BOISE WEEKLY M A RC H 2 8 – A P R I L 3 , 2 0 1 8
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Casa Castle
City officials preserve Idaho artist James Castle’s historic home
LOCA L A N D I N D E PE N D E N T
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Listen Up
Treefort musicians take activist stances on stage
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This Is Bull
Bryan Anthony Moore’s exhibition Brazen Bull denounces Trump politics FREE TAKE ONE!
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BOISE WEEKLY.COM
BOISEweekly STAFF Publisher: Sally Freeman sally@boiseweekly.com Editorial Editor: Amy Atkins amy@boiseweekly.com News Editor: George Prentice
PUBLISHER’S NOTE GRATITUDE
george@boiseweekly.com Senior Staff Writer: Harrison Berry harrison@boiseweekly.com Staff Writer: Lex Nelson lex@boiseweekly.com Listings Editor: Jay Vail Listings: calendar@boiseweekly.com Contributing Writers: Minerva Jayne, David Kirkpatrick Interns:
We would like to express our sincere gratitude to Amy Atkins, longtime friend and colleague of Boise Weekly, for her dedication and service. She has worked at Boise Weekly for over 15 years in varying capacities, and will continue to be part of our family. Her departure is a result of a necessary staff reduction and she will be greatly missed. –Sally Freeman, Publisher
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For this week’s issue I spent some time chatting with Byron Folwell and Rachel Reichert. He’s a designer/architect at Boisebased Studio Maelstrom, and she’s the cultural sites manager at the Boise City Department of Arts and History. Together, they’ve toiled on the much-anticipated revitalization of the residence at 5015 Eugene Street, better known as The Castle House, in advance of a monthlong celebration of enigmatic Idaho artist James Castle. The festivities will include the grand opening of the house, where Castle crafted artwork that now hangs at the Whitney Museum of Art of American Art in New York City and the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. (pages 6 and 7). Speaking of history, I also have an exclusive report on how the owners of the Boise bookstore Rediscovered Books will soon take over operations of Rainbow Books on State Street (page 6), and you can read my dicussion with Gene Peacock, the new Zoo Boise director, on the Friday, April 6, groundbreaking for the zoo’s Gorongosa Park exhibit on page 13. In music news, Harrison Berry reports on the recent appearances of the always-provocative band Pussy Riot and musician/ activist Lido Pimienta—known for asking her audience to allow LGBTQ attendees and women of color to come closer to the stage—at Treefort 2018 (page 13). Finally, Lex Nelson visits a new Garden City winery, Par Terre, owned and operated by former professional dancers Mallory and Travis Walker (page 18) and a new College of Idaho art exhibition (page 16). Find all this and more in the following pages.
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ARTIST: Rachel Teannalach TITLE: “Live Work” MEDIUM: Oil charcoal and wax on linen ARTIST STATEMENT: Rachel Teannalach is a contemporary landscape painter who loves finding beauty in unexpected (and expected) places. Come see her large-scale Idaho landscapes, “Portals,” at a one-night Boise viewing on April 5th. Beside Bardenay, 5-8pm. More at www.teannalach.com.
Andy and Debi Hedden-Nicely. Larry Ragan had a lot to do with it, too. Boise Weekly is an independently owned and operated newspaper. ISSN 1944-6314 (print) ISSN 1944-6322 (online)
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SUBMIT Boise Weekly publishes original local artwork on its cover each week. One stipulation of publication is that the piece must be donated to BW’s annual charity art auction in November. A portion of the proceeds from the auction are reinvested in the local arts community through a series of private grants for which all artists are eligible to apply. Cover artists will also receive 30 percent of the final auction bid on their piece. To submit your artwork for BW’s cover, bring it to BWHQ at 523 Broad St. All original mediums are accepted. Thirty days from your submission date, your work will be ready for pick up if it’s not chosen to be featured on the cover. Work not picked up within six weeks of submission will be discarded.
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LIVE COMEDY 1 9 2 H MARC
What you missed this week in the digital world.
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DISH DELISH Foodfort was full of surprises, with chef Hugh Acheson cooking beef heart and a team of international chefs dishing on their global inspirations. Read more at Food/Food News.
STORIES OF THEIR LIVES Authors Chelsea Bolan, Lidia Yuknavitch and Adam Voith read some of their work and discussed what it means to be an outsider during Storyfort. Read more at Arts & Culture/Lit.
HEADS OF THE CLASS Boise High students commandeered the classrooms March 21 for their annual symposium, delivering wide-ranging presentations on social justice. Read more at News/Citydesk.
OPINION
BOISE WEEKLY.COM
MAIL/OPINION ROILED AT RISCH On November 13, 2013, according to Federal Election Commission records, Idaho U.S. Sen. Jim Risch met with three lobbyists from Mercury Public Affairs: Vin Weber, Ed Kutler and Michael McSherry. They were lobbying on behalf of the European Centre for a Modern Ukraine, a “think tank” set up by Paul Manafort and Rick Gates to front for Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych and his pro-Russia Party of Regions. On December 4, 2013, Weber, Kutler and McSherry each contributed $1,000 to the Jim Risch for U.S. Senate Committee. In early 2014, Mercury was reimbursed for the lobbyists’ contributions with funds laundered through the ECFMU, which can be traced back to Ukrainian/ Russian oligarchs. U.S. law prohibits elected officials from receiving campaign contributions from foreign nationals, or contributions made by one person in the name of another. As a member of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Risch must be particularly aware of these restrictions, yet he accepted the money. Risch is said to be in line to chair this committee. Should someone who took $3,000 from questionable sources through Paul Manafort’s straw-donor scheme be allowed to assume a seat once occupied with integrity by Idaho’s Frank Church and Arkansas’ William Fulbright? —Gary E. Richardson
... ANDRUS VS. RISCH In the final hours before the budget deadline, the U.S. Congress attempted to pass
an omnibus spending bill to keep the federal government running, but Idaho GOP Sen. Jim Risch stalled the bill March 22, when he insisted on removing a provision renaming thousands of acres of Central Idaho wilderness the Cecil D. Andrus-White Clouds Wilderness. Risch and the late Andrus, who served 14 years as Idaho Governor and four years as the U.S. Secretary of Interior, had a history of political friction. In the end, the bill passed with the provision intact, and was signed into law by President Donald Trump. Governor Andrus’ mark upon this state is indelible and he served his country and Idaho with foresight, integrity and charm. It’s unfortunate that Sen. Risch’s vision is too narrow to recognize Governor Andrus’ stature and contributions to our state. History will show which of them will be remembered as a great Idahoan and which will not. —Dave Bieter, Boise Mayor Congressman Simpson is truly pleased that his language to name the White Clouds after Gov. Andrus was signed into law today. Former Gov. Cecil Andrus is extremely deserving of such honor and distinction. —Nick Wallace, Press Secretary for Idaho Congressman Mike Simpson The elected representatives from District 19 are perplexed over Sen. Risch’s divisive move to hold up an appropriations bill to keep the United States government functioning in an effort to forestall this honor for Gov. Andrus. We thank Congressman Simpson for his nonpar-
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tisan wisdom in working to see this fitting honor to come to fruition. —Cherie Buckner-Webb, Idaho Senate Assistant Minority Leader; Mat Erpelding, House Minority Leader; Melissa Wintrow, Representative
OUTRAGE OVER HB 638 AND SB 1234 On March 22, Governor C.L. “Butch” Otter signed House Bill 638, also known as the Abortion Complications Reporting Act, into law. The new law will require providers to report a number of medical conditions, including conditions that have no relationship to abortions, such as breast cancer, a missed ectopic pregnancy or having the placenta covering the cervix in a future pregnancy. Additionally, Otter signed into law Senate Bill 1243, which requires providers to inform patients of where they can obtain assistance in reversing a medication abortion. Governor Otter, your decision to sign immoral and likely unconstitutional bills is irresponsible and abhorrent. Together, this legislation shows that Idaho politicians are committed to putting every barrier possible between a woman and her legal health care. These bills shouldn’t have passed in the first place as they have no basis in science and medicine. We deserve more. The State of Idaho recently defended itself against two politically motivated abortion restrictions in court and lost....Why Idaho legislators and the Governor decided to risk yet another costly lawsuit by passing legally questionable laws like HB 638 and SB 1243 is unclear and foolish. The bottom line is that politicians should never come between a woman and her doctor, but they seem committed to doing just that. —Mistie Tolman, Idaho Legislative Director of Planned Parenthood Votes Northwest and Hawaii BOISEweekly c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c 5
CITYDESK
IMAG ES © 2018 JAMES CASTLE COLLECTION AND ARCHIVE L.P.
GEORGE PRENTICE
NEWS
If all goes as planned, Rediscovered will take over operations of Rainbow on Sunday, April 1.
REDISCOVERED BOOKS BRANCHES OUT WITH PURCHASE OF RAINBOW BOOKS Rainbows are a scientific phenomenon caused by the reflection, refraction and dispersion of light, and usually show up after stormy weather. Much like its namesake, Rainbow Books, the secondhand bookstore on State Street, has weathered the storm of its sale and will emerge with doors open to a bright future. The new owners, who also own Rediscovered Books on Eighth Street, plan to keep Rainbow Books operational as they integrate it into their business. “We actually had started talking about purchasing a second location. We spent a lot of time last year looking at different places,” said Laura DeLaney who, who owns Rediscovered along with her husband Bruce. “Then, by happenstance, we heard that Rainbow was available. It was the right decision for a lot of reasons.” Rainbow opened its doors in 1977, and Laurie Deines purchased the store in 1989, adding bookshelves handcrafted by her husband and eventually filling the store to the brim with literature. If all goes as planned, Rediscovered will take over operations of Rainbow on Sunday, April 1. “I don’t think many people knew Rainbow was for sale,” said DeLaney. “We couldn’t be happier about keeping their tradition alive. The first thing I really want to do is to spend time getting to know the people who are the community of Rainbow.” The DeLaneys’ purchase includes the twostory building at 1310 State St., built in 1956, and its full inventory. DeLaney could only guess at how many books are still on shelves there. “I think it’s 26,000 books. One of our first projects will be to find out what’s there. It’s a really large project, but it’s also a bit like Christmas,” she said. DeLaney said it was crucial to keep longtime Rainbow Books employee Julia Rose behind the counter at the State Street store, and added that she plans to have Rose alternate with current Rediscovered staff at the Eighth Street location to learn about the culture and customer base of each store. “Boise has been very good to Rediscovered. We like to think that keeping Rainbow open is being good to Boise,” said DeLaney. —George Prentice 6 c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c BOISEweekly
James Castle at his desk in his cottage trailer, courtesy of James Castle Collection and Archive, L.P.
James Castle’s image of his Eugene Street home, Circa 1970. courtesy of James Castle Collection and Archive L.P.
Eugene Street house in winter, Circa 1940, courtesy of James Castle Collection and Archive L.P.
THE LEGACY OF JAMES CASTLE: THE MAN, THE MYSTERY AND NOW THE LANDMARK Boise prepares for a celebration of the enigmatic artist GEORGE PRENTICE A unique team of architects, designers and historians—think of them as something akin to The Avengers minus the capes, superpowers and melodrama—is tackling one of the most ambitious preservation challenges in Boise history. “The city has never done anything like this before. In fact, no one in the state of Idaho has done anything like this before,” said Rachel Reichert, Cultural Sites Manger for Boise City Department of Arts and History. “This” began when the city purchased a ramshackle cottage at 5015 Eugene St. in 2015, intending to restore and preserve it. The tiny abode is known as the Castle House, named for the artist James Castle, who lived there from 1931 to 1977. Castle, one of seven children, was born in September 1899, two months premature. Profoundly deaf, he mainly communicated through art, using soot, spit and pigments squeezed from saturated crepe paper to create likenesses of buildings and landscapes. Largely eschewing brushes and pencils, he fashioned tools from discarded sticks and broken fountain pens, but it wasn’t until Castle was in his 50s that his work was recognized as extraordinary. The national attention came on the heels of a visit from his nephew, Bob Beach, a student at the Museum Art School in Portland, Oregon, at the time. When Beach returned to Portland, he brought tales of his uncle’s unique creations to his professors. Exhibitions and receptions across
the Pacific Northwest soon followed, and the popularity of Castle’s work continued to grow through the 1960s and ’70s. Following Castle’s death in 1977, interest in his art intensified, but his relatives, finding the demands for more access overwhelming, decided to keep the collection out of the public eye for two decades. In the 1990s, a rare exhibition of Castle’s work at the Outsider Art Fair in New York City took the Manhattan art scene by storm, inspiring international exhibitions as far away as Madrid, Spain, and Venice, Italy. “Today, when you’re talking to a stranger about James Castle, it doesn’t take too long to get their interest when you remind them his work hangs in the Smithsonian and The Whitney Museum of American Art,” said Reichert. “That always sparks the conversation.” Reichert and her colleagues at Boise City Hall have been working closely with Boisebased Studio Maelstrom—specialists in architecture, residential design and public art—to bring life back to the Castle House. Studio Maelstrom principal Byron Folwell, said he has worked on a wide range of high-profile architectural and public art projects for the past 15 years, but nothing has excited him more than the Castle House. “I grew up here, and if you were lucky enough to have a particularly hip art teacher, you may have been introduced to James Castle’s
work,” said Folwell. “For me, that began in junior high.” For many, the Castle House has been a long-standing mystery. The fact that in his later years Castle spent most of his days in the shed and trailer just outside the main house only added to its legend. To say the home, trailer and shed have fallen into disrepair over the years is a major understatement. “It’s a miracle that the shed is even standing, considering the brutal winters that it endured,” said Folwell. The Department of Arts and History had a keen interest in preserving the Castle House, and in 2015 the city purchased the property for $200,000, following a marathon year and a half of negotiations. Though a milestone for the department, that purchase was only the beginning of a project that has since transformed the site into a destination celebrating Castle’s legacy. So far, the cost of the renovation has been nearly $1.5 million, and a monthlong celebration is planned in April for its grand opening. In anticipation of the event, which will include a four-day symposium (Wednesday, April 25, to Saturday, April 28), on Castle entitled “A Place Called Home” and culminate with the Castle House debut on April 28, Boise Weekly sat down with Folwell and Reichert to talk about the project. BOISE WEEKLY.COM
The James Castle House has been a puzzle for many of us. Is it fair to say it was a bit of a mess? Reichert: When we purchased the property, the first six months of my job was to literally clean the house—with extreme care. For the next year and a half, Byron and I were a two-person team, researching the house and really trying to understand the bones about that space. Quite frankly, when the city purchased the property, the house didn’t resemble anything the Castles would have known when James lived there. So, is it your intention to turn back the clock or to create something new that preserves the memory of James Castle? Reichert: It’s so complex, because there’s really no template to turn to for this type of preservation. Very soon, our thoughts turned to the view of the house. What was it like in the 1930s, ’40s or ’50s to stand on that corner of Eugene and Castle [streets, the latter named for the artist] and see this home with a lovely lawn? Folwell: We’ve had this unique opportunity to be organic about the process and to identify what we had with some real investigative, historical work. We’re not talking about Victorian architectural language here. This is the architectural language of the working class. This house started its life as a one-room gabled structure, only about 12 feet wide and 26 feet long. This little building was never intended to last so long, but in the intervening years, the home changed to meet the challenges of the family. All those changes become elements of storytelling.
where we believe James Castle lived and worked from 1932 to about 1963. When the family bought a trailer, Castle worked and lived there until his passing in 1977. I’ve heard the shed is in poor condition. Folwell: Very poor. It currently has a dirt floor, and it has never been winterized. We have to view the shed as a piece of art rather than a piece of architecture. Reichert: Byron and I have been grappling with what to do. Do we replace all of the shed’s rotten boards? Do we put it on a new foundation? It’s our goal to work with ARG Conservation Services from San Francisco. They have a lot of experience on projects with similar challenges. They’ll be here in Boise in a couple of weeks to build an assessment and treatment plan. Folwell: There are layers and layers and layers of wallpaper, cardboard, other papers and even some sheetrock stuffing the walls of the shed. Like I said, it’s more art than architecture. Paint me a word picture o how I might spend a couple of hours visiting the newly-renovated Castle House once it’s open to the public. Reichert: Right out of the gate, it will be an interactive experience. We’ll have daily tours walking through the home, the grounds, even the shed, learning about James Castle and the history of the site. It’s an amazing, deep dive into early architecture. For instance, we found up to 13 wallpaper patterns on the walls. Plus, we’ll have some special artifacts on loan from the James Castle Collection and Archive.
Let’s not forget someone will once again be Let’s talk about the shed and trailer. living in the Castle House, at least temporarily. Folwell: The shed is still on the property. The Reichert: That’s right. [With] our artist-intrailer has been moved to a storage unit, waiting residence program, an artist will be living there in for treatment. Reichert: The shed is a small wooden structure May, June and July. We’re looking at applications
right now. I give a lot of credit to Mayor [Dave] Bieter, because as soon as we committed to saving the Castle House, he said we had to create an artist-in-residence program there. Folwell: A pocket door, sliding into the wall, will separate the residence from the rest of the house. It’s about 900 square feet: a studio bedroom, kitchenette, restroom and private artist’s entrance. The James Castle celebration really hits its stride on Wednesday, April 25. Reichert: Our “A Place Called Home” symposium begins with a field trip to Garden Valley and the birthplace of James Castle. The next two days, we’ll have a series of events at the Egyptian Theatre and the Linen Building. They’ll feature preservationists, scholars and artists from across the nation. Members of the Castle family will also join us on stage to share their experiences. Then the public gets its first look on Saturday, April 28, when the Castle House is officially opened, and we’ll have a neighborhood block party that same day on Eugene Street. Folwell: When I moved away from the world of commercial architecture, I was really looking for projects that might elevate into something more meaningful or beautiful. I’m hesitant to try to pin down who James Castle was, because the sophistication of his work is seemingly endless. And after all of this intensity, I’m okay keeping him a bit of myth in my mind for now. Are you ready to exhale now? Reichert: Are you kidding? We’re still inhaling. The construction is done. Now, it’s all about the programming. Folwell: We’ve checked a lot of boxes, but we have a few more still to check. We’re very interested in the future of the shed and the trailer. We hope the public is, too.
The public will get its first tours of the James Castle House (left and center) on Saturday, April 28, when the City of Boise will also host a neighborhood block party on Eugene Street. Studio Maelstrom principal Byron Folwell and Rachel Reichert, Cultural Sites Manger at Boise City Dept. of Arts & History (right).
“We have had enough–enough suffering, enough fear, enough pain, enough lives lost.”
HARRISON BERRY
NEWS
CITYDESK
MARCHING TOWARD CHANGE Most of the Idaho Legislature wasn’t anywhere near the Idaho Statehouse Saturday, March 24, but any lawmaker who opposes gun control and has intentions to hold his or her office for a considerable amount of time might want to heed the warning from thousands of voters-to-be on the steps of the Capitol. “Vote them out; vote them out; vote them out,” chanted the crowd of approximately 5,000 at the demonstration, one of hundreds of March for Our Lives rallies across the planet that day, calling for stricter controls on firearms. The history-making difference for these particular rallies is that the overwhelming number of attendees were students, not yet old enough to vote but anxious to have their say in the political arena. “We have had enough–enough suffering, enough fear, enough pain, enough lives lost, enough childless parents and spouseless widows,” said Ryley, a senior at Capitol High School. “Enough is enough.” The cry of “enough is enough” was repeated in at least seven similar rallies across Idaho and hundreds more across the U.S. And there was another duplicated refrain: “Register to vote and go to the polls.” “For those men and women out there marinating in their ignorance and hypocrisy, in the pocket of the [National Rifle Association], my generation is coming and we’re just getting started,” said Ryley. Hundreds of hand-crafted signs, most of them directed at politicians, were waved during the Boise demonstration. Some read: “Thoughts and prayers won’t save me from bullets.” “Columbine, Newtown, Parkland. No more.” “Your silence is killing us.” In the days that followed, attendees of the March for Our Lives Boise rally continued to fill social media with calls to action. “It was one of the most inspiring days of our lives,” wrote Jeffrey Fackler on the March for Our Lives Facebook page. “This was the day that I finally felt I have truly lived,” wrote Paulina Garcia. “It was worth the five-hour drive to Boise,” wrote Sheila Plowman. —George Prentice
BOISE WEEKLY.COM
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CALENDAR WEDNESDAY MARCH 28 Festival & Events CITY OF NAMPA MEMORIAL DAY CEREMONY—Honor the men and women who were in the service for our country and many who made the supreme sacrifice of giving their lives so that we might live in freedom. Walking tours of the cemetery will acquaint the public with of some of Kohlerlawn’s veterans. 10 a.m.-noon. FREE. Kohlerlawn Cemetery, 76 Sixth St. N., Nampa, 208-468-5898.
On Stage COMEDY OPEN MIC—7:30 p.m. FREE. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise.com.
NO GREATER LOVE—Join Nampa First Church of the Nazarene for an Easter musical depicting the passion of Christ. For tickets, call or visit itickets.com. March 28-30 7 p.m. $5. Nampa First Church of the Nazarene, 601 16th Ave S., Nampa, 208-466-3549, nfcnaz. org. OPERA IDAHO SPECIAL SCREENING: A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE—As a preview to presenting the full opera by André Previn April 6 and April 8, Opera Idaho is proud to present the 1951 movie version, which won four Academy Awards and launched Marlon Brando’s screen career. Get your tickets online. 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. $9. Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., Boise, 208-387-1273, operaidaho.org.
Art ABERTZALEAK: SACRIFICE AND HONOR—10 a.m.-4 p.m. FREE-$5. Basque Museum and Cultural Center, 611 Grove St., Boise, 208343-2671, basquemuseum.com.
FRIDAY, MARCH 30
BRYAN ANTHONY MOORE: BRAZEN BULL, A NATURAL MYTHSTORY OF NORTH AMERICA—Through April 30. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Rosenthal Gallery, 2112 E. Cleveland Blvd., Caldwell, 208-459-5321, collegeofidaho. edu/rosenthalgallery. CHERYL K. SHURTLEFF: THE ROAD IS WIDER THAN LONG— Through May 20. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-3458330, boiseartmuseum.org. CONSIDER THE SOURCE— Through Oct. 14. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-3458330, boiseartmuseum.org. DEBRA BONSACK: MY HAPPY PLACE—Through April 2. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. FREE. Crossings Winery, 1289 W. Madison Ave., Glenns Ferry, 208-366-2313, bonsackgallery.com. FRANK GOITIA: STEP INTO MY PAST, LIFE IN A BASQUE NEIGHBORHOOD—Through May 29. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Boise State
Department of Computer Science, 777 W. Main St., Clearwater Building, Boise, 208-426-5766, facebook.com/bsufinearts. HEATHER CARSON: SCULPTED LIGHT—Through July 22. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
NANCY SATHRE-VOGEL: ELEGANT ANTIQUITY, CHAMPLEVÉ METAL JEWELRY—Through March 31. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Art Source Gallery, 1015 W. Main St., Boise, 208-331-3374, artsourcegallery.com. THE RESCUED FILM PROJECT EXHIBITION—Through April 29. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Gem Center for the Arts, 2417 W. Bank Drive, Boise, 208-991-0984, gemcenterforthearts.com.
AN INTENTIONAL EYE: SELECT GIFTS FROM WILFRED DAVIS FLETCHER—Through April 14. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
Citizen
JO HAMILTON: KNOTS IN TIME— Through May 13. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-3458330, boiseartmuseum.org. MAPPING THE PRESENT: SELECTIONS FROM THE DRIEK AND MICHAEL ZIRINSKY COLLECTION—Through July 17. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
SATURDAY, MARCH 31
GOWEN FIELD F35A ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STUDY COMMENT PERIOD—Comments needed for the U.S. Air Force Environmental Impact Statement for 18 F-35A war planes at Gowen Field. Comment online or by mail: Christel Johnson, NGB/A4AM, Shepperd Hall, 3501 Fetchet Ave., Joint Base Andrews, MD 207625157. Through April 6. FREE. ANGF35EIS.com.
MARCH TO END HUNGER/CAN CASTLE DRIVE—Help the Boise Rescue Mission Ministries during their seventh annual Can Castle Contest. This is an opportunity for your business, church or family to collect cans of food and other non-perishables to help feed less fortunate men, women and children in our community. Each participating organization will use the items you collect to build a CAN CASTLE creation and compete in the contest. Visit boiserm.org/event/castle for details. Through March 31. By donation. Boise Rescue Mission Ministry Center and Warehouse, 308 S. 24th St., Boise, 208-3432389, boiserm.org/event/castle.
Kids & Teens INSPIRE IDAHO EXPERIENCE TOUR—Join the Innovation Collective, University of Idaho and experts from around the country trained in Apple’s Swift programming language for the Inspire Idaho Experience Tour. Enjoy a hands-on look at drone and robot programming
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, MARCH 28-29 COURTESY OPER A IDAHO
1 2 3 RF. C O M
COURTESY FO RM & FUNCTION Get your brew on.
Snuggle in with your furry friend.
Are you opera-ready?
HOMEBREW LIKE A BOSS
BOOKS AND BARKS
GEARING UP FOR THE OPERA
Alternative coffee brewing methods are on the rise, and unique small-batch roasts with flavor notes like rosewater and grapefruit have been sweeping the market, bringing “coffee couture” to Boise. As many shops around town can attest, coffee can get pretty sophisticated, with brew methods ranging from the simple pour over to the more sophisticated coffee vacuum. To help coffee lovers make sense of it all, local roaster Form & Function is hosting a workshop on how to brew the best batches on multiple devices, including Aeropress and Kalita Wave, which produces an upscale version of the pour over. To sweeten the deal, your class fee includes a bag of your choice of beans to take home. 7:30 p.m., $35, Form and Function, 511 W. Broad St., 208922-7824, formandfunctioncoffee.com.
At Rediscovered Books during Books and Barks, your four-legged friend will be able to listen to a reading of Ladybug Girl and the Rescue Dogs, a story about a young girl named Lulu who embarks on a mission to find all the dogs at a pet-adoption fair loving homes. Scout the Police Dog will also be at the event to interact with fans for photo ops and will “sign” copies the book he cameoed in, Loyal by Rebecca Ascher-Walsh, with his paw print from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Plus, the author of Walking with Peety, Eric O’Grey, will be there for a meet and greet from noon to 2 p.m., and a Boise Bully Breeds Ambassador will make an appearance from 1-2 p.m. The event is open to the public, with all breeds and ages welcome. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., FREE, Rediscovered Books, 180 N. Eighth St., 208-376-4229, rdbooks.org.
Drinks, food and music make a happy marriage, and you can enjoy all three at two events put on by Opera Idaho in anticipation of its upcoming performance of Andre Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire. First, the company will host two screenings of the 1951 film its performance is based on at the Egyptian Theatre on Wednesday, March 28, so even those not planning to attend the opera may enjoy the show. Next, the group will offer two Operatini sessions with the theme “I Want Magic” in the Sapphire Room on Thursday, March 29. Attendees will enjoy a dinner of chicken picatta and a no host bar with cocktails crafted by a local mixologist. The opera itself will take place in April. Operatini: 5:30 and 8:15 p.m., $22-$30, Sapphire Room, 2900 W. Chinden Blvd., 208-343-1871, riversideboise.com. Screening: 1 and 7 p.m., $9, Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., 208-345-0454, egyptiantheatre.org.
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BOISE WEEKLY.COM
CALENDAR while learning about the InspireID program and how you can receive high tech work-skill training at little to no cost. No registration required. 7:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. FREE. University of Idaho Boise Legacy Pointe Center, 322 E. Front St., Boise, 208-334-2999.,inspireidaho.com. STREAM AT THE WATERSHED SPRING BREAK DROP-IN PROGRAM—Participate in hands-on STREAM (Science, Technology, Reading, Engineering, Art and Math) activities during spring break. Explore a stream table and build block towers, make a boat and float it in the shallow simulated river, or make outdoor art. At 10:30 a.m. each day, meet Raptor Ambassadors from the Morley Nelson Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area. At 11 a.m., take a tour of the water renewal facility; closed-toe shoes required. For ages 4 and older. Through March 30, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. FREE. Boise WaterShed, 11818 W. Joplin Road, Boise, 208-608-7300, boiseenvironmentaleducation.org.
Odds & Ends COMEDYSPORTZ BOISE REC LEAGUE OPEN HOUSE—ComedySportz Boise is excited to announce its Rec League. Have you ever sat in an improv show and thought, “I’d like to play that game”? No experience needed; they’ll teach the games. After this open house, they’ll start hosting an Improv Jam on Wednesdays, at 8 p.m., for a $5 cover charge. For ages 16 and older. 8 p.m. FREE. ComedySportz Boise, 4619 Emerald St., Boise, 208-991-4746, boisecomedy. com. STAR WARS DESTINY TOURNAMENT—Indulge your space fancies by playing one of the best card games around, Star Wars Destiny, with like-minded individuals looking to have fun. Don’t know the game yet and want to learn how to play? All About Games staff will gladly help you with that. 7-11 p.m. $5. All About Games, 7079 Overland Road, Boise, 208-343-5653, allaboutgamesboise.com.
FRIDAY-SATURDAY, MARCH 30-31
THURSDAY MARCH 29 On Stage COMEDY OPEN MIC WITH SOPHIE HUGHES—9:30 p.m. FREE. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise.com. LAUGH OUT CANCER COMEDY BENEFIT WITH NATHON BRANNON—8 p.m. $15. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208941-2459, liquidboise.com.
YOUR CAR IS HIGH TECH. IS YOUR TECHNICIAN? Computerized Diagnostic Engine Analyzer Late Model Volkswagen & Audi Service & Repair Scheduled Factory Maintenance
Jeff’s Import Auto 4433 Adams Street Garden City • 376-4686 jeffsimportautowerks.com
NO GREATER LOVE—Join Nampa First Church of the Nazarene for an Easter musical depicting the passion of Christ. For tickets, call or visit itickets.com. Through March 30. 7 p.m. $5. Nampa First Church of the Nazarene, 601 16th Ave S., Nampa, 208-4663549, nfcnaz.org.
1 2 3 RF. C O M
OPERA IDAHO OPERATINI: I WANT MAGIC—With the cast of Opera Idaho’s upcoming production of André Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire. 5:30 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. $22-$30. Sapphire Room, 2900 W. Chinden Blvd., Garden City, 208-343-1871, 1718operaidaho.org.
Workshops & Classes ENGLISH CONVERSATION CLUB—Are you an English Language Learner looking for a fun, welcoming, non-judgmental space to practice your English? Then check out the English Conversation Club, held weekly on Thursdays. 6:30-7:30 p.m. FREE. Meridian Public Library, 1326 W. Cherry Lane, Meridian, 208-8884451, mld.org.
Art ABERTZALEAK: SACRIFICE AND HONOR—10 a.m.-4 p.m. FREE-$5. Basque Museum and Cultural Center, 611 Grove St., Boise, 208-343-2671, basquemuseum.com. It’s time to get hoppin’.
AN EGG-CELLENT EASTER IN BOISE Easter is fun in all its forms, and in Boise the emphasis is almost always on kids. In a nautical take on traditional easter egg hunts, Nampa Recreation Center will host an Easter Egg Swim on Saturday, March 31, complete with kayaks and a diving well. Stay dry at the Expo Idaho Easter Spring Fling Extravaganza the same night, where the first 100 adults through the doors will earn goodie bags. There will be over 22,000 eggs to hunt, plus a costume contest, prizes and a rock climbing wall. For adults there’s the Fatty’s Bar Bunny Ball, an “Easter Prefunk” event on Friday, March 30. In addition to an egg hunt, bartenders and a Wild 101 radio DJ will hand out plastic eggs stuffed with cash, free drink tokens and candy. Ladies will also receive free bunny ears. For more information including times, prices and full locations, search our online calendar at boiseweekly.com. BOISE WEEKLY.COM
BRYAN ANTHONY MOORE: BRAZEN BULL, A NATURAL MYTHSTORY OF NORTH AMERICA—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Rosenthal Gallery, 2112 E. Cleveland Blvd., Caldwell, 208459-5321, collegeofidaho.edu/ rosenthalgallery. CHERYL K. SHURTLEFF: THE ROAD IS WIDER THAN LONG—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. CONSIDER THE SOURCE—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
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CALENDAR DEBRA BONSACK: MY HAPPY PLACE—10 a.m.-8 p.m. FREE. Crossings Winery, 1289 W. Madison Ave., Glenns Ferry, 208-3662313, bonsackgallery.com. FRANK GOITIA: STEP INTO MY PAST, LIFE IN A BASQUE NEIGHBORHOOD—8 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Boise State Department of Computer Science, 777 W. Main St., Clearwater Building, Boise, 208-426-5766, facebook.com/ bsufinearts. HEATHER CARSON: SCULPTED LIGHT—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. AN INTENTIONAL EYE: SELECT GIFTS FROM WILFRED DAVIS FLETCHER—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. JO HAMILTON: KNOTS IN TIME—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. MAPPING THE PRESENT: SELECTIONS FROM THE DRIEK AND MICHAEL ZIRINSKY COLLECTION—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. NANCY SATHRE-VOGEL: ELEGANT ANTIQUITY, CHAMPLEVÉ METAL JEWELRY—10 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Art Source Gallery, 1015 W. Main St., Boise, 208-331-3374, artsourcegallery.com. PATRICK HUGHES: WORKS ON PAPER—Through April 28. Noon-4 p.m. FREE. Stewart Gallery, 2230 Main St., Boise, 208-433-0593, stewartgallery.com. THE RESCUED FILM PROJECT EXHIBITION—9 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Gem Center for the Arts, 2417 W. Bank Drive, Boise, 208-991-0984, gemcenterforthearts.com.
Talks & Lectures FINDING AND ACHIEVING TRUE LIFE BALANCE—Do you ever feel discouraged when it comes to achieving balance in different areas of your life? This workshop focuses on identifying the key areas of healthy life balance, assessing your current out-of-balance condition, and learning how to apply proven principles to achieve true balance. For ages 18 and older. 6-8 p.m. $15. Jack’s Urban Meeting Place, 1000 W. Myrtle St., Boise, 208639-6610, jumptruelifebalance. eventbrite.com. WINTER WILDLANDS LECTURE SERIES—Join the Boise River Enhancement Network to learn about their community-generated, forward-looking plan to improve water quality, aquatic and riparian habitat and stream channel function from Lucky Peak Dam to the Snake River. It’s a bird’s eye view of the current health of the river and a proposal to work cooperatively to enhance the ecosystem. Learn what needs to be done to improve
the river, and how you can be a part of meeting the needs of the river. In the Fish and Game Trophy Room. 7 p.m. FREE. Idaho Fish and Game Headquarters, 600 S. Walnut St., Boise, sierraclub.org/idaho.
also make reservations to enjoy the Thursday night Paella dinner with Chef’s whim pintxos and salad. 5-7 p.m. $20. The Basque Market, 608 W. Grove St., Boise, 208-433-1208, thebasquemarket.com.
Sports & Fitness
FRIDAY MARCH 30
AVALANCHE COMPANION RESCUE—Learn avalanche rescue skills to increase the likelihood of survival in an avalanche. 8 a.m.-6 p.m. $200. Idaho City Visitor’s Center, 100 S. Main St., Idaho City, 208473-6532, avyscience.com. THAI MASSAGE YOGA WORKSHOP—Join this demonstration of an ancient tradition that dates back to more than 900 years. Thai yoga massage is performed on a mat or a table fully clothed. 1-4 p.m. $150. Body Harmony Massage, 3137 S. Meridian Road, Ste. 110, Meridian, 208-392-2937, costculator.com/ workshop. YOGA WITH MARTHA—Join certified Yoga Teacher Martha for this gentle, invigorating and relaxing all-levels Yoga Basics Class. Mats provided. Must be 18 or older to participate. Call Molly at 208-3620181, ext. 135, or email mkumar@ adalib.org to secure your spot today. 6-7 p.m. FREE. Ada Community Library Victory Branch, 10664 W. Victory Road, Boise, 208-3620181, adalib.org/victory.
Citizen IDAHO HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION MEETING—The Idaho Human Rights Commission will meet to make decisions on the merits of administrative cases filed with the commission. In the second floor conference room. 3:30 p.m. FREE. Idaho Human Rights Commission, 317 W. Main St., Boise, 208-3342873, humanrights.idaho.gov.
Kids & Teens FIRST ROBOTICS IDAHO REGIONAL COMPETITION—In this high tech competition, high school teams from across Idaho and around the country compete in a fast paced 3 on 3-style competition. Teams compete with 120-pound robots of their own design combining the excitement of sport with the rigors of science and technology. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Taco Bell Arena, 1910 University Drive, Boise State campus, Boise, 208-426-1900. idahofrcregional.org. STREAM AT THE WATERSHED SPRING BREAK DROP-IN PROGRAM—10 a.m.-1 p.m. FREE. Boise WaterShed, 11818 W. Joplin Road, Boise, 208-608-7300, boiseenvironmentaleducation.org.
Food BASQUE MARKET SPRING ROSE RELEASE PARTY—Enjoy tasting five fresh and new Spanish Rosados. From lively and bright to fruity, floral or fresh, there will be something to satisfy every palate. Call to reserve your spot; you can
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On Stage COMEDIAN KATHLEEN MADIGAN: BOXED WINE AND BIGFOOT—Over Kathleen Madigan’s 25-year career, she has performed on nearly every standup television show ever made, including Leno, Letterman, Conan and Ferguson. Her third hour-long special, Madigan Again, is available exclusively on Netflix, and is now available on CD, DVD and audio or video download. 8 p.m. $34-$36. Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., Boise, 208-387-1273, egyptiantheatre.net. COMEDIAN NATHON BRANNON—8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $15. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise. com. COMEDYSPORTZ IMPROV—Two teams of comics battle it out for your laughs. Suitable for all ages. 7:30 p.m. $5-$10. ComedySportz Boise, 4619 Emerald St., Boise, 208-991-4746, boisecomedy.com. NO GREATER LOVE—Join Nampa First Church of the Nazarene for an Easter musical depicting the passion of Christ. For tickets, call or visit itickets.com. 7 p.m. $5. Nampa First Church of the Nazarene, 601 16th Ave S., Nampa, 208-4663549, nfcnaz.org. THE SOUND OF MUSIC INTERACTIVE MOVIE—Spectra by Comcast Spectacor, the provider of venue management at the Nampa Civic Center, presents The Sound of Music as the first of its new Interactive Movie Series. The evening starts with Sound of Music Trivia, followed by a costume contest, so go dressed as your favorite character, scene, object or song and try to win a prize. 6 p.m. $12-$15. Nampa Civic Center, 311 Third St. S., Nampa, 208-468-5555, nampaciviccenter.com. WAR PAINT—Nikoa Mak, Lady Delicious, Vanity Mizrahi, Nikki Grimm, Vice Squiwly Bones, and Chaz A Ratazz join Rari Doll in a spectacular drag production. Get tickets online or at either Treasure Valley Adam and Eve location. Your VIP ticket includes two Bacardi drink tickets and a chance of winning more Bacardi drink tickets throughout the night. 8:30 p.m. $10, $20 VIP. Balcony Club, 150 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-336-1313, thebalconyclub.com.
Workshops & Classes LEVEL 2 AVALANCHE COURSE: PRO1 PREP—This three-day course is tailored for the advanced and
experienced backcountry skier. It is intended to refresh your stability assessment skills and to augment your stability evaluation tools. This year, the course has been reformatted to prepare participants for successful conversion of this Level 2 to PRO1 certification. The AAA is allowing to convert Level 2 to PRO1 through 2019 after completing a 2-day Bridge course. 8 a.m.-6 p.m. $650. Idaho City Visitor’s Center, 100 S. Main St., Idaho City, 208473-6532, avyscience.com.
Art ABERTZALEAK: SACRIFICE AND HONOR—10 a.m.-4 p.m. FREE-$5. Basque Museum and Cultural Center, 611 Grove St., Boise, 208343-2671, basquemuseum.com. BRYAN ANTHONY MOORE: BRAZEN BULL, A NATURAL MYTHSTORY OF NORTH AMERICA—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Rosenthal Gallery, 2112 E. Cleveland Blvd., Caldwell, 208-459-5321, collegeofidaho.edu/rosenthalgallery. CHERYL K. SHURTLEFF: THE ROAD IS WIDER THAN LONG—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. CONSIDER THE SOURCE—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. DEBRA BONSACK: MY HAPPY PLACE—10 a.m.-8 p.m. FREE. Crossings Winery, 1289 W. Madison Ave., Glenns Ferry, 208-3662313, bonsackgallery.com.
PATRICK HUGHES: WORKS ON PAPER—Noon-4 p.m. FREE. Stewart Gallery, 2230 Main St., Boise, 208-433-0593, stewartgallery.com. THE RESCUED FILM PROJECT EXHIBITION—9 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Gem Center for the Arts, 2417 W. Bank Drive, Boise, 208-991-0984, gemcenterforthearts.com.
Kids & Teens FIRST ROBOTICS IDAHO REGIONAL COMPETITION—9 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Taco Bell Arena, 1910 University Drive, Boise State campus, Boise, 208-426-1900, idahofrcregional.org. MERIDIANCUE: MADAGASCAR, A MUSICAL ADVENTURE JR.— Local youths ages 6-18 perform in MeridianCUE’s production of Madagascar, A Musical Adventure Jr. Take a journey out of the zoo and onto the stage with your favorite crack-a-lackin’ friends. Based on the the blockbuster DreamWorks film. Get your tickets at the door. 7 p.m. FREE-$5. Centennial High School, 12400 W. McMillan Road, Boise, 208-939-1404, meridiancue.org. STREAM AT THE WATERSHED SPRING BREAK DROP-IN PROGRAM—10 a.m.-1 p.m. FREE. Boise WaterShed, 11818 W. Joplin Road,
Boise, 208-608-7300, boiseenvironmentaleducation.org.
Religious/Spiritual WALK THE LABYRINTH—Walk the Labyrinth, an ancient tool for prayer and meditation, on Good Friday in preparation for Easter. Boise First UCC invites you to enjoy this focusing, meditative experience in the peace and tranquility of the indoor labyrinth. All are welcome. Noon-9 p.m. By donation. First Congregational United Church of Christ, 2201 Woodlawn Ave., Boise, 208-344-5731, boisefirstucc.org.
Odds & Ends BUNNY BALL: AN EASTER PREFUNK—You’ve never been to an Easter party like this. Fatty’s will have an adult Easter egg hunt, which means... more prizes and less hunting. The bartenders and Vijay from Wild 101 Idaho’s Party Station will be handing out plastic eggs full of giveaways. Some will have candy, some will have bar tabs or drink tickets, and some will have cash. They’’ll also be giving out free bunny ears for the ladies. 9 p.m. FREE. Fatty’s, 800 W. Idaho St., Ste. 200, Boise, 208-629-6314, facebook.com/drinkfattys.
MILD ABANDON By E.J. Pettinger
FRANK GOITIA: STEP INTO MY PAST, LIFE IN A BASQUE NEIGHBORHOOD—8 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Boise State Department of Computer Science, 777 W. Main St., Clearwater Building, Boise, 208-426-5766, facebook.com/ bsufinearts. HEATHER CARSON: SCULPTED LIGHT—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. AN INTENTIONAL EYE: SELECT GIFTS FROM WILFRED DAVIS FLETCHER—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. JO HAMILTON: KNOTS IN TIME—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. MAPPING THE PRESENT: SELECTIONS FROM THE DRIEK AND MICHAEL ZIRINSKY COLLECTION—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. NANCY SATHRE-VOGEL: ELEGANT ANTIQUITY, CHAMPLEVÉ METAL JEWELRY—10 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Art Source Gallery, 1015 W. Main St., Boise, 208-331-3374, artsourcegallery.com.
BOISE WEEKLY.COM
CALENDAR FRIDAY NIGHT MAGIC—Do you love Magic the Gathering? Join over 100 Friday Night Magic customers in your choice of one of three Friday Night Magic events: Standard, Draft or Commander. You will receive one booster pack for playing and additional prize packs depending on your performance. Buy-in depends on your choice of event. 7-11 p.m. $5-$15. All About Games, 7079 Overland Road, Boise, 208-3435653, allaboutgamesboise.com/.
Food HOMEBREW LIKE A BOSS—Expand you knowledge of how to best brew coffee by the cup. Not only will you leave with a wealth of knowledge of the best brewing practices on multiple devices (Aeropress, Kalita Wave, Hario v60) but you can also score a bag of your choice of beans to work with at home. 7:30 p.m. $35. Form & Function Coffee, 511 W. Broad St., Boise, 208-9227824. formandfunctioncoffee.com/ shop/homebrew-like-a-boss.
SATURDAY MARCH 31 Festivals & Events EASTER SPRING FLING EXTRAVAGANZA—Enjoy fun for the whole family, including an Easter egg and scavenger hunt on site with free prizes. Plus, there will be door prizes, the Easter Bunny and other favorite characters, vendors, all kinds of goodies, and an allages costume contest at noon. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. FREE. Expo Idaho (Fairgrounds), 5610 Glenwood St., Garden City, 208-287-5650, expoidaho.com. NATIONAL STOP THE BLEED DAY—National Stop the Bleed Day was created following the Sandy Hook disaster in Newtown, when a joint committee was tasked with developing a national policy on increasing survivability following mass-casualty events. It was found that victims of trauma are susceptible to critical blood loss before first responders can reach the scene; therefore, immediate
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bystanders are critical in providing pre-hospital support. This event is a nationwide, free course on the principles of bleeding control and providing front-line aid until the arrival of first responders, with six classes scheduled for the Treasure Valley. Times and locations vary. FREE. Visit bleedingcontrol.org for more information.
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On Stage COMEDIAN NATHON BRANNON—8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $15. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise. com. COMEDYSPORTZ IMPROV—Two teams of comics battle it out for your laughs. Suitable for all ages. 7:30 p.m. $5-$10. ComedySportz Boise, 4619 Emerald St., Boise, 208-991-4746, boisecomedy.com. NO GREATER LOVE—Join Nampa First Church of the Nazarene for an Easter musical depicting the passion of Christ. For tickets, call 208-466-3549 or visit itickets.com. 3 p.m. $5. Nampa First Church of the Nazarene, 601 16th Ave S., Nampa, 208-466-3549, nfcnaz.org. WAR PAINT—Nikoa Mak, Lady Delicious, Vanity Mizrahi, Nikki Grimm, Vice Squiwly Bones, and Chaz A Ratazz join Rari Doll in a spectacular drag production. Get your tickets online or at either Treasure Valley Adam and Eve location. Your VIP ticket includes two Bacardi drink tickets and a chance of winning more Bacardi drink tickets throughout the night. 8:30 p.m. $10, $20 VIP. Balcony Club, 150 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-336-1313, thebalconyclub.com.
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Art ABERTZALEAK: SACRIFICE AND HONOR—11 a.m.-3 p.m. FREE-$5. Basque Museum and Cultural Center, 611 Grove St., Boise, 208343-2671, basquemuseum.com. CHERYL K. SHURTLEFF: THE ROAD IS WIDER THAN LONG—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. CONSIDER THE SOURCE—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk. Go to www.boiseweekly.com and look under odds and ends for the answers to this week’s puzzle. And don’t think of it as cheating. Think of it more as simply double-checking your answers. © 2013 Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved.
BOISE WEEKLY.COM
LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS
DEBRA BONSACK: MY HAPPY PLACE—10 a.m.-8 p.m. FREE. Crossings Winery, 1289 W. Madison Ave., Glenns Ferry, 208-3662313, bonsackgallery.com. HEATHER CARSON: SCULPTED LIGHT—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. AN INTENTIONAL EYE: SELECT GIFTS FROM WILFRED DAVIS FLETCHER—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
208-985-4185 • 11000 W Fairview Ave. www.integrityfabricationandauto.com
Restaurant gift cards 20% OFF Mai Thai $50 value for $40 Boise Brewing $20 value for $16 & $25 value for $20
Limited quantities, stop by Boise Weekly and get them while they last!
Corner of Sixth and Broad streets Downtown Boise • 344-2055 BOISEweekly c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c 11
CALENDAR JO HAMILTON: KNOTS IN TIME—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. MAPPING THE PRESENT: SELECTIONS FROM THE DRIEK AND MICHAEL ZIRINSKY COLLECTION—10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org. NANCY SATHRE-VOGEL: ELEGANT ANTIQUITY, CHAMPLEVÉ METAL JEWELRY—10 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Art Source Gallery, 1015 W. Main St., Boise, 208-331-3374, artsourcegallery.com. PATRICK HUGHES: WORKS ON PAPER—Noon-4 p.m. FREE. Stewart Gallery, 2230 Main St., Boise, 208-433-0593, stewartgallery.com. THE RESCUED FILM PROJECT EXHIBITION—10 a.m.-4 p.m. FREE. Gem Center for the Arts, 2417 W. Bank Drive, Boise, 208-991-0984, gemcenterforthearts.com.
Kids & Teens CAPITAL CHURCH COMMUNITY EGG HUNT—Enjoy hunting for 100,000 candy-filled eggs, plus skydiving bunnies, food vendors, bubble soccer, jump houses and more. 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. FREE. Julius M. Kleiner Memorial Park, 1900 N. Records Ave., near Fairview Avenue and Eagle Road, Meridian, capitalchurch.co/ egghunt. EASTER EGG SWIM—Families enjoy a new way of hunting Easter Eggs while you swim. The Rec Center will have sinkable and floating eggs, kayaks will be out for use, and the diving well will be open for play time. Age 5 and under: 1 p.m.; Ages 6-8: 1:30 p.m.; Ages 9-12: 2 p.m. 1 p.m. FREE-$8.50. Nampa Recreation Center, 131 Constitution Way, Nampa, 208-468-5858, nampaparksandrecreation.org. EGGSTRAVAGANZA—Check out this family-friendly community event, with age-specific egg hunts, bounce houses, carnival games, prizes, food (hot dogs, popcorn, cotton candy, snow cones), face painting and lots of fun. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. FREE. Boise First Baptist Church, 607 N. 13th St., Boise, 208-344-7809, fbcboise.org. ENGAGE BOISE GLOW-IN-THEDARK EASTER EGG HUNT—Join Engage Boise for this free glow-inthe-dark Easter Egg Hunt for ages 0-12 years (with separate age brackets). There will be prizes and giveaways, plus Bounce House, face painting, and animal balloons. 7-8:45 p.m. FREE. Timberline High School, 701 E. Boise Ave., Boise, 208-336-1925. FIRST ROBOTICS IDAHO REGIONAL COMPETITION—9 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Taco Bell Arena, 1910 University Drive, Boise State campus, Boise, 208-426-1900, idahofrcregional.org.
Recreation Department for their annual Flashlight Easter Egg Hunt on the grounds of the Nampa Rec Center. Take your own flashlight and search for every last egg. For ages 13-17. 8-9:30 p.m. $3. Nampa Recreation Center, 131 Constitution Way, Nampa, 208468-5858, nampaparksandrecreation.org. MERIDIANCUE: MADAGASCAR, A MUSICAL ADVENTURE JR.—2 p,m. and 7 p.m. FREE-$5. Centennial High School, 12400 W. McMillan Road, Boise, 208-939-1404, meridiancue.org. PETER RABBIT TEA PARTY—Take the whole family to this special event celebrating the Peter Rabbit movie. Enjoy a Peter Rabbitthemed tea party with treats, games, crafts, giveaways and a visit by Peter himself. 1-2:30 p.m. FREE. Ada Community Library Victory Branch, 10664 W. Victory Road, Boise, 208-362-0181, adalib.org/victory. SILVER SAGE BAPTIST EASTER EGG HUNT—Join this free Easter Egg Hunt, then enjoy free hot dogs afterward. 2 p.m. FREE. Silver Sage Baptist Church, 5858 S. Maple Grove Road, Boise, 208362-0309, silversagebc.com.
Animals & Pets BOOKS AND BARKS—Take your well-behaved dog to the bookstore for an array of fun activities designed to put the wag in any tail. From 10-11 a.m., enjoy Ladybug Girl and the Rescue Dogs Storytime, followed by Scout the Police Dog, who will paw print sign copies of his book from 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. You can meet Eric O’Grey, author of Walking With Peety, from noon-2 p.m., and a Boise Bully Breeds Ambassador Dog from 1-2 p.m. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. FREE. Rediscovered Books, 180 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-3764229, rdbooks.org.
Food VETERAN’S THERAPEUTIC GARDENS CHILI COOK-OFF—Don’t miss one of the hottest events of the year, whether you want to cook, judge or just eat. In addition to all the delicious chili, enjoy music, raffle prizes and auctions. Cooks will compete for a People’s Choice Award ($100 cash), plus judge’s first and second prizes for the best chili. Any donation over $100 receives free commemorative cup and chili. Donate $250 to a raised bed planter box, and receive engraved name plate on wall. Questions: email wishgrantors@gmail.com. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. $5. Lighthouse Rescue Mission, 304 16th Ave. N., Nampa, 208442-7777, boiserm.org.
FLASHLIGHT EASTER EGG HUNT—Join the Nampa Parks and
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SUNDAY APRIL 1 Festivals & Events BOISE PUBLIC LIBRARY HOLIDAY CLOSURE—All locations of the Boise Public Library will be closed Sunday, April 1, in observance of Easter Sunday. Boise Public Library, 715 S. Capitol Blvd., Boise, 208-972-8200, boisepubliclibrary.org.
On Stage COMEDIAN NATHON BRANNON—8 p.m. $12. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-9412459, liquidboise.com.
Religious/Spiritual PGS INTUITION MOVIE SCREENING—PGS is a 90-minute movie shot all around the world over a three-year period. It documents Bill Bennett’s journey to find the source of a voice that saved his life. The movie features some of the world’s leading experts on intuition, spanning the fields of science, religion and spirituality, and discusses what intuition is, how it works, and how you can access it to lead a more enriching life. Tickets must be purchased in advance. 3 p.m. $8-$11. Edwards Boise Stadium 21 with IMAX, 7701 W. Overland Road, Boise, 208-377-9603.
MONDAY APRIL 2 Art FIELD REPORTS: ARTIST RESIDENCIES—What’s it like to do an artist residency? And how do you get one? Three artists share their experiences in this program hosted by the Treasure Valley Artists’ Alliance. Betsy Hinze, Claire Remsberg and Mary Butler will share images from their residencies in places as varied as a glass art studio in Portland, the Grunewald Artist Community in Washington, and Yellowstone Park. After their presentations, Nampa Art Collective President Betty Mallorca will moderate a discussion among the artists and then take questions from the audience. 6-8 p.m. FREE. Gem Center for the Arts, 2417 W. Bank Drive, Boise, 208-991-0984. treasurevalleyartistsalliance.org.
Literature POETICS BOISE OPEN MIC—7 p.m. FREE. High Note Cafe, 225 N. Fifth St., Boise, 208-429-1911, thehighnotecafe.com.
Talks & Lectures
Workshops & Classes
GROWING A REVOLUTION: BRINGING THE SOIL BACK TO LIFE—Hear from David R. Montgomery, professor of Earth and Space Sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle, where he is a member of the Quaternary Research Center. Followed a book signing. Hosted by Boise State University’s Environmental Studies and Global Studies programs, The Treasure Valley Food Coalition, and Ada Soil and Water Conservation District. 6-8 p.m. FREE. Boise State Student Union Jordan Ballroom, 1910 University Drive, Boise, 208-426-5800, boisestate.edu.
STORY STORY STUDIO—Learn the basics of true, live storytelling with Story Story Night. Experienced Studio guides will walk you through choosing a story, building a storyline, and creating compelling scenes paced for maximum impact. This intro to live storytelling will give you a toolkit to start transforming your personal stories into a captivating tell-all and build confidence with public speaking. For all ages with parent. 6-8 p.m. $20 per session. Jack’s Urban Meeting Place, 1000 W. Myrtle St., Boise, 208-639-6610, jumpboise.org.
LEE RAINIE OF PEW RESEARCH: THE FUTURE OF TRUTH—Explore the world of information and misinformation with Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center director of Internet and Technology Research. He’ll discuss changes in the information ecosystem, including bots, schemes and algorithms that affect peoples’ ability to effectively navigate the world of social media. Hear how trust in information sources is shifting in today’s challenging environment, and what can be done. 7 p.m. FREE. Boise State Special Events Center, 1800 University Drive, Boise, boisestate.edu.
Religious/Spiritual PGS INTUITION MOVIE SCREENING—7:30 p.m. $8.15-$10.70. Edwards Boise Stadium 21 with IMAX, 7701 W. Overland Road, Boise, 208-377-9603.
Literature AUTHOR THIRII MYO KYAW MYINT—Surel’s Place April artistin-residence Thirii Myo Kyaw Myint is a writer, Ph.D. candidate and educator living in Denver. A year after she was born in Yangon, Myanmar, her family fled following the military junta’s annullment of election results and establishment of the second dictatorship. Her novel tells the story of a return from emigration, and the traumatic moment when the narrator is confronted with her inheritance of historical violence and environmental devastation. Presented in collaboration with Surel’s Place. 7 p.m. FREE. Rediscovered Books, 180 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-3764229, rdbooks.org.
TUESDAY APRIL 3 On Stage
Talks & Lectures IRAN: THE UNTOLD STORY—Join the Idaho Peace Coalition for a special presentation from an Iranian perspective by Boise resident and former Boise Library storyteller Azam Houle. Learn about the recent Iranian protests in regional and global context. In the Marion Bingham Room. 6:30-7:30 p.m. FREE. Boise Public Library, 715 S. Capitol Blvd., Boise, 208-972-8200, boiselibrary. org.
Citizen TUESDAY DINNER—Volunteers needed to help cook up a warm dinner for Boise’s homeless and needy population, and clean up afterward. Event is nondenominational. Volunteer online. 5:15-7 p.m. FREE. Immanuel Lutheran Church, 707 W. Fort St., Boise, 208-344-3011. ilcdinners.ivolunteer.com.
Religious/Spiritual MEDITATION AND VISION BOARD CREATION—Have fun and creating a vision board creation. Start by settling the mind through a gentle guided meditation, finding the place in your heart and soul where your deepest desires lie, and connect with the feelings, sensations and visions of that special place. Then, project it onto your board using magazine pictures, words, paints, glitter and colored pencils to create a vision board manifestation of your wonderful life to come. For ages 15 and older. 6-8 p.m. $15. Jack’s Urban Meeting Place, 1000 W. Myrtle St., Boise, 208-6396610, jumpvisionboard.eventbrite. com.
EYESPY
Real Dialogue from the naked city
BROADWAY IN BOISE: A CHORUS LINE—The Tony Awardwinning musical’s celebration and true-to-life depiction of performers and their struggle to achieve greatness on the Broadway stage has earned the show unanimous praise as one of the true masterpieces of live theater. ASL Interpretation will be provided for the Wednesday, April 4, performance. Adult themes and language. 7:30 p.m. $35-$63. Morrison Center, 2201 W. Cesar Chavez Ln, Boise, 208-426-1609, morrisoncenter. com. VINTAGE MOVIE NIGHT: STEEL MAGNOLIAS—Vintage Movie Night features classic movies paired with bottomless movie snacks and a full bar and dinner menu. Your ticket includes bottomless movie snacks with popcorn and theater candy favorites. Additional food and beverages available for purchase. 7:30 p.m. $13-$20. Riverside Hotel Sapphire Room, 2900 W. Chinden Blvd., Garden City, 208-343-1871, sapphireboise.com. Overheard something Eye-spy worthy? E-mail production@boiseweekly.com
BOISE WEEKLY.COM
COURTESY ZOO BOISE
NOISE
HARRISON BERRY
CITIZEN GENE PEACOCK The new Zoo Boise director on groundbreakings, brachiation and that name of his GEORGE PRENTICE
When Gene Peacock saw the film Raiders of the Lost Ark in the early 1980s, he knew what he wanted to do for a living. “I thought being an archeologist was the coolest thing on the planet,” he said. All of that changed when Peacock, while studying anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, he spent his weekends working at a nearby zoo. That turned into full-time zoo work during the summers, and he never looked back, spending nearly 30 years in and around zoos. A few weeks ago, he took over as the new director of Zoo Boise. My apologies, but right up front, I’ve got to ask the question that you’ve probably been asked a thousand times. What’s the deal with my last name? Sorry, but the only Peacocks I’ve ever known were a Canadian actress and a fictional character in the Clue board game. Let’s just say that I’ve had some fun moments with it when I’m talking with kids. Boise had a lot of love for your predecessor Steve Burns. He was here for twenty years [Burns recently became the executive director of Hogle Zoo in Salt Lake City]. I knew Steve through the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. One of the things I was so impressed with was Steve’s mission of conservation. You’ve joined Zoo Boise at a historical turning point. Walk us through what will be happening in the coming weeks. On Friday, April 6, we’ll break ground on our magnificent Gorongosa National Park exhibit. We’ll be stretching our footprint by another acre or acre and a half behind the current back fence of the zoo. At the same time, we’ll turn our attention to the entrance of the zoo and our front plaza. We’ll begin demolishing some of our older structures to make room for new exhibits. Such as? Our Annamite Mountains exhibit will give our gibbons a nice, new, modern exhibit so they’ll have room to brachiate. BOISE WEEKLY.COM
Sorry, but I’ve never heard of brachiation. That’s how gibbons and orangutans make those wild arm swings from tree limb to tree limb. It’s called brachiation. Our new exhibit will promote more of their natural behavior to brachiate. When will the public get its first look at all the new exhibits? We’re shooting for summer of 2019. I’d like to talk briefly about the recent death of Zoo Boise’s Amur tiger. It’s always heartbreaking when we hear such sad news. We lost Katarina. Last year, she suffered a herniated disc, which resulted in paralysis of her hind legs. She underwent spinal surgery, and she had shown some signs of improvements, but then her ability to walk took a turn for the worse. Was she showing extreme discomfort? Wild animals hide it very well. But yes, she had significant quality of life issues. Can I assume that there’s a detailed process that leads to a decision to euthanize? All AZA zoos have an animal care management team, including our vet, our curators, the director and assistant director. You just don’t make these decisions easily. We got a lot of input from our keepers and talked extensively with the veterinarian who had performed the surgery. I can’t say enough about the professionalism and quality of our team. We worked through it. Can I also assume that since many of the children who visit the zoo get to know these animals by name, and they might ask what happened to Katarina? It’s a teaching moment, and a part of what we do. We handle it in a dignified way for the animal, while letting the public know exactly what’s going on. You’ve worked at several zoos around the nation, so you must have a sense of how much Boise loves its zoo. This is really a people’s zoo, a great jewel right in the middle of the city. And really affordable. A number of zoos charge admissions of $15, $20, $25 and up. We’ve got an amazing partnership with Friends of Zoo Boise, [which works] so hard to make our zoo so accessible and affordable.
Treefort Music Fest is a big umbrella for artists’ messages and activism.
A RIOT OF ACTIVISM AT TREEFORT 2018 Lido Pimienta asks audiences at her concerts to allow LGBTQ folks and women of color to come closer to the stage. The exercise has made the multimedia artist famous, casting her as both a cause celebre and a controversial figure. “At least half the media about me is clickbait,” said the musician, who traveled to Boise for Treefort Music Fest and spoke at a March 23 Storyfort panel. As Pimienta’s artistic stature and fame grew, so did the pressure to cultivate a more media-friendly image. Music label representatives have asked her to sing in English rather than Spanish, lose weight and dye her hair. She rejected those overtures, calling them attempts to lead her astray from her responsibilities and her identity as a queer Afro-Colombian, single mother and Canadian. “I am a mom. I have a family back home to support,” she said. “I don’t just make music for fun.”
Treefort is a big umbrella, though, and the 2018 festival, which ran from March 19-25, was big enough for more than one vision of activism. Another came from Russian feminist music and performance art collective Pussy Riot. In 2012, three of its members were jailed in Russia for hooliganism after performing a “punk prayer” at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow. They served two years in penal colonies before being amnestied by President Vladimir Putin, and have been regularly harassed by the successor agency to the KGB, the Federal Security Service (FSB). In February, two Pussy Riot members went missing in Crimea, only to re-emerge days later, allegedly freed from FSB custody. At its performance at El Korah Shrine on March 24, Pussy Riot invited Boise-area women known for their activism to dress in the band’s now-iconic over-the-face knit hats, skirts and safety vests, and join its members onstage. The feminist chops of Pussy Riot have recently been
called into question, however. One of the formerly jailed members, Maria Alyokhina, made headlines when she began dating Dmitry Enteo, a founder of the violent Russian Orthodox anti-LGBTQ group God’s Will, and another—Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, who has since taken the reins of the group—has been criticized for throwing an art exhibition at a gallery owned by Charles Saatchi, who was photographed in 2013 assaulting his then-wife. Pussy Riot could not be reached for comment, but The Stranger in Seattle, Washington, called the disconnect between the the band’s stated ideals and the private actions of its members “disappointing incongruities.” Pimienta called it “problematic,” adding that irony and shock art do little to serve the needs of the marginalized or oppressed. “I hope they go back to the way they were in the first place,” she said. “Activism shouldn’t be a trend.” —Harrison Berry
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Elizabeth Smart
Where There’s Hope Author Talk & Book Signing Thursday April 5, 2018 7pm $30 For tickets visit: brownpapertickets.com Grove Hotel 245 S. Capitol Blvd.
Brought to you by:
MUSIC GUIDE WEDNESDAY MARCH 29 ALMOST FAMOUS KARAOKE—9:30 p.m. FREE. Liquid BARBARA LAING—6 p.m. FREE. Highlands Hollow BILLY BLUES BAND—7 p.m. FREE. WilliB’s CAMDEN HUGHES—5:15 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
GARY TACKETT—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
KARAOKE—9 p.m. FREE. Terry’s
GOOD FRIDAY MUSICAL CELEBRATION—The Seven Last Words of Christ by Theodore Dubois. 7 p.m. FREE. First Congregational UCC
MARSHALL MCLEAN—7:30 p.m. $5. District
JENSEN BUCK AND THE FAMILY—With Dusty Leigh and the Claim Jumpers, Dave Nudo Band, and Bobby Dee Keys. 8 p.m. $6$12. Knitting Factory
THE MACKS—With Ruff Pups, and Peanut. 7 p.m. $5. Olympic
SAM RULE—6:30 p.m. FREE. Deja Brew SUDA—Featuring Zack Quintana, Noble Holt, Kevin Litrell, Will Friend and Thomas Wilson, with Dylan and The Shabby Boys. 7:30 p.m. $12-$18. Sapphire
CHUCK SMITH TRIO—7:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers KARAOKE—7 p.m. FREE. High Note ROB HARDING—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365 TYLOR AND THE TRAIN ROBBERS—9 p.m. FREE. Tom Grainey’s
V E N U E S Don’t know a venue? Visit www.boiseweekly.com for addresses, phone numbers and a map.
LISTEN HERE COURTESY EILEN JEWELL
WHISKEY TOAST—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
THURSDAY MARCH 29 BEN BURDICK TRIO—7:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers CHUCK SMITH—5:15 p.m. FREE. Chandlers FRIM FRAM FOUR—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s KARAOKE—9 p.m. FREE. Terry’s MATTHEW (FROM THE COLONIES)—With Peter McGuire, and Travis Kocian. 7 p.m. FREE. High Note METALACHI— 7 p.m. $12-$15. Neurolux OPEN MIC—6:30 p.m. FREE. Deja Brew OPERA IDAHO OPERATINI: I WANT MAGIC—With the cast of Opera Idaho’s upcoming production of André Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire. 5:30 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. $22-$30. Sapphire THUMP: PIXEL TERROR—8 p.m. $8-$25. Knitting Factory TOM TAYLOR—5:30 p.m. FREE. DaVinci’s WAYNE WHITE—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
FRIDAY MARCH 30 ANDY BYRON AND THE LOST RIVER BAND—9 p.m. FREE. The Ranch Club BEN BURDICK TRIO WITH AMY ROSE—7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye Grill-Cole BILL COFFEY AND HIS CASH MONEY COUSINS—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s COSMIC: AN INTERSTELLAR MUSICAL JOURNEY—Featuring AFK, HAL-V & SpaceCase, DASH 30, Doctor Chubs, Double-T, and ONSLO. 8 p.m. $15-$25. Shredder
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EILEN JEWELL, CINDER WINES, MARCH 31 Boise singer-songwriter Eilen Jewell has long been lauded for the “bluesy” hints she adds to her country, gospel and folk songs, but until her ninth and most recent release, Down Hearted Blues (Signature Sounds, 2017), she’d never recorded a full blues album. “I’ve always had this sense of self-doubt about it,” Jewell said in her website biography. “Like, who am I to sing the blues? I’m a white girl from Idaho. I don’t know if I have a right to do that.” Regardless of whether she has a “right” to the Deep South sound, Jewell brings plenty of skill to the table in 12 tracks— all covers of “vintage” blues hits by artists like Willie Dixon, Betty James and Charles Sheffield. From “It’s Your Voodoo Working” to “You Gonna Miss Me,” Jewell’s voice lends the album a sensual, sultry twang that overlays beats ranging from tantalizingly slow to irresistibly danceable. Stop by Cinder Wines Saturday, March 31, to hear this Idaho gem for yourself. —Lex Nelson 7 p.m., $27-$30. Cinder Wines, 107 E. 44th St., Garden City, cinderwines.com. BOISE WEEKLY.COM
MUSIC GUIDE TARA VELARDE—With Ana Lete. 7 p.m. FREE. High Note
CLAY MOORE TRIO—8:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
KARAOKE WITH DJ ADDICTIVE SPIN—9 p.m. FREE. TK Bar
TASTY JAMM—8 p.m. FREE. Ha’ Penny
A DEER A HORSE—7:30 p.m. $5. The District
KAYLEIGH JACK-MCGRATH—9 p.m. FREE. Ranch Club
DJ GIOVANNI: SALSA NIGHTS—8 p.m. $6-$12. Knitting Factory
MAC LETHAL—With Wax, Earthlings, and Arthur Maddox. 8 p.m. $15. Shredder
SATURDAY MARCH 31 18 STRINGS—8 p.m. FREE. WilliB’s ADDAM C.—9 p.m. $3, $5 for 2. Reef BILL COFFEY AND HIS CASH MONEY COUSINS—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
EASTON CORBIN—8 p.m. $33$63. Revolution EILEN JEWELL: DOWN HEARTED BLUES—With Fulton and Hunt. 7 p.m. $27-$30. Cinder
MATH’S ARCANA—7 p.m. FREE. High Note NECKID REDNECKS—8 p.m. FREE. O’Michael’s
GREG BRIDGES—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
POVERTY FLATS—8 p.m. FREE. Ha’ Penny
KARAOKE—9 p.m. FREE. Terry’s
SPUDMAN—6:30 p.m. FREE. Deja Brew THE SWORD—With King Buffalo. 8 p.m. $17. Neurolux
SUNDAY APRIL 1
LISTEN HERE COURTESY THE RIVERSIDE HOTEL BOISE
IRISH MUSIC—7 p.m. FREE. O’Michael’s KARAOKE—9 p.m. FREE. Terry’s NOCTURNUM LIVE INDUSTRIAL DJS—10 p.m. FREE. Liquid THE SIDEMEN: GREG PERKINS AND RICK CONNOLLY—6 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
MONDAY APRIL 2 BRETT REID—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365 KARAOKE—9 p.m. FREE. Terry’s MIKE ROSENTHAL—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers OPEN MIC WITH REBECCA SCOTT AND EMILY TIPTON—8 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s VILLAIN OF THE STORY—With Deadships, We Gave It Hell, and Roses are Dead. 7 p.m. $10. Shredder
SUDA, SAPPHIRE ROOM, MARCH 30 Zack Quintana, Noble Holt, Kevin Littrell, Will Friend and Thomas Wilson may have an average age of 17, but they aren’t your typical boy band. Sometimes called the “Young Guns of Boise,” the five musicians hail from different musical backgrounds—14-year-old Holt, for example, plays electric guitar and prefers to jam out to classic rock, while Quintana and Wilson are both Boise Blues Society Scholarship winners with more refined styles—but they come together to deliver live per formances that the Sapphire Room promises “will keep any blues/funk/rock fan dancing in their seats and on the dance floor.” “We’ve got a wide musical range but care about produced live music that is polished and smooth,” wrote jazz guitarist Littrell on the Facebook page for the event. After a successful Sapphire Room debut March 3, the group has been invited back for an encore—don’t miss them Friday, March 30, at center stage. —Lex Nelson
TUESDAY APRIL 3 BLAZE AND KELLY—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365 BROADWAY IN BOISE: A CHORUS LINE—7:30 p.m. $35-$63. Morrison Center CHUCK SMITH TRIO—7:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers KARAOKE—9 p.m. FREE. Terry’s MIKE ROSENTHAL—5:15 p.m. FREE. Chandlers RICHARD SOLIZ—7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye-Cole THE SUBURBANS—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s X-METHOD—With Toxin, and Kurgan Hypothesis. 8 p.m. $15. Shredder
With Dylan & The Shabby Boys. 7:30 p.m., $12-$18. Riverside Hotel Sapphire Room, 2900 W. Chinden Blvd., Garden City, sapphireboise.com. BOISE WEEKLY.COM
BOISEweekly c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c 15
L E X N E L SON
ARTS NEWS
ARTS & CULTURE BRAZEN INDEED
Bryan Anthony Moore’s exhibition Brazen Bull is an outspoken critique of Trump politics LE X NEL SON L E X N E L SON
Emma Hood represented a year of her life with a grid of 365 square photos.
TIME IS FROZEN AT EMMA HOOD’S MARKING TIME EXHIBITION Displayed on one wall of the Boise State University Trueblood Gallery are 365 pictures arranged in a grid, part of Emma Hood’s new exhibition, Marking Time. The photos are 4 by 4 inches square and hang in rows of 28, with a total of 13 columns. From shots of Craigslist ads and wildlife to captured optical illusions, Hood’s snapshots represent time as a constant. Rather than showing life as a flowing stream, her pictures capture moments, presenting them as singular events. She hopes that her exhibition will inspire others to enjoy every day. “Appreciate your milestones but also appreciate the hard and bad times,” said Hood. Marking Time is an entire year of work, and each photo chronicles Hood’s daily experiences and encounters. Hood decided in 2016 that she would challenge herself creatively and used her iPhone to take and edit the photos. She took a photo each day and posted her pictures to her Instagram account, using the handle @hoodinthewood. Then, she assigned each image its own name and carefully placed it in the correct sequence in her exhibition. “As the year went on it became this series on time, questioning what photography was,” said Hood. Hood explained that her light workload allowed her to challenge herself and to experiment with her photography. She reminisced about how her mom would praise her for her accomplishments throughout the year, drawing parallels between those accolades and some of her photos, like one that represents her new job. Looking back at the images, she also recognized the hard or dull days. Hood said she now feels comfortable enough as an artist to show even work that she may not particularly like; this project was her way of getting through the tough times when commissions were few and far between. “Enjoy the bad with the good and try to remember that each day you are going somewhere, you are going forward. Even if it feels like nobody cared that day,” said Hood. Marking Time opened March 4, and is on display at BSU through Thursday, April 5. Catch it there before the moment is lost. —McKenzie Young 16 c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c BOISEweekly
Bryan Anthony Moore’s work is a bold commentary on current politics, from the reputation of Steve Bannon (left) to the GOP stance on climate change (right).
motivating him to bring more current political Bryan Anthony Moore isn’t shy about his opinthemes into his work. ions on political history, and has made a career “I think [Trump] is very cunning and canny out of saying so through art. Still, his newest at telling people things that they want to hear,” exhibition at the College of Idaho Rosenthal Gallery of Art, Brazen Bull: A Natural Mythstory Moore said, “And I don’t agree with his message at all, but at the same time I thought, ‘He’s right of North America, is a bold stroke: In one imon point, on message, saying all the things that age, inked on a nine-foot-tall sheet of Tyvek he needs to who his target group of voters are.’” paper that covers a freestanding gallery wall, Moore’s work has been ongoing and open President Donald Trump’s face is transposed to the public since he became C of I artist in onto the rear end of an elephant; on another residence in January, and he collaborated with wall, Trump’s head is attached to a bear’s body, with a grinning Vladimir Putin sitting inside its seven portraiture students early on to cover the entire Tyvekhollow chest, wielddraped gallery with ing the controls. BRAZEN BULL political imagery. Images like these by Bryan Anthony Moore The students cover the entire With assistance from Trystin Crofts, Alyssa Moreno, crafted portraits of gallery in a largerPaula Schneider, Abby Schwarte, Tyler Truksa, Henry people they felt were than-life red, black Vaughan and Amy Wilson authority figures, and blue display College of Idaho Rosenthal Gallery like Steve Bannon, that’s impossible to Reception: Tuesday, April 3, 4:30-7:30 p.m. Oprah Winfrey and ignore. It’s a marked Closing Celebration: Saturday, April 14, 4:30-7:30 p.m. Rosalynn Carter, contrast to Moore’s and Moore layered political work circa artwork, quotes, media blurbs and snippets of his 2011, which was often tightly controlled and own verse over and around them. focused on revealing the subjectivity within Rosenthal Gallery Director Garth Claassen supposedly objective history. When Moore said the long-term, evolving nature of the project began working with political themes, he created is something new for the C of I gallery. ink and graphite drawings of past presidents, “We thought [the open gallery] would be whose heads he grafted onto dinosaur bodies to a great opportunity for people to chat with comment on the slanted “mythstory” perpetu[Moore]. And he actually thrives on that. He ated in textbooks. But Moore said that when enjoys the input of viewers and he doesn’t mind Trump took office, his bold narrative convinced getting into debates with people. He has a dishim that “today’s news is tomorrow’s history,”
arming manner, although he has, as you can see, very strong political feelings,” Claassen said. Many of the animal or part-animal images Moore chose are based on exhibitions at the C of I Orma J. Smith Museum of Natural History nearby. Steve Bannon’s head, for example, is surrounded by a classification of insects, while another wall features an ostrich with its head buried in a lake of oil, meant to symbolize the GOP response to climate change. Moore said the title of the exhibition is a nod to the brazen bull of ancient Greek myth, a bronze torture device said to have been commissioned by the Sicilian tyrant Phalaris. When the bull was placed over a fire, it would roast anyone trapped inside, and its machinery would make their screams sound like a bull’s trumpeting call. “The irony of the story is that the people who created the bronze bull were the first ones it was tested out on,” said Moore. “So I thought, what a metaphor for the Wall Street bull and the bull market. The people who created it are now being consumed.” Brazen Bull is still ongoing, and the gallery will be open for visitors through Saturday, April 14, when a closing ceremony will end Moore’s stint as artist in residence. Plus, for those who want to dive into the politics of the display, a reception and gallery discussion featuring C of I Political Economy Professor Jasper LiCalzi, Political Economy Assistant Professor Erin Hern and Vice President for Academic Affairs David Douglass is scheduled for Tuesday, April 3. BOISE WEEKLY.COM
SCREEN COURTESY FLUIDIT Y FILMS
JOURNEYING BACK: A CENTURY OF WAR
ANDRÉ PREVIN’S REVIN’S
A STREET STREETCAR CAR NAMED
DESIRE MADE IN THE USA SERIES
APRIL AP PRIL PR RIL
2:30PM :3 30PM
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6 &8 EGYPTIAN
Journey’s End has a striking sense of urgency
THEATRE
GEORGE PRENTICE It was 100 years ago this month, but it might as well have been yesterday. Conflict was causing an unfathomable body count across the globe. On March 20, 1918, the Germans were about to launch what would become known as the Asa Butterfield co-stars in Journey’s End, the 2018 film adaptation of R.C. Sherriff’s play, penned in 1928. Paul BetSpring Offensive of World War I—think of tany and Sam Claflin co-star. the unexpected doom as something akin to being in lower Manhattan on September 10, arm’s length and the story is character-driven. 2011. The world would never be the same. The wrote the play was “one of the strongest pleas for peace I know,” and the London Daily Mirror There’s a newcomer (played by wide-eyed March 1918 German attack on Allied forces but wiser-than-his-years Asa Butterfield), his called it “a much better argument against war entrenched across Western Europe would Captain (Sam Claflin) and a father figure in the than sentimental propaganda.” The play was a claim more than 700,000 lives. A month later, company (Paul Bettany) who insists that the sensation, and it has since been revived on sevthe same territory was retaken by British and men call him “uncle.” eral occasions. I’ve been fortunate to have seen American soldiers, and a million more would There are flashes of brilliance in the simplicwonderful stage productions, die before the “war to end all ity of the script. For example, on the day before both in London and in New wars” would come to an end York; so, I must admit to some a battle during which nearly everyone will be on November 11, 1918. JOURNEY’S END skepticism in seeing a success- killed, a soldier spots a hard-bound copy of Alice It is that calm before the (R) in Wonderland next to the bunk of an officer. ful film adaptation. But the storm on March 20, 1918, Directed by Saul Dibb The officer reads aloud one of Lewis Carroll’s news from the front is good: that frames Journey’s End, a Starring Asa Butterfield, Paul nonsense poems to the young soldier. Journey’s End is a must-see. superbly acted film adaptaBettany and Sam Claflin “I don’t see the point in that,” says the Perhaps it’s best to look tion of a play scripted by R.C. Opens Friday, March 30 soldier. at Journey’s End as the antiSherriff, which logged one of at The Flicks “Exactly. That’s just the point,” says the Dunkirk (2017). While both the longest runs for a dramatic officer. films share the hue of a world play in the history of London’s The pointlessness of war has been a journey at war, Dunkirk was marked West End. What made the of the body and soul for countless men and by pulsating action, while Journey’s End instead play so remarkably relevant was that it opened women for the past century. Yet, Journey’s End in 1928, a mere 10 years after the end of World portends the dread of battle. Yes, we hear a reminds us that we return to that pointlessness, constant, almost soft, far-off thunder throughWar I, and starred a 21-year-old Laurence time and again. out Journey’s End, but the battle is usually at Olivier. At the time, journalist J.B. Priestley
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OH LUCY! IS DEFINITELY NOT LOST IN TRANSLATION The comedy pedigree of Oh Lucy! begins with its executive producers: Will Ferrell and his writing partner Adam McKay. Add an irresistibly delicious lead performance from Shinobu Terajima (Caterpillar) and toss in an extra spicy supporting appearance from Emmy BOISE WEEKLY.COM
award-winner Megan Mullally (Will and Grace), and it’s a recipe for cinematic brilliance. Oh Lucy!, a joint U.S./Japan production, received quite a bit of love at the recent Independent Spirit Awards (the indie-film Oscars), where Terajima was nominated for Best Actress and director Atsuko Hirayanagi was nominated for Best First Feature.
Terajima plays an emotionally unfulfilled woman, convinced to enroll in an unorthodox English class that requires her to wear a blonde wig and adopt an alter ego named “Lucy.” The film, opening Friday, March 30, at The Flicks, only goes uphill from there, comedy-wise. —George Prentice
STARTS FRIDAY, March 30 BOISEweekly c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c 17
FOOD NEWS
L E X N E L SON
L E X N E L SON
FOOD DANCE FOR DIONYSUS
Chef Carlo Lamagna cooked up a dish inspired by his Filipino heritage.
Two former dancers open a micro-winery in Garden City LE X NEL SON
MEET ME AT THE MEAT UP “Let’s find a line and stand in it,” was a common refrain at the Foodfort Meat Up event on the night of March 22, as Treefort Music Fest enthusiasts age 21 and up poured through the flaps of the Alefort tent. The event began at 6 p.m., and the lines lengthened immediately—the one for drinks mixed by Red Feather Lounge bartenders stretched across the expansive tent pitched in parking lot of The Owyhee on Grove Street. The Meat Up was a 225-person cocktail hour, but it was also a “fangs-out feast.” The night featured Snake River Farms meat-centered small plates from three top-notch chefs: Georgia-based Hugh Acheson, a former Top Chef judge; Portland, Oregon-based restaurateur Carlo Lamagna; and local BBQ4Life pitmaster Brad Taylor. Taylor delivered straight-up barbecue, dishing out pecan-smoked American wagyu tri-tip; country mac and cheese; sweet, custardy bread pudding; and the standout: smokey chunks of bratwurst made in-house with kurobuta pork and tri-tip, every bite exploding with spice and grease. Acheson’s choices were a bit more refined. If ever a slice of steak could be described as velvety, his grilled wagyu tenderloin topped with a dab of bright green chimichurri was it. Mustard-coated potatoes and zingy cabbage slaw added just the right amount of textual interest to the plate, while roasted carrots and a pink lady pea salad rounded out the dish. Lamagna’s kurobuta pork spare ribs were beautifully plated on a pile of garlic-heavy rice and kale laing—a Filipino dish traditionally made with taro leaves—cooked with coconut milk and fatty chunks of smoked ham. The ribs were tender and slightly sweet, playing off the bold flavor of the rice. For their $40 ticket, each Meat Up entrant received unlimited food and four tokens, which could be traded for glasses of wine, beers or Buffalo Trace bourbon cocktails. The Omaha, which featured a blend of Amaro Averna (Italian bitters), lemon and honey, was the crowd favorite, as its heady, sugary punch paired well with the ribs, steak and sausage. “I hope no vegetarians wandered in here,” said Charlene Carion, who attended the event with friends. “That would be a rude awakening.” —Lex Nelson 18 c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c BOISEweekly
Driving down Chinden Boulevard through Garden City is almost like driving through a pavedover version of Napa Valley. Though the grapes aren’t grown there, wineries dot the road on both sides, filling unlikely spaces like auto body shops and converted warehouses. Par Terre, the new venture of husband and wife team Travis and Mallory Walker, is no exception—its rolling garage door, built to usher in cars, is just as welcoming to wine barrels. The couple are both former professional ballet dancers, and joke that in switching from dancing to winemaking, they’ve somehow landed in yet another seasonal line of work. Mallory said that for them, fermenting grapes started out as a passion project, something they brewed up in the garage of a California house they once rented with friends. “It started small, and that first batch was not good,” Mallory said. “We had it in a few glass carboys, and it just got really hot and got ruined, but we were definitely intrigued by what could happen.” The couple—and their one-year-old daughter Harper, who joined in on the interview—has come a long way since then. After leaving the world of professional dance behind when the Boise-based Trey McIntyre Project disbanded, Travis decided to dive head-on into winemaking, commuting to Walla Walla Community College in Washington to earn a degree in oenology and viticulture. “It was really hands-on,” he said, describing the two-year program. Not only did Travis learn the science of winemaking, he and his fellow students helped make two batches of Washington wine, first watching over their professors’ shoulders, then taking over the handling of the grapes. For additional experience, he interned with Indian Creek Winery in Kuna under the wing of wine guru Mike McClure. “Ninety percent of winemaking is just cleaning, so [McClure was] like, ‘Yeah, sure, you can come out and clean!’” said Travis. “He was on board. And then when he realized I’d stuck around he was like, ‘What’s wrong with you?” Travis had the wine bug, and so did Mallory, who spent that time earning a degree in business administration and working as an administrator with the Sunnyslope Wine Trail, where she got
Winemaker Travis Walker pours glasses of his 2017 Rose.
a crash-course in the Idaho wine industry. With a solid educational footing in place, the couple felt secure enough to open Par Terre, taking their original five-gallon wine attempt up to the roughly 500 cases they now produce. “The beverage scene in Garden City especially, and just in Idaho with all the wineries and breweries that have come about in the last decade, is pretty impressive,” said Travis. “It feels good to belong to that.” The Par Terre winery space, now fully renovated, is in essence a single room, with lofty ceilings and plenty of natural light pouring through large windows. One side is utilitarian, with stacked cases of wine and a long row of wooden barrels. The other has been transformed into a stylish tasting room, complete with an island for pouring, shelves holding jewel-like bottles and a shallow bar dotted with stools where guests can sit and sip. When the winery officially opens Thursday, April 5, it will offer four bottles priced under $30: a 2016 Merlot, a 2016 Syrah, a 2017 Rose and a 2017 Semillon. Eager tasters can also try sips of the merlot and rose (the others are still being bottled) at a soft opening Saturday, March 31, and Sunday, April 1. On a bright day in late March, Travis poured three glasses of the 2017 Rose, a dry, crisp pour made with 100 percent Syrah grapes, and carried them over to the bar. Seeing the glasses, little Harper bounced on Mallory’s lap and held out her sippy cup. Travis leaned in with his wine glass, clinking them
together—it was a move the pair had perfected; the baby beamed and held out her cup again. The grapes in the rose came from Washington, Mallory said, because although the wine scene in Idaho was welcoming, the temperamental weather was not. “Last year, the winter was pretty atrocious, so the grapes suffered. And being kind of new kids on the block there wasn’t a whole lot left,” she said. They’d had better luck with their 2016 Merlot, securing grapes from two Idaho vineyards, Arena Valley Vineyard in Parma and Skyline Vineyards in Nampa. The finished product is unbelievably soft, with light tannins and a fruity bouquet more akin to a cabernet. In the future, the couple hopes to source nearly all local grapes, preferably from mom-and-pop wineries, and some day, the Walkers hope to own their own vineyard. The name of their winery is a term from their dance days, which roughly translates to “on the ground,” and Mallory said she sees a lot of similarities between growing grapes, making wine and dancing. “When a winemaker makes wine, grapes come in and it’s one year, it’s one chance to make the fruit into something,” she said. “You put it in a bottle, and you don’t get to touch it again, which is kind of like a performance—you practice, and you rehearse, but you just have one performance and then it’s over … You’ve got the audience, and you can’t see them always, and you don’t know how they’re going to experience it. It’s kind of a magical thing.” BOISE WEEKLY.COM
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boiseclassicmovies.com 12 Medieval Spanish kingdom 13 Sport last played in the Olympics in 1936 14 Was awesome 15 Occupied 16 Funny 17 Riddle-me-____ 18 Qtrly. check recipient, maybe 20 “Stars above!” 27 “____ soon?” 31 Smear 32 Writing in a window? 33 Paranoid sorts, in slang 35 Pushes back 37 “Mamma Mia!” setting 38 In a light manner 39 Outbreaks 40 Anthropomorphic king of Celesteville 41 “Still ____” (Julianne Moore film) 43 Rios, e.g. 44 Decisive assessment 47 Intl. Rescue Committee, e.g. 49 R.&B. singer with the hits “So Sick” and “Mad” 51 Tempe sch. 52 Things in restaurant windows 57 Sac-fly result 58 Outlay that cannot be recovered 59 Some corsage wearers 61 Grand Lodge group 64 Ready … or red, maybe 65 “Let’s keep this between us” 67 Wasn’t kidding about 68 Stunt at the end of a powerful performance 69 Informal assent 70 Go back on one’s word?
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The reason for the change in name is an update in identify. A hearing on the petition is scheduled for 1:30 o’clock p.m. on April 3, 2018 at the Ada County Courthouse. Objections may be filed by any person who can show the court a good reason against the name change. Date: February 16, 2018 CHRISTOPHER D RICH CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT PUB March 7, 14, 21 & 28 LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF, THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA In the Matter of the Estate of: ANNA ARLENE SCHNEIDER, Deceased, PHIL BATES Personal Representative. Case No., CV01 18 03872. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN the the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of the above-named decedent. All persons having claims against the decedent or the estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of the Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to the undersigned at the address indicated, and filed with the Clerk of the Court. Dated this 22 day of March, 2018. Phil Bates c/o Penelope S Gaffney GAFFNEY LAW P. O. Box 937 Boise, ID 83702 (208)991-0158
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My name is Jack Fulton #123259. I am looking for any single ladies ages 30 and up to write me and possibly more. So send me a letter to: Jack Fulton #123259, ISCI, P.O. Box 14 Boise, ID, 83707.
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My name is Brandi Chacon. I’m a 35 year old Puerto Rican with long curly black hair, light brown eyes, and nice kissable lips. Im thick in all the right places. I weigh 135 lbs. My hobbies include: camping, fishing, cooking, and keeping my man happy in every way. I also love spending time with family and my kids. I would love to meet the right man. I grew up in the trucking world. My dad owned 7 semi’s and my brother-in-law is now the owner of his own trucking company. So a trucker is my dream man. I hope to hear from you very soon. I am currently incarcerated at Mini-Cassia Criminal Justice Center. 1415 Albion Ave. Burley, ID 83318. Can’t wait to enjoy your letter. Don’t be shy. Love always, your Puerto Rican Princess.
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Hi my name is Anthony Stowell. Im 33 yrs old. I’m in the Boise, ID prison and would like to have a pen pal (female) that i can write and get to know. I’m outgoing, funny, have a really good sense of humor, and many more other things we can discuss in letters. So if you’re interested and would like to write here’s my info, send letters to, ISCC Anthony Stowell #125101 E2-13B P.O. Box 70010 Boise, ID 83707. I hope to hear from you soon!!:)
from someone. Thank you and have a good day. My address is: Daniel Shook #69457 ISCI 10C67A P.O. Box 14 Boise, ID 83707. Hey there, My name is Autumn Smith. I’m 21 years old with beautiful hazel eyes and light brown hair. I’m looking for a pen-pal and maybe something a little more. I’m gonna be down for a while and getting mail always makes my day. I enjoy cooking, traveling, I love snowboarding and I love to be outdoors. I’m very active. I love music. And to try to new things and new foods for sure. I’m hoping to meet the right man. Can’t wait to hear from you. Love always, Autumn. P.S. I’m incarcerated in Casper WY, the address is 201 N David Casper Way 82601. Well hello, My name is Christy Braden. I’m 37 years old and have red hair. I’m looking for a pen-pal maybe something more if the right man comes along. I like to be outdoors, ride on the back of Harley’s. I also love being around my family. I would like to see new places and can’t wait to get to know you. I’m currently incarcerated at Mini-Cassia Criminal Justice Center. 1415 Albion Ave. Burley, ID 83318. Can’t wait to hear from you. Love, Christy. My name is Javonna Rettew. I’m 23, I have short brown hair, brown eyes, I’m 5’2’’ and I weigh 135 lbs. I love to camp, go fishing, workout, and cook. I’m also very openminded, optimistic, and adventurous. I’m currently incarcerated at the Mini-Cassia Criminal Justice Center, and would like a pen-pal.
My name is Daniel, I’m 36 years old, 5’7’’ 140 lbs, blonde hair, hazel eyes. I have 1-7 years until I get out of prison. I’m looking for someone to write to help me pass time and keep my head up. I would like to know more about Boise and the areas around Boise. Also what is there to do in Boise. Hope to hear
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LEGAL BW LEGAL NOTICES IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE 4TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOR THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADA IN RE: Dylan C. Hughes Case No. CV01-18-02374 PETITION FOR NAME CHANGE A Petition to change the name of Dylan C. Hughes, now residing in the City of Boise, State of Idaho, has filed in the District Court of Ada County, Idaho. The name will change to Sophie Cay Hughes.
BOISEweekly c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c 21
PAGE BREAK MINERVA’S BREAKDOWN $GYLFH IRU WKRVH RQ WKH YHUJH WINE NOT! DEAR MINERVA, I recently had an acquaintance that came over to my house. He was celebrating a big change in his life, along with a few other mutual friends. He proceeded to get very drunk. Finally it was clear that he should not drive. He didn’t have Uber or Lyft and he lived too far for me to pay for it or risk the cleanup fees should he vomit. I offered him the couch. About 45 minutes later, I heard him vomiting—all over my vintage sofa. How do I get red wine stains out of upholstery? Sincerely, Caber-NAY!
DEAR NAY, I’m so sorry that your guest...unswallowed...all over your sofa. To guests like that, I say, “Merlot You Go!” I certainly hope you found something that worked and aren’t eagerly awaiting my reply. I have encountered this issue in the past (sometimes accidents happen). I have a quick solution. Using a clean cloth (preferably white to monitor your progress) dab the wine spill with a mixture of 1 tablespoon liquid dishwashing soap, such as Dawn, 1 tablespoon white vinegar and two cups of club soda. Adjust these measurements as needed depending on the size of the stain. This should help get the wine out of normal upholstery. If you have a different kind of sofa or speciality fabric, you might do some additional research. I have successfully used this method to get red wine out of vintage velour. If you have the funds, consult a professional. Cheers, sweetie! SUBMIT questions to Minerva’s Breakdown at bit.ly/MinervasBreakdown or mail them to Boise Weekly, 523 Broad St., Boise, ID 83702. All submissions remain anonymous.
22 c MARCH 28 – APRIL 3, 2018 c BOISEweekly
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FIND NEW FLAVORS OF MARSHMALLOW PEEPS Depending on how you feel about stuffing your mouth with a ball of sugar, the news that there are several new flavors of Peeps this Easter will either send you running to the limited number of retailers selling the signature Peeps or trigger an episode of marshmallow madness. The history of Peeps dates back to the 1950s, when Pennsylvania-based Just Born began pushing out masses of marshmallow chicks. The traditional colors were pink, white and yellow, with new flavors like vanilla, strawberry and chocolate following years later. This Easter, Peeps is adding several new flavors: fruit punch, sour cherry, sour watermelon, party cake, pancake and syrup (sold exclusively at the Kroger’s family of stores) and Neapolitan chicks, filled with chocolate and strawberry (sold only at Target). Plus, Walmart is selling three different packages of what it calls “mystery” flavored peeps. The general consensus on social media is that mystery No. 1 is root beer, No. 2 is lemon-lime and No. 3 is raspberry. —George Prentice Visit marshmallowpeeps.com for details.
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“TEARING AT THE SEAMS,” NATHANIEL RATELIFF AND THE NIGHT SWEATS “SEA OF DREAMS,” TRANS ATLANTIC CRUSH “NIGHT NIGHT AT THE FIRST LANDING,” MADELINE KENNEY “BY THE WAY, I FORGIVE YOU,” BRANDI CARLILE
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ASTROLOGY ARIES (March 21-April 19): A few years ago, a New Zealander named Bruce Simpson announced plans to build a cruise missile at his home using parts he bought legally from eBay and other online stores. In accordance with current astrological omens, I suggest you initiate a comparable project. For example, you could arrange a do-it-yourself space flight by tying a thousand helium balloons to your lawn chair. April Fool! I lied. Please don’t try lunatic schemes like the helium balloon space flight. Here’s the truth: Now is a favorable time to initiate big, bold projects, but not foolish, big, bold projects. The point is to be both visionary and practical. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The Finnish word kalsarikannit means getting drunk at home alone in your underwear and binging on guilty pleasures. It’s a perfect time for you to do just that. The Fates are whispering, “Chill out. Vegetate. Be ambitionless.” April Fool! I told a half-truth. In fact, now is a perfect time to excuse yourself from trying too hard and doing too much. You can accomplish wonders and marvels by staying home and bingeing on guilty pleasures in your underwear, but there’s no need to get drunk. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Actor Gary Busey is sure there are no mirrors in heaven. He has other specific ideas about the place, as well. This became a problem when he was filming the movie Quigley, in which his character Archie visits heaven. Busey was so enraged at the director’s mistaken rendering of paradise that he got into a fist fight with another actor. I hope you will show an equally feisty fussiness in the coming weeks, Gemini. April Fool! I lied, sort of. On the one hand, I do hope you’ll be forceful as you insist on expressing your high standards. Don’t back down! On the other hand, refrain from pummeling anyone who asks you to compromise. CANCER (June 21-July 22): In the Scots language still spoken in parts of Scotland, eedle-doddles are people who can’t summon initiative when it’s crunch time. They are so consumed in trivial or irrelevant concerns that they lose all instinct for being in the right place at the right time. I regret to inform you that you are now at risk of being an eedle-doddle. April Fool! I lied. In fact, the truth is just the opposite. I have rarely seen you so well-primed to respond vigorously and bravely to Big Magic Moments. For the foreseeable future, you are King or Queen of Carpe Diem. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Paul McCartney likes to periodically act like a regular person who’s not a famous musician. He goes grocery shopping without
BOISE WEEKLY.COM
BY ROB BREZSNY
bodyguards. He rides on public transportation and strikes up conversations with random strangers. I think you may need to engage in similar behavior yourself, Leo. You’ve become a bit too enamored with your own beauty and magnificence. You really do need to come down to earth and hang out more with us little people. April Fool! I lied. The truth is, now is prime time to hone your power and glory; to indulge your urge to shine and dazzle; to be as conspicuously marvelous as you dare to be. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The coming days will be an excellent time to concoct an alchemical potion that will heal your oldest wounds. For best results, mix and sip a gallon of potion using the following magic ingredients: absinthe, chocolate syrup, cough medicine, dandelion tea, cobra venom, and worm’s blood. April Fool! I mixed a lie in with a truth. It is a fact that now is a fine time to seek remedies for your ancient wounds, but the potion I recommended is bogus. Go on a quest for the real cure. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I expect you will soon receive a wealth of exotic and expensive gifts. For example, a benefactor may finance your vacation to a gorgeous sacred site or give you the deed to an enchanted waterfall. I won’t be surprised if you’re blessed with a solid-gold bathtub or a year’s supply of luxury cupcakes. It’s even possible that a sugar daddy or sugar momma will fork over $500,000 to rent an auditorium for a party in your honor. April Fool! I distorted the truth. I do suspect you’ll get more goodies than usual in the coming weeks, but they’re likely to come in the form of love and appreciation, not flashy material goods. (For best results, don’t just wait around for the goodies to stream in; ask for them!) SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): There’s a narrow waterway between Asia and Europe. In the fifth century B.C., Persian King Xerxes had two bridges built across it so he could invade Greece with his army, but a great storm swept through and smashed his handiwork. Xerxes was royally peeved. He ordered his men to whip the uncooperative sea and brand it with hot irons, all the while shouting curses at it, like “You are a turbid and briny river.” I recommend that you do something similar, Scorpio. Has nature done anything to inconvenience you? Show it who’s the supreme boss! April Fool! I lied. The truth is, now is an excellent time for you to become more attuned and in love with a higher power, however you define that. What’s greater than you and bigger than your life and wilder than you can imagine? Refine your practice of the art of surrender.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Fifteenth-century Italian painter Filippo Lippi was such a lustful womanizer that he sometimes found it tough to focus on making art. At one point, his wealthy and politically powerful patron Cosimo de’ Medici, frustrated by his extracurricular activities, imprisoned him in his studio to ensure he wouldn’t get diverted. Judging from your current astrological omens, Sagittarius, I suspect you need similar constraints. April Fool! I fibbed a little. I am indeed worried you’ll get so caught up in the pursuit of pleasure that you’ll neglect your duties, but I won’t go so far as to suggest you should be locked up for your own good. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Now is a favorable time to slap a lawsuit on your mom in an effort to make her pay for the mistakes she made while raising you. You could also post an exposé on social media in which you reveal her shortcomings, or organize a protest rally outside her house with your friends holding signs demanding she apologize for how she messed you up. April Fool! Everything I just said was ridiculous and false. The truth is, now is a perfect moment to meditate on the gifts and blessings your mother gave you. If she is still alive, express your gratitude to her. If she has passed on, do a ritual to honor and celebrate her. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarian author Alice Walker won a Pulitzer Prize for her novel The Color Purple. She has also published 33 other books and built a large audience, but some of her ideas are not exactly mainstream. For example, she says one of her favorite authors is David Icke, who asserts that intelligent extraterrestrial reptiles have disguised themselves as humans and taken control of our planet’s governments. I bring this to your attention, because I think it’s time that you, too, reveal the full extent of how crazy you really are. April Fool! I half-lied. While it’s true now is a favorable time to show more of your unconventional and eccentric sides, I don’t advise you to go full-on whacko. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Warning! Danger! You are at risk of contracting a virulent case of cherophobia! What exactly is cherophobia? It’s a fear of happiness. It’s an inclination to dodge and shun joyful experiences because of the suspicion that they will disappoint you or cause bad luck. Please do something to stop this insidious development. April Fool! I lied. The truth is that you are currently more receptive to positive emotions and delightful events than you’ve been in a log time. There’s less than a one-percent chance you will fall victim to cherophobia.
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