Tuesday, August 18, 2009

SF's Lunch Bell [Routine]

Though born in SF, it wasn't until this year that I got a chance to really explore my hometown. At times, I still feel as if its a foreign country to me. As Xavier said in L'auberge Espagnole:

When you first arrive in a new city, nothing makes sense. Everythings unknown, virgin... After you've lived here, walked these streets, you'll know them inside out. You'll know these people. Once you've lived here, crossed this street 10, 20, 1000 times... it'll belong to you because you've lived there. That was about to happen to me, but I didn't know it yet.
Every Tuesday, at noon, air raid style sirens scream through San Francisco. According to the SF gov't website:, "Every Tuesday at noon, San Francisco tests the Outdoor Warning System. During the test the siren emits a 15 second alert tone."

Turns out there is a rich history behind the weekly event. It was created during the second world war as a civil defense measure. 72hours.org with the help of the SF Department of Emergency Management created a short two-minute clip that explains the genesis of the outdoor warning system and profiles Cesar Santos, the dispatcher who tests the Siren every Tuesday at Noon.

San Francisco is slowly becoming mine.

2 comments:

Vi said...

interesting.. teach me more!

David said...

Nice reference to L'auberge Espagnole. When I was in Granada, Spain, our class watched the movie, and it was cool to watch it with students from all over the world (Germany, Switzerland, Japan, U.S., Belgium, etc.), each of whom were making Granada our new city. It was a moment. Sigh.