A man in a suit sits on a fire truck, gesturing enthusiastically, while another person is seated inside. The background includes buildings and a streetlight.
On a Nov. 8, 2024 victory lap in the Mission, Mayor-Elect Daniel Lurie hitches a ride. Photo by Abigail Vân Neely

Mayor Daniel Lurie likes to end his Instagram videos with an encouraging “Let’s go, San Francisco!” So for his State of the City speech today we’ve put his signature catchphrase — plus many others — onto a BINGO card. 

It’s Lurie’s first State of the City speech, the mayor’s chance to recap his greatest hits and lay out his plans for what’s to come including combining multiple departments. Follow along and click on every signature phrase until you hit BINGO — or, perhaps, BLACKOUT. 

Mission Local will be in attendance today at Rossi Field, and we’re here for the catchphrases (and the controversies, in the extremely unlikely event that Lurie veers off-script). You can watch the livestream at 10 a.m. on SFGovTV.

Good luck — and let’s go, San Francisco! 

Click squares to mark them.
New card Clear marks

Alternatively, if Lurie breaks precedent and starts talking about the president or other all-but-certainly verboten topics … you can turn this into a drinking game: Repurpose your BINGO card into a virtual coaster and take as many (espresso?) shots as Lurie surely does before noon every day while plugging cafe after cafe.

One shot for Great Highway, two shots for Marina Safeway, three for Trump or ICE, and four in the unimaginable instance in which Lurie mentions Beya Alcaraz.

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Find me looking at data. I studied Geography at McGill University and worked at a remote sensing company in Montreal, analyzing methane data, before turning to journalism and earning a master's degree from Columbia Journalism School.

I'm covering immigration. My background includes stints at The Economist in print and podcasting as well as reporting from The Houston Chronicle and elsewhere.

Io covers city hall and is a part of Report for America, which supports journalists in local newsrooms. She was born and raised in San Francisco and previously reported on the city while working for her high school newspaper, The Lowell. Io studied the history of science at Harvard and wrote for The Harvard Crimson.

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