St. Louis native and ABC News corespondent Vicky Mabrey will do a feature on St. Louis real estate on tonight’s Nightline program. Nightline airs on channel 30 at 10:35pm.
Steve: you’re a visionary. The city is lucky to have you. Now: how can you get some power? How can you gain some visibility? Get up there in front of people; get your face known. Once you do, the sky’s the limit–you have wonderful ideas, where others have none at all.
You and Joe Edwards should sit down over coffee and talk about how to bring back the City itself. It can be done.
What about you and Jim Kunstler? How can we get that guy come speak in St. Louis? He’s a freakin genius, but he’s busy talking to groups like the Vermont Organic Farming Assocation. Like Vermont needs insight into the urban condition.
You could work with the Wash U. speakers series to get him to come talk. Hell, you could even introduce him. Start a grassroots effort; get some students involved. In the not-so-immortal words of Bill Clay, we need to rock some boats and rattle some cages.
AARP Livibility Index
The Livability Index scores neighborhoods and communities across the U.S. for the services and amenities that impact your life the most
Built St. Louis
historic architecture of St. Louis, Missouri – mourning the losses, celebrating the survivors.
Geo St. Louis
a guide to geospatial data about the City of St. Louis
New to posting here; less new to reading.
Steve: you’re a visionary. The city is lucky to have you. Now: how can you get some power? How can you gain some visibility? Get up there in front of people; get your face known. Once you do, the sky’s the limit–you have wonderful ideas, where others have none at all.
You and Joe Edwards should sit down over coffee and talk about how to bring back the City itself. It can be done.
P.S.
What about you and Jim Kunstler? How can we get that guy come speak in St. Louis? He’s a freakin genius, but he’s busy talking to groups like the Vermont Organic Farming Assocation. Like Vermont needs insight into the urban condition.
You could work with the Wash U. speakers series to get him to come talk. Hell, you could even introduce him. Start a grassroots effort; get some students involved. In the not-so-immortal words of Bill Clay, we need to rock some boats and rattle some cages.