stay in a boring, posh, luxury appointed apartment on the seafront in SOMA when you could stay in this space-themed studio in the same location? You can sleep under the watchful eye of a silver space man. The spot is hosted by a self-described "fun-loving Psychoanalyst" who also doubles as an Ethnoarchaeologist (whatever that means). The bathroom is decidedly African styled, however; so you can break away from your space exploration with a quick solo safari.
It was Renoir who said that a work of art "must seize upon you, wrap you up in itself, and carry you away." Interviews with artists should have a similar effect. With "Artist's Statement," our weekly interview series with prominent and upcoming visual artists in San Francisco, SF Weekly speaks to the people behind the art you see in the galleries, in the museums, and in the streets.