March 30, 2017 – OC Weekly

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up front

The County

06 | NEWS | Checking in on our seas.

By Lisa Black 07 | ¡ASK A MEXICAN! | Anti-

MARCH 31 - APRIL 1 ST

ST

immigrant Mad Libs! By Gustavo Arellano 07 | HEY, YOU! | Please do your workout someplace else. By Anonymous

Feature

09 | NEWS | How the mainstream

Mrc ONhTH X X–X X , 02014 Ma 31-ap r il 6, 2 017

COUNTY county | CLASSIFIEDS | MUSIC | CULTURE | FILM | FOOD | CALENDAR | FEATURE | THE | CONTENTS | | | classifieds | music | culture | film | food | calendar | feature | the | contents

SINESS inside » 03/31-04/06 » 2017 U B F O T U O GOING VOLUME 22 | NUMBER 31 » OCWEEKLY.COM UST GO! M G IN H T Y R E EV ENTIRE STORE OCWEEKLY.COM/SLIDESHOWS

media blew the Huntington Beach #MAGAMarch free-for-all. By Denise De La Cruz, Brian Feinzimer, Julie Leopo and Frank John Tristan

in back

Calendar

15 | EVENTS | Things to do while

tracking neo-Nazi losers.

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Vietnamese food outside Little Saigon. By Edwin Goei 18 | HOLE IN THE WALL | Masala Hut in Anaheim. By Gustavo Arellano 19 | EAT THIS NOW | Cháo ngheu quay nong at Ha Noi Corner. By Cynthia Rebolledo 19 | DRINK OF THE WEEK |

Magnus at ARC. By Gustavo Arellano 20 | LONG BEACH LUNCH | The

Social List finally finds its voice. By Sarah Bennett

Film

21 | FESTIVAL | Dan Savage brings his amateur-porn film series to Long Beach. By Scott Feinblatt

Culture

22 | ART | Tracking the beginning of

Ansel Adams’ school. By Dave Barton 22 | TRENDZILLA | This app makes

it easy to find vintage stuff. By Aimee Murillo

Music

24 | PROFILE | Examining the musings and music of DJ Johnny Basil. By Christine Terrisse 25 | PROFILE | How Mike Dupree went from college dropout to working with Kendrick Lamar. By Josh Chesler 26 | LOCALS ONLY | Boots and Bikinis is like a Stagecoach By the Sea. By Nate Jackson

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the county»news|issues|commentary

State of the State

A new environmental report reveals the current condition of California’s coastline By liSa Black

I

n California, there’s a deep connection between bona-fide scientific research and the policy decisions that directly affect our coastline. The recently released “The State of the California South Coast”—a 60-page, full-color report compiled by ocean scientists from data collected by pros and amateurs—details the baseline condition of the state’s 5-year-old Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) from Point Conception to the Mexican border. On March 23 at the Holiday Inn Express in San Clemente, editors of the report—which was published by California’s Department of Fish and Wildlife, Ocean Protection Council, and Ocean Science Trust—shared highlights of the findings with the public, easily half of whom worked in commercial fishing. In 2011, the state issued a call for projects, funding 10 investigations that were led by academic researchers and utilized students, volunteers, anglers, divers, remotely operated vehicles exploring inhuman depths and crevices, even airplanes. Covering ecology and socioeconomics, the baseline provides state environmental agencies with a benchmark for all future resourcemanagement decisions. (The data for the entire state’s MPA network, and the decisions that result from ongoing monitoring, are available on OceanSpaces.org.) While the baseline’s purpose is to capture a snapshot of how things are, it’s too early to know if the MPAs are working, but older protected areas, established before the Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA) was implemented, are showing positive trends: The California Spiny Lobster increased in number and mass in the Channel Islands. And during the data collection, a larger percentage of legal-weight lobsters were observed in the Laguna Beach MPA. “We just had the biggest El Niño ever, so more lobster caught means nothing— we’re bleeding here,” said Dave Hansen, a charismatic, second-generation boat captain based in San Clemente who was among the several boat captains and management of Dana Wharf Sportfishing, members of the Oceanside Anglers Club, and assorted old salts in attendance. “Is it ever going to open again? We thought after five years, we’d get some [of the Laguna Beach MPA] back. I’ve got kids that need to eat.” But Hansen didn’t speak for everyone in the room. “It only covers 75 percent of Laguna,” said Mike Bearnan, who helped to create the Laguna Beach MPA. “I grew up in a fishing family. Laguna is the best place to grow in the ocean—I know, it’s

DON’T FISH ME, BRO

LISA BLACK

painful to lose a favorite fishing spot.” While one of the MPLA’s goals is sustaining marine life, including those of economic value, statewide data collection does much more: tracking the multiple effects of climate change and invasive species, as well as emergency events such as oil spills and the nearly overnight disappearance of sea stars. With monitors already in place, the response to the Refugio Oil Spill near Santa Barbara in 2015 was immediate, and data collection continues to measure its impact and keeps decision-makers informed on recovery efforts. “As we move into Phase 2 [creating an action plan], [there will be] opportunities to be involved in a tangible way,” said Cyndi Dawson of the Ocean Protection Council, hoping to reassure Hansen and others. “In the next three or four months, a party boat project will make its way down to your region.” Dawson was referring to the California Collaborative Fisheries Research Program (CCFRP), which has been operating since 2006 in the Central Coast region. According

to CCFRP director Rick Starr, an alliance of conservation organizations catch, tag and release fish inside and near the MPAs. Because the fishing industry has taken such a financial hit, it’s crucial to state agencies that it be involved in evaluating MPAs. “And the state is putting its money where its mouth is,” said Dawson. “We’re now finishing a grant to expand [CCFRP] statewide to mimic what they’ve been doing in the central coast for 10-plus years.” Fishing-boat operators will collaborate with researchers from the get-go, deciding together the sites to fish, the gear used, etc., so the “fishermen are confident in the veracity of the results,” said Dawson, an MPA policy adviser and a co-editor. “That high-quality data is a huge benefit to both sides. Researchers benefit from hours and hours on the water with local party boat operators, who’ve been fishing on those waters for maybe 30 years.” In the current era of budget slashing for anything reeking of conservation, Dawson assured the crowd that funding was solid through 2027, with a current

budget line item of $2.5 million. While mostly state-funded, partners in creating the baseline included two federally funded entities out of Scripps. But the Ocean Science Trust’s Erin Meyer said that although science defunding will be drastic, weather-related work likely wouldn’t suffer brutal cuts. The commitment to effectively manage the vast network of organizations involved resulted in a multi-agency leadership team whose ultimate goal is a healthier ocean through cooperative efforts. Near the end of the Q&A session, Hansen told the scientists he has also been giving talks. “[I] don’t know why they want to listen to me. . . . Hey, we should do a talk together!” We’ll see in the coming months what that spark of cooperation will mean for OC fishing. LETTERS@OCWEEKLY.COM

aread more»online WWW.OCWEEKLY.COM/NEWS


» gustavo arellano DEAR MEXICAN: Why do salvatruchas think they are superior to every Mexican and Guatemalan in every way? I go to a community college in the San Fernando Valley that is infested with them, and the way they portray Mexicans to other people makes me angry. Sometimes, I would like to tell them about what bad and nasty crap they have done since the urban terrorist organization MS-13 has destroyed the Hispanic community even worse. Now some of us Mexicans are leaving places and migrating to other parts of Southern California. I know that some police at the southern border of Mexico have treated Salvadorans like shit, but that is no reason for them to chingar con los Mexicans’ reputation. It’s hard enough with some of the prejudices we mojados confront every day, but to have another Hispanic culture mess it up any more? Tell me what is wrong with those guys? Mixed Mexican of Sherman Oaks DEAR POCHO: Do you realize you just wrote for me a Mad Libs of assimilation that people can apply to any successful immigrant group in America ever? I’m ever-grateful! Here, lemme show you: I need to know why do

(newest immigrant group)

(another successful ethnic group) ethnic group)

think they are superior to every

in every way? I go to a

that is infested with

(workplace or business)

in the

(successful ethnic group)

and

(old municipal stronghold of successful

, and the way they portray

(newest immigrant group)

(successful ethnic group)

to other

people makes me angry. Sometimes I would like to tell them about what bad and nasty crap they have done since the group)

other parts of ethnic group)

los

(gang or national movement associated with newest immigrant group)

community even worse. Now some of us

(successful ethnic group)

has destroyed the

(suburbs of old municipal stronghold of successful ethnic group) (newest immigrant group)

(possessive of successful ethnic group)

APRIL 6

FREE

MAGIC THE WORLD FAMOUS

C

AFTER 3PM

MAGIC AN AMAZING DAY THE WORLD FAMOUS

C

(successful ethnic

OF MAGIC & SPECTACLE

(some situation involving successful

IN ASSOCIATION WITH

like shit, but that is no reason for them to chingar con

reputation. It’s hard enough with some of the prejudices we

(former

derogatory nickname for successful ethnic group that they appropriated and now use as a term of endearment for one another—but woe to anyone else who uses it)

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are leaving places and migrating to

. I know that

have treated

APRIL AT THE QUEEN MARY

confront every day, but to have another

(newest immigrant group)

mess it up any more?

Tell me what is wrong with those guys? So, to recap: Salvadorans hate Mexicans because we hated Salvadorans, just as Irish hate Italians because Italians hated the Irish. How about we break that cycle? This Mexican did!

ASK THE MEXICAN at themexican@askamexican.net, be his fan on Facebook, follow him on Twitter, or ask him a video question at youtube.com/askamexicano!

THE WORLD FAMOUS

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APRIL 20/7PM

mo n th xRIL x–x06, x , 220 014 MARCH 31-AP 17

APRIL 16

Heyyou!

ou were the short man at the gym who spent half an hour “using” just about all the workout equipment in one long, selfish circuit. Not even the sit-up bench was available because you just had to do your bench presses with your feet a yard higher than your head. Apparently, lying flat on your back is too easy. Or BOB AUL maybe you just love the feeling of blood collecting in your skull while you pump iron. In any case, please do your weird workout routine somewhere else, instead of turning the entire gym into your personal dungeon!

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HOW THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA BLEW HUNTINGTON BEACH’S TRUMPBRO FREE-FOR-ALL

by Denise De La Cruz, Brian Feinzimer, Julie Leopo and Frank John Tristan

PHOTO BY BRIAN FEINZIMER

reations has not bothered to contact the Weekly about what its peace officers are doing to go after those responsible for the attack on our people and others. The Weekly will not stand idly by as racism, misogyny, homophobia and flat-out fascism try to run rampant over a free press and political opponents. As I told the Los Angeles Times when they finally corrected their fake news, “My photographers and intern were just trying to do their jobs. For that, they got harassed by Trump supporters, then shoved and punched when they tried to defend one another. . . . I’m proud of them, and we will not be silenced by biddies or bros.” —GUSTAVO ARELLANO CONTINUED ON PAGE 10 »

| OCWEEKLY.COM |

ing story about a Huntington Beach pro-Donald Trump rally in which OC Weekly reporters were beaten up while working originally appeared on ocweekly.com on March 25. We are reprinting it here, along with afterthe-fact commentary from the Weeklings on the scene because the melee must not be forgotten. Not only is it yet another black mark on Huntington Beach (which is always fighting with Anaheim for the title of Orange County’s most riot-happy city), but also the original coverage by the mainstream media was a travesty of journalism that allowed Trump supporters to cloak themselves in a veil of victimhood, when it was their side that itched for a rumble. White supremacists worldwide are already hailing the beatdown of the press and activists of color as a victory for their cause. As of this writing, the California Department of Parks and Rec-

MO NT H X X– X X , 201 4

Editor’s note: The follow-

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FAKE NEWS

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county | classifieds | Music | culture | filM | food | calendar | feature | the county | contents | classifieds | music | culture | film | food | calendar | feature | the | contents | | Ma 31-ap r il, 0 6,14 2 017 mrc onh th xx–xx 20

| ocweekly.com | 10 10

FAKE NEWS » FROM PAGE 9

R

ight now, the world is hearing a tale from Huntington Beach of a pro-Donald Trump rally that erupted in violence after a masked anarchist pepper-sprayed one of the march organizers, Jennifer Sterling, without provocation. Trump supporters are crowing that they gave counterprotesters a taste of MAGA medicine and are no doubt emboldened to go after any cucks, snowflakes and SJWs who stand in their way. Especially if it’s the press—namely, the OC Weekly—trying to do our job. It started peacefully enough. On an overcast Saturday morning, a mini-festival popped up at Bolsa Chica State Beach as part of a nationwide effort to show support for President Trump. An overwhelmingly white crowd (yeah, there were some tokens—good for them!) of old people, families, teens and even pups filtered onto the sand. Many wore red “Make America Great Again” hats or waved the Stars and Stripes, “Don’t Tread on Me” and “Blue Live Matters” flags. And then there were the signs: “Keep Orange County Republican” and “The Silent Majority” and some

BRIAN FEINZIMER

Pepe the Frogs and other such fun. “The Star Spangled Banner” played. Speeches were recited; Dana Rohrabacher rambled. Doves were released. A Marine did pull-ups. Counterprotesters had showed up around 10 a.m., about an hour before the rally was to start, gathering down the way from the party. “We feel like it’s important to come out here and be heard,” Jordan Hoiberg said shortly after arriving. The counterprotest organizer is a Newport Beach resident and a member of Socialist Party USA. “As Frederick Douglas said, ‘Power concedes nothing without a demand,’ so we’re here today to make demands. . . . We’re going to make sure we’re heard, but we’re not looking to

From the outset, it appeared the Trump supporters were angry simply at the presence of the counterprotesters. As the first two counterprotesters stepped onto the beach, a female Trump supporter reportedly pulled her car next to them and yelled, “If you touch my kids, I’ll kill you!” The protesters seemed surprised to find no other counterprotesters in sight, as Trump supporters patrolled the area publicly announced as the gathering place for counterprotesters. The counterprotesters took off into the parking lot, where they found other counterprotesters unloading a car, at which point Trump Mama got in my face. The Trump supporters were angry about counterprotesters invading their march—and conservatives say liberals always want safe spaces? As I approached the mob on the beach, I considered what had transpired with the Twins being ganged up on (see main story for details). I saw photographers Julie Leopo and Brian Feinzimer surrounded, and the only thing going through my head was what editor Gustavo Arellano had told us: “Stick together.” As I turned, I saw Trump Friend charge Feinzimer. I didn’t know what he planned on doing to my colleague, so I stuck

out my arm and yelled, “Hey!” Trump Friend reeled back, then regained his balance and began to attack me. I felt a series of love-tap, tiny-handed punches and someone pulling me from the back. As soon as the pepper-spraying counterprotester cleared the attackers, I started searching for my phone, which held my notes and photos. A Trump supporter kindly handed it back to me and gave me a hug with a look of concern. Counterprotest organizer Jordan Hoiberg took the chants of “pussy” and “faggot” as best as he could. A cellphonewielding Trump supporter grabbed him by the shirt and started yelling, “You’re the one who put this protest together! Why do your guys have masks on?” Meanwhile, another Trump supporter falsely accused him of beating elderly women in order to get nearby supporters to attack Hoiberg. The look on Hoiberg’s face spelled out fear, as the backlash facing him and his fellow counterprotesters surrounded him on all sides. He escaped the crowd, returning to the beach, then attempted to ask

provoke any kind of physical confrontation with the Trump supporters in any way.” Though 60 people confirmed on a Facebook event page they’d show up, only about 10 did at first. As some put on masks, rally-goers yelled things such as “Take off your mask, chickenshits!” and “Why are you dressed like ISIS? Let us see your face!” One woman with bad breath yelled at Weekly intern Frank Tristan, “Are you here to cause trouble, too?!” When Tristan identified himself as media, she screamed, “Fake news!” and stormed off. Veteran members of both sides did their best to keep the peace early by engaging in peaceful arguments. Two elderly Trump supporters came over and shook the hands of their opponents, wishing for nonviolence and peace on both sides and saying, “God bless all of us.” They were the exceptions. The woman with bad breath tried to mark the faces of counterprotesters with a pen; when one told her to back off, she knocked his hat off and walked away. A middle-aged white man grabbed an African-American by the shoulders and proclaimed, “By the way, this is a Trump supporter.” Another one saw an anarchist sign and wondered out loud to the person holding it, “Maybe if there was anarchy, I’d be able to kick your ass and there’d be no cops to help you.” A middle-aged Latina received cheers and thumbs-up when she yelled, “I’m a proud Latina for Trump! For legal immi-

State Park peace officers how many people were arrested and what their names were, only to be told they didn’t know. He walked away without argument. Hoiberg said he believed things were over and that he should probably leave for his safety, so he headed north on the bike trail with the defeated look of a general who led his troops into slaughter. As he was leaving, a group of white boys holding a “Defend America” sign tried to pick a fight with him, but then they faced me and Latino protester Naui Huitzilopochtli. In their group stood Gray Shirt Guy and the white Trump supporter who threw the rock at the counterprotester. Their friend tried to calm them down as they flexed and stared at us. “We see you, dawg,” one told us, threateningly. “Fuck la raza,” another joined in. “I’m in the pit at every Observatory show,” a third Trump supporter announced, inviting anyone who has a problem with him to show up there. They dispersed at the behest of their friends, heading south on the bike trail with the rest of the MAGA marchers.

FRANK JOHN TRISTAN intern

JULIE LEOPO

gration!” Another Latina Trump supporter went on to tell counterprotesters that Trump was “chosen” by God and that they didn’t know their “Father” (God), to which one of the counterprotesters responded, “I’m a Christian, too. I know my Father, and he doesn’t like injustice. . . . He doesn’t like women’s pussies being grabbed.” Eventually, around 25 counterprotesters showed up to chant: “No Trump! No KKK! No fascist USA!” “Hands too small, can’t


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f you believe the Trump supporters, the pepper spray came out of nowhere, unprovoked. But thanks to the YouTube channel Hashtag Re-Hash, there’s a publicly posted video showing the truth. (You can see it on the original post on ocweekly.com.) In case it

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of the Twins. Another Trump supporter jabbed his flagpole into the face of the other Twin, at which point the other Twin grabbed the flag from his hands and threw it to the ground. Someone sucker-punched one of them with what photos and videos show to be brass knuckles as another hit Weekly intern Frank John Tristan in the face. In the ensuing chaos, a middle-aged Trump supporter called one of the Twins “nigger” and the other was called a “spic.” State Park peace officers yelled at the Twins to head to the sidelines, but they both fled the scene; one later stated, “We knew what the cops wanted to do with us because they were clearly defending the violent Trump supporters. “I’m not going to say I didn’t expect it,” he continued. “At the end of the day, they’re emboldened by a leader who supports them, and they’re enabled by statesponsored racists. I think regardless of us being assaulted, anti-fascist protests need to go on. Regardless if we’re outnumbered, we still need to protest.” Then came the pepper spray.

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build a wall!” “Deport Donald Trump!” “Liberation, not deportation!” “All the walls have to go, Palestine to Mexico!” That didn’t endear them to Trump supporters. Some shirtless, white twentysomethings arrived to yell back at them: “Stop embarrassing yourself!” “Communists go home!” “Build the wall!” “Defend America!” “Go get a job!” And, simply, “LOSER!” The march officially began around noon, with about a thousand Trump supporters moving from Warner Avenue to the bridge right before Seapoint Street. But not everyone at Bolsa Chica State Beach got the memo. Many beachgoers looked perplexed as the #MAGAmarch filled the nearly 2-mile bike trail. When it headed south, counterprotesters formed a wall along the bike trail, holding a banner and trying to block the coming crowd. Trump supporters started pushing through gaps, and a struggle ensued. One female counterprotester’s pants fell down during the scrum; Trump supporters laughed. “I just saw your cooter,” one lecher snickered. “That’s illegal!” Fighting soon broke out between Trump supporters and counterprotesters, with videos showing each side giving as good as they got. Two African-American male counterprotesters (let’s call them the Twins) were torn away from their comrades, and Trump supporters began pushing them, with one guy in an orange T-shirt shoving his portly chest against one

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ing. She smirked and walked toward me. I did not know what was to come. Should I continue to shoot? Should I shield my face? Should I hit back in selfdefense? Who would defend me? Our president sure as hell doesn’t respect the media, so why should his supporters? My actions were detrimental to my safety. The pro-Trump woman began to hit my camera and arm with her American flag. I yelled, “STOP!” and held my arm out. This is where time stopped for me. I looked around and saw the yelling and confusion and knew the violent spark had just been ignited.

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a sea of angry, white Trump supporters yelling about building a wall and, above all, disregarding me as fake news was unsettling. The violence and hate-spewing from the president’s supporters had to be documented. Considering the normalization of Trump’s disdain for the media, his supporters felt empowered to ridicule and intimidate me. I kept shooting despite the insults, and just as I was about to click the shutter on my camera, I locked eyes with a white woman carrying a flag. She glared at me. Her stare was cold, angry and taunt-

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“Build that wall! Build that wall!” I maneuvered my way through the crowd, thinking about the absurdity of building a wall that would cost billions of dollars, yet our country can’t allocate funds to combat the water crisis in Flint, Michigan. On the beach, tensions were so high I couldn’t help but think any sudden movement could spark an ugly melee. Was it going to be a snarky remark, a shove, or a misinterpreted action? There were far more Trump supporters than counterprotesters or media. This automatically made me feel uncomfortable— not fearful, but uncomfortable. The fact that I was a brown, 120pound, female photojournalist in

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gets taken down, here’s the synopsis: While protesters are chanting, “USA! USA!” a Trump supporter in a goatee points to a man in a Desert Storm cap and tells his friend (let’s call him Trump Friend) that the cap-wearing fellow (we’ll call him Cap Guy) pushed a woman “on her ass.” Trump Friend then shoves Cap Guy, at which point a young man wearing a black beanie tries to intervene. Trump Friend then starts punching the young man, with other Trump supporters jumping in. The young man? Weekly intern Tristan. Cap Guy? Weekly photographer Brian Feinzimer. His alleged push of a woman? He took a flag from a lady in a cream-colored sweater who had swatted Weekly photographer Julie Leopo with it, then was waving it wildly in front of Feinzimer’s camera. He threw it on the ground; she grabbed onto him. He raised his arm to shake her off; she fell forward to the ground. There, she found her flag, tried to whack Feinzimer with it and walked away to wave the flag elsewhere. This is when Trump Friend jumps in. Sterling pushed Trump Friend away from Tristan. Then, a man in a gray shirt grabbed Tristan by the jacket and began punching him in the head and face. Sterling tried to push away Gray Shirt Guy, at which point an anarchist pushed at Gray Shirt Guy, then tried to swing at him but seemed to hit Sterling. Another masked counterprotester jumped in front of Tristan and pepper-sprayed Gray Shirt Guy, Sterling and others. Video shows that both times, the anarchist targeted Gray Shirt Guy, not Sterling. (The entire Although I knew there was a chance it could happen, being physically assaulted while taking pictures at a Trump rally wasn’t exactly at the top of my list of concerns. As I walked through the group of MAGA marchers, I noticed the group was overwhelmingly Caucasian—the same color as me. Yet despite— or perhaps because of this—it felt incredibly unpleasant being among them, even before the hate speech started. Things started happening fast when a woman armed with a flag began harassing myself

BRIAN FEINZIMER

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| ocweekly.com | 12 12

From The Inside Out

chain of events, starting with the flag-waving lady, is also visible via chopper video from KTTV-TV Channel 11.) Trump fans weren’t done. The goateed guy who started the whole fracas tried to jab his flagpole at Feinzimer and Tristan’s faces. Others surrounded Leopo and Feinzimer as they were leaving, blasting them for working with OC Weekly. “You guys say you can kick our ass online,” one middle-aged man told Leopo. “Let’s see it now!” At that point, a group of Trump supporters chased after the masked anarchists—and that’s when the neo-Nazis arrived to play. They were proudly out during the rally, with no one telling them to go away. The Orange County Register reported banners with swastikas were seen. One young man near the front of the peaceful part of the rally carried an Imperial War Ensign flag, the banner of the Second Reich that neoNazis favor in Germany since the Nazi flag is banned. Another held a sign reading, “Da Goyim Know,” an anti-Semitic meme favored by white supremacists. He was with a group of young white men with a “Defend America” banner that had crossed out the USSR’s hammer and sickle, the anti-fascist red flag, prescription drugs, and Arabic. Their particular style was reminiscent of the playbook of Vanguard America, a white-supremacist group trying to get college kids to think racism is cool. Members

» CONTINUED ON PAGE 13

and fellow photographer Julie Leopo, jabbing at us with it. Suddenly, someone outside my field of view violently pushed me. As I turned my head, I realized I had been intentionally shoved, so I raised my camera to photograph the person. At the same time, someone stepped in the middle to protect me, and as I snapped photographs, I saw that person get punched repeatedly by the person who had shoved me. Three seconds later, I realized it was intern Frank Tristan who

had stepped in and was being punched. In those seconds, my mind went from surprise to confusion, and then the adrenaline kicked in as I wrapped my arm around Frank and pulled him away from the attacker. Julie rushed forward to help me. Someone near us unleashed a cloud of pepper spray, ending the assault. Unable to collect my thoughts, I kept taking pictures, relying on my instinct to keep shooting, to keep doing my job to capture everything that was happening.

BRIAN FEINZIMER photographer


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one of the above—not the assault on Weekly photographers and intern, not the fascist death wishes, not the racist and sexist language uttered by Trump rally-goers—made the TV news.

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someone who was videotaping Trumpbros at their homophobic nastiest. (That video can also be seen on the original post at ocweekly.com.)

JULIE LEOPO

Instead, after the pepper-spray-wielding anarchist was chased off, MSM reporters went back to the peaceful Trump supporters, who by then had gotten to the Seapoint Street bridge, chanting, “USA, USA, USA!” to the traffic speeding by on PCH. Some added “Trump 2020” and “Lock her up” for good measure. The crowd garnered several honks in support of their pro-Trump message, much to the delight of the crowd—although there was one “Fuck Trump!” that they ignored. That said, even the pro-Trump peaceniks were proud of the bros among them. “Everybody is causing violence, right?” a middle-aged white man said. “It’s because they got rid of the snowflakes,” added a middle-aged Asian man with a MAGA hat and a sign with a brick wall painted on it. “I don’t want to start violence, but I will bring it to defend myself,” says Jennifer, who claimed to be Vietnamese immigrant. “We need to teach [anti-Trump protesters] a lesson to respect our right to free speech.”

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the rally—stay classy, Huntington Beach!). One of the white men told Tristan, “We see you” and, “Fuck la raza.” Hoiberg called the fighting “unfortunate,” stating that “people have to act in self-defense.” He added that the counterprotesters masked themselves because “they’re terrified of being stalked online and receiving threats. They want to avoid that.” Another video, posted on YouTube by jonasd914, shows a woman punching

with conservative views. Yet I noticed that among the marchers was a group of about five young white men, one of whom was carrying a “Da Goyim Know” sign while another held a German Imperialist flag—both symbolic of the neo-Nazi movement. I looked around to see if any of the Trump supporters who had claimed to be intolerant of hate took offense to this obvious display of anti-Semitism. Not one seemed appalled. At least if they were, they didn’t speak out aginst the hate that was clearly on display. While they did not participate in the violence earlier, their sheer complicity was just another act of evil.

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ter” and “Don’t Tread On Me” Tea Party flags on the sidewalk alongside the beach garnered honks from cars speeding by on PCH and perplexed looks by beachgoers who didn’t get the memo of the day’s festivities. I heard someone yell out “Fuck Trump!” from their car, but by then, the Trumpsters were already headed back to the march’s starting point near Warner Avenue, where all the violence occurred earlier. As I walked among the Trump supporters, I chatted with some of them. Most assured me they weren’t the bigoted monsters the media perceive them as, but rather well-intentioned people

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I had a feeling the night before and the day of the MAGA march that something serious was going to happen. Around noon, I received text messages from two of my colleagues, photographer Brian Feinzimer and intern Frank Tristan, saying they and photographer Julie Leopo had just been attacked by Trump supporters. My heart immediately sank with disappointment, but I wasn’t surprised. By the time I got to Bolsa Chica State Beach, around 1 p.m., the violence had subsided, but there was still tension in the air, as if a brawl could break out at any moment. The spectacle of hundreds of Trump supporters chanting, “USA, USA, USA!” while waving American, “Blue Lives Mat-

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of that group and their pals began chasing after the masked anarchist who had pepper-sprayed earlier. Video shows them uttering the bizarre chant “You can’t run/ You can’t hide/You get helicopter ride.” The reference is neo-fascist speak for dumping your opponents off a helicopter, the way Pinochet and other Latin American fascists used to do (stealing, of course, what the U.S. did to Charlie in ’Nam). [Editor’s note: Community reporter Naui Huitzilopochtli also took video of a group of racist skinheads wearing jackets with the logo of the white-power Hammerskins. There were also members of the South Bay Skins, a white-power Southern California street gang.] Trump supporters pushed the counterprotester to the ground, pummeling him as nearby peace officers stood and watched. He pepper-sprayed his way out of that position (accidentally hitting Leopo in the process), eventually escaping by hopping a fence that divided them from PCH. A shirtless white man threw a large rock and struck the protester in the chest, making him fall. California Highway Patrol arrested the counterprotester as Trump supporters told police, “Handle him, or we’ll handle him.” CHP made no attempt to arrest the man who threw the rock; law enforcement present at the scene did not bother to do much, period. Meanwhile, a group of white men began following Hoiberg, calling him a “faggot” and “pussy” (there was a LOT of “faggot,” “pussy” and “bitch” thrown around during

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[CONVENTIONS]

Get Your Costumes readY

WonderCon

sat/04/01

[CONCERT]

[ART]

[FOOD & DRINK]

Back From Hell

Take a Little Trip

Brew With a View

Known primarily for the infectious jazz hit “Hell” and for helping to bring about the PAUL FAMILETTI swing-revival craze of the 1990s, Squirrel Nut Zippers also launched the career of jazz violinist Andrew Bird. The world hasn’t really heard much from the group since the MySpace days . . . until they announced their first tour in almost 10 years. Passing through Orange County this weekend, Squirrel Nut Zippers are ready to blow the house down with new members and the same ’30s gypsy jazz sound. Just like your favorite hard liquor, this group has only gotten better with age. Squirrel Nut Zippers with California Feet Warmers at City National Grove, Anaheim, 2200 E. Katella Ave., Anaheim, (714) 712-2700; www.citynationalgroveofanaheim.com. 8 p.m. $30-$40. —AIMEE MURILLO

There were some truly beautiful automotive works of art already out in force at Thee Midniters’ show at the Museum of Latin American Art in February, but this time, the cars are the stars of the show: “Lowrider Lowdown” delivers context, backstory and technical depth alongside the arsenal of vehicles organized by Baldwin Park customizer Danny D., noted by Lowrider magazine as one of the industry’s most in-demand artists. Denise M. Sandoval, Ph.D., a key curator and researcher for numerous lowrider exhibits, will helm the one-day event alongside the legendary tattoo (and album-cover) artist Mister Cartoon, whose early career included a teenage stint doing auto airbrushing. Plus, there will be a live pinstriping session with artists Mr. Rhythm and D.A. Designs’ D.A. Garcia. “Lowrider Lowdown” at the Museum of Latin American Art, 628 Los Alamitos Ave., Long Beach, (562) 437-1689; www. molaa.org. 1 p.m. $10; members, free.

Scenic Balboa Village is the place where more than 30 craft beer vendors will be pouring samples of their brew for the Fourth Annual Balboa Craft Beer Fest. And if you’re a beer fanatic, chances are one of your favorite breweries will be among the lineup: Golden Road, Left Coast, Barley Forge, Shock Top, Hangar 24 and more. Hi-Time Wine Cellars will provide red and white wines for those who prefer grapes to hops, and peninsula-based eateries such as Ruby’s Diner, Cruisers Pizza Bar Grill and Harborside Restaurant will offer tasty food. Check out the Beer Fest site for a handy Lyft code as well; unless you’ve got a designated driver ready, you’re going to need it. Balboa Craft Beer Fest between the beach and the bay in Balboa Village, Newport Beach; www.balboabeerfest.com. 12:30 p.m. $25-$65. 21+. —AIMEE MURILLO

Squirrel Nut Zippers

‘Lowrider Lowdown’

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After briefly moving to Los Angeles in 2016, WonderCon makes its triumphant return to Orange County! While the entire weekend boasts a cavalcade of television, film, comic and gaming legends to grab autographs from, consider checking out some of the panels: expect discussions on publishing your own comics, the politics behind your favorite cloaked superheroes, the future of StarTrek and a look at the special effects behind Logan. Small-time comic artists, publishers and vendors will be slinging their merchandise in the Artists Alley, and of course, there will be cosplayers galore. If you’re feeling generous, donate blood at the Red Cross booth, a small but definite way to secure your own superhero status. WonderCon at Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim; www.comic-con.org/wca. Noon; also Sat.-Sun. $18-$65. —AIMEE MURILLO

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| CLASSIFIEDS | MUSIC | CULTURE | FILM | FOOD | CALENDAR | FEATURE | THE COUNTY | CONTENTS |

sun/04/02 [DANCE]

Bodies In Motion Orange County Dance Festival

The first Orange County Dance Festival celebrates the art of dance with strong companies from throughout Southern California, all coming together for an evening of performances, films and education. More than leaping across the stage, dance

serves to tell stories through movement, imagery and emotion, and these artists commit their bodies, minds and souls into every piece. Aiming to bridge the gap between concert and commercial dance, the festival welcomes 17 venerable groups, including Rhapsody en Dance, Emergent Dance Co., Palm Dance Collective, Akomi Dance and Invertigo Dance Theatre. Orange County Dance Festival at Rose Center Theater, 14140 All American Way, Westminster, (714) 793-1150; www.akomidance. com/ocdf. 6 p.m. $15. —AIMEE MURILLO

[THEATER]

The Puppets Have It Les Miz and Friends!

Not a fan of musicals? I, myself, am the son of a man who fell asleep during a Broadway performance of Les Miserables. That being said, the opportunity to see the show parodied by foul-mouthed puppets is irresistible. In Les Miz and Friends!, witness human cast members fighting against oppressive furry monsters in a production

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that subverts the classic source material. Writer/directors Genevieve Flati and Nathan Makaryk’s show is definitely not for children, but Les Miserables-lovers and -haters are welcome! Les Miz and Friends! A Puppet Parody at Maverick Theater, 110 E. Walnut Ave., Ste. B, Fullerton, (714) 526-7070; www. mavericktheater.com. 6 p.m. Through April 22. $10-$20. —SCOTT FEINBL ATT

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Lovers of sweet, tarty fruits go straight to Knott’s Berry Farm because they know jam is its business, with the boysenberry being the one that put it on the map. A cross between the blackberry, raspberry and loganberry, the boysenberry was created by Walter Knott himself. And the Boysenberry Festival celebrates not only with jam, but also food, wine and even beer inspired by the large purple berry. Plus, there will be live entertainment and a pie-eating contest or two. Don’t miss this excuse to jam out with your belly out. Boysenberry Festival at Knott’s Berry Farm, 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park; www. knotts.com. 10 a.m. Through April 23. $43-$75. —AMANDA PARSONS

3/27/17 3:16 PM

So Relevant 1984

No one could get enough of George Orwell’s 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four back in 1984, and many of the novel’s concepts of “big brother,” “doublespeak” and “groupthink” have been firmly implanted in the popular consciousness. There was even a critically lauded second film made of the story (after the 1956 version), starring John Hurt and Richard Burton in his final screen appearance. No one paid much attention to it again until the recent U.S. election, but it’s now back on everyone’s mind (most certainly a “thoughtcrime”), and the chilling idea of “doublethink”—holding two opposing ideas at the same time—seems all the more poignant. See it on the big screen to draw your own conclusions . . . and steer clear of Room 101, comrades. 1984 at the Frida Cinema, 305 E. Fourth St., Santa Ana, (714) 285-9422; thefridacinema. org. 7:30 p.m. $7-$10. —SR DAVIES


TICKETS and DINNER RESERVATIONS: 949-496-8930

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3/31 4/1 4/2 4/7

Shen Yun

The exhilarating acrobats behind Shen Yun are back, upping the ante with their latest performance of death-defying stunts and daring skills. In this edition, titled Connecting Heaven & Earth, the Shen Yun performers visually represent a lost paradise filled with gardens, dragons, magical emperors and supernatural beings—although it’s hard not to believe these humans aren’t super themselves. While banned from their home country of China, the troupe continue to stun and amaze audiences all over the world while donating proceeds to charity—which you can count as another of its amazing feats. Shen Yun: Connecting Heaven & Earth at Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town Center Dr., Costa Mesa, (714) 556-2787; www.scfta. org. 7:30 p.m. Through Sun. $70-$150. —AIMEE MURILLO

*

[CONCERT]

Dreams On Wheels

DreamCar

Late last year, a collaboration between the non-Gwen members of No Doubt and AFI singer Davey Havok was mysteriously announced. Calling themselves DREAMCAR, the timing was a bit odd, what with AFI releasing a new album in January. After a confirmed Coachella appearance and short tour publicized, the quartet shared their first song, “Kill for Candy,” and the tune was unlike anything any fan of either band could expect. A splash of ’80s new wave that’s fresher and more experimental than what they could have written or shared with their regular outfits. While there’s little known about what’s to come at DREAMCAR’s live debut at the tiny Constellation Room, you can be sure to expect it to be something festival-ready. DREAMCAR with Dear Boy at the Constellation Room, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; www.observatoryoc. com. 9 p.m. $20. —DANIEL KOHN

BLUE OYSTER CULT MATT COSTA TIFFANY SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY & THE ASBURY JUKES 4/13 4/8 LED ZEPAGAIN ERIC 6/4 4/9 GOOD VIBRATIONS SARDINAS JUDY COLLINS 4/13 ERIC SARDINAS 4/14 JEFF BRIDGES “Getting Doug & THE ABIDERS with High” 4/15 VANESSA CARLTON 4/20 “Getting Doug With High” feat Doug Benson & Special Guests 4/20 – Live Podcast Taping 6/8 DOUG 4/21 SUPER DIAMOND XEB BENSON 4/22 ROGER CLYNE & THE PEACEMAKERS 4/23 RICHIE KOTZEN 4/28 DSB 4/29 THE BABYS 5/5 OINGO BOINGO’S DANCE PARTY 5/6 DENNIS QUAID 4/22 6/16 & THE SHARKS ROGER CLYNE DON MCLEAN 5/7 STRUNZ & FARAH 5/11 BIG DADDY’S BBQ 5/12 MARCIA BALL 5/13 OC’S FUNNIEST HOUSEWIVES 5/14 THE RAT PACK LIVE 5/6 FROM LAS VEGAS 6/23 DENNIS 5/18 BEE GEES GOLD DONAVON QUAID

& The Sharks

[ART] [FILM]

It’s Just a Flesh WOunD

Bad Movies, Good Posters

‘Reel Art: Movie Posters From Ghana’

Whether you’re a fan of great comedy, terribly inaccurate history or just the use of banging empty halves of coconuts together to make the sound of a galloping horse, there are plenty of reasons to love Monty Python and the Holy Grail. For tonight’s Classic Film Wednesday at Regency South Coast Village, you’ll get the chance to see the epic draw between King Arthur and the Black Knight (as well as the rest of the movie); some bloody (but outrageously over-the-top) violence; the Dead BodyThat Claims It Isn’t; and some hilarious songs on the big screen one more time. Be there, or fall victim to the Knights Who Say “Ni!” Monty Python and the Holy Grail at Regency South Coast Village, 1561 W. Sunflower Ave., Santa Ana, (714) 5575701; www.regencymovies.com. 7:30 p.m. $8. —JOSH CHESLER

Even the most hardcore cinephile would have trouble naming up to five different Ghanaian films, let alone be aware of the country’s amazing film-poster art. Bowers Museum’s “Reel Art” exhibit brings in glorious B-list (and lower) campy film posters from 1980s- and ’90s-era Ghanaian cinema, originally printed onto flour sacks instead of canvas, intended to advertise films on a traveling medium. With outrageous titles and subject matter such as ninjas, gangsters, robots and an equally outrageous painting style to match, this is nothing like the boring, PhotoShopped posters you’ll see on bus stops and billboards today. A total must-see for bad-movie-lovers and film historians! “Reel Art: Movie Posters From Ghana” at the Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana, (714) 567-3600; www.bowers. org. 10 a.m. Through June 30. $10-$15. —AIMEE MURILLO

5/27 DICK DALE

5/19 5/20 5/25 5/26 5/27 6/2 6/3 6/4 6/7 6/8

6/10

(Bee Gees Tribute)

RONNIE MONTROSE REMEMBERED BILLY VERA and the Beaters LOS LONELY BOYS JEFFERSON STARSHIP DICK DALE COCO MONTOYA EROTIC CITY (Prince Tribute) JUDY COLLINS JEAN LUC PONTY – The Atlantic Years XEB – original members perform entire debut album “Third Eye Blind” ZEPPELIN USA

FRANKENREITER

6/29 & 6/30 TED NUGENT

7/15 MICKY DOLENZ

UPCOMING SHOWS 6/16

6/17 6/18 6/23 6/24 6/29 6/30 7/14

DON MCLEAN

7/15

MICKY DOLENZ (of The Monkees) 7/18 TOMMY EMMANUEL 7/19 TOMMY EMMANUEL 7/21 COLIN HAY 7/25 BUDDY GUY 7/29 BEATLES vs STONES

QUEEN NATION (Queen Tribute) PROJECT PRESLEY feat. Chance Tinder DONAVON FRANKENREITER AMBROSIA TED NUGENT TED NUGENT JACK RUSSELL’S GREAT WHITE

“American Troubadour”

8/12 8/16 8/25 9/23 11/4

- A Musical Showdown

DESPERADO THE ALARM DAVID LINDLEY PAT BOONE LARRY CARLTON

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5/26 JEFFERSON STARSHIP

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HOLEINTHEWALL

» GUSTAVO ARELLANO

Little Big Flavors MASALA HUT 1731 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim, (714) 922-9210; masalahutoc.com.

T

The Next Episode

BRIAN FEINZIMER

LSXO combines hip-hop and the best Vietnamese food outside of Little Saigon

I

back strip malls of Little Saigon or at least open to its quirks. This cuisine is for insiders who already know where to get the best bún bò Hue and cá kho to. When I ate Vuong’s hu tieu Nam Vang, the noodle soup I routinely slurp for breakfast at Trieu Chau, I realized Vuong has not only gotten the broth exactly right, but he’s also included everything I’ve come to expect from it: the pliant fish balls, the ground pork, the shrimp, even the deep-fried Chinese crullers you’re supposed to float atop the scalding liquid. But then he does something ballsy: He dumps the diced Thai bird chiles usually offered as a condiment into the soup itself. Vuong does it because he knows they are central to the experience, its spiciness building to a crescendo that leaves you gasping for air, but then going back for more. There are a few updates to classic dishes here. But when Vuong does it, it’s not a forced deconstruction, but rather an improvement, an upgrade or a shortcut to the essence of the dish. For example, he adds not only lardons to that hu tieu broth for richness and smoke, but also a whole gigantic shrimp that might as well be a lobster. For his take on bún riêu, which is usually a noodle soup with crab and tomatoes, he eschews the noodles and the soup to get down to the heart of it: the crab cakes made with egg and crabmeat that he re-creates here as an omelet. And it’s a revelation, with a wiggly texture hovering near Japanese chawanmushi and a fried soft-shell crab on top. On those dishes that can’t possibly be improved upon, such as bánh xèo—a lacy crepe-like pancake with shrimp and pork

folded over bean sprouts—Vuong plays it straight. His rendition is every bit as crisp as anything I’ve found in Little Saigon, save for Van’s. He even attempts a nem noung cuon, which is not as tightly rolled as Brodard’s nor has the sauce to match. But that’s okay—no other restaurant has come close either. There’s also an amazing braised pork and quail eggs in a coconut gravy that screams for a side of rice and a thin-sliced octopus terrine dribbled with chile sate sauce that’s as tender as turkey cold cuts from the deli. If you like seabass, it’s crisply fried here, paired with Vietnamese herbs and an electric dipping sauce. As authentic as the food is, I would discourage anyone from bringing older Vietnamese relatives—unless they’re already deaf. The restaurant blasts old-school hip-hop that’s heavy on Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg—and not the G-rated radio edits, either. I don’t know exactly how old Vuong is, but my guess is he came of age with this music, just as I did. For LSXO’s customers between 35 and 45, it hits the nostalgic sweet spot. In the middle of my visit, I found my head bobbing to the baseline, then joining the entire restaurant in singing the chorus of “Gin and Juice.” Who knew that gangsta rap and Vietnamese food go great together? The O.G. Tin Vuong, that’s who. LXSO 21016 Pacific Coast Hwy., Ste. D200, Huntington Beach, (714) 374-0083; dinebluegold.com/lsxo. Open daily, 11 a.m.10 p.m. Dinner for two, $40-$60. Full bar.

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f you’ve been to Bluegold at Pacific City and thought, as I did, that it was an uneven experience, you need to push the reset button, then go back and try LSXO, the Vietnamese restaurant within the restaurant. It turns out that this speakeasy-ish backroom, accessible through a set of heavy doors to the right of Bluegold’s kitchen, is like the hidden level in Super Mario Bros. that holds all the coins. The room looks unfinished, as though the contractor quit mid-job, leaving walls of exposed caulking sandwiched between two-by-fours. In the center of the space, there’s a diminutive bar ripped from a Wild West saloon. Behind that is a backdrop of wallpaper with AK-47 motifs and butterflies spray-painted on using a stencil. If Bluegold is a sleek new cruise ship, LSXO is its crew quarters. The difference between the two doesn’t end there. Pound-for-pound, the food at LSXO is cheaper than at Bluegold. And it’s all from an entirely separate menu that’s not only all Vietnamese, but also the window to the soul of its chef, Tin Vuong. Most important, every bite I had here was consistently wonderful. Before opening up an eclectic array of restaurants across Los Angeles County with Blackhouse Hospitality Management, Vuong was the head cook at St. Regis and Sapphire. His flavors are undiluted, unfiltered and bold—full of herbs, fish-sauce funkiness and wickedly hot chile peppers. You get the feeling that if Vuong were to teach you Vietnamese, he’d start with the swear words. But to truly appreciate the food, you should already be fluent with the

BY EDWIN GOEI

here are Indian lunch buffets, and then there’s what Masala Hut offers in Anaheim. The place is small: just four tables, three aisles of groceries, a freezer and a wall covered with blackvelvet paintings of rural Indian life. Right next to the counter is the buffet, six trays representing the subcontinental version of a meat and three: usually just chicken tikka masala and tandoori, plus four vegetarian options. It pales in comparison to every Indian buffet I’ve ever tried in OC, the opposite of what a lunch special is supposed to be. Try the entrées, whose flavors are brighter than anything I’ve encountered resting in chafing trays. The tikka masala is as creamy as a spicy bowl of Fage; the chana masala is the best interpretation of garbanzo beans outside of falafels. The specials come served in little Styrofoam cups, the better to take them home. Masala Hut rotates its buffet offerings according to the whims of the nice people who run this Indian grocery, and everyone is always apologetic if a customer’s regular order isn’t up that day. “Sorry, we don’t have aloo gobi today,” a young lady once told a Latino trucker. He didn’t mind; he gorged that day on cauliflower instead. The buffet is so good, in fact, that I never noticed an actual menu until I grabbed a to-go pamphlet one afternoon. Entrées veer toward the North, so there are biryanis, rotis, samosas and vindaloos. I love the goat curry because there’s simply not enough goat dishes in the world, but also great is the garbanzo dish with a fried bread puffed like a chef’s toque. There’s even more food to go in Masala Hut’s produce aisle and freezer section; I especially like the saffron-spiked almond milk in a bright-yellow can. But when it comes to a drink, forsake the mango lassi for once. Masala Hut is the only restaurant in OC I’ve ever seen publicly advertise a milkshake made from chikoo, the fruit known in English as the sapodilla. It tastes as if you’re drinking custard pie—more, please!

MO N TH X X–X X , 2 014

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AIN’T NOTHIN’ BUT A SOUP THING

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food»reviews | listings

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Hi-Time Wine Cellars NEVER ENOUGH VIET FOOD

CYNTHIA REBOLLEDO

Viet Clam Chowder Cháo ngheu quay nong at Ha Noi Corner

H

a Noi Corner (formerly Pho Co Ha Noi in SanTana) is Garden Grove’s newest Northern Vietnamese eatery. Look for vibrantly flavored specialty dishes such as cha ca thang long (the awesome, famous fish dish from Hanoi), bún cha (grilled pork patties with rice noodles, fresh herbs and fish sauce for dipping) and hen xào xúc (baby clams with crispy rice crackers enjoyed as an appetizer). But its best dish is cháo ngheu quay nong, a steaming bowl of clam rice porridge served with slices of Chinese doughnut for dunking. It’s silky, creamy and subtly sweet, topped with fresh Manila clams, fried

EatthisNow

» cynthia rebolledo shallots and crispy garlic, then garnished with rau ram for that extra-bitter kick. Mix the porridge and topping, and it becomes an interplay of deeply rich flavors—herbaceous, earthy, salty and savory. It’s the Vietnamese version of clam chowder, but better—have it before the spring heat makes you sweat again. HA NOI COR NER 8516 Garden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove, (714) 867-6665.

Come celebrate Chateau Ste Michelle’s 50 Year Anniversary with Winemaker Bob Bertheau! Hi-Time Wine Bar on Thursday, April 6th, 4:30-8:30 p.m. We will taste 8 different wines ($20). The history of Ste. Michelle Wine Estates and its predecessors is the history of grape growing and winemaking in Washington. The companies that eventually became Ste. Michelle Wine Estates were among the first to make wines and plant classic vinifera varieties in the state.

250 OGLE STREET - COSTA MESA, CA 949.650.8463 - HITIMEWINE.NET

OC’s FINEST PERUVIAN CUISINE

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food»

DriNkofthEwEEk OV E R 2 0 Y E A R S O F E XC E L L E N C E !

Magnus at ARC

HAPPY HOUR

A

THE DRINK

Rye, Campari, amaro and chocolate is like the Beatles of booze for me: sweet, strong,

3pm-6pm Daily

50% OFF all Appetizers bitter, perfect (those descriptions I think fit John, Paul, George and Ringo). But even more delightful was that Arc served the Magnus in a chilled, vintage glass that accentuated each liqueur’s strengths. Food Writer took a sip and declared it “superb.” And OC’s national food reputation just shot up a bunch, fam. ARC 3321 Hyland Ave., Costa Mesa, (949) 500-5561; www.arcrestaurant.com.

$5 YOU CALL IT! Well Cocktails & House Wine

Sun - Thurs: 11am-9pm | Fri-Sat: 11am-10pm | Reservations Recommended NEWPORT BEACH/COSTA MESA

260 Bristol Street 714.444.4652

LAKE FOREST

23600 RockfIeld Blvd. 949.587.9008

inkagrill.com #inkagrilloc

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couple of weeks ago, I had the honor of hosting one of the country’s premier food writers, whose name I won’t mention out of respect for his or her anonymity. We only had a couple of hours, so I took the writer to what I felt was emblematic of OC dining right now: Burritos La Palma, Kareem’s in Anaheim, nuoc mia at Hot Vit Lon Long An, and Taco Maria’s latest tasting menu. Food Writer loved every stop and wished he or she had more than four hours to enjoy OC—an awesome testament to our chefs! And for drinks? Arc at SOCO in Costa Mesa. Food Writer ordered a mezcal drink, while I went with one I hadn’t tried before, the Magnus.

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» gustavo arellano

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food» PILE IT ON!

P

ike Restaurant & Bar : A neighborhood meeting place for locals and visitors alike, featuring live music or DJ’s 7 nights a week. We serve a full menu ‘til midnight, 7 days a week and serve some of the best microbrews in the US.

COURTESY THE SOCIAL LIST

PRESENTED BY

#FRESHTOAST

A BRUNCH EVENT

Thank you

TO OUR SPONSORS, VENDORS, STAFF, VOLUNTEERS, VENUE AND EVERYONE THAT CONTRIBUTED TO OUR SOLD-OUT FRESH TOAST BEING A HUGE SUCCESS! THE BLOODIES AND BRUNCH DRINKS WERE FLOWING AND THE FOOD WAS ON POINT!

SEE YOU NEXT YEAR! OCWEEKLY.COM/FRESHTOAST

To Him According to His Needs

The Social List is finally finding its voice

I

n a world of Russian cyber attacks, normalized Cuban relations and cries of “Bernie would’ve won,” the Social List’s punny name holds more meaning than ever. So it feels only appropriate that after three years of business, the corner café owned by Luis Navarro Jr. (of Lola’s Mexican Cuisine) is finally finding its voice. The Social List was designed as a European tavern, a casual place meant for, well, socializing, inspired by the food and drink that Navarro and his sister missed from their travels around the world. Early on, this meant Belgian-style beer and tapasstyle small plates, from chicken-liver pâté on toast to a lineup of house-made sausages, all items not already offered on Retro Row. On multiple visits during its opening year, though, both the menu and service underwhelmed. Despite an open, communal dining room with full sightlines of Fourth Street and an intimate beer-andwine bar tucked into one corner, the food hadn’t yet balanced vision with neighborhood need. But the locally adored Navarro has fixed all this several times over. In his words, he “started having fun.” This meant going back to his core principles of sourcing local and keeping things fresh, which are already well-expressed at the two Lola’s locations, both of which hinge on his mother’s Mexican recipes. He’s switched the menu around several times in the past few years, experimenting with melty mozzarella flatbreads (served on California-shaped cutting boards!) and adding a host of new dishes that are substantial enough to be meals in themselves. Worthy remnants from the past linger: the dill-topped patatas bravas, made for forking through with friends; the juicy bratwurst, served on a bun with onions and pickled vegetables; the Catalan tomato toast, a simple pile of tomato,

LongBeachLunch » sarah bennett

manchego cheese and olive oil. But it’s Navarro’s new experiments that are the most fun right now, from a fall-apart braised short rib, which finds itself on a Philly cheesesteak-like melt (and surrounded by steamed kale as a meal-sized entrée), to house-cut pappardelle pasta tossed with whatever Farm Lot 59 vegetables can be found in the kitchen. More recently, the Social List launched a not-quite-European brunch service (think: French toast waffles, crab cake Benedict, chilaquiles). And in January, it added a full liquor license, which moves the Social List out of competition with the two wine bars within a block of it and into another realm. The cocktail menu is all over the place—in a good way. With something for everybody, it features both a Moscow mule on tap and several craft libations centered on Nicaragua’s silky smooth Flor de Caña rum. VIP bottle lockers are also in the works, as is another parklet patio (similar to what you’ll find at one Lola’s and Number Nine), this time taking over a bulb-out on the corner instead of a few parallel parking spaces. Much as a socialist country itself, the Social List is filled with a grand idealism that needed some time to work out the kinks of implementation. With Navarro at the helm, there’s no doubt this little European tapas tavern will become the reliable neighborhood hangout Retro Row never knew it needed. THE SOCIAL LIST 2105 E. Fourth St., Long Beach, (562) 433-5478; thesociallistlb.com.


Twenty-Two Short Films About Sex

Dan Savage’s X-rated HUMP! Film Festival celebrates its 13th year By ScoTT FeinBlATT

M

THAT WOULD MAKE A BADASS TATTOO!

HUMP! FESTIVAL

the sex act the most gruesome of the festival’s content. When curator/editor Dan Savage solicits festival content, he encourages the use of various props, particular to each year, to be included as a tie-in for the films and as evidence the films were created exclusively for the event. Of the recurring elements that appeared throughout the films, the one that enabled the most diversity—and was, without exception, depicted with disdain—was the red “Make America Great Again” hat. In one film, the hat was doctored to read “Make America Gay Again”; in another, it was used as a receptacle for a used condom. But the most poignant statement occurred after the narrative of the documentary short I’m Not Poly

But My Boyfriends Are, when one of the film’s performers revealed he had no problem with being seen naked or making love in front of a camera, but he was ashamed “to be seen wearing this fucking hat.” Among principal benefits of attending HUMP! is seeing exclusive content that is publicly destroyed at the end of the festival’s run (to protect the privacy of the creators). It may not be for everyone, but it’s best to filter the experience with a diverse audience and further develop one’s perspective on life. HUMP! FILM FESTIVAL at the Art Theatre, 2025 E. Fourth St., Long Beach; humpfilmfest.boldtypetickets.com. April 6, 8 p.m. $20. 18+.

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free refill.” In true infomercial form, the program ends with a list of possible side effects, including “STDs, pregnancy, emotional bonding issues and temporary delusions of love.” On the darker side are shorts featuring some extreme fetishes that are very difficult to watch. In Playing Scrabble, several people lay down Scrabble tiles spelling out various kinks that they then demonstrate. Starting with performers variously dressed up/painted as clowns while penetrating one another, the fetishes progress to performers piercing one another as a part of their sexual play. Closeup shots of staples and pins being driven through flesh and the subsequent free flow of blood make this particular depiction of

mo nt h xx–x x, 220 0 14 March 31-ap ril 06, 17

ost people don’t think of pornography as an art form. Though it was once chic to go see Deep Throat, history has revealed its star, Linda Lovelace, was goaded into the industry by her abusive husband. And while the adult-film world occasionally yields movies with big, colorful productions (e.g., Pirates, Uninhibited), artistic films depicting unsimulated sex are rare (e.g., In the Realm of the Senses, Intimacy). Porn is the only film category without at least several dozen festivals of various qualities of non-studio productions per year. Writer/activist Dan Savage’s HUMP! Film Festival has the distinction of being the first festival of independently created shorts featuring the topic (and sustained depiction) of the sex act. The HUMP! tour stops at Long Beach’s Art Theatre on April 6, giving adventurous audiences the opportunity to experience the 13th-annual block of independently produced porn films, which once again showcase as much diversity in narrative style as they do in production value, sexual orientation and graphic extremity. Previous attendees know this is not so much a showcase of hardcore art as it is a showcase of taboo expression. The lighter fare in this year’s lineup includes several films addressing the theme of sexual expression without nudity. The brilliantly scripted It’s Fucking Complicated focuses on a straight couple’s first time having sex. The woman confides that at the height of passion, in order to achieve orgasm, her partner must name various types of pizzas. The man is happy to oblige, then makes his own request: at the moment of climax, he wants her to hold up a large poster board reading, “You’re #1 at doing sex!” [the sign resembles a grade-school craft project]. As the conversation continues, the couple’s requirements increase as much in complication as they do in hilarity, with the man announcing his partner must dress up as an endangered furry animal. “But wait,” the woman points out, “that panda bear was recently downgraded from ‘endangered’ to ‘vulnerable.’ Do you happen to have a gorilla suit, instead?” Naturally, he does. Sexucation: Just Jizz showcases topnotch production values while humorously promoting the nutritious and holistic values of semen, as well as its accessibility: “Tired of buying expensive beauty products? Save hundreds of dollars and get the benefits of this powerful anti-oxidant by simply texting some guy at midnight and saying, ‘What’s Up?’ He’ll be right over to give you a

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Class Scholars

» aimee murillo

Laguna Art Museum celebrates the legendary California School of Fine Arts By dave Barton

W

SLOW JAMMING

DAVID JOHNSON, DANCING AT JOINT IN THE BAYVIEW DISTRICT, SAN FRANCISCO, CA, 1957

and pubic area are hidden in shadow, are both knockouts. Equally stunning is Philip Hyde’s archival print Sunken Car, Sausalito, California, with its reflected clouds in water and repetitions of squares throughout—empty windshield, hole in the roof, the sharp corners of the lake edge—all mirroring one another. The selection of documentary photos of (mostly) 1940s and ’50s San Francisco is exquisite, not only because of its nostalgia over long-gone moments, fashion and faces, but also because of its narratives. A woman stands on a street corner in C. Cameron Macauley’s Untitled (Woman and Newspapers, San Francisco), looking as if she’s forgotten something or taken a wrong turn, but seen in tandem with the Korean War headlines screaming in the nearby newsrack (which she isn’t even looking at), it’s clear the photographer had something else in mind. His photo of several women talking in an art gallery, oblivious to the work around them, save one that’s grimacing, made me laugh. A two-story white clapboard looking as if it had been lifted from a rowhouse is dwarfed by the menacing, dark oil tank next to it in Pat Harris’ Untitled (White House, Oil Tank). Knowing what we know now, one can only imagine the occupant’s future health conditions. The images of children are worthy of their own exhibition. The cocked head, baseball cap, suspenders, angelic face and gloriously dirty hands of a young boy in Gerald Ratto’s Chidren of the Fillmore, No. 19 feels contemporary, despite the dated

wardrobe; Benjamen Chinn’s neatly composed five Chinese boys—light glinting off the gel in their slicked-back hair and one boy’s leather jacket—are gathered around two desks, reading; the grimy faces of William Heick’s Sharecropper’s Kids (Central California) hearkens back to Lange, while the gap-toothed black and white faces in George Wallace’s Laughing Boys are joyously in unison about something they see, but we can’t. Under former curator Grace KookAnderson, the LAM basement space— with its limited seating, inconvenient load-bearing pillars smack in the middle, and awkward nooks and crannies—was transformed into a gallery that soared above its limitations, offering the new and unusual in a variety of artistic mediums. It took a foursome of curators to put together this excellent exhibit—Dr. Malcolm Warner, Upton, Ken Ball and Victoria Whyte Ball—but their great taste and eye for conversation between the images is present in every photograph and every inch of the show. There isn’t a bad picture or misstep throughout. It’s a return to form in quality of presentation, and I’m grateful for its comeback. “THE GOLDEN DECADE: PHOTOGRAPHY AT THE CALIFORNIA SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS, 1945-55” at Laguna Art Museum, 307 Cliff Dr., Laguna Beach, (949) 494-8971. Open Mon.-Tues. & Fri.-Sun., 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Thurs., 11 a.m.9 p.m. Through May 29. $5-$7; children younger than 12, free.

T

he new way to nab used and upcycled goods is through e-commerce apps such as Depop. And while that same buying power existed through sites such as Etsy or eBay, Depop has a handy interface resembling Instagram, allowing you to like specific items and follow vendors with discerning taste, including thrift-store mavens, bloggers and such celebrities as Shaquille O’Neal and Dita Von Teese (and who wouldn’t want to take a peek at what’s coming out of their closets?). Depop makes shopping easier and less time-consuming than pushing through racks of clothing at Goodwill. If you’re after an obscure or über-specific item of clothing, you can type something like “metallic button down shirt” or “vintage white Kangol bucket hat” into the search engine. Even better, you can find items from high-end brands such as Prada, Balenciaga or Yves St. Laurent at discounted prices. And vendors are upfront and honest about wear and tear in the product descriptions, with closeup shots and modeling photos. But it’s not all pastels and sequins. At the dawn of its reign, you could haggle prices with the seller or even trade for an equally priced item. Now, in an effort to crack down on flakes and ripoffs, more and more vendors are backing away from those tactics for their own protection. And if an item doesn’t fit, too bad— very few vendors will accept refunds. Despite those setbacks, I still check Depop for my next big score, especially from my favorite Orange County-based vendors, including @loserthrift, @dreamofvenus, @psychorags, @jonnarayofsunshine and @breezyschweetz, all of whom sell unique collections of preloved vintage clothing that millennials will covet. That perfect jean jacket you fell in love with at first sight? It’s now only a double-tap away from hanging in your closet. AMURILLO@OCWEEKLY.COM

These Are the Best Orange CountyBased Vendors on Vintagewear App Depop

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andering around the basement gallery at Laguna Art Museum’s (LAM) masterful “The Golden Decade: Photography at the California School of Fine Arts, 1945-55” exhibition, you’ll find perfection after perfection, amazed at the quality of the overlooked work and more than a little saddened that the school’s heyday was so short-lived. Representing the perfectly timed amalgam of jazz, the Beats, the end of a World War and an influx of money from soldiers cashing in their G.I. Bills for an art education, the California School of Fine Arts gave jobs to artists as diverse as Richard Diebenkorn, Mark Rothko and Ansel Adams, with the latter founding the school’s Photography Department. Adams filled the staff with such masters of the craft as Imogen Cunningham, Dorothea Lange, Minor White and Edward Weston, with the fortunate students under their tutelage becoming personalities in the art world themselves, even if they weren’t quite the household names their instructors were. A handful of work devoted to the teachers starts off the show, with Cunningham, Weston, White, Lange and Adams among those whose gelatin silver prints are on display. There are Adams’ perfect landscapes of Yosemite and Sequoia National Forest alongside Lange’s Depression-era documentary images, including a povertystricken figure in White Angel Breadline, San Francisco, a lone man turning away from the faceless, jacketed horde behind him, gripping a tin cup for soup close to his chest, his face pinched in despair. Nearby, the smooth suavity of Cunningham’s portrait of artist (and co-curator) John Upton—lost in thought, cigarette burning down between two fingers—contrasts sharply with a picture of her aged father, bearded, rustic and bearing a striking resemblance to Leo Tolstoy. In opposite corners, White’s idealized nude male study, Gino Cipolla, suggests an ode to Weston’s Pepper 30 from a decade earlier, the rippling flesh of the vegetable lit very much like the model’s muscular back and arms. The largest part of the exhibition is the remarkable photographs by the students, divided between images of nature, social documentary and street photography. Most of the nature work screams of Adams’ oeuvre, with more than a touch of Weston’s sensuality and aesthetics of decay. Upton’s Point Lobos, Near Carmel, California, with its luscious monochrome rocks, their worn surfaces resembling sculptures buried in the wet sand, and his theatrically lit female nude, the light caressing her bare belly and the top of her breasts, while the nipples

Delightful Depop

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music»artists|sounds|shows

Inside the Magnetic Mind of Johnny Basil

Examining the musings and music of OC’s most interesting DJ By ChrIstIne terrIsse

B

umping along in DJ Johnny Basil’s mid-’90s pickup truck, we discuss music before moving to topics the decades-long fixture is especially passionate about: his energy-healing work, releasing people from their angel/devil complexes and right/left mentalities. Basil seems to be going through a renaissance of sorts—popping up in music videos for hip young acts such as Saint Mesa, Rainbow Arabia, and Jessica Hernandez & the Deltas; booking regular DJ gigs at locales including the Wayfarer and the Ace Hotel downtown; touring with the Growlers; and generally stoking millennial interest. But this new topic is not a subject he tends to get into unless he’s asked. I admit that I feel as if I should have brushed up on science, astrology, mythology and world-control theories to fully pick up what he’s throwing down as we twist through side streets on our way to 17th St. Recording Studio in Costa Mesa. “I understand it’s all a game,” he says. “Everything’s based on game theory, and it has been for thousands of years. . . . What [they’re] going to control is the technology, which would be your Tesla-orientated energy continuum vs. an EinsteinianNewtonian-Copernican model of the universe, you know.” This is a lot to chew on. “Meet Johnny Basil: The Man You Wish You Were,” a Vice/Thump article written by a British blogger not too long ago, painted him as some sort of hipster panty-dropper. Well, if you don’t talk to him about much, I suppose. Looks-wise, he does have something going on. “I think my image is something that males and females can feel comfortable with,” he later muses over lunch. I tell him he resembles Iggy Pop, mostly because that’s what everyone else says. They both have longish wispy hair and tend to go shirtless. Like Iggy, Basil is tall and tan. He keeps fit via a combination of hardcore crunches, self-developed yogic techniques, stretching and deep breathing, plus pulling weeds in the back yard of the ranch-style home in Westminster he shares with his sweet 90-year-old mother. I find Johnny refreshingly earthy and unpretentious. When we left the house earlier, he gave his mother a kiss and told me he’s focused on paying off her mortgage. His truck reminds me of the one driven by my grungy college ex-boyfriend. Utilitarian when it comes to material goods (save his kick-ass record collection), it seems as if he rotates a few key wardrobe pieces, sticking to a uniform of formfitting jeans and an interesting jacket. He understands the value of image-making

THAT HAIR! THOSE ABS!

VICTORIA ZENGO

while remaining comfortable in his skin. At the studio, we temporarily set aside metaphysical musings while Basil puts together a couple of mixes. There to greet us is Steve Chinn, who works with him at Ubiquity Records across the street; Sam Holborn, who runs the indie label Forest Jams Records; and a couple of studio chihuahuas. Basil is a talented musician whose older recordings are layered yet focused. You can hear Miles Davis in the jazzy streak running through his original music and the way he speaks. In a previous profile on Basil for the Weekly, Dave Segal did a good job dissecting his earlier work and stints in bands such as West Coast Harem. A decade later, after a seven- to eight-year dry period, he’s paying more attention to the business side of things than ever before. As a DJ, he plays what he’s into and knows what he plays: colliding the obscure with the iconic. I’m introduced to Big Lady K and Queen Lisa, precursors to the more commercially known female MCs of the mid-’90s (think Queen Latifah, MC Lyte and Lil’ Kim). And then there is Gigolo Tony, smirking from the vinyl cover in all his ’80s glory. Soon, Holborn presses a cassette into

my hands. It’s a special-edition release of Basil & Rogers, a disco dance/trance fourtrack. Fullerton’s Burger Records handled the cassette release of the collaboration with Body Rogers (a.k.a. Brian McKinley of Black Bananas). The two worked together years earlier, a synchronicity I could hear when I listened to the music. He explains that the cover art—a shiny lipstick tube underneath a late-’70s font— depicts a “universal phallic symbol that defines backstage decadence, both male and female—a ‘seething’ decadence.” In addition to Basil & Rogers, Basil plays bass on a project with R. Scott, BAAST, named after the Egyptian fertility goddess; Ubiquity released their latest album, which is jazzy, funky and worldmusic-influenced. He also fronts Kandi Jones, a force of cynicism and street rock named for the former model and purported CIA mind-control victim. Over a lunch of shrimp, tacos and beer at Catalina Fish Kitchen, we talk about his reluctant embrace of social media, which evolves into a discussion of situationism and sloganeering, the idea that you don’t have to really be an artist or make art to be noticed, that you simply have to make

something happen and control it. Basil rejects anyone trying to control anything, especially information. “My whole game is, we have a table, and all the information goes up on the table,” he says. “The worst of the left, the worst of the right, the middle and the super-ultra ideals, concepts . . . Everything is a threedimensional object you can turn at every angle, compare and contrast; everyone gets to see it. That’s what I do. I don’t fantasize about the idyllic; it’s all about the tangible.” We return to his house before his gig at the Wayfarer. After a little vaping, Basil offers to demonstrate his energy work. I hold out my hands and close my eyes. I feel some heat and his hands circling above my own. But I’m not feeling anything intense, which makes me tense. I’m thinking a lot about what I should feel and what to tell him; I would definitely need to relax to get to any sort of altered state. Earlier I had asked him why the energy work is so important to him. “Because it’s the culmination of all my studies,” he replied. “I literally can feel the field and work the field and be a part of the field.” Sounds like a plan. LETTERS@OCWEEKLY.COM


HOOK US UP WITH A MIXTAPE, FAM

MIKE DUPREE

The Art of Falling Up

How Mike Dupree went from college dropout to working with Kendrick By Josh Chesler

A

LETTERS@OCWEEKLY.COM

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direct route and simply walked into the studio where the rapper was recording, armed with a CD full of tracks. Although Dupree had to leave his beats with a member of the lyricist’s entourage, the next morning, he learned Tech N9ne wanted to use most of those tracks. After working on All 6’s and 7’s, Dupree saw his stock soar through the Midwest and beyond. In 2012, he decided to move to LA. “I slept in my car when I came out here, and then my wife [moved here] before I could get anything, so we both ended up living in my car,” Dupree says. “That built character and gave me a better sense of what I needed to do to achieve what I wanted to do. But even after we got a spot and I could focus on music, it took a couple of years to get everything together. It was like a big pause in my career.” Dupree is now a fixture in the hip-hop world on a national and international level. The 29-year-old multi-platinum producer recently released “Falling Up,” the first track in his own name. With more of his own music on the way, Dupree is already seeing the differences between producing for others and creating his own tracks. “When you produce for other people, the value you build is based on the value of the person you produced for,” he says. “This way, I’m able to create value in my own way. As things are moving now, it makes more people take notice of what I’m doing, and it makes more people want to pull me in even for production on someone’s album.”

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bout a decade ago, Mike Dupree was a college freshman in his hometown of Kansas City, Missouri. While many of his peers graduated and found suitable desk jobs, Dupree decided to pursue a different route—one that would make his office a music studio and allow him to work with whichever hip-hop artists he wanted, including Kendrick Lamar and Snoop Dogg. “I knew I wanted to make music, and I didn’t think I needed to go to college to do that, but no one understood that because Kansas City is such a shutout place that there’s no comprehension of how the industry functions,” Dupree says. “I went to one semester, and I actually got great grades until I decided to not go to class for the last two weeks. Then I went back for a second semester, and at the end of the first week, I got a phone call saying T.I. picked one of my tracks to go on his next album. I left class and did not go back to school after that.” As it turned out, the burgeoning beatmaker never had to worry about finishing his degree. Before T.I. could release 2010’s No Mercy, featuring Dupree’s “How Life Changed,” Trey Songz picked up one of his tracks, and Dupree’s career officially began. It didn’t take long for Dupree to conquer his local scene, as the producer quickly sought out the help of the biggest name in Kansas City hip-hop, the prolific Strange Music founder Tech N9ne. Rather than trying to go through management or social media, Dupree decided to take the

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THE WHEELAND BROTHERS

Stagecoach By the Sea BOOTS AND BIKINIS at Baja Beach Cafe, 2332 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach, (949) 673-8444; www. facebook.com/bootsandbikinis. Every Sat., 4 p.m.-2 a.m. All ages.

Y

ou’d be hard pressed these days to find a place on the map that isn’t a bastion for country music. Stars such as Luke Bryan, Dierks Bentley and Carrie Underwood are the new rock stars, taking up the mantle of the FM icons who made us praise guitar music. But when was the last time you went out on a Saturday night to a club that actually catered to country? For Lauren Boquette, the best party since the genre reinvented itself has been going to Stagecoach in Indio and getting a proper dose of the 21st-century sound and scene. “When I’m there, I’m like, ‘This is a rock & roll party. This isn’t country; this isn’t what people think country is. This is tailgating, beer bongs and Van Halen. This might as well be a Van Halen party.’ And I realized that in Orange County, there’s a ton of people who are into that and there’s nowhere to go,” he says. Boquette also saw the potential to take advantage of local beaches. It made sense to the lifetime metalhead and convert to contemporary country music to create such an event, calling it Boots and Bikinis. On Saturday, the new weekly, all-ages club rolls into the Baja Beach Cafe in Newport Beach for a full evening of country-friendly fun, featuring live bands and DJs. The idea, Boquette says, mirrors what he’s seen in

LocaLsonLy » nate jackson

some music videos, with country stars wearing board shorts and flip-flops and soaking in the sun. “Dierks Bentley has a song that says somewhere on a beach sipping something strong,” Boquette says. “That’s what we do around here.” The weekly event gives not only local country and southern rock bands, but also any artist that falls under the umbrella of good-time beach music a place to play. Boquette, who is also Wheeland Brothers’ manager, got the idea for Boots and Bikinis after taking the band on a tour stop to the Virgin Islands and experiencing weekend daytime beach parties. Returning to OC, he enlisted the help of Baja Beach Cafe general manager Josh Sobotik, who agreed to let him use the bar for a loose, tailgating backyard beach party right on Pacific Coast Highway that will tide you over until you can make the trip to Stagecoach at the end of April. “I’m happy to create something that’s different, for people who look forward to going to Stagecoach every year,” he says. “Now, they can have that same kind of a party every Saturday night and not have to wait a year to experience it again.” Hey, Orange County/Long Beach musicians & bands! Mail your music, contact info, high-res photos & impending show dates for possible review to: Locals Only, OC Weekly, 18475 Bandilier Circle, Fountain Valley, CA 92708. Or email your link to: localsonly@ocweekly.com.


THIS WEEK FRIDAY

BLUE OYSTER CULT: 8 p.m. The Coach House,

33157 Camino Capistrano, Ste. C, San Juan Capistrano, (949) 496-8930; thecoachhouse.com. THE BUTTERTONES: 7 p.m., free with purchase of CD or LP. Fingerprints, 420 E. Fourth St., Long Beach, (562) 433-4996; fingerprintsmusic.com. CHRONIXX: 8 p.m. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com. DJ QUIK: 11 p.m. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com. ELECTRIC SIX: 8 p.m. Constellation Room at the Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; constellationroom.com. FUNK FREAKS: 8 p.m., $10. Original Mike’s, 100 S. Main St., Santa Ana, (714) 550-7764; originalmikes.com. JOEY PURP: 7 p.m., $15. The Parish at House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim; houseofblues.com/anaheim. MENALIVE CONCERT—SWING OUT!: 8 p.m., $37$49. Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 Campus Dr., Irvine, (949) 854-4646; thebarclay.org. NERO: 9 p.m., $22.50. The Yost Theater, 307 N. Spurgeon St., Santa Ana, (888) 862-9573; yosttheater.com. REEL BIG FISH: 7 p.m., $25. House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim, (714) 778-2583; houseofblues.com/anaheim. THA LIKS: 11 p.m. Constellation Room at the Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; constellationroom.com.

SATURDAY

#SCHOOLSNOTPRISONS TOUR, WITH ALOE BLACC; MAYA JUPITER; BUYEPONGO: 3 p.m.,

free. Delhi Center, 505 E. Central Ave., Santa Ana, (714) 481-9600; delhicenter.com. ALLAN RAYMAN: 9 p.m., $18. Constellation Room at the Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; constellationroom.com. BOOTS & BIKINIS COUNTRY MUSIC BEACH PARTY: 4 p.m., free before 10 p.m., bootsandbiki-

Restaurant & Bar, 6251 E. Pacific Coast Hwy., Long Beach, (562) 596-4718; thegaslamprestaurant.com. SPRING THRASH BASH: 8 p.m., $10-$15. Malone’s, 604 E. Dyer Rd., Santa Ana, (714) 979-6000; facebook.com/MalonesConcertVenue.

SUNDAY

ALINA BARAZ: 8 p.m. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor

Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com.

APOLLO BEBOP BOTTOMLESS BRUNCH: free.

The Gypsy Den, 125 N. Broadway Ave., Santa Ana, (714) 835-8840; gypsyden.com. APOTHESARY: 7 p.m., $7. Blacklight District Lounge, 2500 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. BTS: 8 p.m., $50-$250. Honda Center, 2695 E. Katella Ave., Anaheim, (714) 704-2400; hondacenter.com. THE GROWLERS: 7 p.m., $30. House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim, (714) 778-2583; houseofblues.com/anaheim. JOHN LINDAHL: 7 p.m., $10. The Parish at House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim; houseofblues.com/anaheim. MAGGIE LINDEMANN: 7 p.m., $10. Constellation Room at the Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; constellationroom.com. NOTHINGTON: 8 p.m., free. The Slidebar Rock-N-Roll Kitchen, 122 E. Commonwealth Ave., Fullerton, (714) 871-7469, slidebarfullerton.com. TIFFANY: 7 p.m. The Coach House, 33157 Camino Capistrano, Ste. C, San Juan Capistrano, (949) 4968930; thecoachhouse.com.

MONDAY

KILL THE INTERNET, WITH DJ CARDIGAN & DESIRABLE D: 8:30 p.m. Que Sera, 1923 E. Seventh

St., Long Beach, (562) 599-6170; queseralb.wix.com.

KING TREE & THE EARTH MOTHERS: 8 p.m., free.

The Wayfarer, 843 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, (949) 7640039; wayfarercm.com.

TUESDAY

CUMBIA TUESDAYS: 8 p.m., free. Roxanne’s Lounge,

1115 E. Wardlow Rd., Long Beach, (562) 426-4777; roxanneslounge.com. ERROL BONNICK: 9 p.m., $5. The Wayfarer, 843 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, (949) 764-0039; wayfarercm.com. WILLIAM SINGE WITH ALEX AIONO: 8 p.m. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com.

WEDNESDAY

BATTLE AT THE BEACH: 8 p.m., free. Hurricanes Bar

& Grill, 200 Main St., Huntington Beach, (714) 374-0500; hurricanesbargrill.com. CARTER WINTER: 7 p.m., $15. The Parish at House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim; houseofblues.com/anaheim. FRANKIE BALLARD: 7 p.m., $22.50. House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim, (714) 778-2583; houseofblues.com/anaheim. THE STROKES NIGHT, WITH UNDER COVERS OF DARKNESS: 9 p.m., free. The Continental Room,

115 W. Santa Fe Ave., Fullerton, (714) 469-1879; facebook.com/ContinentalRoom.

THURSDAY, APRIL 6

BADFISH: tribute to Sublime, 8 p.m., $20. House of

Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim, (714) 778-2583; houseofblues.com/anaheim. CLIFF & IVY: 7 p.m., $7. Blacklight District Lounge, 2500 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. DEEJAY CALLEN & RUFFNEK: 8 p.m., $5. The Wayfarer, 843 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, (949) 764-0039; wayfarercm.com. DREAMCAR: 9 p.m., $20. Constellation Room at the Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; constellationroom.com. GRYFFIN: DJ set, 8 p.m. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com. SPAWNBREEZIE: 7 p.m., $20. The Parish at House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim; houseofblues.com/anaheim. TIMMY TRUMPET: 9:30 p.m., $15. The Yost Theater, 307 N. Spurgeon St., Santa Ana, (888) 862-9573; yosttheater.com.

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MISSING PERSONS; ANNABELLA (THE ORIGINAL BOW WOW WOW): 7 p.m. Gaslamp

Arts, 1 University Dr., Orange, (844) 626-8726; muscocenter.org.

March 31-ap ril 06, 20 17

nisoc.com. Baja Beach Cafe, 2332 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach, (949) 673-8444; bajabeachcafe.com. BTS: 8 p.m., $50-$250. Honda Center, 2695 E. Katella Ave., Anaheim, (714) 704-2400; hondacenter.com. DANIEL MINAYA: 9 p.m., free before 10:30 p.m.; $5 after. The Wayfarer, 843 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, (949) 764-0039; wayfarercm.com. DESPERADO: tribute to the Eagles, 6:30 p.m., $20. The Strawberry Bowl Amphitheater, 12762 Main St., Garden Grove, (714) 928-3894; thestrawberrybowl.com. THE DOLLYROTS: 8 p.m., free. The Slidebar Rock-NRoll Kitchen, 122 E. Commonwealth Ave., Fullerton, (714) 871-7469; slidebarfullerton.com. GNASH: 7:30 p.m. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com. GOT THAT SWING!: 7:30 p.m., $15. Dance United LH, 23461 Ridge Route Dr., Ste. D, Laguna Hills, (949) 3700523; danceunitedlagunahills.com. THE GROWLERS: 7 p.m., $30. House of Blues, Anaheim GardenWalk, 400 W. Disney Way, Ste. 337, Anaheim, (714) 778-2583; houseofblues.com/anaheim. THE HYBRIDS: 8 p.m., free. The Continental Room, 115 W. Santa Fe Ave., Fullerton, (714) 469-1879; facebook.com/ContinentalRoom. LIL PUMP; SMOKEPURPP; DON KREZ: 11 p.m., $15. The Observatory, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, (714) 957-0600; observatoryoc.com. MATT COSTA: 8 p.m., $20. The Coach House, 33157 Camino Capistrano, Ste. C, San Juan Capistrano, (949) 496-8930; thecoachhouse.com. MENALIVE CONCERT—SWING OUT!: 3 p.m., $37$49. Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 Campus Dr., Irvine, (949) 854-4646; thebarclay.org.

VINCE GILL: 7:30 p.m., $35-$75. Musco Center for the

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SPECIALIZING IN ALL THINGS

YOUR ONE STOP SHOP FOR: SEXY LINGERIE (S-XXXXL) ADULT TOYS & NOVELTIES XXX DVDS LOTIONS & EDIBLES BACHELORETTE PARTY SUPPLIES

UPCOMING SEX EDUCATION EVENTS THURS. APR. 20TH @ 7:15PM

HOW TO TALK TO YOUR KIDS ABOUT SEX In this workshop, we will talk about the importance of the “Sex Talk” and how and when to do it. We want our children to grow up and have happy, healthy relationships, but we rarely send them into the world with the correct arsenal to do so. We will discuss how to talk about sex and still be true to our beliefs and moral values.

THURS. APR. 27TH @ 7:15PM

HOW TO PERFORM A WORLD CLASS BLOWJOB

ocweekly.com || || ocweekly.com

This workshop is open to women only. In this workshop you will learn tips and techniques for amazing blowjobs and handjobs! This workshop always sells out, so RSVP early!

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CALL OR STOP BY DURING BUSINESS HOURS TO RSVP. CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED. TICKETS ARE $15 PER PERSON OR $25 PER COUPLE WHEN PREPAID AT LEAST 24 HOURS IN ADVANCE. IF SPACE IS AVAILABLE, TICKETS ARE $25 PER PERSON ON THE DAY OF THE EVENT.

17955 SKY PARK CIRCLE, SUITE A, IRVINE | 949-660-4990 STORE HOURS: MON-SAT 11AM-7PM CALL FOR DIRECTIONS TO STORE!

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Positive Thinking Gay guy here. Met a guy online. He came over. We had incredible sex, and then a great conversation lasting several hours. But—and you knew there was one coming—he told me he lied about his HIV status. (I asked him before meeting him, as I do with anyone.) He is undetectable, but he told me initially he was “HIV/STD negative.” I got very upset—more from the lie than his status. (I know that undetectable is practically the same as negative.) I really like him, but that was a big lie. He told me all about his life and any other secrets after that. Should I swear off him for lying about such a big topic? Or is the fact he did tell me and our connection enough to give him a second chance? I had not been that happy up until the reveal in, well, maybe ever. But I want to be wise. Did Ask, Didn’t Tell Why would he lie? To avoid rejection. Obviously. Guys often refuse to hook up with guys who are honest about being HIV-positive even though a positive guy with an undetectable viral load is less of a risk—at least as far as HIV transmission is concerned—than a guy who believes himself to be negative because he was the last time he got tested or because he doesn’t think he could ever get infected and so has never been tested. Someone who was recently infected is highly infectious; someone who doesn’t think he could ever get infected—because he doesn’t sleep with older guys, because he only tops, because his ass is magic and he uses unicorn spit for lube—is a fucking idiot, and fucking idiots are higher risk for fucking everything. Sometimes positive guys get sick of being punished for being honest, so they lie—and it’s particularly tempting to lie to someone you don’t expect to see again, i.e., a quick hookup. HIV-positive people shouldn’t lie to their sex partners. Obviously. People should be honest, informed consent is consent, and lying about your HIV status can be risky for people with HIV. Thanks to stupid laws passed by ill-informed idiots, failing to inform a sex partner you’re HIVpositive is a crime in many areas. There are people in prison today—mostly men, mostly black—for failing to disclose. These disclosure laws incentivize not knowing your status—you can’t be punished for not disclosing what you don’t know—putting everyone at higher risk. Why would he tell the truth? It’s possible he lied to you about his status—a lie he regarded as harmless thanks to his undetectable viral load—because he assumed this would be a hookup and nothing more. He wasn’t going to infect you, and he wasn’t going to see you again. But after you two hit it off, DADT, he decided to tell you the truth right away instead of waiting weeks or months. The connection you describe is hard to find—this could be the start of something great—but the lie he told was big, yes, but understandable. I think he deserves credit for coming clean right away—and a second chance. I want to fuck my 31-year-old husband more often than he wants to fuck me, his 27-year-old wife. We have been married for three years and together for four. My question is twofold: One, how do I gracefully accept his “no”? We have sex usually two times a week—I wish it was more like five— which means he turns me down two or three times a week. I want to be better at hearing “no” from him without getting upset. The more I freak out, the less likely he is to fuck me the next time I ask. It’s a bad cycle. Two, he watches porn every day. I know because I was naughty and snooped. I love porn and watch a lot of it myself. But it doesn’t replace sex for me. Is there a conversation to be had about this? Should I just keep my mouth

SavageLove » dan savage

shut? I love him, but I am so frustrated. Sincerely Perplexed Over Unwanted Sexual Energy You want to have sex five times a week, SPOUSE, you watch a lot of porn, and porn doesn’t replace sex for you. Isn’t it possible that it works the same way for your husband? He wants to have sex twice a week, he watches a lot of porn, porn doesn’t replace sex for him. Don’t assume your husband is having a wank every time he visits a porn site. Lots of people—men and women—like to take a quick peek at porn sites, get a little erotic charge, and then get on with whatever they’re doing without stopping everything to have a wank. That said, SPOUSE, I can certainly understand why you’re frustrated—you’re having a lot less sex than you’d like, and you’re constantly feeling rejected—but blowing up about porn isn’t going to help anything. So what do you do with your feelings of frustration? Regarding frequency, SPOUSE, you directly address the issue with your husband and propose a low-stakes, low-pressure (and mutually pleasurable) compromise. Tell him you’d like to aim for three times per week, but put mutual masturbation on the table for that third time and/or the husband giving you a masturbatory assist. He may not be up for PIV more than twice a week, but he may be up for crawling into bed with you and either having a wank with you or holding you and talking porny while you have a wank. As for your frustration around always initiating, well, sometimes we have to accept the shit we cannot change. As the person with the higher libido in your relationship, SPOUSE, you may be stuck being the initiator. I’m a teenage girl, and I’m really horny. I always think about sex, and I’d like to masturbate sometimes. I can’t live in this way; sometimes I feel physically and psychologically bad because of this terrible need to have sex or stuff. I’m single, and I don’t want to lose my virginity with a random guy. I really need some advice from you! How can I masturbate or quit this exaggerated libido? Don’t Reveal My Name Your libido is your libido, DRMN. It isn’t exaggerated; it simply is. Some people have high libidos, some people have low libidos, some people have no libidos, and an individual’s libido can wax and wane and wax again over the years. You’re at the stage of life when people tend to be at their horniest and consequently think about sex a lot. Women and girls, too. (Don’t let anyone tell you that women aren’t as horny as men— reread the last letter.) If you find yourself distracted by sexual thoughts, DRMN, masturbating can help— most people find they can concentrate on other things for at least an hour once they’ve rubbed one or two or three out. As for how you masturbate . . . Masturbate on your own or with a partner, in private, and whenever you feel the desire or need to. Enjoy! CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS. Filmmakers, lovers, wannabe porn stars, sex-positive types, kinksters and other creative types are invited to create short porn films—five minutes max—for HUMP! 2018, my dirty little film festival! HUMP! films can be hardcore, softcore, live-action, stop-motion, animated, musical, kinky, vanilla, straight, gay, lesbian, bi, trans, genderqueer—your film can be anything because everyone and everything is welcome at HUMP! For more information on submitting a film—including info about the big cash prizes!—go to tinyurl.com/hump2018! And come see the festival at the Art Theatre in Long Beach (see Scott Feinblatt’s article on page 22). On the Lovecast (savagelovecast.com), Dan spars with rival advice columnist Minda Honey. Contact Dan via email at mail@savagelove.net, and follow him on Twitter: @fakedansavage. Visit ITMFA.org.


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Software Engineer Jobsite Newport Beach, CA, apply to HR at Phunware, Inc., tnolazco@phunware. com.

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Bioinformatics Associate, Irvine, CA. Designing analysis strategies, algorithms, and tools for genome-wide DNA methylation and next-generation sequencing. MS in Bioinformatics & 1 yr experience. Mail resume to Angela Kim, HR Mgr, Zymo Research Corporation, 17062 Murphy Ave., Irvine, CA 92614.

CFO (Garden Grove, CA) Supervise employees performing financial reporting, accounting, billing, collections, payroll&budgeting duties; Coordinate&direct the financial planning, budgeting, procurement/ investment activities of all/ part of an organization; Develop internal control policies, guidelines&procedures for activities such as budget administration, cash&credit management/accounting. 40 hrs/wk, Bachelor’s in Business Administration or related req’d and Min 5 yrs of experience as a CFO or related req’d. Resume to Chun-Ha Insurance Services, Inc. Attn. Minsung Ko, 9122 Garden Grove Blvd, Garden Grove, CA 92844

Computer Programmer (Irvine, CA) Comprehend client's management challenges & develop computer program functional requirements to facilitate & support management decisions; Perform / direct revision, repair, or expansion of existing programs to increase operating efficiency / adapt to new requirements; Design & write well designed, efficient code on time & with high quality in C++, Python, C, SQL (MySQL), or other programming languages. 40hrs/wk, Bachelor’s in Computer Science or related reqd. Resume to Kayuga Solution, Inc. Attn. Colin Chung, 9641 Irvine Center Dr, Irvine, CA 92618

Notice of the Initiation of the Section 106 Process: Public Participation AT&T Mobility LLC plans to install a new telecommunications facility at: 680 California Avenue Irvine, CA 92617 The project consists of the removal and installation of a new 91’-6” tall replacement light pole with nine 8’-0” tall panel antennas mounted at tip heights of 56’-0”, 67’-0”, and 78’-0”. Associated equipment will be installed in a new lease area. No alternatives to the project were identified. Public Comments for this project should be forwarded to: Joyce McDonnell Bechtel Infrastructure and Power Corporation 16808 Armstrong Avenue, Suite 225 Irvine, CA 92606 jwlau@bechtel.com (949) 372-4469

RE-UP: FTP Specials: 3G's Private Reserve $30 | 3G's Gold Crumble | 7G's Top Shelf | FREE PreRoll w/ $10 Donation 8851 Garden Grove Blvd, Ste 105 Garden Grove, CA 92844 | 714.586.1565

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Market Research Analyst: Apply by mail only to Pacmet International, Inc., 26040 Acero, #214, Mission Viejo, CA 92691, attn. President.

Computer Network Support Specialist (Irvine, CA). Analyze network data to improve website functionality, define network usage and server function. Bachelor’s or higher degree in computer science. 1 year experience. Experience may be completed before or after university degree. Resume to Allen Anthonysamy, SOLO Business Systems, Inc., 15041-A Bake Parkway, Irvine, CA 92618.

525 Legal Services

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Market Research Analyst Analyze statistical data to forecast future market trends & FPD industry, gather info. re: company customers/competitors, analyze conditions that may impact sales by researching market conditions, changes in industry. Must be able to perform job duties. Bachelor's degree in Economics req'd. Resume: Signet FPD, Inc. 75 Columbia, Aliso Viejo CA 92656.

Certified Public Accountant (Irvine, CA) Perform financial statement audits for CPA firm clients. California CPA license req'd. Resume to: PK LLP, 2100 Main St., #200, Irvine, CA 92614.

Software Engineer (Irvine, CA) Develop, create/modify general computer applications software&specialized utility programs; Design software/customize software for client use with the aim of optimizing operational efficiency; Analyze/ design databases within an application area, working individually or coordinating database development as part of a team. 40hrs/wk, Bachelor’s in Computer Engineering or related Reqd. Resume to Kakao Games USA, Inc. Attn: Jeonghee Jin. 7 Corporate Park #150, Irvine, CA 92606

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Chemical Engineer Recon Engineering & Construction, Inc. is hiring in Los Alamitos. Must have at least 2 years of progressive experience as a Chemical Engineer. Assess chemical equipment and processes to improve performance while ensuring compliance with safety and environmental regulations. Fulltime. Mail Resume to P.O. Box 93120, Long Beach, CA 90809

Accountant (Buena Park, CA) Prepare asset, liability, and capital account entries by compiling and analyzing account information. Documents financial transactions by entering account information; Report to management regarding the finances of company. 40hrs/ wk, Bachelor in Economics or related req’d. Resume to Sureung America Inc Attn: Dong H KO, 6281 Beach Blvd #318, Buena Park, CA 90621

ENGINEERING Staff Process Eng’r in Foothill Ranch, CA. Review & modify prod. schedules, eng’g specifications, orders, & related info regarding mfg methods, procedures, & activities in the indus. manufacture of optica prod. Reqs: Master’s + 2 yrs exp. Apply: Oakley, Inc., Attn: S. Shrivastav, Job ID# SE1031, 1 Icon, Foothill Ranch, CA 92610

530 Misc. Services

Top Shelf Anaheim: $35 CAP | FTP: 4.5 Gram 8th OR $10 OFF Concentrates | Free DABS with Any Donation. DOGO Deals & oz Specials 3124 W. Lincoln Ave. Anaheim | 714.385.7814

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South Coast Safe Access: FTP: Buy an 1/8, Get a FREE 1/8 | 1900 Warner Ave Ste. A, Santa Ana 92705 | 949.474.7272 | Mon-Sat 10am-8pm Sun 11am-7pm

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STOREFRONT Gram Kings: DAILY DEALS | Discounts for Military, Veterans, Disabled | 10189 Westminster Ave. Suite #217, Garden Grove 714.209.8187 | Hours: Monday-Sunday 10am-10pm

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CONDITIONS: All advertisements are published upon the representation by the advertiser and/or agency that the agency and advertiser are authorized to publish the entire contents and subject matter thereof, that the contents are not unlawful, and do not infringe on the rights of any person or entity and that the agency and advertiser have obtained all necessary permission and releases. Upon the OC Weekly’s request, the agent or advertiser will produce all necessary permission and releases. In consideration of the publication of advertisements, the advertiser and agency will indemnify and save the OC Weekly harmless from and against any loss or expenses arising out of publication of such advertisements. The publisher reserves the right to revise, reject or omit without notice any advertisement at any time. The OC Weekly accepts no liability for it’s failure, for any cause, to insert an advertisement. Publication and placement of advertisements are not guaranteed. Liability for any error appearing in an advertisement is limited to the cost of the space actually occupied. No allowance, however, will be granted for an error that does not materially affect the value of an advertisement. To qualify for an adjustment, any error must be reported within 15 days of publication date. Credit for errors is limited to first insertion. Drawings, artwork and articles for reproduction are accepted only at the advertiser’s risk and should be clearly marked to facilitate their return. The OC Weekly reserves the right to revise its advertising rates at any time. Announcements of an increase shall be made four weeks in advance to contract advertisers. No verbal agreement altering the rates and/or the terms of this rate card shall be recognized.

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1 ST LICENSED MEDICAL MARIJUANA DISPENSARY IN ORANGE COUNTY

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VOTED

Christopher Glew

BEST LAWYER

2016

Christopher Glew

DEFENSE ATTORNEY IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Winning groundbreaking trials in the field of medical marijuana in the state of California. Called “The hottest criminal defense attorney in Orange County,” he has been recognized as one of the 2015 Top Lawyers in California by American Lawyer Media, and one of the Top 100 Criminal Trial Lawyers Southern California by the National Trial Lawyers Association.

Best Of winner • 2016 •

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