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Fire recovery; visit Russian River
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Wonderstruck
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Vol. 47 • No. 43 • October 26-November 1, 2017
FPPC fines gay SJ school trustee by Heather Cassell
Georg Lester
District 8 supervisor candidate Rafael Mandelman, left, received an endorsement from former state Senator Mark Leno.
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state watchdog agency has fined a gay South Bay school board trustee for embezzling funds from the campaign account for a school ballot measure and for misleading investigators about his Courtesy Facebook actions. South Bay school The state Fair Poboard member John litical Practices ComLindner mission in September approved the $18,500 fine against John Lindner, who serves on the board overseeing the Franklin-McKinley School District in San Jose, and disclosed it publicly October 19. According to the FPPC, the fine against Lindner individually was $15,000, while the remaining $3,500 fine was against Lindner and a campaign committee he controlled. Lindner, 55, who has served as school trustee since 2004 and was re-elected to his fourth term in November 2016, used $13,000 from the Franklin-McKinley for Our Kids – Yes on Measure J 2010 campaign for personal use, according to an audit performed earlier this year. Measure J was a $50 million bond to modernize neighborhood schools and equip them with technology and other capital improvements. Voters approved it by 70 percent, according to Smart Voter. Lindner, a retired elementary school teacher, was the campaign treasurer responsible for handling the finances when the Measure J committee was terminated at the end of 2015. Lindner claimed to investigators that he disbursed the funds in $90 anonymous donations to community organizations, but he couldn’t provide proof and there was no paper trail. Use of campaign funds for personal use is a serious offence. Violators legally must personally pay back the funds. The FPPC fined Lindner for failing to disclose and itemize expenditures of $100 or more on campaign statements and three counts for using campaign funds for personal use. According to the Mercury News, Lindner used the campaign debit card for personal expenditures such as restaurant meals, gasoline, clothing, movie tickets, hotel rooms, and cellphone bills. So far, Lindner has not been criminally charged in the matter. He responded to the Bay Area Reporter, writing in an email that to his knowledge, no other office has contacted him. “I have not heard from any office other than the FPPC,” wrote Lindner. Lindner, who remains on the school board, told the B.A.R. that he has paid the fine in full See page 18 >>
Leno endorses Mandelman in D8 supe race by Matthew S. Bajko
Cleaning up the AIDS grove
Rick Gerharter
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olunteers formed a bucket brigade to move dirt to the slopes of the National AIDS Memorial Grove Saturday, October 21, the final workday of 2017. During the event, Quest Diagnostics employees and executives joined community volunteers to announce a $100,000 grant to bolster the grove’s workday program in 2018. Grove Executive Director John Cunningham said
the grant was appreciated. “The community volunteer workdays are at the heart of our mission and this grant provides important funding to support keeping our 10-acre memorial a beautiful space for healing and remembrance,” he said in a news release. Quest officials said that the company has long supported the grove. For more information, visit aidsmemorial.org.
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an Francisco mayoral candidate Mark Leno has endorsed Rafael Mandelman in the 2018 race for his old District 8 seat on the city’s Board of Supervisors. Leno, a gay man who had been appointed a supervisor by former mayor Willie Brown, was the first person to win the seat, which includes the gay Castro neighborhood as well as Noe Valley where Leno resides, when supervisors reverted to being elected by district in 2000. Mandelman, a gay attorney who serves on See page 8 >>
SF releases 5-year homeless plan by Seth Hemmelgarn
those most in need get quick access to housing,” the report says. he San Francisco agency “Prioritization also saves public tasked with fighting resources, since these individuhomelessness has reals tend to be high users of public leased an ambitious five-year health and other systems.” plan that lays out goals for helpThe city will prioritize over ing people living in the city’s 6,500 existing supportive housstreets and shelters, including ing units for chronically homethe chronically homeless, youth, less people. Another 800 units are and people staying in tents. being developed and are expected But while the Department of to open in the next five years. The Homelessness and Supportive city should be able to get about Housing’s “strategic frame3,600 chronically homeless peowork” report, released in early ple into permanent supportive October, goes into depth about housing by the end of 2022, the the agency’s hopes, it provides report says. little detail about what the efAnother goal, which deals with Rick Gerharter forts will cost or where exactly the daunting maze of homeless Homeless tent encampments are under the freeways at Division and the money will come from. services in the city, is to put into 9th streets, in South of Market. The report says that about place “coordinated systems for 7,500 people are homeless in adults, families with children, and Mayor Ed Lee launched DHSH in 2016, and the city “on any given night,” and officials have youth by December 2018.” the agency says its vision “is to make homeless“lacked a coordinated, data-driven, and inteAs the report notes, “Clients’ experience of grated system to ensure these efforts result in ness a rare, brief, and one-time event.” the current system can elicit confusion and One of the biggest goals listed in the plan is permanent, sustained reductions in homelessfrustration,” as they often have to complete to cut the number of people who are chroniness. We also lack the full complement of remultiple program applications and get stuck sources needed to meet the current demand for cally homeless in half by December 2022. on different waiting lists, or deal with outreach Among other means, the city plans to use housing, shelter, and services.” workers who can discuss what programs may According to the 2017 San Francisco existing permanent supportive housing specifibe available, but can’t get them into the right Homeless Point-In-Time Count and Survey, cally for people in this population – those who services. are most at-risk for serious health problems 30 percent of the city’s homeless people iden“Like a triage nurse in an emergency room,” and other complications. tify as LGBTQ. See page 18 >> “Prioritizing this population ensures that
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2 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
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Jo-Lynn Otto
Khanna honors trans leader
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ongressman Ro Khanna (D-San Jose), left, recognized East Bay trans leader Tiffany Woods October 18 at Kennedy Middle School in Cupertino as part of his office’s recognition of LGBT History Month. Khanna’s 17th Congressional District stretches into southern Alameda County, where Woods works at Tri-City Health Care and is the director of its TransVision program. Woods wrote in an email that she was honored to be chosen by Khanna. “Many of my LGBTQ sheroes/heroes, who have inspired me as an out trans woman to continue being a changemaker, have been honored previously and I am honored to
join them in recognition. As forces around the world, and in our own country, continue to work to take away our civil rights and liberties, our humanity, and oftentimes, our very lives, the very act of existing and coming out as our authentic an d true selves becomes more and more revolutionary and lifesaving for many who do not yet have a voice or whose voices have been silenced.” Other LGBT community leaders honored by Khanna included Josh Selo, Philippe Rey, Roark Clayton, Gabrielle Antolovich, Thaddeus Campbell, Lance Moore, John Nguyen-Cleary, and Wiggsy Sivertsen.
Man arrested after volunteer assaulted at Pacific Center by Tony Taylor
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halk messages of support were written on the sidewalk outside the Pacific Center for Human Growth’s office in Berkeley following an incident last week in which a volunteer was physically assaulted and a rainbow flag was burned. “We support you. We love you. No hate here,” read the messages that greeted Executive Director Leslie Ewing when she arrived at the center Saturday morning, she said. The day before – Friday, October 20 – a rainbow flag was burned outside the center and a volunteer was physically assaulted. “A man screaming obscenities against LGBTQ people took our rainbow flag down, set it on fire, and when the volunteer receptionist went out to tell him to stop, he slugged her,” Ewing said in a phone interview with the Bay Area Reporter. The volunteer, whose name was not released, was not seriously hurt,
Courtesy Pacific Center via Facebook
People comfort each other outside the Pacific Center for Human Growth in Berkeley, where a man allegedly burned one if its rainbow flags last Friday.
Ewing said. “Fortunately, one of our staff members came down during the confrontation, and, along with a passerby on the street, they were able to get good photos of this person,” said Ewing. The Berkeley Police Department
responded around 11 a.m. and within half an hour the suspect was apprehended. Police Sergeant Andrew Frankel told the B.A.R. via email that the suspect is 32-year-old transient Richard Woods. “He was arrested and charged with arson, committing a hate crime, and battery with bodily injury,” Frankel confirmed. Ewing, who was in a meeting on the premises when the alleged assault happened, said her first concern was for the volunteer. “The paramedics looked her over. She didn’t want to go to the hospital and she didn’t need to,” Ewing said. Since the incident, Ewing said See page 16 >> center staff are checking in with volunteers on a daily basis and will continue to do so over the next few weeks. “I don’t think too much that could’ve been done differently,” she added.
PRC receives federal grants
by Charlie Wagner
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San Francisco-based nonprofit that serves people living with HIV/AIDS and other conditions will receive $3.4 million in federal grants to help provide programs for those with substance use issues who are HIV-positive or at risk of contracting HIV or hepatitis C. Positive Resource Center has been awarded grants from two divisions of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the first time the nonprofit has received direct federal funding from it.
Charlie Wagner
PRC CEO Brett Andrews
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration will provide $2.5 million ($500,000
annually for five years), for PRC’s Baker Places program called Substance Use Treatment HIV Enhancement, or SUTHE. The program provides substance use disorder treatment for racial and ethnic minority populations at high risk for HIV/AIDS. Separately, the Health Resources and Services Administration has awarded PRC $900,000 ($300,000 annually for three years) that will help fund what HHS calls a Special Project of National Significance. Its goal is to improve HIV health See page 19 >>
Free Educational Event Near You
Living with
HIV:
from information toinspiration •Hear from people living with HIV and those close to them •Get tips on making the most of your healthcare provider visits •Learn about HIV treatment
Wednesday, November 8, 2017 SF LGBT Center 1800 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 Registration Time: 6:00 PM Start Time: 6:30 PM Food will be served
Reserve your spot 855.653.7430 HIVevent.com
©2017 ViiV Healthcare group of companies. All rights reserved. Printed in USA. 817695R0 April 2017
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4 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
<< Community News
t 9th circuit hears sex work case
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he 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco recently heard a case that seeks to decriminalize prostitution in California. The case, ESPLERP v. Gascón, originated in 2015, when the Erotic Service Providers Legal, Education, and Research Project filed a complaint claiming that Penal Code 647(b), the state’s anti-prostitution statute “unfairly deprives consenting adults of the right to private activity, criminalizes the discussion of such activity, and unconstitutionally places prohibitions on individuals’ right to freely associate,” according to an ESPLERP news release. The named plaintiffs are “three women who want the right to sell sex” in the state, and one man “who wants to pay for sex,” the news release said. Named defendants include San Francisco District Attorney George Gascón and state Attorney General Xavier Becerra. ESPLERP President Maxine Doogan said in the news release, “Our hope is to see this bad law struck down, so that consenting adults who choose to be involved in prostitution are simply treated as private citizens again, and are afforded all the privacy and constitutional rights thereof.” At the hearing in the case last Thursday, October 19, plaintiffs’ attorney H. Louis Sirkin said, “This case is not about sex trafficking” or using minors for sex. It’s about “consenting adults who want to engage voluntarily” in sex work. The current law “infringes on the right of individuals to make their own individual choices of how to behave.” The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2003 landmark Lawrence v. Texas decision, which overturned all remaining state sodomy laws in the country, was repeatedly invoked at Thursday’s hearing. U.S. Circuit Judge Carlos Bea asked, “What is the fundamental right,” the sex conduct “or the personal relationship?” Sirkin said he believes it’s the sex conduct. Bea told Sirkin that his clients “don’t have enduring bonds,” which
Courtesy YouTube
Erotic Service Providers Legal, Education, and Research Project President Maxine Doogan
was what Lawrence covered. Judge Jane Restani, who’s a senior judge on the U.S. Court of International Trade, mentioned Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, who had said that Lawrence didn’t involve prostitution. Some of the discussion revolved around whether the controlling case should be the 1988 case IDK Inc. v. Clark County, rather than Lawrence. (According to the site www.Pornharmsresearch.com, the 9th Circuit determined that, among other findings, “Under any test, it is clear that the escort services are primarily commercial enterprises and their activities are not predominately of the type protected by the First Amendment.”) Sirkin said IDK didn’t specifically mention prostitution, either. U.S. Circuit Judge Consuelo Callahan accurately predicted that the government would argue that prostitution is “not a victimless crime,” and she brought up dangers such as sex trafficking and working for pimps. Sirkin said that his clients have decided on their own that “this is a way [they] can make a living,” and they’re not working for pimps. He said that “the only reason to prohibit” trading sex for money is if it’s based on “morality.” Deputy state Attorney General Sharon O’Grady argued that IDK is the controlling case, since “Lawrence
is about relationships and not about the sexual act.” O’Grady also said that prostitution is a “commercial transaction.” Callahan said that Lawrence affirmed people’s right “to decide how to conduct their private lives” in regards to sex. It’s “the commercial aspect” that makes the difference, said O’Grady. Sexual relations involving “two men in the privacy of one of their homes ... is one thing,” but “if you’re simply buying sex ... that is not an enduring relationship by any measure.” She added, “I do believe IDK remains the law.” Bea asked O’Grady whether she was saying, “If it’s commercial, it can’t be personal” in every case. O’Grady said that friends don’t pay each other for sex. “There is not a fundamental right to have a commercial transaction in which sex is the product being sold,” said O’Grady. O’Grady also suggested the judges should consider “the deterrence of trafficking” and “violence against women.” Bea noted that 647(b) doesn’t distinguish between whether the transaction occurs on a street, in a brothel, or on the internet, and Callahan said, “You could be convicted of 647(b) in your own home.” It’s not known when the judges will issue a ruling in the case. t
Letters >> Single vote doesn’t negate other work
In your October 12 editorial (“Alice club’s strange award choice”), you criticized the Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club for giving a Legislator of the Year Award to Supervisor Katy Tang as part of our Fall Awards ceremony, claiming that it was “strange” to do so after she made a vote with which your editorial board disagrees. (As it happens, we made the decision to honor Tang with the award over a month before the vote in question.) In May of this year, we signed on to a letter (along with the Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club) opposing the anti-gay Pacific Justice Institute’s involvement in this issue. And indeed, Tang has herself asked PJI to stop its interference and fear-mongering in her district. Yet, your editorial spuriously connected her vote to PJI’s homophobia. Alice is not a “single-issue” organization and we do not engage in slash and burn politics. Tang has been an unwavering straight ally throughout her career, and to suggest that her vote was somehow anti-gay is a gross mischaracterization. We do not impugn her motives simply because we may disagree. We believe that a single vote does not negate the other important and laudable work that Tang has done this year. We stand by our award and applaud Tang’s efforts to increase housing production and density, which is directly in line with our club’s platform. Eric Lukoff and Louise (“Lou”) Fischer, Co-Chairs Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club San Francisco
Supes ignored voters
Last year, San Francisco voters approved Proposition 64 (legalization of recreational use of cannabis) by a 74 percent vote. Now, nine supervisors are obstructing legalization by refusing a permit to a medical cannabis dispensary [“Anti-gay group sinks SF pot club,” October 5]. This is like the kind of nonsense congressional Republicans pull: Cutting funding for Planned Parenthood to make abortions less available, because they have nowhere near the two-thirds vote needed to put an abortion ban into the Constitution. The supervisors have ignored the voters. All voters who support decriminalization of cannabis should oppose the nine who voted no when they ask for your votes in future elections (including elections for the San Francisco Democratic County Central Committee). By the way, five of those nine are leftists (Sandra Lee Fewer, Aaron Peskin, Norman Yee, Hillary Ronen, and Jane Kim). The supporters of those supervisors probably voted 90 percent for cannabis legalization. The argument that “kids will get pot if we license dispensaries” is bogus. When I was in high school, cannabis possession was chargeable as a felony. The high school crowd still knew where to buy weed even in 1973. Arlo Hale Smith San Francisco
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<< Open Forum
6 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
Volume 47, Number 43 October 26-November 1, 2017 www.ebar.com PUBLISHER Michael M. Yamashita Thomas E. Horn, Publisher Emeritus (2013) Publisher (2003 – 2013) Bob Ross, Founder (1971 – 2003) NEWS EDITOR Cynthia Laird ARTS EDITOR Roberto Friedman BARTAB EDITOR & EVENTS LISTINGS EDITOR Jim Provenzano ASSISTANT EDITORS Matthew S. Bajko • Seth Hemmelgarn CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Ray Aguilera • Tavo Amador • Race Bannon Erin Blackwell • Roger Brigham Brian Bromberger • Victoria A. Brownworth Brent Calderwood • Philip Campbell Heather Cassell • Belo Cipriani Richard Dodds • Michael Flanagan Jim Gladstone • David Guarino Liz Highleyman • Brandon Judell • John F. Karr Lisa Keen • Matthew Kennedy • Joshua Klipp David Lamble • Max Leger Michael McDonagh • David-Elijah Nahmod Michael Nugent • Paul Parish • Sean Piverger Lois Pearlman • Tim Pfaff • Jim Piechota Bob Roehr •Donna Sachet • Adam Sandel Khaled Sayed • Jason Serinus • Gregg Shapiro Gwendolyn Smith • Sari Staver • Jim Stewart Sean Timberlake • Andre Torrez • Ronn Vigh Charlie Wagner • Ed Walsh Cornelius Washington • Sura Wood ART DIRECTION Max Leger PRODUCTION/DESIGN Ernesto Sopprani PHOTOGRAPHERS Jane Philomen Cleland • FBFE Rick Gerharter • Gareth Gooch Jose Guzman-Colon • Rudy K. Lawidjaja Georg Lester • Dan Lloyd • Jo-Lynn Otto Rich Stadtmiller • Steven Underhil Dallis Willard • Bill Wilson ILLUSTRATORS & CARTOONISTS Paul Berge • Christine Smith ADVERTISING/ADMINISTRATION Colleen Small Bogitini VICE PRESIDENT OF ADVERTISING Scott Wazlowski – 415.829.8937 NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE Rivendell Media – 212.242.6863
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Betty Price needs to apologize W
hile former Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price was jetting off to various locales on the taxpayers’ dime, his wife, Betty Price, was up to something more sinister. A state representative from Atlanta, Price (R) caused an uproar last week when she pondered quarantining people living with AIDS in order to decrease HIV transmissions in Georgia, which in 2013 ranked second in the nation for new HIV cases, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution. Price was attending a committee meeting examining the barriers to adequate health care. “What are we legally able to do? I don’t want to say the quarantine word, but I guess I just said it,” Price asked Pascale Wortley, the head of the Georgia Department of Public Health’s HIV Epidemiology Section, as seen in a video of the meeting. “Is there an ability, since I would guess that public dollars are expended heavily in prophylaxis and treatment of this condition, so we have a public interest in curtailing the spread,” she reasoned. “Are there any methods, legally, that we could do that would curtail the spread?” Wortley did not address the issue of quarantining PWAs. But Price, a former anesthesiologist who has served on the boards of the medical associations of Atlanta and Georgia, surely should know better. As San Francisco has demonstrated with the Getting to Zero initiative, treating people as soon as possible after they’ve tested positive is key. Starting HIV-negative people on PrEP has also shown to be effective in preventing HIV transmission. Those are two options that Price
should have been told about at that committee meeting, and both are legal, which seems to be a particular concern of hers. Rather than quarantining HIV-positive people, Price should be focused on making sure state resources are spent on treatment and prevention. San Francisco public health officials reported last month that HIV infections here dropped 16 percent in 2016; in 2015 there was a decrease of 15 percent. Treatment and prevention work. Anyone who has studied HIV/ AIDS in the U.S. knows that rates are higher in the South. That’s attributable, in part, to conservative politicians who don’t want to spend public dollars on effective programs and on a general lack of leadership among Republicans, who dominate statehouses there. The federal government has stepped into this void, resulting in more federal funds through the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Modernization Act being distributed in the South, at the expense of cities like San Francisco. That’s why local officials regularly have to backfill HIV/AIDS funding here. Price’s flirtation with quarantine brought a quick rebuke from LGBT advocates. “WHAT YEAR IS IT,” tweeted Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, which regularly represents people living with HIV. Gay rocker Elton John expressed alarm. “Rep. Betty Price’s comments about people living with HIV are horrific, discriminatory, and astonishingly ill-informed,” he said in a statement released by the Elton John AIDS Foundation. “As a doctor and elected official from a state where people are still contracting HIV at an alarming rate, Mrs. Price should know better than to demonize people and
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perpetuate myths that stigmatize people living with HIV.” GLAAD also weighed in, pointing out that Price’s comment “further promotes the misinformation and stigma that creates barriers to testing and treatment for vulnerable communities, including transgender women of color and young gay and bi men of color.” By raising the idea of quarantine, Price triggered ugly flashbacks from a dark time when lots of political leaders wanted to round up gays. California had its own dreadful experience: back in 1986, when activists associated with Lyndon LaRouche placed Proposition 64 on the ballot. While supporters argued that it would have restored AIDS to the list of communicable diseases, the LGBT community saw it as an effort to force HIV-positive people out of their jobs and into quarantine. The acronym for the LaRouche backers said it all: PANIC, for Prevent AIDS Now Initiative Committee. Prop 64 was defeated by a margin of 71 percent to 29 percent. Never one to give up, LaRouche and his followers were back at it two years later. Proposition 69, as it was known, was also defeated. Thirty-six years into the epidemic, AIDS stigma, unfortunately, still remains an issue that can prevent people from seeking care. Today people with suppressed viral loads have been shown to be less able – or unable – to transmit the virus using current medication. But people need to be able to confide in their medical providers and should be empowered by their decision to seek treatment, not threatened by politicians like Price, who wants the HIV/AIDS community to go back in the closet. Price needs to apologize for her remark, not sweep it under the rug by claiming she was “misunderstood.” We heard her loud and clear, and so did PWAs.t
I was recently informed I am NOT a transsexual by Riki Wilchins
so that you often don’t realize you’ve transgressed until you do it. This was giving my Gender 101 presengenerates ever-new opportunities tation to an important corporate to be pronounced “politically incorclient in the Bay Area recently, when rect.” It happens in every language. I got to the Terms & Definitions. It Even among the deaf – as the New was then I learned I am no longer a York Times has noted – signs evolve transsexual. I tried to define the difin order to respond to new awareference between “transgender” and ness and new sensibilities. “transsexual” but was stopped by So no, we don’t say “gay and lesthree young persons – two of whom Riki Wilchins bian” anymore, we say “lesbian and identified themselves as nonbinary gay.” Nor do we say “lesbian, gay, – who took strong exception to the and bisexual.” What we now say is word transsexual. “lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans“We don’t use that anymore,” they said. This gender.” But, actually, it’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, was backed up by a young cisgender man, a and ... oh, screw it. UCLA queer studies major, who declared that I don’t mind having my language corrected. the term was objectionable because it “mediGod knows sometimes it is in need of correctcalizes” trans people, and inappropriately ing. Like everyone, I get things wrong, and I ties recognition of someone’s genital status – sometimes find myself on the wrong side of which is private – to their gender identity. So it the gender discourse. But who has the right was not only archaic, but offensive. to certain terms is not just about PC, but also I’d long known I was offensive – often indeeply intertwined with body and identity. It’s tentionally so, more often unconsciously. But not just what is said, but who does the saying. it was the first time I learned I was also archaic. It dawned on me that these three You could hear the room stirring, and everyindividuals probably read me as one’s attention swiveling toward me, smiles another privileged straight white gone, tense with that awful feeling when concisgender male who was offenflict breaks out over the politically incorrect. sively referring to someone’s gen“Politically incorrect” used to mean someital status. My co-facilitator took thing like, “We now have a better and more me aside and told me that our sensitive way to say that,” which is actually a training was toast. There was very helpful and useful correction to unconenough bad blood and moral sciously offensive modes of communication indignation hovering over the that are deeply embedded in our language. meeting to make it impossible And there are many. Yet it often comes with for us to continue. But I wasn’t so a hint of moral superiority, which has since sure. I always assume my transgender-ness is grown to be as important as the subject that apparent, though in this room I was obviously occasions it. wrong. I needed to come out. Now “politically incorrect” is closer to saySo I explained that ... ahem ... I started my ing something like, “I denounce you for havown transition in 1976, and that “transsexual” ing said something which we no longer say in was indeed the term-of-art. We used it. Those polite company. You are therefore a bad person around us used it. The book many of us read and should be publicly shamed, not to menwas entitled “The Transsexual Phenomenon.” I tion silenced.” co-founded a nationwide protest group called Sometimes this is right on target (Mr. PresiThe Transexual Menace (No mistake, one S by dent, call your answering service). However, intention). And, oh yes, I had my own surgery just as often, this kind of brickbat is aimed at a before any of you were born. friend and ally who are simply one step behind The atmosphere in the room became inthe discourse ... stantly warmer. The straight white oppres... which of course is constantly changing, sive male had morphed into ... an oppressed,
I
marginalized transgender person. So who is politically incorrect now? The sex change was on the other foot. We are at an interesting place in queer discourse when it comes to the politics of trans self-description. There are now rules for what we can call ourselves. I love that transpeople are now considered legit enough that we can finally enjoy the luxury of telling people how we’d like to be referred to. We used to be a despised class – a trash bin of bodies and identities left behind when gay rights decided to mainstream itself by throwing its genderqueers under the bus (with some of us still having treadmarks to show for it). At the time, we were happy just to be mentioned, regardless of what we were called. We were the identity that didn’t speak its name. Now we can’t get other folks to shut up about us. There’s a news story about trans every week in most major newspapers, and on most hightraffic websites. My 10-year-old daughter calls me over to watch whenever she comes across another YouTube video featuring a trans character. We are everywhere. So in addition to no longer being a transsexual, I also realized I am no longer a tranny. Yet, in spite of being regularly corrected when I use the term, I have a stubborn affection for it; same as queer, another word like it – one which LGBTQ people have fought hard for and successfully reclaimed from the pejorative it was. I accept that “tranny” is diminishing and offensive. But I think it important to remind people (and maybe ourselves as well) that we have been diminished and considered offensive. I think it is important to always bear in mind where we’ve come from, and not just acknowledge the better and morePC place we’re hoping to go to. t This essay originally appeared in the Advocate in April. It is included in Riki Wilchins’ “Burn the Binary! Select Writings on the Politics of Being Trans Genderqueer and Nonbinary,” published this month by Riverdale Avenue Books. For downloads, visit riverdaleavenuebooks.com, Amazon, Barnes and Noble’s Nook, iTunes, or Kobo.
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Politics>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • BAY AREA REPORTER • 7
LGBT 2-year college students focus of summit by Matthew S. Bajko
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tudents, faculty, and staff from more than 50 California community colleges will gather at UC Riverside next month for a summit focused on how to expand campus resources for LGBT students weeks after Governor Jerry Brown signed into law legislation that requires the state’s community colleges to include LGBT students in their campus equity plans. The legislation, Assembly Bill 1018, largely flew under the radar during the legislative session and was not one sponsored by the statewide LGBT advocacy organization Equality California. In addition to LGBT students, homeless students must also be included in the colleges’ equity plans they are required to develop in order to receive Student Success Funding from the state, which this fiscal year totaled $110 million. “Although recent efforts from several school boards are encouraging when it comes to the inclusion of minorities and low-income students, AB 1018 will ensure sustained investment in communities of our state that remain neglected,” stated Assemblywoman Eloise Gomez Reyes (D-San Bernardino), the bill’s author, in a news release issued earlier this month. The California community colleges chancellor’s office will be sending out a legislative and legal summary to the 114 community colleges in the state to inform them of the new requirements under the bill. Vice Chancellor for Governmental Relations Laura Metune told the Bay Area Reporter this week that the chancellor’s office, community college staff, and student leaders had asked Reyes to include LGBT students in her bill, as at first it only
focused on homeless students. It was prompted by staff at several campuses wanting to use their colleges’ equity funds to assist LGBT students, in particular by establishing LGBT resource centers, but were unable to do so because they were not specified as a community eligible for the funding, explained Metune. Due to Reyes’ bill, the colleges will now be able to conduct disproportionate impact studies to determine if there is an equity gap in their LGBT student populations, which is the first step in seeing LGBT students included in the equity plans. “Once a gap is identified then equity funds can support improving equity for that population,” said Metune, who is straight. “The money goes out to campuses based on allocation formulas based on the number of students they serve.” For a number of years the application students fill out when enrolling at a California community college has asked if they identify as LGBT. The question is voluntary to answer, and the data is maintained by a central technology center. Until now, it was unclear if the LGBT data could be shared with the individual campuses, said Metune. Reyes’ bill clarified it can be, as the information will be key as the community colleges work on their equity plans for LGBT students. City College of San Francisco trustee Rafael Mandelman, a gay attorney who formerly had served as president of the board, told the B.A.R. this week that he was unaware of Reyes’ legislation. “It sounds like a good idea,” said Mandelman, who will be unable to
attend the CCC + LGBTQ Summit next month. The daylong event November 11 will highlight the fact that just two community colleges in California have professionally staffed centers for LGBT students. The resource centers at Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut and Sierra College in Rocklin both opened last year. “We are behind the curve on serving the needs of LGBTQ people compared to the UC and CSU systems,” stated Steven Deineh, librarian at MiraCosta College in Oceanside and chair of the LGBTQIA Caucus of the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges. “The summit will provide the biggest and best opportunity to set the stage for change across the CCC system of 114 campuses, 2.1 million students, and 90,000 employees.” There are only four LGBT centers serving two-year institutions in the U.S. with paid staff people overseeing them, according to data compiled by Nancy Jean Tubbs, director of UC Riverside’s LGBT Resource Center and one of the organizers of the summit. Thirteen of the 23 campuses in the California State University system have professionally staffed LGBT centers, including the San Francisco and San Jose state campuses. All 10 of the UC campuses have professionally run LGBT student centers, and there are seven centers at private four-year colleges and universities in the Golden State. “This inventory became important as we shared it. Stakeholders within the California community college system were contacting me wishing we had some event to bring
Courtesy Facebook
The Mt. San Antonio College Pride Center opened in 2016.
people to improve how they could support LGBTQ people in the system,” said Tubbs, 46, a lesbian hired in 2000 to oversee her university’s center, which is the oldest on the West Coast and will be celebrating its 25th anniversary in January. A resource center for LGBT students, whether at a four-year or two-year institution, can assist them in dealing with everything from the coming out process to confronting homophobia or transphobia on campus, said Tubbs. “The length of time, in my opinion, you are attending a college should not be a factor in the kinds of services you are offered,” she said. “What should be is the fact that some students are less successful than other students because of issues their institution can address.” Michael Paul A. Wong, Ph.D., the dean for student services overseeing counseling at Moreno Valley College in Riverside County, said efforts to establish LGBT student centers at community colleges in the
state will be greatly enhanced by AB 1018. Because “data is what drives the decision-making process,” Wong said it is essential that the campuses know how many LGBT students they are serving. “We don’t have a center of any kind,” noted Wong, a straight ally at the campus of 8,000 full- and parttime students. “I think that is part of the advocacy internally and why, in our case, I have been particularly supportive of this forum. Because we, like so many community colleges in the system, do not have any kind of resource center staffed.” Four of the state’s community college campuses have volunteerrun LGBT centers: City College of SF, Los Medanos College, Palomar College, and San Joaquin Delta College, according to the LGBTQ+@ California Community Colleges website. Mandelman said he was unaware of any discussions to have the Queer Resource Center on the Ocean Campus of the city’s community college be professionally staffed. He noted that all of the school’s centers for its students could use more resources. “During our accreditation crisis, when we were trying to get our finances in order, I don’t think we provided the support to the extent we should. We definitely want to look at supporting our various minority student groups,” said Mandelman. “And I think coming out of the crisis now gives us the opportunity to do that.” Like Mandelman, Wong also told the B.A.R. he had not heard about Reyes’ legislation until after it passed and predicted it would be the talk of the summit. Tubbs noted that an interim vice chancellor from the California community colleges See page 19 >>
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<< Commentary
8 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
Being transgender, with style by Gwendolyn Ann Smith
themselves in a way that does not correspond with their sex at birth. “If that preference is not expressed, use the pronoun consistent with the way the individuals live publicly.” This is a far cry from the way transgender stories have long been covered. Heck, it’s even a change from how many get covered today: pull up the average story on Caitlyn Jenner, as an obvious example, and just count the number of times the above rules are violated. What’s more, don’t even start me on the reporting on anti-transgender murders, which is further muddied by the wishes of family members who may have been at odds with a transgender sibling or child’s life, and police reports that focus on specifics of anatomy over names and identities of victims. Each time, transgender activists again pull an AP Stylebook off their
bookshelf and explain, in an increasingly exasperated tone, how these cases should be covered. In some instances, some transgender people have opted to buy copies of the AP Stylebook for local news outlets, just to try and shame them into more accurate coverage. All this is changing, however – and like so few other things in the era of the Trump Administration, this is a change for the better. The Associated Press recently held an event on Twitter, hashtagged as an #APStyleChat. Its focus was on gender and LGBT style issues. Of particular relevance were the following quotations: “Gender refers to a person’s social identity, while sex refers to biological characteristics. ... Use transgender for people whose gender identity doesn’t match the sex or gender they were identified as having at birth. “They/them/there (sic) is OK in limited cases as a singular and/or gender-neutral pronoun; do not use other neutral pronouns like ze. “Call people transgender only if relevant; give the name they use publicly; avoid references to being born a boy or girl. ... Avoid transgendered or transsexual; don’t call someone a transgender; trans is OK on second reference and in headlines.
“Transition is the process by which people match their physical characteristics to their gender identity. ... For medical procedures often but not always used for a transition, say sex reassignment or gender confirmation. ... This usage of gender confirmation is new to the gender entry on Stylebook Online today.” Each of these is a step forward from the “sex change” entry, a title, I should add, would not be consistent with the AP Stylebook as of this new guidance. These are changes that go a lot further in accurately representing trans expression in the media. That said, I think AP can go a bit further. I’m concerned that the first quote, above, will give some outlets the wiggle room to say, for example, refer to someone’s sex rather than their gender identity, or to somehow put more emphasis on a person’s biology over their identity. On the second, I find myself concerned that if a person actually does use a pronoun such as “ze” or “hir,” will that be lost in favor of “they/them/their,” or even stripping a gender-neutral pronoun entirely from someone who identifies with it because the stylebook is unclear on “limited cases.” I think there is a lot that can be addressed, which may require more
work on the part of both activists and AP. For example, finally quashing phrases like “lives as a ___” or even “thinks they are a _____” as a way to delegitimize one’s identity. I think it would be valuable to see guidelines put in place, too, that cover the proper name and pronoun use for a transgender person when the media is discussing that person prior to their transition. If one is writing about a transgender woman, for example, is it appropriate to say, “When they were growing up a boy?” I would say no, or at least not without explaining that they may have been socialized and presented as such, but they were presumably always a transgender woman, regardless. This could not only present a clearer picture of a specific person, but also provide a more accurate image of trans people overall. Now I’m aware that this was just the discussions of one informal chat, but I look forward to seeing the AP Stylebook’s next update, and how these issues end up being addressed. I hope it will continue to be the vital resource it has been in the war on fair, accurate reporting on transgender people and our issues. t
as Sheehy was appointed by Mayor Ed Lee earlier this year to fill the vacancy created by gay former Supervisor Scott Wiener’s election to the state Senate. Sheehy is seeking to serve out the remainder of Wiener’s term on the June 2018 primary ballot. He would then run for a full fouryear term on the November ballot next year, a race that Mandelman
has also filed to run in no matter the outcome of the June race. It is the second time Mandelman has sought the District 8 seat, having lost to Wiener in 2010. In a brief phone interview Tuesday with the Bay Area Reporter, Leno said he decided to support Mandelman because he was impressed with his leadership while president of the community college
board as the school fought to keep its accreditation and deal with a resulting financial deficit. In the state Legislature, Leno secured special funding for the school to help it survive the crisis. “I was very impressed with his leadership and contribution in keeping our city college open. And I am confident that he will bring a similar passion, expertise, and
professionalism to the Board of Supervisors,” said Leno, who declined to say if any action Sheehy has taken so far as supervisor had influenced his decision. Mandelman told the B.A.R. he is “enormously grateful” for Leno’s support. “I think it is a great thing for the
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ransgender people have had a long-standing feud with news reporting. We often face news stories that play up the most salacious details of trans people, dredging up the names on our birth certificates – known within the community as “deadnaming” – and using pronouns not consistent with our lived experiences and our preferences. One of the tools that transgender activists have reached for in trying to educate the news media over the years has been the widely used Associated Press Stylebook. Every media outlet, of course, does not use it, but it nevertheless serves as a useful tool for how reporters really should present stories to an informed public. While one might think a stylebook would be more conservative in its outlook, the AP Stylebook has for many years provided a largely transgender-friendly directive in how to more accurately report our stories. For more than two decades, transgender people have been able to turn to the “S” section – mine is tabbed for easy access – and look up the entry called “sex changes.” It reads as follows: “Use the pronoun preferred by the individuals who have acquired the physical characteristics (by hormone therapy, body modification, or surgery) of the opposite sex and present
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D8 supe race
From page 1
the board that oversees City College of San Francisco, is running against Supervisor Jeff Sheehy, a gay married father who is the first openly HIV-positive person to serve on the board. They are running against each other in a special election next June
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Courtesy AP
The Associated Press Stylebook is used by many media outlets.
Gwen Smith has bought many copies of the AP Stylebook over the years. You’ll find her at http://www. gwensmith.com.
See page 14 >>
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Help Reduce Isolation in Your Community Give back as a one-on-one Shanti volunteer for our newest program!
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Shanti’s LGBT Aging & Abilities Support Network(LAASN) Supporting LGBT Seniors and Adults with Disabilities
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Since 1974, Shanti has trained 20,000 Bay Area volunteers to offer emotional and practical support to some of our most vulnerable neighbors, including those with HIV/AIDS, women’s cancers, and other life-threatening diseases. We are now excited to announce that our services are being offered to LGBT aging adults and adults with disabilities who face isolation and need greater social support and connection.
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The LGBT Aging & Abilities Support Network is made possible by funding from the City and County of San Francisco’s Department of Aging and Adults Services.
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<< Community News
10 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
Events to light up the Castro compiled by Cynthia Laird
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wo events will light up the Castro this weekend and shine a spotlight on the work of artists and musicians. First up is the nighttime lighting Friday, October 27, of a temporary art installation called The Seed at Jane Warner Plaza on 17th Street at the intersection of Castro and Market streets. Consisting of six, 13 foot tall abstract flowers that will glow different colors, the artwork is expected to remain at the public parklet through 2020. The work is the creation of the Los Angeles-based collective known as Aphidoidea. The floral sextet is inspired by the practice of making wishes as one blows away dandelion petals and represents the desire of countless LGBT people to be able to live and love freely. According to the artists, The Seed “is a symbol that represents how a single wish that is blown away can carry enough weight to inspire a movement.” The Fiddle Castro’s String Quartet is set to perform at 7:30 p.m. with the lighting ceremony to take place at 8. Sunday, October 29 the queer nonprofit Comfort & Joy, which for 15 years has hosted the Burning Man camp C&J Village for LGBTQ attendees of the annual desert bacchanal, will shut down Noe Street between Market and Beaver to throw an outdoor block party it is calling “Glow on the Street.” The event will feature art installations, drag shows, and DJs from 4 to 10 p.m. Performer Liam Ocean will be spinning multiple LED hoops to create a dazzling light show, while the night will end with a blacklight performance presented by the GayGlo Guerrilla Theater. The event is free, though donations
will be accepted at the entrance gates. A $10 ticket that will provide certain discounts at Flore cafe and the Lookout bar can be purchased in advance at http://tinyurl.com/y95vdpp3.
B.A.R. columnist wins reporting award
Belo Cipriani, a gay man who writes the Bay Area Reporter’s Seeing in the Dark column, received an honorable mention for this year’s Katherine Schneider Journalism Award for Excellence on Reporting on Disability, presented by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University. Cipriani, 36, mostly focuses on disability and the LGBT community in his monthly column, challenging stereotypes about disability ranging from sex to parenting. “I feel honored and elated to be recognize for my work. I also feel so lucky to have Tony Coelho, who I use to see on TV and hear on the radio as a kid, comment on my column,” Cipriani wrote to the B.A.R. in an email, referring to the former California congressman who was one of the judges. Cipriani said that people with disabilities “are not always a part of the national conversation and I believe that the Katherine Schneider award is helping to change this by encouraging more disability content.” “I am very grateful to the B.A.R. for picking up my column three years ago, and for believing in a type of reporting that they had never done before,” he added. The prize comes with a $250 award. First place went to Chicago Tribune reporters Michael J. Berens and Patricia Callahan for their investigation
Rick Gerharter
Andrew Hernandez, of the collective Aphidoidea, works on the interior lighting system of The Seed, a temporary public art and light project being installed in Jane Warner Plaza that will open Friday.
into mistreatment of disabled adults in Illinois group homes. Second place went to Brian M. Rosenthal of the Houston Chronicle, and third place was awarded to Mona Yeh, Sonya Green, and Yuko Kodama for reports that aired on Seattle-Tacoma public radio station 91.3 KBCS.
Halloween dance in Ukiah
The Mendocino Pride Alliance, under the auspices of the Billy Foundation, will hold a Super Queero Halloween dance fundraiser Friday, October 27 from 7 to 11:30 p.m. at the Ukiah Veterans Memorial Building, 293 Seminary Avenue (at Oak). DJ Goette Lee will be spinning. Costumes are encouraged. The suggested minimum donation is $10. Food, coffee, and tea will be provided. There will be no-host beer and wine for sale. No nudity and no drugs, including marijuana and e-cigarettes. People must be 18 or older to attend.
Boo at the Zoo in Oakland
Boo at the Zoo, the Oakland Zoo’s annual Halloween event, is back this
year October 28-29. People can stroll the zoo in costume and collect treats. They can also ride the spooky “boo train” and join the dance party. Kids in costume receive a free ride ticket. They can also make treats for the animals and see how they celebrate Halloween. Registration is not required, and the event is included with regular zoo admission, which is $22 for adults and kids over 15 and $18 for children ages 2-14. There is a discount for seniors over 65. Weekend hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. There’s also an overnight event, “Family Sundown Spookfari” at the zoo during the weekend. Pre-registration is required and the cost for that is $90 per person for non-members and $80 for members. For more information, visit www. oaklandzoo.org.
Day of the Dead in Berkeley
Berkeley’s eighth Day of the Dead (Dia de los Muertos) celebration will be held Thursday, November 2 from 5 to 10 p.m. in downtown Berkeley (Kittredge Street and Harold Way) and will remember those who have passed on. The event includes food trucks, a wine and beer garden at Maison Bleue, free skeletal face painting, and art and craft vendors. There will be a candlelight procession at 9. Costumes and traditional papier mache giant heads are encouraged. Organizers said that this year, several altars will be created by local artists and students from Berkeley City College. The public is invited to bring photos or stories of loved ones, candles, breads, and flowers to add to the large community ofrenda, or offering. The event is sponsored by the Downtown Berkeley Association, Berkeley Community Media, East Bay Loop, East Bay Express, and Yelp. People can take BART to the Downtown Berkeley station. Admission is free. For more information, visit http://www. anotherbullwinkleshow.com.
‘Michelle Meow Show’ partners with Commonwealth Club
The Commonwealth Club has announced a new programming partnership with Michelle Meow, host of “The Michelle Meow Show” on radio and TV, to expand the range and depth of its programs dealing with issues of interest to LGBTQ audiences. Meow, a lesbian who is currently president of the board that oversees San Francisco Pride, will begin hosting the show before live audiences next month. The shows will take place Thursdays at 10 a.m. at the club’s offices, 110 The Embarcadero. “This partnership will enable us to bring discussions concerning the LGBTQ community to a larger platform,” Meow said in a news release. “It is a critical time for Americans to come together
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and address issues we face that affect all of us.” John Zipperer, vice president of media and editorial at the club, will co-host the show. “Michelle Meow is a high-profile leader of the LGBTQ community, and her knowledge and passion for all aspects of it are well known,” he said in the release. “The club has covered LGBTQ issues for many years, and we’re excited about this partnership because it will enable us to take that coverage to a higher level.” Club members and the general public will be able to attend the taping of the program, which will air later that day on the Progressive Voices channel on TuneIn. Tickets will be available at the Commonwealth Club beginning in November. For more information, visit www. commonwealthclub.org.
Nonprofits can sign up for window space
San Francisco LGBTQ nonprofits can sign up to reserve window display space for 2018 at the Walgreens at 18th and Castro streets. The program was started in 2001 by community members and store management in an effort to help nonprofits promote their services and events. The window enjoys an abundance of foot traffic on Castro Street. OurTownSF.org, a reference site for LGBTQ nonprofits, now manages the sign-up system and offers 13-day reserved space to selected groups. Window displays should be eye-catching and cannot contain pornographic, political, or provocative themes. Interested agencies should contact Gary Poe, OurTownSF’s window reservation coordinator, at window@ ourtownsf.org and include dates of major 2018 events or go to https:// www.ourtownsf.org/contact.html. Reservations are prioritized on a firstcome, first-served basis.
Lambda Legal SF event
Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund will be having a cocktail reception at the San Francisco home of board member David Tsai Wednesday, November 1 from 7 to 9 p.m. The featured speaker for the Lambda Legal in the City event will be senior attorney Natalie Nardecchia, who will discuss the agency’s work to combat the anti-LGBT policies and actions of the Trump administration, including the transgender military ban. There is no cost to attend, but donations are strongly encouraged. To RSVP, visit http://support.lambdalegal.org/site/Calendar/1404656833. The address will be provided upon RSVP. To donate, visit http://tinyurl. com/ycesy9b4
AIDS survivor group holds forum
Let’s Kick ASS (AIDS Survivor Syndrome) will hold a forum for providers and community members Friday, November 3 at the San Francisco LGBT Community Center, 1800 Market Street. Since coining the term “AIDS Survivor Syndrome,” Let’s Kick ASS founder Tez Anderson said that he has received hundreds of messages and emails from people who felt supported by the knowledge that they were not crazy and not the only ones experiencing something they did not understand and couldn’t name. Now, there is research data to confirm the existence and impact of AIDS Survivor Syndrome. Ron Stall, Ph.D., director of the Center for LGBT Health Research and the associate chair for science in the Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh’s Graduate School of Public Health, has conducted research using the Multi-Center AIDS Cohort Study. He will present his findings at the forum. In addition to Stall, attendees will hear from HIV long-term survivors
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Community News>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • BAY AREA REPORTER • 11
LGBTs weigh in on if minorities feel welcome in Castro by David-Elijah Nahmod
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fter Strut, the men’s health center in the Castro, abruptly canceled its Black Love event in July, some LGBT African-Americans and others began discussing whether people of color feel welcome in the Castro. The San Francisco AIDS Foundation, which operates Strut, said the Black Love cancellation was due to an “odd” email it received that officials said “raised concern.” But they never made the email public and declined further comment. They said Black Love would resume at a later date, which happened this month. For members of San Francisco’s queer African-American community, the Black Love cancellation was the latest in a long line of incidents in which people of color have felt that they are not wanted in the Castro. Decades ago, Asian-Americans, blacks, and other minorities often had
Rick Gerharter
Shaun Haines
to show multiple IDs to enter bars. In 2004, blacks and others accused Les Natali of discriminating against African-Americans at his Badlands bar. That resulted in findings by the San Francisco Human Rights Commission that Natali had discriminated
against African-Americans, but the findings were never official, because the HRC director at the time did not sign off on the report. The parties eventually reached a mediated settlement, and Natali has always denied the charges. After numerous court battles, Natali later bought the Pendulum, a Castro bar that catered to African-American gays, closed it for renovations, and reopened it as Toad Hall in 2009. In 2016, Black Lives Matter dropped out of being the organizational grand marshal in the San Francisco Pride parade after Pride officials announced they were increasing police presence at the event in the aftermath of the massacre at Pulse, a gay club in Orlando, Florida, in which 49 people died. BLM cited the numerous shootings of unarmed African-Americans by police as the reason for its decision. Shaun Haines is a gay AfricanAmerican organizer in San Francisco.
He attended the October 19 Black Love program, the first one since the July cancellation. “The event has changed. It was held on a different floor and day of the week and attracted a lot less people than what seems to be the average for events held at Strut. Someone suggested that security might be organized in conjunction with Castro Community on Patrol. They weren’t present,” he said, referring to the volunteer safety group. Haines added that he greatly enjoyed the performances he saw at Black Love, which included poetry, spoken word, and comedy. He shared his feelings about both the good and bad sides of the Castro. “The Castro is often a great place for community gatherings, recreation, and protests against our overall oppression,” Haines told the Bay Area Reporter. “The Castro represents our mainstream gay community.”
Haines said that the Castro can be a place where queers can gather against the Trump administration. “We have the opportunity to join forces with other communities who are slowly starting to understand that we are all in this together,” he said. But Haines agrees that there are problems that need to be addressed. “Among LGBT minorities, the transgender community, and for individuals with non-mainstream identities, the Castro is not widely considered to be a mecca for all,” Haines said. “We have been marching, holding rallies, and organizing demonstrations and yet not much has changed,” he noted. “We feel undervalued and are underserved. We must, at every turn, demand to be heard or fight for a seat at the table or else our cultural heritage and contributions will be lost and not preserved alongside See page 18 >>
Novel to explore '50s bar life in San Francisco
by Seth Hemmelgarn
A
queer writer is planning a novel about LGBT tavern culture and the bar raids of the 1950s in San Francisco. Katie Gilmartin, who lives in Oakland, and the San Francisco nonprofit Openhouse, which works with LGBT seniors, are getting $40,000 from the Creative Work Fund for the novel, set to be called “Vice Academy.” Gilmartin, 52, said one of the things that inspired her to do the book was “realizing what a risk it took to simply go out to a bar if you wanted to get together with friends for a drink,” or “meet someone to fall in love with” in the 1950s, when
Author Katie Gilmartin
getting “caught in a bar raid” could mean losing one’s home, employment, family, or other trouble. Gilmartin’s working with Openhouse to find LGBT elders to interview for the book, which she said
should be coming out in 2020. It will be Gilmartin’s second novel. Along with the novel, readings, and walking tours are also planned. “It’s really important to recognize what LGBT elders did, the risks they took for it to be possible for us to be where we are today, where we can just go out to a bar if we want to,” she said. Gilmartin noted that for many, the dangers still exist. “This is not so far away, and that’s why I feel like we really need to know about and hold on to this history,” she said. She added, “One of the reasons this grant is so important and critical right now” is that “there are elders still alive whose stories are
going to be lost when they pass. It’s critical to honor their memories and experiences” and how “they paved the path for all of us.” Two nightspots that interest Gilmartin are the former North Beach bars Tommy’s Place and 12 Adler, which she said were shut down after police raids in 1954. A newspaper headline referred to the bars as a “vice academy.” Kelly Harris, who works in mission engagement for Openhouse, wrote in an email that the nonprofit “is excited to work with Katie Gilmartin in preserving the history and culture of LGBT taverns. These establishments provided a place for the LGBT community to mingle and connect, but also served as the
beginnings of long-standing protest groups. Katie’s project reminds us all about our community’s responsibility in preserving the legacies and memories of our LGBT seniors. ... These stories of sacrifice and courage will inspire us to be grateful for the freedoms we experience each day.” The Creative Work Fund is a program of the Walter & Elise Haas Fund and is also by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. The fund recently announced $600,000 in grants to 15 Bay Area literary and traditional artists, including Gilmartin. Anyone wishing to be part of the interview process for Gilmartin’s novel can contact Harris at kharris@ openhouse-sf.org. t
MUNI SAFETY AND TRACK IMPROVEMENTS
Bus Substitutions on N Judah Line Construction on 19th Avenue The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA) is improving pedestrian and transit safety on the M Ocean View. We’re building a new pedestrian island crossing and installing transit sensors at 19th Avenue and Junipero Serra Boulevard. Construction started earlier in October and is expected to be completed by Thanksgiving, weather permitting. Sign up for updates and learn more about the project at sfmta.com/mon19thavenue. Questions? Contact Public Information Officer Kelley McCoy (kelley.mccoy@sfmta.com or 415.646.2551)
Bus service substitutions will replace train service on weekends between West Portal and Balboa Park stations. Buses will run from start of service Saturdays until start of service Mondays on the following weekends:
10/28 – 10/30 11/4 – 11/6 11/11 – 11/13 11/18 – 11/20
sfmta.com/mon19thavenue
<< Community News
12 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
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LGBTs mobilizing to aid queer fire survivors by Heather Cassell
L
GBTs in wine country are mobilizing to create a safe space to help queer residents receive assistance in Sonoma and Mendocino counties, following the recent North Bay firestorm. More than 20 LGBTs throughout Sonoma County, including heads of some of its LGBT organizations, met October 19 to come up with solutions to aid queer survivors of the wildfires. One of the first things they decided to do is create a virtual LGBT community center, tentatively called SoCo
LGBT Community Center. The goal of the center and the group is to gather LGBT-friendly resources and fundraise to support immediate and long-term needs for the LGBT community as recovery efforts begin. Wildfires in the North Bay broke out late October 8 and burned for days in multiple counties. Authorities said that 42 people died, and an estimated 8,400 structures were destroyed, making it one of the worst fires in state history. The blazes are now all nearly contained, evacuation orders have been lifted, and people are returning to
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their homes, and in many cases, lots covered with debris. Last week’s meeting was led by Gary Carnivele, owner of www.gaysonoma. com and host of OutBeat Radio. Attendees expressed their concerns about the needs of the community during the relief and recovery efforts. People were worried about the housing crisis, which was instantly made worse by thousands of homes being destroyed, and people being forced to leave the county if they couldn’t find temporary housing. They expressed the need to find LGBT-friendly housing for displaced queer people. Others expressed safety issues in the evacuation shelters for seniors, undocumented individuals, people who don’t speak English, and youth. The group also discussed raising funds for individuals who don’t have access to traditional crisis financial relief, such as the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The group’s primary goals were to rapidly reach out to LGBT people in the shelters that remain open to let them know about available resources and figuring out ways to inform people who have left the shelters. Eliseo Rivas, a 26-year-old gay gender non-conforming individual who is program coordinator at LGBTQ Connection in Sonoma County, described what it was like staying in the shelters. “When it came to gender, sometimes going to the shelters wasn’t as safe as I thought it would be,” said Rivas. “You’re vulnerable and then being asked about your gender and using the restrooms.” The group decided to create a database of LGBT-friendly temporary and long-term housing that was accessible to the community, including those who can offer housing and those who need housing. Others focused on creating the virtual community center and fundraising efforts, including quickly distributing the money to those who need it. Brian Rogers, a member of the planning committee of Sonoma Pride, offered to be the fiscal sponsor of the virtual center. Outwatch Film Festival, Out in the Vineyards, Sonoma Pride, Sonoma Gaydar, and other organizations announced fundraising efforts to support the recovery for the LGBT community. The group suggested foundations they could approach to assist in handling monies and distributing grants. Tuck Carter, 47, a gay insurance claims adjuster who has responded to natural disasters for more than 20 1:59 PMyears, offered some for homeowners and renters as they recover from the fires. He was in Santa Rosa last week helping people file their claims and, before that, he was in Houston after Hurricane Harvey.
Heather Cassell
Gary “Buz” Hermes, center, proposed a virtual LGBT community center at Thursday’s LGBT community meeting for relief and recovery efforts for queer victims of the fires in Sonoma County.
Carter acknowledged California’s ongoing housing crisis was posing a unique situation in the aftermath of the fires, but he advised people should first check their insurance policy and contact their insurance provider. Homeowners should look for temporary housing and additional living provisions to see how much they could receive. Renters should also check their insurance policy to see if they have similar provisions, he told the Bay Area Reporter. People should keep receipts and track expenditures and speak with a tax professional, Carter said. People left the meeting feeling empowered about the next steps in the recovery efforts. “I hope that we will be able to get to those people who are in need,” said Bonnie Bryen, a 42-year-old transgender woman. “I hope that we get to those people who are struggling to find places, to find resources, to find those simple things that they need and connect them with those resources.” Cheryl Kabanuck, 60, a lesbian who runs Santa Rosa Gaydar and the Lez B Here and There meet-up group, said she felt positive. “I feel like there’s a lot of good leaders here in this room that belonged to a lot of good organizations here in Sonoma County,” said Kabanuck. “It’s a great community, it’s very active, and we have so many people just working to get our community together.” Rivas agreed, adding, “I wasn’t planning on it being this productive or this well attended or this heartfelt. Relief efforts are going to be a marathon not just a sprint.” Carnivele said he thought the group would make headway. He noted that many people are still in shock in the wake of the devastation of the fires. The group is meeting weekly on Thursdays. It will gather October 26, from 6 to 9 p.m. at KRCB Broadcasting, 5850 Labath Avenue in Rohnert Park. For more information, contact
Carnivele at garycarnivele@gmail.com. At a separate meeting last Thursday night, the board of the Mendo-Lake Pride Alliance decided to donate 50 percent of the proceeds from its forthcoming Halloween party to help Mendocino’s general community, said Jennifer Sookne, a board member. [See the item in News Briefs.] Mendocino County was also hit by wildfires.
Upcoming fundraising events
Outwatch Wine Country’s LGBTQI Film Festival will be donating 100 percent of its proceeds to relief and recovery efforts for LGBT fire victims November 2-5 at various locations. Tickets are $10 per screening or $70 for an all-access pass. For more information, visit http://www. outwatchfilmfest.org. Wine Country Rising, a benefit for North Bay Fire Victims – the LGBTQ community responds, will host an evening of wine, food, and entertainment to raise funds to support relief efforts to benefit victims of the recent North Bay fires. It’s produced by Rainbow World Fund and Out in the Vineyard. Wine sponsored by gayowned winery Eco Terreno Wines. November 12, from 4 to 7 p.m. at 2004 Gough Street, San Francisco. Tickets: $100-$1,000. To RSVP or donate, visit https://www.facebook.com/ events/172116763369089. Holiday bingo party hosted by Graton Resort and Casino and Santa Rosa GayDar will benefit the Sonoma County LGBTQI Giving Circle for Wildfire Relief. Join the holiday festivities with a celebrity host and fun and games – including an ugly sweater contest – and prizes. December 10 from 1 to 7 p.m. at Graton Resort and Casino, 288 Golf Course Drive, Rohnert Park. $5 for a pack of Bingo Games (7 games). To RSVP, visit https://tinyurl.com/ Holiday-Bingo-with-Graton-Reso.t
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Travel >>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • BAY AREA REPORTER • 13
Fire-weary Sonoma eager for tourists’ return by Ed Walsh
M
ichael Volpatt fought back tears last week as he told the Bay Area Reporter about two school kids, brothers Sage and Wilder Bell-Bross, who came into his shop, the Big Bottom Market in Guerneville, to donate $150 that they had been saving for a vacation. The money went into the market’s Pennies from Heaven fundraiser to help the North Bay firestorm victims. The funds will be distributed by the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, known for their tireless charitable work in the Russian River area. Volpatt owns the market along with fellow Guerneville LGBT entrepreneur Crista Luedtke. He noted the outpouring of support for the first responders as well as those who have lost homes and jobs because of the fires. Fortunately, the fires never threatened Guerneville and the town was able to support evacuees, firefighters, and other first responders. Volpatt noted that one of the best ways to support fire victims is to visit Sonoma County and support local businesses and their employees. The businessman is also one of the owners of one of Guerneville’s newest ventures, Equality Vines (https://equalityvines.com/). He is paying displaced winery workers $400 to do four to five hour shifts in his tasting room as a way to help those workers get back on their feet. Sara Little, the marketing manager for Luedtke’s business, Boon Eat and Drink and Boon Hotel and Spa, echoed Volpatt on the important role visitors play in supporting Sonoma County businesses and workers. Little noted that two of Boon’s employees lost homes in the fires. The business is spearheading efforts to help those employees and other local residents hard hit by the fires. More information on how to help can be found on its website, http://boonhotels.com/. Gay businesses in Guerneville are banding together to host a three-day fundraiser next month over the Veterans Day weekend. It begins Thursday, November 9, at the Rainbow Cattle Company with “Thursday Give Back,” a dinner and raffle starting at 6 p.m. Friday, November 10, the r3 resort will present a silent auction, raffle, and entertainment starting at 7 p.m. The trifecta fundraiser will be topped off
Courtesy Big Bottom Market
A jar at Big Bottom Market holds donations for fire relief in Sonoma County.
Ed Walsh
Cyclists ride along Main Street in downtown Guerneville.
Saturday, November 11, at the Timberline Restaurant with a “Fire Aid Festival” featuring comedy, music, and drag starting at 6 p.m. If people can travel to Guerneville this time of year, beyond being of help to Sonoma County’s recovery, they will be treated to more of a sense of the unique quiet and dark beauty that became legendary for its first human inhabitants, the Pomo Indians. The Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve is just two miles from downtown Guerneville and gives visitors a glimpse of what the region looked like before the loggers took over. The park is 850 acres, 250 acres larger than Muir Woods. While just 90 minutes from the Golden Gate Bridge, the Armstrong Woods feels like a world away from the city.
Becoming an LGBT favorite
Guerneville used to be called Stumptown, because of all the redwood tree stumps loggers left behind. The name was changed to Guerneville in honor of George Guerne, who owned the town’s timber mill. Guerneville eventually became a popular summer vacation spot for San Franciscans, but fell out of favor in the 1960s, and by the late 1970s, was full of run-down resorts. Philadelphian Peter Pender took advantage of the cheap real estate and opened the town’s first gay resort, Fife’s, in 1978. Other LGBT businesses followed and today Guerneville (pop. 4,500) has one of the largest gay populations per capita of any town or city in the U.S. LGBTs remain a major force in the revitalization of Guerneville that continues today. Two of the latest additions to the scene are the aforementioned and fabulous Equality Vines tasting room, which opened just last month, and Timberline, which opened in August. Equality Vines is among four upscale businesses that have opened at the corner of Main Street (River Road) and Armstrong Woods Road, in place of the old Mercantile variety store. Equality Vines offers wine tastings with the best people-watching perch on Main Street. Timberline moved in to the space where Buck’s used to be on Fourth Street, between the hotels r3 and The Woods. The restaurant and bar feature gourmet comfort foods at down-to-earth prices. The expansive space hosts live entertainment. It will host stand-up comedy performances from Alison Arngrim, who played the bratty Nellie Oleson on “Little House on the Prairie” over the Parade of Lights weekend. The parade is a holiday tradition in early December as Christmas-themed floats take over Main Street. This year it will be on December 9 at 7 p.m. Drag performances will be a regular part of Timberline’s entertainment repertoire and in keeping with that, Timberline will be hosting a Nellie drag lookalike contest, where Arngrim herself can help judge who becomes her most. While Timberline is the newest edition to Guerneville’s LGBT nightlife scene, the town’s oldest and arguably the gayest bar is the Rainbow Cattle Company (http://www.queersteer. com/), on Main Street in the heart of downtown. The bar has been going strong since 1979 and deservedly has a reputation for giving back to the LGBT community. Its famous Give Back Tuesdays combines a meal with entertainment and raffles, all to benefit local causes. The r3 (http://ther3hotel.com/), formerly the Triple R, combines a resort with a fabulous bar and restaurant. It does a good business with people who are up for the day and is the place to be if you want to be part of the crowd. While mostly gay, the
Sara Little
Boon Eat and Drink hosted a dinner at its hotel for volunteers, firefighters, and first responders during the North Bay fires.
resort is not exclusively gay. The Highlands Resort (https:// www.highlandsresort.com/) is the gayest of the accommodations choices on the Russian River. The hotel estimates that although all-welcoming, about 98 percent of its guests are gay or lesbian. It includes comfortable rustic cabins that give you a sense of why the Russian River became such a popular getaway for people escaping city life. The resort is perfectly situated in a redwood grove on a hill just above downtown. It has the best of both worlds, being close to downtown but on a hill surrounded by redwood trees where it never floods. The fabulous Woods resort (http://
www.russianriverhotel.com/) was named after the famous Woods resort on Armstrong Woods Road, which closed in 1991. It is owned by a gay man, Michael Preaseau, and his mother, Verna, who live on site. They and their staff are constantly working to renovate and keep this property in pristine condition. While not exclusively gay, it has predominantly gay clientele. One of the most upscale resorts in the Russian River area is the aforementioned Boon Hotel and Spa on Armstrong Woods Road, about halfway between downtown Guerneville and the Armstrong Woods. The property was one of many LGBT businesses that hosted firefighters and it served up a dinner over the weekend after the fires first broke out. The
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<< Community News
14 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
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Group hosts parties, salons to promote gay men’s health by Matthew S. Bajko
W
hether through dance parties and bar events or more intimate salon-like settings with invited health officials and other speakers, the Impulse Group aims to engage and inform gay men around the globe about how to take care of their own health needs and that of their peers. Since launching more than seven years ago in West Hollywood, the volunteer-run organization now has chapters throughout North and South America, Europe, and Asia. Its San Francisco chapter formed in October 2016 and has held a number of gatherings, both educational and entertaining, for members over the last year. Topics addressed by the local Impulse chapter have included safe-sex practices, drug education and harm reduction, and racial disparities, particularly those faced by gay black men, within the LGBTQ community. “The feedback we get is it is diverse, engaging, and welcoming,” said Jeremy Joseph, 34, a gay man who is president of the local chapter and works for Genentech. Gay Los Angeles resident Jose Ramos, 37, founded Impulse as a way to inform gay men, particularly those in their 20s and 30s, about the latest advancements in HIV prevention and care. The idea was sparked when his best friend learned in 2009 that he was living with AIDS. “After my friend was diagnosed, a lot more friends were becoming HIV-positive. Something was
missing,” said Ramos. “When I looked at the HIV community in West Hollywood, there was nothing promoting awareness and empowerment around sexual health. The way we are presenting this information needed to be where gay men were making those decisions.” Ramos stressed that the approach Impulse takes is meant to be informative so participants can determine on their own what is best for their health needs. “We are not public health officials,” said Ramos. “As volunteers, I try to tell my team we can’t tell people what to do. We can empower them with the information they need so they make the right decisions.”
Working with AHF
Shortly after founding Impulse, Ramos formed an alliance with the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, which in recent years has granted funding to the group. In 2017 Impulse’s grant from AHF totaled $2 million, said Ramos, which was distributed to the group’s 18 active chapters and two expansive chapters in nine countries. A spokesman for AHF did not respond to the Bay Area Reporter’s request for comment on why it had decided to financially support the Impulse Group, one of a handful of nonprofits it has formed affiliations with in recent years. Ramos suspects his proposal was approved because the two organizations have the same mission. “We want to stop HIV and want to stop AIDS and get people healthy
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People hold fans at an Impulse San Francisco event at Oasis.
and into treatment,” said Ramos, who quit his job with Target last summer after being hired by AHF as its regional sales director for the western region of the U.S. A question Impulse leaders routinely face due to their ties to AHF is what their stance is on PrEP, the once-a-day pill that has been found to be effective in keeping people HIV-negative. AHF has been a vocal critic of seeing the medication, known as Truvada (tenofovir/emtricitabine), become a primary HIV prevention tool. The Los Angeles-based agency has questioned what the consequences of its longtime usage may be and has argued its adoption is contributing to the rise in cases of other sexually transmitted infections, such as gonorrhea, syphilis, and chlamydia. Some gay and bisexual men taking PrEP are doing so in order to forgo condoms during sex, which puts them at risk for various STIs. Concern over where the Impulse Group stands on the usage of PrEP and PEP, short for post-exposure prophylaxis and taken after sex that may have exposed someone to HIV in order to prevent them from becoming positive, has been elevated by the fact that the page designated for information on both HIV prevention tools on Impulse’s website has been blank for months. Ramos and Joseph both told the B.A.R. that Impulse supports PrEP, PEP, and any other tool shown to be effective in preventing HIV. As for the website page, Ramos said it is being redone as part of a restructuring of the entire site that is in the works. The Impulse San Francisco chapter has repeatedly promoted PrEP, hosting a forum about it for its members and highlighting it in several videos it has released online.
<<
D8 supe race
From page 8
campaign,” Mandelman said. “He is a well-respected figure in the district, and it signals his confidence in my ability to be a good supervisor.” Leno’s endorsement comes after another gay former District 8 supervisor, Bevan Dufty, endorsed Mandelman last week, as the B.A.R. reported on its blog Thursday (October 19). Dufty, who now serves on the BART board of directors, said in a brief interview that morning that his decision “was not easy,” as he has known both Sheehy and Mandelman for years, but that he felt Mandelman was better suited to lead the district. As for the third former occupant of the District 8 seat, Wiener endorsed Sheehy in the spring. He told
Last week, it posted a commercial on its Facebook page that encourages gay HIV-negative men to take PrEP and directs those interested in doing so to visit its website http:// www.impulsesf.org to find a local provider. “We believe in PrEP; we believe in condoms; we believe in being undetectable. Anything that will protect against new infections we support,” said Ramos, noting that the group’s Washington, D.C. chapter supported a PrEP campaign promoting its usage in the city’s black community. “People will ask me, ‘Do you support it?’ And I tell them that at Impulse, we do.” As it advocates for PrEP usage, Impulse San Francisco is also cognizant of the need to educate men, especially those in their early 20s, about STIs, Joseph said. Despite the city close to reducing new HIV infections by 90 percent come 2020 – over the last decade new HIV cases in San Francisco have declined, falling to a new low of 223 in 2016 – local health officials have been unable to stem a decade-long rise in STIs that are particularly prevalent in sexually active gay and bisexual men. “I think when we tell people PrEP only prevents HIV and not necessarily hepatitis B, chlamydia, and gonorrhea, and hear what the implications for our long-term health can be from STDs, people can be surprised,” said Joseph. Impulse, since its inception, has harnessed social media platforms to its advantage. The nonprofit organization, and its individual chapters, all utilize Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, for example, to reach the younger generation of gay and bisexual men. Ramos estimated the Impulse Group has half a million followers across the various platforms.
It has also used online videos featuring porn stars and drag queens to grab attention and help spread a safe-sex message. A spoof of a “Golden Girls” episode that promoted condoms starring a trio of drag queens went viral when released last fall. “The fact we are not funded by the CDC or NIH gives us the freedom to be outspoken and provocative in the way we present the information,” explained Ramos, referring to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health. Most of the videos released by the San Francisco chapter have been created by, and often star, local filmmaker Alex Liu, 33, the owner of Herra Productions. One released over the summer that featured Liu, who is not an official member of Impulse, focused on the rise of STIs in San Francisco. “What I like about the group, definitely, is that they are trying to destigmatize sex and sexuality as much as possible,” said Liu, who is paid for his work and hopes to create even more videos in 2018. “I hope the message that comes out is, as a community, we have special specific health needs. If you value people, we should tend to those unique health needs of the community.” To learn more about the Impulse Group and its various chapters, visit https://impulsegrp.org/. t
the B.A.R. in May that he “thinks the world of Jeff ” and that he had already proved to be “a strong leader” on the board. Asked about Leno’s and Dufty’s endorsement of Mandelman, Sheehy told the B.A.R. this week that he was “honored” to have the endorsements from lesbian former citywide supervisors Roberta Achtenberg, Leslie Katz, and Susan Leal in addition to that of Wiener and former mayor Gavin Newsom, now the state’s lieutenant governor. In his emailed reply to the B.A.R., Sheehy said voters “will look beyond endorsements to decide on issues – especially which candidate supports building housing.” Mandelman told the B.A.R. that his endorsements from Leno and Dufty show that he is “the right choice for District 8. These are two figures who
are familiar with my work, who I have worked with in different capacities over many years, and it means a lot to have their support.”
Impulse San Francisco’s next event will be its inaugural fundraiser EXTRA, a happy hour event with donations at the door benefiting the Q Foundation, which works to address homelessness in the city’s LGBT community. It will take place from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursday, November 2, at gay bar the LookOut, located at 1600 16th Street at Noe and Market streets.
Expected to refrain
It had been expected that Leno would refrain from endorsing in the supervisorial contest due to his ambitions to be elected to Room 200 in City Hall in 2019, cementing his political legacy as the first out LGBT person to become mayor of San Francisco. The city’s LGBT vote will likely be critical in the mayoral race, leaving many to assume Leno would not want to upset the supporters of either gay supervisorial candidate. Yet Leno said this week he doubts his supporting Mandelman for supervisor will be an issue for LGBT voters in the mayoral race. See page 19 >>
<< Sports
16 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
Johnson in fine form at USF talk by Roger Brigham
R
ick Welts, a gay man who’s president and chief of operations for the Golden State Warriors, is a wonderfully successful NBA executive. Last week, however, he was happily overwhelmed and outmatched by one of the most charismatic figures the sport of basketball has ever enjoyed. Welts appeared at the University of San Francisco Wednesday, October 18, to moderate a discussion as part of the Silk Speaker Series in War Memorial Gymnasium.
His assignment was to sit on stage and lob questions at Hall of Famer Magic Johnson to set up slam dunk answers on keys to success, the value of integrating social justice with good business sense, and how to transition from basketball wunderkind to business phenom. But a key of Johnson’s popular success was his “Showtime” approach, constant motion, and undeniable will, and nothing there has changed. Johnson delivered an entertaining, informative, and insightful presentation in which he roamed the audience, called out
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random students for exchanges, and delivered a message that they should build their careers on confidence, perseverance, skill acquisition – and a desire to make the world a better place for others. Johnson didn’t just own the spotlight: he was the spotlight. Johnson, 58, good naturally endured the gentle boos when his accomplishments playing for the Los Angeles Lakers and owning the Los Angeles Dodgers were mentioned. He shared a few behind-the-scenes moments when his belief in himself inspired his teammates to have faith in themselves. He showed how diversity in management opened up ways of thinking and enabled him to be a trail maker in bringing viable, needed business enterprises into inner cities. “Don’t do something just to make money,” he told the business students. “Do something you’re passionate about. The money will come.” He told the crowd about being called home to Los Angeles from Utah before a game during his playing career and being told he was HIV-positive. “Driving home afterward to tell my wife, who was pregnant at the time, was the hardest thing I ever did,” Johnson said. “When you get infected, it doesn’t just affect you. It affects everyone who loves you.” Johnson’s infection was made public in the fall of 1991. After an initial round of television appearances, he dropped out of the public eye for a few months while he educated himself on HIV/ AIDS politics and issues. When he realized his future role as a force in HIV fundraising and education would require him to become more connected with the poz and 12:19 PMLGBT communities, he reached out to activists to help him. And then he reached out to me. More specifically, he reached out to the Advocate to do a prominent question and answer feature with him, complete with a Herb Ritts cover. The Advocate had no one on board who was both knowledgeable on HIV and on Johnson’s career, so they asked me to fly out to conduct the interview and write it up. For a quarter of a century, I’ve known my feelings about that assignment, what impact and importance it had in my life. I was at the
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Pacific Center
From page 2
“It’s a blessing it was away from the building,” Ewing said, noting that no damage was done to the Pacific Center office at 2712 Telegraph Avenue. The nylon flag ended up on the sidewalk and was quickly engulfed in flames. “It’s shocking when this stuff is happening in places like Berkeley,” Ewing added. “We’re in a bubble, or so we think. In the last year, since the inauguration, we’ve seen hate crimes all over the country at LGBT centers. Here in Berkeley there’s been a lot of confrontation. We have to expect this kind of thing.”
We’ve expanded our services and kept the spirit and tradition.
Call (415) 771-0717 One Loraine Court between Stanyan & Arguello
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Earvin “Magic” Johnson, left, and his onetime interviewer, Roger Brigham, met again last week at the University of San Francisco, where the basketball great talked with business students.
time the sports editor of a newspaper in upstate New York and most people at work knew I was gay. Those who didn’t knew it once they found out I was doing the story. I did not tell the Advocate editors I had been HIV-positive for a decade. I didn’t tell Johnson. As I sat there lobbing questions and taking down his replies, I kept thinking of how we both believed we were under death watches, destined to be dead in a few years’ time. This was before the anti-viral “cocktails” that would revolutionize AIDS treatment. This was when many were advocating for quarantining poz individuals and still more were leery of any direct contact with anyone who was poz. This was before Johnson would stand the sports world on its head by coming out of retirement, playing on the Dream Team, and appearing in another NBA All-Star game. We both left that interview room expecting to be dead within a few years – but equally determined to keep on trucking and doing the things we do best as long as we could. I wrote the headline for the story, “The Importance of Being Earvin” to let my readers know the AIDS community would not get the entertaining Showtime “flash” of
Magic but the thoughtful and strategic thinker behind it. And to let my non-sports readers understand just how big a deal Johnson was, I opened the article with the words, “He was the athlete of the ‘80s, and it was the disease of the decade. After more than 10 years of dominating the headlines on the news and sports pages of America, Earvin “Magic” Johnson and the country’s awareness of AIDS fused in the national consciousness last Nov. 7.” Twenty-five years have passed, and we met again at the USF presentation. I have left daily newspapers and thrived playing sports and continuing my writing career in ways I never would have thought possible. And Johnson is still wowing and succeeding, interjecting his unique energy and zest for life into a roomful of students seeking words to steer them toward happiness, success and fulfillment. As I shook hands with Johnson, he leaned in and said, “Thank you. You helped me with that interview. I learned a lot from it.” Who’d a thunk it? Amazing what passion armed with confidence, perseverance, and skill acquisition can do.t
The Pacific Center provides support groups and mental health services to LGBTQ youth, seniors, and adults. The center has over 20 therapists dealing primarily with low-income clients. Founded in 1973, it’s the oldest LGBT center in the Bay Area and the third oldest in the nation. Ewing said that there’s “a lot of distrust of the police department in the queer community. But in this particular case, Berkeley PD was responsive and honestly apprehended someone quite quickly.” Frankel said he believes “this was an isolated incident.” There was an outpouring of support from locals once news of the
attack was disseminated over social media. “It’s sweet. Someone brought doughnuts and unicorn stuffed toys,” said Ewing. “Those are our neighbors; the people that count.” Ewing, who identifies as queer and prefers “she/they” pronouns, has led the center for nine years. “I used to work at the Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt where terrible things happened,” she said. “The sweetest things have also happened and that’s the fuel that keeps grassroots organizations rolling forward. That’s where we are now.” t
Vermont, is Saturday, November 4. The second will be Sunday, November 5, at the Center for Sex and Culture, 1349 Mission Street (between 9th and 10th streets). Both days are 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., with a sharing circle at 2:30, for story telling, grieving, laughing, comparing notes, and making new connections. People are invited to come and take
some remembrances of Mr. McAllester’s artwork. Mr. McAllester, who always wanted to be called Bur, died by his own hand February 11. He was 65. To read the Bay Area Reporter’s obituary for Mr. McAllester, see http://ebar.com/ obituaries/index.php?id=1067.
To read Roger Brigham’s Advocate interview, go to http://idorapark.com/reports/advocate. pdf.
Obituaries >> Memorial set for Burling McAllester Burling Vincent McAllester’s life will be celebrated at two memorial drop-in events in San Francisco. The first, at the Slovenian Hall, 2101 Mariposa near
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Sports>>
October 26-November 1, 2017• BAY AREA REPORTER • 17
Picking a host for Gay Games XI by Roger Brigham
environment that may be Kong – and has a greater need for stronger, but violent resistance to in less immediate need of stimulus than Washington. change and acceptance remains very four years, Federathe Gay Games’ ability to The Gay Games are one of the a threat. The visibility of the Gay tion of Gay Games memchange attitudes than the largest and most complex sports Games could provide needed inbers vote for a city to host a other bidders. And by 2022, events in the world, requiring teraction and regional dialogue to Gay Games five years down the event will already have massive efforts to schedule mulhelp change attitudes throughout the road. Each time, they been held in the United tiple venues; accommodate dozthe region. In contrast, the unique must play the role of GoldiStates and Canada six times ens of different disciplines; meet political relationships Hong Kong locks, trying to figure out but just once in Australia, the needs of thousands of athletes has with China and the District which of three potential sites three times in Europe – and of all ages and levels of ability and of Columbia has with the United is not too much this, not too never in Africa, Latin Amervarying disability; coordinate and States have an isolating effect that much that, but “just right.” ica, or Asia. Those are areas train thousands of volunteers; may geographically restrict much Not too big, not too the FGG knows it must and raise enough money to hire of their impact. small. Not too ambitious, eventually enter if it is to staff and keep athlete costs down. Voters will have to make up their not too timid. Just culturmaximize its global impact. Neither Washington nor Hong minds after they have had a chance ally repressed enough to need I have been a voting delKong has that kind of experience; to meet and hear the bidders and change, just legally progresegate in previous years for Guadalajara handled the task maslook them in the eye. They’ll have sive enough to enable that either Wrestlers WithOut terfully when it hosted the largest to figure out with whom they wish change. Borders or Team San Franmulti-sport event of 2011, the Pan to spend the next five years in As the Gay Games look to cisco. This will be the first American Games, as well as the working partnership – and who is broaden their global reach cycle since the 2002 SydParapan America Games. best equipped and best motivated into untapped markets, they ney Gay Games in which • Throughout Latin America, to fulfill the mission. will have their greatest social I have no vote. But I have the struggle for LGBT rights is I won’t be there for that and value when they occur in read the bids and the quesbeing fought on common cultural, I won’t vote. But on the outside places that are still struggling tions and answers and disreligious, and political fronts. looking in, I’d say Guadalajara is with issues of acceptance and cussed the bids with other Legal protections have become just right. t inclusion. The host should be Gay Games stakeholders. in a location where limited My gut tells me that progress has been made in holding the Gay Games legislatures and courts of law, in Guadalajara offers the but issues are not yet settled best chance of meeting in the court of public opinathletes’ expectations and ion, keeping the threat of discreating long term social crimination very much alive. impact. Here’s why: Just ripe for change means • In the first 10 Gay just right for the games. Games, the only places the At the end of this month, event has been held outFGG members will hear final side of Europe have been presentations in Paris (host in former British colonies: of Gay Games X in 2018) Three cities are vying to host the 2022 Gay Games. Canada, Australia, and the from three finalists bidding United States. Selecting to host Gay Games XI in Hong Kong or Washington This is the second time Wash2022 – Guadalajara, Mexico; Hong would continue that Anglo bias. ington has bid for the event, and Kong; and Washington, D.C. Washington has access to the the FGG tends to look favorably Beginning with Gay Games IV most local LGBT sports clubs of on bidders who come back after in 1994 in New York City, the Gay any of the bidders. There are few missing out on their first atGames have been blessed to have such clubs in Asia for Hong Kong tempt, as Paris did. But the Gay cities lining up to host, creating to draw upon. But there is a growGames have been flirting with the a truly competitive bid process. ing and enthusiastic number of idea of making a splash by going New, completely renovated contemporary showpiece. That has allowed FGG voters to LGBT sports organizations scatinto other regions for some time, be choosy, able to pick a city not tered across Latin America, some Breathtaking Mt. Tam Views, easy SF commute. which could boost the chances of based solely on available venues, inspired by their organizers’ previeither Guadalajara or Hong Kong. Greenbrae, 4BD/3.5BA $3,295,000 but also the bidding organizations’ ous trips to Gay Games on scholarFGG voters have spent the past grasp of the Gay Games mission; ships, capable not only of helping year grilling the bidders with retheir experience in staging major provide support but penetrating peated rounds of questions on the www.305VistaGrande.com multi-sport events; their ability to the FGG reach throughout Central nuts and bolts of their bids. Barbara Major • 415-999-9706 provide a first-class, life-changing and South America. In other words, Can you hold all soccer matches competitive experience for LGBT the nascent LGBT sports infrain a single venue? What makes you athletes regardless of skill level structure in Latin America is better think you can draw enough par– and their ability to create long equipped to sustain growth after ticipants to hold rugby when no lasting societal change in attitudes. the 2022 Gay Games than Hong other host has been able to since Voters look for balance in the the inception of the Bingham bids and the people behind the Cup? Will participants have free bids. Is a bidder’s budget realistic Barbra Major 2x5.indd 1 10/25/17 1:57 PM transit passes and how much will and will it deliver an event accommodations cost? that athletes and teams What are your local laws will be able to afford concerning same-sex and want? 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<< Community News
18 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
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FPPC
From page 1
as part of the stipulation agreement with the FPPC. “I made several payments over the last few months,” he wrote. He said that he has no plans to resign his seat, despite calls that he do so by LGBT community leaders and the Mercury News, which wrote a scathing editorial last week. “I do not plan on resigning,” Lindner wrote. “I feel that I continue to have important work to do supporting the academic and social-emotional success of students, parents, and staff of FMSD.” Lindner stated that he hasn’t considered running for re-election, saying that it’s too early. Former San Francisco Supervisor David Campos, a gay man who’s now a deputy county executive for Santa Clara County, said Lindner
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Homeless plan
From page 1
the report says, “Coordinated entry assesses needs and prioritizes available resources, while keeping track of all who seek assistance.” In June, DHSH launched the Online Navigation and Entry System, which merged 15 different homeless services databases into a single data system. The tool, known as the ONE System, is expected to be fully implemented in 2018. Along with streamlining the system for homeless people, DHSH also wants to implement performance accountability across every program and system by December 2019. Officials will assess performance based on measures including the number of people who’ve become homeless for the first time, how many people exit the system by being helped into secure housing, and the number of people who become homeless again. Another goal is for the city to have a detailed plan to decrease youth homelessness by July 2018. The city’s 2017 Homeless Unique Youth Count and Survey shows that almost half of the city’s homeless youth say they’re LGBTQ. Work is already underway to provide 50 new supportive housing units for youth, among other steps, and DHSH says it’s working on siting a youth-focused Navigation Center. The city’s Navigation Centers, which allow people to bring their belongings and pets, work to get people into permanent housing.
Ending encampments
One of the department’s most ambitious goals may be to eliminate “large, long-term” tent encampments by July 2019. Citing San Francisco Public Works, the report says there are almost 100 encampments, and about 25 of them contain “more than five tents or structures.” The Encampment Resolution Team resolved 17 large encampments with about 500 people in its first year of operations, the report says, and DHSH has also been working to educate people about where they can access services.
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Minorities
From page 11
mainstream LGBT identities.” Haines feels that in most representations of the community, diversity is ignored. The B.A.R. also spoke to Sister Merry Peter of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence and the Reverend Dr. Megan Rohrer of Grace Lutheran Church about solutions. “As long as there has been a Castro, vulnerable LGBTQ individuals who have felt unwelcome or unable
should step down. “I certainly hope that this person resigns and that the [district attorney] fully prosecutes,” Campos told the B.A.R., noting that Lindner makes elected officials and the LGBT community look bad when so many others are working for the good of the community. “It’s important when someone from our community does something like this that we all need to speak out against it and point out that he is not reflective of who we are as a community: our values and our principles. To the contrary, right? He stands against those values and principles,” Campos added. Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen told the Mercury News that he is looking into the case.
against Lindner when a Mercury News reporter contacted him, was shocked and disappointed. “The public places trust in us in the expenditure of campaign funds, even more so in bond measure campaigns – that we use the funds for how they’re intended to be used,” Sanchez told the newspaper. He has served 24 years on the board, including 13 years alongside Lindner. Like Sanchez, South Bay LGBT community leaders were unaware of the Lindner scandal and shocked when the B.A.R. contacted them for comment. Shay Franco-Clausen, a lesbian who is running for a San Jose City Council seat, said she hopes it’s a one-time situation. “I hope it’s isolated and that’s how the community sees it versus, ‘We can’t trust the LGBT community,’ because we are a very giving community,” said Franco-Clausen, noting
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that there are some elected officials from all backgrounds and ethnicities who behave badly and many others who are doing a lot of good work. “There are a lot of great LGBT elected officials,” she said. “There aren’t enough for sure.” Lindner didn’t believe that his actions would cast a shadow over the South Bay’s LGBT community and the public’s trust. “I don’t think it specifically casts a bad light on the LGBT community, as every community faces issues like this,” he wrote. Campos called upon LGBTs in the South Bay to get more involved in the county’s politics. “I think members of the LGBT community need to be more involved and hold our elected officials accountable,” said Campos, who added that the county is currently working on a pilot program to address the needs of the students in the Franklin-McKinley School District.
“It’s very tragic,” said Campos, who explained that Measure J was designed to help some of the most vulnerable kids in a school district that largely serves low-income students from many backgrounds. “That’s probably as low as it gets in terms of embezzlement by a public official.” James Gonzales, president of the board of directors of the Bay Area Municipal Elections Committee, or BAYMEC, believed Lindner attended its benefit brunch gala at the beginning of the month, he wrote in an email to the B.A.R. However, Lindner didn’t speak, beyond introducing himself along with the other elected officials at the event, which was attended by nearly 400 people, he wrote. Gabrielle Antolovich, president of the board of directors at the Billy DeFrank LGBT Community Center, confirmed that Lindner served on its board in the 1990s. t
way of life,” said the man, who said his first name is Allen but declined to share his last name. Allen, who’s 34 and identifies as bisexual, said the Homeless Outreach Teams and Public Works employees are “a joke,” and “the city isn’t doing shit for people but shuffling them around.” He freely admitted that he’d been evicted from at least one shelter “for fighting.” While he doesn’t like living in the street, he doesn’t want to stay in another Courtesy LA LGBT Center shelter. “Out here, I’m my own Assemblywoman Blanca Rubio (D-West Covina), right, joined state Senator boss. I do what I want to do,” Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) and Assemblywoman Eloise Reyes (D-San he said. Bernardino) at a hearing at the Los Angeles LGBT Center on youth Allen said he does want to homelessness. get into a single-room occupancy hotel, but he’s spent two years on a waiting list. Additionally, the city plans to imtents have worked to keep the area “You’re waiting, you’re waiting,” prove its overall response to street clean, garbage spills into the street he said. “... It’s hurry up and wait for homelessness by October 2018. and pedestrians have often had to everything.” “With over 4,000 people on the navigate between passing traffic and street on any given night, it is clear parked cars. Money that the existing portfolio of tempoA Bay Area Reporter staffer and While DHSH’s five-year plan ofrary shelter and other services is inothers made several calls to the fers many details on how the agency sufficient,” the report says. “Roughly city’s 311 customer service center will address homelessness, it doesn’t 1,100 individuals are on the nightly beginning in late August about the say much about how much money shelter waitlist and existing shelters encampment. it will take. are mostly full. There is currently an One operator said that he’d reThe report says that the city’s expansion of shelters, Navigation ported the encampment himself, budgeted about $239 million in Centers and stabilization beds in and encouraged a caller to keep reoperating funds for the agency in the works,” and the city recently got porting it. the current fiscal year to address more than $10 million from state After the encampment had been homelessness, which is about 2.4 and federal agencies that can be in place for more than a month, an percent of San Francisco’s $10 bilused to expand temporary shelter operator said he’d make a note for lion budget. capacity. workers to “escalate” their response. Asked about how much money People in San Francisco frequentAs of mid-October, the encampachieving the goals in the five-year ly complain about drug use, mental ment remained. plan would cost, and where that health, and cleanliness issues in the In an interview, DHSH spokesmoney would come from, Quezada encampments, and many of these man Randy Quezada said, “I wish said, “This document’s more of concerns are supposed to be hanwe could do the work faster,” but a road map. It’s not the financial dled by other agencies, the report “it takes time to build relationships plan.” says. DHSH “is now meeting weekly of trust and get people into a safe He didn’t have information with partner agencies and holding place.” on when budget details would be regular check-in calls throughout Quezada noted that that there available. the week.” used to be even more encampments “The budget process unfolds the The South of Market neighborin the area. way it does,” said Quezada. “Right hood has seen some of the city’s “Every single block was almost now, we’re really focused on getting largest encampments. impassible,” he said. the vision out, getting the roadmap For weeks, San Bruno Avenue beOne man who’s lived in the enout,” with the idea of better serving tween Division and Alameda streets campment for several weeks is duhomeless people, providers, and the has been the site of about a dozen bious of the city’s goal of ending city overall. tents lining the sidewalks and even encampments in the next couple of The report does say that the Tipthe concrete median in the middle years. ping Point Community organizaof the road. “There’s people out here that tion has pledged $100 million to While many people living in the want to stay out here. That’s their
help the city reach its goal of cutting chronic homelessness by 50 percent by 2022. The money will be used “to attack the root causes of homelessness, boost the capacity of the public sector, and work with the city and other partners to support the addition of new, stable housing for thousands of people.” Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, said in an interview early in October that she hadn’t yet read the entire DHSH report, but she was concerned by the lack of financial detail. Tipping Point’s help isn’t going to be enough, said Friedenbach. “What the plan really should be calling for is a serious investment in homelessness in order to reach its stated goals from the city,” she said. “The resources are not outlined in the strategic plan.” Friedenbach said with the Navigation Centers and other efforts, “We’re making progress, but the numbers are so overwhelming, it’s going to take a lot more than the status quo.” The small percentage of the city budget that’s going to fight homelessness means that it’s “a very low priority, and that needs to shift,” she said. The five-year plan is available at http://hsh.sfgov.org/wp-content/ uploads/2017/10/HSH-StrategicFramework-Full.pdf.
to afford a Castro lifestyle have urged reforms, safety, and legal opportunities to become homeowners and merchants in the area and support for artists and activists,” Rohrer, the first out trans pastor to lead a Lutheran congregation, said. “The screaming queens and the vanguard youth on Polk Street in the 1960s and 1970s protested the same issues we see today,” added Rohrer, referring to trans people, drag queens, and young LGBTs. Rohrer, who prefers gender-neutral pronouns, made a point of saying that
who feel excluded – we can’t pretend that these aren’t real stories. We have to start making deep and powerful changes.” Peter said that there are things people can do on a personal level. “We have to confront our own prejudices,” Peter said. “We have to make an effort to get to know people who are different from us – we have to be honest as a community that our institutions profit from discrimination.” t
Disappointment
George Sanchez, president of the Franklin-McKinley School District board, who learned about the fine
they want businesses in the Castro to succeed. “At the same time, our LGBTQ community must address the racial disparities, economic inequalities, and, sometimes, outright biases of our community,” Rohrer said. Rohrer urged the community to look back upon its history. “LGBTQ activists must find ways to both thank the queer heroes who have brought us this far and name the ways that we have benefited from racism, economizing the bodies of others, and encouraging addiction,”
they said. “We must also do what we can to mentor and financially support the art, advocacy, businesses, and lowincome housing options that support the most vulnerable in our LGBTQ community.” Peter also feels that much can be learned from looking back. “Discrimination has been part of the Castro since the beginning,” Peter said. “We need to listen to people’s stories – people of color have never been welcome in bars. To change this, we have to admit that this is a systemic issue. We have to believe the people
Legislators call for end to youth homelessness
Gay state Senator Scott Wiener and (D-San Francisco) and Assemblywoman Blanca Rubio (D-Baldwin Park) recently held a hearing on youth homelessness in California at the Los Angeles LGBT Center. They announced they’ll introduce and pass a bill next year “to devote significantly more resources to youth homelessness, create much more coordination in allocating those resources, and implement best practices – proven methods of housing youth,” according to a news release from Wiener’s office. At the hearing, Sherilyn Adams, executive director of San Francisco’s Larkin Street Youth Services, said needs include $60 million to provide housing options to homeless youth, according to the news release.t
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Community News>>
October 26-November 1, 2017• BAY AREA REPORTER • 19
Legal Notices>>
D8 supe race
From page 14
“I don’t believe that it will be,” he said. Mandelman early on endorsed Leno’s mayoral bid, while Sheehy had yet to as of this week. When asked about doing so by the B.A.R. in the spring, Sheehy noted how the election was more than two years away and he was focused on his own election. Reiterating that comment this week, Sheehy told the B.A.R. that he would “look at” endorsing in the mayor’s race after his own election next year. As for Leno’s decision to endorse Mandelman for supervisor, Sheehy said he “can assure that this announcement will have zero impact on my decision.” Long considered a moderate leader in the city, Leno in recent years has been touted as more progressive. Yet in several local elections last year, Leno endorsed the moderate candidate; decisions that some progressive leaders have criticized. He sided with Wiener in his race for Leno’s state Senate seat against District 6 Supervisor Jane Kim. He also endorsed Ahsha Safai in his successful run for the District 11 supervisor seat against lesbian labor leader Kimberly Alvarenga. In 2014 he drew ire from some
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PRC
From page 2
outcomes through the coordination of supportive employment and housing services. PRC’s federal funding has usually been channeled through the city of San Francisco and state of California, said PRC Chief Executive Officer Brett Andrews. These direct grants, Andrews believes, confirm the strength of PRC’s diverse services. “This critical funding will help PRC improve health outcomes for this vulnerable community of individuals,” he said. The SUTHE program will integrate HIV testing, hepatitis testing and vaccinations, primary care, HIV case management, and HIV prevention into PRC’s existing Joe Healy Detoxification Program. The SAMHSA grant will provide 11 percent of the program’s funding. SUTHE will link HIV-positive individuals to primary care and antiretroviral treatment, following up at six months to track adherence to treatment. Andrews said the goal is having 80 percent of participants remain for the six-month follow-up survey. Through this longer-term participation, the program hopes to increase the number of people in treatment for HIV who maintain fully suppressed viral loads. Andrews expects the program will serve 1,382 people over the five-year period.
New programming
For the Special Project of National Significance, PRC will implement a new programming mode called integrative health analysis, which screens
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Political Notebook
From page 7
chancellor’s office will be at the opening plenary for the event. “They will be able to explore these questions of what does it mean for equity plans because of this bill,” said Tubbs. “Equity plans are important because state funds are attached to them.”
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037755700
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: COLLEEN MATTHEWS LCSW & ASSOCIATES; PURE FOCUS FAMILY SOLUTIONS, 1321 EVANS AVE #C, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94124. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed COLLEEN MATTHEWS. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/07/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/07/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037781700
Rick Gerharter
State Senator Scott Wiener, left, has endorsed Supervisor Jeff Sheehy.
progressives for remaining neutral in the Assembly race that pitted progressive gay former District 9 Supervisor David Campos against moderate former District 3 Supervisor David Chiu, who won the legislative seat that had been held by out lawmakers for 18 years. In recent weeks Leno had been getting flak for remaining neutral in the District 8 contest. Tom Ammiano, a gay former supervisor and state assemblyman, called out Leno and other progressive leaders on Facebook last Thursday for having yet to endorse Mandelman for
supervisor. “Leno’s endorsement history is particularly revealing,” noted Ammiano in one comment to his original post, adding, “you can’t have it both ways and we have enabled this ...” The timing of his endorsement of Mandelman was not influenced by Ammiano’s comments, as Leno said he wasn’t aware of them until asked about them by the B.A.R. on Tuesday. Mandelman said he had been talking to Leno for weeks about having his support in the race. t
targeted individuals for detrimental social determinants and improves them via social services offered by PRC or partner agencies. The project will evaluate a host of social determinants, including employment and housing status. Activities will take place mainly at two housing sites in San Francisco that receive federal funding. One is operated by Lutheran Social Services of Northern California and the other by Larkin Street Youth Services. Integrated processes will be used to coordinate client access to HIV primary care and ensure continuity of care as residents exit funded housing programs. The project will increase data sharing between agencies while building greater efficiencies and providing a replicable model for similar cities. That is why both Lutheran Social Services and Larkin Street Youth Services provided letters of support for the grant application. “We’re excited about the opportunity to bring a deeper level of services to a vulnerable population,” Sherilyn Adams, executive director of Larkin Street, said in response to the B.A.R.’s request for comment. “PRC has an excellent reputation and has been a strong long-term partner for Larkin Street. We’re pleased to see new federal investments in this work and to continue to work with PRC to make additional supports available to young people with HIV/AIDS, complimenting our continuum of services at Larkin Street.” Lutheran Social Services officials did not return a message seeking comment. As part of the project, PRC will produce an HIV housing guide to help both program clients and other
HIV-positive individuals in the city access stable and secure housing. Andrews said the completion goal is late 2018. PRC started as the AIDS Benefits Counselors in 1987 when a group of attorneys and Social Security workers noticed friends with HIV applying for Social Security benefits and getting turned down. Those who apply on their own have about a 33 percent success rate, according to Andrews, but “our current success rate is about 90 percent. And we take all referrals.” In 1992, supporters of an organization called the Life Center founded another organization they called Positive Resources, to help long-term HIV survivors thinking about their futures for the first time in years as better treatments became available. “As they stabilized their lives,” Andrews said, “they wanted to return to the workforce.” Later PRC and ABC merged. Last year, PRC merged with the AIDS Emergency Fund, which provides financial assistance to qualifying people living with HIV/AIDS, and Baker Places. Even before the special project grant, PRC had worked with both Lutheran Social Services and Larkin Street. But now their collaboration, enhanced by the grant, can utilize PRC’s skill in data collection and management. “The SPNS grant is a ‘demonstration grant,’” Andrews explained. “PRC will endeavor to prove our hypothesis that more effective data sharing will increase the effectiveness of all organizations involved. Significant efficiencies can be gained. The whole result becomes greater than the parts.”t
Other topics the summit will cover include professional development for staff on LGBT issues and teaching LGBT courses on campus. Tubbs would like for the summits to be held every two years and is hopeful the second one can be held by and at a community college. “We chose to do it this year, because as far as I am concerned, these are our future students,” she said,
adding that, “the power of repeating the summit is you hold yourself accountable. In two years you can look back at what changed, what didn’t change, and what we accomplished.” The inaugural summit is free to attend, but registration for it closes Friday, October 27. To register and learn more about the program, visit cccqsummit.blogspot.com. t
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: JUST TUK IT, 1135 CAPITOL AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94112. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed CLARENCE J. HARDY. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/29/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/29/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037783300
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BRISA TOURS, 3322 BUCHANAN ST #308, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94123. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed CHRISTINE BARNETT. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/01/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/02/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037776700
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SPA BEM-TI-VI, 3150 18TH ST #262 SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed ALESSANDRA CAVALLERO. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 05/31/16. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/26/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037772600
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: AKIWEE, 1373 46TH AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94122. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed FUJIAN HO. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/18/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/22/2017.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037780300
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MEX RICO, 433 BARTLETT ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by a general partnership, and is signed DAVID J. SANCHEZ JR; BARBARA M. SANCHEZ; FRANCISCO M. SANCHEZ. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 01/01/71. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/29/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037776300
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: WASABI BISTRO, 524 CASTRO ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94114. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed UNITED RESTAURANT CORP (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/26/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/26/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037779900
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: DR. PAUL’S, 1250 MISSOURI ST #312, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94107. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed DEFINED CONCENTRATES (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/22/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/29/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037780700
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CAFE TABOO, 600 YORK ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed JIN HOUSE CAFE INC. (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 07/05/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/29/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037770400 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BAKER PLACES’ ACCEPTANCE PLACE, 1376 4TH AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94112. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed BAKER PLACES, INC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 03/14/90. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/21/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037770500
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BAKER PLACES’ JOE HEALY DETOX PROJECT, 101 GOUGH ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94107. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed BAKER PLACES, INC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 03/14/90. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/21/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037781800
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SAN FRANCISCO MUSIC HALL OF FAME; SAN FRANCISCO MUSIC WALK OF FAME, 1353 BUSH ST #112, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94109. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed SAN FRANCISCO SOUND (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on NA. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/29/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037781600
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MUSIC CITY REHEARSAL, 1353 BUSH ST #112, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94109. This business is conducted by a limited partnership, and is signed PACIFIC EQUITIES WEST LLC, GP OF MUSIC CITY LP (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 06/27/16. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/29/17.
OCT 05, 12, 19, 26, 2017
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF WILLIE BELL HOWARD IN SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO: FILE PES-17-301275
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of WILLIE BELL HOWARD. A Petition for Probate has been filed by LUSTER DONNEL HOWARD in the Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco. The Petition for Probate requests that LUSTER DONNEL HOWARD be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court. The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Oct 31, 2017, 9:00am, Rm. 204, Superior Court of California, 400 McAllister St., San Francisco, CA 94102. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the latter of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined by section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for petitioner: ALMA SOONGI BECK, ESQ. (SBN: 197383) LAKIN SPEARS, LLP, 2400 GENG ROAD #110, PALO ALTO, CA 94303, 650-328-7000.
OCT 12, 19, 26, 2017 SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, COUNTY OF BERNALILLO, STATE OF NEW MEXICO CHILDREN’S COURT DIVISION NO. D-202-SA-2017-020 IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION PETITION OF DANIEL LUKE GONZALES NOTICE OF PETITION FOR ADOPTION STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO NOUFAL HADIOUI AND THE PARENTS OF NOUFAL HADIOUI:
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that Daniel Luke Gonzales, the above-named Petitioner, has filed a Petition for Adoption of the minor child, Khalila Adrianna Griego-Morrow born November of 2002 in the above referenced action. The biological mother, Misty Gonzales, consents to the step-parent adoption. Unless you enter your appearance within twenty (20) days of the date of the final publication of this Notice in the Second Judicial District Court, Children’s Court Division, before the Honorable Marie Ward, judgment by default will be entered against you. The date of the final publication is October 26, 2017. Respectfully submitted: LITTLE, GILMAN-TEPPER & BATLEY P.A. Randy W. Powers, Jr. Attorneys for Daniel Gonzales, 316 Osuna Rd. NE, Suite A, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87107 (505) 246-0500
OCT 12, 19, 26, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037779000
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BANOU COUTURE, 27 CYPRESS LANE, DALY CITY, CA 94014. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed MARYAM ARIA. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/28/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/28/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037790600 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: XU’S DESIGN LAB, 2259 18TH AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94116. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed JIACEN XU. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/01/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/04/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037782200 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: RADEFF DESIGN STUDIOS, 956 ILLINOIS ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94107. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed TRACY E. RADEFF. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/30/02. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/02/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037765400
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BAY AREA EFFICIENT MOVERS, 1238 NORTHPOINT DR. #D, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94130. This business is conducted by a general partnership, and is signed EZIZ TACHMURADOV & DZIANIS VASILEUSKI. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 07/26/16. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/18/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037791800
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: EMERALD ISLE TRUSTS & ESTATES, 345 FRANKLIN ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94102. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed HALLINAN & HALLINAN PC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 01/01/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/05/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037772500
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: ACCOUNTING PARAMEDICS, 291 PUTNAM ST #B, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed SIMKEINASO, INC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/22/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/22/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017
<< Classifieds
20 • BAY AREA REPORTER • October 26-November 1, 2017
Legal Notices>> FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037785100
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037797900
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: RIA HEALTH, 44 GOUGH ST #203, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94103. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed DXRX INC. (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on NA. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/03/17.
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: AMSA BUILDING SERVICES, 1114 SUTTER ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94109. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed CYNTHIA PAREDES. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 05/31/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/12/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037792500
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037800300
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SHELLAC NAIL BAR, 702 LARKIN ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94109. This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed STRAND SF LLC, (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/05/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/05/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037791500 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SANDY HILL FLOORING, 5235 DIAMOND HEIGHTS BLVD #108, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94131. This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed SANDYHILL BUILDERS, LLC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/05/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/05/17.
OCT 12, 19, 26, NOV 02, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037777900
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: WIN YEN COMPANY, 2747 MISSION ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed ANNIE YUEN. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on NA. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/28/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037799100
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: MYBIKESKILLS.COM, 431 ELLINGTON AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94112. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed JASON SERAFINO-AGAR. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/29/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/13/17.
0CT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037800600
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BLUE SIGHT TOURS, 20 DESCANSO DR #1124, SAN JOSE, CA 95134. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed SEYED AHMAD MIRFAKHRAIE. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/14/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/16/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037773100 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SANFRANCISCOTIM.COM, BARBARY COAST PRESS, 37 ALPHA ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94134. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed TIMOTHY P. KEEFE. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/12/12. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/25/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: CLOUD GRAPHICS & PRINTING, 832A STOCKTON ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94108. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed JING JIANG. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/10/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/13/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037798400
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PONTE ROMA TOURS, 555 PIERCE ST #244, ALBANY, CA 94706. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed MARYAM ETTEHADIEH. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/09/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/12/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037769300 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PSALM RES. CFE, 565 GROVE ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94102. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed WILLIAM SACRO ENCARNACION. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/21/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/21/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037799000
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: QUARTS N PINTS, 2434 NORIEGA ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94122. This business is conducted by a general partnership, and is signed SUSANNA CUI CHEN & YU YING CHEN. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on NA. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/13/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037801100 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SF SUPER CAB, 1407 IRVING ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94122. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed SF SUPER CAB (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/10/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/16/17.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037772800 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: 5 DEGREE TEA HOUSE, 2527 SAN BRUNO AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94134. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed LEE’S KITCHEN CHINESE FOOD INC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 08/28/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/22/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037776200 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: TENROKU RAMEN, 3251 20TH AVE #250C, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94132. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed TENROKU RAMEN INC. (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/26/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/26/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037798500
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: DCOPPER+, 1017 VALENCIA ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110.This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed DCOPPER+ LLC (CA).The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/05/17.The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/12/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037797400 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: THE WILLOWS, 1582 FOLSOM ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94103. This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed THESE THREE TREES LLC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 06/10/13. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/11/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037800100 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PHRAME.COM, 75 BROADWAY, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111. This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed GOLDUBER LLC (DE). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/13/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/13/17.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME FILE A-036241800 The following persons have abandoned the use of the fictitious business name known as: BERNAL HEIGHTS PIZZERIA, 59 30TH ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business was conducted by a corporation and signed by BERNAL HEIGHTS PIZZERIA, INC (CA). The fictitious name was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 01/09/15.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME IN SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO FILE CNC-17-553397
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037795200 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BAIANO PIZZERIA - BH, 59 30TH ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed BERNAL HEIGHTS PIZZERIA INC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/10/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/10/17.
In the matter of the application of: MARIA VERONICA DE PAOLIS KALUZA, 50 CHUMASERO DR. #12M, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94132, for change of name having been filed in Superior Court, and it appearing from said application that petitioner MARIA VERONICA DE PAOLIS KALUZA, is requesting that the name MARIA VERONICA DE PAOLIS KALUZA, be changed to VERONICA EVA LUNA. Now therefore, it is hereby ordered, that all persons interested in said matter do appear before this Court in Dept. 514, Rm. 514 on the 7th of December 2017 at 9:00am of said day to show cause why the application for change of name should not be granted.
OCT 19, 26, NOV 02, 09, 2017
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017
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ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME IN SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO FILE CNC-17-553376
In the matter of the application of: ALMA INFANTE REYES, 555 JONES ST #401, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94102, for change of name having been filed in Superior Court, and it appearing from said application that petitioner ALMA INFANTE REYES, is requesting that the name SALMA REYES INFANTE, be changed to SALMA REYES INFANTE. Now therefore, it is hereby ordered, that all persons interested in said matter do appear before this Court in Dept. 514, Rm. 514 on the 5th of December 2017 at 9:00am of said day to show cause why the application for change of name should not be granted.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037812900
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: BLISSFUL ENCOUNTER, 33 WAVERLY PL, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94108. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed HUI YING LU. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/20/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/20/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037813000
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SHIELD101, 1788 19TH AVE, UNIT C1, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94122. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed HIO-KIT LEUNG. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/19/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/20/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037802700
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: OHANA, 3150 18TH ST #225, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed DANIAL E. PALMER. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/06/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/17/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037778300 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: PROPERTY RENOVATIONS UNLIMITED, 14 PRECITA AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by an individual, and is signed STEPHEN SCHNEIDER. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/28/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 09/28/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037806000
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: SAN FRANCISCO NEUROPSYCHOLOGY PC, 833 MARKET ST #809, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94103. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed SAN FRANCISCO NEUROPSYCHOLOGY PC (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 08/02/16. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/18/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037798700
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: AVICOMM, 1111 MARKET ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94102. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed AVICOMM (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/12/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/12/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037801800
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: JEFF SCHLARB DESIGN STUDIO, 636 POTRERO AVE, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110. This business is conducted by a corporation, and is signed GREEN COUCH STAGING AND DESIGN (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on NA. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/16/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037811900
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: AGENCY ALL ABOUT CHILDREN, 1410 NORIEGA ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94122. This business is conducted by a married couple, and is signed EDWARD Y. ROMANOV & JANET ROMANOV. The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 10/20/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/20/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037810400
The following person(s) is/are doing business as: ORANGETHEORY FITNESS FINANCIAL DISTRICT, 343 SANSOME, #125, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104. This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed SFFIT FD LLC, (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/01/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/20/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE A-037810100 The following person(s) is/are doing business as: ORANGETHEORY FITNESS - SAN FRANCISCO - MISSION BAY, 215 KING ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94107. This business is conducted by a limited liability company, and is signed SFFIT MB LLC, (CA). The registrant(s) commenced to transact business under the above listed fictitious business name or names on 09/01/17. The statement was filed with the City and County of San Francisco, CA on 10/20/17.
OCT 26, NOV 02, 09, 16, 2017
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To place your classified ad, call 415-861-5019 Then go have a drink & relax...
SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT NOTICE TO PROPOSERS - GENERAL INFORMATION The SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT (“District”), 300 Lakeside Drive, Oakland, California, is advertising for proposals for Brokerage Services for an Owner-Controlled Insurance Program (OCIP), Request for Proposals (RFP) No. 6M2067, on or about October 25, 2017, with proposals due by 2:00 PM local time, Tuesday, November 28, 2017.
DESCRIPTION OF SERVICES TO BE PROVIDED The District is soliciting the services of The San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (“BART” or “District”) intends to engage the services of a consulting firm or joint venture (“Consultant”) to provide brokerage services for an Owner-Controlled Insurance Program (OCIP) for BART’s Earthquake Safety Program, Hayward Maintenance Complex and the Train Control Modernization Project. A Pre-Proposal Meeting will be held on Wednesday, November 8, 2017. The Pre-Proposal Meeting will convene at 10:00 AM at the District’s Office, in Conference Room #1700, 17th Floor, 300 Lakeside Drive, Oakland, California 94612. At the Pre-Proposal Meeting the District’s Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) Program will be explained. All questions regarding DBE participation should be directed to Cindy Chan at (510) 464-6574 – E-mail CChan@bart.gov. Prospective Proposers are requested to make every effort to attend this only scheduled Pre-Proposal Meeting, and to confirm their attendance by contacting the District’s Contract Administrator, Carl Asbury, telephone 510-464-6545, E-mail casbury@bart.gov prior to the date of the Pre-Proposal Meeting.
REQUIRED REGISTRATION ON BART PROCUREMENT PORTAL In order for prospective Proposers to be eligible for award of an Agreement being solicited on the BART Procurement Portal, such Proposers are required to be currently registered to do business with BART on the BART Procurement Portal on line at https://suppliers.bart.gov and have obtained Solicitation Documents, updates, and any Addenda issued on line so as to be added to the On-Line Planholders List for this solicitation. If a prospective Proposer is a joint venture or partnership, such entity may register on the BART procurement portal with the entity’s tax identification number (TIN) and download the Solicitation Documents so as to be listed as an on-line planholder under the entity’s name prior to submitting its Proposal. If such entity has not registerd on BART procurement portal in the name of the joint venture or partnership prior to submitting its Proposal, provided that at least one of the joint venturers or partners registered on line on the BART Procurement Portal and downloaded the Solicitation Documents so as to be added to the ON-Line Planholders List for this solicitation, such entity will be required to register with the entity’s TIN as an on-line planholder following the submittal of Proposals, in order for the entity to be eligible for award of this Agreement. PROPOSERS WHO HAVE NOT REGISTERED ON THE BART PROCUREMENT PORTAL PRIOR TO SUBMITTING A PROPOSAL, (OR FOR JOINT VENTURE OR PARTNERSHIP AS DECRIBED ABOVE PRIOR TO AWARD) AND DID NOT DOWNLOAD THE SOLICITATION DOCUMENTS FOR THIS SOLICITATION ON LINE SO AS TO BE LISTED AS AN ON-LINE PLANHOLDER FOR THIS SOLICITATION, WILL NOT BE ELIGIBLE FOR AWARD OF THIS AGREEMENT. Dated at Oakland, California this 19th day of October, 2017. /s/Kenneth A.Duron Kenneth A. Duron, District Secretary San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District 10/26/17 CNS-3063999# BAY AREA REPORTER
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Chariot ride
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Dragon tale
Acting up
Rat tails
Vol. 47 • No. 43 • October 26-November 1, 2017
www.ebar.com/arts
Scene from director Todd Haynes’ “Wonderstruck.”
Nosferatu’s gay master by David-Elijah Nahmod
I Synchronized hearts by Matthew Kennedy
T
odd Haynes’ high-reaching ode to youthful dreams and disappointments “Wonderstruck” comes to us from New Jersey-born designer-illustratorauthor Brian Selznick’s popular 2011 book. Selznick is a historical novelist, but hardly in the classic James Michener-Herman Wouk mold. He combines words and images into fanciful, twisty, object-laden, adult-and-kid-friendly storytelling. His best-known book, “The Invention of Hugo Cabret,” became the Martin Scorsese film “Hugo,” about an orphan rescuing the automata of pioneering filmmaker Georges Melies from a museum garbage pile. See page 28 >>
n “The Language of Shadows,” a one-hour documentary included on Kino Lorber’s DVD release of FW Murnau’s classic chiller “Nosferatu” (1922), the auteur is recalled by his niece as a sensitive, artistically inclined young man who was interested in art and theater. As a youngster in Germany he attended the theater regularly, often “restaging” the productions he saw at his home. By his early 20s, Murnau was hanging out with artists and literary figures and acting onstage. Though “The Language of Shadows” never mentions Murnau’s homosexuality, the film paints an almost stereotypical portrait of a “sensitive” gay artiste. See page 23 >>
Twin titans of Modernism by Sura Wood
Rick Gerharter
A
uguste Rodin, the Michelangelo of modern sculpture, and Gustav Klimt, the great 20th-century Austrian symbolist painter and founder of the modernist Vienna Secession movement, met only once, in 1902. Klimt was already well on his way to becoming one of the highest-paid painters of his day when Rodin, then at the height of his international fame, visited the 14th Secession exhibition in the Austrian capital that year. Their second meeting, a reunion if you will, is currently taking place at the Legion of Honor in “Klimt & Rodin: An Artistic Encounter.” While both men were certainly titans of 20thcentury art, and 2017 marks the centenary of their deaths, the show doesn’t advance a particularly convincing case for the pairing or adequately deliver on a promised dialogue between their artworks. See page 28 >>
{ SECOND OF THREE SECTIONS }
Max Schreck as Nosferatu in director FW Murnau’s 1922 classic film.
Auguste Rodin’s “The Kiss,” paired with two replicated panels from Gustav Klimt’s “Beethoven Frieze” (left) at “Klimt & Rodin: An Artistic Encounter,” now at the Palace of the Legion of Honor.
<< Out There
22 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
Best Wedding Photographer as voted by BAR readers
Human misbehavior
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WINNER Best Wedding Photographer
Steven Underhill
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Aris-Allen Roberson, Ashley D. Gallo, and Branden “Noel” Thomas in 42nd Street Moon’s production of the Broadway revue “Ain’t Misbehavin’.”
WEDDINGS, HEADSHOTS, PORTRAITS
stevenunderhill.com · stevenunderhillphotos@gmail.com
2pub-BBB_BAR_101217.pdf
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9/14/17
11:36 AM
by Roberto Friedman
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2nd Street Moon is currently opening its 25th anniversary season by presenting “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” the musical revue devoted to songs that Fats Waller made famous, playing the Gateway Theatre in San Francisco through Oct. 29. Directed and choreographed by Jeffrey Polk, with music direction by Dave Dobrusky, the show seems to suggest that the company has moved on from its self-described mission of presenting “lost” or neglected musicals, and has now decided to go for shows that may not be obscure, but are remembered or renowned for good reason. People love them. This production of “Ain’t Misbehavin’” gives the audience everything it came for: classic jazz, blues and stride piano, delivered by a crack band with Dobrusky on the keys, and sung by a cast of five ap-
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on Broadway, Erica Richardson is convincingly dreamy on “I’ve Got a Feeling I’m Falling” (1929), sultry on “Mean to Me” (1929), and spunky on “Cash for Your Trash” (1942). The quintet makes beautiful harmony together in “Black and Blue” (1929), the one number when the show lets the cast sit down and really take stock. It’s Fats Waller addressing social-justice issues and the lived experience of being black in America. Sadly, the central conceit of its punning title is still relevant in 2017. Out There saw the original Broadway production back in the 1970s, had fond memories of numbers such as “Lounging at the Waldorf ” (1936) and “The Viper’s Drag” (1934, a reworking of the traditional “The Reefer Song”), and was happy to have them rekindled by the Moon production. We had the songs’ lyrics roaming our thoughts for hours afterward – “I can’t give you anything but love,” “It’s a sin to tell a lie,” “I dreamed about a reefer five feet long, a-might, immense, but not too strong!” – words that were, shall we just say, the tiniest bit triggering.t
Down home again by Jim Piechota
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pealing performers who sell every number with joyful good spirit. Every cast member gets at least one chance to shine. In “’T Ain’t Nobody’s Business If I Do” (from 1922), Aris-Allen Roberson shows off his resonant voice, sinuous dance moves, and spry athleticism. “Handful of Keys” (1933), a paean to Waller’s signature style of stride piano, features Ashley D. Gallo in a paroxysm of parody pianism, with the company backing her up in spirited musical pantomime. Branden “Noel” Thomas gets to showcase the dexterity and luster of his bass voice on the classics “Honeysuckle Rose” (1939) and “I’m Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter” (1933). Katrina Lauren McGraw can be kittenish on “Squeeze Me” (1925) and mockstrident on the retro-anthem “When the Nylons Bloom Again” (1943). With her powerful pipes, in the role that Nell Carter originated
Since I Laid My Burden Down by Brontez Purnell; Feminist Press, $17.95
I
n author and musician Brontez Purnell’s engrossing debut novel “Since I Laid My Burden Down,” his protagonist does something that a lot of us dream about doing when city life becomes oppressive: return home to the land of our childhood to rest and regroup. DeShawn, a middle-aged gay man living in Oakland, flees back to rural Alabama to mourn the death of his uncle, and contemplate his past and who he has become as a man. Flashback episodes of his childhood and adolescence fill in the spaces of DeShawn’s adult life and flesh out much of the book. While these scenes tend to be haphazardly arranged, they are effective at translating past ordeals into a present condition. Growing up, DeShawn’s family life was made turbulent by an abusive stepfather who was prone to violent rages amidst quarreling relatives. But his sexual awakening came early, and with a thrust his family wasn’t quite ready to process. The novel is slim yet potently realized, with a lot to ponder. Purnell draws each episode in DeShawn’s stirred memory with careful con-
sideration and candid detail. His sexual escapades are raw, and the ghosts of his past confronting him during his homecoming are dealt with and vanquished one-by-one. Readers will relate to DeShawn’s return home if they’ve ever ventured back to the childhood roots of their own pasts and found both painful and pleasant memories there. Nostalgia can be a welcoming friend and a vengeful enemy at the same time. This novel follows the re-publication of Purnell’s first book “Johnny Would You Love Me If My Dick Were Bigger” by Feminist Press, initially released through San Francisco-based radical underground press Rudos and Rubes in 2015. This brilliant, unfettered commentary on the state of contemporary gay life is told through a series of frank, humorous essays, vignettes, anecdotes, musings, and illustrations. Purnell reflects pointedly on urban life, friends, adventure, race, culture, and freedom. He makes some poi-
gnant, vital, and deeply-felt points on HIV, the queer community, and sexuality in all its glorious forms. Both Purnell publications are busy, frantically narrated books, but well worth the trip.t
On the web
Music writer Tim Pfaff considers new releases from Mark-Andre Hamelin and Chiyan Wong in his review “Extreme pianism.”
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Theatre>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • Bay Area Reporter • 23
Holy Moses
Kevin Berne
A young Moses (Diluckshan Jeyaratnam) takes a chariot for a joy ride in TheatreWorks’ production of the new stage musical based on the animated feature “The Prince of Egypt.”
by Richard Dodds
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ne Sunday, in a decade far, far away, our Sunday school class trooped down to a second-run theater to see Cecil B. DeMille’s “The Ten Commandments.” The special effects were the niftiest part, but even a third-grader could catch the story’s drift: bad Egyptians, suffering Israelites, magisterial Charlton Heston, a chatty burning bush, and the parting of the Red Sea. To revisit the story with suggestions of humanizing nuance can be a slippery slope when it undoes moral unambiguity but only gives lip service to the conundrums it unleashes.
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That’s the case in a stage musical that has been crafted from “The Prince of Egypt,” a 1998 animated feature from DreamWorks with librettist Philip LaZebnik expanding on his screenplay. Moses feels bad about all the dead Egyptian babies he hath wrought, but as he tells anyone who’s listening, he was just following orders – albeit God’s orders. It’s all in the cause of freeing the Hebrews from slavery, but Moses didn’t much mind these forced laborers when he was living in the royal household unaware of his own roots. And you get the impression that he wouldn’t care too much who the Pharaoh enslaved as long as they
FW Murnau
From page 21
That sensitivity could clearly be seen when Murnau became a filmmaker. His first half-dozen films are either lost or survive in short fragments, though most of his 1920s output exists fully intact. What we see today is the work of a man who understood the power of cinema. Murnau painted haunting portraits with his camera, as he did with his visually stunning retelling of the medieval legend “Faust” (1926). The film’s imagery remains unforgettable even today. As the plague ravages a small town, the Satanic Mephisto hovers over the populace, laughing maniacally at the suffering he sees below. Sequences like these are visually stunning. Not even today’s computer-generated effects can hold a candle to the dark universe that was Murnau’s cinematic vision. “Nosferatu” (1922) is Murnau’s most widely-seen film. The first big-screen version of Bram Stoker’s 1897 “Dracula,” the film was almost lost forever. Denied the novel’s film rights by Stoker’s estate, Murnau simply changed the names of the characters and the title. “Nosferatu” is the German word for undead. Stoker’s widow sued for copyright infringement, and all copies of the film were ordered destroyed. Fortunately, a few prints survived, and Kino Lorber has restored the film from various prints found in European vaults.
Director FW Murnau at work.
Murnau’s take on the Dracula legend is nothing short of magnificent. As portrayed by Max Schreck, Dracula stand-in Count Orlock makes for a terrifying visage. Dracula wasn’t human, so Murnau eschewed the concept of the vampire as a courtly if creepy gentleman. Instead Schreck is made up to look like a human-rat hybrid. One look at his evil countenance and viewers will know that he’s out for blood. The scenes in Orlock’s castle were shot on location in a desolate, centuries-old European castle. When we see Orlock in his dungeon coffin, the effect is chillingly
weren’t his own kith and kin. Perhaps these ethical questions wouldn’t have arisen if the new musical had sufficient distractions, but in its world premiere at TheatreWorks, the script, songs, and many of the performances are lukewarm, and the production design surrounding the material is surprisingly subpar. The cast is forever rearranging a collection of lightweight building blocks – supposedly the stones used to construct the pyramids – and that is pretty much the extent of the set. And the costumes by Tony Awardwinner Ann Hould-Ward seem to be based on cutoff sweatpants and the unflattering shapes provoked by cheap materials. While the production carries a number of Broadway names on the creative end – most notably, songwriter Stephen Schwartz of “Wicked,” “Godspell,” and “Pippin” fame – the impetus to turn the movie into a stage musical came not from aspirations for New York but, as the program notes, mainly from synagogues, churches, and school groups that had been asking for a theatrical rendering of the animated feature. Diluckshan Jeyaratnam, a young Danish performer of Tamil descent, is boyishly appealing as Moses, and though not commanding in stature, projects convincing sincerity, and possesses an appealing voice. Most of the other men in the cast aren’t able to make strong impressions, which most become a problem with Jason Gotay as Moses’ bland royal boyhood buddy Ramses, and Will Mann as the de-humored high priest Hotep. In comically shrewish roles, Brennyn Lark and Jamila SabaresKlemm help enliven the proceedings as, respectively, the spouses of Moses and Ramses. Stephen Schwartz has augmented the songs written for the movie, which included the generic pop anthem “When You Believe,” with songs that are mostly pleasantly unmemorable. His son, Scott Schwartz, has staged the musical without enough imagination to compensate for limited resources, often relying on Sean Cheesman’s choreography that erratically serves that purpose powerful. Throughout the film Murnau shoots scenes at odd angles with shadowy lighting effects. The result is almost dreamlike. The director pulls you into the netherworld where vampires reside. In 1927, Murnau moved to Hollywood, where he made four films. The best-remembered of these is “Sunrise” (1927), a drama about a country bumpkin who leaves his wife after he’s seduced by a sophisticated city woman. Murnau used many of the techniques he employed in “Nosferatu” – the strange, off-kilter camera angles, expressionistic art direction and deep shadows take an ordinary tale and make it seem ghostly. In 1931, soon after completing his final film “Tabu,” Murnau and his chauffeur were killed in a car accident near Santa Barbara. Murnau was 42. Rumors persist that the director and his driver were lovers engaged in oral sex when they lost control of the car. There’s no way to verify this story. In 2015, Murnau’s grave in Germany was the site of an incident more disturbing than anything he filmed. His head was stolen from the grave. Speculation continues that this was part of a Satanic ritual, but no one knows for sure. Actor John Malkovich played Murnau in the 2000 film “Shadow of the Vampire,” a fictional dramatization of the filming of “Nosferatu.” Director E. Elias Merhige opines that Max Schreck was an actual vampire. Happy Halloween!t
with routines both artsy-awkward and helpfully imaginative. After its Mountain View run, with Jeyaratnam again in the title role, the musical will be staged at the Fredericia Theatre in Denmark, which has declared its own production the world premiere. And then, presumably, it’s onto the churches,
synagogues, and school groups that will begin tithing royalties.t “The Prince of Egypt” will run at Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts through Nov. 5. Tickets are $40-$100. Call (650) 463-1960 or go to theatreworks.org.
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<< Theatre
24 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
The many ways & means of temptation
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Dex Craig
which also revived Kittell and Fogel’s 2000 musical “Club Inferno,” and among the recurring players are Noah Thompson, Peggy L’Eggs, Zelda Koznofski, Crystal Why, and Carol Ann Walker. Allen Sawyer has taken over the direction of the rebooted musical, with musical direction by “Club Inferno” alum Steve Bollinger. A co-production between D’Arcy Drollinger and the Tuck ‘n’ Roll Players, “Cyberotica!” will run through Nov. 18. Tickets are available at sfoasis.com.
Halloween spirits
Nick Otto
Left: “Deal With the Dragon,” Kevin Rolston’s solo show about temptation, has been added to the New Conservatory Theatre Center calendar for a run starting Nov. 10. Above: D’Arcy Drollinger makes his third appearance as the sweet transvestite from Transylvania in Ray of Light’s “Rocky Horror Show” at the Victoria Theatre.
by Richard Dodds
T
he dragon is still on the loose, having breathed fire in Scotland, Los Angeles, and all over the Bay Area. The plan is to bake the Big Apple, but “Deal With the Dragon” is having one more San Francisco run, beginning Nov. 10 at New Conservatory Theatre Center, before its anticipated move to New York. Kevin Rolston is the author of and only performer in the multi-character study of temptation and the justifications used to succumb to it. First seen at the SF Fringe Fest in 2014, the solo show was most
recently presented in August at TheatreWorks’ New Works Festival. “We discovered a new, much stronger ending given everything going on nationally and globally,” Rolston said in announcing the NCTC production. “We found it just in time to share it with the kind of audience I had hoped to reach when I first conceived the play.” That would be an LGBTQ audience, even though the play is not strictly focused on an agenda of sexual orientation. Rolston plays three characters in the show (developed with and directed by M. Graham Smith) about a struggling artist with an
overly solicitous live-in patron and a rival artist who’s a self-described “skinny queen” with a brutal wit and a history of drug addiction. Rolston thought he was writing “for a very specific audience of middleaged or older gay men,” and was surprised to find the piece striking a more universal note. “It’s essentially speaking to anyone struggling with behavior they’re not happy with.” “Deal With the Dragon” will have weekend performances through Dec. 3. Tickets are available at (415) 861-8972 or nctcsf.org.
Party like it’s 1999
The world was on drummed-up tenterhooks as the second hand pushed its way into 2000, but if Y2K calamities never arose, the anticipation was the cause of cre-
ative celebrations. Among those was “Cyberotica! A Low-Tech Rock Musical About a High-Tech World,” staged in 1999 at the long-departed Transmission Theatre. It was meant to be revived by the more recently departed Thrillpeddlers, but has now found a home at Oasis, where it opens Nov. 2. With a book by Kelly Kittell, music by Peter Fogel, and lyrics by both, “Cyberotica!” opens with Electra, the Goddess of Technology, introducing three intertwined love stories: an Internet newbie hungry for cybersex, a genetic engineer and her cloned baby, and a transgender trio eager to change the world. The show climaxes with the inevitable countdown to Y2K, where surprises await. The cast includes several members of the Thrillpeddlers company,
While D’Arcy Drollinger is attached to “Cyberotica!” as a presenter, he will be pounding the boards several blocks away at the Victoria Theatre. He’s back for a third time as sweet transvestite Frank-n-Furter in “The Rocky Horror Show,” in what is becoming an annual Halloween tradition for Ray of Light Theatre. David Hoover is directing the production, set to run Oct. 26-Nov. 4. Tickets are available at rayoflighttheatre.com. Back at Oasis, Drolinger is directing another Halloween-timed production with a new set of episodes for “Buffy the Vampire Slayer Live!” Michael Phillis is in the Sarah Michelle Gellar role of a high schooler who must fit battles against evil into her life as a wannabe-everyday teenager. “Buffy” will run Oct. 26-31; tickets at sfoasis.com. Put together a lonely fellow with a shovel and a corpse too lovely to put in the ground, and you’ve got “Gravedigger – The Musical,” running Oct. 26-28. PianoFight is offering its second staging of the homegrown show by Dylan Waite and Casey Robbins that has the title character trying to maneuver the purloined stiff in and out of public. Tickets at pianofight.com.t
Love in the time of the plague by David Lamble
F
resh from its screening at the Toronto and this year’s Mill Valley Film Festival, the powerful new French drama “BPM (Beats Per Minute)” immediately makes the personal political. For a historybased piece, it’s surprisingly relevant to our current struggles with greed, indifference and latent Fascism. Right away, “BPM” director Robin Campillo slams us back into urban France in the early 1990s, at a meeting of Paris’s rambunctious ACT UP group. The members can barely contain their anger at the big drug companies, at the
Socialist-led government of Francois Mitterrand, and sometimes with each other. One of the film’s special qualities is in dramatizing how fighting for your life and the lives of your friends is seldom just another day at the office. The price paid is often in lost tempers and shattered relationships. Just as in America, Britain and the rest of the West, AIDS is, as “BPM” begins, a death sentence and a damning indictment that the establishment cares not a bit for queers, their families and lovers. The film opens as Nathan (Arnaud Valois), new to the group, is both politically mesmerized and
romantically seduced by Sean (Argentina’s charismatic Nahuel Perez Biscayart), a young militant whose behavior intensifies just as his grip on life is challenged by falling Tcell counts and screaming matches with others in the group. Brought to the screen by Robin Campillo (“Eastern Boys”), “BPM” presents a provocative, deeply emotional portrait of ACT UP-Paris just before the life-saving drug-cocktail treatments appeared on the scene, as the brave young women and men put their bodies on the line to make the AIDS epidemic visible to a wider public. “BPM” is actually two different films sprawling out over 144 minutes. The first puts younger viewers in touch with the “ancient history” of the plague years, and the second consists of an increasingly passionate affair between the at-first-naive Nathan and the always-pushy Sean. The frank love scenes between the men more than compensate for the difficult turn their lives take as Nathan comes face-to-face with how hard it is to lose your lover just as the two of you are setting up housekeeping. Topping a sublime core cast is Nahuel Pérez Biscayart, familiar to LGBTQ audiences from his sublime sexy turn as the Argentinian teen who carries on with both his soccer-playing buddy Nacho and his eyeglass-wearing, slightly tomboyish female friend in the 2007 Patagonian-set romance “Glue.” The now-31-year-old actor is starting to show traces of the heroic capacities of cinema icons like Jean-Paul Belmondo and Humphrey Bogart. There’s a wonderful third-act scene
where Sean’s friends carry out his wishes for the deposition of his remains in a moment that would feel right at home in the iconoclastic cinema of the Mexican-Spanish surrealist Luis Buñuel. Mexican-born director Robin Campillo has previously impressed us with his second feature, “December Boys.” That 2013 melodrama
found a Parisian man tricked into letting a dangerous gang into his flat through the seductive wiles of a young adolescent. It’s to be hoped “BPM” (opening Friday in San Francisco) will garner both queer and mainstream attention and accolades during the upcoming awards season. Not rated, presented in French with English subtitles.t
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Film>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • Bay Area Reporter • 25
Of rats & humans
Courtesy Roxie
Scene from director Theo Anthony’s “Rat Film.”
by Erat Blackwell
R
ats are everywhere, just like people. They want what we want: warmth, shelter, food, family. The brown rat, also called the common, street, sewer, wharf, or Norway rat, probably evolved in Mongolia, then migrated by ship to every port in the world except Antarctica. With a 10inch body plus 10-inch tail, an adult weighs 10-12 ounces. Energetic, agile, and diabolically clever, these critters’ short reproductive cycle, large litters, quick development, and short life-span mean they evolve twice as fast as their #1 predator, humans. Their name has been taken somewhat in vain in “Rat Film,” opening Friday at the Roxie. The central thesis of director Theo Anthony’s 82-minute film seems to be that although integrated, Baltimore’s historically black neighborhoods, legendary rat havens, remain mired in unemployment, poverty, and crime. His approach is formal, poetic, and associative, but ultimately thin, strained, and incoherent. He fails to generate a feature’s worth of footage
from a demographic conceit. Archival photographs of rickety wooden structures compete with a map divided into socio-economic districts. Flogging frustrating footage of bad videogame graphics, he seems insensible to the difference between analytics and aesthetics. Viewers’ best hope is Eddy, a charismatic black dude, a rat exterminator for Baltimore City Rat Removal, who keeps up an amusing patter as he makes his rounds. We watch him drive around but never get down to the nitty-gritty, although he does pump beige sludge into the ground, presumably a mix of grain and poison. None of the people who request Eddy’s services are interviewed. Surely there are rat horror stories waiting to be told that would flesh out the bare outlines of that archival map. Rats bite, eat, and kill babies; it’s no joke raising a family in a ratinfested building. But Anthony shies away from human interest. Creepy breathy female narration skewers three researchers. Dr. Curt Richter (1894-1988) was a psychobiologist whose rat poison, by killing hundreds of rats, simply
provoked survivors to increase birthrates to compensate. David E. Davis (1913-94) was an animal behaviorist whose Rodent Ecology Project proved sanitary human habitation deters rat infiltration. John B. Calhoun (1917-95) was an ethologist at the National Institute of Mental Health whose studies of cooped-up rats or mice devolving into sterile misfits provide dismal parallels of human overcrowding and bad behavior. Photos misleadingly show Calhoun with mice. The liveliest sequence involves men who like hunting rats. There’s a white guy with a crazy smile and a collection of pellet guns who picks up a blowgun to stalk rats in his alley. There are a couple of black guys who enter a deli to buy turkey breast and peanut butter to bait a fishhook. The big guy casts his line into an alley and waits, while his thin sidekick wields a baseball bat. Eddy reappears to state succinctly, “That’s where you’re gonna find a rat. Where the uneducated people are, the ones who have the least. The least resources. The people who have no dreams, no aspirations, just survival. In a nutshell.” Cue the mesmerizing but entirely irrelevant story of Frances Glessner Lee (1878-1962), whose series of dollhouse murder tableaux “The Nutshell Studies of Unexplained Deaths” revolutionized the study of circumstantial evidence. No rats involved, but maybe some societal breakdown? Montaging maps, models, and mayhem, Anthony has inexplicably overlooked “The Tale of Samuel Whiskers, or The RolyPoly Pudding” (1908) by Beatrix Potter, wherein an enormous old rat makes a dumpling out of Tom Kitten. “Rat Film” is not to be confused with last year’s thrilling “Rats,” Morgan Spurlock’s unsettling homage now on YouTube.t
Army at the Castro by David Lamble
“T
he Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin,” Jennifer Kroot’s bio-documentary (with co-director Bill Weber), is several films in one. First, a funny, ironic account of how a “son of the old South,” with a rockrib conservative dad, initially does all the dutiful things expected of a first son: Navy service in Vietnam; jump-starting a journalism career in a stint with a Marin weekly; and finally, adopting a Dickensian style for a diary-like column, “Tales of the City,” making witty fiction of Maupin’s nightly sexcapades. It led to a daily San Francisco Chronicle series filled with increasingly explicit queer content, and resulted in a wildly popular PBS TV series. That show, despite its huge audience, would be driven off the air
by a vengeful witch-hunter – ironically, Maupin’s first employer, North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms. The film offers candid audio snapshots of the subject from his adopted/non-biological family, including Neil Gaiman, Laura Linney, Olympia Dukakis, Sir Ian McKellen and Amy Tan, weaving these personal insights with a humorous cultural history of this Left Coast city from the mid-70s on. It’s an eloquent portrayal of an urban community moving from the highs of sexual freedom in the 70s (including Maupin’s relationship with a Hollywood superstar, the hyper-closeted Rock Hudson) to the devastating reality of AIDS, to a “post”-AIDS world where freedom and prudence are lovingly if precariously balanced. (Wed., Nov. 1, Castro Theatre)t
CHRIS MANN
CAISSIE LEVY
NORM LEWIS
November 3 – 4
November 16 – 18
December 8 – 10
For tickets: feinsteinsatthenikko.com Courtesy the filmmakers
Laura Linney and Armistead Maupin ride in the gay pride parade in co-directors Jennifer Kroot and Bill Weber’s “The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin.”
Feinstein’s | Hotel Nikko San Francisco 222 Mason Street | 855-322-2738
<< Music
26 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
International style by Philip Campbell
conductors, instrumental soloists and entire orchestras. Two one-night stands finish the month at DSH and start November with music and artists drawn from all over the world. SFS Great Performers presents the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Zubin Mehta conducting, on Oct. 31. China National Centre for the Performing Arts Orchestra, with Liu Ja conducting, appears Nov. 5, as the NCPA
D
avies Symphony Hall, home of the San Francisco Symphony, has always been a friendly hub for international visitors. This month, guest conductors without borders started an adventurous cultural series featuring music of their native lands, which continues throughout the season. The doors are opening wider soon to welcome even more
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continues a six-city US tour in celebration of the Centre’s 10th anniversary season. Virtuoso Wu Man is soloist in American composer Lou Harrison’s Concerto for Pipa. The fantastic decorations for the 10th anniversary Dia de los Muertos Community Concert (three performances Nov. 4) are already on display at DSH. The colorful altars and figures will add a fanciful touch to the concert on Halloween night. Whether the Israeli musicians know the tradition or not, Zubin Mehta will surely smile in recognition. The Day of the Dead is a big deal in Southern California, too. I grew up attendStephen Kahn ing Mehta’s concerts at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion Instrumentalist Wu Man has introduced Chinese music and her fourwhen he was Music Direc- stringed pipa (sometimes called the Chinese lute) to Western audiences. tor of the L.A. Philharmonic (1962-78). I also enjoyed Commissioned for the artist, the (from the motion picture). Mehta his successors Carlo Maria Giulini great gay iconoclast’s beautiful piece will sign autographs afterwards. I and Andre Previn, but no one stays can be previewed on YouTube in the guess I’ll have to schlep my timeworn in memory better than the man Grammy-nominated recording with (but still-mint) LP of “Petrushka” to who first brought classical music the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. DSH for old times’ sake. to life for an eager kid. Seeing him Wu Man is a founding member of Brilliant instrumentalist Wu at DSH in his elevated title of IPO Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project, and Man has performed with the China Music Director for Life (since 1981) her career, like Harrison’s, reflects NCPA Orchestra in Europe and the offers a special treat for life-long an ongoing captivation with the U.S. Introducing Chinese music and fans. Marking his 80th birthday, the rich combination of Eastern and her four-stringed pipa (sometimes Mumbai-born and Vienna-trained Western music. Acclaimed Chinese called the Chinese lute) to Western maestro announced his formal recomposer Qigang Chen’s “Itineraire audiences for years, she will perform tirement in 2019. d’une illusion” is included in the Lou Harrison’s Concerto for Pipa The concert features Mozart’s program, and the Brahms Symand String Orchestra in celebration Symphony No. 36, “Linz”; Schubert’s phony No. 4 further displays the of the composer’s birth centennial Symphony in C Major, “The Great”; orchestra’s versatility.t (May 1917) on Sun., Nov. 5. It resoand Tel Aviv composer Amit Poznannates well with beloved Lou’s ties to sky’s “Footnote,” Suite for Orchestra sfsymphony.org Northern California.
No tunes like bro tunes by Gregg Shapiro
A
cliffsvariety.com
s unlikely musical sex symbols go, they probably don’t get more improbable than Ed Sheeran. The doughy tattooed ginger has transcended his appearance via his appealing singing voice on “Thinking Out Loud” and “Sing” from his breakthrough 2014 album X, and the inescapable “Shape of You” from his 2017 album Divide (Atlantic). Sheeran doesn’t veer too far from the formula that brought him success, which comes through loud
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and clear on “Dive,” “Castle on the Hill” and the heartbreaking “Supermarket Flowers.” The Search for Everything (Columbia) is John Mayer’s most soulful album in years. The writing is genuinely sophisticated, and Mayer’s singing is at its most compelling. Irresistible opener “Still Feel Like Your Man” is 21st-century blue-eyed soul that neatly avoids cultural appropriation. Heartbreak is the dominant theme on the acoustic “Emoji of a Wave,” followed by the funky “Helpless.” The subtle stomp of “In the Blood” is Mayer at his most confessional. “Moving On and Getting Over” puts a funky spin on the break-up song. Mayer excels at sad songs “Never on the Day You Leave” and the Randy Newman-esque “You’re Gonna Live Forever in Me.” On Beast Epic (Sub Pop), Sam Beam’s sixth album as Iron & Wine, the singer-songwriter has returned to the more acoustically driven style of his early releases. This leads to a more intimate feel throughout the 11 songs. It does feel like a solid return to form, especially on “Claim Your Ghost” and “The Truest Stars We Know.” Canadian singer-songwriter Mac DeMarco is the kind of cool indie artist who deserves attention. DeMarco’s third full-length album This Old Dog (Captured Tracks) is a giddy pleasure from start to finish. DeMarco’s distinctive sense of humor, beginning with “My Old Man,” in which he admits to beginning to see more of his father in himself, sets him apart. Other standout tunes include the 80s slow jams “On the Level” and “For the First Time” and closer “Watching Him Fade Away.” Of the four albums Grammynominated singer-songwriter Seth Glier has recorded, his latest, Birds (MPress), feels like it could connect
with the most people. The gospel choir on “Just Because I Can,” the infectious retro-pop sensibility of “People Like Us,” the blues rendition of Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth” and the beautiful ballad “Too Much Water” are all highly recommended. On teen singer-songwriter Declan McKenna’s terribly titled debut album What Do You Think About the Car? (Columbia), the opener “Humongous” sounds as big as its name. “The Kids Don’t Wanna Come Home” is as bratty as you’d expect. “Make Me Your Queen” isn’t as gay as you think. The album closes with the exceptional “Listen to Your Friends,” co-written by McKenna and openly gay exVampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij.t
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DVD>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • Bay Area Reporter • 27
Troubled waters
by Tavo Amador
D
espite a limited output of short stories, Katherine Anne Porter (1890-1980) enjoyed a great literary reputation. This high regard allowed her to be a writer-in-residence at several universities. She taught writing at Stanford, the University of Michigan, Washington and Lee, and the University of Texas. For decades, Porter won grants and fellowships to support herself while she toiled on a long-awaited novel. A malicious Truman Capote ridiculed her status in a thinly veiled portrait in his uncompleted novel “Answered Prayers.” In 1962, however, Porter published “Ship of Fools.” The novel soared to the top of the bestseller lists and finally gained her a wide readership. It was based on a voyage Porter had taken from Vera Cruz, Mexico to Germany in 1931. Reviews ranged from respectful to dismissive, but its success gave her financial independence. She sold the movie rights for the then-staggering sum of $500,000. In 1965, Columbia Studios hired producer-director Stanley Kramer and writer Abby Mann, who had collaborated on “Judgment at Nuremberg” (1961), to adapt it for the screen. In 1933, the disparate characters boarding the ship in Vera Cruz include Mary Treadwell, a bitter, middle-aged American divorcee whose beauty is fading (Vivien Leigh); La Condesa, a morphineaddicted Spanish noblewoman (Simone Signoret); Bill Tenny, a failed American baseball player (Lee Marvin); Herr Reiber, a vulgar anti-Semite who publishes a German Fascist magazine (Jose Ferrer); a disillusioned yet idealistic ship’s doctor, Wilhelm Schumann (Oskar Werner); and tempestuous young American lovers Jenny (Elizabeth Ashley) and David (George Segal). Also sailing are worldly Karl Gloken (Michael Dunn), a dwarf whose family pays him to stay away from them; a group of Spanish dancers headed by Pepe (Jose Greco), who pimps out the women in his troupe; and the kindly, urbane Jewish businessman Julius Lowenthal (Heinz Ruhlmann), who considers himself to be a German and fails to take the Nazis seriously. The ship is commanded by bored, cynical Captain
Thiele (Charles Korwin). One of his officers is Lt. Huebner (Werner von Klemperer, years before TV’s “Hogan’s Heroes”). The plot consists of the interactions of these strangers. In that sense, it’s “Grand Hotel” at sea. But Mann’s screenplay, which is reasonably faithful to the novel, brings depth and irony to the individual stories. The dialogue is often pointedly caustic. When Tenny and Mrs. Treadwell, who are uneasy dining companions, overhear anti-Semitic comments by Herr Reiber, he wonders why they have anything against the Jews. Back in Texas, he didn’t see a Jew until he was an adult. “You were probably too busy lynching Negroes to worry about the Jews,” replies Mrs. Treadwell. Dr. Schumann, who injects La Condesa with morphine, finds himself falling in love with her. She tells him about her three failed marriages and why she will be getting off the ship in Havana. Her circumstances are much reduced from what they once were. But her sense of humor remains. When thinking about the formal dinner, she shrugs and says, “I’ll wear my – only dress.” David is a broke artist angry that Jenny is paying for the trip. She wants to see if their relationship can survive 27 days without sex. It’s a test he doesn’t want to take. Each day their quarrels escalate further and even become physical. Reiber, who is forced to share a cabin with Lowenthal, takes excessive pride in being German and espouses a frightening nationalism. Lowenthal, however, recognizes his accent and exposes him as an Austrian. Reiber also hits on the voluptuous young Lizzi (Christine Schmidtmer), who eventually learns that he lies about more than his country of birth. Virginia-born Mrs. Treadwell, whose seemingly perfect marriage ended in a nasty divorce because of her husband’s rampant philandering, cannot help being flirtatious. But her casual insensitivity, bordering on cruelty, is exposed by Lt. Huebner. She’s also humiliated when Amparo (Barbara Luna), one of Pepe’s dancers, tricks Tenny into thinking she will sleep with him, but gives him Mrs. Treadwell’s cabin number. Kramer gets fine work from his celebrated cast, who take advantage
of Mann’s well-crafted script. Leigh, in her final film appearance, is superb. Some critics unfavorably compared her performance to her unforgettable Blanche Du Bois in 1951’s “A Streetcar Named Desire,” labeling it “A Steamboat Named Desire,” but they were wrong. Blanche was helpless in the face of life’s misfortunes. Mrs. Treadwell is not. “He struck me. I took him for every penny he had,” she says of her ex-husband. During shooting, Leigh was plagued by her littleunderstood bi-polar disorder, but Kramer somehow got her to do her best in front of the cameras. Signoret is deeply moving as the sophisticated Condesa. She seduces Dr. Schumann and unexpectedly falls in love with him. Werner is touching, outraged at the fate that awaits La Condesa, and disgusted by the vanity and pretense of so many of the passengers. Marvin is wellcast as a horny yokel whose baseball career ended because he couldn’t hit an outside curveball. Ashley is a bit overwrought as Jenny, but Segal is terrific. Ferrer is appropriately loud and coarse as Reiber. Dunn is appealing as Glocken. The rest of the cast is good. The movie earned eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Werner), Best Actress (Signoret), Best Supporting Actor (Dunn), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Black-and-White Costume Design (Jean Louis and Bill Thomas), winning for Ernest Laszlo’s Black-and-White Cinematography and for Art Direction/Set Decoration by Robert Chatsworthy and Joseph Kish. Nonetheless, it failed at the box office. As for Porter, in 1965 she won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for her “Collected Stories.”t
<< Film
28 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
Scenes from director Todd Haynes’ “Wonderstruck.”
<<
Wonderstruck
From page 21
There are no easy antecedents for “Wonderstruck,” for no book or film has heretofore been concerned with two deaf children separated by 50 years (1927 & 1977) alone in New York City searching for clues to family mysteries. Both survive on ingenuity and determination, and both find a strange comfort at the American Museum of Natural History as their stories intersect with grown-ups and ancestors played by, among others, Julianne Moore and Michelle Williams. “Wonderstruck” is devoted to children’s capacity for awe and discovery in the material world. Haynes’ camera languishes on the taxidermy of the museum’s dioramas, and delights in what’s hidden in the musty old drawers of forgotten storage rooms. I like Todd
<<
Klimt & Rodin
From page 21
Over the past year, the Legion has displayed portions of its extensive Rodin collection in conversation with works by other artists, but the exhibit featuring Klimt has been the most eagerly anticipated. Be advised: there are a mere 35 of his landscapes, portraits and drawings here, and those don’t include the splendid golden masterpieces for which he’s most famous: the sublime “Portrait of Adele BlochBauer-1” (1907) (for that, you’ll have to travel to Neue Galerie in New York) and “The Kiss” (190708), an achingly erotic, sumptuous depiction of tender lovers cloaked in byzantine gold and mosaic. Because of their fragility, the astronomical cost of insurance and lenders’ reluctance to part with them, Klimt’s works rarely travel, making their first appearance in California, however sparse the selection, a cause for celebration. After getting beyond what’s missing and yearning for more, there’s much that’s lovely to behold. It’s also an occasion to contrast two temperamentally, very different masters. The prolific Rodin was a showman and relentless self-promoter whose studio was a stage where he greeted friends and patrons, posed for photographs and employed as many as 50 assistants, while Klimt, who toiled in virtual solitude, constantly altered and never quite finished many of the 245 artworks he produced before his premature death at 55, an output Picasso could have matched in the space of a year. Women were central to the art of both men – as lovers, patrons and subjects. Rodin was as magnetized by female sitters such as Miss Eve Fairfax, whose delicate beauty and aristocratic bearing he memorialized in white marble, as he was oppressed by the demands of multiple mistresses. Two sculptures attest, quite literally, to his vexing struggles with the opposite sex. In “The
Haynes because, unlike so many filmmakers, he is humble enough to recognize and consciously tribute his predecessors without being imitative. He takes what’s fine about far outre film styles and overlays them with what’s permitted in the 21st century. The 1927 “Wonderstruck” sequences are suffused with a pulsing, silvery glow evoking the best surviving films of the late silent era. His film-within-a-film snippet “Daughters of the Storm” is a title in proximity to D.W. Griffith’s 1922 “Orphans of the Storm.” Moore as actress Lillian (Gish) Mayhew battling relentless big weather while clutching her swaddled baby does pure honor to Victor Seastrom’s 1928 “The Wind.” Certain moments of “Wonderstruck” are rapturous in their visual beauty. When young Rose (remarkable deaf actress Millicent Simmonds) falls on a busy Manhattan street and looks up to find a kindly
stranger offering to assist her, or rides a trolley while the blazing neon lights of Times Square burn in the background, the shots are as translucently beautiful as anything in late silent masterpiece “The Crowd.” The 1970s scenes are shot on grainy film stock in the garbagestrewn, pre-Disney cesspit of Times Square, evoking the era of “Klute” and “Dog Day Afternoon.” The feat may be greater than what Haynes achieves with the earlier decade. He nails the look and sound of a period noted for its lack of visual precision – the hand-held cameras and hitand-miss focusing of 1970s urban street scenes. Haynes is a master of details, right down to the perfect display choices of “Hawaii,” “In Cold Blood” and “Oliver’s Story” in a chock-a-block Upper West Side bookstore. Production designer Mark Friedberg, director of photography Ed Lachman, and composer Carter Burwell, for his varied score
inspired by the live music accompanying silent films, are likely to be names repeated this coming awards season. “Wonderstruck” celebrates the power of sight and tactility heightened by the absence of sound. Less immediate, and steadfastly desired by this viewer, was an equivalent commitment to the heart. In addition to his gifts of visual stylizing, Haynes can map human emotions with stunning perception. His features “Safe,” “Far from Heaven,” and “Carol,” and HBO mini-series “Mildred Pierce,” are each devastating in their explorations of women’s feelings thwarted, repressed, and ultimately liberated. They comment pointedly on race, sexuality, and class under their deceptively placid surfaces. “Wonderstruck” is largely unconcerned with such sociology, but is instead preoccupied with its own veiled truths. I was ready to give this one a
Temptation of Saint Anthony” (before 1900), the holy man desperately kisses his cross as the naked woman wrapped around his back wrestles him to the ground; and the determined female standing on a man’s thigh in the bronze “The Sculptor and his Muse” (1890s) has grabbed him by the balls, a possible reference to the artist’s fraught breakup with Camille Claudel. Klimt didn’t marry, and despite his success, never moved out of his mother’s house, a domestic situation that apparently didn’t interfere with his fathering 14 children by various paramours, and maintaining a relationship with fashion designer Emilie Floge, his lifetime companion and confidante. He paid tribute to their deep, abiding connection in a 1902/03 portrait – unfortunately, not in the show – that reveres her long, lithe frame clothed in an ornate chiffon evening dress dusted with metallic silver and gold. He’s said to have abruptly canceled a date with Floge to attend a party honoring Rodin’s 1902 visit. Though Rodin created sensual renderings of both genders, Klimt was, above all, a painter of women. Elegant, posh and circulating in the rarefied orbit of Viennese high society, his stylish creatures seem not quite of this world, like the tall, cool drinks of water depicted in vertical planes in two lyrical works. The exquisitely slender Gertrud Loew was 19 in 1902 when Klimt painted her as part of a series on women in white inspired by James Whistler. Soft with upswept brown hair and a penetrating gaze, she’s a spectral vision in a pale, flowing diaphanous dress trimmed with blue grosgrain ribbon. The equally willowy “Ria Munk III” (1917) merges with a profusion of divinely colored flowers as if she herself were a delectable bloom lovingly cultivated by an attentive gardener. Klimt woos us with lush femininity in the beautifully balanced “Portrait of Sonja Knips” (1898), whose lifesized subject, in light pink tulle, is
the epitome of refinement. Offset by darkness of nightfall, she’s poised on the edge of an upholstered chair wearing a dress – chosen by Klimt – with cinched waist and full skirt. One can almost hear the crunch and rustle of the crisp fabric. No one should depart the museum without ducking into a side gallery containing the artists’ explicit erotic works on paper, which were controversial in their own time, and still are today. And no wonder.
There’s an unmistakable scent of sex in Klimt’s “Reclining Nude Propped up on her Left Elbow” (1908/09), where a woman is curled in bed with her head slightly turned away, a pose that exposes her ample breasts, and “Lying Nude with Spread Legs” (1917-18), which speaks for itself. They’re shown on the same wall as a female on all fours by Rodin, and his version of a spread-eagle contortionist. In his lifetime, Rodin completed over 10,000 drawings, the
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good cry, as I did for the others, but it didn’t happen. “Wonderstruck” has children, search for family and tribe, death, and transformation – all elements to pluck heartstrings. But the inherent emotionality of the story is muted by so many relics in the museum’s Cabinet of Wonders, or by a visit to the amazing 1964 New York City miniature housed at the Queens Museum. Haynes spares us slack-jawed, bug-eyed Spielbergian reactions shots, but he also denies us deep emotional engagement. The visuals shadow and overwhelm the actors as they wander the bustling HaynesSelznick landscapes. Moore, playing two very different women, is reliably good, while I suppose the bulk of Williams’ surprisingly brief performance was left in the cutting room. “Wonderstruck” reveals its secrets at the end with a voiceover. How unfortunate. We’re denied figuring out the puzzle for ourselves. That leaves a worthy if frustrated effort to combine dreamlike storytelling and gentle observations of human behavior. “Wonderstruck” traverses the magic of collections and antiques – things as gateways to the mystical corners of childhood memory and imagination. But this is no harangue for adults to embrace the child within, nor does it reduce youth to sweetness and light. The lonely search for answers to family questions amidst the onslaught of time and death is hardly kid’s stuff. “Wonderstruck” doesn’t always straddle its contrasting worlds of sound and silence, and youth and age, with masterful ease, but it does add a bit of magic to the world that wasn’t there before.t Opens Friday in SF.
key, he once said, to understanding his entire body of work. For those left mourning the absence of “Adele,” with its intricate patterning and panoply of color, there’s some solace in “The Virgin” (1913), a painting of intertwined women nestled under a kaleidoscopic coverlet, floating away on the wings of a Chagallesque dream.t Through Jan. 28. legionofhonor.famsf.org.
Courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Gustav Klimt, “The Virgin” (1913), oil on canvas. National Gallery in Prague. From “Klimt & Rodin: An Artistic Encounter,” now at the Palace of the Legion of Honor.
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Arts Events Vol. 47 • No. 43 • October 26-November 1, 2017
www.ebar.com V www.bartabsf.com
On the C Tab
hordes, reepy ghoulies, zombie it’s not , no ; ers nst mo screeching ell, it your next MUNI ride (w of ing od eb could be), but a scary for en-themed we the multiple fun Hallo ek. we events through the
October 26November 1
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Listings begin b elow
Sun 29
GayGlo Guerilla Theatre, part of Comfort & Joy’s Glow in the Streets Block Party @ Noe/Market
Sundance Saloon @ Space 550
Chunk @ Lone Star
The Country-Western line-dancing two-stepping dance night. $5. lessons at 5:30pm, dancing til 10:30pm. Also Sundays. 550 Barneveld Ave. www.sundancesaloon.org
DJs Trevor Sigler, Tommy Cornelis and cake to eat, at the Halloween bear and cub social. 9pm-11pm. 1354 Harrison St. www.lonestarsf.com
Tubesteak Connection @ Aunt Charlie's Lounge Disco guru DJ Bus Station John spins grooves at the intimate retro music night. $5. 10pm-2am. 133 Turk St. at Taylor. www.auntcharlieslounge.com
Fri 27
Loveboat Halloween @ Pier 70
Fri 27 Ain't Mama's Drag @ Balancoire
Edited for space. For full listings, visit www.ebar.com/bartab
Thu 26 Buffy the Vampire Slayer Live! @ Oasis D'Arcy Drollinger presents Michael Phillis starring in the return of the campy parody of the vampire-hunting high school student and her pals. $25-$35 ($200 VIP tables, too). Thu 8pm. Fri & Sat 7pm. Oct. 31. 298 11th St. www.sfoasis.com
Eek! Hush Hush, Thursday Addams @ The Stud Monthly experimental music/ performance show. $5. 7pm-10pm. Followed by Trangela Lansbury and friends' "Hollow Eve" spooky dragathon. $5. 10pm-2am. 399 9th St. www.studsf.com
Meg Mackay, Billy Philadelphia @ Feinstein's The charming cabaret duo perform classics songs. $17.50-$40. ($20 food/ drink min.). 8pm. Hotel Nikko, 222 Mason St. feinsteinsatthenikko.com
Weekly drag queen and drag king show hosted by Cruzin d'Loo. 8pm10pm. No cover. 2565 Mission St. www.balancoiresf.com
The Monster Show @ The Edge The weekly drag show with host Sue Casa, DJ MC2, themed nights and hilarious fun. $5. 9pm-2am. 4149 18th St. at Collingwood. www.edgesf.com
A Night of Evil @ Lone Star Saloon Hard rock, goth and extreme metal grooves at the popular bear bar. 9pm2am. 1354 Harrison St. www.lonestarsf.com
Queer Karaoke @ Club OMG KJ Dana hosts the weekly singing night; unleash your inner American Idol ; first Thursdays are Costume Karaoke; 3rd is Kinky Karaoke 8pm. 43 6th St. www.clubomgsf.com
Stranger Queens @ Cal. Academy of Sciences Peaches Christ hosts the '80s-themed Halloween party with a massive drag show and costume contest; DJ Omar, exhibit tours, including on the roof. $17-$20. 6pm-10pm. 55 Music Concourse Drive, Golden Gate Park. www.calacademy.org
All Hallow's Eve @ Palace Theater The Speakeasy immersive theatre ensemble's Halloween spookfest includes seances, Tarot, oldfashioned eerie good times and drinks; retro attire preferred (rentals available). $55-$150. Also Oct. 31. thespeakeasysf.com
HustlaBall SF @ Danzhaus
DTF Fridays @ Port Bar, Oakland Various DJs play house music, and a few hotties gogo dance at the new gay bar's weekly event. 9pm-2am. 2023 Broadway. (510) 823-2099. www.portbaroakland.com
Jukebox the Ghost @ Slim's The band performs Halloqueen, their Queen cover concert; Vandella opens. $21-$46 (with dinner). 9pm. 333 11th St. slimspresents.com
Underwear Night @ SF Eagle Skivvies and Halloween costumes encouraged, with DJSpazatron and host Dulce De Leche. Oh, my! 9pm-2am. 398 12th St. at Harrison. sf-eagle.com
Brian Kent, Anthony John and Fabrice Marino present two nights of a local edition of the wildly sexual dance party made famous in Britain/NYC; with DJs Tom Stephan and Pacifico, live porn star shows and debauchery. $25-$120. Oct, 27, 10pm-4am, Danzhaus, 1275 Connecticut St. Oct 28, 10pm-4am at Club Six, 60 6th St. hustlaworld.com
Latin Explosion, Club Papi @ Club 21, Oakland Hip Hop/Latin grooves event, with 3 dance floors, gogos, drag acts, and DJed grooves. $10-$20. 9pm-4am. 2111 Franklin Stt. club21oakland.com
Lifting the Veil @ Dance Mission Theater Jocquese Whitfield and Carnie Asada cohost a party on a sprung dance floor, with extra social rooms, DJed grooves and a performance by Allan Frias. Proceeds benefit Dance Mission. $10-$100. 8pm-12am. 3316 24th St. www.dancemission.com
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Beach Blanket Babylon @ Club Fugazi The musical comedy revue celebrates its 43th year with an ever-changing lineup of political and pop culture icons, all in gigantic wigs, now with new 'Summer of Love' numbers. $25$160. Beer/wine served; cash only; 21+, except where noted. Wed-Fri 8pm. Sat 6pm & 9pm. Sun 2pm & 5pm. 678 Beach Blanket Babylon Blvd. (Green St.). 421-4222. www.beachblanketbabylon.com
Black Fridays @ The Stud Honey Mahogany hosts the new drag show with performers of color, plus DJed dancing. $5-$10. 10pm-4am. 399 9th St. www.studsf.com
{ THIRD OF THREE SECTIONS }
Sat 28 Heklina and Peaches Christ host their annual Halloween Party @ Oasis
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30 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
Sat 28
ScreamWorks @ The Stud
Literary Speakeasy @ Martuni's
The Pound Puppy crew's Halloween party, with DJ Mozhgan, Kevin O'Connor, Taco Tuesday. $10. 10pm-3am. 399 9th St. www.studsf.com
Readings and drinks with a special Halloween theme; authors Carson Beker, Meg Elison, Richard Kadrey, Loren Rhoads, Sumiko Saulson and host James J. Siegel. 7pm. 4 Valnecia St.
Asheq @ Slate Bar
Sun 29 Disco Daddy @ SF Eagle Halloween edition of the groovy disco T-dance, with DJ Bus Station John playing vintage Gay Liberation classics. $5-$7. 7pm-2am. 398 12th St. at Harrison. www.sf-eagle.com
Domingo De Escandal @ Club OMG Weekly Latin night with drag shows hosted by Vicky Jimenez and DJ Carlitos. (Comedy Open Mic 5:30pm). 7pm-2am. 43 6th St. clubomgsf.com
GlamaZone @ The Cafe Pollo del Mar's weekly drag show takes on different themes with a comic edge. 8:3011:30pm. 2369 Market St. www.cafesf.com
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Glow in the Streets @ Noe & Market
On the Tab
From page 29
Loveboat Halloween @ Pier 70 10th anniversary massive (mostly straight) warehouse dance event, with Juanita MORE!'s drag stars, DJ Guy Ruben. Also Oct 28 with Fat Boy Slim and Moby DJ sets. $80-$160. 9pm-2am. Pier 70 at Embarcadero. loveboathalloween.com
Red Hots Burlesque @ The Stud The saucy women's burlesque show hosted by Dottie Lux will titillate and tantalize. $10-$20. 8pm-9:30pm. 399 9th St. Also Sunday brunch shows at PianoFight Theatre.144 Taylor St. www.redhotsburlesque.com
Shenanigans @ Oasis The monthly costume dance party is themed Spellbook, so get out your witchy drag. $10-$15. 10pm-2am. 298 11th St. www.sfoasis.com
Steam @ Powerhouse Seventh anniversary of the monthly bath house-themed cruise night, with wet towel gogos, DJ Sergio Fedasz. $5-$10. 9pm-2am. 1347 Folsom St. www.powerhousebar.com
Sat 28 $666 Costume Contest @ SF Eagle DJ Sergio Fedasz spins spooky grooves at the leather bar's wild and kinky costume contest, hosted by Shelix. $7 (free with costume contest entry). 9pm-2am. 398 12th St. at Harrison. www.sf-eagle.com
Asheq @ Slate Bar The LGBT Middle Eastern and North African dance night's Halloween party, with DJed grooves, sexy gogos, performers, and lovely people. No cover. 9pm-2am. 2925 16th St. slate-sf.com/
Bootie SF @ DNA Lounge Resident DJs and guests spin at the mash-up DJ dance party, with four rooms of different sounds and eight DJs; The Monster Drag Show hosted by Sue Casa. $10-$15 and up. 9:30pm-3am. 375 11th St. www.bootiesf.com
Bounce @ Lookout Dance music with a view at the Castro bar. 9pm-2am. 3600 16th St. www.lookoutsf.com
Club Papi @ Calle 11 Halloween party with Latin music, 10 gogo studs, drag divas, DJed grooves, at the new Latin club with 3 levels and a rooftop patio, $1000 cash prize costume contest. $10-$12 (free before 11pm). 1501 Folsom St. www.clubpapi.com
Halloqueen @ Powerhouse Fright and fun with Qween, a costume contest, dancing (DJ Jim Collins) and cruising. $5. 9pm-2am. 1347 Folsom St. www.powerhousebar.com
Horror Story @ Space 550 Dance of the Dead, the Polyglamorous and Mystopia crews' combined creepy fun dance night, with DJs Dan b2b, David Harness, Harry Cross and Polyglamorous/Mystopia crew. Costumes encouraged. $15-$35. 10pm-5am. 500 Barneveld Ave. http://bit.ly/2x9FhPu
Comfort & Joy's fab outdoor pre-Halloween party, with 'Gayglo' guerilla theatre, drag, art, dancing (DJs Justime, Robin-Malone Simmons, Elaine Denham, Hil Huerta and Trevor Pearson) and general outdoor fun. $10. 4pm-10pm. www.playajoy.org
Lower Self @ The Stud The Cramps cover band and The Smell of Female perform live, plus drag acts. $5. 10pm-4am. 399 9th St. studsf.com
Mother/Halloween @ Oasis Heklina hosts the fun drag show with weekly themes, this time the popular drag and Halloween night, withcohost Peaches Christ; fiercest costume contest, 11:30pm show. $15-$25. 10pm-3am (11:30pm show). 298 11th St. www.sfoasis.com
Noche de Catrinas @ Trilliants Studios, Oakland Lak'ech Dance Academy's first LGBTQ dance social, with codirectors Jahaira Fajardo and Angelica Medina leading a dance class (8pm) followed by performances and social dancing. $15-$20. 8pm-1am. 130 Linden st., Oakland. inlakechdance.com
Penal Institution @ Lone Star Prison-themed Halloween party with DJ Prince Wolf. $5. 9pm-2am. 1354 Harrison St. www.lonestarsf.com
Phantasm @ The Armory Massive (mostly straight) dance event with multiple floors of fun; performances by Hot Since 82, Miss Kittin, Stanton Warriors, Vau de Vire Society, aerialists, kink demos; DJed floors, VIP upper rooms. $40-$150. 9pm-4am. 333 14th St. phantasmsf.com
The Playground @ Club BNB, Oakland Revamped night at the popular hip hop and Latin dance club. Oct. 14: live show with Siir Brock. $5-$15. 9pm to 4am. 2120 Broadway. (510) 759-7340. www.club-bnb.com
Jason Brock @ Martuni’s
Queer Tango @ Finnish Hall, Berkeley Same-sex partner tango dancing, including lessons for newbies, food and drinks. $5-$10. 3:30pm-6:30pm. 1970 Chestnut St, Berkeley. finnishhall.org
Sunday's a Drag @ Starlight Room Donna Sachet often hosts the weekly fabulous brunch and drag show. $45. 11am, show at noon; 1:30pm, show at 2:30pm. 450 Powell St. in Union Square. 395-8595. starlightroomsf.com
Comedy Showcase @ SF Eagle
Girl Scout @ Port Bar, Oakland
Underwear Night @ 440 Strip down to your skivvies at the popular men's night. 9pm-2am. 440 Castro St. 621-8732. the440.com
Tue 31 Bar Crawl @ Castro District Not a specific event, but a reminder; Castro Street will not be closed off on Halloween night. Regular street traffic will be maintained. Bars will be open and sidewalk strolling permitted. Dress up, have fun and be safe. castrocbd.org
The B52s @ The Fillmore The classic party band plays all their hits ("Rock Lobster," "Planet Claire"). $75. 8pm. 1805 Geary St. at Fillmore. thefillmore.com
Demons and Angels @ Club BnB, Oakland 10th annual big hip hop Halloween dance party, with $3000 in cash prizes, gogo studs, costumes encouraged, 2 dance floors and a haunted house. 9pm-2am. 2120 Broadway. (510) 759-7340. club-bnb.com
Sing Till It Hurts with hostess Sister Flora; 2 for 1 happy hour, no cover. 8pm-2am. 399 9th St. studsf.com
My Life with Thrill Kill Cult @ Brock and Mortar The rocking neo-goth band performs a Halloween concert. $20. 8pm. 1710 Mission St. brickandmortarmusic.com
Fang Bang @ Powerhouse Halloween party with a creepy clown theme; costume contests, DJed spooky grooves. $5-$10. 10pm-2am. 1347 Folsom St. www.powerhousebar.com
Underwear Night @ Club OMG Weekly underwear night includes free clothes check, and drink specials. $4. 10pm-2am. Preceded by Open Mic Comedy, 7pm, no cover. 43 6th St. www.clubomgsf.com
Epic Karaoke @ White Horse, Oakland Mondays and Tuesdays popular weekly sing-along night. No cover. 8:30pm1am. 6551 Telegraph Ave, (510) 652-3820. whitehorsebar.com
Diesel Dudes, Violence Creeps, Chucko and Milk play live, olus DJ sets by Droso. $5. 8:30pm. 399 9th St. www.studsf.com
Olga T and Shugga Shay's weekly queer women and men's R&B hip hop and soul night, at the club's new location. No cover. 8pm-2am. 2120 Broadway, Oakland. www.bench-and-bar.com
Glamamore's drag and crafts party. 9pm-2am, $5. 9pm-2am. 1347 Folsom St. www.powerhousebar.com
Mon 30
Live Bands @ The Stud
B.P.M. @ Club BnB, Oakland
Pillows @ Powerhouse
Karaoke Night @ The Stud
Sat 28
Wed 1
Kollin Holtz hosts the open mic comedy night. 5:30pm-8pm. 398 12th St. at Harrison. www.sf-eagle.com
Board games, card games and cheap beer. 4pm-2am, plus weekly viewings of American Horror Story: Cult (8pm-11pm) hosted by Thee Pristine Condition. 398 12th St. at Harrison. www.sf-eagle.com
The stellar singer returns to the intimate martini bar for a Halloween-themed concert, with Dee Spencer and the Coker Sisters. $20 (use BARBROCK code for a discount). 7pm. Also Oct. 29. 4 Valencia St. jasonhalloween2.eventbrite.com
Classic disco T-dance with DJs Jim Hopkins, Lotus Disco and Justime. $5. 3pm-9pm. 1354 Harrison St. www.lonestarsf.com
Drag night with Honey Mahogany, Dulce de Leche and Carnie Asada. No cover. 10pm. 4067 18th St. 861-4186. www.midnightsunsf.com
Game Night, AHS @ SF Eagle
Jason Brock @ Martuni's
Love Hangover @ Lone Star
Mister Sister @ Midnight Sun
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Tue 31
The B52s @ The Fillmore
The weekly women's happy hour and dance night with DJ Becky Knox. 6pm-10pm. 2023 Broadway. portbaroakland.com
Juicy @ Club OMG Weekly women's event at the intimate Mid-market nightclub, with DJ Micah Tron. 9pm-2am. 43 6th St. www.clubomgsf.com
Miss Kitty's Trivia Night @ Wild Side West The weekly fun night at the Bernal Heights bar includes prizes, hosted by Kitty Tapata. No cover. 7pm-10pm. 424 Cortland St. 647-3099. www.wildsidewest.com
Pan Dulce @ Beaux The hot weekly Latin dance night with sexy gogo guys, drag divas and more, with Club Papi's Frisco Robbie and Fabian Torres. $7. 9pm-2am. 2344 Market St. www.beauxsf.com
Po Hoe @ Powerhouse Nikki Jizz offers cheap drinks and cheaper men. 10pm-2am. 1347 Folsom St. www.powerhousebar.com
Thu 2 Cyberotica @ Oasis Revival of the hilarious 1999 Y2K drag musical by Peter Fogel and Kelly Kittell. $25-$35. Thu 8pm. Fri & Sat 7pm. Thru Nov. 18. 298 11th St. www.sfoasis.com
Mary Go-Round @ Lookout Mercedez Munro and Holotta Tymes present saucy and unusual drag acts. $5. 10pm-2am. 3600 16th St. www. lookoutsf.com
The Monster Show @ The Edge The weekly drag show with host Sue Casa, DJ MC2, themed nights and hilarious fun. $5. 9pm-2am. 4149 18th St. at Collingwood. www.edgesf.com
Nap's Karaoke @ Virgil's Sea Room Sing out loud at the weekly least judgmental karaoke in town, hosted by the former owner of the bar. No cover. 9pm. 3152 Mission St. 8292233. www.virgilssf.com
Queer Karaoke @ Club OMG KJ Dana hosts the weekly singing night; unleash your inner American Idol ; first Thursdays are Costume Karaoke; 3rd is Kinky Karaoke 8pm. 43 6th St. www.clubomgsf.com
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BARchive>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • Bay Area Reporter • 31
Making Magick
Searching for LGBT histories of Neopaganism, the paranormal and the occult in San Francisco
Above: Kenneth Anger on the set of his film, Lucifer Rising. Right: Poster for the “Equinox Of The Gods” event at the Straight Theater from the San Francisco Oracle, 1967; poster artist Rick Griffin used an image from Gustave Doré’s “Purgatorio” (1867).
by Michael Flanagan
poet Helen Ada, whose work often involved the supernatural. Anger lived in San Francisco from 1964 to 1967. On November 27, 1964 he premiered Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome at The Movie on 1034 Kearny Street (Anger lived above the theater at 1032 ½ Kearny). The Chronicle reported that it was the first showing of the film in America. Anger told the paper the film “is based on a cult started by Aleister Crowley.” By 1967 Anger was living at the William Westerfeld House (1198 Fulton). On February 24 he attend-
E
courtesy of Esquire UK; photographer unknown
ed the Digger’s “Invisible Circus” at Glide Memorial Church. There he arlier this year, while doing met Bobby Beausoleil, who would research for another article, I go on to infamy with the Manson found the term “witches Christmas” Family. for Halloween. It first appeared on Anger invited Beausoleil to move a calendar for the S.I.R. center in into the Fulton Street house and to October 1967 and was taken as the personify Lucifer (which Anger saw name of an annual party for the as an angel of light) in Lucifer RisWarlocks Motorcycle Club. The ing. Some material in the film comes term made me wonder about the from a live concert, Equinox of the history of pagan and occult interests Gods (named from a book by Crowamong LGBT people in San Franley) which happened at the Straight cisco. This is the perfect time of year Theater (1702 Haight) on Septemto explore that topic. ber 21, 1967. Events surrounding At his talk “Do What Thou Wilt: the concert resulted in both Anger Kenneth Anger and the Dawn and Beausoleil leaving town. of Aquarius,” held at the GLBT Another star of Lucifer Historical Museum in August, Rising was Anton LaVey, historian Joey Cain handed out who was well-known in cards with Aleister Crowley’s San Francisco in the ‘60s, work Liber Oz. One line in that even before founding the work is, “Man has the right to Church of Satan in 1966. love as he will.” As part of the Featured in Herb Caen’s doctrine of Crowley’s Thelemite column as the owner of a religion, it declares the equality of lion named Togare, LaVey all forms of love, and it was writheld a series of Friday night ten in 1941. lectures on the occult in the Crowley is central to many early ‘60s at his Black Vicschools of occult thought. In The torian (6114 California St.) Confessions of Aleister Crowley, where Anger was a frequent the bisexual mage writes he visguest. ited San Francisco twice, in 1901 LeVayan Satanism is LGand 1916. In 1901 he found the BT-friendly, as the will of city to be “a madhouse of frenthe individual is paramount zied money-making and fren(he referred to his form of zied pleasure-seeking” (an acSatanism as “Ayn Rand’s complishment, considering he philosophy with ceremony was called the wickedest man in and ritual added”). His The the world). Satanic Bible (first pubThe gay bohemian poets of lished in 1969) states: the San Francisco Renaissance “Satanism condones any worked with the magic of words. type of sexual activity which Robert Duncan was raised by properly satisfies your indiTheosophists in Alameda. In Devidual desires – be it heterocember 1964 filmmaker Kenneth sexual, homosexual, bisexAnger left a trunk at Duncan and ual or even asexual, if you Jess’ house at 3267 20th choose.” Street which contained This philosophy is also items that belonged to made clear in the documentary Crowley. In Robert DunSatanis (1970), in which he percan, The Ambassador forms a ritual of sexual attracFrom Venus, Lisa Jarnot tion between gay men. relates that after having The 1970s saw an explosion Anger remove the trunk: of interest in Neopaganism, “In the following days, witchcraft and the occult. Jack Duncan poured through Fritscher published Popular his books on magic and Witchcraft, Straight from the spells, carrying out variWitches Mouth in 1972. ous makeshift rituals In 1976, Arthur Evans gave a to evict the unwelcome series of “faeries” lectures which spirits.” were published as Witchcraft Poet Jack Spicer was and the Gay Counterculture in likewise interested in the 1978. occult. Lewis Ellingham Starhawk, a founder of the and Kevin Killian relate Reclaiming tradition of Neopain the Spicer biograganism, wrote the Chronicle in phy Poet Be Like God 1976 responding to an article that he was interested in entitled “Alarming Revival of Tarot and Crowley and Witchcraft.” She pointed out planned a book on Tarot. in her letter, “Witchcraft has In 1957 Spicer conductno connection with diabolism, ed a workshop called Above: Bobby Beausoleil in front of 1198 Fulton Satanism or the worship of “Poetry as Magic” at the Street (1967) with the Aleister Crowley phrase the forces of evil in any form. Public Library, which in- “Do What Thou Wilt” on the door. We practice the religion of the Below: Aleister Crowley in ceremonial garb. cluded (among others) Goddess, the loving Mother of Spicer, Duncan and the the Universe….”
Z. Budapest, who would hex the LaRouche proposition in 1986, fought for her right to practice Wiccan religion in the ‘70s. The Radical Faeries and the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, with their versions of Neopaganism, were founded in 1979. Many of these traditions remain with us to the present. Although some occult bookstores like Fields, which was at 1419 Polk Street for 80 years, moved online (www.fieldsbooks.com) others, like Enchantations in Campbell (2160 Winchester) remain open and LGBT-friendly today. The Reclaiming tradition (www.
reclaiming.org) holds its annual Spiral Dance for Samhain every year at this time. Ghost tours like the Haunted Haight Walking Tour (www.HauntedHaight.com) include sights like Trax Bar, which tour guide Tommy Netzband tells me was haunted by a ghost from the 1940s. It may seem odd that our community found acceptance in occult philosophy while religions which profess to follow a god of love object to LGBT people both legally and spiritually. But perhaps Halloween is a good time of year to remember: our daily existential horror often trumps gothic horror.t
<< Leather
32 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
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Creating our erotic selves
Both photos: Rich Stadtmiller
Left: Two kinksters at the 2017 Folsom Street Fair geared up, embodying their horse or pony erotic identities. Right: A semi-furry canine creature at 2017’s Folsom Street Fair.
by Race Bannon
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ebar.com
nytime I make an association between kink and Halloween, I know I run the risk of some readers thinking I’m discounting kink as nothing more than “dress up.” That is certainly not the case. Anyone who knows me is aware of the respect I have for who we are and what we do. This week I’ll take the risk and any lumps that might ensue. Of course, the mental and practical complexities of our sexualities never make for easy dissection of what makes our erotic selves tick. But one of the mechanisms many kinksters use to create their best erotic self is what they place on their bodies. On Halloween night (and weekend), millions of people transform themselves into something other than their usual daily persona. For some of us, this transformative property of what we wear accentuates our sexuality. There are many ways to present oneself physically as kinky, from the classic leatherman aesthetic to comic-inspired superheroes or gameinspired cosplay to various animals and so much more, all entirely legitimate ways to be kinky. I know some disagree with this sentiment. There are those who feel the leather world is now populated with lots of poseurs, dabblers or those who have deviated too far from the past culture’s norms. I don’t share that opinion. I think the scene as it has progressed and manifested over time is a big tent under which all these various external expressions are valid. Why might someone utilize various leather, gear, masks, hoods, and dare I say costumes (I know I just pissed off a few people; so be it) to enhance their erotic lives? Like all things sexual, there’s no one right answer. Many people report that the process of donning whatever kink gear fits their idealized erotic self is a sensuous process of transformation. Some people spend hours planning for and turning themselves into their version of a kink adventurer. As a leather clad man prepares for an evening out, he laces up his boots, cuing himself in an almost Pavlovian way to slip into a sexual maverick mindset, ready to join his leather mates in a communal, tribal socializing ritual. Two women help each other lace up their corsets, the tightness around their waists letting them become the self-bondaged, hourglassshaped goddesses they occasionally enjoy being. Someone dons a police or mili-
tary uniform that gives them permission to adopt the bossy, protocoled, in-charge person in the playroom that counters their daily demure personality. A guy prepares for a night of play by putting on a football uniform and helmet that reflects back in the mirror the big, burly men he imprinted on in his younger formative years. A woman is dressed in royal finery, crown included. She presides as queen over her kingdom of servants and subjects. The servant or subject may be their life partner, but in this mode the power dynamic and journey outside of self are accentuated. Someone sits down in front of a mirror, an array of makeup in front of them. They paint on themselves an entirely new character. Maybe they’re creating a sultry vixen. Maybe they’re creating a non-human. Another use of masks or full or partial hoods is making someone more anonymous. By masking or
hooding, a person becomes a blank slate. The baggage of the day-today is sluffed off and replaced with someone ready to wallow in another reality, if only temporarily. In BDSM and other types of scenes, the purpose of the mask or hood is often to depersonalize a play partner. The cloaked identity creates anonymity that may allow the dominant player more perceived power in the exchange. Or a mask or hood worn during a scene might foster fewer inhibitions for all parties involved. It can suppress the ego-driven self for a while. Perhaps one of the most visible forms of erotic transmutation is the burgeoning wave of pups and furries that are now integral parts of the overall kink scene. I have spoken to many pups, especially those who don pup hoods during play, on how it lets them set aside the daily grind to be replaced by a more carefree nature. It’s the same for furries. While not all furries see their pursuit as sexual or erotic, many do. Certainly, those who mingle amid other kinksters likely see their form of identity and play as sexual. Covering the entire body with an animal form completely negates the human inside, at least insofar as they want to be negated. Freedom and liberation are terms I’ve often heard furries utter when describing the feeling they get when they step into their animal outfit. Appropriateness matters, in life and in kink. Regardless of how you might gear up –costume or otherwise– turn yourself into an erotic warrior, don’t yuck other people’s yum. If an event or venue wants attendees ‘leather only’ or ‘gear only,’ respect it. If an event seems noholds-barred in terms of presentation, show up however you want. Just always show respect for the spirit of the atmosphere intended. Lots of what I’ve described are more extreme examples of creating an erotic persona or a sense of anonymity, but those aren’t the domain where most kink players live or play. Don’t be afraid to dip your own toe into the bathwater of this type of eroticism and play. A simple mask can have tremendous power. Putting on a single article of clothing associated with someone other than your usual self can bring about significant internal and external changes. Or, go all out and create something entirely outside of yourself. Just have fun with it, whatever you do. Happy Halloween!t
For Leather Events, visit www.ebar.com/bartab Race Bannon is a local author, blogger and activist. www.bannon.com
Both photos: Rich Stadtmiller
Top: Facemask and rubber fetish style at a 2013 Latex fashion show. Bottom: Colorful kinksters in canine masks at a recent International Mr. Leather convention in Chicago.
<< Arts Events
Arts Events October 26-November 1
34 • Bay Area Reporter • October 26-November 1, 2017
Sat 28
Mon 30
Wed 1
Day of the Dead @ Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts
Diego Gómez @ Strut
Career Fair @ Dept. of Human Resources
In Heaven as on Earth, the 31st annual exhibit of installations and artwork commemorating Day of the Dead. $2-$7. Tue-Sat 10am-5pm. Thru Nov. 17. 2868 Mission St. missionculturalcenter.org
Noche de Catrinas @ Trilliants Studios, Oakland
Sat 28 Noche de Catrinas @ Trilliants Studios, Oakland
I
t’s time to reclaim orange as a seasonal favorite color. Pumpkin spice it up at arts events and Halloween parties near you. For nightlifery with a spooky edge, see On the Tab.
Edited for space. For full listings, visit www.ebar.com/arts
Thu 26 Another Hole in the Head @ New People Cinema 14th annual two-week horror, scifi and fantasy indie film festival. $15 (single ticket) $149 (festival pass). Thru Nov 8. 1746 Post St. ahith.com
Author Readings @ City Lights, MacArthur Annex, Oakland Tara Jepsen, Brontez Purnell, Miriam Klein Stahl & Kate Schatz. 7pm. 644 40th st., Oakland. citylights.com
AXIS Dance Company @ Malonga Casquelourd Arts Center, Oakland The East Bay disabled-inclusive innovative dance company premieres new works by new Artistic Director Marc Brew, Mik Nawooj; restagings of Amy Seiwert’s The Reflective Surface and Stephen Petronio’s 2001 Secret Ponies. $20-$30. 7:30pm. Thru Oct. 29. 1428 Alice St., Oakland. axisdance.org
Economic Justice Month @ LGBT Center Workshops and panels addressing poverty and marginalization in the Bay Area and beyond. Oct. 26: LGBTQ Career Fair, 1pm-4pm at Linked In 222 2nd St. Oct. 28: Queer Street Market Expo. sfcenter.org
The Rocky Horror Show @ Victoria Theatre Ray of Light Theatre Company revives their hit adaptation of the fun Richard O’Brien musical, starring D’Arcy Drollinger as Frank N. Furter. $30-$40. Tu-Sat 8pm (some 7pm & 11pm shows). Thru Nov. 4. 2961 16th St. rayoflighttheatre.com
Truth to Tell @ CounterPulse Skywatchers, an ensemble of Tenderloin residents, tell their stories in music, storytelling and visual art. $10-$25. 8pm. Also Oct. 27. 80 Turk St. www.counterpulse.org
Fri 27 Author Events @ Wolfman Home Repair, Oakland Oct. 27: Black Printed Matter: Two Black Queer Women printmakers Leila Weefur and Sam Vernon. 7pm. Oct. 28: poets Marvin K. White and David Brazil. 7pm. 410 13th St., Oakland. wolfmanhomerepair.com
Multiverse @ Flight Deck, Oakland Ragged Wing Ensemble’s performance work about scientistastronauts who travel through time and space to escape the destruction of our current world, only to face new dilemmas. $25-$45. Fri & Sat 8pm Sun 5pm. Thru Nov. 11. 1540 Broadway, Oakland. raggedwing.org
Remembrance and Resistance: Dia De Los Muertos @ SOMArts Cultural Center 18th annual Day of the Dead exhibit, with 25+ installations and multimedia works by more than 60 participating artists. $12-$15. Reg hours Tue-Fri 12pm-7pm. Sat 11am5pm. Sun 11am-3pm. Thru Nov. 9. www.somarts.org
Le Switch @ New Conservatory Theatre Center Philips Dawkins ( The Homosexuals) ’ witty new play about a gay librarian who’s swept into a romance at a Montreal wedding. $25-$50. WedSat 8pm. Sun 2pm. Thru Dec. 3. www.nctcsf.org
Lak’ech Dance Academy’s first LGBTQ dance social, with codirectors Jahaira Fajardo and Angelica Medina leading a dance class (8pm) followed by performances and social dancing. $15-$20. 8pm-1am. 130 Linden st., Oakland. inlakechdance.com
Noel Simonse @ Dance Mission Theatre The local choreographer premieres the beauty and ruin of friends of bodies, a new duet with Christy Funsch, inspired by a manuscript by gay science fiction author Samuel Delaney. $20. 5pm & 8pm. Also Oct. 29. 3316 24th St. funschdance.org
Other Cinema @ ATA Gallery Weekly screenings of unusual, rare and strange short films and videos, with free/cheap vinyl, VHS tapes and wine. $9. 8:30pm. 992 Valencia St. 648-0654. othercinema.com
Sun 29 Metamorphosis & Migration: Days of the Dead @ Oakland Museum A group Day of the Dead exhibit and installations, guest-curated by Evelyn Orante; Thru Jan. 14. Also, Question Bridge: Black Men, a video installation with 160 Black American men discussing current themes of race and class. Also exhibits about local art/natural history. $7-$16. Wed-Sun 11am-5pm (til 9pm Fridays). 1000 Oak St., Oakland. museumca.org
The Hard Femme Ex-Men, an exhibit of superhero queer art by the prolific local artist and drag queen (Trangela Lansbury). Exhibit thru Oct. 470 Castro St. designnurd.blogspot.com
Tue 31 OUT/LOOK and the Birth of the Queer @ GLBT History Museum New exhibit about the groundbreaking LGBT quarterly based in SF from 1988 to 1992; curated by E.G. Crichton, with a special commemorative new edition for sale. $5. 4127 18th St. glbthistory.org
The Rocky Horror Picture Show @ UC Theatre, Berkeley Enjoy a screening of Richard O’Brien’s classic ‘sweet transvestite’ comic film adaptation of the cult hit musical, with a local shadow cast and plenty of call back fun. $16.50$26.50. 8pm. 2036 University Ave., Berkeley. theuctheatre.org
Various Events @ Oakland LGBTQ Center Social events and meetings at the new LGBTQ center include film screenings and workshops. Oct. 31: LGBTQ Families & Youth Halloween Party, 5pm-8pm. Bruthas Rising, trans men of color meetings, 4th Tuesdays, 6:30pm. Film screenings, 4th Saturdays, 7:30pm. Game nights, Fridays 7:30pm-11pm. Vogue sessions, first Saturdays. 3207 Lakeshore Ave. Oakland. oaklandlgbtqcenter.org
Will Durst @ The Marsh The witty comic performs his new solo show, Durst Case Scenario, with lots of barbs at Hair Furor, aka Trump. $20-$100. Tuesdays, 8pm. Thru Nov. 21. 1062 Valencia St. themarsh.org
Womyn’s Spiral Dance @ Orinda Masonic Temple Daughters of the Goddess’s annual multicultural celebration of beloved ancestors and crones, for women and girls of all ages. $23-$29. 6:30pm-10:30pm. 9 Altarinda Road, Orinda. DaughtersoftheGodess.com
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Holiday Ice Rink @ Union Square Opening day for the Safewaysponsored ice rink. $13-$25 daily 9:30am-9pm. 333 Post St. unionsquareicerink.com
Walker Evans @ SF MOMA New exhibit of 300 prints by the acclaimed historic photographer of American culture from the 1930s, with 100 of his own collected artifacts. Also, exhibits of Pop, Abstract and classic Modern art. Free/$25. Fri-Tue 10am-6pm. Thru Feb 4. 151 3rd St. sfmoma.org
Thu 2 Game Changers @ El Rio Book release party for Game Changers: Lesbians You Should Know About, with Kate Kendell, Jewelle Gomez, Franco Stevens, Kathy Belge, Crystal Jang, Bonnie J. Morris, Mariah Hanson, and author and designer Robin Lowey; books available for purchase and signing. 5pm8pm. 3158 Mission St. elriosf.com lesbiangamechangers.com
Voice of the Central City @ Tenderloin Museum Opening reception for the new exhibit about the history of The Tenderloin Times. 7pm. Thru Mar. 30. Reg hours Tue-Sun 10am5pm. Free-$10. 398 Eddy St. tenderloinmuseum.org
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San Francisco:
Positive Resource Center’s career and community resource fair; find job leads and network with reps from many local companies. 10am12pm. 1 South Van Ness Ave., 2nd floor. positiveresource.org
Personals
Tom of Finland @ Landmark Embarcadero Biographic film about the life of Finnish erotic illustrator who revolutionized depictions of gay male masculinity. (Oct 27 at Shattuck in Berkeley). One Embarcadero Center Promenade Level. landmarktheatres.com
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Shining Stars>>
October 26-November 1, 2017 • Bay Area Reporter • 35
Shining Stars Steven Underhill Photos by
Mr. International Freedom Contest @ DNA Lounge
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Read more online at www.ebar.com
he second Annual Mr. International Freedom Contest raised funds for The LGBT Asylum Project, which supports queer refugees from several countries. Held on October 22 at DNA Lounge, a dozen hunky men representing different countries competed in a variety of categories, including a swimsuit competition. The winner was Mr. China Liam Ocean, with the first runner-up Mr. USA Daniel White. Other gorgeous contestants included Mr. Mexico Ismael Acosta, Mr. Russia Ilya Khristoforov, and Mr. Uganda Dice Sebina. The event was emceed by Donna Sachet and Cip Cipriano, with musical performances by Igor Chudak and Juliano Wade, with Greg Angelo of Velocity Circus. Special Guest and SF mayoral candidate Mark Leno delivered an inspiring speech, and co-founder Okan Sengun presented the Person of the Year Award to activist and nightlife icon Juanita More. More photo albums are on BARtab’s Facebook page, www.facebook.com/lgbtsf.nightlife. See more of Steven Underhill’s photos at StevenUnderhill.com.
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For headshots, portraits or to arrange your wedding photos
call (415) 370-7152 or visit www.StevenUnderhill.com or email stevenunderhillphotos@gmail.com
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