San Francisco, CA
Photos: Robin Williams’ Sea Cliff mansion in San Francisco listed for $25 million
![Photos: Robin Williams’ Sea Cliff mansion in San Francisco listed for $25 million](https://www.mercurynews.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/RVZKWHlu.jpeg?w=1024&h=683)
The San Francisco mansion of the late legendary actor and comedian Robin Williams is for sale for $25 million.
Williams and his wife Marsha Garces Williams raised their three children in the home where Garces Williams currently resides.
The 10,598-square-foot Sea Cliff property has six bedrooms and five-and-a-half baths and was almost entirely rebuilt in the early 1990’s, according to listing agent Steven Mavromihalis with Compass.
“However (the Williams’) took great pains to preserve the rare and valuable building materials used in 1926, which are simply no longer available in the construction of modern homes,” said Mavromihalis in a statement.
The Italian Renaissance Villa style home features a carved archway entry, marble columns and patterned terra cotta tilework, among other design features.
And the three-story property has 20 rooms including a media/billiards room, a wine cellar, a sauna, a walk-in safe room, and a one-bedroom guest apartment.
Another Tiburon home of the Williams was sold for $5.35 million in 2020.
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San Francisco, CA
PIX Now Evening Edition 6-22-24
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San Francisco, CA
Trading for this San Francisco 49ers player would make no sense for the Houston Texans
![Trading for this San Francisco 49ers player would make no sense for the Houston Texans](https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/c_crop,w_2209,h_1242,x_0,y_0/c_fill,w_1440,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto/images/GettyImages/mmsport/10/01j0y8f1xpt2d8dd3vny.jpg)
The Houston Texans have one of the best receiver corps in the league. They’re currently eight-deep at the position with major names including Stefon Diggs, Nico Collins, and Tank Dell. The team’s front office has built one of the best receiver outfits in football, and they look to be one of the best for some time to come.
Diggs is likely a one-year rental, but Collins and Dell aren’t. Plus the team has John Metchie and Noah Brown who are expected to be around for some time. What happens after that? Should the team then go out and make more trades? Should they try and acquire another elite pass-catcher in 2024?
Well, Nick San Miguel of Niner Noise, seems to think that the Texans could be the perfect fit for current San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk. He listed the Texans as the second-best spot for the disgruntled receiver to land with. The soon-to-be fifth-year receiver and former first-round pick wants a major contract that the 49ers are iffy on giving him as of press time.
So a trade is very likely to happen at this point unless something changes. That said, while Aiyuk would love to land on the Texans, Houston has no reason to trade for him currently. The team is deep, loaded at the top with talent, and is set for the future regardless of what happens with Diggs.
If injuries occur, or players start declining in production, we can revisit the issue, but right now the Texans don’t need any more receivers who would demand the ball. Right now they already have three elite-looking guys. So unless the rules of football have changed allowing for two quarterbacks and two footballs to be used at any one time, then there just aren’t enough passes to go around.
After all, we haven’t even factored in Dalton Schultz, Joe Mixon, or Damien Pierce into the matter. They’re going to want to make plays too.
The wide receiver position, as of right now is not a position of need. To waste any draft picks on acquiring Aiyuk today would be irresponsible.
San Francisco, CA
How San Francisco Became The World’s Most Important Whisky Competition
![How San Francisco Became The World’s Most Important Whisky Competition](https://imageio.forbes.com/specials-images/imageserve/66743a2d27ab3c933b668e79/0x0.jpg?format=jpg&crop=4036,1815,x185,y834,safe&height=900&width=1600&fit=bounds)
Some of the Double Gold whiskey medalists from the 2024 San Francisco World Spirits competition
Over the last five years, the San Francisco World Spirits Competition (SFWSC) has become the world’s largest spirits competition. In 2024, more than 6,000 entries were submitted from beverage companies worldwide. In the process, the SFWSC has also become the world’s largest whiskey competition. Recently, I sat down with Amanda Blue, President of the Tasting Alliance, the company that organizes the SFWSC, and Stephen Beal, whiskey’s eminence grise and the founding and longest-serving judge of the SFWSC, to talk about the role of the competition in the global whiskey industry.
According to Blue, more than 1,800 entries were submitted in the whisky category in 2024, a record level of submissions. “It’s our single largest category,” added Blue, noting that “roughly 2/3rds of the submissions are from American distillers, but the rest come from thirty other countries worldwide.
Per Steve Beal, the SFWSC has become critical to both the established mega-brands and up-and-coming craft distillers. “The big established brands,” he noted, look to the San Francisco competition to test new concepts and validate aroma and flavor profiles.” “It’s also an excellent way to showcase new ultra-premium expressions,” he added. “This year, we had a 45 YO Talisker entered in the competition”, he observed, “you just don’t see those kinds of submissions in international spirit competitions very often.” “By the way,” he added, it was a fantastic whisky.
Beal was Diageo’s first Senior Master of Whisky and played a pivotal role in the growth and development of Bulleit Frontier Whiskey and has been referred to as the “Godfather of Bulleit Rye”. His portrait is displayed in the entrance of Bulleit’s new distillery in Shelbyville, Kentucky. Widely recognized as one of the world’s leading whiskey experts, he was a founding member of the Council of Whisky Masters and served as chair of its Advisory Council. He was inducted as a Keeper of the Quaich in Scotland in 2010 and the Whisky Magazine Hall of Fame in 2015. He has also been a fixture in international spirit competitions for several decades, having judged virtually every major global competition.
“The SFWSC is equally important for up-and-coming craft distillers,” states Beal. The history of the San Francisco competition is full of iconic stories of little-known brands that broke onto the national stage and saw exponential increases in their sales volume due to winning top honors in the competition.
The final “Sweeps” judging around at the 2023 SFWSC
It’s not just the craft distillers who look to San Francisco for legitimacy,” notes Beal. The US whiskey market is the single largest in the world; “If you want to be a world-class player, you need to have a significant presence in the US market,” added Beal.
“That’s why we had 90 whiskey submissions from Australia’s burgeoning whisky industry and more than 110 submissions from Irish whisky producers”, noted Blue. “That’s more submissions than any other US competition; in fact, it’s more submissions than any other international competition.”
“It’s not just established whisky-producing countries like Ireland, Japan, Scotland, or Australia,” she added. “This year, we received entries from as far afield as China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Denmark, Peru, Iceland, and Nepal.”
Approximately 25% of the whiskey entries, 452, scored Double Golds, although only five entries in each category made it to the final or “sweeps” round, where the whiskeys are tasted and scored by all judges.
The SFWSC Medals
I asked Beal whether he was concerned about the number of Double Gold medals awarded this year. “Not really”, he noted:
Remember, this is the world’s largest, most competitive whisky competition. If you are going to enter the SFWSC, you are going to do so with your best expressions. I’ve judged rounds where every single entry, ten different expressions, received a Double Gold. They were that good! The judges at the SFWSC are among the most knowledgeable, most competent whisky judges you will find anywhere. Many are considered world-class experts. If three of those judges consider an entry a Double Gold medalist, you better believe that is one outstanding whiskey!
With over 6,000 entries, I asked Blue if the competition was at risk of getting too large.
It’s a possibility”, she observed. “Even with the world’s best judges, 1,800 whiskeys are a lot of whiskeys to evaluate, not to mention the other 4,000+ spirits being judged. She added, “It’s entirely conceivable that at some point in the future, we will have to cap the total number of entries in the competition.”
Blue also noted that the Tasting Alliance, the SFWSC’s parent, is developing additional programs, scheduled to roll out in 2025, to help craft distillers by providing them with evaluations from its expert judges and marketing and distribution advice.
The results of the whisky judging, including the finalists, will be announced by category in July. The final winners from the San Francisco and other competitions organized by the Tasting Alliance will be revealed at the Tasting Alliance annual Gala on October 5 in San Francisco. The Gala is open to both consumers and the beverage trade and will afford an opportunity to taste spirits from 70 Double Gold winning medalists.
Founded in 2000 by the late Anthony Dias Blue, the SFWSC is the oldest spirits competition in North America and among the oldest in the world. A total of 70 judges from around the world evaluated approximately 6,000 spirits from April 4-6, 2024.
The competition is organized by the Tasting Alliance, which also hosts spirit competitions in New York and Singapore, wine competitions in San Francisco and New York, and Beer and RTD competitions.
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