INSIDE > CLARK SLIDES ALBERTA RAINMAKER INTO TOWN NOV. 1 - 7, 2012
It’s not just
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
NEWS & VIEWS > THE WEEK
EDITOR’S NOTE
Hair today, oil block tomorrow Spirits predict the future ho would think getting your hair cut could halt an oil spill? Now it can, thanks to a handful of Island salons who are rallying together to put all those clippings to good use. DANIELLE With increasing concerns of POPE the Enbridge Northern Gateway news@ Pipeline Project, 12 Victoria mondaymag.com and five Nanaimo salons have started gathering snipped hair — the most effective material to create hair booms and hair mats on shorelines for oil cleanup — in the case of an oil spill on the West Coast. Many of the same salons donated hair to clean up the Gulf Coast BP oil spill in 2010, and recognize that the hair grown right here on the West Coast can be put to use close to home in the event of a spill. Green Circle Salons has offered to store the hair in Burnaby, and will hand over the stockpile in the event of a spill. Human hair behaves much like the fur and feathers seen on oil-covered wildlife after a spill — it absorbs and clings to oil. “Until now, our industry’s waste has gone to landfills because it’s not like typical commercial or office waste,” says Jennifer Hennessey with Green Circle Salons. “We are diverting, literally, football fields full of waste each month.” Green Circle has been collecting hair from Ontario salons for over three years, but has just launched its operations in Metro Vancouver, Victoria and Nanaimo. “We can do this, one salon at a time,” says Hennessey. “We encourage each and every customer to ask their salon to become a Green Circle Salon member. Not only do we re-purpose the hair for oil spill cleanup, but we also pick up their foils, colour tubes and excess chemicals that would have otherwise gone into landfills or down the drain. These chemicals simply don’t belong in our waterways.” Participating Victoria salons include Aveda Institute, Carreiro the Studio, DesignHouse Salon, Gemi/ Phoenica Styles, Hive Hair, Kazen Hair & Beauty, Lab Salon, Luv Salon, On the Fringe, Parlour Salon, The Gallery, Wiink2 for Hair & Body. See GreenCircleSalons.ca for an updated list.
n ancient Britain, Halloween marked the end of the year when crops were no longer harvested and winter’s first cold breath arrived to chill the blood. On that night, between the old and the new, it was believed that the veil between the world of the living and that of the dead became transparent and malleable. Spirits of the dead were able to walk amongst the living, whispering secrets of the future yet to unfold. GRANT My Celtic ancestors encouraged this spiritual interacMcKENZIE tion by building sacred bonfires and wearing costumes of animal heads and skins, while attempting to tell each editor@ other’s fortunes. Trick or treat depended on whether the mondaymag.com fortune was good news or not. In those dark days, these prophecies were an important source of comfort and direction during the long, dark winter. If that same veil was lifted today, what wisdom would the dead have to tell us about the future? Let’s see. ■ Two years after the public referendum, the City of Victoria will finally accept a bid to rebuild the Johnson Street Bridge. Nobody will be happy with the decision, cost or design, but we’ll celebrate its official opening anyway. ■ The Liberal government will face its worst defeat in history during the spring election. Liberal faithful will try to point blame at Premier Christy Clark, while knowing full well that she inherited a sackful of manure and simply couldn’t make it smell like popcorn. The NDP will crow about how everything will be different now that they are in charge. We’ll switch back to the antiquated GST + PST tax system (a decision made emotionally rather than wisely), and then, suddenly, Enbridge will be given approval to build its pipeline through B.C. We’ll be told it’s for our own good in order to balance the budget and clear out some of that massive Liberal debt. Minimum wage will not be raised and shocked voters will realize for the umpteenth time that what parties say to get elected is entirely different from what they do once in office. ■ NDP nominee Murray Rankin will win the Nov. 26 byelection to replace outgoing Victoria MP Denise Savoie. His victory music will be “Your Boat’s Lost At Sea” by The Rankin Family as a message aimed directly at the ruling Tories. ■ Marijuana will remain illegal despite evermore higher-profile citizens, intellectuals and government leaders joining the call for deregulation and taxation. Prime Minister Stephen Harper, however, will keep the issue in his back pocket in case he needs to make it an election promise in 2015 to keep control of the majority. ■ Grant McKenzie will win millions on the lottery and won’t be able to stop smiling. Hmm, maybe my crystal ball is a little foggy. M
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FUNDS TO EASE THE PAIN With news of the death of a 13-year-old Sooke boy who was hit by a pickup truck on Sooke Road last week, the surrounding community has heaved together to offer the only condolence it really can: fundraising for a grief-stricken single mother who can’t yet return to work, but has three other children to care for, along with looming bills and rent to pay. Troy Thompson, 31, was one of the first on the scene when AJ (Adam Jessie) Wakeling stepped off a bus with his twin brother, then crossed a street and was hit by a motorist. Thompson’s role quickly unfolded as support for Wakeling’s mother, Yannick Aubin, who remained in shock at the scene. “You feel helpless, because there is nothing you can say to someone in that situation — what can you Sale Effective Nov. 1st thru 7th, 2012
Local salons are getting ready with hair for oil spills.
say? — but I did my best to pick her up off the pavement and just be there,” says Thompson. In an effort to do more, Thompson has started the Facebook page “Fund raising for AJ Wakeling,” which directs members to the online communitycreated fundraising page fundrazr.com/campaigns/ bNVE4. So far, Thompson’s page has gained 729 members in only a few days. More than $2,000 has been raised for the family.
CHEAP DRINK THE BEST KIND Try to withhold your gasps: people are less likely to buy high-alcohol drinks if they are more expensive. Research by UVic’s Centre for Addictions Research of BC (CARBC) and the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto shows that people still pick saving money over getting drunk. The two groups followed sales data in Saskatchewan before and after a price-hike implementation. A 10 per cent increase in price resulted in a 22 per cent decrease in sales for high alcohol (6.5 per cent and up) beer. Coolers and cocktails also saw large reductions in sales, at 13.2 per cent and 21.3 per cent respectively. Funny enough, Alberta showed no change in per-capita alcohol consumption before and after the increase was implemented. Dr. Tim Stockwell, CARBC’s director and lead author of the report, says it’s quite easy for provinces to implement these kinds of policies because of government monopoly arrangements. “Saskatchewan’s new approach is right up there as one of the best. Their approach applies to all beverages, including spirits,” Stockwell says. “In B.C., minimum prices of spirits are the only ones that get adjusted with any regularity, so there’s been a shift towards cheaper beer, coolers and wine.” While price increases may be deterrents (in some locations), it does not reflect the social factors that lead to alcohol abuse, apart from a cursory connection to low-income populations. The implications of the study are geared toward policy makers, although riskier consumers, heavy and young drinkers, are cited as more inclined to purchase cheap alcohol. Read the report at: http://bit.ly/RMQwW6. M — By Colin Cayer
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A SCARY END TO THE MONTH OF OCTOBER As October closes, the only really spooky occurrence is the end of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Trauma lasts a lifetime. Help is waiting for you.
BABY, IT’S (GETTING) COLD OUTSIDE Help keep off the chill this winter by donating 10,000 coats (or at least one or two) to West 49’s annual Coats for Kids drive, on from now until Nov. 21 at Mayfair Shopping Centre, the Salvation Army (Victoria), Victoria West Elementary and George Jay Elementary. Now that can warm the heart.
CHOOSE YOUR NEW MP INTELLIGENTLY Get to know who your new Member of Parliament will be for Victoria, by attending the all-candidates forum: Wed., Nov. 7, 6:30–9pm at the New Horizons Building (234 Menzies). Ask questions now, or complain later.
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
CONTENTS VOL. 38, NO. 44, Nov. 1 - 7, 2012
NEWS & VIEWS
MONDAY LIFE
3
THE WEEK
12
FOOD & DRINK - PAM GRANT
3
REPORT CARD
17
GEORGIA NICOLS HOROSCOPE
3
EDITOR’S NOTE
6
LETTERS
MONDAY GUIDE
7
KIERAN REPORT
10
7
CITY WATCHDOG
BOOKS Victoria author tackles bullying in new novel
11
CITY SOMETHING Warren Miller returns with Flow State and Red Hot Flamenco
14
MUSIC Aidan Knight’s new album is expansive, yet intensely intimate
15
FILM & LIBATION Cloud Atlas filled with underwhelming stories
FEATURES
18-19 CALENDAR OF EVENTS FULL LISTINGS @ MONDAYMAG.COM
ON THE COVER 8
MUSIC HUB CLOSING
The Fort Street CafĂŠ has announced it will close Dec. 15, after the building landlord told the six-year-old business that it is no longer deemed suitable for the premises.
Matt Morrison visits Matthew Conrad of Victory Barber to have his iconic moustache shaved off, so that he can grow it again in support of Movember.
continuing studies
Life-Wide Learning
9
COVER PHOTO: DAVID BUKACH X
MAGAZINE is published by Black Press Group Ltd. at 818 Broughton Street, Victoria BC, V8W 1E4
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Grant McKenzie
Danielle Pope
Mary Ellen Green
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The Practice of Story: Building Community in a Storytelling Circle STARTS NOV 3
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Express Yourself! Creative Facilitation NOV 3-4
Transformational Theatre STARTS NOV 17
28 Day Launchpad to Entrepreneurship STARTS NOV 6 Aboriginal Ways of Being and Knowing NOV 9
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Memories to Memoirs NOV 17-18 Social Media Toolkit II: Visual Tools, Wordpress and Blogging NOV 18
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Each week we hide an “M” on the cover. Last week it was sat the bottom of the dumbbell. The winner was chosen by a random draw. Prove that you’ve found the “M” and get it into our office to win! Drawn Monday at noon. Submit entries to: 818 Broughton St., Victoria, V8W 1E4 with daytime phone number or fax it to our number at 250-386-2624.
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LYNN MARTIN
NEWS & VIEWS > OPINION
MAIL Stopping a bully before torment begins
Re: Editor's Note: Mistakes are part of life, Oct. 25-31 I read at least 13 papers a week, and so in the last three weeks I have read many letters and editorals on this subject. As a young gay man in Junior and High School in the early ’70s in Victoria, for my friends and me, bullying was normal. It is rare when an adult can write to young people in such a way that you know they are listening. My wish is that parents and teachers pass this Editor’s Note onto their children and students to read. Your words may have stopped a bully from being a bully or maybe made someone stand up and refuse to be bullied. COLIN CRAIG, VICTORIA
Meaning of friendship
going deeper divee in,, awaken, awaken,, and and cultivate cultivaate your fullest fulllest potential poten ntial
"And when you ask, that’s when you’ll know the true value of a friend" because that is when the cream separates from the rest. Awesome article. DANIELA HUPPE, VIA FACEBOOK
Editorial was wise, moving
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
I was moved and touched beyond belief by Grant McKenzie's editorial. All of the wisdom and 'smartstuff' I had to learn as a teenager, he imparted in the simplest words: "High school is shallow, but you are not," and "Without dreamers, the world is only two dimensional," and "Some of us continue to screw up well past our teens until the day we reach out a hand and ask for help. And when you ask, that's when you'll know the true value of a friend." It was only by accident that I read this commentary, but it was no accident that I
Don’t just sit there and fume, write to us. Snail: 818 Broughton, V8W-1E4 E-mail: letters@mondaymag.com Not every letter makes it to print, but we do read everything we receive.
magic teeth
have re-read it several times over. Kudos, Grant. All those who believe they are bullied moths will be happy to know that they are butterflies in the making. LORALEE MARIA JUDGE, VANCOUVER ISLAND
Insightful message, but Another insightful message to help boost our awareness about "at risk" youth. I loved the article and always enjoy reading what you write. However, I don't agree with the word "weak" (in ‘from the weakest to the strongest’] to describe these young girls and boys. The adjective "vulnerable" seems more appropriate. The last thing any of us needs to be called is weak. Just being alive makes all of us vulnerable. We become weakened by the system, by illnesses, by stress, by lack of support, exposure ... and on it goes. If we are to evolve as a species, we must stop the war against vulnerable groups. We must understand that anything can happen to anyone at anytime. We are one. NELLIE M. POWER, VICTORIA
gareth gaudin
Caring people create change Re: Enbridge protest shortsighted, Letters - Oct. 25 - 31 News Flash: The 3,500 folks who showed up on the legislative lawn last Monday are concerned about our environment. It was not an "anti-prosperity" protest, but rather an anti-exploitation (of our natural resources) protest. There are far more economical opportunities in creating "green" initiatives and promoting renewable and sustainable businesses than in pillaging the last few drops of oil from Mother Earth. If we kill off all our treasured sea-life, blackening our magnificent coastlines with crude oil, what would attract tourists to this jewel of the west? How does that bring in the money? Change happens when caring folks get off the couch and make a stand. NANCY RAYCROFT, VICTORIA
Sowing seeds of job-loss fear With the current shaky state of many national economies, our provincial and federal governments have become adept at sowing fear of lost job opportunities
and economic ruin in individuals such as Mr. Perry whenever someone has the temerity to question the advisability of embarking on industrial projects such as the Northern Gateway Pipeline. The pipeline project will actually provide relatively short-term jobs in the construction phase, and few long-term pipeline maintenance jobs. For this we are asked to risk the huge economic (and environmental) loss of the north coast commercial and sportsfishing industries, and eco-tourism should a tanker spill bitumen during the treacherous journey through Douglas Channel. MURRAY GOODE, SAANICH
Oil disasters mean job boost Mr. Perry considers opposition to the proposed Enbridge pipeline shortsighted because it prevents job creation. To pipeline opponents, the jobs the project would bring simply aren't worth the risk. If job creation trumped all other concerns, and if this project went through, we might as well hope for plenty of disasters. Think of all the clean-up jobs this would create! HELMUT BEIERBECK, VICTORIA
NEWS & VIEWS > OPINION
STREET SMARTS What is your favourite type of moustache?
KIERAN REPORT
Clark brings Alberta rainmaker to town remier Christy C l a r k must be a lot more desperate than she’s letting on. It appears she has been forced to swallow her pride BRIAN and hire one of AlKIERAN berta Premier Allison bkieran@ Redford’s hand-memondaymag.com down political toy boys. Clark, who is having a spitting match with Redford over sharing tar-sands wealth, actually recruited her Alberta counterpart’s idle rainmaker Stephen Carter to perform unnatural political acts on this side of the border, starting with a cloak-and-dagger appearance at the party’s Whistler convention. Back in September, Alberta political blogger David Climenhaga predicted that Carter was poised for a new challenge in B.C. Climenhaga told his readers there was a good chance of “Carter showing up in Victoria with a smile on his face and a nice apartment overlooking the Strait of Juan de Fuca.” Carter takes credit for engineering Redford’s leadership campaign against front-runner Gary Mar, her election cam-
P
paign against front-running Wildrose Party leader Danielle Smith and for Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi’s campaign against front-runner Ric McIver. Climenhaga suggests Carter has been accorded way more credit for these saves than he actually deserves. The Alberta wunderkind believes British Columbians really want to like Clark, but we “just don’t know what it is she’s in government for.” Very insightful. His initial cavalier advice to Liberals at a behind-closed-doors session was to ignore the pollsters, media pundits and political scientists who he calls “the Holy Trinity of incompetence.” This has most certainly endeared him to Clark who hates pollsters as much as she hates NDPers. Maybe a made-in-Alberta solution is timely. Clearly, the advice Clark is getting here at home is skewed all to hell. During her pitch to convention delegates — “We have a big vision, a bold vision for our province, not a modest agenda, a bold one” — she claimed she can reverse her party’s death spiral if the remaining foot soldiers under her command get out and sell the Jobs Plan she says has created “57,000 new jobs” since being launched. That was a whopper even by Alberta standards. And, it prompted some of the loathed media pundits to do a little fact checking. It became instantly appar-
ent that Clark’s Jobs Plan claims do not square with Statistics Canada. Ottawa’s current labour force statistics indicate that unemployment in B.C. has actually increased over the past year to seven per cent. Full-time employment increased about 44,000 since the jobs plan was introduced, but part-time employment dropped 15,000 for a net increase of less than 30,000 jobs — nowhere near the 57,000 Clark takes credit for. I think the premier should have shopped for help on this side of the Rockies. I would have recommended her predecessor’s former chief of staff Martyn Brown, notwithstanding the fact that Gordon Campbell’s former consigliere has been pumping lead into Clark ever since he left government. Just before the convention, Brown wrote: “Step outside the tiny convention hall and beyond the din of the party faithful, and it all soon sounds like distortion.” Now that’s prescient. He has also reminded Liberals that “some 75 per cent of B.C. voters now plan to vote for parties other than the one in power. What they want, above all, is a real vision for a better British Columbia that is backed by specific policies and initiatives.” That’s the kind of tough love they need, not that glib Alberta crude. M
The Dali. ELLIOT JACQUES, Australia
The Horseshoe. EVAN PLATT, Australia
The Pencil. SALLIE CABRERA, Victoria
The Fuman Xu.
CITY WATCHDOG
TROY TUCKER, Victoria
Thousands rally, but masked artists face heat ast week thousands of people gathered on the lawn of the legislature for what was billed by organizers as “one of the largest acts of civil disobedience in Canadian history.” This action consisted of erecting a black banner on stakes driven into the sacred ground of our provincial government’s seat to symbolize the proposed pipeline. SIMON The goal of this illegal action was to lure NATTRASS the Victoria police into playing the antagsnattrass@ onist and arresting a few dozen protesmondaymag.com tors under the watchful eye of the media. When VicPD refused to play along, the long-awaited act of defiance garnered little more than a cheer from the crowd and a few bored stares from unmoving officers. Meanwhile, a small group of local activists created a different kind of protest in a quiet corner of the lawn. The purpose, according to one organizer, was to create space to discuss the effectiveness of the protest and explore other forms of opposition.
L
Organizers were critical of the misguided theatrics of the international NGOs responsible for the Defend Our Coast rally, advocating instead for a new approach to protecting our bioregion. “People’s intentions were to go and ‘defend the coast,” but if we’re not addressing the systems that are attacking the coast or the indigenous people whose coast it is, then we’re not effective.” Despite their refusal to perform on the main stage, the Victoria police weren’t entirely absent from the day’s events. Officers arrested street performer Mikhail Miller — whose face was painted like a skull — and detained two fellow artists (dressed as a bird and a clown) on their way to the protest, informing them that it was illegal to wear a mask during the rally. “It was very invasive, and all we were doing was an artistic performance. I just didn’t feel like they had any right to be asking me for information.” Miller is correct — while a federal law is being considered to criminalize disguises in certain situations, VicPD jumped the gun with enforcement. A few weeks ago, I wrote that The Capital had been given a taste of real politics. After last week’s rally, local activists have shown that they can respond just as appropriately to political theatre. M
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No, they're kinda creepy
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Maybe, but only during Movember
Total Votes: 30
To participate in next week’s poll, go to mondaymag.com
Proudly Standing Up for the Issues That Matter. Carole James MLA Victoria – Beacon Hill 250-952-4211 Carole.James.MLA@leg.bc.ca www.carolejamesmla.ca 1084 Fort Street, Victoria
Maurine Karagianis MLA Esquimalt – Royal Roads 250-479-8326 Maurine.Karagianis.MLA@leg.bc.ca www.maurinekaragianis.ca A5 – 100 Aldersmith Place, View Royal MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7 mondaymag.com
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Movember Events Ready Set Mo! at Glo (2940 Jutland); Thurs., Mov. 1; 7:30pm — Live music and prizes. By donation
Manscape Spa Mo Launch (748 Douglas); Fri., Mov. 2 Moustache Party @ Lucky Bar Thurs., Mov. 22, 9pm with Handsome Distraction, Warbuck, Citizen Joy and DJ Jeremy Baker. $12/10 at Ditch Records and CDs.
Less is Mo Fundraiser The Boxers are Brief Boylesque. Thurs., Nov. 29, 7:30pm; Victoria Event Centre (1415 Broad); $20 online at boxers.ticketbud.com/ movember2012 or $25 at door. Movember Gala Partés Nov. 29, 8pm; Club 9ONE9; $20 Lone Stars and Handlebars 2: The Mo Down; Fri., Mov. 30; Sugar Nightclub. $10 min. donation.
NEWS & VIEWS > COMMUNITY
Victoria to lose unique music hub FORT STREET CAFÉ EVICTED FROM BUILDING he Fort Street Café has announced it will close Dec. 15, after the building’s landlord told the six-year-old business that it is no longer deemed suitable for the premises. Despite attempted negotiations and a previously good relationship, owner BC Shaver and Hobbies has asked the popular café to vacate by the end of the year, which will bring an end to Victoria’s only licensed all-ages grassroots music and DANIELLE POPE arts hub. Owners Jon Perkins (left), Melissa Byrnes and Benji Duke share a final cheers. While The Fort owners initially searched for an alternative venue when they heard the news a number of bands before they were (really) big, few months ago, closure and start-up costs — at an including Acres of Lions, Aidan Knight, Lola estimated $100,000 — make the move prohibitive Parks, Maurice, Mike Edel, Tequila Mockingbird for the small business, and the crew has decided to Orchestra, The Children of Celebrities and The surrender. Chantrelles. It has also been home to the richly DANIELLE POPE “We are obvi- popular Sunday Lowdown, The Friday Quiz, ously sad, and I Underground Comedy Fort, Drum Hang, Feminist news@mondaymag.com don’t think it has Rock Camp, Victoria Film Festival and this year’s really sunk in yet — it’s the end of an era,” says Singe Festival. Benji Duke, part owner. “There really is nothing “The rug really was swept out from under us more we can do now, and we have decided we are on this one,” says Perkins, 32, whose main role in going to use this as an opportunity to move on to the business has been food and health safety. “It others things. Some of us want to start families, or would be one thing if we had a five-year exit plan, get involved in the arts scene in other ways.” or even if we had something to sell, but for us to The independent arts and music venue has learn this and be out in just a few months leaves us played host to more than 3,300 stage performers, with nothing, and no real contingency plan.” including bands, comedians, actors and chariByrnes, 34, says she can still remember when ties, since owners Duke, Jon Perkins and Melissa the three were discussing plans for the space, Byrnes took over the space in 2007. While the which was leased originally as a food venue. The venue has a food-primary liquor license, The Fort stage that now sits at the front of the café was then has long been considered one of the rarest oppor- a storage closet full of carpet and lunch supplies. tunities for budding musicians in the community “It was hard for me to picture some of their — acts are not charged to use the space or sound visions at first, but slowly it all came together,” services, and the café gives door money to the art- says Byrnes, who has specialized as the space ists after breaking even; more than $300,000 has designer. “I really don’t know what I will do now. gone directly into artists’ hands. Just keep moving forward, somehow.” “We are very proud of what we have achieved While the three considered a furious fundover the last six years. We have grown the business raising campaign to open a new venue, they felt from out of the walls; the room represents who we the amount needed placed unrealistic expectaare and what we stand for. There has never been tions on the community. That’s not to say they a pot of gold and we have never received funding wouldn’t change their minds if $100,000 fell … The venue has survived on respect and com- onto their stage — or if they could find another munication between the venue, the artists and business to partner with in opening a new locathe public.” tion. But, for now, with only six weeks left for Duke, 36, who has acted as finance and enter- fans to get that Fort Street fix, the group plans tainment manager, says the eviction came as a to host a number of fundraising events to offset surprise, but believes there was no incident or closure costs — estimated at $10,000 — and has “bad blood” that caused it. However, he says nego- a call-out to bands to help on either Dec. 8, or the tiations in rent were not offered. grand finale on Dec. 15. “When you own a building, you are entitled “This really has been our labour of love, and to decide what happens to it,” he says. “My main we have invested our lives in this. We never had concern is that there is nowhere else for young money, so we just let The Fort evolve and added to musicians and bands to go in Victoria; there is it as we could, bit by bit,” says Duke. “It hurts, but no one who does what we do. There are 20 pubs now we need to move onto something new … and in town playing Tom Petty cover bands, and that we want to say thank you to our community for does not match the reality of the creativity we your support, your patience and your friendship.” have in this city.” Despite repeated attempts by Monday, the The 80-person capacity venue employs near- owner of BC Shaver and Hobbies was not availly a dozen people, and has played host to a able to comment by press time. M
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 7PM Farquhar Auditorium, University of Victoria Tickets $22 .75 at UVIC Ticket Centre www.tickets.uvic.ca Presented by Alpine Club of Vancouver Island • accvi.ca
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
OFF THE FRONT > FEATURE
MOVEMBER: oothbrush, walrus, painter’s bru brush, lampseshoe, chevron, cookie cook duster, shade, horseshoe, lip sweater, man pelt — all names for what’s monly known as the mo more commonly moustache. m Over thee last few years, the moustache has been enjoying a resurgence, thanks inpart to the hipster phenomenon, but also due to Movember, the month-long campaign to raise funds and awareness about men’s health, notably prostate cancer and, more recently, mental health issues. Moustaches, or the lack thereof, get people talking — at least that’s the hope for the annual Movember campaign, launching Nov. 1 around the world. The idea is this: men shave their faces clean and register at Movember.com. Over the next 30 days, these “Mo Bros” selflessly search for sponsorship for their mo-growing efforts, all while grooming, trimming and waxing their brand new lip sweater into something stylish they can be proud MARY ELLEN GREEN of. arts@mondaymag.com One of these Mo Bros is Monday cover model Matt Morrison, night manager at Sugar Nightclub and owner of one of the most iconic moustaches in town — that is until last week, when he let Matthew Conrad of Victory Barber and Brand shave it for the cause. “It think it must be like what a hunter feels like when they’re about to take out a majestic elk in the wild,” says Conrad. “This is a beautiful creature I’m about to remove from the earth. I don’t hunt myself, but I imagine that’s how they feel.” Last year was the first time Morrison registered at Movember.com. “I’ve donated a portion of my tips every year, but this is the first year I’m really pushing it. I’ve got cards getting made saying, ‘Yes, I did have a fantastic moustache. How come I shaved it off? To raise awareness for men’s health,’” he says. “Every guy’s got a prostate and every guy’s got a brain, so it’s important to be aware of the health of both of them. Especially mental health issues; people are all like ‘That guy has a disorder and it’s a very big deal.’ No it’s not. A lot more people do than most people realize.” “Let’s face it,” adds Conrad. “The prostate has a pretty bad rap already. Anything we can do to make it more fun to talk about ... It’s an uncomfortable topic, it’s uncomfortable to check, it’s something we sweep under the rug. Girls talk about boobs and breast cancer all the time. It’s also a nice chance for men to grow a moustache and get their girlfriends off their back because they’re doing it for charity,” he says with a laugh. “Regardless of why you decide to grow a moustache, the fact is that it draws attention to something important.” The Movember campaign has picked up significant speed since its launch in Melbourne, Australia in 2004. Since then, more than two million participants have raised almost $300 million for its causes. Canadians came onboard in 2007 and Movember received official charity status in Canada in 2011. More than $64 million has been raised and allocated to men’s health initiatives in the areas of awareness, education, research and survivorship across Canada — almost $360,000 of that to various research studies at UVic since 2010.
Changing the face of men's health
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Before (after a luxurious shave)
DAVID BUKACH
Matt Morrison visited Matthew Conrad of Victory Barber to have his iconic moustache shaved off, so that he can grow it again in support of Movember.
use, provide you with a better shave once you learn how to use them, and they’re just classic — anything with a small element of danger makes it more masculine.” Victory Barber and Brand is a seven-chair, full-service barber shop, offering everything from a no-fuss barber’s buzzcut to the classic hot-lather shave, complete with hot towels, steam treatment, foamy lather, a straight-razor shave and a “renewed masculinity.”
RENEWED MASCULINITY
After
(so long as it grows back)
MALE GROOMING Conrad opened Victory Barber and Brand in the Atrium building on Blanshard in July 2011, with a strong focus on male grooming, but not the Maxim Magazine version of masculinity. “There were a lot of men that were falling through the cracks, who couldn’t get what they want in a salon and couldn’t get a good haircut at a barber shop. We seem to have filled that hole,” says Conrad. “We don’t play to the contrived cliches of a barber shop — we don’t have porno mags, we don’t have sports on TV, because that’s what masculinity has been propped-up to look like now. It’s a super-shallow concept of masculinity. If you really look at those things, it’s an immature concept of masculinity — those are things that you do as a teenager — and part of the reason why we have a generation of grown-up boys now instead of a generation of grown men is because nobody really showed them that it’s time to grow into manhood, and
that’s what we’re doing here, we’re moving past the grownup boy and seeing what it looks like to be a gentleman, and sometimes that can be as simple as grooming.” Indeed. Conrad was inspired to open the modern barber shop thanks, in part, to a box of stuff he inherited from his grandfather when he passed away a couple of years ago. “My generation grew up with men deriving their style from the ’60s and ’70s, and if you look back there was a real disconnect with masculine grooming in that time. Women’s styles on men were really prevalent and so we really lost touch there,” says Conrad. “[My grandfather] had brushes and pomades, he always carried a comb and he had a safety razor. He was 95 years old when he died and he still used a safety razor — a screwtogether contraption that has a housing that holds a single razor blade. They’re slightly more dangerous than what we use now, but at the same time, they’re so much cheaper to
“I’ve been a hairdresser for 17 years, and before we opened this thing, the peak of men’s grooming, as far as hairdressers go, culminated in two words: Manscaping and Metrosexual — and both of those words are an absolute pox on our sex,” says Conrad. “It’s emasculating and it’s a problem that these cutesy marketing words are sucking any masculinity left out of any man who wants to be groomed —they turn them all into douchebags or Nancyboys and there’s nothing masculine left about being well put together. My grandfather wasn’t either of those things, he was never manscaped and he was not a metrosexual, but he was well-groomed every day of his life because he knew that part of being a gentleman is about presenting your best self to the world. We need to make it not only acceptable, but cool again, taking that gentile approach to life. When you present your best self to the world, you behave that way.” And Morrison feels the same way. “I think that metrosexual is used in a derogatory way and it sounds kind of homophobic — but what’s wrong with taking time to invest in your appearance and look good. Women do it. Here at the nightclub, you see women taking an hour to get ready and the guys spend maybe five minutes.” “No one’s ever said to me ’You groom your moustache? That’s not very manly.’ People respond well to the moustache. It’s usually ‘That’s a very manly moustache’ ... It’s also an instant personality ... Otherwise, I’m the average white guy, regular build with brown hair — I got nothing. But the guy with the giant moustache? Everyone knows who that is.” M MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7 mondaymag.com
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Victoria author tackles bullying
MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
raig Barton might have looked like your typical bully growing up — the thick, broad-shouldered man was already passing six-feet by the time he was 12. But what would unfold instead was a childhood of taunting — and bullies aiming their mark straight at Barton’s height in an effort to prove they could “take out the big guy.” “Whenever I saw posters or campaigns around bullying, I would look at the pictures and see that I was supposed to be the bully — I was the big guy taunting a poor little nerd — the victim never looked like me,” says Barton, now 49. “I didn’t have a lot of support from my peers, or even adults, because I looked like a man; they expected me to be able to handle it. But I also knew I could never use the one thing I had — my size.” DANIELLE POPE Barton survived the Craig Barton has penned a book about bullying, recovery and healing. grade-school nightmare, which started to fade as he entered high school and became “just a ery and healing, the James Bay author has imparttall guy.” But the damage had already made Barton ed his understanding into the brief 100-page text, reassess others’ motives, and hold friends at a with a twist that not everyone understands at first: distance. He stayed on guard at all times, became “love the bully.” hypersensitive and suffered panic attacks. Worst of “Sure, it’s not going to feel like the kind of love all, he had begun the spiral of negative self-doubt you have for your mom, but loving someone who that would almost last a lifetime. some think you should hate takes that person’s Although Barton lacked the support he needed power away — and it lets you see them as sad more in the ’70s, news of the recent suicide of Coquitlam’s than scary,” he says. “Bullying is never about the 15-year-old Amanda Todd has turned national person being harassed — it’s about the bully; it’s attention to the issue, and the provincial govern- some inadequacy they are dealing with. It can help ment, teachers unions and Canada Safety Council to understand that.” aimed its focus for last month’s National School While the theories aid a survivor’s mindset, Safety Week (Oct. 17-23) to combat bullying. Barton is keenly aware of the life-and-death danYet Barton has taken his own step to help ger bullying now poses. He has become a staff those suffering through or surviving the effects, member at TeenHelp.org, an online mentorship by penning his new book The Bathroom Mirror: buddy program for youth seeking anonymous Encouraging thoughts that will help you move on assistance, and has heard tragic stories from young with your life. members. Those stories made Barton realize his Barton’s compilation of essays, short stories, book was needed. poems and quotes is paired with an inventive use “That feeling of being alone is death to a perof white space and bold fonts that urge the reader son,” he says. “There are going to be situations to take another look. where survivors don’t have someone to talk to, but “So much of what we believe about ourselves they need to know there are others out there. They is not necessarily true, and a negative belief is no have to know they do have power — and there is more closer to that ‘truth’ than a positive one,” nothing wrong with them.” M he says. “The tough thing about emotional abuse is that you can’t point to the scar, but you hurt Purchase Craig Barton’s The Bathroom Mirror at TheBathroomMirror.me or Mattick’s Farm’s Elephant everywhere.” Through his own lifetime of experience, recov- Flowers Gift Shop (#113-5325 Cordova Bay).
C
MONDAY GUIDE > ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
City Something
MARY ELLEN GREEN arts@mondaymag.com
TOP PICKS
OUR
FOR NOV. 1 – 7
SATURDAY WARREN MILLER ENTERTAINMENT
WARREN MILLER: FLOW STATE re you getting super stoked for winter’s inevitable return? Can’t wait to shred the pow on the Olympic Peninsula or up-Island at Mount Washington? If you answered ‘yes’ to either of those questions, get yourself down to UVic’s Farquhar Auditorium (3800 Finnerty) for a screening of Warren Miller’s 63rd feature film, Flow State. This film brings audiences to a place of such singular focus and connection with the environment that, in this place, the faster you ride, the slower time passes. Join host Jonny Moseley and a laundry list of world-class athletes like Jess McMillan, Chris Davenport, Colby West and David Wise as they ride some of the world’s most challenging peaks, including Chugach, Alaska; Niseko, Japan; San Juans, Colorado; Northstar, California; Murren, Switzerland, and Svalbard, Norway. This film will make you want to tune-up your gear, take an avalanche refresher course and press fast-forward on the next two months of fall. Flow State screens Sat., Nov. 3 at 7pm for one showing only. Tickets are $26 and are available at 250-721-8480 or online at auditorium.uvic.ca. Ticket holders also receive a loaded gift bag, two-forone lift tickets and are eligible to win a weekend resort package, skis and more. The official trailer is available at http://vimeo.com/45658515. Event parking is $2.25. M
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INTERNATIONAL GUITAR NIGHT repare to have your senses picked to perfection by the world’s most renowned acoustic guitarists. International Guitar Night is coming to UVic’s Farquhar Auditorium (3800 Finnerty) at 8pm, Sun., Nov. 4, for IGN’s 12th North American tour featuring Martin Taylor, Solorazaf and, of course, Brian Gore. In an international mix of talent, guitarists from around the world will perform their latest compositions and exchange musical ideas in a public concert setting. The event, which Gore developed in San Francisco 20 years ago, showcases a new lineup of musicians every year and features diverse fusions of sound. The show has generated a strong following since its first-ever public auditorium performance in none other than Duncan, B.C. in 1997. “It really has been a labour of love, and B.C. has a special place in the history of IGN — it’s like a home away from home,” says Gore. “With the kind of quality we have on the show, these aren’t just guitarists; these are musicians and their music leaves a statement.” Be sure to catch this year’s cast of guitar luminaries in solos, duets and quartets that highlight the virtuosity and diversity within the world of acoustic guitar. Learn more at InternationalGuitarNight.com. Tickets: $30. Alumni, students & seniors $15. Seats must be reserved in advance: 250-721-8480, auditorium.uvic.ca, or in person at the University Centre. Evening parking $2.25. M — Danielle Pope
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W A S T E W A T E R
HOLLY CROOKS
RED HOT FLAMENCO he Victoria Symphony welcomes Compañía Azul to Victoria for Red Hot Flamenco! Nov. 1-3 at the Royal Theatre. Back by popular demand, Compañía Azul creates passionate, stunning displays of emotion, sound and colour. Director and principal dancer, Megan “Azulita” Matheson (pictured above) will be joined by guitarists Bob Sutherby and Daniel MacNeil, singer Sean Harris, percussionist Ian MacMillan, the Victoria Symphony and its conductor Giuseppe Pietraroia. Nov. 1 at 2pm and Nov. 2 and 3 at 8pm. Tickets start at $35 and are available at 250-385-6515. VsSOUNCHECK (ages 18-35) tickets are available for $13 at victoriasymphony.ca. M
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T R E A T M E N T
M A D E
C L E A R
CENTRALIZED PLANT LOCATION WITH BEST POTENTIAL FOR FUTURE GROWTH
MCLOUGHLIN POINT
All roads lead to McLoughlin Point. Analysis of a distributed system found that 11 treatment plants would cost more than $2 billion to build, making a central plant the most cost-effective choice for existing developments. In the future, to serve growth areas new treatment plants will take advantage of technologies not yet available today. Check out the facts online at www.wastewatermadeclear.ca/facts or watch for our insert in your local paper on November 14, 2012. www.wastewatermadeclear.ca MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7 mondaymag.com
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FOOD&DRINK MONDAY MORSELS
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SCHOOL DINNERS NEVER TASTED SO GOOD graduate of Ecole Hôtelière Des PyrÊnÊes in Toulouse, France, awardwinning Chef de Cuisine Gilbert Noussitou has practiced his trade for more than three decades at some of the finest establishments in France, England and Canada. Culinary Arts students in Camosun College’s cook apprenticeship program have benefited from Noussitou’s vast experience since the late ’80s, where he leads a team of dedicated instructors to train their successors, and you can join, too. The Classroom Restaurant is operated entirely by students from the advanced level of the culinary arts program at the Interurban campus. Located in Huber Hall, this hidden gem is sort of a pleasanter version of Hell’s Kitchen and is open to the public Tuesday through Friday evenings during the school year, with seating from between 5:30pm to 7:30pm. If you think that college food is all about burritos and iceberg salads, you’re in for a pleasant surprise. Dinner is comprised of a three-course menu commencing with your choice of soup, salad or appetizer, followed by your choice of main course
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PAM GRANT Though it wouldn’t normally get past my editor, “Sea Food Drink Beer� is the sentence of my dreams, and the title of a delicious fundraiser being held Friday Nov. 2, from 7pm to 10pm.
>
pamgrant@ mondaymag.com
Join like-minded people and an octopus named Steve for this 19+ event that is run entirely by Camosun College Hospitality Management students with partnerships from generous local sponsors. Proceeds will be donated to The Shaw Ocean Discovery Centre, a non-profit, community aquarium focused on educating and promoting awareness of local Salish Sea ecosystems. The evening will feature delicious pairings of sustainable seafood and beverages from Driftwood Brewery, live recipe demonstrations, raffle prizes and more.
WHO CAN RESIST CHOCOLATE FOR DESSERT?
Drink local, eat sustainable. 9811 Seaport Place, Sidney. 250-665-7511
Continued on next page
DAYTRIPtoDUNCAN & the COWICHAN VALLEY LUNCH BOX THE PIONEER HOUSE A valley favourite for over 30 years offering a casual dining experience. We are a fully licensed restaurant with a fresh and local menu. November we are featuring a $15 menu including house-made pumpkin pie. Also consider our cozy atmosphere for your staff Christmas party. Book in November and receive a 10% discount. Everything made in house open for breakfast, lunch and dinner seven days a week.
If you are on the pursuit for lush vineyards, farmers markets and beautiful backdrops then make Duncan and the Cowichan Valley your destination this season. Your road trip can begin with homemade brunch near Whippletree Junction. Then lap up some sun in Cowichan Bay to devour some fresh crab. Continue the journey on to Duncan and hit an eclectic variety of shops, boutiques and eateries along the main strip.
www.pioneerhouserestaurant.com 250-746-5848 MM ECLECTIC AVENUE B PDF !-
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
$ 00
(50¢ on fridays)
Under NEW Ownership
1208 Wharf St. • 250.360.1808 wharfside.ca
MONDAY > FOOD&DRINK
5
$ 50
SCHOOL DINNERS Continued from previous page
and dessert. Until Nov. 2, you may choose from Tuscan bean soup with fennel-scented sausage and garlic herb croutons, a salad of roasted beets with Stilton and balsamic herb dressing, smoked salmon and asparagus tart with “Maltaise” emulsion, panfried Fanny Bay oysters with chipotle remoulade and jicama slaw, or duck confit with quinoa galette and apricot and Saskatoon berry chutney. Entrees feature pan-fried red snapper with sun-dried tomato tapenade and pancetta; grilled tenderloin of beef, roasted shallots with forest mushroom sauce or braised lamb shank with gremolata and thyme jus. Save some room for a trio of chocolate delights; pistachio semifreddo with caramel sauce or warm raspberry sabayon. The price tag? A bargain at $29.95 (please note the price does not include beverages, taxes or gratuities). Menus change weekly. In November, sample Parmesan gnocchi with basil cream sauce and roasted walnuts, steamed Salt Spring Island mussels, Manila clams and black beans in fragrant
DRINKUP couple year s ago, most people wouldn’t have recognized a wine aerator if it fell out of the cupboard and landed on their head, but it seems lately, no self-respecting wine aficionado can do without one. Do they make a difference? Yes, they do, especially with reds. Though people often open a bottle of red to let it breathe, that is the equivalent of opening your car window a crack — it won’t make much difference as there is little surface area exposed. In order to aerate wine properly, you must decant it, though once you have done so, the older the wine, the sooner the clock starts ticking. Younger wines with higher tannin levels last a little longer. Wine aerators force air into wine more quickly, so instead of waiting 15 minutes after pouring a glass for it to breathe, you can
Kaffir lime and ginger broth, game terrine or grilled asparagus, roasted pine nuts, Romano shavings and champagne vinaigrette. Continue wth paupiettes of lemon sole filled with prawn and scallop mousseline and sauce Veronique; roast breast of chicken with goat cheese and apricot stuffing drizzled with apple cider jus lié or grilled lamb medallions with Café de Paris butter. Finish with white and dark chocolate brioche pudding and raspberry coulis; Grand Marnier mousse with a crisp almond Amaretti cookie or vanilla bean panna cotta with wild berry compote. If you don’t want to choose, visit on Nov. 23 for the grand buffet ($32.95). Reservations are strongly recommended. Call 250-3703775 or fax your request to 250-370-3859. The Interurban campus is located at 4461 Interurban Road.
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Chez Michel Restaurant What’s hot on local shelves By Pam Grant
Tues to Sat from 5:30 pm www.chezmichelrestaurant.ca 1871 Oak Bay Ave. 250-598-2015
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GOT NEWS?
KURAIDORI MAKES AN EXCELLENT ACRYLIC AERATOR
enjoy smoother wine with fuller flavours immediately. With increased demand, today a wine aerator can cost over $1,000, but you don’t need one made of crystal or pewter. Kuraidori makes an excellent acrylic aerator with a removable filter for under $20, available at Home Hardware. Though many dismiss aerators as a fad and say you can achieve the same results pouring wine between two glasses, I would disagree. Try it with the next red you drink, and you will see the difference. M
Contact me at pamgrant@mondaymag.com
Brand New Design at Koto New Style & Great Vibe • Now open Late
Traditional Tatami Party Room seats 6-30. Book your next Christmas party or intimate celebration with us. Lunch Bento Box $9 Dinner Maku-No-Uchi Bento $19 Featuring Lobster Sashimi Brown Rice available Incomparable Sushi Chef with over 30 years experience. 510 Fort Street • 250 382 1514 • kotovictoria.ca 1 hour free parking • Free delivery after 5pm MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
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MONDAY GUIDE > MUSIC
Colin Nealis, Olivier Clements, Aidan Knight, Julia Wakal and David Barry are the indie-folk quintet Aidan Knight.
Aidan Knight: Small Reveal NEW ALBUM IS EXPANSIVE, YET INTENSELY INTIMATE By Mary Ellen Green
thing — fear of commitment.” After another 10 days of recording sessions in the hallways and living rooms of family homes and in the former church that is now Larsen Music, Knight idan Knight’s second album Small Re- is following up with a stunning collection of affecting veal (released Oct. 23 on Outside Music) and often uncomfortably honest songs — noticewas affected by the dreaded “sophomore ably absent, though is the boyish charm of a song slump,” but the collection of expansive, like “Jasper” — instead Knight offers a more mature yet intensely intimate songs is far from a and sophisticated selection of “music about making disappointment. music.” Knight says it was difficult to see the big pic“I don’t know who came up with the sophomore ture, or theme of the album, while immersed in the slump term, but it was definitely something that was recording process. It wasn’t until the band listened to weighing heavily on my mind at some point,” says the finished album that the theme emerged — the life Knight. of a singer-songwriter. The Victoria-based musician says that writing the “I think that has to do thematically with what follow up to his debut, Versicolour, and its hit song Small Reveal is about,” says Knight. “It’s not a meta“Jasper” was daunting, and months into recording, he album, but there’s something really interesting to me almost decided to scrap what he and his bandmates — the idea of songs about songwriting, that creative had created and start again. output about creativity. I think something about that Knight, along with Olivier Clements, Julia Wakal, just found its way into the songs somehow, listening David Barry and Colin Nealis — who all recorded back to it for the first time and realizing that gave it Knight’s music on Versicolour and are now officially even more meaning.” members of the band, joining Knight in writing duties A special treat in Small Reveal is the cinematic — packed hundreds of pounds of recording equip- instrumentals interspersed throughout — a chance ment into a bush cabin on Protection to exhale between songs. These Island for a week last August for the themes add another element to the AIDAN KNIGHT creative session where Small Reveal enthralling lyrical and musical stoSmall Reveal was born. rytelling on this album, yet Knight “I don’t know the percentage of says he was divided on whether to CD release show things that ended up making their keep them. Thurs., Nov. 1 way to the album, but it’s most of “These instrumentals, these Alix Goolden Hall the backbone. Most of the songs were sweeping score-like things, there’s With Andy Schauf created there, then blown apart and a dangerous line between someTickets $18 at Ditch re-written,” says Knight. thing that feels thrown in there or Records, Lyle's Place “There was a point in recording, pretentious, but when we started and ticketweb.ca sometime around this time last year, listening to the album and started September or October — I didn’t have sequencing the tracks, I listened a mental break or anything — but to the album without them and there was a time that I thought we’d have to restart there’s just something about having a pause or a the whole album in order to make something good breath in between the songs around those moveand I was really convinced that no one was going to ments and there was also an opportunity for Julia and like what we had already made … that whole process Colin to arrange some things out. We’re always lookof writing and recording was an emotional roller- ing for an opportunity to do something new, try to go coaster. One week I was thinking everything was for a feeling and I love instrumental music,” he says. good and the next I never wanted to hear the songs or “I think maybe being divided on them has to let anyone else hear them.” do with wanting to downplay and not go for the With help from producer and engineer Jonathan power-move all the time and maintain some sort of Anderson, who worked on Versicolour — and a little soul façade of humbleness — it’s a Canadian upbringing searching by Knight — the band was able to push through. thing.”(When I call him modest, he replies: “Well, “I think that part of my feelings in the middle of don’t let that go to my head.”) making it had to do with more of the idea that I was Another standout is the devastatingly beautiful trying to tell myself or make myself believe that it’s story of love and loss in the album’s closer, “Margaret not important what other people think about what Downe.” you do.” Small Reveal was released on Knight’s 26th birthThat sentiment is most clear on the moody “You day and came in with a bang — the band’s minivan will See the Good in Everyone,” on which Knight hit a patch of ice on the highway near Strathmore, refrains “Am I singing for strangers?” Alta and the band had to miss both the CD release “I’m glad that I was able to figure out why I was day show in Regina and the following day’s show in feeling pressured to do a certain thing, or why I felt Winnipeg. the need to want to run away from everything we Let’s welcome them home to Victoria for a show at worked on through that whole process. Classic guy the Alix Goolden that is sure to impress. M
arts@mondaymag.com
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
MONDAY GUIDE > FILM & CINEMA OPEN CINEMA SCREENS PLAY AGAIN In collaboration with Habitat Acquisition Trust, Open Cinema presents Play Again, a documentary that explores the changing landscape of childhood as it relates to technology and nature. The film follows six young people liberated from their usual 5 to 15 hours of screen time (from computers to cell phones) as they get a hearty dose of nature. The changes these youth experience are immediate, inspiring and a little terrifying. According to the film, most children spend up to five months per year in front of a screen. They only have three and a half minutes of meaningful conversation with parents per week. Ninety per cent of their time is spent indoors. Sadly, most will not have this experience with nature and in truth no one knows what the consequences will be. As the film states early on, “This is a very large experiment that we’re enacting as a society.” Play Again is filled with these findings and Open Cinema is offering a space to do more than just watch. The screening will include a follow-up discussion between audience and a specially selected panel. Lisa Lockerbie, a teacher from Sooke Nature Kindergarten, Todd Carnahan of Habitat Acquisition Trust and David Segal of Power To Be adventure programs will be on the panel. Dr. Richard Kool, associate professor for environment and sustainability at Royal Roads University, will be the moderator. The technology being discussed won’t be shied away from, however. The café-style theatre will feature a Tweetchat wall projection during the post-screening discussion, which will also be streamed live. Luckily, they won’t be competing with any presidential elections in the Twitterverse as was the case during the first screening of the season! Join the conversation at #OCchats. Open Cinema screening Play Again, Wed., Nov. 7 at the Victoria Events Centre (1415 Broad). Doors open at 5:30pm and the film begins at 7pm with a suggested donation of $10-20. Refreshments available. Open to all ages. — Colin Cayer
Cloud Atlas mostly vapour OVERWHELMING COMPLEXITIES, UNDERWHELMING STORIES By Robert Moyes arts@mondaymag.com
ith a running time of nearly three hours, the wildly ambitious Cloud Atlas offers viewers a whole bunch of movie. Too much, in fact, and a lot of it mediocre and pseudo-profound. Based on the supposedly “unfilmable” novel of the same name by David Mitchell, Cloud comprises six separate plotlines that include an 18th century seagoing yarn, a diverse trio of stories from the ’30s to the ’70s, as well as a sci-fi tale of a fascist future Asia and ultimately a postapocalyptic account of neo-primitives set even further ahead in time. Trying to knit all this together are actors in multiple roles throughout the movie’s sprawling timeline (said actors sometimes shifting age, gender, and race in the process). There’s also a mysterious birthmark that recurs on various characters, and themes of honour, evil, redemption and reincarnation that are mostly heavy-handed tropes that get vigorously waved like flags at various junctures. In short, this is a movie that makes a great deal of noise about its own high-flying ambitions. And maybe it’s not too surprising that three directors collaborated on a project this big, with Germany’s Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run) joining forces with Lana and Andy Wachowski (The Matrix) to get it all done. Although Cloud is easy to follow for a film this complex, it’s often annoying to watch due to the frequency with which we skip between subplots. This crosscutting is executed with technical cleverness and is used to underline thematic connections — which presumably was fun for the filmmakers but can be irritating to viewers who feel the emotional power of the individual stories becoming weakened. Equally wearying is the cumulative impact of a couple of
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the performers. A very hairy and latex-covered Tom Hanks is onscreen for much of the movie; he plays, amongst several roles, a dentally-challenged doctor sneakily poisoning a patient, and a cowardly member of a primitive tribe. It’s painful to contrast his laboured efforts with those of England’s superb Jim Broadbent, who does so much more with an equal amount of screen time. And Halle Berry similarly fails to bring much interest to her bevy of roles. And for a film with a great eagerness to be inspirational, it is disappointing that there is really only one storyline — a musically gifted “rent boy” (Ben Wishaw, I’m Not There, Bright Star) who becomes the exploited amanuensis to a once-brilliant but now faded classical composer (Broadbent) — that seems to resonate with the truth you expect from a thoughtful novel rather than the plot-driven distractions of pulp fiction. (The subplot about the half-dozen seniors trying to break out of a nasty care home is sweet and very funny but little more than a lark — albeit one that echoes more serious concerns with fascism raised elsewhere in the film.) It’s hard to imagine who exactly is going to applaud Cloud, or tell their friends to rush out and see it. It’s a well-advertised “event” film, and one that could garner several Oscar nods. But most viewers will likely be overwhelmed by Cloud’s complexities at the same time as they are underwhelmed by the oftensketchy storylines. As grandpa used to say: what the Dickens?
CLOUD ATLAS ★★½ Directed by Tom Tykwer, Andy and Lana Wachowski Starring Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, R - 164 minutes Continues at the Odeon & SilverCity
FILM & CINEMA CALENDAR OPENING FLIGHT -(Odeon/SilverCity) Denzel Washington stars in a drama about a heroic pilot who "impossibly" saves an airliner from certain destruction, only to find himself in a world of trouble for unexpected reasons. Starts Fri. THE MAN WITH THE IRON FISTS -(Odeon/SilverCity) Russell Crowe, Lucy Liu and a small army of martial artists get their "fu" on with a rousing tale of gold fever and blood lust as rival warriors, bandits and assassins descend on a small Chinese village that supposedly holds a fortune ready for the plundering. Starts Fri. WRECK–IT RALPH -(Capitol/ SilverCity/Westshore) John C. Reilly provides the voice for a video-game villain who tires of being a bad guy and sets out on a quest that throws an entire video arcade into chaos. This animation lark includes the voices of Sarah Silverman and Jane Lynch. Starts Fri. ★★★½ END OF WATCH -(Caprice) Jake Gyllenhaal stars in a gripping and very realistic crime drama about a pair of L.A. cops who are marked for death after they confiscate some drugs and guns from a violent cartel. Starts Fri.
CONTINUING
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★★★½ ARGO -(Capitol/Uni 4/ SilverCity/Westshore/Caprice) Despite some liberties taken with the facts, this account of a CIA agent who managed to smuggle six Americans to safety from Iran during the famed 1979-'80 hostage crisis is surprisingly even-handed, very suspenseful and truly entertaining. Directed by and starring Ben Affleck. ★★ THE BOURNE LEGACY -(Caprice) The hyper-kinetic spy series gets a flaccid and disappointing reboot with a new director and new actor (Jeremy Renner). Co-starring Rachel Weisz and Edward Norton. FUN SIZE -(Odeon/SilverCity/ Caprice) A teen girl has to babysit her little brother the night of a big Halloween costume party. Hey, what could go wrong?
★★½ CHASING MAVERICKS -(Odeon/Westshore) Gerard Butler plays a grizzled surf champ who agrees to mentor a young lad desperate to ride really big waves. Decent family fare, albeit a bit plodding. Based on a true story. ★★½ CLOUD ATLAS -(Odeon/ SilverCity) German director Tom Tykwer (Run Lola Run) combines forces with Andy and Lana Wachowski (The Matrix) to take us on an exotic, wildly ambitious trip as characters lead parallel and contrasting lives in six different storylines in the past, present, and future. Starring Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, and Hugh Grant. See review. DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: DOG DAYS -(Caprice) Greg is totally ready for summer when suddenly his plans all fall apart. What's the poor guy gonna do now? HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA -(Capitol/ SilverCity/Westshore) A hotel where vampires and sundry other monsters hide out from humans gets a big scare when a backpacking dude shows up looking for a room. This animated comedy features the voices of Adam Sandler, Kevin James, and Andy Samberg. ★★★½ LOOPER -(Odeon/SilverCity/ Westshore) This trippy, noir-tinged sci-fi thriller is a stylish mash-up of hitmen and time travel. Starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Premium Rush), Bruce Willis, and Emily Blunt. ★★★ MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE'S MOST WANTED -(Caprice) Those mouthy NYC zoo escapees are up to their usual colourful antics in a wittily entertaining animation romp. THE ODD LIFE OF TIMOTHY GREEN -(Caprice) Disney Studios produced this rather fantastical family-friendly tale about a childless couple who end up with a young boy under distinctly magical circumstances. Starring Jennifer Garner. THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER -(Odeon) This coming-of-age romantic drama focuses on a freshman introvert who is befriended by a small group of slightly crazy friends.
★★½ THE PAPERBOY -(Odeon) This lurid "swamp gothic" thriller is set in '60s Florida and features a man on death row who may be innocent, and a bunch of scuzzy characters who are certainly guilty of something. PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 -(Capitol/SilverCity/Westshore) The once-interesting trick of using faux found footage to give a spritz of realism to horror flicks is becomeing duller with every sequel to this series about spooky doings in the suburbs. ★★½ PARANORMAN -(Caprice) In an amusingly morbid slice of family animation, a misunderstood boy who can talk to the dead is the only hope to save his town from an army of zombies and ghosts activated by a centuries-old curse. ★★½ PITCH PERFECT -(Westshore) It's a gals-versus-theguys vocal throwdown, as competing campus choirs seem to have gone to college only to major in Glee. Although not exactly Oscar bait, this is lots of fluffy fun. ★★★★ THE SEARCH FOR SUGAR MAN -(Uni 4) This musical documentary features the incredible quest of two South African men to discover whatever happened to a Bob Dylan-style troubadour from the early '70s who never amounted to anything in his native America but became a huge superstar — and revolutionary influence — in South Africa at the height of Apartheid. ★★★ SEVEN PSYCHOPATHS -(Capitol/SilverCity) A struggling screenwriter accidentally gets mixed up with some really nasty criminals and lots of people die. With Colin Farrell, Sam Rockwell, and Christopher Walken. Not to all tastes, but this is a smart, darkly funny black comedy from the writer-director of In Bruges. SILENT HILL: REVELATION -(Capitol/SilverCity) This video gameinspired horror series goes 3D -— if only to give some depth otherwise lacking to its cliché characters and stock situations. SINISTER -(Caprice) Some gruesome "found footage" is at the centre of this horror flick that seems to owe a large debt to The Ring. Starring Ethan Hawke. Note: moves here from SilverCity on Friday.
★★½ TAKEN 2 -(Odeon/Westshore) Liam Neeson reprises his role as a retired CIA tough guy who has to use his nastiest skills when his wife gets kidnapped by the vengeful father of the goon that Neeson killed in the last movie. ★★½ TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE -(Caprice) Clint Eastwood plays an ailing and aging baseball scout who takes his estranged daughter (Amy Adams) along on one last recruiting trip. This predictable but engaging comedy-drama also stars John Goodman and Justin Timberlake.
LEAVING THURS. ★★½ THE EXPENDABLES 2 HOUSE AT THE END OF THE STREET ★★ ALEX CROSS
SCREENINGS MOVIE MONDAY - Is screening Nothing But A Man. Dating from 1964, this impressive and groundbreaking drama was written and filmed by two Jewish men who wanted to explore the reality of being black in America. The result is an intelligent, and non-condescending "social issues" movie (that stars jazz vocalist Abbey Lincoln). By donation. 6:30pm MONDAY in the 1900-block Fort. 595FLIC. moviemonday.ca RAINCOAST ROCKS THE PIPELINE -The Raincoast Conservation Foundation helped produce Groundswell, an evocative look at what's potentially at stake on our unspoiled West Coast courtesy of the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway project. FRIDAY, 5:15, at UVic's David Lam Auditorium. The 7 pm show is already sold out and you must pre-book. groundswellvictoria1715.eventbrite.com. OPEN CINEMA -Screens Play Again: What are the Consequences of a Childhood Removed From Nature? In a doc that is emotionally powerful but also very humorous. WEDNESDAY, Nov. 7, 7 pm, at Victoria Event Centre, 1415 Broad Street.
MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7 mondaymag.com
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MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com
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Intro Evening: November 8, 7pm $30 Garry Oak Room, 1335 Thurlow Workshops: November 9 - 14 Register: infogerlyons@gmail.com 250-382-0724 • www.GerLyons.com
HOROSCOPE > NOVEMBER 4 - 10, 2012
“You’re never too old to become young.”
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even introduce you to a new ll Signs: There’s good romantic partner (someone news and bad news older, wiser or richer or all of this week. The bad the above). Enjoy your good news (but it’s not fortune! Accept all invitations that bad) is Mercury goes retto party. Live it up! rograde on Tuesday. But hey, it’s been slowing down since the beginning of the month, CANCER JUNE 21-JULY 22 which means we’re already hipEvery Mercury retrograde is deep in transportation delays, different because it occurs in a goofy errors and mixed-up different sign. (There are three communications. (Aagghh!) GEORGIA Mercury retrograde periods Get used to it because this con- NICOLS a year.) This particular one tinues for the rest of the month. is creating havoc with your Although Mercury retrograde work, daily tasks and even with your health. ends Monday the 26th, Mercury will not At work, you can expect staff shortages, miscatch up to where it was when it first went placed paperwork, delayed mail, cancelled retrograde until Dec.10. (Use this last date if appointments and insanely confusing comyou’re buying a car or truck.) The good news munications. (Yes, your efficiency will sufis after hump day (that’s Wednesday) Venus fer.) When it comes to health-related issues, and Jupiter join forces to create pleasure and I doubt it will affect your health directly. fun for everyone. Yay! Mae West always said, But you could miss appointments with “You’re never too old to become young.” doctors or dentists, lose a prescription or misplace medicines and food supplements. Fortunately, good times at home are soothARIES MARCH 21-APRIL 19 You are suffering from travel delays, cancel- ing! Entertain at home; enjoy warm family lations and goofy mistakes connected with activities. Explore real-estate opportunities publishing, higher education, medicine and and have fun redecorating your digs. the law. Of course, it’s frustrating. And disappointing. Fortunately, you’re not one to LEO JULY 23-AUG 22 wallow in misery for too long because you In astrology, every sign “rules” many things. are always up for whatever comes next. Well, For example, Leo rules children, the theatre, in that case – good news! After Wednesday show business, the entertainment world, this week, schmoozing with others will be a professional sports and romance! And these sheer delight! You will meet new faces and are the very areas where this Mercury retexisting friendships will be warmer and rograde will impact your life. Expect delays more loving. A casual relationship could and confusion attending movies, theatrical become committed. Others will help you, events, parties and fun stuff. (Parking could which is why this is an excellent time to form be a problem or your car might get towed.) partnerships and working units, especially Because of the romance angle, you will likely with someone from your past. be in contact with old flames, and you might be dealing with past issues with children. (“Who are these kids and why are they callTAURUS APRIL 20-MAY 20 Life continues to be bogged down by con- ing me Mommy?”) Later this week, you’ll cerns about shared property, inheritances, enjoy interactions with everyone. You’ll have wills, debt, taxes and anything you own fun schmoozing with siblings and daily conjointly with others. Such a red-tape fuss! tacts, plus your efforts to write, sell, promote (Your napkin math ain’t holding up.) and teach will be stellar. Enjoy! Fortunately, you will finish this stuff because Mercury retrograde will help you! (Oh VIRGO AUG 23-SEPT 22 yeah. Mercury retrograde is not all bad.) Family reunions and past issues related to Meanwhile, back at work, things are rosy, your private life or your relationships with especially later in the week. Work-related relatives or family members are back on romance might begin for some. Others will your plate again. Many of you are also dealget a raise or praise or a positive boost with ing with home repairs or some recurring co-workers. Work-related travel is also likely. problem at home. Naturally, in turn, this Meanwhile, (watch my lips) get more rest! creates chaos and increased activity. Oy vey. You need sleep and downtime. Catch those But your money scene is starting to look up. extra Zzzzzz’s. What a relief! Not only might you be earning more money, many of you will be buying beautiful things. (You just can’t resist them.) GEMINI MAY 21-JUNE 20 Ex-partners from your past are back in your Look for ways to boost your income later life. At the least, you’ll be talking and think- in the week, because these opportunities ing about them. For some, this will be enter- do exist for you. Let’s face it, when you’ve taining; for others, it will be an opportunity got your eye on pretty goodies, money is so for closure; and for a few, it will be hell. (“Not handy, isn’t it? this again!”) Don’t worry. The lovely combo of Jupiter and Venus will bring more fun LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) and pleasure your way than any other sign. This particular Mercury retrograde is rather Enjoy parties, fun times, vacations, romantic lethal for your sign because it really does interludes, sports events and delightful times aggravate your daily tasks, your paperwork, with children. This energized Venus might all your communications with others on
a daily basis and everything to do with short trips and travelling. Flat tires, stalled cars, missed buses, traffic fines and parking tickets will be classic outcomes this month. Cheques will be late in the mail and you will definitely have confused communications and delays with many things you try to do. Don’t worry, you’re not losing it. It’s just what it is. But you can more easily finish writing projects and other business on your plate. (Cool!) Plan on socializing at the end of the week because you’re in the zone. You will dazzle others with your charm and diplomacy! SCORPIO OCT 23-NOV 21 Old money issues seem to be back on your plate again. (This could be good news or bad news.) Those of you looking for work should go back to where you have worked or applied before. Retrace your steps and work with prior contacts. You can more easily finish work projects now but getting paid for something could be delayed. Important purchases might be possible now, especially if you have been saving for something or hoping to get a particular item. Personally, life will take on a more rewarding aspect later in the week. You will have a warm feeling in your tummy about everything and you’ll feel loved. SAGITTARIUS NOV 22-DEC 21 You’re befuddled and frustrated by delays and snafus because this is one of the rare times that Mercury retrograde is happening in your sign! (Suck it up, cupcake.) Forgive my glibness, but you have no choice. You will have an opportunity to finish old business and gain closure with others about something important to you (perhaps). The lovely Venus/Jupiter influence later this week will bring you contact with friends (especially artistic types) and people from other countries or different cultures. You might travel with a group. You will certainly have fun and learn a lot in group situations, whether they are casual get-togethers or large meetings. Aside from these annoying little mistakes and delays, it’s a great week for you!
bosses, parents and VIPs, some of you will strike up a flirtation with someone older, richer or in a position of authority. (An affair with your boss?) Hmmm. AQUARIUS JAN 20-FEB 18 Old friends from the past will make life interesting now. Admittedly, running into some acquaintances could be a pain. However, your sign loves the gamut of the human condition. You like to observe people, especially in groups. You’ll get a kick out of reconnecting with many acquaintances at this time. By all means, grab every opportunity to travel for pleasure because this will fall in your lap later this week. Because your appreciation for beauty is heightened, give yourself a chance to enjoy museums, art galleries, parks, gorgeous architectural buildings – something. You’ll also love learning new
information about another culture or a different place. It’s a stimulating week! PISCES FEB 19-MARCH 20 Many of you will be involved with parents you haven’t seen for a while or you’ll run into bosses from your past or other authority figures. This could be interesting or it could be angst-ridden, depending on your past history with these people. It might be your chance to clarify or explain something or you might want to tell them to go jump in the lake. It is encouraging, however, to note that later in the week, gifts, goodies and favours from others will come your way. Keep your pockets open! Not only that, physical intimacy will be sweet, reassuring and fun-loving. Romance with someone from another culture could blossom. (It’s all very heady.)
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CAPRICORN DEC 22-JAN 19 While some people are really plagued by this particular Mercury retrograde, in large measure, you can benefit from it because you have a chance to go back over old issues that might have been troubling you for some time and finally put them to bed. (“Bye!”) You’ll also find that any research you have to do this month or digging for answers and solutions will be surprisingly easy and successful. It will be like a hot knife cutting through butter. And later this week, you will be getting such great press! In fact, you are looking so good to
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EVENTS CALENDAR ✓ EVENTS RAGING GRANNIES- Join Victoria's Grandmothers Advocacy Network to tell Canada's MPs to pass Bill C-398 to get affordable AIDS drugs to Africa. Music and messages. Kites welcome. Noon at Clover Point (Dallas and Moss). Free. 250-480-1061.
FRI. NOV. 2 VICTORIA QUILTERS' GUILD CHRISTMAS SALE - Shop for unique quilted items from decorations to full-size quilts, all great Christmas gifts. FRIDAY 2-7pm & SATURDAY 10am-4pm at Salvation Army Citadel (4030 Douglas). $2. 250-382-2675.
A TASTE OF AFRICA - Enjoy a threecourse African dinner, slide show and silent auction to benefit the Maasai people of northern Tanzania. Hosted by The Centre for Inspired Living. 5:308:30pm at Cook Street Activity Centre (380 Cook). $28 full dinner / $15 desert only. 778-433-4820 / 250-419-2805.
VICTORIA DOWNTOWN WINTER FARMERS' MARKET - See the latest in local produce, cheeses, seasonal surprises and live music. 11am-3pm at Market Square, Inner Courtyard (560 Johnson). Free. 250-884-8552. AFC 13 MIXED MARTIAL ARTS EVENT - See the pros like John Alessio vs Dave Mazany and amateurs have their MMA showdown. 7-10pm at Bear Mountain Arena (1767 Island Hwy) $40. 250-479-8525.
SAT. NOV. 3 HUMAN LIBRARY PROJECT Initiated in Denmark in 2000, the Human Library hosts a collection of living books: a diverse range of people who make themselves available to be "checked out" for informal 20 minute conversations. Books include a city planner, pawn master, buddhist nun, urban farmer, police man and more. Pre-registration required. 1-4pm at GVPL (735 Broughton) and AGGV (1040 Moss). Free. 250-413-0388 / 250384-4171 ext 0.
SUN. NOV. 4 PUMPKIN SMASH - Carve it, then compost it! Instead of letting your jack-o-lantern haunt Hartland Landfill, give it a proper burial in Thrifty Foods' compost bin. Games and prizes with all donations going to the Greater Victoria Compost Education Centre. 10am-3pm at Thrifty Foods (1495 Admirals). By donation. 250-386-9676.
NUTS ABOUT SQUIRRELS - What animal leaps from towering trees and runs as fast as 20 km/h? Drop in for squirrel day and join the all-ages fun with puppet shows at 11:30am and 1:30pm, and walks at noon and 2pm. 11am-3pm at the Francis/King Nature Centre (off Munn Road). Free. 250-478-3344.
WED. NOV. 7 YOUNLIMITED DOWNTOWN WOMEN’S LEARN & NETWORK LUNCHEON - Great speakers, delicious lunch, business networking, connection and community. Join in workshops on everything from painting and creating community to loving your jiggly bits. 19+. 11:30am1:30pm at Union Club of British Columbia (805 Gordon). $27 early bird/$35 regular. 250-479-4235.
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MONDAY GUIDE EVENTS CALENDAR MUSIC THURS. NOV. 1 AIDAN KNIGHT -Victoria's own singer-songwriter turned bandleader releases his second album Small Reveal. With Andy Schauf. 7pm at Alix Goolden Hall (900 Johnson). $18 at ticketweb.ca, Ditch Records and Lyle's Place. SMOKY MIRROR - Victoria based emcee releases his second album Moving Mirrors. 8pm at Solstice Cafe. $10. BACH AND BUTTERFLIES - Harpist Josh Layne presents Bach and the premiere of his own composition "Cotton Butterfly." With Mark Haney. 7:30pm at Victoria Truth Centre (1201 Fort). $12/10. LUNASA - Performs Irish instrumental music. With Quinn Bachand. 7:30pm at Upstairs Cabaret. $28 at Ditch Records and Lyle's Place or brownpapertickets.com.
FRI. NOV. 2 MAD CHILD- Swollen Members member tours his debut solo album Dope Sick. 9pm at Sugar Nightclub.
FLASHBACK FREDDIE - Rock and roll dance and bbq dinner. 6pm at the Britannia Legion (780 Summit). $15. KELLY CAVANAGH- With her Easy Answers. 8pm at HermWith Dan Weisenberger, all sorts of guitars and original tunes. Open stage at 8pm at James Bay Coffee and Books (143 Menzies). By donation. THE TIN SEA-Roots with Peter Garder (Hawk & Steel). 7:30pm at Solstice Cafe (507 Pandora). $5. SONREAL AND RICH KIDD - Live music, 8pm at Felicitas Campus Pub. $8/10 (3800 Finnerty). JUST US-RAn eclectic presentation of folk, show tunes, operatic arias and Irish dancers. 7:30pm at St. Matthias Church (Richmond Ave). $15/10.
SAT. NOV. 3 LINDEN SINGERS- Present music for royalty, showcasing choral works sung at coronations, weddings and funerals of the royal family. 7:30pm at the Sooke Baptist Church and SUNDAY at 2:30pm at St. Mary's Church (1701 Elgin). $20/17. Free under 25.
Email your listing info to calendar@mondaymag.com or enter it online at mondaymag.com
SONGS FROM THE CLOISTERS Cappella Artemisia (Italy) performs music from Italian convents in the 16th and 17th centuries. Pre-concert talk at 7:10pm, concert at 8pm at Alix Goolden Hall (907 Pandora). $20/27 at Royal McPherson box office, 250-3866121 or rmts.bc.ca. THE MOJOS - Funk-pop-rock at Canoe Brewpub Harris Gilmore and the MoJos bring hard-drivin' blues, funky reggae and wicked jams to Swans Brewpub (506 Pandora). No cover.
SUN. NOV. 4 REMEMBRANCE CONCERT - The Sidney Concert Band presents a musical salute to veterans featuring the Saanich Peninsula Pipe Band and the Canadian Scottish Association Band. 2pm at Mary Winspear Centre (2243 Beacon, Sidney). By donation. VOICES INTIMAE - Presents a concert of Russian Orthodox choral music. 3pm at St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church (10030 3rd, Sidney). $20/15 at Ivy's, Larsen's, Long and McQuade CANUS -Hot jazz. 4-7pm at Hermann's Jazz Club (753 View). $12.
HECTOR'S FRIENDS -Seven men who sing bring an eclectic program of music and readings based on the ocean, ports and people of the sea. 2:30pm at Saanich Penninsula Church (9296 East Saanich). $10. STACEY EARLE AND MARK STUART -Americana-style folk tinged with blues, pop, country and rock. After open stage at 7:30pm at Norway House (1110 Hillside). $5. victoriafolkmusic.ca. INTERNATIONAL GUITAR NIGHT -The world's foremost acoustic guitarists come together to perform their latest compositions and exchange musical ideas in a public concert setting. 8pm at the UVic Farquhar Auditorium. $30/15 at 250721-8480 or auditorium.uvic.ca.
TUES. NOV.6 ANDRE PHILIPPE GAGNON - The one-man hit parade defends on the Royal Theatre. Tickets at rmts.bc.ca or 250-386-6121. BACK IN ACTION - Spectrum Community School Junior and Senior Concert Bands and Jazz Bands in their annual concert. 7pm at Spectrum's old gym (957 Burnside). By donation.
WED. NOV. 7 VOCAL JAZZ JAM - Bring three copies of your songs and come sing with professional accompaniment. 8pm at Hermann's Jazz Club (753 View). $10/5. MAUREEN WASHINGTONHalloween skankin' at Felicitas Live jazz and $5 wine specials. 6pm at the O Bistro at the Oswego Hotel (500 Oswego).
STAGE
A CLOSER WALK WITH PATSY CLINE-Dean Reagan's musical homage to one of the greatest women in country and western starring SaraJeanne Hosie and Wes Borg. Directed by Brian Richmond, choreographed by Treena Stubel. Opens THURSDAY at 8pm to Nov. 10 at the McPherson Theatre. Tickets at rmts.bc.ca or 250-386-6121.
WORDS TUES. NOV. 6
THURS. NOV. 1 THE HOBBIT-William Head on Stage presents JRR Tolkien's The Hobbit, adapted and directed by Kate Rubin. With a cast of 13 inmates and three local actresses. FRIDAY and SATURDAY at 7:30pm at 6000 William Head, inside the federal prison. Until November 10. Tickets are $20 and are available at ticketrocket.org or My Chosen Cafe (4480 Happy Valley). 19+. 250-391-7078.
AUTHOR KEVIN CHONG - Hear the tale of a Vancouver-based Asian-Canadian forced to resolve his ambivalence toward his hyphenated identity. 7:30pm at Open Space, (510 Fort). By donation. 250-383-8833.
WED. NOV. 7 POETRY NIGHT WEDNESDAYS READINGS AND BOOK FAIR - Open mic and featured poets including Janet Rogers, Linda Rogers, Yvonne Bloomer, Carla Funk, John Barton, Jeremy Loveday, Patrick Friesen and more. Also Nov. 14 and 21. 7pm at The Well (821 Fort). $6. 250-590-4995.
GALLERIES THURS. NOV. 1 GREATER VICTORIA PUBLIC LIBRARY - See Katrina Pavlovsky's photographic images: bold, beautiful and inspired statements of nature and the sacred. Opening 10am-9pm. To Nov. 30 at 1442 Monterey.
FRI. NOV. 2 XCHANGES GALLERY - Eva Campbell's Reflections on Service: Paintings About Canadian Service Men and Women. Opening reception 7pm. To Nov. 25 at 2333 Government.
SAT. NOV. 3 POLYCHROME FINE ARTS GALLERY - Hudson's Bay Journals a poem by David Barton, illustrations by Jennifer Wise. 7-9pm at 977-A Fort.
MON. NOV. 5 ECLECTIC GALLERY - Small Works Show, featuring Pat Martin Bates, Alllison Brodie, Taryn Coulson, Jennifer McIntyre, Wendy Oppelt, Irma Soltonovich, Sharon Stone and more. To Jan. 5 at 2170 Oak Bay.
MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7 mondaymag.com
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like a fruit smoothie, yet provide optimal levels of vital and essential Omega-3 EPA/ DHA to bring you vibrant health and energy. Recent studies show that Barlean’s Omega Swirl is 9 times more bio-available than regular fish oil. 454 g
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Promote healthy digestion. Turmeric is used in herbal medicine as an aid for healthy digestion. Known as the “King of Herbs” in Ayurvedic medicine, Turmeric has been used in traditional herbal systems for thousands of years. At New Chapter, we truly believe that Turmeric is one of the world’s most important herbs.
237 ml
$
Pain relief + repair. Results in 7-10 days guaranteed Enter to win a free foam roller with everyy purchase p
$
25
2O OFF
Entire Pain Re Relief Line
Enerex Oil of O Oregano
Healthy holiday recipes
Enerex Oil of Oregano is a powerful antioxidant. Our pure & wild oregano oil contains a minimum of 80% carvacrol (a phenolic compound used in fungicides) and is blended with organic olive oil. The blend is highly potent at 40% oregano and 60% olive.
Must Have Been Something I Ate spins salads into t PMS cures, tturns oatmeal t l iinto t a sleep aid and transforms kelp into a weight loss wonder. This go-to-guide is your personalized resource for discovering the connection between the food you eat and how you look and feel. Whether you’re feeling blue or bloated, bitchy or blemished, this one-of-a-kind companion will become your solutionfinding BFF.
72 softgels
BONUS SIZE
20% MORE
$
80 g
20 $30 $
Genuine Health pain relief
• Tre Treats eczema, psoriasis, rosacea and pso dermatitis der • Can also be applied topically along with oral top treatment tre • GLA is not found in fish or flax oil
$
Supercritical Turmeric
Dr. Terry Willard, world renowned Clinical Master Herbalist and Mycologist will be speaking on the amazing properties of mushrooms – Reishi, Coriolus, Cordyceps. Learn what mushrooms inhibit cancer cell growth and triple survival rates for people receiving chemo and radiation. Find out what other mushrooms can improve heart health, increase energy and relieve insomnia. Seating is limited. Please sign up at the store.
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Beautiful skin begins with Barlean’s Fish Omega Swirls look and taste GLA SKIN OIL
CIH, PhD
1:00 - 3:00 p.m.
$
360 g
Barlean’s Fish Omega Swirls
Dr. Terry Willard
Wednesday, Nov. 14th
30 g
100 tablets
60 softgels/30 ml
20
GREAT GIFT IDEA
2199
$
While supplies last
1599
$
Sukin Skin care
Quick D
“Skincare that doesn’t cost the earth™ www.sukinorganics.com Sukin boasts a blend of active botanicals, essential oils and natural ingredients that have been carefully selected to restore the natural vitality and radiance of you your skin.
Vitamin D deficiency is one of the most prevalent nutrient deficiencies for people living outside of the tropics. • Potent immune support • Bone and joint health • Lowest cost per serving • Convenient and easy to take
Buy one get the second nd
Buy one get the second
Buy one get the second
40% OFF
40% OFF
40% OFF
Wild Rose medicinal mushrooms 5 Mushroom Blend, Reishi, Cordycepts & Chaga 100g
RSVP to 250-590-5524 or info@myhealthessentials.ca
101-300 300 Gorge Road Westt (Next to Il Greco Restaurant) 101-3 250.590.5524 50.590.5524 • myhealthessentials.ca 25
Til licu m
Rd .
Prices in effect November 1st - November 28th, 2012
Gorge Rd. West
For updates on upcoming seminars and in-store specials, follow us on facebook. Fo [20]
MONDAY MAGAZINE NOVEMBER 1 - NOVEMBER 7, 2012 mondaymag.com