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Red Flag Media adds Philadelphia music magazine JUMP to its roster

Red Flag Media, the publisher of of Grid and Decibel magazines, is happy to announce that it recently acquired Philadelphia music publication JUMP. JUMP will now be published monthly as a music section in Grid, highlighting stories about sustainability, health and wellness, music and culture in Philadelphia. Though all Grid and JUMP content will be

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October 8, 2018
1 min read
#112 September 2018/All Topics/Culture/Editor's Notes

Third Verse, Same as the First

I came to publishing magazines as a result of the intersection of three personality traits. First, I love to share things that excite me. I get that from my dad, who is always pushing something, using hyperbole to describe a horseradish sauce, a sugar cookie or a TV show. He doesn’t rest until he’s cornered

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October 2, 2018
2 mins read
#112 September 2018/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

A wildlife center for convalescing animals finds a new home

Abrood of fledgling kestrels—America’s smallest falcons that are adorable even as adults—peer through the front of their cage, which sits at the top of shelves filled with animals on the mend. “These are ones we raised from fallen nestlings,” explains Michele Wellard, assistant director of the Philadelphia Metro Wildlife Center. Wellard is careful to make

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September 27, 2018
3 mins read
#112 September 2018/All Topics

At Philly Music Fest, the city’s diverse communities come together for four days of shows

At the 2017 Philly Music Fest, indie psych band Ceramic Animal took the stage on Friday night at World Cafe Live. Despite the fact that they were a lesser-known local band, their prime 8:30 p.m. time slot meant they were playing to a packed house. The band blazed through their set, electrifying the room and

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September 18, 2018
2 mins read
#112 September 2018/All Topics

Philly Farm and Food Fest Relocates to the Navy Yard

In 2011, fair food decided to bring its mission of uniting local farmers with businesses and consumers to a broader audience with the first Philly Farm and Food Fest (PF3). Held at Reading Terminal Market, the celebration of the Philadelphia area’s local food system brought together farmers, makers, butchers, artisans and educators in the local

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September 11, 2018
1 min read
#112 September 2018/All Topics

Local businesses provide alternatives to the breakneck speed of Fast Fashion

"Sale" in big block letters reads a sign inside a window at the H&M at 17th and Walnut. On the discount racks hang shirts, sweaters and T-shirts in a wide variety of styles for as little as $5 each. For $6, a new dress can be yours; for $9, a new pair of jeans.For the

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September 4, 2018
7 mins read
#112 September 2018/All Topics

A Center City tailor aims to heal our ailing wardrobes

As the old saying goes, what goes around comes around, and in the fashion industry, that is definitely true. If you are over 40, you see the same styles of clothing that you wore as a teenager being worn by today’s adolescents. Ron Wilch, Philadelphia fashion designer—and stepfather of hip-hop legend Eve—is taking full advantage

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August 28, 2018
1 min read
#111 August 2018/All Topics/Editor's Notes/Environment

A Troubled Optimist

There are two letters from readers sitting on my desk, each one tugging at me, competing for my mood and mindset. I may be an optimist, but I’ll start with the more negative of the two. It comes from a reader in Oreland, a response to editor’s notes I had written about the ill-conceived idea

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August 21, 2018
2 mins read
#111 August 2018/All Topics

From the mountains of trash piled high in the city, there emerges a superhero for our time

Some people call me a "scrapper.” Some people call me a "garbage picker.” I call myself “Philly Green Man, Environmental Superhero.”It’s hard to say exactly where it began. I had what people would consider a respectable job, teaching architecture for nine years with some of the greatest students in Dobbins High School history. But even

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August 14, 2018
2 mins read
#111 August 2018/All Topics

A Matter of Degrees: Grid’s Guide to Sustainability Programs at Philly Universities

It wasn’t long ago that a budding environmentalist had only a handful of choices in higher education. But about a decade ago, this all began to change. As sustainability became a major cultural watchword, many students—some new to academia, some returning after losing jobs—were searching for a modern kind of major, and the stage was

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August 14, 2018
10 mins read
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