Charleston City Paper Vol 23 Issue 26

Page 1

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VOL 23 ISSUE 26 • JANUARY 29, 2020 • charlestoncitypaper.com

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Proving Ground Ruta Smith

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PRE GAME OYSTER ROAST COME SHUCK IT OUT BEFORE THE BIG GAME

01.29.20 VOLUME 23 • ISSUE 26

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N NEWS

Looking Up

Local mentors build a mutually beneficial lifelong bond BY SKYLER BALDWIN

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

Kent Wagner says it’s hard for him to actually sit down and talk about his relationship with Chris Spann without sounding too cliche. What started as a rocky friendship grew into an unconditional bond that transcends what either of them could have expected.

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“I think I was 9 years old, and I wanted a ing up. Spann says that what kids really need positive male role model in my life,” Spann is just somebody who will be patient and recalls. “At the time, it was just me, my mom, listen to them. and my sister. My mom turned to this proAfter a few years of showing up, Wagner gram and asked me if I wanted to try it out. I asked Spann to be the best man at his was hesitant at first, but I gave it a shot.” wedding. The teenager didn’t really know Spann signed up as a little brother for Big what a best man was supposed to do at the Brothers Big Sisters more than 20 years ago. time, but he knew that he didn’t want to Big Brothers Big Sisters, founded in 1904, mess it up. pairs volunteer “big brothers” and “big sisters” “I had never been a part of something with younger kids in need of a positive role so big and so important for someone else,” model and friend. According to the group, Spann says. “I felt like it was a pretty big today’s youth face a variety of challenges, and deal and like he really cared about me. I having someone there to guide them along really cared about him too, and I made those risky paths can help them to reach sure everything was going to go all right their potential. with him. I trusted him a lot more, and he Around the time Spann signed up, trusted me a lot more.” Wagner, then 29, had recently moved to After the wedding, things got a bit busier Charleston and opened Millenium Music, for both. With Spann, then a teenager, going a landmark music store downtown at the through high school and college, and Wagner corner of King and Calhoun. Business was starting a family, it became harder for them booming, and he was enjoying the ride when to get together. he decided to sign up as a big brother. “We both grew up,” Wagner remembers. “The stars were “I got married and had aligned for me to give He went through “One thing our big brothers kids. something back, so his middle years, his say is that they are pretty I decided to give the teenage years, and I program a try,” he guess we didn’t see sure they have made a explains. “I tend to be each other for a while. slow at starting things, difference in the life of their We lived separate lives, but just as slow at but the bond never felt little brother. But, they are quitting, so once I start any weaker.” positive their little brother something, it becomes Recently, the two made a difference in theirs.” have reconnected. a lifelong thing.” Things didn’t click Wagner is now the —Merridith Crowe, president and CEO immediately between of Big Brothers Big Sisters Lowcountry godfather of Spann’s the two of them young daughter. And, when they first met in now that Spann is in 1995. Spann says he tested Wagner a lot, his early 30s, the relationship is less onestaying distant from his new “big brother.” sided, they say. Both have noticed a bit of But Wagner remained patient, and let the a role reversal, with Spann returning some young Spann express himself however he advice that Wagner gave him years ago. needed. Merridith Crowe, president and CEO of “Eventually I stopped,” Spann says. “I Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Lowcountry, always thought he wouldn’t be there for long, says the group is always in need of more but he was showing me that he was there volunteers, especially for big brothers. for the long haul — that he wanted to get to According to Crowe, it takes six times as know me and build a real friendship.” many asks to get men to say yes, whereas Wagner believes that Spann puts it best women tend to readily volunteer their time. when he says it’s really a matter of just show- She says she has never met anyone who

Provided

KENT WAGNER (LEFT) AND HIS LITTLE BROTHER, CHRIS SPANN, AT A CHRISTMAS PARTY TOGETHER AFTER MORE THAN TWO DECADES OF FRIENDSHIP

regretted signing up because the relationships have an impact for both involved. “One thing our big brothers say is that they are pretty sure they have made a difference in the life of their little brother,” Crowe explains. “But, they are positive their little brother made a difference in theirs.” Wagner, who now works closely with Crowe to get volunteers for the program, says that there’s a waiting list for big sisters, but a waiting list for little brothers, highlighting the need for volunteers. In his case, though, he has never had trouble advocating for the work. “It’s an easy sell because I believe in it,” Wagner says. “I’ve lived it, and I know how rewarding it is. When I talk about it with the people I meet, it’s coming from the heart, and that enthusiasm is translated pretty easily because it’s real.” With Be a Mentor, Alex Moor, the group’s executive director, mentors a local sixth grader. “Mentoring provides adults the opportunity to really reflect on what’s important to them in their lives — their core values,” Moor says. “It builds a stronger sense of what that means to you. It brings me so

much joy to be able to see my mentee grow through her successes.” Whether they know it, the numbers give a sense for how much of an impact mentors can have on a young person. “Students with mentors are 55 percent more likely to graduate,” Moor explains. “One hundred percent of mentees graduated last year. Students with mentors are also more likely to hold leadership positions, which prepares them for life after graduation.” Getting involved in either Big Brothers Big Sisters or Be a Mentor begins with an online application. While Big Brothers Big Sisters processes applicants to be mentors and mentees themselves, Be a Mentor partners with local schools, and after a screening process, helps to match the volunteer with a mentee in need of a mentor. “What’s really cool about mentorship is that everybody has unique qualities they bring to the table to impact the lives of their mentee,” Moor says. “Everybody has unique skills that can be used for good when it comes to providing kids with someone in their life to look up to.”


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N “We’re not in the tourist business. We’re in the maritime commerce business.” —Jim Newsome, the State Ports Authority president and CEO, pushed back on a proposal from Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg to enact a per-passenger tax on people boarding cruise ships at the downtown Charleston port. Source: The Post and Courier

Sam Spence

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

HISTORIC BUILDINGS UNDAMAGED IN HAMPTON PARK FIRE LAST WEEK

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A fire in a storage building in Hampton Park on the night of Tues. Jan. 21 did not damage nearby historic buildings slated for renovation in the coming years, officials say. No cause for the fire has been identified, Charleston Fire Department officials told the City Paper on Wed. Jan. 22. A police spokesman says dispatchers were first alerted to the incident at Mary Murray Boulevard and Cleveland Street at 5:25 p.m. on Tuesday evening. Within an hour, firefighters had the blaze under control as traffic was diverted away from the busy intersection near Rutledge Avenue and Grove Street and residents continued to play with their dogs in the nearby dog park. While the shed sustained damage, nearby historic buildings slated for alteration by the Charleston Parks Conservancy were unharmed by the fire. Two years ago, the group was approved to build a new public event space near the corner of Hampton Park.

“There should be a formal, fair and rigorous selection process...” —Will Haynie, the mayor of Mt. Pleasant who serves on the Charleston County Aviation Authority board, reacted before the board met on Mon. Jan. 27 and offered the position to County Council Chairman Elliott Summey without a search. Source: facebook.com/mayorwillhaynie, Charleston County Aviation Authority

Under those plans, the shed itself would be completely demolished and replaced with expanded parking and the nearby horse stable building will be replaced with a new, modern-style building. The stable, which was last used by police and carriage companies, has gone unused in recent years. The small caretaker’s house, which sits next to the horse barn off Mary Murray Boulevard, is slated to be renovated to include a historical exhibit of the park, according to the plans. College Park, the adjacent baseball stadium that’s used as a practice field for the Citadel, was also undamaged in the fire. On Wednesday, Parks Conservancy director Harry Lessane said the group is raising money for the Jubilee Hall project, but no timeline has been determined. Phase one of the project, the renovation of the snack bar nearby into the Rose Pavilion, was completed in 2019. —Sam Spence

$997,000

The amount requested by S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control from state budget writers last week to combat vaccine-preventable diseases in response to vaccine hesitancy and drops in federal funding. The funds would pay for 31,000 total doses of hepatitis A and the three-part MMR vaccines. Source: SCDHEC

NEW CHARLESTON INITIATIVE WOULD INCENTIVIZE AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT IN OPPORTUNITY ZONES

Last month, members of Charleston City Council voted to leverage federal Opportunity Zone (QOZ) incentives to stimulate the development of affordable housing in the designated areas. The measure passed through Council on Dec. 17, but not without some skepticism from members. QOZs are areas that are designated economically distressed according to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, where the concept was first enshrined into law. These zones are meant to encourage investment in low-income communities, thanks to a tax credit for investors that put money in Qualified Opportunity Funds (QOF), investment vehicles that are organized with the intent of devoting capital to QOZs. First proposed by U.S. Sen. Tim Scott in 2016, Opportunity Zones have been on the receiving end of some criticism that they could exacerbate gentrification in low-income areas. Majority Whip Jim Clyburn indicated worry that the program would amount to “a tax credit for rich investors,” and some early examples indicate that that could be what’s happening. In December, Scott proposed additions that would build in accountability measures. “The city of Charleston sought to offset any potentially negative effects of the Opportunity Zones by creating an additional incentive for affordable housing,” says Jacob Lindsey, the city’s director of planning, preservation, and sustainability. “So we were proactively creating our own additional regulations so we could gain more affordable housing in Opportunity Zones.” Gov. Henry McMaster designated eight census tracts as OZs in Charleston County, including some in areas of the peninsula that have already seen heavy investment in recent years. A total of 128 tracts have been approved as Opportunity Zones. Councilmember Robert Mitchell’s Eastside district includes parts of the downtown QOZs. Even though he voted in favor of the program, he is still concerned about the location of the zones. “It’s going in various areas that sometimes don’t need the Opportunity Zone in it because they have the money and the resources to do the things that they need to do,” Mitchell told the City Paper. “I think it’s going to help a little in some areas that we need it, but I need it more in these blighted areas, mostly.” Developers using QOFs can apply to delay federal taxes on capital gains, but if a developer is building affordable housing, Lindsey says the project can automatically qualify with the city for higher residential density and lower parking requirements. “What the developer gets,” Lindsey says, “is a time bonus, effectively.” Support for the measure was strong, but some members were cautious. “I do feel like the federal law has been put into motion prior to having the thoughtfulness of how it’s going to be regulated and enforced to the level of accomplishing the goals that are stated by the sponsors in Congress,” said Councilmember Carol Jackson, who represents James Island. “We’re trying to basically frame up a requirement that we have no control over.” “I applaud the city for ways to get affordable housing, but I was against Opportunity Zones from the beginning,” said now-former Councilmember James Lewis. “If you look at the way this design is drawn — it’s drawn for the rich folk. It’s drawn for the developers… All the development that’s going on down there, it’s been going on. It’s just another level of funds to help the rich developers get their properties, and get tax breaks, and it’s not benefiting the neighborhoods.” Lindsey says the city has taken steps to ensure developers follow through on commitments to build the lower-cost housing. The city’s to leverage QOZs was preceded by local legislation. North Charleston Rep. Marvin Pendarvis introduced a bill (H.3186) in 2018 to provide added incentives if a comapany commits to benefit the community before they invest in an Opportunity Zone. “Our biggest problem is going to be trying to attract investments to those areas,” Pendarvis told the City Paper. “You’re going to have to have a developer that feels like it makes sense, but we also have to make sure we make it make sense, and give them the kind of incentive they need, but also hold them accountable to make sure it’s something mutually beneficial so that the community benefits, as well.” —Heath Ellison


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N Three Questions With Presidential Candidate …

Amy Klobuchar Until the S.C. Democratic Party primary on Sat. Feb. 29, we will publish candidate responses to three questions on issues facing local voters along with a brief analysis of each from two CofC professors. For more, visit charlestoncitypaper.com/threequestions 1. What would you do now and in the future to address climate change’s impact, particularly for poor and rural residents of coastal communities? Sen. Klobuchar will introduce sweeping legislation to combat the climate crisis that includes a massive investment in renewable energy, energy efficiency, climate-resilient infrastructure, climate research and innovation, rural energy development, and better, greener transportation. She is deeply committed to leaving no one behind through investments in climate adaptation and support for frontline communities. As President, she will make sure vulnerable communities are a key part of decision making, increase federal funding to invest in infrastructure and jobs in communities that are most directly experiencing the effects of climate change, and strengthen environmental justice programs at the EPA. 2. How would you deal with enduring, stark racial inequalities in places like South Carolina? Sen. Klobuchar believes we must beat back decades of systemic racism, discrimination, and inequality. That begins by focusing on economic justice and opportunity, which means investing in underserved areas, providing early-childcare, fixing inequalities in our education system, addressing racism in health care such as disparities in maternal and infant mortality rates, overhauling our country’s housing policies by totally eliminating the Section 8 backlog and ending housing discrimination, and tackling racial disparities in wages and in retirement savings. Sen. Klobuchar is also committed to cutting child poverty in half within a decade and ending it within a generation. 3. Why should South Carolina voters support you Feb. 29? Sen. Klobuchar is running for President to bring people together, take on the challenges facing our country, and to get things done. In the Senate, she has passed more than 100 bills as the lead Democrat on issues like infrastructure, election security, and preventing shortages of life-saving medications. And she has a track record of winning big. She has won every race, every place, every time — including places President Trump won by more than 20 points — and she will get our country back on the path of progress with an ambitious, optimistic economic agenda for our country.

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

According to the experts …

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U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s campaign is based on a simple strategy: do well in Iowa’s first-in-thenation caucuses and carry that momentum into New Hampshire, Nevada, and South Carolina. Unfortunately for Klobuchar, this strategy, sensible as it may be, does not appear to be working. Although research has shown that momentum can indeed play an important role in nomination contests, in our recently published book on the South Carolina presidential primary we discovered that a strong performance in Iowa has a weak relationship with a candidate’s performance in South Carolina. For example, in 2004, then-Sen. John Kerry won the Iowa caucuses but lost to N.C. Sen. John Edwards by over 15 percent in South Carolina. No doubt the reason for the weak relationship between the Hawkeye and Palmetto states is their vastly different Democratic nominating electorates. One of the key differences is that South Carolina Democrats are more conservative than Democrats in Iowa. Given the state’s greater conservatism, one might expect Klobuchar to do well in South Carolina. She is a bona fide moderate, having won three statewide elections in Minnesota, and has spoken out about the dangers of the growing national debt. However, her message has not resonated in South Carolina. According to the Real Clear Politics polling average, she only has support from 1.3 percent of likely voters in the Palmetto State. Another key finding in our book is the importance of endorsements in the South Carolina primary. We found that key endorsements from South Carolina political leaders carry considerable weight with the state’s primary voters. In this area, Klobuchar is also well behind her chief rivals. Joe Biden continues to be the polling leader in South Carolina and also has the most endorsements, including support from state Sen. Marlon Kimpson, state Rep. Marvin Pendarvis, and longtime Charleston Mayor Joe Riley. All in all, Amy Klobuchar needs a quick turnaround to have a chance in South Carolina’s “First in the South” primary. Jordan Ragusa and Gibbs Knotts are political science professors at the College of Charleston. They recently published First in the South: Why South Carolina’s Presidential Primary Matters (USC Press, 2019).


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2/1

G. LOVE

blotter

BY SKYLER BALDWIN and HEATH ELLISON ILLUSTRATION BY STEVE STEGELIN

BLOTTER O’ THE WEEK

Almost $500 worth of Nike clothing was shoplifted from a West Ashley sporting goods store. It’s a wonder that they escaped on foot without stealing running shoes.

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

A bag of what was suspected to be crack cocaine was found on the floor of a downtown emergency room. According to the complainant, the bag fell out of a patient’s pocket while they were lying on a stretcher. The man made comments to suggest that he sells narcotics, but doesn’t do them. Unfortunately, selling the stuff is a crime, while doing it is not.

3/1

CHIPPENDALES

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The Blotter is taken from Charleston Police Department reports. We’ve added a cartoon and a little commentary. We’ve added a little humor, too. No one has been found guilty. This is not a court of law.

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The “bejesus” was scared out of a Johns Island woman when she discovered a “boulder” in her backyard. Officers advised that the rock was approximately 12 inches long and six inches wide. Johns Island is coming for your throne of bizarre police complaints, Daniel Island. During a field sobriety test, officers advised a man to count down from 36 to 24. The man ended up counting backwards all the way to zero. Overachiever.

At a downtown museum, a man was seen facing the outside wall, near a puddle of suspected urine. We know what you’re thinking: It could have rained that morning and officers are just mistaking the puddle of pee for rainwater. Wait … the report goes on to say, “There was no rainfall last night nor this morning.” Well, there goes that defense. A West Ashley man answered his door to find two men, one with a gun. They told him that they wanted to “buy something from him.” The victim wasn’t sure what it was, but told officers that it could have been one of his four prescription drugs. But on TV, the only way to become a drug dealer is getting cancer and cooking meth in the desert with a former student. Last Wednesday, a downtown gas station employee told police they had been having trouble with a trespasser all day. The culprit? A woman in her 60s wearing a red shirt and khaki pants — which were soiled.

A man dressed in what police described as bright African clothing and gold jewelry was placed on trespass notice after being “inappropriate” with women while driving a black Dodge Charger. Some guys are just too cool. After getting a call from a downtown business owner, police found a man drunk and passed out beneath two “No Trespassing” signs. Responding officers noted that the man had also urinated on himself and his genitals were still exposed. What is it with people soiling themselves this week? After officers stopped a man they had observed drinking something from a brown paper bag, the man told officers that they must have been mistaken and “there was no beverage.” When an officer approached a vehicle to speak to its driver, the driver rolled the front window down, letting out a billowing cloud of smoke. When asked what he was doing, the driver said, “Just sitting and smoking weed, trying to clear his mind.”


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V VIEWS

OUR VIEW

Serving Charleston, North Charleston, Mount Pleasant, Summerville, and every place in between.

On the Ballot

PUBLISHER

Jaime Harrison gives South Carolina a chance to be relevant in November

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

ith a month to go before the state’s Democratic presidential primary, candidates and cable news producers would normally be planning their final blitzes through the Palmetto State, orchestrating photo ops with fellow politicians and relatable working folk before politely disappearing until the next contested presidential primary. But in 2020, one candidate challenging U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham statewide could change that. Could Jaime Harrison — an Orangeburg-raised, Yaleeducated former lobbyist — help make South Carolina a factor come November? As much as party leaders love to hold up our “First in the South” presidential primaries, South Carolina is rarely a player by the time the general election rolls around. For decades, Republicans’ one-party rule in the state has meant that a huge chunk of our elections are not competitive. And blame it on partisan gerrymandering and the electoral college, but the state has been solidly red on the national level since before U.S. Sen. Fritz Hollings retired, leaving the state with two Republican senators for the first time in the modern era. Driven by his own confessed desire to be “relevant” after the passing of former U.S. Sen. John McCain, Graham has set himself up for a serious challenge this year by Harrison. The campaign strategy almost writes itself as Graham’s support of President Donald Trump becomes even more inscrutable. Harrison, while unproven on the ballot, may very well have the political chops to defeat Graham on his own, but both of their fates are tied to Trump.

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By simply having a strong statewide candidate to choose from in November, Democrats down the ballot stand to benefit. In Charleston, for example, where U.S. Rep. Joe Cunningham is also running for reelection, Democratic voters will have at least two consequential votes to cast even assuming that the state’s electoral college votes will go to Trump. Same goes for the 2nd District where Congressman Joe Wilson has a solid challenger in Adair Ford Boroughs. And in Clyburn’s 6th District, which includes Harrison’s hometown, increased turnout could prove to be a counterweight to reliably Republican corners of the state. Harrison faces long odds, for sure. But he has already proven to be a capable fundraiser, pulling in a reported $7.5 million total so far, a remarkable sum dwarfed by Graham’s own $10.5 million warchest, according to reports. But in the eyes of national donors, success begets success, and if Harrison can be an effective messenger and national polling shows that the party has a chance to defeat Trump and his most-shameless ally, you can bet that the money will be there. In 2014, Graham beat state Sen. Brad Hutto with 54 percent of the vote. Hutto never really stood much of a chance, but was able to mount a serious challenge nonetheless. Perhaps most importantly, 2020 is not 2014. Trump, Graham, and Harrison will all be on every single ballot in the state. It’s hard to tell whether there’s another 5 percent out there at this point, but it’s safe to say that people will be watching South Carolina in November.

Andy Brack

EDITORIAL

Editor: Sam Spence Staff: Skyler Baldwin, Heath Ellison, Connelly Hardaway, Mary Scott Hardaway, Lauren Hurlock, Lindsay Street Cartoonist: Steve Stegelin Photographer: Rūta Smith Contributors: Gabriella Capestany, Vincent Harris, Melissa Hayes, Stephanie Hunt, D.R.E. James, Stratton Lawrence, Parker Milner, Robert Moss, Alex Peeples, Kyle Peterson, Michael Pham, Chase Quinn, Jeremy Rutledge, Michael Smallwood, Rex Stickel, Rouzy Vafaie, Dustin Waters, Kevin Wilson, Vanessa Wolf, Kevin Young

Published by City Paper Publishing, LLC Members: J. Edward Bell | Andrew C. Brack

Views expressed in Charleston City Paper cover the spectrum and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. Charleston City Paper takes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts. © 2020. All content is copyrighted and the property of City Paper Publishing, LLC. Material may not be reproduced without permission. Proud member of the Association of Alternative Newsmedia and the South Carolina Press Association.

Send us a letter We love hearing from readers. Share your opinions (up to 200 words) in an old-fashioned letter (1316 Rutledge Ave., Charleston, SC 29403) or by email to editor@charlestoncitypaper.com. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity. Please include your name and contact information for verificaiton.


GUEST COLUMN | BY BEN CRAWFORD

No Need to Suffer My future patients deserve Medicare for All I’ve been a medical student for about six months now. (The take-home: human bodies are intricate — human beings even more so.) I’m humbled by the weight of the responsibilities ahead of me. I study seriously because I have a duty to my future patients — to give them the best care that I can.

intimate details of their personal care by an untrained private bureaucrat ever again. Nearly all Americans would save money as a result. Since insurance companies want to make a profit, they’re always going to charge you more than they need to. Dozens of studies find that switching to a Medicare for All system would save money — on administraI would betray that duty, even now, by ignoring the Among major nations, it’s striking that in the U.S. tive bloat, on corporate greed, and as a result of better inescapable reality: Private insurance in America is you will you find cases of parents who kill themselves to health outcomes. wasteful, predatory, and unsustainable. Every day that avoid leaving behind the burden of medical debt. (The Imagine never having to worry about whether a surwe allow it to continue, we condemn more people to U.S. today is the wealthiest country in recorded history.) gery would be covered or not. Imagine never having to suffer. If we are going to build a more just world in my worry about where the money for new contact lenses or Their suffering is not necessary. It exists under an lifetime, one of the foundations of that world must be a hearing aids would come from. (They’re covered too!) unfeeling, corporate superstructure that is driven solely single-payer healthcare system: Medicare for All. Imagine the freedom of a system in which your wellby profiteering. Worse, that suffering has become an Medicare for All envisions a world where providers being, and not the profit of private insurance compaacceptable economic byproduct — like chemical runoff simply provide and are quickly and reliably reimbursed. nies, is what matters most. or car exhaust. The system is simple: You replace the inflated private For myself, as a medical student, these hypotheticals There are many different kinds of suffering and they taxes of insurance premiums, deductibles, and all other aren’t rhetorical. They’re personal. How many of my are by no means exclusive to the uninsured. Please, ever-ballooning out-of-pocket costs with a (smaller) patients will forgo care to avoid digging into their savtake your pick: Sky-high premiums? Byzantine private bump in public tax. ings? How many of my patients will suffer for it? bureaucracy? How about $1,000+ ambulance fees? Or After that, you go to whatever hospital and doctor you How many will die? Until we pass Medicare for All maybe the sudden fear of finding out that an “in-netplease, and, at the end of the visit, you’re covered. It’s done. in this country, I will have already failed them. work” provider was, in fact, “out-of-network,” and that If you’re a human being and you show up at the door, you’re you’re (“We’re sorry to inform you…”) on the hook for treated for what you have and then you can go home. Ben Crawford is a first-year medical student at the everything you thought was covered? Neither doctors nor patients would have to run the Medical University of South Carolina from Columbia.

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CITY PICKS

T H U R S D AY

CofC Day

S AT U R D AY

Pup Bowl

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

Cheer on the Kansas City Canines and the San Fran Puppy-niners as they face off in the third annual Pup Bowl. Guests can check out raffles, contests, a photobooth, bouncy house, food, face painting, and more. Kickoff is at 12:30 p.m. At the Pup Bowl, every adoption is a touchdown. Sat. Feb. 1, 12-3 p.m. Free to attend. Mt. Pleasant Towne Centre, 1600 Palmetto Grande Blvd. Mt. Pleasant. mtpleasanttownecentre.com

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S AT U R D AY

S AT U R D AY

Save The Light Race

Park Circle Record Show

Save The Light Inc. and The Charleston County Park and Recreation Commission are partnering up to host their annual 5K and half marathon through Folly Beach. The 5K is open to all runners and walkers alike, but the half marathon is a runners only event. Awards and post-race food will be provided. This race helps support the preservation of Morris Island Lighthouse. Sat. Feb. 1, 8:30 a.m. $28+. Folly Beach, Center Street. ccprc.com

From hard-to-find albums to $1 records, search for your long lost vinyl at the Park Circle Record Show hosted by Gray Cat Music. Shop from crates of the very best (and maybe worst) albums in music history. Sat. Feb. 1, 3-7 p.m. Free to attend. The Sparrow, 1078 E Montague Ave. North Charleston. facebook.com/graycatmusic

Join the city in wishing The College of Charleston a happy 250th birthday. The Cistern Yard will host a birthday bash for the College with a special message from President Hsu, block party food and festivities, and a live performance from AFISHAL. Thurs. Jan. 30, 5-8 p.m. Free to attend. College of Charleston, 66 George St. Downtown. facebook.com/collegeofcharlestonalumni

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SPONSORED

Carolopolis Award Ceremony

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The Preservation Society hosts its 66th Carolopolis awards ceremony to honor buildings for their historic background, preservation, renovation, and rehabilitation. Winners display the coveted honor with the front door medallions you see around downtown. After the ceremony there will be a full reception with food, wine, and live music. Thurs. Jan. 30, 6 p.m. $100. Riviera Theatre, 225 King St. Downtown. preservationsociety.org

Laughing For all the Wrong Reasons. The Second City is back to break all the comedy rules they made famous in their all-new, all-hilarious revue that will leave you laughing ... and questioning your very existence on this lonely planet. Sat. Feb. 1 at 8 p.m. Tickets for The Second City are $35 and can be purchased at charlestonmusichall.com


S AT U R D AY

Shop discounted bridal, formal, and cocktail attire at the fourth annual bridal boutique and fundraiser, sponsored by Junior League of Charleston. This two day event offers donated, new, and gently worn dresses at a fraction of the retail price so every person has the opportunity to buy their dream dress. Sat. Feb. 1, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., 1:30-5 p.m. and Feb. 2, 12-3 p.m. Free to attend, $10/early access. Citadel Mall, 2070 Rittenberg Blvd. West Ashely. jlcharleston.org

S AT U R D AY T H U R S D AY

Dave Chappelle Legendary stand-up comedian Dave Chappelle performs not one but two shows this Thursday at the North Charleston Performing Arts Center. After his performances head to Deco nightclub for an after party with his official DJ, DJ Trauma. Thurs. Jan. 30 at 7 and 10 p.m. $68.50+. North Charleston Performing Arts Center, 5001 Coliseum Drive. North Charleston. northcharlestoncoliseumpac.com

S AT U R D AY

Last Oyster Roast at JI Pub Aw shucks, oyster season is almost over. For their last hoorah, Charleston Sports Pub hosts an all you can eat oyster roast. In between shucking, enjoy $3 beer, live music, and lawn games. Sat. Feb. 1, 1-5 p.m. $20. Charleston Sports Pub, 792 Folly Road. James Island. facebook.com/cspjamesisland

TAKE A WALK ON THE WILD SIDE F E BRUARY 14-16 • S EW E.CO M Enjoy 20% off general admission tickets with code JOINUS20 through 2/1/20.

CHS Hort Oyster Roast Dwell under live oaks while indulging in endless oysters, chili, hot dogs, beer, and other goodies with the Charleston Horticultural Society. This event is open to all, and kids under 12 get in free. A portion of proceeds from this roast will support Charleston educational outreach programs. Sat. Feb. 1, 4-6:30 p.m. $40. McLeod Plantation, 325 Country Club Drive. James Island

CALENDAR | charlestoncitypaper.com

A Gown Affair

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A ARTS

artifacts PORGY AND BESS COMING TO BIG SCREENS NEAR YOU

VIOLINST ANYANGO YARBO-DAVENPORT JOINS A CAST OF TALENTED MUSICIANS DURING THIS WEEKEND’S COLOUR OF MUSIC FESTIVAL

Colour Scheme The Colour of Music Festival puts the spotlight on African-American classical performers and composers BY VINCENT HARRIS The Colour of Music Festival

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

Wed. Jan. 29-Sat. Feb. 1 $15-$35 Various venues colourofmusic.org

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If it’s possible to be born to do a job, then Lee Pringle was born to create and run The Colour of Music Festival. Pringle has spent the last seven years building the festival into a stunning and expansive presentation of classical music either composed or performed by African Americans. This year’s edition features a piano recital courtesy of Leonard Hayes, a clarinet quintet led by Robert L. Davis, a vocal recital from Indra Thomas, soprano, and performances by string and brass ensembles. Over four days, the program that Pringle spent more than a year creating will unfold in intimate surroundings — just the kinds that the composers themselves might have envisioned these pieces being played in. “This year’s program is the first time we’ve created an intimate setting that features a very robust chamber presence,” Pringle says. “We’ve done the grand masterworks with chorus and orchestra, but we have not yet really showcased the original form of classical music from the baroque period. So by having these intimate concerts at the EdmondstonAlston House Salon or the Murray Center Salon, it gives the audience a chance to

George Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess will be streamed live on the big screen on Sat. Feb. 1 as part of The Met: Live in HD series. You can catch it at three area theaters: the Main Library on Calhoun Street, the Terrace, and Regal Azalea Square in Summerville. Check each venue’s website for full details on ticket prices and start times. James Robinson’s new take on the classic opera transports audiences to Charleston’s Catfish Row, featuring choreography from Tony Award-nominee Camille A. Brown. Eric Owens and Angel Blue star in the title roles of Porgy and Bess. The live transmission will be hosted by Tony, Grammy, and Emmy Award winner Audra McDonald, who took home a Tony for her 2012 portrayal of Bess. The Charleston-based opera, composed by Gershwin and featuring a libretto by author DuBose Heyward and lyricist Ira Gershwin, was the highlight of Spoleto Festival USA 2016’s season. That year was not the first time the opera had graced the Holy City’s stages. At least, it was not the first time the production had made it to the Gaillard, which was freshly revamped in 2016 after a three year renovation, ready for the international arts festival’s sold out event. As Kinsey Gidick wrote in 2015, Porgy and Bess was first performed at the Gaillard in 1970, the first time the venue had hosted an integrated audience. Former director of marketing at Spoleto, Jennifer Scott, said: “It was a landmark production for the tricentennial celebrations in Charleston.” Fast forward to 2016, when the city celebrated the famed opera, selling out every Spoleto performance; offering free outdoor screenings for those who didn’t get tickets to the Gaillard performances; and inspiring art exhibitions at several local galleries and museums. Charleston has seen shows and exhibitions come and go since that 2016 production. Porgy and Bess, though, an opera that made its Broadway debut in 1935, remains deeply rooted in the city, and you’ve got one rare opportunity to check it out on Feb. 1. —Connelly Hardaway

Photos provided

EDMONDSTON-ALSTON HOUSE SERVES AS ONE OF THE FESTIVAL’S INTIMATE “SALONS”

experience not only exquisite classical music by extraordinary instrumentalists, but they get to hear it in a setting that it was conceived to be heard in.” Pringle himself has the perfect background to create and promote a festival like this. In addition to his own skills as a tenor vocalist, he’s produced more than 150 orchestral

and choral concerts along with solo recitals and served as a consultant to the Charleston Symphony Orchestra. But he’s also led his own marketing and production firm, Buster-Elsie Productions, and he has an extensive background in corporate finance. All of that expericontinued on page 19

For daily updates from Charleston’s art world, check out the Arts+Movies section at charlestoncitypaper.com.


MUSEUM OF LIVING ARTS

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Wed.

From the Sahara to Mt. Kilimanjaro, the City of North Charleston’s cultural arts department hosts a children’s theater show about the various folktales in Africa. Bring the kiddos along to celebrate Black History Month with the traveling Bright Star Touring Theatre. • Wed. Feb. 5, 10-11 a.m. $2/child. North Charleston Performing Arts Center, 5001 Coliseum Drive. North Charleston. brightstartheatre.com MAIN LIBRARY National Book Foundation Event Thurs. To kick off of their new season, The National Book Foundation presents Jericho Brown and Akwaeke Emezi, who will guide a discussion on breaking convention to create brand new forms, worlds, and hybrid genres. The event will feature readings, conversation, and a book signing.

singer + songwriter

Will Hoge

featuring FINNEGAN BELL

MARCH 7, 2020 @ 7:00 PM THE OLD BRICK CHURCH CAINHOY ROAD

• Thurs. Jan. 30 at 6 p.m. Free to attend. Charleston County Public Library, 68 Calhoun St. Downtown. ccpl.org

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THE SCHOOLHOUSE OVERHAUL Sat. Where dancers and musicians clash, melt, and intersect, enjoy modern dance set to a wide variety of music, from Bach to Massive Attack. OVERHAUL is a collaborative performance by Annex Dance Company and Electric Chamber Orchestra.

@stachouseshows

• Sat. Feb. 1, 6-7 p.m. and 8-9 p.m. $18/General, $15/Students. The Schoolhouse, 720 Magnolia Road. West Ashley. annexdancecompany.org ST. MATTHEW’S LUTHERAN CHURCH TMG Concert Sun. The Taylor Music Group performs their rendition of Una Sancta: Out of Many, One. They will perform the American premiere of Gefängnisgedicht (Prison Poems), written by an imprisoned German priest during WWII. • Sun. Feb. 2 at 4 p.m. $35/preferred seating, $25/general, $10/students. St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church, 405 King St. Downtown. tmgcharleston.com

stachouseshows.com In association with Awendaw Green + Dragonfly Media Arts

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NORTH CHARLESTON PERFORMING ARTS CENTER African Folktales

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Voices of Veterans Bandstand accurately portrays the postwar lives of soldiers through song BY GABI CAPESTANY Bandstand Fri. Jan. 31 7:30 p.m. $30+ Gaillard Center 95 Calhoun St. Downtown gaillardcenter.org

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

Broadway is making a stop in Charleston this month and swingin’ audiences back to 1945. For one night only, theater-goers will be able to catch the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical Bandstand at the Gaillard Center. Happiness, sorrow, song, and swing round out this touching and historically accurate musical centering around the second World War. Created by Richard Oberacker and Robert Taylor, the story of Bandstand follows soldier Donny Novitski returning home in 1945 and struggling to transition to civilian life after the war. Eventually he finds his calling when NBC announces a radio competition to find the next great band. A songwriter and performer himself, Donny gathers a group of fellow veterans to create a band for the contest. During the competition they find a new purpose in postwar America as they learn how to overcome and deal with the lasting trauma of war. The concept for the musical came from a central question: “What would veterans who came back from that experience, with all the emotional challenges they would be dealing with, and, if they were musicians, what

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Jeremy Daniel

BANDSTAND TAKES HEAVY TOPICS LIKE PTSD AND LOOKS AT THEM THROUGH THE LENS OF MUSICAL THEATER

would they need to make themselves feel back at home in society again?” From the start, Oberacker and Taylor teamed up with award-winning Hamilton choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler to create the show. “I had been looking for a piece to do about World War II,” Blankenbuehler says. “I’m really passionate about the 1940s and passionate about that generation of Americans, and all the sacrifices made because of war.” Topics such as grief, survivor’s guilt, and post-traumatic stress disorder (a term that didn’t even exist at the time) are explored through song and dance. “WWII veterans didn’t understand what it was they were

grappling with, because there was no vocabulary with which to even begin to address it,” Oberacker says. In order to accurately portray the experience of WWII veterans, the group worked with Got Your 6, (the name is derived from a military term which means “got your back.”) The non-profit organization works with film and television projects to advise them on accurate portrayals of military veterans and aims to help productions avoid common stereotypes associated with service members. The organization connected Oberacker and Taylor with veterans to look over the script and help them figure out the most

accurate way to share the experience of being a veteran on stage. Bandstand was the first theater production to be “6 Certified” by the organization for its accurate veteran portrayals. With a score inspired by swing music, the show brings together the dark topic of war and the popular musical genre at the time to create a whole new experience using song and dance as a kind of coping mechanism. “I found the story about art healing the soul the way in,” says Blankenbuehler. “So, for these men and these women, yes, they were dealing with these deep, deep, deep wounds. But the story that I want to tell is, there is a way out. There is a way forward.”


AN EVENING WITH

continued from page 16 ence essentially allows him to execute events like this from start to finish, and he’s done so not just in Charleston, but in Nashville, New Orleans, and Pittsburgh as well. “I don’t have the multimillion dollar budget of something like Spoleto,” Pringle says, “but I have the background of executing marketing strategies. Most people see how we’re doing things and they think we’re a multimillion dollar outfit, but we’re just using our money wisely.” Pringle says that he’s learned over seven years that the best way for The Colour of Music Festival to compete with events like Spoleto is not to. “We initially modeled ourselves after the Spoleto Festival,” Pringle says, “which of course has had more than 40 years to cultivate an enormous international patron base. But our model has since become a portable model. It’s a very unique model, because we can go wherever someone is willing to write a check. We have a lot of options to explore, and we’re finding that people really enjoy the chamber performances as much as they do the masterworks series.” Pringle says that he’s come up against many challenges over the festival’s history, both from Mother Nature and from an oversaturated marketplace. The time of year that the festival was held has changed from fall to

mid-winter after inclement weather became an issue, and sometimes getting people’s attention in Charleston has been difficult. “I would say the biggest surprise for me is that as cosmopolitan as Charleston may be on the outside, there are still very deeply rooted ideas of what represents high classical art,” Pringle says, “and because Spoleto and the Charleston Symphony both have an extensive history, it’s very difficult for other entities to weave out a spot, particularly when it’s something as focused as what we’re doing, giving black classical musicians and composers a platform.” Part of Pringle’s job is planning ahead; the typical Colour of Music Festival program is in the works long before anyone else hears about it. “The programs are usually conceived a year in advance,” he says. “What we deployed this week was conceived last year, and 2021 is already in the works. A lot of it has to do with artist availability, finding top quality artists. But this year’s program was built around the concept.” You can expect to see Pringle at each of the festival’s seven events this year, both making sure everything is running smoothly and enjoying as much of the music as he can. “I’m still very much hands on in every aspect,” he says. “Typically, I’m able to see every performance because I’m managing the execution. And this year, since we engineered things with more intimacy, I’ll definitely be there for every performance.”

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C CUISINE

Proving Ground Workshop is the in-between incubator emerging chefs didn’t know they needed BY MARY SCOTT HARDAWAY

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

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SUSHI-WA IZAKAYA OWNERS CHRIS SCHOEDLER (LEFT) AND KAZU MURAKAMI ARE THE ONLY ONES IN THE KITCHEN TUES.-SUN.

he glass-enclosed izakaya seats about 40 guests, oftentimes HBO crews and celebrities like Danny McBride. The Japanese word izakaya literally translates to “stay sake shop,” which people do — stay, order sake, usually some usuzukuri, sashimi, or nigiri. “It’s in between full service and fast casual,” explains chef Kazu Murakami. He and fellow chef and longtime friend Chris Schoedler opened Sushi-Wa in June 2018. When approaching the complex, it’s the first salient signpost that yes, there is food to be found at 1503 King St., tucked behind tech start ups and parking lots. The chefs have experimented with the space — first housing Bad Wolf Coffee, then Effin B Radio — since opening. Order at the counter. Order at the counter plus table service. Table service with a hostess. But many customers still walk in and lock eyes with Schoedler. “They’ll get in line and try to order up here. Which is totally understandable — it’s just the workflow of Workshop. We’ve spent a year-anda-half trying to swim against the stream, almost.” The Workshop model is not new. Public markets, food halls, and upscale food courts have been operating in major cities for a century (Cleveland’s West Side Market opened in 1912). They’ve picked up steam — what’s old is new again — in the past half-decade. In 2017, Slate’s Henry Grabar examined why Americans have fallen in love with the idea of eating moderately priced high-end bites in the company of hundreds, hunched over long tables with plasticware. “That’s part of the charm, too: the no-nonsense emphasis on food.” Workshop possesses its own kind of utilitarian charm. The half-dozen tenants hawk a variety of fare served on bright red trays and silver platters — right now you can order tacos, burgers, steamed buns, and bagels inside. Find wood-fired dishes, craft ciders, and snow crab rolls just outside. The model is appealing to folks on the move, on a budget, and with a modicum of discernment. For those who think, “I want something fast, but I want to probably take a picture of it, too.” This spring will mark three years for Workshop. Owner Michael Shemtov says that 2018 was challenging, and the start of 2019 was “rough.” But there’s been incredible growth — a year of transformation, he says. After graduating only one concept, Slice Co., from stall to brick-and mortar in the first year, in the two years since, Workshop has graduated four more: Spanglish, Pink Bellies, Free Reign, and most recently, Little Miss Ha. Things are starting to gel, and the lineup of stalls is as strong as ever. Shemtov says he went into the project know-


Photos by Ruta Smith

FROM LEFT: WORKSHOP OWNER MICHAEL SHEMTOV AND OPERATIONS MANAGER BUIST RIVERS; THE KELLY KAPOWSKI BURGER AT CHUCK & PATTY’S; JANICE HUDGINS OF LITTLE MISS HA POSES IN HER NEW MT. PLEASANT LOCATION

“I like seeing people have a chance,” says Shemtov. “I especially like it when someone who has worked in proper restaurants or has fine dining training has an opportunity to cook food that is a childhood memory, or is from somewhere where they went and got inspired … I get a kick out of it, and I enjoy giving people the platform.”

“If you open a restaurant there is a lot more invested — you’ll be putting your house up for collateral. [At Workshop] you aren’t looking for investors and bank loans.” —Janice Hudgins One of those people is Janice Hudgins, the woman behind Little Miss Ha Vietnamese concept. After more than a year at Workshop, Hudgins’ first storefront is set to open any day now in Mt. Pleasant. It will be “elevated fast casual,” with customers ordering at the counter and a server bringing out their food. Hudgins, whose husband — along with Shemtov — owns and operates a string of local Mellow Mushrooms, says she never wanted to open a restaurant. And she certainly never thought she’d open one boasting a counterservice model. But Workshop changed all that. “It was low cost,” says Hudgins about her decision to transition from private chef and caterer to Workshop tenant. “If you open a restaurant there is a lot more invested — you’ll be putting your house up for collateral. [At Workshop] you aren’t looking for investors and bank loans.” Hudgins admits that her success was largely dependent on her perspective: She’d seen firsthand how taxing running a restaurant

can be on a person and on a family. “I’m not saying Workshop is easy,” says Hudgins. “But it’s not that bad because I’ve seen bad — at Workshop you can walk away, you can write a 30-day notice if it’s not working out for you.” Jacob Hunter, the brains behind ‘90s-themed burger joint Chuck & Patty’s, has experience building brands in cities like D.C. and Chicago, where fast casual means more diversity and more access for anyone who loves to eat out frequently. “When I go out to eat I want to eat, I don’t want there to be a whole to-do.” Hunter says that with the “oversaturation” of restaurants, he didn’t want to invest in a costly, large brick and mortar. Though now with his proof of concept — Tiffani Theissen herself vetted the stall’s Kelly Kapowski burger — Hunter thinks Chuck & Patty’s would do well in Charleston suburbs like Daniel Island and Johns Island. Like Verde, Hunter wants to populate the city, and maybe even the Southeast, with locally owned and operated fast-casual eateries that serve high quality eats to people who are hankering for Chipotle-fast but want to support local small businesses. A Big Mac riff you can feel good about. There are concepts of course, no matter their menu of feel good eats or snazzy Instagram stories, that didn’t work. Google their name — they were set up at Workshop, and then they were gone, poof. They were not privy to the luxury of time-earned wisdom, perhaps. Or maybe their price point wasn’t hitting that “sweet spot” Hudgins looks for — $12 is the max, $15 is where customers are going to start expecting table service. During that “rough” patch, Shemtov cites in early 2019, Chick-fil-A (heard of it?) had a two-week run in an empty stall. We lambasted the gimmick at the time — why not put up Boxcar Betty’s or Chicken Fats, we queried? “I mean, it’s very tough to make money,”

Andrew Cebulka

REBEL TAQUERIA HAS BEEN SLINGING TACOS AT WORKSHOP SINCE SEPTEMBER 2018

admits Lewis Kesaris, co-owner of Rebel Taqueria. “As an owner you’re putting a lot of hours on the clock yourself, you really have to watch food costs, labor, waste, and make really good sales on top of that to make a dollar.” Kesaris, like Hugdins, credits his industry experience for why his stall has been successful — Shemtov says Little Miss Ha and Rebel were often competing for number one and

CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com

ing that, “By definition, we will always have people who would not be candidates, who have bigger teams and money to invest in a brick and mortar.” He also designed the food court as a response to the Pacific Box & Crate developers. “They said, ‘We have this parcel, we have BoomTown and tech offices, we need amenities.’” Not wanting to open a branch of The Daily or Butcher & Bee there, “I have enough restaurants,” and knowing that the city’s top chefs wouldn’t deign to take a risk that far up King, he knew he’d need candidates with “one hand tied behind their backs” — enterprising cooks eager for a shot at success. It was a compromise: Come try and sell your food way up on King Street in an area with no foot traffic, little car traffic, and huge office buildings blocking your facade. Oh, and the owners are going to take around 30 percent of your sales. In return, you get a space to grow, with top-of-the-line equipment, an in-house dishwasher, free marketing, and the blessed commitment-free lease. Need to cut and run? You can write a 30-day notice and walk away, something you’d never be able to do if you wanted to shut down a struggling storefront. What Shemtov says he didn’t anticipate was just how inexperienced some of the stalls would be. “Early cohorts didn’t know how to manage their staffs,” Shemtov says. “There were a lot of highly emotional issues coming from lack of experience or maturity on the operators’ parts,” as one might expect when money and early-stage businesses are involved. He soon realized he needed to find tenants with one hand tied behind their backs, and one hand deftly — and efficiently — creating and selling tasty food. His reasoning for pursuing this complex scheme that could go so terribly wrong was simple: altruism, with a hint of selfishness.

continued on page 22

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Proving

continued from page 21 two in sales — and why it’s been around so long, almost a year-and-a-half. Kesaris says while food trucks require a lot of upkeep, running Rebel for three years with just a couple of employees was a breeze compared to figuring out that as an owner, “You’re getting taxed for having employees.” Still, Workshop has helped Rebel build their brand and their audience. “It’s fun to be around people so energetic about food, to see what works and what doesn’t work.” Many of the tenants note the organic camaraderie of Workshop, how, even as the stalls compete, they’re also ready to share a head of cabbage, a nub of ginger.

“It’s fun to be around people so energetic about food, to see what works and what doesn’t work.”

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

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— Lewis Kesaris

“I probably owe Janice a pound of ginger,” laughs Schoedler. It’s almost 3 p.m. (they open at 4) and Murakami is behind the bar, starting the rice. It’s just the two of them in the kitchen, always has been. Sushi-Wa, although very much its own entity, still has to turn over their cut to Workshop, too — the more $14 crudo they sell, the larger that share is. So to keep costs down, they limit labor. Fresh seafood is expensive, after all. “It’s always chasing behind you,” Schoedler says of the sales they have to turn over. “We never hit that point where you’re like ‘We made rent! We did this now we’re going to start making a profit!’” But he and Murakami, who met a decade ago working at a Japanese restaurant in Mt. Pleasant, say there would be no Sushi-Wa without Workshop. They’d tossed around the idea of opening their own 20-seater, an upscale izakaya, for years. One potential space fell through and they were tied to their full-time jobs, Murakami serving as executive chef at O-Ku, Schoedler doing sushi events and catering. One day the two were having an omakase lunch at former stall Slider Gold and started chatting with owner Brian Emperor. “He said he was on his way out, asked if we were interested, gave us a tour of the kitchen,” say Schoedler. They chatted with Shemtov, the restaurateur saw an opportunity to offer a couple of talented chefs a platform — “It’s such a good offering, they’re a perfect fit” — and they were given a choice between the recently vacated adjoining space and the inside stall. It only took five days for the empty box to become Sushi-Wa. All they brought were their groceries and specialized sushi equipment. “Their business has probably tripled in sales from the first few months,” says Shemtov. But don’t expect the chefs to stay confined. That’s the nature of the food court — it’s only an in-between space, no matter how many Instagram followers you’ve gained in the process. “It’s scary to be comfortable,” says Murakami. “This is only a stepping stone. This is for the next step.”

Workshop Tenant List FORMER

Bad Wolf Beech Acai Cafe Roux Effin B Radio + Bar Fowl Mouth Free Reign Greens and Grounds JD Loves Cheese Juan Luis Little Miss Ha Kite Noodles Koa Bowls Pink Bellies Root Note Sambar Slice Co. Slider Gold Spanglish Two Fat Olives Verde Wolf Peach Pizza

CURRENT

Chuck and Patty’s Burger and fries Ginger Vine Rotating menu with seasonal produce prepared in Workshop’s wood-burning oven Julius Delicastessen “Newish” Jewish deli serving comfort food Mansueta’s Filipino food with a twist Merrows Garden Bar Wine pro Kevin Regan serves libations from small producers Rebel Taqueria Specializing in tacos and burritos served on locally made organic tortillas Sushi-Wa Sushi, chirashi, sake, small plates

GRADUATES

Free Reign Community Table now open at 148 Civitas St. Mt. Pleasant Little Miss Ha Opening at 915 Houston Northcutt Pink Bellies Opening at 595 King St. Spring 2020 Slice Co. Now open at 1662 Savannah Hwy. Spanglish Now open at 652 St. Andrews Blvd.

Mansueta’s Mission

Photos by Ruta Smith

BY PARKER MILNER

Workshop star Nikko Cagalanan is learning on the fly Nikko Cagalanan’s culinary journey began 9,000 miles from Charleston. Growing up in the Philippines, his grandmother Mansueta taught him how to make traditional Filipino dishes like adobo, sisig, and lumpia. Since debuting his stall, lovingly called Mansueta’s, at Workshop in November, Cagalanan has built a menu of tried-and-true Filipino favorites plus dishes like chicken drumsticks and pork ramen. Although Cagalanan didn’t start working in kitchens until 2014, the chef is making up for lost time with the help of members of the Charleston food community. If you follow Mansueta’s on Instagram, you’ve probably noticed that Cagalanan frequently collaborates with other chefs. “I didn’t go to culinary school, so collaborating with others is a way for me to learn about different cuisines.” Facilitating these pop-ups might be exhausting for some, but not Cagalanan, who welcomes the chance to reach out to other members of the food and beverage industry. Recently, he teamed up with Butcher & Bee’s Alison Cates for a Filipino/Korean yakitori-style pop-up, and he has even more planned. This past Mon. Jan. 27, Cagalanan joined forces with El Pincho Taco’s Sandra Aguirre, whose culinary journey also began in grandma’s kitchen as a child in Mexico City. Cagalanan says he heads straight to El Pincho at least twice a week following his shift, and eventually he and Aguirre began to discuss what a Filipino/Mexican fusion meal would look like. As is often the case, Cagalanan made an effort to turn the casual banter into reality, developing a menu featuring five Filipino tacos. In less than a month, Mansueta’s will host another collaboration at Workshop featuring Matzo Y Masa, a local Jewish/Mexican popup operated by Samantha Kramer and Jullian Abarca. Later in March, Cagalanan will team up with Emily Hahn, who competed

on Top Chef, for a seafood-forward pop-up. With each one of these dinners, Cagalanan hopes to learn from his peers and shine the spotlight on Workshop. And what does the rising chef hope to accomplish during his Workshop residency? Eventually, Cagalanan says the dream is to open his own restaurant, but for now the main focus is excelling right where he is. Future plans would surely include his dedicated sous chef Joel Carnright, who has played a key role in managing the hustle and bustle at Workshop. “We both came into this without a lot of experience, but we have a shared vision of pushing Filipino food to Charleston,” said Cagalanan. “He’s been an essential part of this since we popped up at Kwei Fei for a week last July.” Cagalanan has earned the respect of his peers who would say it’s well-deserved given his work ethic — the chef recently took his first day off in two months.

CAGALANAN CAREFULLY PLATES EACH DISH, FROM LUMPIA TO ADOBO


SUPER EATS: HERE’S WHERE TO GRAB GAMEWINNING BITES FOR SUPER BOWL LIV

For those sportsball fans who are only interested in the epic eating that comes with Super Bowl Sunday, no need to drag your borrowed jersey out to a downtown bar. Order a spread from one of the below and settle in for a night of commercial watching: Hamby Catering is offering a special Halftime Eats menu featuring a plethora of classic game-day snacks like southern fried chicken, slow roasted pulled pork sliders, walking tacos, and seven-layer dip. Minero has $75 taco catering kits with 20 tacos — all kits come with cotija cheese, chopped onion, salsa verde, cilantro, limes, and a choice of two meats including charcoal grilled chicken, al pastor, and grilled steak. Orders only require 30 minutes notice. Hop online and order some ‘cue from Sticky Fingers. Choose from a Classic Barbecue menu ($8 per person) with hickory smoked pulled pork, bbq sauces, and buns; Rib Combos ($12) with ribs, baked beans, slaw, and sauces; the Slow Country Boil ($18 per person) with a classic Lowcountry boil, plus pulled pork, green beans, and slaw; or go all out with the Oyster Roast and Barbecue (market price). This option brings the Sticky Finger team to your house; they’ll shuck oysters onsite and serve them with habañero hot pepper sauce, cocktail sauce, lemons, and saltine crackers. This menu comes with your choice of any ‘cue. Check out the grub on Boxcar Betty’s catering menu: choose from a custom sandwich bar, party platters of nuggets or tenders, dessert, drinks, and sides like chips and slaw. Famulari’s Pizzerias are offering unlimited 14” one-topping pizzas for $10.99 on Super Bowl Sunday for carry out and delivery. Order express catering from Mosaic to take your party up a notch. Choose from charcuterie boards, cheese boards, dips like smoked gouda pimento cheese and jalapeno corn, roasted shrimp cocktail, signature salads, and specialty sides. Callie’s Hot Little Biscuits will always satisfy a crowd. Order eats for anywhere from 25 to 50+ people. HLB has a grits bar; tea sandwiches; biscuits (in a variety of flavors) with toppings like preserves, butter, pimento cheese, bacon gravy, or Carolina honey; veggie and fruit trays; cocoa cream cookies; salads and soups; fried chicken biscuits; and more. Edmund’s Oast Brewing Co. has a special game day pick-up menu with eats like pimento cheese and chips, nacho kits, six pack sliders, wings, custom hot dogs, and spicy queso. All orders must be placed by Fri. Jan. 31 at 3 p.m.

dining guide

SEASONALLY DRIVEN SMALL PLATES IN THE EVENING!

Restaurant listings include a combination of our critics’ recommendations and current advertisers. PRICE GUIDE: Dirt Cheap: $ • Inexpensive: $$ Moderate: $$$ • Expensive: $$$$ Very Expensive: $$$$$

n AMERICAN 5Church The sister restaurant to 5Church Charlotte, 5Church Charleston is run by exec chef Adam Hodgson and Bravo Top Chef alum Jamie Lynch. While the menu veers pretty standard high-end, approachable, “modern American” fare — think salmon, raw bar items, flatbread — the Market Street spot has made a point to go the extra mile by sourcing ingredients from Lynch’s new sixacre farm located 30 minutes from Charlotte. —Mary Scott Hardaway (Dish, Summer 2019) Lunch, Dinner, & Sun. Brunch. Dinner. 32 N. Market St. (843) 937-8666. The Alley Fun bowling alley with games, lanes, great drinks, and good food. Lunch (Thurs.-Sun.), Dinner, Late Night (daily). Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Live Music, Non-Smoking, Burger Week. 131 Columbus St. (843) 818-4080.

EVO CRAFT BAKERY 1075 E Montague Ave. Park Circle 843-225-1810 • EvoPizza.com MON-SAT 7AM-10PM • SUN 9AM-9PM

Boxcar Betty’s Somewhat hidden away on Savannah Highway is Boxcar Betty’s, a simple enough place that means to take a stand on the lack of good fried chicken sandwiches. Because owners Ian MacBryde and Roth Scott, formerly of Magnolias, staked their claim as a niche kind of joint, the menu confidently boasts only a few items. Boxcar Betty’s now has four area locations. Lunch, Dinner (daily). Lunch, Dinner. 1922 Savannah Hwy. 843-225-7470 114 Holiday Drive. 7800 Rivers Ave. Burtons Grill Classic New England fare, from clam chowder to shrimp scampi with big entrees like barbecue ribs and rib-eyes, plus a local catch. Lunch & Dinner. Lunch, Dinner. 1875 Hwy. 17 N. (843) 606-2590. Early Bird Diner Biscuits and eggs for breakfast. Patty melts and open faced sandwiches for lunch. Blue plate specials for dinner featuring meat and sides of your choice. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner (Mon.-Sat.),. Late Night (Fri. & Sat.), & Sun. Brunch. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Late Night, Parking, Non-Smoking. 1644 Savannah Hwy. (843) 277-2353. Eli’s Table Benedicts for breakfast, soup and sandwiches for lunch, and crowd-pleasing entrees for dinner like pork chops, lemon chicken, and seafood fra diavolo. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, & Weekend Brunch. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Breakfast. 129 Meeting St. (843) 405-5115. Florie’s at Commonhouse Aleworks Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 4831 O’Hear Ave. Harold’s Cabin This Bill Murray-owned restaurant serves fresh eats and coffees from its two-story location in the Westside neighborhood. Mon.-Fri. 4-10 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 9 a.m.-10p.m. Brunch & dinner. Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast. 247 Congress St. (843) 793-4440. Hen and The Goat This fast/casual spot offers sandwiches, breakfast, and snacks in a family friendly atmosphere. Lunch (daily). Lunch. 869 Folly Rd. Jack’s Cafe A greasy spoon that’s operated on the edge of the college campus forever, serving up burgers, breakfast, and more. Breakfast & Lunch, weekdays. Lunch, Breakfast, Non-Smoking, Wifi. 41 George St. (843) 723-5237. Kickin’ Chicken 27 varieties of wings, plus great sandwiches, huge salads, and burgers too. Lunch, Dinner, Late Night (Daily). Lunch, Dinner, Late Night, Delivery, Best of Charleston winner. 337 King St. (843) 805-5020 1175 Folly Road. (843) 225-6996 349 W Coleman Blvd. (843) 881-8734 800 N. Main St. (843) 875-6998 1179 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. (843) 766-5292. KinFolk A stone’s throw from Kiawah, KinFolk occupies the tiny space once inhabited by Crave Smokehouse. With snug seating for two dozen, it’s something of a shack in its own right. There’s a welcoming “door’s always open” vibe that permeates everything from the decor to the food. The menu changes often, seemingly most influenced by the whims of nature and her bounty, and on my visit, the heirloom tomato salad beckoned. Simple and straightforward, it does exactly what one would hope — elevate the pure pleasure of a perfectly ripe, late-summer tomato. When approaching the Nashville-style hot chicken, I started in the shallow

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CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com

a la carte

Novwing Ser

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dining guide continued from page 23

PROUD SPONSOR OF GOOD TIMES

end with the quarter bird prepared mild — much like Indian or Thai cuisine, note that even the ‘mild’ has a small touch of heat. Served on a slice of white sandwich bread and accompanied by three lightly brined breadand-butter pickles, the chicken itself is at once crisp and juicy. Arguably, it’s at the hot level that the dish achieves true Nashville distinction. The melange of black pepper, smoked paprika, and sweet sugar hit first, followed by a slow burn at the back of the throat. The chicken’s inherent blandness helps to temper any real intensity, and the heat lingers for just a few seconds. In other words, order it this way if you can. Lunch, Dinner. 4430 Betsy Kerrison Pkwy.

GettyImages.com

A Taste of Tuscany Fri. Jan. 31 5:30-8:30 p.m. $35 Red Drum Restaurant 803 Coleman Blvd. Mt. Pleasant

Krazy Owls Steampunk sports bar and restaurant. L, D, daily. 3157 Maybank Hwy. (843) 640-3844. Mainland Container Co. Kitchen & Bar Mainland Container Co. is comprised of a rustic, beachy restaurant, a ground-level bar set in a shipping container, and ample umbrella-covered seating. Bar food offerings range from wings; hushpuppies that are basically savory donuts drizzled with honey, and served with hot pepper jelly and pimento cheese; and a beer cheese-covered tater tot extravaganza called The Full Container. Dinner (Mon-Sat.), Weekend Brunch. Sunday Brunch, 3, Dinner. 1528 Ben Sawyer Blvd. (843) 284-8174.

WATCH THE

BIG GAME

Philly’s Cheesesteaks They say don’t be fooled by imitators. We say this is definitely the real deal when it comes to cheesesteaks, whether you take ‘em ‘wi’d or ‘widout.’ Lunch & Dinner, Closed Sun. Lunch, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner. 4650 Ladson Road. (843) 873-0776.

SAN FRAN VS. KC

A Salt N Battered Lunch & Dinner. Lunch, Dinner, Parking. 1303 Ashley River Road.

ON OUR 10FT WIDE BIG SCREEN!

24 TAPS • FIREPIT • TVS CORNHOLE • POOL TABLES

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

LIVE MUSIC THU, 1/30 • 7PM

24

Ms. Rose’s Modern American diner food with classics like meatloaf and fried chicken and newer favorites like kale, polenta, and brussels sprouts. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner (daily), Weekend Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Parking. 1090 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. (843) 766-0223.

SIRSY FRI, 1/31 • 7PM CHARLES COOK SAT, 2/1 • 7PM CHAMPAGNE WITH FRIENDS THOMAS CHAMPAGNE & FRIENDS SUN, 2/2 • 6:30PM BURGER NIGHT IN THE BEER GARDEN MON, 2/3 • 7PM THE GOOD TIME DUO + BURGER NIGHT

815 FOLLY RD • JAMES ISLAND (PARKING AROUND BACK) SMOKENBREW.COM

The Rarebit A 50s-style cocktail bar with a full menu of diner favorites like chicken noodle soup, patty melts, and triple stack burgers. Breakfast is served all day, every day. Lunch, Dinner, & Late Night. (Tues.-Sun.) Kitchen open until 1 a.m. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Breakfast, Late Night, Wifi, Burger Week. 474 King St. (843) 974-5483. Rutledge Cab Co. An all-day menu of burgers, salads, sandwiches and finer fare. Lunch & Dinner. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Parking, Burger Week. 1300 Rutledge Ave. (843) 720-1440.

The Shelter Kitchen + Bar Burgers, brunch fare, beer, and a sprawling bar and patio make for a comfortable place to hang and enjoy yourself. Lunch, Dinner, (Daily) & Weekend Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Late Night, Burger Week. 202 Coleman Blvd. (843) 388-3625. Stack’s Coastal Kitchen A small menu focuses on fresh seafood with duck, steak, and pork entree options too. Lunch & Dinner. Lunch, Dinner. 1440 Ben Sawyer Blvd. (843) 388-6968. Toast of Charleston Housemade soups, sandwiches, and desserts “to die for,” according to USA Today. Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, & Sun. Brunch. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner, Breakfast, Delivery, Live Music. 155 Meeting St. (843) 534-0043 2026 Savannah Hwy. (843) 556-0006 717 Old Trolley Rd. Unit 10. Uptown Social There are adult slushies with names like High Noon grapefruit frose and Day Rager, plus signature cocktails like the Grape-full Dead and Burning Sensation. The bar food fares well. The sloppy joe sliders are billed as “cafeteria style, but better.” Although not a very high bar, they’ve succeeded. The Armitage pizza makes a case for what Uptown Social does best — bake fresh dough. Lunch, Dinner (Daily). Weekend Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner. 587 King St. (843)793-1837. Vickery’s Bar and Grill Great setting for creative American food with Cuban flair and some of the best bloodys in town. Voted Best Outdoor Patio and Best Happy Hour by CP readers. Lunch, Dinner, (Daily) & Sun. Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Lunch, Dinner, Waterfront, Best of Charleston winner, Parking. 1313 Shrimp Boat Lane. (843) 884-4440. Warehouse As of early 2019 Warehouse is now serving “noodle bowls for the soul,” offering a ramen-focused

FOODIE EVENT | European staycation Enjoy a wine tasting with heavy hors d’oeuvres (and Italian hospitality) this Fri. at Red Drum. Guests will meet Italian winemakers Catherine and Guiseppe Brancatelli, who own a winery and farmhouse in the heart of Tuscany. The couple’s villa is located in Val di Cornia, a valley between the sea and the hills known for its rich history, art, and traditions. —Mary Scott Hardaway FRIDAY

cuisine calendar n BEER

550 King St. (843) 203-6297. felixchs.com

Thankful Thursdays — One dollar from every pint sold on Thankful Thursdays is donated to a local charity. While sales throughout the day count, the official happy hour is from 5-8 p.m., when the charity will be in the brewery to discuss the good work they do. Learn more on Tradesman’s Facebook page. Each Thurs. 5-8 p.m. Free to attend. Tradesman Brewing Co., 1647 King St. Ext. (843) 410-1315. facebook.com/ Tradesmanbrew Weekly Beer and Wine Tastings at Edmund’s Oast Exchange — Edmund’s Oast Exchange offers weekly wine tastings on Thursdays entitled Sarah’s Selections from 5:30-7:30 p.m. For $5, enjoy a special beer tasting selected by Certified Sommelier Sarah O’Kelley. All proceeds benefit a selected charity each quarter. Each Thurs. 5:30-7:30 p.m. $5. Edmund’s Oast Exchange, 1081 Morrison Dr. (843) 990-9449. Bendy Brewski Sunday Brunch — 45 minutes of all levels yoga followed by a mimosa or beer. Each Sun. 10:15 a.m. $7. Holy City Brewing, 1021 Aragon Ave. (843) 437-0846. holycitybrewing.com Bendy Brewski Yoga Frothy Beard — Enjoy all-levels yoga and craft beer along with Zombie Bobs Pizza every Monday inside the brewery. Mats are available to borrow. Each Mon. 6-7 p.m. $15. Frothy Beard Brewing, 1401 Sam Rittenberg Blvd. (843) 4370846. bendybrewskiyoga.com $12 Burger + Beer Night at Félix — Join us every Tuesday at Félix for our Raclette Burger, Frites and a Beer for $12! Tues. $12. Félix Cocktails et Cuisine,

Charleston Place Launches World-Class Champagne Tastings — Sip and savor a variety of legendary Champagnes from top Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy (LVMH) brands including Veuve Clicquot, Krug, and Ruinart. Charleston Grill’s advanced sommelier and wine director Rick Rubel has cultivated two different Champagne flights, served daily at the Thoroughbred Club and Charleston Grill. Ongoing, 11 a.m. $49-$75. Charleston Place, 130 Market St. (843) 722-4900. Common Hour — Every Wed. and Thurs. evening at Wild Common enjoy Common Hour with $8 white, red, and rosé wines and $5 Chef’s Selection of ‘bites’ from 5-6:30 p.m. Each Wed. Thurs. 5 p.m. A la carte. Wild Common, 103 Spring St. cannongreencharleston.com Daily Beer and Wine Happy Hour—3 @ 3 at Edmund’s Oast Exchange — Edmund’s Oast Exchange hosts a Daily Beer and Wine Happy Hour—3 @ 3 from 3:00-4:30 p.m. For the happy hour, patrons can enjoy 12-ounce house beers for $3 each and a featured wine by the glass for $3 per half pour and $6 per full pour. Ongoing, 3-4 p.m. Edmund’s Oast Exchange, 1081 Morrison Dr. (843) 577-5446. edmundsoast.com/exchange Undiscovered Charleston Food Tour — Chef Forrest Parker, the city’s only Palmetto Guild Certified chef guide, leads guests on a three hour experience unlike any other. You’ll begin with a 90 minute walking tour, exploring the complicated history of the Holy City and the culinary influ-

n FOODIE EVENTS

menu, small plates, and their neighborhood favorite Sunday brunch. Lunch (Fri.), Dinner (Daily), & Sun. Brunch. Sunday Brunch, Lunch, 3, Dinner, Late Night, Wifi. 45 1/2 Spring St. (843) 202-0712. The Watch Rooftop Kitchen & Bar The only thing prettier than the views are what’s on the plate at this rooftop restaurant. Think hamachi crudo, lobster rolls, and a huge burger. Lunch, Dinner (Daily) & Sun. Brunch. Outdoor Dining, Sunday Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 79 Wentworth St. (843) 518-5115.

ences that shaped Charleston into one of the world’s top food destinations. The tour concludes at the cozy Bistro A Vin where you’ll relax while Chef Forrest teaches you how to cook three dishes from recipes he wrote interpreting definitive Lowcountry classics, and prepared using techniques he mastered over two decades. He’ll serve those recipes for lunch while you enjoy a carefully curated wine pairing (or cool, delicious sweet tea if you’d prefer). You’ll go home with Chef Forrest’s recipes as his gift to you. Each Mon. Wed.Sun. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. $125. Riley Waterfront Park, 1 Vendue Range. undiscoveredcharleston.com Wild Common Industry Discount — Hospitality employees can simply bring in their pay stub or other proof of employment to enjoy the four-course tasting menu for just $45/person (not including beverage pairings), which is normally $65/person. Each Wed.-Sun. 5-10 p.m. $45. Wild Common, 103 Spring St. cannongreencharleston.com Container Bar Late Night Eats — Starting Fri. Aug 9, Container Bar Charleston is extending their food hours on Friday nights to offer a late-night menu provided by Sap-Lai Charleston. From 10 p.m. to 12 a.m., customers will have access to a full menu of south-east asian eats sure to curb all of the nighttime cravings. The late-night menu will feature Dumplings, Pad Thai, Pad Woonsen, Khao Soi, Hot Pot, and Drunken Noodles with Pho, Ramen, and Soup Dumplings rotating in during the fall. Each Fri. 10 p.m. A la carte. Container Bar, 2130 Mt. Pleasant St. containerbarchs.com

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n MODERN AMERICAN Angel Oak Restaurant Serving lunch, Sun. brunch, and “supper,” this Johns Island gem uses local ingredients and modern preparations. Lunch features fresh, quick, made from scratch fare that is at once rustic and delicious. Dinner takes a more innovative approach to southern American cuisine. Beer and wine only. Lunch (Tues-Fri.), Dinner (Tues.-Sat.), & Sun. Brunch. Sunday

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Three Course

DINNER FIRST COURSE

$30 for one $50 for two

She Crab Soup laced with sherry

SECOND COURSE

504 Meeting Street

SAINT LORD

Filet Mignon topped with a parmesan encrusted lobster tail with garlic butter. Served with whipped Yukon gold potatoes and asparagus —OR— Shrimp and Lobster served over fettuccine with a citrus saffron sauce topped with parmesan cheese

THIRD COURSE Strawberry Cheesecake

Reservations suggested. 3 course dinner only 2/14.

SAVE THE DATE

David Murphy (Sound Tribe Sector 9) & Justin Allmet

With music, as in life, timing is everything. Nothing could be further from the truth with the formation of Saint Lord by members David Murphy (STS9) and Justin Allmet in Atlanta, Ga. The two were in a circle of musicians, bands and friends for close to 15 years before coming together to create the band and debut album from Saint Lord. All good things come to those who wait. Combining Allmett’s sweet haunting vocals and alternative rock song writing with Murphy’s instrumental electronic dance sensibilities they’ve put together a band and album that is nostalgic yet modern, mature yet fun and dream like. Listening to the album it is hard not to feel like you’ve heard it before.

Lunch & Dinner Every Day Sunday Brunch @10:30am Shem Creek | 1313 Shrimp Boat Lane 843-884-4440 | vickerysmtp.com

Opening set of deep house and classic hits with DJ Peter Jackson The Commodore opens @ 4pm 817 SAVANNAH HWY | WEST ASHLEY | 843-225-GENE | GENES.BEER

CUISINE | charlestoncitypaper.com

saturday, february 1 st Shows @ 9pm $10 cover

25


Christophe Artisan Chocolatier

2 AVONDALE AVE WEST OF THE ASHLEY MON-SAT 11-9 • SUN 12-7 DBSCHEESESTEAKS.COM

Valentine’s Chocolate + Craft Beer Pairing Tues. Feb. 4 7-8:30 p.m. $22 Low Tide Brewing 2863 Maybank Hwy. Johns Island

FOODIE EVENT | Good for the heart Nothing warms the heart like gourmet chocolate paired with craft beer. For only $22 try six samples of decadent Christophe Artisan chocolate plus half a dozen Low Tide cold ones paired to bring out the best in both. Sap-Lai Charleston will also be onsite with Southeast Asian-inspired bites. Reserve your chocolate pairing tickets at lowtidebrewing.com under “shop.” —Mary Scott Hardaway TUESDAY

cuisine calendar continued from page 24

*See store for full details

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

24 BEERS ON TAP • 18 TVs FOR ALL YOUR FOOTBALL ACTION

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55" TV GIVEAWAY!

Historic Entertaining Talk and Wine Tasting at Drayton Hall — Enjoy this historic, interpretive conversation followed by a wine tasting: Take the opportunity to learn about the Draytons’ entertaining through research, archaeological discoveries, and Drayton diaries. Then, enjoy wines with histories relevant to entertaining at Drayton Hall through the generations. Space is limited, reservations are required. Sat. Feb. 1, 2-4 p.m. $65/non-member, $55/member. Drayton Hall, 3380 Ashley River Rd. draytonhall.org/event/ february-1-historic-entertainingand-wine-tasting/ NICO Oyster Education Classes — Join French Master Chef Nico Romo for a dive into the history of the oyster. The class includes an overview of farming techniques and lessons on how to shuck your own oyster as Romo shares his team’s experience traveling the east coast to study oysters and build the restaurant’s current oyster program. House shucker Bella who won the Lowcountry oyster shucking competition will help teach guests the best shucking techniques. Guests will enjoy 12 different oysters from Maine to South Carolina as well as two glasses of Oysterman wine. The class also includes take-home items.Reservations are available through RESY. As each class is limited to just eight guests and a credit card is required to confirm a reservation. Each Mon. 6 p.m. $45. NICO,

201 Coleman Blvd. (843) 3527969. nicoshemcreek.com Foxes Fried Industry Night — This special industry night at Charles Towne Fermentory features $1 off all draft pints, $2 off all wines, $3 lager pints, and a $10 combo Foxes Fried chicken sandwich plus pint of the day. Each Tues. 6-9 p.m. A la carte. Charles Towne Fermentory, 809 Savannah Hwy. (843) 641-0431. chsfermentory.com Jack of Cups Oysters — In the backyard of Jack of Cups — Back of Cups — every Tuesday there will be an oyster roast, hot toddies, draft mules, CBD honey straws, and live music starting at 6 p.m. $10 AYCE oysters. Each Tues. 6 p.m. Free to attend. Jack of Cups Saloon, 34 Center St. (843) 633-0042. jackofcups.com Neighborhood Night at Basic Kitchen — Every Tuesday, Basic Kitchen hosts Neighborhood Night, offering a weekly dish special and wine bottles at discounted prices. Any wine bottle on their list that’s $60 or under is 1/2 off, too. Each Tues. 5:30 p.m. A la carte. Basic Kitchen, 82 Wentworth St. (843) 7894568. basickitchen.com

n WINE

Deep Water Vineyard Tastings — Sample local wines made from the muscadine grape. $7 includes wine glass. Each Tues.Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $7. Deep Water Vineyard/Firefly Distillery, 6775 Bears Bluff Road. (843) 559-6867. fireflydistillery.com

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the

big game

SUN, FEB. 2 • OYSTER ROAST 3-7PM FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS, PRIZES & MORE *MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN

3417 Shelby Ray Court, West Ashley • 843.793.1342 CHECK US OUT ON

& THE UNTAPPD APP FOR CURRENT DRAFT LIST

MON-THU 11AM-12AM • FRI 11AM-2AM • SAT 10AM-2AM • SUN 10AM-12AM

Brunch, Lunch, Dinner. 3669 Savannah Hwy. (843) 556-7525. Burwell’s Stone Fire Grill This “modern steakhouse” features a menu of diverse, yet refined, steak dishes and locally sourced plates highlighting purveyors like Tarvin Seafood and Carolina Gold Rice. Dinner (daily). Happy hour (daily) 4-7 p.m. bar only. Outdoor Dining, Dinner, Late Night, Valet, Catering. 14 N Market St. (843) 737-8700. Charleston Grill Exec. chef Michelle Weaver takes the helm in the kitchen of this world-class dining room. The

Fine/Old/Rare Bordeaux Vertical Tasting — This Fine & Rare Bordeaux vertical tasting features 1975 Gruaud Larose, 1975 Potensac, 1975 Prieure Lichine, 1978 Montrose, 1978 Gruaud Larose, and 1978 La Lagune. The Champagne reception starts at 6:45 p.m. All wines are sourced from old Midwest and deep British cellars. Thurs., Jan. 30, 6:45 p.m. $175. Sena Cafe, 2170 Snyder Circle. (314) 680-9889. senacafe.com Monthly Wine Dinners at NICO Oysters + Seafood — The inspiration behind the monthly wine dinners at NICO is to explore the different regions of France with guests. At each dinner, chef Nico Romo showcases the traditional cuisine and wines from the region, creating an authentic and educational experience. Thurs. Jan. 30 focuses on Alsatian wine, Thurs. Feb. 27 focuses on Burgundy, and Thurs. March 26 is all about Cotes du Rhone. Reservations are available on RESY or by calling the restaurant. Last Thurs. of every month, 6:30 p.m. Through March 26. $65. NICO, 201 Coleman Blvd. (843) 352-7969. nicoshemcreek.com Wine Tastings — Taste four different wines — two red, two white — and nibble on snacks at the community table. Each Thurs. 6-8 p.m. $5. Avondale Wine and Cheese, 813-B Savannah Hwy. (843) 769-5444.

E-mail cuisine calendar items to editor@charlestoncitypaper.com or fax to 576-0380 by the Wed. before the week of the event.

innovative menu is broken into four types of dishes: pure focuses on fresh ingredients in simple preparations, lush delivers lavish French fare, cosmopolitan explores exotic and imaginative cuisine, and Southern is the Grill’s take on local favorites. Live jazz nightly. Dinner. Online Reservations, Dinner, Best of Charleston winner, Top 50, Valet, Non-Smoking. 224 King St. (843) 577-4522.

on the web Search our dining listings on the web by location, type of cuisine, and amenities like outdoor dining, valet parking, and Sunday Brunch. charlestoncitypaper.com


Real Estate Vacation Rentals

N. Charleston

SPOTLIGHT GOT RENTAL PROPERTY?

NEED TENANTS? We can help. Advertise your rental to over 110,500 people each week for only $25. Call (843) 577-5304 or cris@charlestoncitypaper.com

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2829 Spruill Ave. Needs full renovation. $85,000. Jennifer LePage (843) 478-2600, AgentOwned. www.jjlrealestate.com

HOUSE FOR SALE? Advertise in the

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Real Estate Services VACATION PROPERTY

ADVERTISE YOUR VACATION PROPERTY FOR RENT OR SALE to more than 2.1 million S.C. newspaper readers. Your 25-word classified ad will appear in 99 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Call Randall Savely at the South Carolina Newspaper Network, 1-888-727-7377.

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UNION HEIGHTS. 1995 & 1997 Hugo St. 2 lots, residential, $25K each. Call Jennifer LePage (843) 478-2600, www.jjlrealestate.com

Downtown

100 Danae Ct. 5 BR, 3.5 BA w/ 3,756 sf, beautifully updated home with new roof, hot water heater & flooring throughout. Large screened porch w/ extended deck, large master down w/ garden tub in master bath, FROG, $464,900. Call (843) 810-0403. Lisa Richart-Hernandez, View Properties. http://bit.ly/2L8SFwO

UNION HEIGHTS

2001 Hugo St. Duplex in need of renovation, previous commercial down, residential up, includes second lot, $175,000. Call Jennifer LePage (843) 478-2600, www.jjlrealestate.com

28

N&M HOMES

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3 BR, 2.5 BA w/pool, $725,000. Call Jennifer LePage (843) 478-2600. Agent Owned RE, www.jjlrealestate.com

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ADVERTISE YOUR DRIVER JOBSIn 99 S.C. newspapers for only $375. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 2.1 million readers. Call Randall Savely at the PT DRIVERS NEEDED S.C. Newspaper Network, Join the great team at the 1-888-727-7377. Charleston City Paper to deliver newspapers across town. Routes run on Wednesday mornings. Must have valid driver’s license & your own vehicle. Call Maury at 704-517-2186.

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22 Nassau St

3bd/2.5ba with pool coming soon! $725,000

Full renovated, 3bd/2.5ba with plunge pool. $749,000

North CharlestoN uNioN heights

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

NO W

28

Duplex in need of renovation. Previously commercial down, residential up. Includes second lot. $175,000

1995 & 1997 Hugo St

North CharlestoN ChiCora

North CharlestoN ChiCora

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2829 Spruill Ave Commercial. Needs full renovation. $85,000

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2020 | 10:30 A.M. Myrtle Beach Convention Center, Ballroom 2101 North Oak Street, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina Admission is Free / Open to public SouthCarolinaHallofFame.com • 843-626-7444 *Darius Rucker will not be in attendance.

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CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

Free Will Astrology

30

ARIES (March 21-April 19): My favorite ancient Greek philosopher was the rascal Diogenes. As a joke, he carried around a lantern during the daytime, proclaiming, “I am just looking for an honest man.” When Alexander the Great, the most powerful man in the world, came to meet Diogenes while he was relaxing outside and asked him if he needed any favors done, he replied, “Yeah, stop blocking my sunlight.” As for Plato, Diogenes complained that the famous philosopher talked too damn much and misinterpreted the teachings of Socrates. I encourage you to borrow some of Diogenes’ attitude in the coming weeks. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, it’ll be healing for you to experiment with being brassy, saucy, and sassy. Emphasize what makes you most unique, independent, and self-expressive. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus author Anthony Trollope (1815–1882) published his first novel at age 30. During the next 37 years, he completed 48 additional novels and 18 works of nonfiction. Critics liked his work well enough, but were suspicious of his prodigious productivity. When they discovered that one of Trollope’s motivations for writing was to make money, they disapproved. Then they found out that Trollope kept a watch nearby as he worked, determined to generate 250 words every 15 minutes. The critics hated that even worse. Creative artists are supposed to court inspiration, not adhere to a schedule — at least according to the critics. But I approve of and recommend Trollope-like behavior for you in the coming weeks, Taurus. Cosmic forces will be on your side if you do. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In accordance with the astrological indicators, I invite you to rise and soar and glide during the coming weeks. I encourage you to expand and enlarge and amplify. Don’t wait around hoping to be asked to explore and experiment and improvise — just do those things. It’s high time for you to enjoy stirring quests and research projects and missions dedicated to discovery. Be a fun-loving pioneer. Sample the joys of being a maverick and outlier. CANCER (June 21-July 22): I love living in the material world. Its crazy-making demands and exhilarating rewards are endlessly entertaining. Despite having been born as a fantasy-prone, overly sensitive Cancerian, I’ve become fairly earthy and well-grounded. I have a good job, a nice house, a smart wife, and an interesting daughter. On the other hand, I also love living in the soul’s realm. I have remembered and recorded an average of three dreams per night for many years. Although I don’t take drugs, I cultivate alternate states of consciousness through meditation, prayer, and ritual. I’ve long been a student of depth psychology, which has trained me to be as focused on my soul as my ego. In accordance with current astrological omens, my fellow Cancerian, I urge you to hang out more than usual in the soul’s realm during the coming weeks. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Can I talk you into being more tender and open-hearted toward the people who care for you? I don’t mean to imply that you are currently too hard and closed. But all of us can benefit from enhancing our receptivity, and the coming weeks will be prime time for you Leos to do just that. I think you’ll find it easier than usual to deepen your listening skills and intensify your sensitivity. You’ll have an acute intuitive grasp of the fact that you can earn yourself huge blessings by expressing love and compassion in very practical ways. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): All of us are in service to someone or something — to certain people or ideas or situations. We provide them with help or energy or mirroring or love. We are dutiful in attending to their needs and wants. For some of us, our service feels like a burden. It’s grating or humbling or inconvenient, or all of the above. For others of us, being of service is fulfilling, even joyful. We find a rich sense of purpose in our devotion to a higher cause or deeper calling beyond our selfish concerns. Among the 12 signs of the zodiac, you Virgos are more likely than most to carry out the latter kind of service. I bring these thoughts to your attention because the coming weeks will be an excellent time

By Rob Brezsny

to re-evaluate, reconfigure, and reinvigorate your own service. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Author David Markson imagined what it would be like to write a novel that lacked conflicts or confrontations — in other words, a novel unlike any ever created. Libran author Ursula Le Guin also fantasized about stories with plots that weren’t driven by strife and struggle. Since many of us are addicted to entertainment that depends on discord to be interesting, we might find it hard to believe Markson’s and Le Guin’s dream would ever happen. But I’m pleased to inform you, Libra, that your life in the coming weeks may be exactly like that: a fascinating adventure with few hassles and wrangles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): According to Scorpio painter Georgia O’Keeffe, success is irrelevant. The most crucial life-long effort that anyone can be devoted to is “making your unknown known.” Did she mean making your unknown known to yourself? Or making your unknown known to other people? Or both? According to my analysis of the astrological omens, the coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to do both. So I hope you will tease out your best and biggest mysteries from their hiding places. Give them expression. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You Sagittarians have a talent for burning bridges that really do need to be burned. Your intuition often guides you to assess when the time is ripe to withdraw from connections that no longer benefit you. On the other hand, you sometimes burn bridges prematurely. You decide that they are in such disrepair that they’re of no use to you, even though it might serve your ultimate interests to fix them. I offer these thoughts as a preface for my advice: 1. Refurbish rather than burn a certain bridge you’re a bit disenchanted with. 2. Build at least one new bridge that will be valuable in the future. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The shape of the planets’ orbits around the sun is elliptical, not circular. Capricorn astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571–1630) was the first person to figure this out. He didn’t like it. He really wanted the orbits to be circular. That would have been more satisfying to his aesthetic and spiritual sensibilities. Explaining the arduous labor he did to arrive at his conclusion, he wrote, “Take pity on me, for I have repeated these calculations seventy times.” In the big picture of our understanding of the universe, of course, his discovery was felicitous. It’s not a problem that the orbits are elliptical, merely the truth. In the coming weeks, Capricorn, I foresee you engaging in a process that’s metaphorically comparable to Kepler’s. Hard work will yield useful, if unexpected results. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Please don’t imitate or repeat yourself in the coming weeks. Refrain from relying on formulas that have worked for you before. Resolve to either ignore or rebel against your past as you dream up fresh gambits and adventures. Treat your whole life like an improvisatory game that has just one purpose: to attract and stir up useful novelty. If you do these things, Aquarius, I can practically guarantee that you will win the game. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Poet Robert Bly believes that each of us has a special genius, and the key to understanding and fully activating that genius is in our core wound. In other words, the part of us that got hurt the worst is potentially the generative source of the best gifts we have to give. Do you know where that is in yourself: the wound that could be the source of your blessing? Now is a great time to investigate this tantalizing mystery. Homework: Avoid the Tragic Magic Triad: taking things too personally, too literally, and too seriously. FreeWillAstrology.com

ESTATES’ CREDITOR’S NOTICES All persons having claims against the following estates are required to deliver or mail their claims to the Personal Representative indicated below and also file subject claims on Form #371ES with Irvin G. Condon, Probate Judge of Charleston County, 84 Broad Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401, before the expiration of 8 months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or else thereafter such claims shall be and are forever barred. Estate of: DAVID CARROLL HARPER 2019-ES-10-2093 DOD: 11/24/19 Pers. Rep: KIMBERLY H. WILKINS 8733 ALEXANDRIA DR. NO. CHARLESTON, SC 29420 Atty: GORDON H. GARRETT, ESQ. 1075 E. MONTAGUE AVE. CHARLESTON, SC 29405 ************ Estate of: ELIZABETH A. HILDEBIDLE 2019-ES-10-2130 DOD: 11/28/19 Pers. Rep: MATTHEW HILDEBIDLE 177 SUGAR MAGNOLIA WAY CHARLESTON, SC 29414 Atty: MELINDA LUCKA KELLEY, ESQ. 4000 FABER PLACE, #450 NO. CHARLESTON, SC 29405 ************ Estate of: JANICE MARIE GLOVER 2019-ES-10-2144 DOD: 09/17/19 Pers. Rep: DORIS GLOVER LEGARE 116 PAMELA LN. SUMMERVILLE, SC 29483 Atty: LYDIA P. DAVIDSON, ESQ. 9 STATE ST. CHARLESTON, SC 29401

ESTATES’ CREDITOR’S NOTICES All persons having claims against the following estates are required to deliver or mail their claims to the Personal Representative indicated below and also file subject claims on Form #371ES with Irvin G. Condon, Probate Judge of Charleston County, 84 Broad Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401, before the expiration of 8 months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or else thereafter such claims shall be and are forever barred. Estate of: ILENE A. DOWNEY 2019-ES-10-2038 DOD: 11/14/19 Pers. Rep: JOHN R. DOWNEY 135 RAW HIDE CT. W. COLUMBIA, SC 29172 *********************** Estate of: GLENN ANTHONY STIEGMAN, JR. 2020-ES-10-0005 DOD: 10/08/19 Pers. Rep: GLENDA ANN HARRISON STIEGMAN 51 GRAND PAVILION DR. ISLE OF PALMS, SC 29451 ***********************

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NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-4409

NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-2799

By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of St. Johns Crossing Homeowners Association, Inc., Plaintiff, against Richard S. Colton, Jr., Defendant;

By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff v. Andre R. Pryor, Defendant.

I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on February 4, 2020 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit:

I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on February 4, 2020 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit:

ALL that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, situate lying and being in Charleston County, State of South Carolina, known and designated as Lot 34, St. Johns Crossing Subdivision as shown on a plat entitled, “FINAL PLAT SHOWING THE SUBDIVISION OF TMS NO. 312-00-00-079 (3.881 AC.) INTO ST. JOHN’S CROSSING PHASE IV CONTAINING LOTS 3446 & 71-76 (1.754 AC.), RIGHT OF WAYS (1.044 AC), AND H.O.A. AREAS (1.083 AC.)”, Property of Baycorp Inc., Located in the City of Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina,” dated June 16, 2012, prepared by HLA, INC. and recorded August 23, 2012 in Plat Book L12 page 0240. Said lot having such size, shape, dimensions, buttings, and boundaries as will by reference to said plat more fully appear.

ALL that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Summerville, County of Charleston, State of South Carolina, known and designated as LOT 566, PHASE 3C-II, LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, as shown on that certain plat of Seamon Whiteside & Associates Surveying, LLC entitled, “A FINAL SUBDIVISION PLAT OF LOTS 552 THRU 571, A 0.140 ACREA H.O.A. COMMON AREA, A 0.173 ACREA H.O.A. AREA 1 AND A 4.309 ACRE RESIDUAL TRACT, PHASE 3C-II, LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, BEING A PORTION OF TMS #388-0000-048, OWNED BY CHEROKEE VALLEY HOMES, LLC AND LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, LLC, LOCATED IN THE TOWN OF SUMMERVILLE, CHARLESTON COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA,” dated July 23, 2014 and recorded September 17, 2014 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Plat Book L-14 at Page 0375. Said lot having such size, shape, dimensions, buttings and boundings as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear.

SUBJECT to all restrictions, easements and rights-of-way of record. BEING the same property conveyed to Richard S. Colton, Jr. by deed of St. Johns Capital, LLC, dated June 14, 2013 and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County June 21, 2013 in Book 0340, Page 117. TMS No: 312-00-00-721 Property Address: 1743 Bee Balm Road Johns Island, SC 29455 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of Five (5%) Percent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (30) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by PennyMac Loan Services, LLC, by assignment from Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc., solely as nominee for W.R. Starkey Mortgage, LLP, in the original amount of $178,159.00, dated June 14, 2013, and recorded June 21, 2013, in Book 0340 at Page 120 with the Charleston County Register of Deeds; and that certain mortgage lien held by Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the original amount of $45,660.60, dated April 25, 2018, and recorded June 25, 2018, in Book 0728 at Page 472 with the Charleston County Register of Deeds. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412

SUBJECT to any and all applicable easements, restrictions, conditions, right-of-ways and setbacks of record and as may be shown on the above-referenced plat. BEING the same property conveyed to Andre R. Pryor by deed of LOS Homes, LLC dated June 4, 2015, and recorded in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book 0482, at Page 453 on June 11, 2015. SUBJECT, to any and all applicable easements, restrictions and reservations of record as set forth in Exhibit A of said deed recorded on June 11, 2015 in the RMC Office for Charleston County in Book 0482, at Page 453. TMS No.: 388-13-00-968 Property Address: 275 Coosawatchie Street Summerville, SC 29485 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder. The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. The sale shall be subject to that certain mortgage lien held by Citibank, N.A., in the original amount of $168,730.00, dated June 8, 2015, and recorded June 11, 2015, in Book 0482 at Page 454; that mortgage lien held by Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America in the original amount of $________, dated June 8, 2015, and recorded June 11, 2015, in Book 0482 at Page 456; and that tax lien held by South Carolina Department of Revenue in its favor and against

“Andre Pryor”, bearing Tax Lien Number 3-51962399-9, in the original amount of $2,773.63, and filed August 1, 2017, with the Charleston County Register of Deeds with the Charleston County Register of Deeds. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 NOTICE OF SALE Docket No. 2019-CP-10-2589 By virtue of a Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County, heretofore granted in the case of The Lakes Master Association, Inc., Plaintiff v. Stephen McMaster and Meg McMaster, Defendants. I, the undersigned Master-inEquity for Charleston County, will sell on February 4, 2020 at 11:00 o’clock a.m., at the County Council Chambers, Public Services Building, 4045 Bridge View Drive, North Charleston, South Carolina, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to wit: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in Charleston County, South Carolina, shown and designated as ‘Lot 112’ as shown on a plat entitled, ‘REVISED FINAL SUBDIVISION PLAT PREPARED OF THE LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE - PHASE II - E SITE LOCATED IN THE TOWN OF SUMMERVILLE, CHARLESTON COUNTY, SOUTH CAROLINA PROPERTY OWNED BY LAKES OF SUMMERVILLE, LLC’ by Associated E & S Inc., dated February 7, 2005 and recorded February 3, 2006 in Plat Book EJ at Page 502 in the RMC Office for Charleston County, South Carolina. Said piece, parcel or lot of land having such size, shape, location, dimensions, buttings and boundings, courses and distances as will by reference to said plat more fully and at large appear. Being the same property conveyed to Stephen McMaster and Meg McMaster by deed from Frank J. Potter and Margaret A. Potter dated August 28, 2013 and recorded September 4, 2013 in Book 0358 at Page 450 in the Charleston County RMC’s Office. SUBJECT to any and all restrictions, covenants, conditions, easements, rights of way and all other matters affecting subject property of record in the Office of the RMC for Charleston County, South Carolina. TMS Number: 388-13-00-165 Grantee’s Address: 327 Savannah River Drive Summerville, SC 29485 TERMS OF SALE: FOR CASH: The Master-in-Equity will require a deposit of five (5%) per cent of the amount of bid (in cash or equivalent), same to be applied on the purchase price only upon compliance with the bid, but in case of non-compliance within thirty (3) days after the date of


The sale shall be subject to taxes, to existing easements and restrictions of record, and to homeowners association assessments accruing subsequent to the date of the deed issued to the purchaser [Purchaser to pay interest on his bid from the date of sale to the date of compliance at the rate of 6.875% per annum]. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Purchaser shall pay for all costs of recording the deed. Any sale pursuant to this order, is without warranty of any kind. Neither Plaintiff nor the Court warrant title to any third-party purchaser. All third-party purchasers are made parties to this action and are deemed to have notice of all matters disclosed by the public record, including the status of title. See Ex parte Keller, 185 S.C. 283, 194 S.E. 15 (1937); Wells Fargo Bank, NA v. Turner, 378 S.C. 147, 662 S.E2d 424 (Ct. App. 2008) No personal or deficiency judgment being demanded, the bidding will not remain open after the date of the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. Mikell R. Scarborough Master-in-Equity for Charleston County Attorney for the Plaintiff Derek F. Dean Simons & Dean 147 Wappoo Creek Drive, Suite 604 Charleston, SC 29412 ESTATES’ CREDITOR’S NOTICES All persons having claims against the following estates are required to deliver or mail their claims to the Personal Representative indicated below and also file subject claims on Form #371ES with Irvin G. Condon, Probate Judge of Charleston County, 84 Broad Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401, before the expiration of 8 months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or else thereafter such claims shall be and are forever barred. Estate of: WILLIAM DAVID PALMER, JR. 2019-ES-10-1964 DOD: 10/04/19 Pers. Rep: REBECCA P. EDWARDS 2500 CHEYNE WALK VIRGINIA BEACH, VA 23454 ************ Estate of: BENJAMIN A. HAGOOD AKA BENJAMIN AMBLER HAGOOD, SR. 2019-ES-10-2002 DOD: 11/09/19 Pers. Rep: JAMES MORROW HAGOOD, II 433 GREENBRIAR LN. CHARLESTON, SC 29412 Pers. Rep: BENJAMIN AMBLER HAGOOD, JR. 2424 RAVEN DR. SULLIVANS ISLAND, SC 29482 Pers. Rep: ROBERT CAMP HAGOOD 137 BROAD ST. CHARLESTON, SC 29401 Atty: T. HEYWARD CARTER, JR., ESQ. 115 CHURCH ST. CHARLESTON, SC 29401 ************ Estate of: LUCY CLARKE DEAVOR 2019-ES-10-2012 DOD: 10/17/19 Pers. Rep: JAMES P. DEAVOR 153 MANCHESTER RD. CHARLESTON, SC 29407 ************ Estate of: GEORGE POWELL BUSCH 2019-ES-10-2026 DOD: 11/19/19 Pers. Rep: LINDA BUSCH FREYTAG

1504 W. ARBOR ARCH SUFFOLK, VA 23433 ************ Estate of: MICHAEL DUFF ROUMILLAT 2019-ES-10-2034 DOD: 11/21/19 Pers. Rep: LYNNE ROUMILLAT HEADLEY 211 NOTTINGHAM RD. RICHMOND, VA 23221 ************ Estate of: HOWARD FUSON MOORE, JR. 2019-ES-10-2039 DOD: 11/19/19 Pers. Rep: CHARLES R. MOORE 53 STOCKER DR. CHARLESTON, SC 29407 ************ Estate of: BRADLEY GARTH MILLEN 2019-ES-10-2059 DOD: 07/12/19 Pers. Rep: SANDRA ELAINE MILLEN 3296 VON OHSEN RD. SUMMERVILLE, SC 29485 ************ Estate of: ROBERT LEROY JAEGLY AKA BOB JAEGLY, SR. 2019-ES-10-2072 DOD: 11/09/19 Pers. Rep: CATHERINE R. COFFEY 307 LANCASTER RD., SUMMERVILLE, SC 29485 ************ Estate of: RALPH LAMAR MILLER 2019-ES-10-2073 DOD: 11/25/19 Pers. Rep: SANDRA M. RUSS 895 PORTABELLA LN. CHARLESTON, SC 29412 ESTATES’ CREDITOR’S NOTICES All persons having claims against the following estates are required to deliver or mail their claims to the Personal Representative indicated below and also file subject claims on Form #371ES with Irvin G. Condon, Probate Judge of Charleston County, 84 Broad Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401, before the expiration of 8 months after the date of the first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or else thereafter such claims shall be and are forever barred. Estate of: NORMAN CALHOUN ANDERSON, SR. 2019-ES-10-1293 DOD: 05/30/19 Pers. Rep: NORMAN C. ANDERSON, JR. 21 COVENTRY CLOSE SAVANNAH, GA 31411 Atty: EVAN A. SMITH, ESQ. PO BOX 976 CHARLESTON, SC 29402 ************ Estate of: DAVID WALTER ALSBROOKS 2020-ES-10-0019 DOD: 12/01/19 Pers. Rep: DAVID STEPHEN ALSBROOKS 4618 WILSON RD. BIG STONE GAP, VA 24219 ************ Estate of: PERRY A. GARVIN 2020-ES-10-0035 DOD: 11/01/19 Pers. Rep: CAROLYN A. BERRY 335 TUCKER DR. CHARLESTON, SC 29414 ************ Estate of: JOSEPH JAMES CORRADINO 2020-ES-10-0037 DOD: 11/27/19 Pers. Rep: JOSEPH CORRADINO 1238 VALLEY FORGE DR. CHARLESTON, SC 29412 ************ Estate of: HENRY H. FREUDENBERG 2020-ES-10-0039 DOD: 12/30/19 Pers. Rep: LARRY W. FREUDENBERG 2228 WEEPOOLOW TRAIL CHARLESTON, SC 29407 ************ Estate of: JAMES THEODORE FRALIX, JR. 2020-ES-10-0053 DOD: 01/02/20 Pers. Rep: JAMES T. FRALIX 2193 WAPPOO HALL RD.

CHARLESTON, SC 29412 ************ Estate of: PATRICIA ELLISON PHILLIPS 2020-ES-10-0074 DOD: 07/11/19 Pers. Rep: SUE PHILLIPS YOUNG 110 N. GATESHEAD CROSSING GOOSE CREEK, SC 29445 Atty: LAURA W. MOORE, ESQ. 23 BROAD ST. CHARLESTON, SC 29401 ************ Estate of: RUTH DEETTE MIMS RODGERS 2020-ES-10-0079 DOD: 11/20/19 Pers. Rep: ALISSA R. DICKERSON 779 CONDON DR. CHARLESTON, SC 29412 Atty: LARRY G. REDDECK, ESQ. PO BOX 699 LAKE CITY, SC 29560 ************ Estate of: SUSAN DENMAN GLADDEN 2020-ES-10-0094 DOD: 06/12/19 Pers. Rep: DANIEL GLADDEN PO BOX 898 ISLE OF PALMS, SC 29451 Atty: ANNE KELLEY RUSSELL, ESQ. PO BOX 22828 CHARLESTON, SC 29413 ************ Estate of: WALTER SCHROEDER 2020-ES-10-0095 DOD: 11/21/19 Pers. Rep: EMILY S. SCHROEDER 806 DUCK HAWK RETREAT CHARLESTON, SC 29412 Atty: GORDON H. GARRETT, ESQ. 1075 A MONTAGUE AVE., NO. CHARLESTON, SC 29405 ************ Estate of: GEORGE LABRASCA, III 2020-ES-10-0109 DOD: 11/18/19 Pers. Rep: RAMONA E. LABRASCA 1807 WALSINGHAM WAY CHARLESTON, SC 29412 Atty: W. BARNWELL VAUGHAN, ESQ. 102 WAPPOO CREEK DR., #2 CHARLESTON, SC 29412 PUBLIC NOTICE Topic: Proposed Reissuance, of a WTR-NPDES-Wastewater Individual Permit Notice Number: SC0001759-3 Notice Date: January 29, 2020 End of Comment Period: February 28, 2020 Permit Applicant: WESTROCK CHARLESTON KRAFT LLC Facility Location: The Mill is located on the Cooper River, just north of the Mark Clark Expressway (I-526) Address Details: at 5600 Virginia Avenue, North Charleston, South Carolina, Charleston County Dhec Permit Engineer: Randall Thompson, THOMPSGR@dhec. sc.gov, 803-898-4314 Proposal: Reissuance WTRNPDES-Wastewater Individual Permit Permit: SC0001759 Permit Summary: The facility will be discharging: 001: Process wastewater from pulp and paper manufacturing and wood chemical manufacturing, and stormwater 004: Non-process raw water reservoir overflow and raw water intake screen backwash The receiving streams are classified class: SB (Tidal Waters – Rec. & Fishing): SB (Tidal Waters – Rec. & Fishing) - are tidal saltwaters suitable for primary and secondary contact recreation, crabbing, and fishing, except harvesting of clams, mussels, or oysters for market purposes or human consumption or human consumption. Also suitable for the survival and propagation of

a balanced indigenous aquatic community of marine fauna and flora. FW (Freshwaters): FW (Fresh Waters) - are freshwaters suitable for primary and secondary contact recreation and as a source for drinking water supply after conventional treatment in accordance with the requirements of the Department. Suitable for fishing and the survival and propagation of a balanced indigenous aquatic community of fauna and flora. Suitable also for industrial and agricultural uses. The Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Code for the facility is 2631, 2611, 2661, and 2861 A Fact Sheet is available This permit when issued will supersede an existing permit which expired on: May 31, 2018 There is no potential to affect an exisitng or proposed drinking water source and no state-approved source water protection area. Hence MCLs or W/O criteria shall not apply Notice Purpose: DHEC is seeking input on this proposed decision and invites interested parties to provide written comments. How To Comment: Provide comments, received no later than the above mentioned “End of Comment Period” date. Forward comments, with the subject line as the above mentioned “Notice Number”, to the above mentioned Permit Engineer: DHEC, Bureau of Water, 2600 Bull St., Columbia, SC, 29201. Any individuals with disabilities or special needs who wish to participate or review DHEC’s files should contact the Permit Engineer, to discuss any special aids or services required. Hearing: When there is a significant degree of public interest in a proposed permit or group of permits, the Department may hold a public hearing to take oral comments in addition to written comments. More Info: DHEC’s project file is available for review at the above address and copies can be made for a fee by contacting our Freedom of Information Office (2600 Bull Street, Columbia, SC 29201, 803-898-3882). An e-copy of the proposed permit can be found at: http://www. scdhec.gov/Publicnotices Miscellaneous: DHEC is not involved in zoning, land use, or property value issues (please contact your local County or Municipal officials for questions or concerns on these issues). All people commenting will receive a response to comments when DHEC makes a permit decision. Additional information about the public notice processes can be found at our web site at: https://www.scdhec.gov/ environment/water-quality/ national-pollutant-dischargeelimination-system-npdes/ npdes-overview-0.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-2331 Angela N. Dickie Plaintiff, vs. Robert L. Dickie Defendant. SUMMONS FOR DIVORCE (One-Year Continuous Separation) To the DEFENDANT AboveNamed: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that you have been sued by the Plaintiff for DIVORCE in the Court indicated above. You must respond in writing to the Complaint for Divorce filed with the Charleston County Clerk of Court 100 Broad St. Charleston, SC 29401 and

serve a copy of your Answer on the Plaintiff within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons upon you, not counting the day of service, or thirty-five (35) days if you were served by certified mail, restricted delivery, return receipt requested. If you wish to retain an attorney to represent you in this matter, it is advisable to do so before submitting your Answer to the Plaintiff. If you do not answer the Complaint within the required thirty (30) days, the Court may grant a DIVORCE and grant the Plaintiff the relief requested in the Complaint. Angela N. Dickie CHARLESTON, SC 1/15/20 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE MAGISTRATE COURT FOR THE CITY OF CHARLESTON Case No.: 2019CV1010601311 DOUGLAS A. CHURDAR, Plaintiff, vs. JOSEPH TERRY RATLEY Defendant(s). SUMMONS YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action filed on August 22, 2019 at 3:43 pm, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the complaint on the subscriber at 304 Pettigru Street, Greenville, SC 29601, within thirty (30) days from the date of service hereof, exclusive of the date of such service. If you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, judgment by default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint. Attorney Douglas A. Churdar 304 Pettigru Street Greenville, SC 29601 phone: (864) 233-0203. NOTICE OF ASSUMED NAME Notice is hereby given, pursuant to law, that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the assumed name of DARIUS DARRELL HARRIS, holds both Equitable Title and Legal Title to the Assumed Name in a UBOT in a competent jurisdiction of equity. Details regarding this notice are as follows: ASSUMED NAME: DARIUS DARRELL HARRIS; PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: c/o 316 Calhoun Street, Charleston, South Carolina [29401]–9999, (u)nited (s)tates of America; NAMEHOLDER(S): Name: Harris, Darius Darrell; Address: c/o 7620 Rivers Avenue, Suite 370-197, North Charleston, South Carolina [29406]–9999, (u)nited (s)tates of America, Republic. All Rights Reserved.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-3193

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-3066

SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Chelsea Albanese

SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Jacquinn Arline

NOTICE

NOTICE

TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on September 18, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.

TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on September 9, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.

Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-4189 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Shornita Henderson and Kevin Henderson NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on December 12, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.

Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-2392 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Ryan Walker NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on July 9, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS, 3366 Rivers Avenue, North Charleston, SC 29405, Telephone: 843953-9286

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2018-DR-10-3317

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-2859 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Ridge Murphy

NOTICE

SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Carlos Jenkins, et al. NOTICE

I, James-Benjamin III: DeWitt in the name of the Almighty Creator, By my Declaration of Independence solemnly Publish and Declare my Right to expatriate absolute, my res in trust to the foreign jurisdiction known as the municipal corporation of the District of Columbia, a democracy, and return to the Republic. Any and all past and present political ties implied by operation of law or otherwise in trust with the democracy is hereby dissolved. I, JamesBenjamin III: DeWitt have full power to contract, establish commerce as found being guaranteed by the Bill of Rights being the full first 10 Amendments to the Constitution of the (u)nited (s)tates of America, a Republic. So Done this 8th day of August, 2019.

TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on October 3, 2018 Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.

NOTICE TO Ridge Murphy: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in docket number 2019-DR-102859 this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on August 14, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, Regina Parvin, at the Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-2219 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Shekia Butler NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on June 26, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS, 3366 Rivers Avenue, North Charleston, SC 29405, Telephone: 843953-9286 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF CHARLESTON IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR THE NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT DOCKET NO. 2019-DR-10-1658 SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES VERSUS Abraham Johnson NOTICE TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action filed with the Clerk of Court for Charleston County on May 13, 2019. Upon proof of interest, a copy of the Complaint will be delivered to you upon request from the Clerk of Court in Charleston, and you must serve a copy of your Answer to the Complaint on the Plaintiff, the Charleston County Department of Social Services, at the office of their Attorney, The Legal Department of the Charleston County Department of Social Services, 3366 Rivers Ave., N. Charleston, South Carolina 29405-5714, within thirty days of this publication. If you fail to answer within the time set forth above, the Plaintiff will proceed to seek relief from the Court. Attorney of Record: Kyra McMillan, SCDSS 3366 Rivers Avenue North Charleston, SC 29405 Telephone: 843-953-9286 NOTICE OF ASSUMED NAME Notice is hereby given, pursuant to law, that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the assumed name of JAMES BENJAMIN DEWITT III, holds both Equitable Title and Legal Title to the Assumed Name in a UBOT in a competent jurisdiction of equity. Details regarding this notice are as follows: ASSUMED NAME: JAMES BENJAMIN DEWITT III; PRINCIPAL PLACE OF BUSINESS: c/o 809 82nd Parkway Myrtle Beach, South Carolina [29572], (u)nited (s)tates of America; NAMEHOLDER(S): Name: DeWitt, James Benjamin III; Address: c/o 1227 16th Avenue #221 Conway, South Carolina [29526], (u)nited (s)tates of America, Republic. All Rights Reserved.

CLASSIFIEDS | charlestoncitypaper.com

the sale, same to be forfeited and applied to costs and the property re-advertised for sale upon the same terms at the risk of the former highest bidder.

31


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Across 1 Archipelago components 7 NBA or NHL stats 10 [We meant it this way] 13 Prepare to serve, as a pizza or pie 15 French street 16 Sheep’s mother 17 Country that Conchita Wurst represented in the 2014 Eurovision Song Contest 18 Fairway club not often found in a bag 20 ___ Martin (sports car) 21 Her self-titled album was named the best of 2014 by The Guardian and Entertainment Weekly 23 John of 2020’s “The Grudge” 24 Fire pit leftovers 25 Some endoscope users 26 Dorothy of the “Road” pictures 28 Buenos Aires loc. 29 TV show whose climactic episode “Ozymandias” was turned into a mini-opera premiering in 2014 33 Slippery ___ (herbal remedy source) 36 Teddy ___ (1980s bear that played cassettes) 37 Baby’s slipper 39 Music booster 40 Late night host who filmed in Cuba in 2015, the first to do so since Jack Paar in 1959 44 Biblical preserver 46 Battery terminals 47 Trig curve 49 Beam of happiness? 50 Robin’s “Mork & Mindy” costar 53 Hit indie RPG of 2015 with notable music, jokes about puzzles, and multiple endings 55 Miller who played the younger daughter in “The Descendants” 57 Tarantulas, e.g. 58 Award-winning 2015 movie whose title is Spanish for “hitman” 60 “Chicken Run” extra 61 Night flyer 62 Soccer forward 63 Amsterdam-based financial co. 64 “Wow” feeling 65 Highest North American peak Down 1 “I, Robot” author Asimov 2 Semi-wet snow 3 Ready, in Spain 4 ___-1 (“Ghostbusters” car) 5 Migratory seabird 6 Fashion designer Anna

7 “Ignorance is bliss,” e.g. 8 North African capital city 9 No longer hidden 10 National park in Tanzania 11 “___ let you down!” 12 They’re shown after the decimal 14 Hand down 19 Writer on a birthday? 22 Criminal tough guy 24 Acid class 26 Resting cat’s spot 27 “I Get ___ Out of You” 28 Acrobat software company 29 Word after sports or training 30 Zombie spirit 31 Like the universe, cosmologically 32 Domicile 34 Finch’s creator 35 Game pieces 38 Hosp. areas 41 Yoga studio greeting 42 Indigo dye source 43 At a minimum 45 Lou of the Velvet Underground 47 Food on a belt 48 Show-offy way to solve crosswords 49 A metal one is reusable 50 Heavy jacket 51 The Little Mermaid 52 Haka dancer 54 “Fancy” singer McEntire 55 Nice-sized lot 56 Principal 59 “___ be my honor”

Last Week's Solution

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M MUSIC

pulse CULTURA FESTIVAL WILL RETURN TO THE ROYAL AMERICAN ON APRIL 25

Hip-hop/R&B-centered Cultura Festival will return to the Royal American for a second year on April 25. Details, including performing artists, are scarce right now, but will be revealed in the coming weeks. The 2020 festival was announced on social media on Jan. 19. Longtime Charleston rapper Matt Monday conceived and curated Cultura in 2019 as a festival that celebrates young black culture. At the inaugural performance last April, some of the Holy City’s biggest rap and R&B artists appeared: Monday, Benny Starr, Shaniqua McCants, Abstract that Rapper, Jah Jr., Contour, Niecy Blues, Anfernee, and more. Not much else is known about Cultura 2020 at this point. But, as always, Monday knows how to build hype. When asked for comment, he kept it succinct. “Prepare yourselves.” —Heath Ellison

A Little Mo’ Love G. Love’s got The Juice, thanks to an assist from Keb’ Mo’ BY VINCENT HARRIS G. Love & Special Sauce Sat. Feb. 1 8:30 p.m. $25-$99 Music Farm 32 Ann St. (843)577-6969 musicfarm.com

Garrett Dutton, better known as G. Love, has been making albums for 28 years. The singer, guitarist, and harmonica player most often records with his band, Special Sauce, comprised of bassist Jim Prescott and drummer Jeffrey Clemens. But he’s done solo albums and collaborated with the likes of the Avett Brothers and Jack Johnson. So he knows the drill when it comes to recording and releasing albums, and the cycle of press and touring you have to do to promote them. But he’s been sitting on his 2020 album The Juice for over a year, and in conversation, he has mixed emotions about the album finally being out. “It’s funny,” he says. “It’s a bittersweet kind of thing because it’s been your little secret you’ve had. It’s just been for you. And then it finally comes out. We hope as musicians that these songs are going to connect with the people, so we do as much promo as we can do, and we do as many interviews as we can. But ultimately if people like it, they’re going

to keep listening to it. So that’s what we’re hoping for, is that you make a connection.” It’s not like people haven’t connected with G. Love & Special Sauce’s music before. Since their self-titled 1994 debut, the band has specialized in a loose, undeniably funky mix of soul and rock that most often gets labeled as “alternative hip-hop.” The band also gets called “laid-back” a lot, but that might be more because of G. Love’s easyrolling vocal delivery than the band’s effortless way with a good groove. That sound has given them a reliable live audience, beloved singles like “Baby’s Got Sauce” and “Cold Beverage,” and a nearly three-decade career. So, Love isn’t a stranger to putting out music and having people like it. But The Juice is special for him because it was co-written and produced by the Grammy-winning bluesman Keb’ Mo’ and features guest appearances by pedal steel phenom Robert Randolph and guitar maestro Marcus King, among others. It also took about four years to get done, due to the busy touring schedules of everyone involved. The album served as a reconnection for G. Love and Keb’ Mo’, who were label-mates back in the early ’90s. “In 1993, Keb’ and I were signed to the OKeh label under Epic Records,” Love says. “It

was a relaunch of a ‘race records’ label from the ’30s that released music by African-American artists, so it was really kind of an honor for Keb’ and I to be a part of that. From there we went on to our separate careers, but we finally reconnected on tour, and Keb’ offered to make a record for me. So I went down to Nashville and we started writing together.” It took Mo’ and Love about three more years of intermittent work after that initial meeting to finish writing and then recording the songs. “There were a lot of breaks,” Love says. “And that’s why it was such a long process, but I really think there’s a lot of value in taking your time. For one thing, the cream rises to the top; you can see and feel when you have something strong when you’re given the benefit of time. When you record something, you always think it’s great, right? Most artists are like this because we love what we do. So you think when you first make a song that it’s the greatest thing ever, but after time goes by you might find things that could have been better.” The songs on the album certainly don’t seem overly labored over, but there’s a tightness and precision to the tunes that suggests the long-term recording process worked. G. Love unleashes a tongue-twisting sungcontinued on page 35

RANKY TANKY’S GOOD TIME CONTINUES WITH GRAMMY WIN FOR BEST REGIONAL ROOTS ALBUM

Ranky Tanky just keeps one-upping themselves. At the 62nd annual Grammy Awards, the Lowcountry Gullah band took home the Grammy for best Regional Roots Album for their 2019 LP Good Time. “It’s an honor to be here to stand on the shoulders of our Gullah ancestry and bring this music and message to the world,” Charlton Singleton said in the band’s acceptance speech. This was Ranky Tanky’s first nomination for a Grammy and the win comes just two years after the band’s 2017 album, Ranky Tanky, peaked on the Billboard Jazz Charts at No. 1. Ranky Tanky’s momentum has been hard to stop since the band formed in 2016. They grabbed local attention almost immediately thanks to their funky interpretation of traditional Gullah songs. Plus, the band was made up of Lowcountry music heroes: Singleton on trumpet, Quentin and Calvin Baxter on drums, Quiana Parler on vocals, Kevin Hamilton on bass, and Clay Ross on guitar. After releasing their 2017 self-titled album, the band’s touring schedule and some high-profile performances took Gullah music far beyond the South Carolina borders. Good Time in 2019 gave the band more material to run with and a Grammy nomination soon after the album’s release. The band’s success led Mayor John Tecklenburg to commemorate Dec. 17 as Ranky Tanky Day in the city of Charleston. We’re not really sure how Ranky Tanky will go beyond this most recent success marker, but the Grammy win continues to add hype to the band’s upcoming hometown show in March at the Gaillard Center. —HE

MUSIC | charlestoncitypaper.com

Kaelan Barowsky

G. LOVE HAS PERFORMED SONGS FROM HIS LATEST ALBUM, THE JUICE, WHILE TOURING OVER THE LAST YEAR

33


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KLEIN HAS TOURED THE WORLD ALONGSIDE ESTEEMED ARTISTS INCLUDING ARLO GUTHRIE

Spoken Words Jess Klein talks about her journey to become a folk singer BY KEVIN WILSON Jess Klein

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Jess Klein calls Hillsborough, N.C. home now, but prior to her move in 2016, she had the unique opportunity to immerse herself in the creative community of Austin, Texas for eight years, where she was able to hone her songwriting and performance skills in a big way. Still, as influential and inspirational as her time in the Lone Star State may have been, Klein’s initial musical awakening happened much earlier, and much further North. “I grew up in Rochester, New York, listening to Motown records, primarily,” Klein recalls. “That did something special for me.” “The Motown work ethic showed me that you didn’t have to do it all by yourself when it comes to making a great product,” she says. “You know, they always had the best songwriters, the best horn players, the best of whatever was needed to round out the recordings. It was a team effort every time. And the sound they achieved in the end made things like falling in love or having a broken heart seem like they really mattered.” Yet, as highly as she regarded that sort of teamwork, Klein has mostly opted to go it alone since first discovering what she wanted to

do with her life. “I was actually working on my thesis in Jamaica, documenting dub poets and studying the musical landscape of that country, when I realized that I was really interested in taking my love for creative writing and applying it to songcraft. Prior to seeing how ingrained it is in the culture there, I used to think that you had to be really famous or something to be able to pursue music as a career.” Klein explains that after it dawned on her that “you only needed a guitar to get started as a folk singer,” that seemed like a good area of focus for her work. It wasn’t too long after she started down this path that Klein won a prestigious songwriting contest at the annual Telluride Bluegrass Festival, also garnering the attention of record company representatives from all over the country in the process. She subsequently began recording richly flavored Americana albums for indie label Rykodisc, which in turn landed her enough recognition to be included on tours throughout the U.S., U.K., Europe, and Japan, both on her own and with such esteemed artists as Arlo Guthrie, Erin McKeown, John Fullbright, and Carlene Carter. Interestingly, Klein says she has learned one very important thing about her own creativity over these last two decades: Always be willing and able to receive something good when it comes along. “I try to stay warmed up all the time, and ready to write whenever an idea hits me.” In recent years, however, it continued on page 35


Words

rapped verse on the title track that lands hard over a sparse soul-gospel groove, dives into straight-up funk on “Go Crazy,” which features a vocal assist from Keb’ Mo’, lays down a playful acoustic pseudo-country love song with “She’s the Rock,” and lest we think he’s abandoned his core sound, wraps things up with the loose-limbed “Drinkin’ Wine,” which sounds like it could have been on his first album way back in ’94. It’s probably his most exploratory and assured album, and Keb’ Mo’s steady hand behind the board was a big part of that. Love says that as a producer, Mo’ asked for his absolute best performance every time out. “Keb’ Mo’ is a really meticulous, thoughtful guy,” he says. “His philosophy of making records is to just really put everything you have into the record. Every song, every word, every note, and every melody played or sung has to be carefully thought out and performed perfectly. So there was a lot of work, but it really paid off.” Now that the album is out, Love says he’s excited to tour behind it, and it helps that, during the lengthy recording process, he was able to play the songs on The Juice live pretty extensively. “I know that these songs connect with people because I’ve been playing them live for the last three or four years,” he says. “People loved these tunes even before they knew them, so I’m excited to get them out there.”

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LOST DOG STREET BAND W/ CASPER ALLEN FREE MUSIC ON THE DECK 6-9PM DAILY DECK STAGE SCHEDULE THU, JAN 30 THE HUNGRY MONKS, 6 PM FRI, JAN 31 POHO FAMILY FUNK REVUE, 6 PM SAT, FEB 1 DESMOND JONES, 6 PM SUN, FEB 2 POHO YOGA, 10 AM SUNDAY BRUNCH FARMERS MARKET, 11 AM MOTOWN THROWDOWN, 1 PM TBA, 6 PM MON, FEB 3 HOLY CITY HEATERS, 6 PM TUE, FEB 4 FUSION JONEZ, 6 PM FOR TICKETS & SHOW INFORMATION

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MUSIC | charlestoncitypaper.com

continued from page 33

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seems as though Klein’s warmth in this area has brilliantly burst into a full-on fire. Emboldened by her time in Austin, the cross-country move that followed, and invigorated by her new marriage to fellow songwriter Mike June, Klein’s latest effort, an LP for Blue Rose Records called Back to My Green, showcases her expanded tastes and ever-evolving talents. The material on the album dances around multiple musical genres and forcefully grabs the listener with lyrical themes that touch on every imaginable aspect of the human experience. This sort of content makes the most sense now to Klein. It’s the standard by which she measures success at this point, she says. Fortunately, Klein should have plenty of opportunities for interacting with her target audience when she plays the Awendaw Green Barn Jam this week. And she definitely aims to please with her live performances. “My current show is very intimate and completely solo, and it will feature a lot of my songs both new and old, and maybe a few covers, if that feels right on any given night. I will also be doing a spoken word piece about the desecration of the Jewish cemetery where some of my relatives are buried. In times like these, that one really seems to resonate with people everywhere.”

WED, JAN 29

continued from page 34

35


Provided

w/ Moon Hollow Tues. Feb. 4 8 p.m. Tin Roof

Provided

INDIE FOLK-POP | Vanwho

w/ Dyrty Byrds Fri. Jan. 31 9 p.m. $13/adv, $15/dos Pour House

You don’t necessarily need to speak the language of music to feel its enchanting effects. And in the case of Vanwho, a Canada-based indie band, you don’t have to speak French to appreciate their music. Vanessa Boivin-Drolet started as a solo artist, creating breathtaking music both in English and French. “It all started in 2009 when someone saw me play my classical guitar in a video store I used to work at,” explains Boivin-Drolet. “He asked me to play a song and then told me to go and record it with him in his home studio.” From there, her project Vanwho was born. Now accompanied by David Fortin Théberge on drums, Émile Tempère on bass, and Jay Leblanc on guitar, Vanwho’s enticing sound and unique story has spread across borders. “We just bought a 1987 Winnebago Lesharo which will be our home for the next four months,” says Boivin-Drolet. “We are calling it the Snowbirds Tour as we are headed south and staying in the warm as we make our way to the West Coast.” Expanding popularity is just one example of how the band’s hard work is paying off. While many of us have already given up on our New Year’s resolutions only a month in, Vanwho has already released a new single and their first EP, Four, in English. But, words take the back burner in the creation of Vanwho’s music. “Life is incredible, magical, and so beautiful and it is much easier to appreciate it when we take away the words and are able to just be present with it all,” says Boivin-Drolet. Music is a luxury some will never get used to. It is powerful, emotional, and liberating all on its own — no words needed. —Abrie Richison TUESDAY

MUSICBOARD

ATTENTION CLUB, BAR, AND RESTAURANT OWNERS List gigs and events for free on the MusicBoard every week. Send an e-mail to musicboard@charlestoncitypaper.com. Please have listings for the following week submitted no later than noon Friday for a chance at print publication.

SOUTHERN ALT-ROCK | Bloodkin Interestingly, Southern rock stylist and Bloodkin co-founder Daniel Hutchens credits the Beatles for putting him firmly on a musical path at a young age. “When I was five, my older sisters got me a copy of Sgt. Pepper’s,” he says. “The lyrics were printed on the back cover, and I’d just learned to read, and that made a huge impression on me. Reading along with the lyrics while the record played … I think that shaped my life.” Hutchens’ longtime friendship with the members of Widespread Panic also shaped his approach to music-making in a big way. “At first, Bloodkin was basically a punk band. Fast and loud and all about tightly structured songs. Panic was about chemistry and improv, and the songs stretched out. I think we rubbed off on each other: Panic started pursuing the songwriting and we started letting the songs breathe onstage and got into some trance, groove stuff. We were just friends with a mutual and sincere love of music, and that continues to this day.” According to Hutchens, his band’s current live show is better than ever, for a variety of reasons. “It’s a bigger setlist than we’ve ever had featuring the new record and songs from all the old records, unreleased stuff, and a few covers that mean a lot to us.” Hutchens admits that his personal appreciation for life, music, and art has only intensified following a harrowing stroke a few years back, making each show a special occasion to him. “I think I’m more appreciative than ever,” he says. “I think I’m less distracted by nonsense and more focused on the essentials: my kids, my songs, my friends, the band, and our fans. That’s what’s real.” —Kevin Wilson FRIDAY

Visit charlestoncitypaper.com for the latest live music, karaoke, and open mic events 9 p.m. THE SHELTER KITCHEN + BAR Mike Huhn, acoustic, 9 p.m. SMOKE ‘N’ BREW SIRSY, pop, 7 p.m. THE SOUTHERN BAR AND GRILL Guilt Ridden Troubadour, Americana, rock,

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THE COMMODORE The Majestics, funk,

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AWENDAW GREEN Drew Marler w/ Nick Dittmeier, Jess Klein, Hey Monea, the Scros, folk, singer-songwriter, 6 p.m. BURNS ALLEY Karaoke Chris CHARLESTON GRILL Duda Lucena, Latin

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Americana, folk, 5 p.m. JOHNKING GRILL + BAR Graham Whorley & Friends, blues, roots, rock, CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

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n WEDNESDAY, 29

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36

HIGH COTTON James Slater Trio, sax

7 p.m. LOGGERHEAD’S Eric Penrod, jams,

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SHOOTER’S Karaoke with Rick, karaoke

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EVENTS BY BENITA Exquisite Open Mic,

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R&B, 9:30 p.m.

acoustic rock and jamgrass, 10:30 p.m. ELI’S TABLE Gino Castillo, jazz, 7 p.m. FORTE JAZZ LOUNGE Joe Clarke Trio, jazz, 7 p.m.

HALLS Larry Ford, Abe White, and Chris Williams, jams, 6 p.m. HIGH COTTON Frank Duvall Trio, piano

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HOME TEAM BBQ Jason Bible, alt-

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JUANITA GREENBERG’S—MP Graham Whorley, acoustic soul/rock and jams,

6:30 p.m.

ANDELL INN The Joy Project Jazz Quartet, jazz, 6 p.m. BAR MASH Red Cedar Review, blue-

K.C. MULLIGAN’S Token Mary, pop,

BARSA TAPAS LOUNGE & BAR Steve Simon and the Kings of Jazz, jazz, 7 p.m. BUTCHER & THE BOAR Chris Boone,

PLANET FOLLYWOOD Karaoke w/ DJ Richburg, 9:30 p.m. POUR HOUSE Hungry Monks, country, blues, acoustic, 6 p.m. Hustle Souls, soul,

grass, 7:30 p.m.

Americana, folk, 6 p.m.

CHARLESTON GRILL Richard White Trio,

jazz, 6:30 p.m.

CHARLESTON LIBRARY SOCIETY Adryn Sumner, classical, 8 p.m. COASTAL COFFEE ROASTERS Acoustic Night, open jam

jams, 10 p.m.

LOCAL 616 DJs: The Selectas, party

tunes

rock, 9 p.m.

THE PUB ON 61 Karaoke, 8 p.m. THE REFUGE Todd Beals Trio, jazz,

6:30 p.m.

THE ROYAL AMERICAN Blackfoot Gypsies w/ Parker Gispert, blues rock,

acoustic, folk, 7:30 p.m.

LOCAL 616 Karaoke Chris R PUB Karaoke with Aaron

OPEN MIC

MAINLAND CONTAINER CO. KITCHEN & BAR Open Mic Night, 7-10 p.m.

n FRIDAY, 31 BAR MASH Jeff Wilson, jazz, 9:30 p.m. CHARLESTON GRILL Ron Wiltrout Jazz Quartet, jazz, 7-11 p.m. CHARLESTON MUSIC HALL Todd Snider w/ Chicago Farmer, Americana, alt-

country, 8:30 p.m.

THE COMMODORE Funktastics, funk,

soul, 9:30 p.m.

CONTAINER BAR Whitney Hanna & Fancy Kool-Aid, singer/songwriter,

10 p.m.

THE DEWBERRY Joe Clarke Big Band, jazz, 7 p.m. Joe Clarke Trio, jazz, 8 p.m. THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Jockey Lot Band, roots, Americana,

POUR TAPROOM Ben Somewhere, THE PUB ON 61 Edison Medicine, funk SAND DOLLAR Ocean Drive Party Band,

rock, 10 p.m.

THE SHELTER KITCHEN + BAR Beam Country, country, 10 p.m. SMOKE ‘N’ BREW Charles Cook, jams,

7 p.m.

SURF BAR Desmond Jones Band, rock,

funk, 10 p.m.

TOMMY CONDON’S Carroll Brown,

acoustic, 8:30 p.m.

TRAYCE’S TOO Mason Dixon, country,

southern rock, 9:30 p.m.

THE WASHOUT Eddie Bush, acoustic,

rock, jams, 8:30 p.m.

WINDJAMMER Louie D Project, funk,

10 p.m.

KARAOKE

HARBOR BREEZE Karaoke LOGGERHEAD’S Karaoke, 10 p.m.-1 a.m. MANHATTAN’S Karaoke, 9 p.m. TRU BLUES Karaoke Night, 9 p.m.

CHARLESTON GRILL Asa Holgate Quartet, jazz, 7:30 p.m. CHUCKTOWN BAR AND GRILL Back in the Day Saturday, hits from the ’80s,

’90s, and 2000s, 9 p.m.

THE COMMODORE Saint Lord, jams, 9:30 p.m. Futurefunk, funk, 9:30 p.m. THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Charles Cannon, singer-songwriter, 7 p.m. FORTE JAZZ LOUNGE Joe Clarke Trio,

jazz, 7 p.m.

HIGH COTTON Frank Duvall Trio, piano

jazz, 7 p.m.

LOCAL 616 DJ D-EZ, old and new-school

tunes, 10 p.m.

MUSIC FARM G. Love & Special Sauce,

alternative hip-hop, 8:30 p.m. NV DJ Y-Not, dance and party music PALMETTO BREWING CO. SIRCY, rock, pop, blues, 6 p.m. POUR HOUSE Desmond Jones, rock, funk, 6 p.m. Well Charged and Friends, Bob Marley covers, 9 p.m. POUR TAPROOM Chris Boone, Americana, folk, 7 p.m. PROHIBITION New South Jazzmen, jazz, 7 p.m.

SAND DOLLAR Ocean Drive Party Band,

rock, 10 p.m.

THE SHELTER KITCHEN + BAR Josh Hughett w/ DJ Flip, jams, 9 p.m. SMOKE ‘N’ BREW Champagne with Friends, jams, 7 p.m. SURF BAR Dallas Baker & Friends, blue-

grass, folk, 10 p.m.

SUSHI BLUE Salsa Night , DJ Luigi, salsa THE TIN ROOF Last Chance Riders,

rock, 8 p.m.

TOMMY CONDON’S Carroll Brown,

DJS + DANCE Dudley’s After Dark — DJ Matterhorn 8 p.m.

acoustic, 8:30 p.m.

DUDLEY’S ON ANN Stream DJ, dance

music

n SATURDAY, 1

9 p.m.

FORTE JAZZ LOUNGE Joe Clarke Trio,

BURNS ALLEY Louie D Project, funk,

KARAOKE

7 p.m.

jazz, 7 p.m.

10 p.m.

THE VENDUE Louie D Solo Sax Experience, funk, 4 p.m. WINDJAMMER Natty Grass, jams, variety,

LOGGERHEAD’S Karaoke, 10 p.m.-1 a.m.


YOUR HOME FOR THE

BIG GAME Provided

Thurs. Jan. 30 8 p.m. $25-$50 Woolfe Street Playhouse

SOUTHERN SOUL | Patrick Davis and his Midnight Choir Nashville-based and Camden-raised singer-songwriter Patrick Davis is back in Charleston, this time bringing his 11-piece Midnight Choir with him. Davis is perhaps best known for his writing credits on songs by artists like Lady Antebellum, Guy Clark, Darius Rucker, and Jimmy Buffett among numerous others. Outside of his time as a go-to writer in Nashville, Davis has built up a solid following in the southeast over the last few years with his own Southern soul and roots-rock inspired songs. Davis comes into this performance after the release of two new singles in 2019 titled “Six String Dreams” and “L-O-V-E,” as well as an EP in August 2019 titled The Gamecock that pays tribute to his alma mater. The “Midnight Choir” that accompanies Davis is something of an intentional misnomer. It isn’t actually a choir, but rather his backing band that provides a soulful wall of sound behind Davis’ onstage showmanship. The name is derived from Leonard Cohen’s song “Bird on a Wire.” While it’s a little misleading, it was just too good of a name and reference for Davis to pass up. Davis fancies himself a storyteller and showman and his performances always promise those elements in full. Not to mention, an older venue that maintains a balance of history and modernity, like Woolfe Street Playhouse, is about as fitting of a venue as you could have for a concert that promises to blend the past and present of Southern music. —Alex Peeples THURSDAY

25 TVS

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4 CRAFT DRAFTS, $2.50 TALL BOYS, $3.50 WELLS

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Alexa King

ALTERNATIVE | Parker Gispert For about 18 years, singer/guitarist Parker Gispert didn’t have to worry about coming up with stage patter. His band, the Whigs, played loud, but melodic, garage rock onstage and on their albums, and the music essentially spoke for itself. “It was a Ramones-style presentation where you just play the songs back to back to back,” Gispert says. “So you didn’t really have to say anything to the crowd.” Now as a solo acoustic performer, Gispert has had to step up his between-songs chatter. “You’ve got to have a totally different level of engagement with the crowd,” he says. “So I try to make it more of a conversation with them and keep it casual and just make it fun for everybody. It’s a totally different skill, which was really exciting to me. It was a great challenge to sort of say, ‘Hey, let’s see what you can do when you don’t have the band with you.’ I’ve been doing the band almost 20 years, so any time you find a new challenge for yourself, it’s just invigorating and exciting.” It also helps that Gispert has a good mix of material to choose from, pulling from both the Whigs catalog and the gorgeous, elegant indie-folk of his debut solo album, 2018’s Sunlight Tonight. “I think last time I toured, I kind of had to play unreleased songs, just because that was the situation that I found myself in,” he says. “Now I’m throwing in a couple of new songs that haven’t been released yet, but I’m trying to stick to Whigs songs and the Sunlight Tonight album so that I’m not playing a ton of material that people aren’t familiar with.” —Vincent Harris THURSDAY

R PUB Karaoke with Aaron SMOKEY’S PLACE Karaoke with Jason,

n SUNDAY, 2

OPEN MIC

jazz/classical (guitar and violin), 7 p.m. COAST Graham Whorley, acoustic duo: rock, jazz, and grooves, 7-10 p.m.

karaoke, 9 p.m.

FREEHOUSE Freehouse Acoustic Open Mic, local acoustic

CHARLESTON GRILL Bob Williams Duo,

THE COMMODORE Honky Tonk Sunday,

jams, 9 p.m.

THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN

Josh Hughett, singer/songwriter, 7 p.m. FORTYEIGHT WINE BAR & KITCHEN Austin Hahn, acoustic, rock, 6 p.m. HALLS The Plantation Singers, gospel,

12:30-3:30 p.m.

VHIGH COTTON The Bluestone Ramblers, bluegrass brunch

continued on page 38

The Lowcountry’s True Gentlemen’s Club SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2nd

THE

BIG GAME COME WATCH WITH THE HOTTEST WOMEN IN THE LOWCOUNTRY

DRINK SPECIALS + APPETIZERS

FIRST FRIDAY FETISH PARTY FRIDAY, FEB 7TH

OPEN DAILY 4PM-2AM DOWNTOWN • 1337 KING STREET 843-789-4488 • KINGSTREETCABARET.COM

MUSICBOARD | charlestoncitypaper.com

w/ Blackfoot Gypsies Thurs. Jan. 30 9 p.m. $5 The Royal American

37


HIGH FIDELITY: Your Weekly Top 5 Joe Clarke is a pianist, educator, and the mastermind behind a couple local jazz bands. Last summer, he opened Forte Jazz Lounge on King Street. Because of his experience leading the Joe Clarke Trio, Quartet, Swing Band, and Big Band, he was the perfect person to ask: Who are your top five bandleaders?

Band w/ Casper Allen, lowdown coun-

try, 9 p.m.

PROHIBITION Salsa Night w/ Gino Castillo Cuban Jazz Quartet, Cuban,

salsa

THE TIN ROOF Vanwho w/ Moon Hollow,

indie-pop, 8 p.m.

TOMMY CONDON’S Kevin Church, acous-

tic, folk, 7:30 p.m.

THE WASHOUT The Ol’ 55s, bluegrass,

7 p.m.

n WEDNESDAY, 5

DUKE ELLINGTON GLENN MILLER COUNT BASIE HARRY JAMES TOMMY DORSEY

musicboard continued from page 37

MCCANN’S IRISH PUB Irish Trad Session, Irish, 5:30 p.m. MILLS HOUSE Thomas Champagne,

beach funk, 11 a.m.

POUR HOUSE On the Deck: Kanika Moore and the Motown Throwdown,

gospel, soul, funk, 1 p.m.

SALTWATER COWBOYS Louie D Solo Sax Experience, funk, 12 p.m. THE SHELTER KITCHEN + BAR Buzz Run Trio, jams, 12 p.m. SNAPPER JACK’S SEAFOOD & RAW BAR Foggy Sunday w/ The Fogg, rock cov-

ers, 3:30 p.m.

singer-songwriter, 12 p.m. SURF BAR Malin Wagnon, Americana,

10 p.m. TOMMY CONDON’S Kevin Church, singer-

JOHNKING GRILL + BAR Graham Whorley & Friends, blues, roots, rock,

songwriter, 7 p.m. THE WASHOUT Donnie Polk, acoustic,

6 p.m.

SMOKE ‘N’ BREW Good Time Duo,

variety, 7 p.m.

TOMMY CONDON’S Open Mic Night,

4 p.m.

open mic, 7 p.m.

n MONDAY, 3

KARAOKE

BAR MASH Live Funk/ Mo-town music with Mike Quinn and friends, funk, soul,

9:30 p.m.-1 a.m. CONTAINER BAR Whitney Hanna, acous-

tic rock, 6 p.m. HALLS Larry Ford, Abe White, and Chris Williams, jams, 6 p.m.

BIG GUN BURGER SHOP Karaoke, open

mic, 9:30 p.m.

O’BRION’S—JI Karaoke w/ Blaze, kara-

oke during Margarita Mondays

n TUESDAY, 4 ART’S Saluda Shoals, country, rock,

Americana, 9 p.m.

jams, 7 p.m. FILL RESTAURANT AND PIANO BAR Jazz Night with Heather Rice, jazz, 6:30 p.m. HIGH COTTON James Slater Trio, sax

CHARLESTON CITY PAPER 01.29.2020

BIG GAME BASH 38

SUNDAY FEB 2ND / 10FT. HD SCREEN

K.C. MULLIGAN’S Token Mary, pop, LOCAL 616 DJs: The Selectas, party

6 p.m.

tunes

POUR HOUSE On the Deck for Dead Wednesday: Reckoning, Grateful Dead

covers, 6:30 p.m.

PLANET FOLLYWOOD Karaoke w/ DJ Richburg, 9:30 p.m. THE PUB ON 61 Karaoke, 8 p.m. THE REFUGE Todd Beals Trio, jazz,

rock, Americana, 6 p.m.

6:30 p.m.

jams, 7 p.m.

THE SOUTHERN BAR AND GRILL Guilt Ridden Troubadour, Americana, rock,

THE PUB ON 61 The Associates, jams RITA’S SEASIDE GRILLE Bender Funk, THE WASHOUT Brady & Dale, bluegrass,

n THURSDAY, 6

OCEAN COWBOYS Poppa DuPree and JoJo, jams POUR HOUSE Fusion Jonez, progressive funk, fusion, 6 p.m. Lost Dog Street

6:30 p.m. jams, 10 p.m.

WILD WING—NC Matt & Dan, jams

10 p.m.

JUANITA GREENBERG’S—MP Graham Whorley, acoustic soul/rock and jams,

LOGGERHEAD’S Eric Penrod, jams,

HOME TEAM BBQ Holy City Confessional, singer-songwriter showK.C. MULLIGAN’S DJ Random, DJ, jams,

acoustic rock and jamgrass, 10:30 p.m. ELI’S TABLE Gino Castillo, jazz, 7 p.m.

7 p.m.

jazz, 6 p.m. case, 7 p.m.

THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Donnie Polk, jams, 7 p.m. THE DROP IN Stratton Moore & Friends,

jazz, 6 p.m.

Americana, folk, 5 p.m.

CHARLESTON GRILL Kevin Hamilton and Friends, jazz, 6:30 p.m. THE DINGHY TAPROOM AND KITCHEN Jeff Bateman and Josh Hughett, covers,

R&B, 9:30 p.m.

THE COMMODORE Lady & The Brass,

HOOKED SEAFOOD Chris Boone,

K.C. MULLIGAN’S Amanda, jams, 10 p.m. POUR HOUSE On the Deck: Holy City Heaters, jam-grass, Americana, roots,

COASTAL COFFEE ROASTERS Acoustic Night, open jam THE COMMODORE The Majestics, funk,

HALLS Larry Ford, Abe White, and Chris Williams, jams, 6 p.m. HIGH COTTON Frank Duvall Trio, piano

funk, soul, 9:30 p.m.

ST JAMES GATE Ed “Porkchop” Meyer,

jazz, 6:30 p.m.

BURNS ALLEY Karaoke Chris CHARLESTON GRILL Duda Lucena, Latin

jazz, 6:30 p.m.

GET AN EARFUL OF THESE BIG BAND GREATS AT CHARLESTONCITYPAPER.COM

CHARLESTON GRILL Richard White Trio,

ANDELL INN The Joy Project Jazz Quartet, jazz, 6 p.m. BAR MASH Red Cedar Review, blue-

roots, 9 p.m. SOUTHERN ROOTS SMOKEHOUSE Open Mic Night, 6:30 p.m. Sound Check: Musical Bingo, bingo, but with songs

instead of numbers, 7-9 p.m.

grass, 7:30 p.m.

TASTY FUSION Ben Somewhere, singer-

BARSA TAPAS LOUNGE & BAR Steve Simon and the Kings of Jazz, jazz,

THE WASHOUT Gracious Day, acoustic,

7 p.m.

songwriter country, jams, 7 p.m.


PRESENTING A

SPECIAL VALENTINE’S CONCERT WITH

THE JOE CLARKE BIG BAND FRI, FEB 14 • TWO SHOWS 7:00-9:30PM & 9:30-11:30PM

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THE BEST LIVE JAZZ IN CHARLESTON

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UPCOMING SCHEDULE

39


WAT C H T HE BIG G A M E IN OUR E L E C T R IC

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FEBRUARY EVENTS

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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK, 11:30AM - 2AM 480 KING STREET • 843-577-5885 • CHARLESTONBEERWORKS.COM @CHASBEERWORKS

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