San Francisco: The GOOD, The BAD, The UGLY (California Documentary)

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Published 2023-06-18
San Francisco, California — a city so beautiful it’s hard to believe it’s real. Yet at the same time, it is gritty and dystopian, its underbelly fully exposed for the world to see. In this travel documentary, explore the nature and geography of this 7x7 peninsula, take a closer look at the quirky, colorful Victorian architecture and the history behind it, visit one of the most iconic Victorians in town (that looks like the Addam's Family mansion), and walk through the Tenderloin, a complex neighborhood that is ground zero of San Francisco's homeless and drug crisis and home to the city's Southeast Asian immigrants.

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All Comments (21)
  • @knowyourhistory
    I'm born, raised, and still live in San Francisco. I avoid the tenderloin/civic center area like the plague and I feel like it's a way to ignore the problems our city faces. This doc is way better than the one by CNN a few months ago. Great job.
  • The people who run SF are very different from the people who built it…different mindset. SF could not be built today if the current mayor and city council were in charge. They can’t even build an outdoor toilet for less than 1.5 million. Dam it used to be an incredible city
  • @user-ui6ik5so7h
    A massively underrated channel with some amazing mini sized documentaries, I'm glad I bumped into you.
  • @shinjk2527
    I resided in San Francisco from 2011 to 2012. A decade later, I had the opportunity to revisit the city. However, it was disheartening to witness that the city I once adored, cherished, and loved had drastically changed. It was a sad sight to see my favorite city deteriorating...
  • @Darrylizer1
    I left San Francisco in 2018 and I miss what it used to be, but not what it's become.
  • @firstlast8731
    Great documentary. The reporting, content, and camera work is top quality. Can’t wait to watch your other videos.
  • My daughter went to UC Santa Cruz and ventured into San Francisco a couple times back in 2017. She then went to Japan and brought her boyfriend back for a visit and they planned a three day stay in San Francisco. The boyfriend is a native Japanese and when they walked out of their hotel on their first morning they were greeted by a homeless man taking a crap in front of the hotel. They turned around the corner to be greeted by another homeless peeing on the wall. The boyfriend looked at my daughter in shock and said is this normal in the US? They left San Francisco the next day
  • @luisroams
    My family migrated to San Francisco from Puerto Rico In the 1950's. I was raised primarily in the mission. I was a part of operation integrate during the 1970's when SFUSD put kids on buses and we were shipped all over the city. I was a elementary school child and although it was a bit intimidating at the time, l was treated to the best city tours imaginable. Thank you SFUSD. Growing up in San Francisco taught me many things. It taught me to appreciate the arts, it gave me insight into other cultures and taught me to have a profound respect for nature and all it has to offer. The city is no different than any family, we all have the good the bad and the ugly. Although I no longer live in California, San Francisco will always be my home. Great Video and thank you guys for taking the time and effort in sharing.
  • @yaimavol
    What the politicians will never admit is that there is a sizeable percent of the homeless population that want to be homeless. They have given up, want to just tune out, and they won't even take enough responsibility to take care of themselves. Enabling this lifestyle drags everyone else down with them
  • @ronaldboykin9755
    I grew up across the bay in Berkeley for over 50 years but I was always in San Francisco, going to school or performing music in the Haite or in North beach. It was a lot of fun back in the 1970s and 1980s. San Francisco’s an old city and that’s the feeling I get when I was there working or going to school. It was wonderful back then but now it’s problems have tarnished it’s sheen quite a bit! I’m sure plenty of people have left the city after the Pandemic because they can’t afford to rent apartments and or they lost their jobs. Tourism is down, jobs in the downtown area are down too! Stores are closing in some of the most popular shopping areas such as Union Square! I know this has to affect landmark restaurants such as John’s Grill steak house (one of the places I worked as a musician in the 1990s). I hope San Francisco picks up where it was back in the early 1990s, it needs the tourism, the shopping, businesses and restaurants to survive into the 21st century!
  • @tonyson8721
    I watched this video over and over. It brings back memory when I was on Magic island in the military and waking up to the fog and then see Alcatraz. Thank you for being such a great story teller.
  • @Mokkari77
    The good thing is now the problem has gotten so big it has to be dealt with, whereas before it was still small enough to be ignored.
  • @zereb57
    I went to San Francisco a few weeks ago for business. Couldn’t wait to get out. Went back to the airport a few hours before my flight as I didn’t feel safe in the city and I am a Marine veteran.
  • @RedEyeC
    Born in San Francisco in 1960 - as were my grandparents back to 1849 when my Great Great Grandfather migrated there - left the area when I was a kid, but visited relatives frequently throughout the years. All the family from there has left now - it is so sad to see what was once the most beautiful city rot away... 😪 Nice to see these Victorian homes still up-kept.
  • @pressluke9458
    I am a a native from San Francisco- born and raised here. Still here. I lived in the T.L. For many years and I still frequent it often. To the maker of this doc- Good job!
  • @energyexecs
    ...I worked downtown San Francisco Financial District for at least 25 years. The late 70s/1980s/early 90s were great years of what I call the "Herb Caen" years, everyone read the SF Chronicle and the Examiner, and rushed to read Herb Caen's writings, where San Francisco was still a somewhat local city with local citizens and personalities - Herb Caen, Harry Denton, Pat McCormick (Kuletos), Willie Brown, Bob Lurie SF Giants, Riordan, Aliotos, the Opening of the Opera, remember those two old lady twins?, Gump's, Emporium Capwell, Macys, John's Grill and the old patrons, Sam's Grille, the French Quarter/Le Central on Grant right before the entrance of China Town, Lefty O'Douls, and Powell Street was open to vehicles; chess players, sightseers, and everyone wore suits, business dress downtown, the women were beautiful, then Cesar's Latin Palace, and everyone was either dancing salsa, or swing, Lombard Street, the old restaurants along Sutter, the old North Beach and it's restaurants, and all its characters, and everyone knew the policemen walking the beats. That's the San Francisco that I remember....
  • @Lvexhibitrentals
    Thanks for this video! I first came to SF in 1983 after graduation from college. The 80's was pre- Silicon Valley's impact. I returned in 1992, I site selected and built the Subway at Bush/Kerney it's still there as of April 2023. It's still declining rapidly. I moved to Las Vegas in 2001. But I loved travel back and walk the hills with my wife and kids. The city is like Detroit -ruined. Probably for decades. The wharf has lost several Iconic restaurants. China town business mostly closed. The culture loss is permanently damaged. Westgate Mall now closed. Very sad.
  • @mark-madison
    Excellent video - great camera work, nice background music, superb commentary, fine insights on the cultural gems, the people, and the economic issues. Thanks !!!
  • Thank you so much, that was a very beautifully presented picture of this fantastic and unique city. Our hearts and love goes to the city and all who are there providing their aspects to all of it.