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Plus, this hat takes fish fry fandom to the next level.
The Incline

🚦 The Pittsburgh Left’s history and controversy

Plus, this hat takes fish fry fandom to the next level.

Happy Friday! 

Today, I’m turning over the newsletter to a deep dive into the Pittsburgh Left, courtesy of my predecessor Colin Deppen (miss you, Colin!). Colin’s a relatively new Pittsburgh transplant, and I can only imagine what this native New Yorker thought the first time he saw the Pittsburgh Left. Perhaps a “jagoff!” was let fly. 

But no matter your opinions on the maneuver, Colin’s piece will no doubt fuel your Pittsburgh trivia knowledge. Let’s turn (hah) to it. 

What Pittsburgh is talking about

Pittsburghpedia: The Pittsburgh Left

Know your weird and wonky Pittsburgh terms? This post is part of our Pittsburghpedia series, a handy glossary of words and phrases unique to our city that’ll help you #talklikeyoulivehere. Let’s fill you in. Today’s entry … The Pittsburgh Left. 

WHAT IS IT? A divisive and for outsiders deeply confusing traffic maneuver. It works like this: A driver at a light makes the left before oncoming traffic instead of waiting for oncoming traffic to pass — and sometimes with that oncoming traffic's permission. This GIF will show you.

WHERE’D IT START / WHY’D IT START? Pittsburgh developed from a patchwork of boroughs and municipalities. And its geography basically ruled out a more traditional street grid. 

That lack of a street grid combined with old-school narrow streets and fewer left arrows to give birth to a bold traffic move — necessity and urban planning being the mother of invention. 

90.5 WESA has a great writeup about the Left's history here.

CONTROVERSY? Yes. There are Pittsburgh Leftists — those who revere the maneuver — but plenty who don't. The city is also designing intersections in ways that discourage it

In 1985, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette columnist Peter Leo condemned the Pittsburgh Left as the “Pushy Pittsburgh Left.” To be clear, his beef wasn’t with Pittsburgh Lefts made with oncoming traffic’s consent. His beef was with Pittsburgh Lefts taken without consent. 

But both versions are arguably bad. We’ll explain why in a moment. 

IS IT LEGAL? Not according to Pennsylvania’s traffic code, which says failing to yield to oncoming traffic while navigating a turn is a traffic violation. 

IS IT SAFE? Advocates say the question of whether the move is made with or without oncoming traffic’s permission misses the point entirely. Because that permission is often given without pedestrians in mind, and pedestrians are usually the ones in the path of a vehicle making the Left in a hurry through their crosswalk. Car crash attorneys aren’t big fans either.

IS IT CHAOTIC GOOD, CHAOTIC NEUTRAL, OR CHAOTIC BAD? It might be all three. You be the judge.

— Colin Deppen

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Today

🌱 Start your indoor herb garden with a starter kit and virtual instructions in this Venture Outdoors workshop (Virtual)

🚲 Cycle through the worlds of art, film, and music at the Bicycle Film Festival, where a portion of the proceeds benefits BikePGH — through Feb. 28 (Online)

🇮🇪 Tap your toes to some classic Irish tunes with the Pittsburgh Irish Festival's performance featuring HighTime (Online)

🎹 Explore the music of William Grant Still and Florence Price this Black History Month (Online)

Tomorrow

🚲 Bike through Black history with Pittsburgh Major Taylor Cycling Club & Venture Outdoors (Homewood)

🌳 Grab your gear for Hiking for City Folks and learn to get "unlost" and leave no trace (Frick Park)

📺 Laugh with an all-star cast of Steel City improvisers as they dub over Very Special Episodes of classic and forgotten TV (Online)

💵 Join in on the Blockchain In The Burgh Meetup with Daniel Polotsky, Founder and CEO of CoinFlip ATM (Online)

Sunday

👻 Tune in for the next episode of 12 Peers Theater's virtual Mythburgh series, Dooker's Hollow, features a haunting tale about Braddock's gold (Online)

😲 View a new one-act play set in a psychiatrist’s office (Online)

Monday

🔬 Hear from a Pitt expert at this virtual Carnegie Science Center Cafe Scientifique titled " Balance Within Your Body: Why do you need an immune response?" (Online)

💰 Find out how you can receive the Arts Council's new grant for teaching artists (Online)

🏢 Explore architect Frank Lloyd Wright's 20-year relationship with Pittsburgh, where Fallingwater was only the beginning, in this Doors Open Pittsburgh event (Online)

Tuesday

🎼 Treat your ears to some opera music as Aria412 celebrates five years in Pittsburgh (Online)

🚍 Hear what's next for the future of our city's public transit (Online)

🍺 Go "behind the beer" with this peek inside Penn Brewery during this Doors Open Pittsburgh event (Online)

Wednesday

🎶 Learn about Bulgarian folk music from award-winning singer Elitsa Stoyneva Krastev in the Mendelssohn Choir's Global Choral Traditions program (Online)

🍷 Taste Italian wine and meet a Piemontese winemaker from the comforts of your own home (Online)

One more thing ....

It’s a Fish Fry-Day and don’t forget to bookmark this map to help you find a fish dinner near you (you can filter for takeout options).

Now, if we could just find out where to get one of these fish hats to wear at dinnertime. Got any intel, Eat’n Park?

Enjoy the weekend, and see you back here on Tuesday.

— Rossilynne at The Incline

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