
My daughter tells me a recent interview with John Waters has become something of an Internet sensation among teenage girls. The interview was posted on Rookie, a site geared towards teen girls, and she’s had friends in Vancouver, Hawaii, and Minnesota raving about it. Reading the piece, it’s easy to understand why, as Waters comes across as everyone’s favorite uncle. He’s understanding, worldly, and permissive, with a mischievous streak tempered by gentlemanliness. I’m, once again, astounded by his capacity for connecting with an audience.
Check out these comments: “the advice he gives is so wise,” “he’s got a pretty awesome perspective on life,” “I want to marry him, but I’m a girl so it probably wouldn’t work out,” “this man is quite literally a genius,” “I just love everything he stands for,” and “if only our parents were more like him.”
Waters says his favorite comment was quite succinct: “...





Friday night, while you were watching the
You may not know his name, or be able to pick him out of a lineup, but you've certainly seen his work. As leader of the Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC), the public-private agency charged with steering development in the city, M.J. "Jay" Brodie has had as much to do with creating the Baltimore we know and love as William Donald Schaefer and David Cordish—and now he's retiring.


Esquire magazine ranks Baltimore as No. 25 on its list of “79 Things We Can All Agree On.” Nice. But, wait, what does that really mean?
Last June, we
The building, constructed in 1911, had turns as a vaudeville and Yiddish theater, a movie theater, and a parking garage before being left vacant for the last 20 years. The front facade (first picture), including iron detail and an "E" at the top (fortuitous for the Everyman) from its original incarnation as the Empire Theater, has been painstakingly restored.

