San Francisco, CA
The 10 Best Clubs, Bars and Venues for Dancing in SF
It’s Friday night in San Francisco. You’ve got the urge to dance. Where are you going? If you’re drawing a blank, that’s completely understandable. The city has a diverse slate of dance clubs, concert halls and other venues where you can let loose, but picking one can feel daunting, especially if you’re going for the first time — so we’re here to help. The next time the feeling strikes, hit up one of these 10 dance clubs (well, nine dance clubs and one roller rink).
1015 Folsom
Eric Ananmalay
Forget San Francisco (stay with me now), 1015 Folsom is one of the most iconic dance music clubs in the world. A renowned institution, the club recently underwent a remodel and sound-system upgrade that yielded big results: The main floor is now far more open to better accommodate some of the biggest names in dance music. You name it, they’ve played here Fatboy Slim, Basement Jaxx and Carl Cox? The birthplace of the weekly party Spundae? Check and check. Both Peggy Gou and Charlotte de Witte have played the room in the past year. But it’s much more than just a single dance floor, with five rooms in total that give it underground warehouse feel that’s a privilege to have in San Francisco. And with the longstanding Pura Saturdays bringing Latinx and international flair every week too, it truly is a global affair.
1015 Folsom St
Rickshaw Stop is best known as the music venue to see breakout acts (from Billie Eilish to Sam Smith) before they get big, but it’s also hallowed ground for dance music. The home to the iconic Popscene club, founder DJ Aaron Axelsen has a knack for bringing in electro and dance pop acts from the U.K. and U.S. (Jorja Smith! Flight Facilities!) to the 350-ish person club — and Axelsen’s own opening and closing DJ sets are kick-ass in and of themselves. Rickshaw Stop also plays host to a number of themed dance nights from emo, Taylor Swift and LCD Soundsystem to K-Pop, Italo Disco and even the infamous Shrek Rave.
155 Fell St
The patio at El Rio
Shot In The City
The queer-owned and operated space in the Mission has one of the best backyard patios in San Francisco and it’s BIG. El Rio is a dynamite community space that does an incredible job of incorporating alternative and underserved subcultures by providing a space for promoters from all walks of life to spread their wings and throw glorious dance parties in their house. That means soul and disco daytime vibes from Hard French (with a big anniversary bash on the horizon), the wonderfully boisterous and delicious vibes of R&B and Ribs, and A Family Affair’s queer ’90s and ’00s throwback party every first Friday at 9 p.m. for only $5.
3158 Mission St
For when just a simple dance party won’t suffice, Church of 8 Wheels is a full-blown roller disco set in — you guessed it — a converted church in the Lower Haight. While it’s open other days of the week, it’s the Saturday Sessions that really turn up with a DJ and neon lights galore. You can bring in your own skates, or rent a pair for $5.
554 Fillmore St

The Midway
Missael Gonzalez
On the outskirts of SF’s Pier 80, the Midway is a warehouse and gallery space with a lot to offer. The main room, dubbed Ride, is a sweeping space to dance in. There’s the smaller Gods & Monsters Room and also a chilled-out back patio that can make for any combination of multi-room parties with DJs from Mark Farina to Bonobo and even electro-minded bands like Little Dragon. But the best time to come to the Midway to dance is during one of their excellent afternoon block parties, where a big chunk of the blocks behind the venue on Michigan and Marin Streets transform into a mega dance party. Summer is just around the corner and parties with Steve Aoki, Carl Cox and Above & Beyond (on Pride weekend!) are already on the docket.
900 Marin St
Salsa dancing at Cavaña
Anna Wick
Found at the Luma Hotel, Cavaña is already one of the best hotel bars in San Francisco. The spectacular Latin-focused cocktails and food offerings on a glorious rooftop patio in Mission Bay are complemented by DJs spinning globally-minded tunes from 8 p.m. to midnight on the intimate dance floor on Fridays and Saturdays. Then on Sunday nights at 5 p.m., Edgardo Cambon and LaTiDo drop live salsa music to dance to on the outside terrace with gorgeous views of S.F. and a mojito bar to boot.
100 Channel St, 17th Floor
On the edge of S.F.’s Design District, the Great Northern is one of the most uniquely laid out rooms in town, complemented by 30-foot-high ceilings that make for an imposing yet still intimate space for acts like dancehall producer Mad Professor and electro cumbia DJ Nicola Cruz. The Great Northern also hosts occasional block parties outside on Utah Street that often make it feel like the most exciting corner of the city.
119 Utah St
Known for having one of the best drag shows and cabaret performances in San Francisco, Oasis also hosts fabulous dance parties on the regular. Owned by drag queen D’arcy Drollinger, Oasis is built within an 8,000-square-foot former gay bathhouse in SOMA. While Oasis is a staple in the queer community and a hot ticket on any night, make sure to get there on Saturday night when, starting at 10 p.m., Princess is a resident drag and dance extravaganza exploring sounds from disco to K-Pop.
298 11th St
This long-running SOMA club is the place to be if you want to dance to ’80s music, but it also offers ’90s, new wave, goth, industrial and more. Every Thursday, Class of 1984 plays ’80s tunes with no cover. Club Gossip and New Wave City take the torch on second and third Saturdays, then on every fourth Friday, Leisure is the premier Britpop/Manchester/’90s party in town. Then if you really want to get in the spirit of the nearby Folsom Street Fair year-round, Play-X-Land is a BDSM/kink/fetish night with go-go dancers and a dungeon that goes down every Wednesday with a $10 cover if you’re in fetishwear and $20 if not. You know what to do.
1190 Folsom St
A favorite of the Burning Man contingent, Public Works brings consistently stellar DJs to the Mission. The two-level, community-minded space features a Funktion-One sound system and dizzying visuals on any given night. Upcoming DJ performances include the Polish Ambassador and Rusko, as well as the Blessed Madonna playing a fundraiser for the Stud, the soon-to-be-reopened historic LGBTQ bar.
161 Erie St
This article was featured in the InsideHook SF newsletter. Sign up now for more from the Bay Area.
San Francisco, CA
People’s Budget Coalition Claims Victory After San Francisco Budget Restores Most Proposed Service Cuts – Davis Vanguard
By Vanguard Staff
SAN FRANCISCO — The San Francisco People’s Budget Coalition declared a major victory this week after the San Francisco Board of Supervisors’ Budget and Appropriations Committee advanced a budget proposal restoring nearly all of Mayor Daniel Lurie’s proposed cuts to community organizations and workers providing essential services throughout the city.
The coalition credited months of organizing by labor unions, community organizations, residents and advocates for reversing many of the reductions initially proposed in the mayor’s budget. The committee-approved budget now moves to the full Board of Supervisors and then to Mayor Lurie for final approval. According to the coalition, few, if any, additional changes are expected during that process.
The coalition said thousands of San Francisco workers, residents and community members participated in neighborhood town halls, marches, rallies, phone banks, letter-writing campaigns and demonstrations to pressure city leaders to restore funding for programs serving vulnerable populations.
“This budget represents a remarkable victory for every single San Francisco resident,” said Anya Worley-Ziegman, coalition coordinator for the San Francisco People’s Budget Coalition.
“And it shows that public pressure works. Showing up works. Organizing, going out into communities where people will see their lives impacted by cuts, where people feel like their government and their representatives aren’t listening to them, and giving people an outlet to make their voices heard can make real change.”
Worley-Ziegman credited “the thousands of people, workers, unions, community and advocacy organizations, as well as the leadership of Budget Chair Connie Chan and Supervisors who fought for their districts’ priorities” with helping restore “tens of millions of dollars for essential programs serving our city’s most vulnerable populations.”
“Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. reminds us that budgets are moral documents, and today, City Hall seems to agree,” Worley-Ziegman added.
According to the coalition, many of the mayor’s proposed reductions affecting LGBTQ+, immigrant, student and homeless services were restored through the city’s annual budget “add-back” process during the Budget and Appropriations Committee’s final meeting, chaired by Supervisor Connie Chan.
The coalition said restorations include tens of millions of dollars for senior services, housing and rent assistance, Free City College, HIV services, immigrant services and other community programs.
The organization argued that many of the programs initially targeted for reductions serve communities that are already facing challenges resulting from actions by the federal government. The coalition said restoring those programs demonstrates continued city support for immigrants, LGBTQ+ residents, Black, Indigenous and other communities of color, as well as individuals struggling with mental health, substance use disorders or homelessness.
The coalition said investments in those communities strengthen the city and help maintain San Francisco’s reputation as a welcoming and inclusive city.
Despite celebrating the committee’s actions, the coalition said significant fiscal challenges remain. It noted that not all proposed reductions were fully restored and that city officials project next year’s budget deficit to exceed this year’s.
The coalition argued that San Francisco possesses substantial wealth, particularly amid the city’s growing artificial intelligence industry, and said city leaders should pursue additional revenue sources to sustain public services rather than relying on service reductions.
“San Francisco is one of the wealthiest cities in the wealthiest country in the world, and with the AI boom, it’s only getting richer,” Worley-Ziegman said.
“The fact that we need to exert this much time and energy fighting for such a small slice of the pie is, frankly, as ridiculous as it is shameful.”
“We should be laser focused on expanding the pie. We need to be talking about IPO taxes, wealth taxes, mansion taxes, and every policy tool available to close future deficits,” Worley-Ziegman continued.
“It feels like every year our leaders tell the most vulnerable communities to eat cuts and make ‘hard choices,’ while simultaneously opposing comically small taxes on the city’s wealthiest and well connected residents.”
“It should not be this hard to get an immigrant mother on the cusp of eviction $50 to make rent, or a senior living with HIV on our streets counseling or a hot meal.”
Worley-Ziegman concluded by urging advocates to continue organizing beyond this year’s budget process.
“Yes, let’s celebrate this win, but don’t forget that there’s so much more work to do if we want to move San Francisco forward without leaving its most vulnerable residents behind.”
Follow the Vanguard on Social Media – X, Instagram and Facebook. Subscribe the Vanguard News letters. To make a tax-deductible donation, please visit davisvanguard.org/donate or give directly through ActBlue. Your support will ensure that the vital work of the Vanguard continues.
Categories:
Breaking News San Francisco
Tags:
budget advocacy community services Connie Chan Daniel Lurie People’s Budget Coalition San Francisco budget
San Francisco, CA
Suspect arrested after shooting near San Francisco Pride events, police say
A suspect was arrested Saturday after a shooting near San Francisco’s Pride celebrations left one person wounded and an officer hurt during a foot chase, police said.
The San Francisco Police Department said officers were monitoring Pride events near United Nations Plaza around 3:32 p.m. when the shooting occurred.
Officers found a victim suffering from a gunshot wound and immediately began rendering aid. The victim was taken to an area hospital with injuries that were not life-threatening.
Police said officers in the area quickly located a person matching the suspect’s description, prompting a foot pursuit. During the chase, one officer suffered minor injuries.
The suspect was eventually taken into custody, and the person’s name has not been released.
Police said the investigation remains active despite the arrest.
San Francisco, CA
Serving up a slice of Palestine at Old Jerusalem in the Mission District
Ahmed Ali Mazen can’t remember the last time he missed the call to prayer.
Five times a day, he heads out the back of his restaurant, Old Jerusalem at 25th and Mission streets, and climbs the stairs to his rooftop, which overlooks the Mission and Bernal Heights.
He always concludes the routine with a Marlboro Gold and a scorching-hot cup of tea with fresh mint.
It’s a lifetime away from the farm where Mazen, now age 58, was raised, one of 11 children, in a small village named Saffa in Ramallah, Palestine. His family grew cucumbers, tomatoes, watermelon and, on the village’s mountaintop, olives.
The Mazen family raised cows, sheep and goats. Mazen had his own pet donkey, which he said he loved dearly.
“Donkeys were for those who couldn’t afford horses,” he said. “Those who couldn’t afford donkeys walked.”
Mazen’s donkey was his most prized possession. He would use it to plow the family’s land and carry produce back from the top of the mountain.
He looks back on his childhood fondly, remembering the village’s ceremonial olive harvest and the fiercely competitive soccer matches.
He and his friends would wait outside the nearby girls’ school in the afternoons, each picking who they said they would one day marry.
“Of course, we never had the guts to go up to them and introduce ourselves. It was just fun to love from afar. That’s what kids do.”
Mazen was 19 during the first intifada in 1987, a political uprising against Israel in which more than 1,100 Palestinians, many of them children, were killed.
“Nothing was ever the same,” he says.
He was still in his teens when he left to start a new life in the United States. In San Francisco, he worked all sorts of odd jobs: Bagging groceries at Mike’s on Mission Street, tow-truck driver, and endless kitchen gigs.
Next came an arranged marriage. “She had seen a photo of me beforehand, I didn’t, but I didn’t really care,” he recalled. “I just wanted to get married.”
His bride was another Palestinian from Ramallah, possibly one of the girls he’d admired from afar during his school days.
He said falling in love and wanting to raise a family motivated him to be self-sufficient by starting his own business. Mazen felt there was a gap to be filled, that existing Middle Eastern restaurants weren’t serving “true” Palestinian food.
One day, Mazen noticed a new “for sale” sign in a window on his commute home. The asking price was far above his price range, but with loans from a bank, family and friends, he cobbled together enough money to buy it.
Old Jerusalem Restaurant opened in 2005. At first, business was so slow that he had to borrow another $40,000 loan from a friend, but eventually it picked up.
Now, 21 years later, Old Jerusalem offers authentic Palestinian dishes like pistachio-crusted lamb chops and Nablusi kunefe, a dessert made of crispy, shredded phyllo, layered with melted cheese and soaked in sweet, fragrant syrup.
“We serve the food I ate growing up, no compromises,” Mazen said.
On its face, Mazen’s story is one of the many successful stories of Palestinian immigrants. He has a wife and three kids, all of whom went to college, and a longstanding business.
He has friends in the Palestinian community here, like Sami Rami, who owns the nearby Middle Eastern market. These days he goes to countless weddings for his friends’ grown children. And he has come to love this sanctuary city.
“This place has everything you need to love it,” he said. “There is so much diversity here: Arab, Chinese, Black, you name it. If you want to get to work in this country, there’s also the money for it.”
Yet Mazen longs for the life he left behind. The annual olive harvest has become nearly impossible due to the current conflict, he says, but he still visits home about once a year to check in on his mother.
“Do you want me to tell you what is good for the story, or do you want me to be honest?” he asked. “I’m so grateful for what God has given me, but if I could go back 20 years from now, I would have never left.”
“The biggest mistake anyone can make is to leave their country,” he said.
“Money doesn’t fix anything. It doesn’t fix that feeling of comfort hearing the mosque’s call to prayer, or seeing your children gather with your nephews, and grow up alongside their cousins. No matter how much money you make, you’ll never be able to get what you once had at home.”
-
Missouri1 minute agoUPDATE: Well-known mid-Missouri attorney charged after sting expected to request home detention | 93.9 The Eagle
-
Montana6 minutes agoMontana nurse and Guard member earns national Air Force recognition
-
Nebraska13 minutes agoFormer OSU, Nebraska wrestler AJ Ferrari arrested after police pursuit in Nebraska
-
Nevada16 minutes agoOfficials elevate response efforts to combat eastern Nevada wildfires
-
New Hampshire21 minutes agoU.S. Forest Service Reorg Talk | Films | Stories In A Park: Week Ahead Events On Concord Patch
-
New Jersey28 minutes agoMissing New Jersey teens found safe after vanishing from train station | Fox News Video
-
New Mexico31 minutes agoNew Mexico wrestling standouts give back at Raton High School camp
-
North Carolina36 minutes agoDuke’s Grayson Allen returns to North Carolina after trade from Suns

