Night cabbie

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Logo used for the column Night Cabbie.
Logo used for the column Night Cabbie.

The Night Cabbie is a newspaper column that ran in the San Francisco Examiner and later the San Francisco Chronicle on and off from August 19, 1996 through December 27, 2004, under a trademark logo of a man peering into a car rear view mirror that highlighted the author's anonymity. The term is also the pen name of the anonymous columnist.

Something of a blog or a gossip column, the Night Cabbie portrays the firsthand experiences of a cab driver who worked late night in San Francisco, California until his retirement at the end of 2004. Each column typically comprised several vignettes of his "fares" (customers), who ranged from prostitutes and homeless people to politicians and socialites. He frequently described his experiences with local police, restaurants, and hotel concierges. Throughout his columns he maintained a gritty, film noir style attitude, describing murder, graft, and corruption without much elaboration or editorial commentary.

Not much is publicly known about the Night Cabbie's past or identity. In his columns he hinted that he had been a successful businessman and was familiar with finance, something that gave him a cynical perspective on passengers who considered themselves smarter or more sophisticated than him. He once revealed he had earned a master's degree in economics from San Francisco State University[1].

He retired, according to his last column, out of disenchantment over his low pay and local politics as it affected taxi drivers[2].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Anonymous ("Night Cabbie"). "Everybody's a football expert, even the guy at the wheel", San Francisco Chronicle, November 1, 2004. Retrieved on 2007-01-19. 
  2. ^ Anonymous ("Night Cabbie"). "A farewell to fares, column deadlines and bureaucracy", San Francisco Chronicle, December 27, 2004. Retrieved on 2007-01-19. 

[edit] External links