Riverfront Times, January 11, 2023

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by THEO WELLING

FIVE QUESTIONS for Psychic Jillaine Marie

At the start of a new year, everyone wants to know what the future holds, so we sat down with St. Louis psychic Jillaine Marie to find out more about communing with the dead and reading people s futures and to hear if she had any bold predictions for t. ouis in 2023. This interview is edited and condensed for clarity.

When did you start making predictions?

I would see energy in the room when I was five years old, but I didn’t understand it at the time. Through the course of my life, I would have what would be considered paranormal or supernatural experiences. After the death of a family member, an awakening happened, and I started to develop my skill set to help others.

When you were young and saw spirits, did you ever figure out who they were?

I was speaking to my mother as I started to develop my gifts, and explained to her that during meditation, a heavyset woman with a bun in her hair was just sitting with a stoic expression, and she was holding a baby. My mother said, “Oh, that’s so strange. That’s your great-grandmother that you never met. She died before you were born.”

So do you interact with the dead?

I read the energy of the physical living and spiritually living by coordinating different types of readings. A psychic session is about life, future relationships, career... In a mediumship reading, I make connections with the deceased in spirit. I don’t control who comes in, but they step into the room and show me a version of themselves. It’s really quite beautiful because they’re really excited to communicate how their afterlife is going.

Do you communicate with dead pets?

Absolutely. The animal communication is my favorite thing, by far. I’ve communicated with horses and dogs and cats, obviously, bunnies, birds, fish. Fish don’t have much to say.

Do you have any predictions about St. Louis in 2023? Maybe weather related?

Previously On

LAST WEEK IN ST. LOUIS

MONDAY, JANUARY 2 Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapses on the field, and the nation holds its breath. The NFL increasingly feels like the vestige of a world that considered body blows entertainment. Does anyone really want their kid to regularly risk death for a six-figure payday?

TUESDAY, JANUARY 3 We can’t remember when we ever had a January this balmy. Is it churlish to also ask for a tiny bit of sun?

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4 If you’re tired of people using the state attorney general’s office as a launching pad for the U.S. Senate, imagine how Governor Mike Parson feels. The poor schmoe from Bolivar is on his third A.G.! As the latest man to take the office, Andrew Bailey, gets sworn in, Parson tells reporters that he and Bailey “did do this private blood oath ... he cannot run for any other office for a while.” Would that he secured a similar oath from now-Senator Eric Schmitt

THURSDAY, JANUARY 5 Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft’s plan to target libraries for offering books he doesn’t like drew 20,000 pages of comments, the Post-Dispatch reports. Ashcroft’s spokeswoman acknowledges that negative responses outweighed the positive, but sniped that commenters who didn’t offer alternatives to Ashcroft’s proposal “were not especially helpful.” In that spirit: How about we let libraries do what they do?

ESCAPE HATCH

he’ll take him on. Left-wing populism vs. right-wing populism — or Yale undergrad vs. Yale Law? Poor Missouri has no actual working people to run; we’re too busy working. Speaking of: More than 40 people have filed to run for St. Louis alderman Only two are running unopposed: Shane Cohn, in the new third ward, and President Megan Ellyia Green. Is the SlayKrewson-Coatar coalition finally done? Jennifer Florida ain’t giving up — the former alderwoman is running in the new sixth. For those who like their political nostalgia with a dive-bar twist, Ken “Cat’s Meow” Ortmann aims for a comeback in the new eighth.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 7 Just after midnight, the 15th vote is the charm for House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Just a few hours later, in St. Louis, a man was shot on the edge of Soulard at 2:16 a.m. — the year’s first homicide. KSDK reports he may have been trying to steal a car. New year, same St. Louis.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 8 It’s Dia de los Reyes, and the three kings were in view on Cherokee Street. Call it Epiphany, call it the 12th day of Christmas — the holidays are over. Time to recycle that tree and hunker down for the dark days of January

We ask three St. Louisans what they re reading watching or listening to. In the hot seat this week: three University of Missouri-St. Louis professors.

Eike Bauer, chemistry professor Reading: MSN and abc.com “Those two sites offer a good starting point to get into a topic or catch up with the latest news for free.”

Beth Huebner, criminology and criminal justice professor Listening to: errible han s for As ing, a podcast by Nora McInerny “Nora is a magnificent, poignant storyteller who doesn’t shy away from the tough topics of life.”

—Rosalind Early

I do sense that there will be flooding throughout the seasons. But one of my biggest predictions for St. Louis is that the younger generation is wanting change and coming into the political arena. I’m not political, but I see a lot of change coming for the older establishment.

Nathan Muchhala, evolutionary ecology professor Watching: The English on Amazon “There are interesting characters, and it feels historically accurate.” (He also wanted to squeeze in an honorable mention for The Broken Earth Trilogy [he’s reading it], by N. K. Jemisin. “This is an excellent fantasy series by an African American author.”)

6 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
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FRONT BURNER
Jillaine Marie works as a psychic in St. Louis. | COURTESY PHOTO FRIDAY, JANUARY 6 On the two-year anniversary of Josh Hawley running through the Capitol like a yellow-bellied chicken, Lucas Kunce announces

CHRIS ANDOE’S SOCIETY PAGE WEEKLY WTF?!

Touring Bellefontaine Cemetery with Joe Shields

Dumpster Watch

Date and time of sighting: January 4, 11:30 a.m.

Location: hurled through the air after being the victim of a collision, ultimately coming to rest in a resident’s backyard near Lindell Boulevard and Sarah Street

Time of departure: 2 a.m. that morning

Apparent distance of flight: one (1) alley

Mechanism by which flight was achieved: flaming Mercedes-Benz traveling at high speeds, driven by a man with no memory of the crash

Contents at lift-off: a cardboard box labeled “glass”

SO ST. LOUIS

e American Entrepreneur

An anonymous story about something that could only happen in the Gateway City

The crack/meth/fentanyl dealership across the street is a thriving business and a great testament to the endurance of the American Entrepreneur. It has been in business for almost five years. To date, two dead bodies have been hauled out — young women with little children right by their sides when they keeled over. There is also a substantial junk pile in the backyard. Somebody somewhere is missing a lot of copper pipe and electrical wire. So far, only one bullet has been shot through my house. I was on a job at the time.

About once a year, the city, sometimes joined by county police, will creep in before sun up, bash the doors down with battering rams, charge in and haul six to eight people out in handcuffs. It is an exciting thing to watch as I pack my lunchbox and fill

my thermos. Doors flying off the hinges, dogs barking and snarling, people yelling and flashlight beams darting every which way. Everybody on the block turns out to watch the show.

Then all is quiet for about four days. Really peaceful. But before the week is out, the endless stream of cars begin to come and go. No mufflers. Plastic bags where the glass used to be. Riding on a donut tire. Never, ever a license plate. Speaking before the city officials is less productive than speaking before an old oak tree. Those elected officials don’t live on this block or anywhere near it. Neither do the police officers. It’s just the retired pensioners and the blue-collar working people that live here.

I’m just a dumb welder, but the solution is so simple, I don’t understand why somebody of importance and brains hasn’t figured it out yet.

Send your So St. Louis story to jsrogen@euclidmediagroup.com.

It was a crisp fall day when the affable Joe Shields, development officer for Bellefontaine Cemetery and Arboretum, enthusiastically greeted me near the property’s stone and iron gates. My interest had been piqued after seeing the cemetery’s fresh and modern social media advertisements for its numerous events, including one called Death Positive Festival. “Fresh and modern” aren’t terms I would expect to assign to a historic cemetery, much less “social,” and I wanted to learn more about the people behind the programming. That led me to Shields.

“You’re in the region’s most underutilized cultural institution,” Shields proudly says as we begin our tour of the 314-acre north St. Louis property with its gothic tombstones and architecturally significant mausoleums — from the circa 1892 Wainwright Tomb, designed by Louis Sullivan to be “The Taj Mahal of St. Louis,” to the new and mysterious Cascade Mausoleum, the striking $5.3 million modern structure whose anonymous owners have everyone speculating.

“In addition to being a resting place... we’re a Level III arboretum — the first in Missouri to achieve that accreditation... We have 9,000 trees, five species of which are rare,” Shields says.

Bellefontaine is where the beer barons, captains of industry and those with major roles in the nation’s western expansion are laid to rest. The staff and team of volunteers study their 89,000 residents, even reviewing their last will and testaments and probate records. Shields has endless anecdotes about the residents as we wind our way through the grounds.

“Were you aware the first recorded cocktail party in the U.S. was held in the Central West End?” Shields asks. “The venue was the current Archbishop’s Mansion... The home was built for St. Louis beer baron William Nolker, and it was sold to Julius S. Walsh Jr. after Nolker’s death in 1906. The Walsh Family hosted the first cocktail party. William Nolker is a Bellefontaine resident, and his large family mausoleum is located on Prospect Street, loosely referred to as Millionaires Row. His neighbor to the left is the Eberhard Anheuser Mausoleum, and seven ad-

dresses up on the same side of the street is the Lemp Mausoleum. I tell people on my tours that Bellefontaine is a ‘collision of coincidence’ because of the way local, regional and national history intersect here. I’ve researched and visited numerous cemeteries all around the country, and Bellefontaine is a bona fide treasure of the rural cemetery movement of the 19th century.”

Such detailed knowledge can come in handy for more than anecdotes. For instance, a dozen years ago when it seemed the entire city was charmed by an apparent fraudster with a key to the Lemp Mausoleum, claiming to be an heir and charging for tours, Bellefontaine staff weren’t fooled. They padlocked the doors.

The legitimate Lemp heirs do allow tours, and the Greek Revival tomb was a highlight of my visit. “It was completed in 1902 with heat and electricity,” Shields tells me.

Born right across the street, Shields has a family connection to the cemetery that goes back five generations to 1875, with the opening of the family floral business which overlooked the property. He felt such a connection to Bellefontaine that when not at his high-pressure job handling logistics for Bunge North America, Shields was serving as a volunteer tour guide.

When COVID-19 hit and he lost his mother, he re-prioritized his life. “I developed and presented a business proposal to justify a full-time position. I still can’t believe I get to do this every day.”

Shields has planned over 100 events for 2023, including bird watching, themed tours, 5K and 10K runs, and theatrical performances from the Hawthorne Players about notables interred at Bellefontaine. “Nothing could have prepared us for the experience they provided by bringing our residents’ stories to life,” Shields says about the show Voices of Bellefontaine

When looking at our city, it’s easy to write off cemeteries as, no pun intended, dead space. But at Bellefontaine, you will find an urban oasis filled with over 300 species of migrating birds. You’ll enjoy world-renowned gardens, explore incredible architecture and meet fascinating people working to keep our stories alive. n

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 7
YOU WANT SERIOUS? WE’LL GET SERIOUS... JUST NOT QUITE YET [ ]

HARTMANN

New Attorney General Hits the Ground Walking

Andrew Bailey is poised to keep his o ce friendly to illegal slots and MAGA suits

On the door above the office of the Missouri attorney general is a plaque that reads as follows:

“I may be nothing special, but the last two guys were lying insurrectionists.”

OK, I made that up. But it would make a fine catchphrase for Attorney eneral Andrew Bailey, the latest lucky fellow to obtain higher office the old fashioned way by getting appointed by Governor Mike Parson.

Bailey has the benefit of following two of the easiest acts to follow since that time Kanye est and Marjorie Taylor reene co hosted om Kippur services. If Bailey doesn’t come to work for the next two years, they’ll list him on every “Political ising Stars” list in America.

First came now Senator Josh Hawley, tragically elected A in by an unwitting electorate. Despite serving only minutes, Hawley set the gold standard for shamelessness by actually yes, not metaphorically having his Senate campaign operation run his state office.

Hawley’s attempt to cover up emails between taxpayer-funded staff and political consultants resulted in a Sunshine aw violation. In something less than a profile in courage, Bailey told reporters last week, “I’m not going to second guess how other offices have carried out their legal responsibilities under the transparency laws I can only be responsible for how I’m going to do it.”

Parson replaced Hawley in with (yech) Senator elect ric

Schmitt (then state treasurer) after a search that certainly did not entail combing the state’s law libraries. Schmitt was different than Hawley. After two deceiving years of relative normalcy, Schmitt one upped Hawley in the realm of political treachery.

Schmitt didn’t bother to bring campaign operatives into his state office. Instead, his Senate campaign acquired the office as a wholly owned subsidiary. The “no one does political amicus briefs like us” slogan on the official A stationery should have been a dead giveaway.

The good news within the state is that Hawley and Schmitt are long gone on their respective missions to destroy American democracy. They’ll only be coming back to Missouri for fundraisers and the occasional that’s me wearing overalls on a tractor photo op.

Parson joked last week at Bailey’s swearing in ceremony that his appointee had “sworn a blood oath” not to seek another office, as Hawley and Schmitt had done.

“I really want some stability in the attorney general’s office, and I think Andrew’s going to bring that,” Parson said. That’s a fine vote of confidence. And thanks, governor, for the tacit admission that Bailey’s predecessors were unstable. But they were at lot worse than that.

So what can Missouri expect from Bailey hich of Missouri’s most pressing criminal justice concerns does Bailey have on his radar

ell, funny thing there. The only headline item that came out of Bailey’s inaugural speech and an ensuing press conference was what he would not be doing as attorney general enforcing the state’s law against illegal gambling. And no, that’s not a joke.

“Bailey told reporters that thousands of unregulated and untaxed slot machines are the responsibility of local jurisdictions,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. “That is an issue that’s up to local law enforcement investigators and local prosecutors.”

As the reporting went on to note, adroitly, “that posture is similar to one adopted by Schmitt, who could have issued an advisory opinion on the legality of the gambling devices as they began to flood gas stations, liquor stores and other establishments in recent years.”

Schmitt, of course, had no interest whatsoever in annoying the illegal slot machine industry. There was no MA A connection and thus no electoral benefit to wasting time and scarce resources on a topic that didn’t target President Joe Biden.

And there was this Former epublican state epresentative Steve Tilley, now the most powerful lobbyist in Missouri, counts among his most prized clients the companies who operate the aforementioned gaming machines which those companies insist are legal. Tilley has been a close ally of Parson, to put it mildly.

Far be it from me to judge whether these apparent slot machines violate Missouri’s apparent laws on the subject of apparent gambling. et’s just say they’re controversial enough that in Schmitt felt compelled to return two , contributions from the owner (and his spouse) of Torch lectronics, based in ildwood, which had been battling the state in court on the subject.

By amazing coincidence, Schmitt took this principled step immediately after the Post-Dispatch inquired about whether having accepted it might not constitute a conflict of interest. hat a guy.

If you’re thinking Bailey plans to diverge from Schmitt, not so fast. It seems to have escaped statewide attention in the media, but this little tidbit from the Jefferson City News-Tribune provided insight into just how much Bailey might be full of Schmitt

“Bailey said his office is still reviewing lawsuits created by his predecessor. Schmitt filed lawsuits to prop up a wide range of conservative stances, taking aim at social media companies for allegedly censoring free speech and suing school districts for requiring masks and conducting diversity training, which he labels critical race theory. He also sued to block President Joe Biden’s student debt forgiveness plan.

“ e are absolutely going to look at every lawsuit,’ Bailey said. I’m not here to start dismissing lawsuits. e’re going to continue to push back against President Biden’s illicit federal overreach, and we’re going to look for new opportunities to do that in the coming days.’”

onderful. xpect more epublican MA A messaging at Mis-

souri taxpayers’ expense any day now. And what should those taxpayers not expect Pretty much anything else, it seems.

“Bailey declined to state priorities for his two years in office when his appointment was announced,” the News-Tribune reported. “He said Tuesday consumer protection and violent crime are among his top priorities.”

That’s great. But wait “On the violent crime front, Bailey said local communities have got to get it under control,’ adding the Attorney eneral’s Office stands ready to assist.”

If that doesn’t have the state’s criminal class shaking in its boots, what could On the positive side, Bailey did not promise to continue Schmitt’s ongoing crackdown on St. ouis city officials for “holding office while Black.” But who knows

Bailey might be just saying the things a epublican needs to say upon having the baton passed to him by a couple of nationally infamous scumbag traitors. There will be actions or inactions by the new attorney general upon which he should be judged.

ive the guy a chance. Maybe he’ll live up to the lofty principles he stated last week at his inauguration, as reported by the NewsTribune:

“The former arren ounty prosecutor said the .S. onstitution represents a national identity formed on the legal agreement that everyone is created equally and rights come from od. He said the legal system is designed to protect those rights, even when it’s inconvenient. The Missouri onstitution comes from the will of the people, and the government it creates is instituted for the good of the people,’ Bailey said.”

I’m not sure what any of that has to do with, say, enforcing Missouri’s gambling laws. Neither, apparently, does Bailey.

But those words don’t match any description with which the likes of Hawley and Schmitt could ever be confused. And that’s perhaps a good thing.

After all, the only direction Andrew Bailey can go is up. n

8 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
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Ray Hartmann founded the Riverfront Times in 1977. Contact him at rhartmann1952@ gmail.com or catch him at 7 p.m. on Thursdays on Nine PBS.

Amber McLaughlin Put to Death

Missouri carried out the nation’s first execution of an openly transgender woman

This story was commissioned by the River City Journalism Fund as part of its series Shadow of Death, which considers St. Louis County’s use of the death penalty.

On January 3 at a prison in Bonne Terre, the state of Missouri carried out the first execution of an openly transgender woman in the history of the United States.

Amber Mc aughlin, , was put to death for the murder of Beverly uenther. Mc aughlin, then known as Scott, raped and stabbed uenther, , years ago in arth City, Missouri, before dumping her body in the city of St. Louis.

Mc aughlin’s final moments were spent in a small white room in the state’s astern eception and Diagnostic Corrections Center. She was accompanied by a spiritual adviser, auren Bennett, who sat by her side when a milligram dose of pentobarbital was administered at p.m. hat appeared to be the outline of a strap used to secure Mc aughlin to a hospital like bed could be seen beneath the white linen under which she lay.

Bennett appeared to speak and sing to Mc aughlin after the injection. Mc aughlin breathed heavily a few times before succumbing to the drugs. The official time of death was p.m.

Mc aughlin’s final written statement was, “I am sorry for what I did. I am a loving and caring person.” The morning of January , Mc aughlin was served a final meal of a cheeseburger, French fries, a strawberry milkshake and peanut M&Ms.

The execution represents the

first time a woman has been put to death in Missouri since , when the federal government executed Bonnie Brown Heady for kidnapping and murdering a child.

The younger brother of Mc aughlin’s victim, Al edepohl, , witnessed the execution. He remembers uenther as “the best sister anybody could ask for,” a woman whose life was taken from her just as she was reinventing herself after her marriage collapsed.

“After the depression of the divorce, she was finally starting to bring herself back on track,”

edepohl says. uenther hadn’t worked when she was married, and the house she lived in hadn’t belonged to her, but edepohl recalls his sister in the wake of the divorce establishing an independent life. She bought a car. She bought a house.

“She was really turning her life around,” edepohl says. “It took a few years, but she finally got herself back together.”

Then she met Mc aughlin.

“The worst mistake she ever made,” edepohl says.

edepohl met Mc aughlin in and described his sister’s murderer as manipulative, controlling and “very abusive, physically and mentally.”

edepohl recalls a get together uenther had arranged so her brother and sister in law could meet Mc aughlin, but at the gath-

ering Mc aughlin walked right past edepohl and his wife without saying a word.

The relationship between uenther and Mc aughlin devolved into abuse. hen uenther tried to end it, Mc aughlin stalked and harassed her, burglarizing her home in October .

“[Mc aughlin] had this thing that was like a fatal attraction. It was either you’d be with me, or you’re not,” edepohl says. “That was even more messed up because he was living with someone else.”

In the months before her murder, uenther filed a restraining order against Mc aughlin and, according to court filings, said in her victim impact statement that Mc aughlin “threatened her and her friends” and “showed up at her job and watched everything’ that she did.”

On November , , Mc aughlin abducted uenther outside the office where she worked. Mc aughlin raped her and stabbed her to death before leaving her lifeless body in the Patch neighborhood in south St. Louis, near the banks of the Mississippi iver.

Mc aughlin had been due in court on stalking charges the very next day.

After a four day trial in , the jury in the case was unanimous that Mc aughlin had murdered uenther, but they couldn’t agree on whether the punishment should be life in prison or death.

ith the jury deadlocked, the decision was left to St. ouis ounty ircuit Judge Steven oldman. He ruled that Mc aughlin deserved to die.

Court transcripts show that oldman thought the “depravity of mind” with which Mc aughlin killed uenther ultimately warranted death.

“I think that Beverly uenther lived at the end a tortured life, and she died a tortured death, and this was at your hands,” oldman said, addressing Mc aughlin. “You made her worst fears come true when you killed her.”

More than a decade later, Mc aughlin was incarcerated in Potosi orrectional enter in when another inmate there, Jessica Hicklin, won a landmark lawsuit allowing transgender incarcerated Missourians access to gender affirming care.

Hicklin previously told the Riverfront Times that because of her success in the courts, she became a mentor to other transgender inmates. One day, Hicklin was introduced to Mc aughlin for the first time as Amber.

“Now, this makes sense,” Hicklin recalled thinking. “I’ve known you for a long time, you didn’t necessarily seem very comfortable in your skin, and now you’re smiling.”

Mc aughlin said in December that she started wearing women’s clothing around age , though she had to do so away from her parents and guardians.

“I knew then this is what I wanted to be,” she said. “But I had to always do it secretly.”

edepohl, the brother of Mc aughlin’s victim, says that he’s been bothered by the recent focus on Mc aughlin’s identity as a transgender woman. He feels that his sister has been entirely lost in the onslaught of news coverage given to Mc aughlin’s case in the past month.

He says that he doesn’t want to belittle anyone, but he feels like Mc aughlin’s transition is a “ploy.” He adds, “It seems like it’s pretty premeditated to try to get out of the death penalty.”

Mc aughlin’s attorneys and other supporters lobbied until the end for her life to be spared. They say that her gender identity should have no bearing on her

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 9
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Amber McLaughlin, 49, was executed by the state of Missouri on January 3. | JEREMY WEIS

AMBER MCLAUGHLIN

case.

Hicklin, who was released from prison earlier this year, has been outspoken in her support for sparing McLaughlin’s life. She stressed in an interview with St. Louis Public Radio that people have been hurt by McLaughlin, and that an appeal for her life to be spared can’t minimize that. However, she added, “At the end of the day, whatever mistake Amber has made, it does not warrant taking her life. … We can’t set the example of retributive killings.”

McLaughlin’s attorneys had hoped her death sentence might be overturned because it was Judge Goldman who handed down a sentence of death, not the jury.

“McLaughlin’s trial jury did not recommend the death penalty — it was imposed by the trial judge,” McLaughlin’s attorneys wrote in a clemency application to Governor Mike Parson. Only Missouri and Indiana, they wrote, allow a trial judge to impose the death penalty after a jury deadlock.

In 2016, a judge vacated McLaughlin’s death sentence, changing it to life in prison. However, in 2021, a three-judge panel in the U.S. Court of Appeals reversed that decision and reinstated the death penalty. On September 19, the Missouri Supreme Court issued a warrant of execution in the name of Scott McLaughlin.

McLaughlin’s supporters have pointed to prolonged, egregious abuse McLaughlin suffered as a child. McLaughlin had been placed in foster care as a child after being exposed to alcohol in the womb and suffering abuse

as a toddler. After a stint in foster care, McLaughlin ended up in a “house of horrors,” according to her attorneys, with her adoptive father, a police officer, tasing her and using his nightstick on her. He also routinely locked the house’s refrigerator and cabinets to withhold food from children in his care.

Teachers reported calling in multiple complaints that McLaughlin was abused and neglected. A childhood IQ test showed her in the “borderline or very low range.”

In the clemency application, McLaughlin’s attorneys wrote that she “never had a chance. She was failed by the institutions, individuals and interventions that should have protected her, and her abusers obstructed the care she so desperately needed.”

Among those lobbying for McLaughlin’s life to be spared were U.S. Representatives Cori Bush (D-St. Louis) and Emanuel Cleaver (D-Kansas City). They wrote in a letter to Parson, “Each of us is more than the worst thing we’ve ever done.”

In a letter to the governor, a group of clergy called Guenther’s murder “a tragic waste of life,” writing, “We strongly believe … society can adequately protect human life without capital punishment.”

Any hope for clemency was dashed on January 3 around 10 a.m. when the governor’s office issued a statement saying that McLaughlin’s execution would go through. Like the Supreme Court, Parson used the name “Scott McLaughlin” in issuing the order. Mc aughlin also signed her final written statement in that name as well.

“McLaughlin’s conviction and sentence remains,”Parson’s statement said in part. “Ms. Guenther’s family and loved ones deserve peace.”

Missouri Department of Corrections Spokeswoman Karen Pojmann said that approximately 51 protesters were present at Bonne Terre to protest McLaughlin’s execution.

In addition to state witnesses and members of the media, two individuals representing Guenther and two there at the request of McLaughlin witnessed the execution. None of the witnesses chose to speak to the press. n

For more on the River City Journalism Fund, which provided funding for this project and seeks to support local journalism in St. Louis, please see rcjf.org.

‘Crypto’ Mayor Faces Reckoning

build up private wealth. At the time, each bitcoin was worth $60,000. Now the value of an individual bitcoin has fallen to less than $17,000.

Stewart never revealed where the money for the bitcoin giveaway program would come from, other than to say the source would be a wealthy benefactor.

The council approved 13 individual charges against Stewart during a December 21 meeting. The charges center on Stewart’s refusal to obey council directives. Stewart allegedly:

The Cool Valley City Council plans to hold a hearing to impeach and remove Mayor Jayson Stewart on Wednesday, January 25. Last month, the council voted on charges that Stewart has allegedly refused to follow council directives, including refusing to share city financial records, disclose the whereabouts of $230,000 in COVID-19 relief funds and return a city-owned police car and gas card.

The city of 1,100 people, near St. Louis Lambert International Airport, has hired St. Louis attorney Paul Martin, at a fee of $250 per hour, to prosecute the case against Stewart, a job that includes presenting evidence to support the charges against the mayor.

Three of the four council members must vote to remove Stewart before he loses his job as mayor, a part-time position that pays $300 per month. Stewart, who is responsible for his own legal counsel, may appeal the impeachment and removal vote to a St. Louis County judge.

Stewart, 32, did not return calls seeking comment. His clashes with the city council were the subject of a recent Riverfront Times cover story. (See Mike Fitzgerald’s “Crypto Mayor,” October 12, 2022.)

In the fall of 2021, Stewart won national attention when he proposed giving every Cool Valley resident $1,000 worth of bitcoin, the cryptocurrency, as a way to

• failed to take action to ensure the city prepared an annual budget for fiscal year 2023 and failed to file an annual financial report or provide for an annual audit as required by law.

• refused to return a city-owned 2014 Dodge Charger and gas card after being directed to do so repeatedly by the council.

• ignored multiple council requests to order then-Cool Valley City Clerk Cheryl Wallace to provide financial records to the council to assess the city’s financial status and its compliance with Missouri law. These requests included bank statements, documentation of employee work hours, documents showing the city account balances for 2022, copies of all checks paid during that time and specific documentation related to $230,000 in federal COVID relief funds.

• refused to order Wallace, who quit her job in November, to comply with these council directives, and further failed to discipline the clerk for her insubordination.

Stewart is a graduate of the prestigious John Burroughs School in Ladue. He won the Cool Valley mayorship in April 2020 in a landslide. His LinkedIn profile states that he ran a successful recording studio and then a St. Louis-based company called PL28, which aimed to clean plastic trash from the ocean. It remains unclear if PL28 had any employees or made any money.

10 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
Continued from pg 9 Beverly Guenther was murdered in 2003. | COURTESY OF AL WEDEPOHL
With many unanswered questions and missing COVID relief funds, Cool Valley’s city council moves to impeach its mayor
n
Jayson Stewart, the mayor of Cool Valley, is facing impeachment. | THEO WELLING

Radio Host Leaves Show Amid Scandal

e Rizzuto Show’s Patrico allegedly messaged fans wanting nudes

St. Louis radio station KPNT 105.7

“The Point” announced last week that host Tony Patrico has left the station amid ongoing allegations that he messaged fans with sexually suggestive comments.

The station, run by Hubbard Radio, posted the news on Facebook at 10:11 a.m., saying, “Tony Patrico is no longer with Hubbard Radio or a member of The Rizzuto Show. The show returns as scheduled tomorrow at 6am.”

Patrico and 105.7 The Point have not responded to messages from RFT

In recent weeks, a Facebook user named Robert Reynolds and Twitter account called “HellNoPatrico” have accused Patrico of inappropriately messaging women.

Both social media accounts use as their profile picture a caricature of Patrico with a line through it, with text reading, “Get Patrico off the Rizz Show.” Both have posted a slew of screenshots al-

legedly sent from someone named Tony Patrico. In those screenshots, Tony Patrico can be seen asking women for nude photos and making sexually suggestive comments. He follows up some of the messages by saying he is kidding.

After the news was announced last Wednesday morning, The Rizzuto Show co-host Scott Rizzuto offered a short statement posted on the radio station’s YouTube page as well as an audio message. He said he could not comment extensively on Patrico’s departure because it is a “personnel issue.”

“We cannot get into the specifics of it,” he said on air. “All I can say — and I’m speaking for all of us here — we are in complete shock. To say the last couple of days have been difficult is the understatement of the century. And we’re still all processing everything that happened. We’re sad, we’re devastated. We have spoken with Tony. He is our friend. But this is really hard. Again, speaking for all of us here on the show, we have nothing but compassion and empathy for everyone involved in the situation.”

Patrico had served as a member of

The Rizzuto Show on KPNT 105.7 FM since 2014.

The Point’s Facebook post about Patrico’s departure has drawn more than 1,000 shares and 1,500 comments, with multiple women posting in the comment section about their experience with Patrico. One woman wrote, “I was an intern at another station in the same office and he would always make comments and ask me for inappropriate things via snap. I felt so bad for his wife.”

Added another, “I also experienced this! The inappropriate things with the manipulative comments and statements made it hard to feel comfortable bringing this to anyone.” n

Unhoused File Lawsuit to Fight New Missouri Law

Afederal lawsuit filed by seven unhoused individuals seeks to stop enforcement of a new Missouri law banning sleeping and camping on stateowned land.

On December 21, seven individuals who are currently unhoused filed suit against the Missouri attorney general saying that the law, which went into effect January 1, is both vaguely worded and essentially criminalizes homelessness.

Attorney Stephanie Lummus, with the Cook Group, is representing the seven plaintiffs. After filing the suit, she asked the court for a temporary restraining order to stop the law from taking effect, but that was denied. She says that in the coming weeks, she’ll be asking Judge Matthew T.

Schelp to issue a temporary injunction, which would pause enforcement of the law while the suit makes its way through the courts. Ultimately, she is hoping the law is declared unconstitutional.

The new law prohibits “unauthorized sleeping, camping, or the construction of long-term shelters” on state-owned land, such as highway overpasses or state parks. But Lummus says the law doesn’t provide any explanation about what counts as “unauthorized.”

Lummus says that she is hoping to have the lawsuit eventually certified as a class action.

“You’ve got constitutional issues on the line,” she says. “You’ve got people whose freedom is subject to go away. You can get basically thrown in a cage for being poor.”

The law was part of a bill signed by Governor Mike Parson last June. Though it was introduced as a seven-page bill focused largely on county financial statements, by the time the bill passed it had transformed into a 64-page behemoth on different political subdivisions including the homelessness statutes championed by Representative Bruce DeGroot (R-Chesterfield) and Senator Holly Rehder (R-Sikeston).

Anyone caught breaking it could face a class C misdemeanor charge — a crime punishable with up to a $750 fine and 15 days in jail. Any municipality caught

not enforcing the law could get slapped with a lawsuit by the Missouri attorney general. And any municipality with a homelessness rate higher than the state average within a year of the bill’s passage could lose state funding until they rectify the problem.

DeGroot previously said in an interview with the RFT that he thinks his proposal will help the unhoused.

He and Rehder thought that instead of combating the issue through permanent housing, Missouri should direct public funding toward mental-health services and short-term housing.

DeGroot said the federal government’s Housing First model “just doesn’t work.” Prioritizing short-term housing was a less expensive and possibly safer option for the unhoused, he claimed.

In addition to banning “unauthorized” camping and sleeping, the new law redirects state funds used for permanent housing construction for the unhoused to mental-health treatment and other services, including short-term housing.

Lummus’ suit isn’t the first to call the new law into question. In September, three Missourians represented by Legal Services of Eastern Missouri and Public Citizen Litigation Group asked a judge to block the bill from taking effect. The suit claimed the law violated Missouri’s constitutional requirement that legislation

stick to only one subject.

One of the plaintiffs represented by Lummus, 63-year-old military veteran Ronald Benson, says he’s lived in the old Cotton Belt building near the Mississippi riverfront for four years with his dog, Rebel. “I’ve made this into a pretty nice little home,” Benson says of his living area on the south end of the mural-adorned building that was once a freight depot but has been long abandoned.

“One of the rooms is pretty much like a little apartment,” he says. “It’s 13 by 16, big enough for one person.”

It gets cold, Benson says, but with the help of a small propane heater and an antique wood-burning stove, he manages.

Benson says that he initially moved into the building with the permission of the people who owned it at the time, but he has trouble getting in contact with the building’s current owner Justine Petersen Properties. It took him two years “off and on” to build the space into what it is now.

Benson signed onto the lawsuit as a plaintiff because he’s stayed on stateowned land in the past and is likely to in the future.

“Sure, homeless people do create problems,” he says. “But it’s nothing like so that they need to herd us around like a bunch of cattle, which is pretty much how they treat us.” n

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 11
e law makes it a criminal behavior to sleep or camp on state-owned land
Tony Patrico was part of e Rizzuto Show for nine years. | YOUTUBE SCREENSHOT Patrico faces allegations of sending sexually suggestive messages. | TWITTER SCREENSHOT

MISSOURILAND

A Very Burlesque New Year’s

Lola van Ella’s New Year’s Eve show brought the glam

Some lucky St. Louisans rang in the new year with a little burlesque action at Lola van Ella’s Spectaculaire! A Solid Gold NYE show. The evening was billed as “a groovy, rocking, and rolling disco dance party and high glam stage show.”

It featured burlesque, drag and circus acts including Michelle Mynx, The Bon Bons, Loleezbo!, Jeez Loueez and, of course, Lola van Ella. The show included a midnight champagne toast and buffet. Guests danced the night away in their New Year’s Eve best since the shindig didn’t end until 2 a.m. n

12 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
12
riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 13
OUR HOME [ ]
A CELEBRATION OF THE UNIQUE AND FASCINATING ASPECTS OF

The Perfect LOOSE GUN LAWS SET MISSOURI UP FOR A SCHOOL SHOOTING. WILL LAST OCTOBER’S

The sound of gunfire was the first indication to Je’ ya uster that this was more than a drill.

Moments before, an announcement had sounded on her high school’s intercom. “Miles Davis is in the building” the phrase is the school’s code for an intruder.

It’d been a normal, quiet morning. Her school, entral isual and Performing Arts, or PA, had practiced school shooter drills before, so she didn’t think much of the announcement at first. But shortly after the warning blared, uster heard gunfire. indows broke in the distance. An angry voice sounded, “All of you are gonna die ”

She was so scared, the sophomore says. uster believed the voice.

The voice came from year old Orlando Harris, who on the morning of October , , stormed into his alma mater prepared for war. He held a . caliber, A style rifle. He’d strapped to his chest seven rounds of ammunition. In a field bag, he’d stuffed an additional eight magazines. All told, Harris had more than rounds of ammunition enough to do far more damage than he did.

Police would later find a manifesto in his car, a piece of notebook paper on which Harris had written about his life as an “isolated loner.”

He wrote “This was the perfect storm for a mass shooting.”

Harris was more right than he could have known. The “perfect storm” that led up to Harris’ rampage in his alma mater began long

before he decided to harm innocent students and teachers, however. It didn’t really begin with Harris, either. ather, it started with the Missouri eneral Assembly.

December marked the th anniversary of an event that most people believed unthinkable until it happened Adam anza killing innocent people at Sandy Hook lementary School in Newtown, onnecticut. hat was unimaginable in is all too common now. There were school shootings with casualties at public and private elementary and secondary schools during the school year, according to the National enter for ducation Statistics. Only school shootings occurred in the school year.

et, as mass shootings become more commonplace and other states tighten their gun laws in response, Missouri has taken steps in the opposite direction.

Since , Missouri’s epublican dominated legislature has all

but erased what little gun control the state previously had. Now, year olds can carry concealed weapons without a permit. People no longer have to receive gun safety training or pass criminal background checks to carry concealed firearms in parks, shopping malls or most public spaces. If a guardian allowed it, a child could own a gun.

Before Orlando Harris forced his way into PA, he had done nothing illegal under Missouri’s gun laws. His gun, purchased from a private seller, was bought legally despite Harris’ failure to pass an FBI background check in a separate attempt to buy one from a licensed dealer days before his rampage. Nine days prior to the shooting, his mother called St. ouis Metropolitan Police to remove her son’s weapon. But police thought they had no legal authority to do so. A law passed in bars police from enforcing federal firearm laws that don’t align with the state’s, and police erred on the side of caution.

Missouri’s gun control shortfalls are not lost to most lawmakers open to reform. This legislative session, these lawmakers are fighting for gun reform again and harder than ever before.

October’s shooting in St. ouis has spurred lawmakers to propose at least gun control measures for Missouri’s legislative session.

Backers of gun reform have tried and failed to change state laws in the past, while bracing for the possibility that a mass shooting would someday happen in their neighborhoods.

This fear became a reality for state epresentative Peter Merideth (D St. ouis) in October.

PA lies in his district. The magnet school shares a building with ollegiate School of Medicine and Bioscience.

“ e know it’s going to happen again, and we continue to do nothing about it,” says Merideth, who has four gun reform proposals on the books for this year. “It’s not just about passing common sense gun laws it’s about not passing the opposite.”

But in a state that arguably places Second Amendment rights above all others, can bringing bills to a gun fight prevail Pro reform lawmakers hope the horror of what unraveled at PA will spur their colleagues to take action.

Social studies teacher Matthew Pace had just started a new unit on the onstitution when the school’s code sounded on the intercom. It didn’t sound normal. Fuzz clicked on the sound system, and after a

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Continued on pg 16
CHANGE?
TRAGEDY PUSH THE STATE TO

Perfect Storm

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 15
A shooting at a south city high school killed a student and teacher last October. Now, lawmakers for gun reform are pushing legislation to prevent similar tragedies. | MAX BOUVATTE

PERFECT STORM

Continued from pg 14

brief moment, someone yelled “Miles Davis, Miles Davis,” and hung up. It sounded urgent, different from the apathetic tone of drills. Had he missed an email about a drill

His students, huddled against a wall in his classroom, were laughing and talking to each other as they often did in drills. Then they heard gunshots. He could hear a clip drop to the floor from what sounded like right outside his room.

In a way, Pace had prepared for this moment. He had bought a sturdy cane made of oak a few years ago after a high profile school shooting (he can’t remember which) to use for protection in case a shooter ever came to his classroom. A cane was a less conspicuous form of protection, as opposed to something like a baseball bat.

“I didn’t want something that was obviously meant as a weapon,” Pace says.

He stood by his classroom door with the cane clenched in his hands, ready to swing if the intrud-

er made his way into the room.

After about to minutes, he heard a female officer’s voice and peeked his head out to look. Pace and his students then escaped through an emergency exit.

The gravity of what he went through didn’t settle until everyone had gathered at ateway ST M High School afterward and he found out Jean Kuczka, a year old health teacher and Pace’s friend, had died from gunshot wounds.

“Mrs. Kuczka was close with everybody,” Pace says. “She was funny. She was smart. The kids loved her.”

Alexzandria Bell also lost her life that day. Among many things, she was , a dancer and a friend to many.

It didn’t take long for PA and ollegiate students to catch on to the shortcomings of their state’s laws. A week after the shooting, students lay on the steps of St. ouis ity Hall with their arms spread and eyes shut to emulate students killed by gun violence. “Justice for Alex,” they shouted. “Justice for Kuczka ”

Over a dozen legislators lis-

tened and pre filed a slew of bills for Missouri’s legislative session in response. Most proposals have already been implemented in other states and are championed by gun control advocates as “common sense” measures.

epresentative Patty ewis (D Kansas ity) wants all sales or transfers of firearms to be processed through licensed dealers. epresentative David Tyson Smith ( olumbia) has pre filed a bill to make it a class A misdemeanor for anyone younger than to buy or lease a semi automatic or automatic firearm. nder his proposal, sellers would also face a misdemeanor charge if caught selling or leasing firearms to customers younger than .

Most proposals would also create “red flag” laws, or a legal means to prevent individuals who show signs of being a threat to themselves or others from possessing a gun.

State epresentative Ian Mack-

ey (D St. ouis) had two bills in and aimed at keeping firearms out of the wrong hands. Neither made it out of committee, but October’s shooting inspired Mackey to try a third time.

There are a “whole host” of fixes that would alleviate the “epidemic” of gun violence, Mackey says. ed flag laws are a good place to start.

“There are potential changes to our gun laws that I think would have prevented the PA shooting and would mitigate further instances of gun violence,” Mackey says. “Between to states have better gun laws, including red states.”

nder Mackey’s proposal (nearly identical to his last two), anyone concerned about an individual with a firearm would be able to file an extreme risk protection order with a court, which would then determine if the owner is an extreme risk to themselves or others.

Doug Beck, a Democratic state

16 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
DeJanel Freeman (le ) embraces her daughter, Central Visual and Performing Arts High School sophomore Je’Rya Luster. | MAX BOUVATTE Alexzandria Bell, 15, died from gunshot wounds on the day of the shooting. | GOFUNDME Jean Kuczka, 61, died shielding her students from gunfire. | COURTESY PHOTO

senator from Affton, pre filed a similar bill to Mackey’s in the past aimed at installing a red flag law in Missouri. None of the bills received a hearing.

On December , Beck pre filed a new bill that would prevent anyone on the federal Terrorist Screening enter’s No Fly ist from purchasing a firearm. In a previous session, he received “a lot of pushback” for the measure.

A gun owner himself, Beck says most “responsible” gun owners should agree with tightening Missouri’s gun laws.

“This would make everyone

safe,” Beck says. “These [assault style] weapons are designed to take as many human lives as they possibly can and in a short period of time. It’s so frustrating to me especially when we’re talking about wanting to be pro life.”

Despite October’s tragedy, legislators who spoke to the RFT say opposition to gun reform from Missouri’s epublican majority will always remain.

Democrats and the lone epublican with gun reform proposals would have to convince a epublican dominated legislature to go against their rural constituents and

minimize their Second Amendment right to bear arms a right Missouri overnor Mike Parson has said he will fiercely defend.

“I’m encouraged that folks on the other side of the aisle even those who were kind of resistant to this in previous sessions see very clearly, from the evidence in this case, that this incident would have been prevented had a red flag law been in place,” Mackey says.

ill Missouri’s legislature learn from past mistakes epresentative Merideth has his doubts.

“They are opposed to any gun

law whatsoever it’s really that simple,” Merideth says. “Anything that doesn’t make it easier to have a gun, they oppose.”

But this isn’t the first time a tragic event of gun violence has shaken the St. ouis area and the lawmakers who represent it, and it’s not the first time lawmakers followed with proposed legislation bent on making it harder for guns to get in the wrong hands.

After a particularly deadly summer when children were killed by gun violence in St. ouis in , lawmakers, mostly from the state’s urban areas, filed at least bills to crack down on gun violence. None passed.

For ayquan Strickland, the reality of imminent danger dawned on him soon after he heard a large boom from somewhere in the school. Sirens blared outside, but that wasn’t out of the ordinary. A busy street lined the front of the school, so hearing sirens was normal.

But the boom was not normal. A fallen table A slammed door Surely not gunshots.

Then he heard screams.

“He just shot my teacher ” someone yelled outside.

This immediately set everyone in Strickland’s class on edge. He cowered in a corner with his classmates as they texted and called their families. He tried to remain calm as the only boy in the classroom, he says, he worried about the safety of his female classmates. ould he have to defend them

Then came more clashes and the sound of someone trying to break into a room. Then came gunshots, and more screams, and the patter of police officers’ hurried steps. The police made their way into Strickland’s classroom.

un. They were told to put their hands up and run.

Above Strickland, on the second floor, the school shooter had barricaded himself into Kuczka’s classroom, where Keshuan Brooks was in health class with Kuczka not minutes before.

Brooks and his twin brother had texted their mom, writing, “Mom, I’m about to die, I swear to od” and “Mom, there’s an intruder in the school. ou got to come get us now.”

Soon after, Harris fired shots into the classroom. Kuczka stood in front of her students as they piled through the window. Some of the students who weren’t hit by gunfire were injured by the fall, spraining their wrists or

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 17
Continued on pg 19
Brian Collins (le ) escaped October’s shooting with gunshot wounds to his hands and jaw. A erwards he called his mother, VonDina Washington (right), saying “Mama, I’m shot.” | MAX BOUVATTE CVPA senior Rayquan Strickland helped organize a rally to honor Alexzandria Bell and Jean Kuczka. | COURTESY PHOTO Social studies teacher Matthew Pace sheltered with his students during the attack, brandishing a cane to protect them. | MAX BOUVATTE
18 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com

PERFECT STORM

ankles. But adrenaline helped most of them who weren’t stopped by paramedics to run to a nearby Schnucks parking lot, where Strickland fielded call after call.

Strickland, months after the shooting, recalls the most terrifying day of his life. He speaks calmly but from a remote second person.

“You never expect this to happen to your school,” Strickland says. “It was so unreal.”

It’s early December, hardly a month after Harris shot Brian Collins’ hands and face. Collins was in Kuczka’s class — one of the students who survived by braving a fall out of his classroom’s window.

Collins had transferred to CVPA just a week before the shooting in October. He wanted to get better at drawing.

As he sits on his family’s couch in his St. Louis County home, he fiddles with the braces on his hands. They keep his hands steady until he has surgery to remove bullet fragments left in his bones. A bullet remains lodged in his right mandible that his doctors have no plans of removing, according to Collins’ mother, VonDina Washington. It landed mere centimeters from a major artery. It’s a miracle her son survived, Washington says.

A picture of Collins reached national news outlets after the shooting; the image showed him asleep in a hospital bed, a heart monitor attached to his left forefinger, his hands and forearms covered in medical wrap. Hardly six weeks after the shooting, Collins is a far cry from this image. He moves freely and seemingly without pain.

When he speaks, his words are soft and quiet.

What does he like to draw? “Whatever’s interesting.”

What would he like to do after school? “I’m not sure yet.”

Does he look forward to going back to school? He shakes his head no. “I feel like I’ll get crowded.”

Washington was like most other CVPA and Collegiate parents on the day of the shooting. She received a call at work. When she answered, Collins said, “Mama, I’m shot.” This initiated a mad dash to south city, where blocks of parents were doing the same, some leaving their vehicles in the street in a frantic pursuit to find their kids.

Two hours before, Washington recalls, she had dropped her son off at school at 7:10 a.m. and saw a teacher lock an entrance gate. It wasn’t until she finally got to Children’s Hospital where doctors tended to Collins that the situation started to sink in.

“I was like, ‘Dang, my baby got shot,’” Washington says. “My baby got shot at school.”

The weeks that followed were stressful. But now, Washington regrets rejecting the several interviews local and national journalists asked for following the shooting. She wants to call attention to deficiencies in Missouri’s gun laws.

“I wasn’t in the mental space,” she says. “But I really wish that I would have. I think there was an opportunity for voices to be heard, and I think we were silent on it.”

She’s never been too into politics. At the same time, the shooting has unwillingly put her in a position where she thinks she could help other people.

“I have to use this situation in order to help other people and hopefully prevent this from happening again,” she says. “Although, I don’t think there’s anything that we can do to prevent this.”

Washington doesn’t blame Harris’ mom. She doesn’t blame

Harris either, really. He had mental-health issues he didn’t know how to deal with, she says. Maybe, if anything, she wonders if the school could’ve had tighter security.

For Pace, his “heart breaks” for Harris, who “needed help that we have denied.” He’s gotten through the last few months by going on long walks and forgiving the legislators who, in his eyes, accepted Kuczka and Bell’s lives as an acceptable price for lenient gun laws.

The shooting’s victims don’t bother to assign blame anymore. Those who did at first are trying to move on, to heal from the worst day of their lives. Pointing fingers hasn’t brought them peace.

For Luster, moving on was hard at first. She’d lost Bell, one of her good friends.

At midnight on November 18 — what would have been Bell’s 16th birthday — Luster says she especially mourned the loss of her friend but afterward felt a sense that it was safe to move on.

It’s taken her a long time to recover, Luster says — though that day has far from permanently stifled her and her classmates’ spirits.

In short, straight-to-the-point

answers, Luster sums it up matterof-factly: “Our spirit is really uplifting,” she says, describing her own spirit as “always sunshine and rainbows.”

She adds: “That’s not something the school shooting could take away.”

Strickland had a lot of “why” questions after the shooting. Why did Harris come back to the school? Why did he hurt people he didn’t really know? Why teachers?

“I’ve realized I won’t find an answer to that question, so I won’t ask it,” Strickland says.

Instead, every time he thinks about it now, he feels grateful to have his life. He cries — not necessarily tears of sorrow, or even happiness, but a sharp feeling of something in between — a painful awe that his life could’ve ended at 17, but he’s still here. By some miracle, he’s still here.

Surrounded by family on Thanksgiving, he cried. He cried remembering “that moment,” the one where he felt he could have lost his life. The moment his friends could have lost theirs.

“For those of us who came out as survivors, for those of us who are still here, we’re definitely grateful for life,” Strickland says. “And we’re grateful for each other.” n

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Continued from pg 17
“Peace,” by David Ruggeri, is one of several murals that CVPA has added to respond to the shooting and welcome students back to in-person learning for the first time since the shooting on January 17. | COURTESY DAVID RUGGERI

CALENDAR

FRIDAY 01/13

Honoring a Legend

Celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day at the Saint Louis Art Museum (1 Fine Arts Drive, 314-721-0072, slam.org). The museum kicks things off on Friday, January 13, with the 2023 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration: Artistic Expression Uplifting the Movement. The event will feature original performances inspired by Moneta Sleet Jr.’s Pulitzer Prizewinning photography. Tabari Coleman, a community engagement moderator, will also speak about creating space for constructive dialogue in St. Louis. The event is free and runs from 6 to 7:30 p.m., but advance tickets are recommended.

On Sunday, January 15, the museum will host Art for Justice: Family Sunday in honor of King, with hands-on art activities and a storytime featuring Goodnight Racism by Ibram X. Kendi. The event is from 1 to 4 p.m. Storytime starts at 2 p.m. Admission is free.

Twisty Turny

A young woman in peril. A child in peril. A stranger who can’t be trusted — or is our protagonist’s perspective somehow deeply flawed Suspense novels can be fairly predictable in their setup, but the best authors working in the genre take the plot to places you never see coming. Is the young woman just paranoid Is she too drunk/traumatized/sleep-deprived to remember if the child is actually hers (Is the child even real ) There’s a reason they call twisty books like these page-turners, and Stacy Willingham keeps fans riveted long past bedtime. The Charleston, South Carolina, author earned raves for her debut novel A Flicker in the Dark. Now she’s back with All the Dangerous Things — and talking about it as part of the St. Louis County Library’s Favorite Author series. Willingham’s reading at the Grant’s View branch (9700 Musick Road, 314-994-3300, slcl.org/authors) is sponsored by the St. Louis County Library Foundation and free to attend. Doors

open at 6 p.m. for the 7 p.m. event, and the library suggests you come early; you’re not the only one who’s addicted to this stuff. Admission is free.

Vroom Vroom

The largest automobile event in the St. Louis area is back again, and it’s ready to show you 400 new cars, trucks and SUVs. Held at the Dome at America’s Center (701 Convention Plaza), the 2023 Saint Louis Auto Show runs from Friday, January 13, through Monday, January 16, and it promises to let you not only preview new models but also to learn about the latest in vehicle safety technology. Buying a new vehicle is difficult these days, but the auto show lets you preview your favorite rides without the pressure of buying. For only the $12 general admission, you can also check out some other (very expensive) cars that you’d otherwise probably never get a chance to properly inspect up close — many car enthusiasts head to shows like this just hoping to get a peek at the latest sexy Lamborghini or luxury RollsRoyce. Visit saintlouisautoshow. com to find more information or to get your ticket.

SATURDAY 01/14

Nostalgiafest

“Vintage collecting” used to mean gathering items from the ’60s and ’70s, but time has marched on (to a cruel degree), and now “vintage” items can refer to things from the ’80s, ’90s and even the Y2K years. Woof. But whether you’re old enough to remember it the first time around or if you’re keen to hop on flashback clothing trends, the Totally Rad Vintage Fest has you covered. Held from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. at the Gateway Convention Center (1 Gateway Drive, Collinsville; 618-345-8998), this nostalgiafest is hosting more than 40 vendors who will be on site to sell you retro clothes, memorabilia, video games, toys, home goods and more from the 1980s and beyond. (Think grunge flannel shirts, Spice Girls accessories, Beanie Babies, Nintendo, etc.)

Visit totallyradvf.com for more information or to grab your ticket, which will run you from $8 to $25.

Art in Blue

Anyone who sees the stark outlines of a white-and-blue cyanotype can’t help but draw parallels to Blue Willow porcelain. It’s a classic look. The vintage-style photos are made by mixing together iron compounds and coating paper or fabric with the solution. Then, an object is placed on the prepared surface and exposed to light. The part that’s uncovered turns a bright, beautiful blue. You could try to make those at home with no supervision, but why do so when you can instead head to a cyanotype class by Perennial (3762 South Broadway, 314-832) The nonprofit’s course will have participants reusing scrap paper, found objects and transparencies to produce unique designs. The $45 fee includes materials, and the class runs from 10

a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Goodwill to All

Just because Christmas is over doesn’t mean the spirit of “goodwill to all” has to end. Next time you’re at the City Foundry (3730 Foundry Way), check out the Garand and ra ti isp ay, six seven-foot trees painted by local street artists. A QR code on each tree corresponds to different local charitable organizations and gives scanners information on how to donate. The trees were decked by artists including Peat “Eyez” Wolleager, Ariane O’Day, Jonny Xacto and others. Organizations benefited include nited hildren, St. Patrick Center, St. Louis Diaper Bank, Perennial, the Women’s Safe House and Our Lady of Perpetual Help Food Pantry. You may not want the holiday season to end, but alas, there comes a time when all trees must come down. Even though these are for a good cause, you only have until Saturday, Janu-

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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gives the “I Have a Dream” speech. | LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

ary 14, to check them out.

SUNDAY 01/15

A Lovin’ Spoonful

What better way to spend a Sunday afternoon than with some friends, a few cocktails, a little bit of art and a whole lotta love This Sunday, head over to the 9 Mile Garden (9375 Gravois Road, 9milegarden.com) for Valentine Gnome Painting, hosted by artist Stacey Crump. Don’t stress if you’re short on art supplies or even shorter on talent. This event will supply you with everything you need, and Crump will walk you through painting your own beautiful 16-by-20-inch portrait of a Valentine’s Day-themed gnome. By the end of the event, you’ll have

something to replace those Christmas decorations that you’ve hopefully taken down by now. Tickets are $35 and can be purchased at paintingontherocks.org.

MONDAY 01/16

Civil Rights Medley

Listen to hymns, anthems and an original piece by a St. Louis composer at St. Louis Symphony Orchestra’s hourlong Community Concert for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. It is the symphony’s first time holding a free concert to honor the legacy of the civil rights leader, and it will also be broadcast on St. Louis Public Radio. The orchestra will be joined by the resident choral ensemble and led by Music Director Stéphane Denève and IN

UNISON Chorus Director Kevin McBeth. Songs on the schedule include “Precious Lord, Take My Hand,” “Lift Every Voice and Sing” and “Battle Hymn of the Republic.” There will also be a selection from St. Louis composer Adam Maness’ “Divides That Bind” as well as an arrangement of Florence Price’s “Adoration” and “Freedom’s Plow” by St. Louis native Rollo Dilworth. The concert is at Powell Hall (718 North Grand Boulevard, 314-5341700, slso.org), starts at 7:30 p.m. and is free.

WEDNESDAY 01/18

Meaning in Sound

St. Louis Symphony Orchestra will bring music from Powell Hall to the Pulitzer Arts Foundation (3716

Washington Avenue, 314-754-1850, pulitzerarts.org) for the annual St. Louis Symphony: Live at the Pulitzer series. The night will feature a slate of performances from four of America’s “most talented young composers,” including Christian Quiñones, Peter Shin, Aiyana Braun and Nicky Sohn. Packed into just a few hours, the musicians will run the gamut of sounds from K-pop to violin solos to an exploration into the “varied meanings ‘burning’” through sound. Wednesday’s performances will mark the first ive at the Pulitizer event of the year, with the second coming on Tuesday, April 18. Tickets are $25 and are at slso.org/pulitzer. n

Have an event you’d like considered for our calendar? Email calendar@riverfronttimes.com.

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 21
WEEK OF JANUARY 12-18
Learn to make a cyanotype at Perennial. | VIA FLICKR / BERND HUTSCHENREUTHER Stacy Willingham will be at the St. Louis County Library on Friday, January 13. | COURTESY IMAGE
22 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com

Culinary Majesty

South America Bakery stuns in O’Fallon with creative cuisine drawn from Peru, Chile, Venezuela and Brazil

South America Bakery & Cafe

4279 Keaton Crossing Boulevard, O’Fallon; 636-477-6688. Mon. 7:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; Tues.-Wed. 7:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Thurs.-Fri. 7:30 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sat. 8 a.m.-8 p.m. (Closed Sunday.)

The stuffed potato from South America Bakery is less a creative interpretation of a spud and more a feat of culinary majesty — one that would feel equally on brand billed as a deconstructed-reconstructed “baked potato” at an avant garde temple to molecular gastronomy as it does as a humble snack at a fast-casual O’Fallon strip-mall storefront.

At first glance, this stunning tuber presents as a baked potato in shape, size and color. However, a closer look reveals that it is actually a lightly fried russet-shaped fritter composed of fluffy mashed potatoes that have been fashioned to look like its original form. When cut into, the lightly crunchy golden coating yields to a cloud-like interior filled with ground beef that’s accented with olives, onions and Peruvian peppers. The seasoned jus from the meat bastes the potatoes from the inside, which they soak up like a sponge. If you crossed an arancini with South American spiced shepherd’s pie, you’d get close to capturing the idea, though the only way to truly understand this marvel is to tuck in and bask in the glory.

Such an outstanding dish might have never entered our lives were it not for chef and owner uigi uzman’s dog. rowing up in ima, Peru, uzman loved his family’s pet so much that he would spoil it every way he knew how. One of the ways he showed his affection was through food, and he would often cook for the

pooch using leftovers or whatever ingredients he could find around his family’s kitchen. One time, when he was around years old, uzman was inspired to make the pup a stew, so he put everything together, left it simmering on the stove and went out to play soccer.

hen he returned, the pot was basically empty, and his mother asked him about his concoction.

Startled, he informed her the meal was meant for the dog, to which she replied, “Don’t tell your stepfather. He ate four bowls.”

From that moment on, it was clear to uzman and his family that he had a knack for cooking, so when it came time for him to decide what he wanted to do for a career, culinary school was the natural pursuit. After graduat-

ing, he cooked around Peru, hile (where his father is from), enezuela and Brazil, learning the nuances of each country’s culinary traditions before landing in the nited States in . Once here, he settled into the restaurant industry, met his wife, Kathryn, and began dazzling friends, family and coworkers with his talents.

uzman’s specialty was pastry in particular, empanadas — and as more and more people got a taste of his offerings, he and Kathryn realized that he might find success striking out on his own. He began selling empanadas at the Lake Saint Louis Farmers Artists Market, where he developed such a following that he decided to expand to other area markets such as Maplewood, St. harles, Kirkwood and Ferguson. No matter where he went, people would consistently ask him where his bakery was located or if he had a storefront. When he informed them that he did not have one, the response was always the same: You need to change that.

The uzmans finally decided to take that leap, opening the doors to their casual O’Fallon restaurant, South America Bakery, in

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CAFE
Continued on pg 25
For lunch on select days, South America Bakery & Cafe o ers a selection of sandwiches in addition to its regular sweet and savory baked goods. | MABEL SUEN Luigi and Kathryn Guzman are the owner of the South American Bakery & Cafe. | MABEL SUEN
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SOUTH AMERICA BAKERY

2021, all the while continuing to work the farmers market circuit during its season. Kathryn notes that the brick and mortar and market presence have been symbiotic; when they run out of empanadas at the Lake St. Louis market (which happens every time they are there), hungry customers will head over to the bakery to get their fix.

Once you’ve tried one of Guzman’s empanadas, you understand why they make the trek. The chef offers two different styles of the South American savory pastries — baked and fried — each filled with a variety of delectable ingredients. Though the dough is the same, each style has its own unique character. Baked, the crust is smooth and buttery like a pot-pie topper, then hand-pinched around the edges after it’s filled with such ingredients as tender steak, hardboiled eggs, mild Peruvian peppers and olives. A veggie version pairs broccoli, cauliflower, spinach and peppers, all sauteed in soy sauce to the point where they are tender but not mushy for a warm, satisfying filling.

Both the chicken and pork empanadas are a master class in succulent, slow-cooked meats. The former features juicy pulled chicken mixed with peppers, olives and eggs and molten, mild white cheese. The latter, studded with the same ingredients as the chicken (minus the cheese), is so tender it’s like South Americanseasoned pork rillettes. Of the baked empanadas, this was the showstopper.

Guzman also offers two fried empanadas that are an entirely dif-

ferent experience from the baked ones thanks to their pleasantly fryer gilded texture. One pairs thinly sliced ham with delightfully funky white cheese, while the other dazzles as a simple, cheesestuffed concoction filled with two different cheeses that form a magnificent goo that lies somewhere between liquid and solid.

In addition to empanadas and stuffed potatoes, South America Bakery serves a few different lunch sandwiches, including the salchicha huachana. This breakfast-forlunch concoction pairs mild, crumbled housemade sausage (think breakfast sausage with a little piquant zing) and scrambled egg, which are tucked into a pillow-soft housemade bun. That bun, a hybrid of French bread and brioche, is a

beautiful canvas for fried chicharron; the hunks of mouth-watering pork are garnished with roasted sweet potatoes and sliced raw red onions that cut through the meat’s decadence. My favorite of the restaurant’s sandwiches, the jamón del país, is basically the Peruvian version of porchetta: marbled, slow-roasted seasoned pork that is sliced and layered with onions on Guzman’s signature bun. Though served at a casual restaurant, the dish has the soulful feeling of the sort of sandwich you’d make from Grandma’s leftovers.

Guzman’s culinary prowess extends to sweets as well. South America Bakery serves a good selection of traditional Peruvian pastries, including melt-in-the-mouth alfajores, which are butter short-

bread cookies filled with luxurious, caramel-ly dulce de lece. That same filling is layered with flaky phyllo-like dough to form the outstanding milhojas, or stuffed into a delicate, cone-shaped cañoncito; as excellent as the pastry is, you could serve that dulce de leche in a Dixie cup with a spoon, and it would still be a wonderful end to an excellent meal.

Then again, so would a second helping of that stuffed potato. That Guzman has me thinking of anything else after eating that glorious spud shows that he is a chef of many talents.

South America Bakery

Pork empanada

Ground beef stuffed potato

Jamón del país ......................................$12.99

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.....................................$5.29
...................$5.29
Continued from pg 23
e restaurant’s sweet pastries include alfajores, milhojas and apple trenza. | MABEL SUEN e torreja — a Peruvian omelet with two eggs, spinach, peppers, tomato and flour — pairs magnificently with an apple trenza and a latte. | MABEL SUEN Empanadas come with fillings such as veggie, pork and chicken mixed with Peruvian peppers, olive and hard-boiled egg. | MABEL SUEN
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SHORT ORDERS

Eat for the Cause

Juniper is raising money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society this month

As if you needed another reason to eat Juniper’s (4101 Laclede Avenue, 314-3297696) acclaimed fried chicken, chef and owner John Perkins has sweetened the deal. The entire month of January, the restaurant is running a fundraiser to benefit the eukemia ymphoma Society with the goal of raising , to help fund the organization’s research and advocacy efforts.

Throughout the month, Juniper guests will be able to donate to the eukemia ymphoma Society by using a QR code at their table or telling their server an amount they would like to donate and having it added to their bill. One hundred percent of all money raised will go directly to the orga-

Crowning Achievement

Bud’s Pizza & Beer to open on South Kingshighway this summer

The corner of South Kingshighway Boulevard and Chippewa Street has seen some changes in the past few years as Garcia Properties tries to fancy-up the area.

The realty company purchased the whole block of buildings along Kingshighway between Mardel Avenue and Chippewa Street with the hopes of turning the area into a dining and retail desti-

nization, which has invested over $1.5 billion in research since its founding. According to the organization’s website, these efforts have helped advance percent of FDA approved blood cancer treatment options over the last five years, making it a vital actor in the fight against these diseases.

The fundraiser is personal for Perkins, who disclosed last month that he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma this past August.

Though he is currently in the

nation it’s calling the Crown District.

In addition to the Garcia Properties office, the corner is also home to the Golden Hoosier, a bar opened by Ivan and Berto Garcia of Garcia Properties.

Now they’re looking to expand their tiny empire once again with Bud’s Pizza & Beer. There isn’t much news on the new place yet, aside from the fact that it will be located at 3805 South Kingshighway, and they plan to open this summer.

“Bud’s Pizza and Beer will help breathe new life into a block that for decades was home to a laughable/sad concentration of predatory lenders,” they wrote in the Facebook announcement. “Over the next couple of years we will restore all the buildings on this block from Mardel, south to Chippewa. We have dreamed of doing this for many years! Again we thank you for your support and let’s all continue to be the change we wish to see in St. Louis.” n

midst of treatment himself, Perkins still felt compelled to do something to help an organization that has been so instrumental in the very research he is currently benefiting from.

“It wasn’t that long ago when my type of cancer would have been a death sentence,” Perkins says. “The treatment plan I have grew out of the research the eukemia ymphoma Society has done and sponsored. It has a success rate, and people are going

through it and hitting remission, so in a real sense I owe my life to what they have done and want to help them continue to do what they are doing for the benefit of other people.”

This is not the first time Perkins has made Juniper a hub for charitable giving. hen the pandemic hit St. ouis in March of , he quickly founded Meals for Meds, a grassroots movement co-organized with Knead Bakehouse’s Kirsten Brown that fed area health-care workers. Before partnering with the national group Frontline Foods in May of that year, Perkins and Brown managed the restaurant strong effort that both provided meals to those on the health crisis’ frontlines and kept restaurant workers employed when dining rooms went dark.

ike Meals for Meds, Juniper’s current fundraiser, too, serves a dual purpose. In addition to raising money for the eukemia ymphoma Society, the effort has the added benefit of providing joy and encouragement to Perkins as he undergoes treatment that will keep him out of the restaurant for the next several months.

“On a personal level, knowing people are coming into the restaurant is medicine for me,” Perkins says. “Support for Juniper over the next few months will be a kind of therapy while I am gone, and my team is holding it all down.” n

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Eat fried chicken for a good cause. It’s a win-win. | LUCAS PETERSON [COMING SOON] e new spot is the second venture for Gracia Properties. | COURTESY PHOTO
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Relief Pitcher

Condado Tacos to open in Ballpark Village next summer

The Ballpark Village food game is again adding an exciting player to its roster, this time courtesy of a popular national chain. Condado Tacos, an Ohio-based tacos, margaritas and tequila chain, has announced that it will open its first Missouri location inside the Busch Stadium-adjacent complex next summer.

“We couldn’t be more excited to open our newest Condado Tacos restaurant in Ballpark Village and to bring our fresh and delicious tacos, margaritas and tequilas to St. Louis,” said Chris Artinian, Condado Tacos president and chief executive officer, in a release announcing the opening. “This new restaurant represents the furthest-west we have taken our brand, and we will continue to grow. We look forward to serving residents and guests at Ballpark Village, and we look forward to adding to our incredibly loyal following.”

ondado Tacos first opened in Columbus, Ohio, in 2014, specializing in build-your-own tacos that use fresh, high-quality ingredients, as well as creative cocktails and a robust tequila selection. The Ballpark Village restaurant will be Condado’s 39th location and builds upon the brand’s reputation for creative flavors and a lively, colorful atmosphere.

The forthcoming St. Louis location, which is currently under construction, will come in at 5,225 square feet and consist of a main dining room, bar and outdoor patio. Though the restaurant is known for its vivid and lively aesthetic, Condado’s designers are working with local artists who will add a uniquely St. ouis flair to the space.

The setting will set the tone for ondado’s creative flavors. Build-your-own taco options can be made from a wide variety of ingredients, not all of which are traditionally thought of as TexMex. ook for such fillings as Sri-

racha butter chicken, Thai chili tofu and Korean BBQ jackfruit alongside more traditional TexMex ingredients like tequila lime steak and slow-roasted pulled pork. Guests are encouraged to mix and match creatively, and that expands beyond the protein choices. Condado offers four different types of shells, including a Kewl Ranch version, as well as double-decker options like the Peezler, which is comprised of both soft flour and hard corn shells held together with bacon refried beans, sour cream and guacamole. Nachos and taco bowls are also available.

Mike aMartina, chief operating officer for Ballpark illage, expressed his excitement at Co-dado

joining the facility’s family of restaurants, bars and shops.

“We strive to bring new and creative concepts to our downtown neighborhood and the vibrancy and energy of Condado Tacos certainly fits the bill,” aMartina said in the release. “Our goal has always been to create a destination that offers a great variety of distinctive dining choices for our residents, tenants and guests on game days and beyond. With the addition of Condado, we’re continuing to deliver on this promise.”

aMartina has reason for his enthusiasm. With the addition of Condado and the forthcoming Katie’s Pizza & Pasta Osteria and Koibito Poke, the venue will be at 95 percent occupancy. The complex

also boasts 90 percent occupancy of its office space and single digit vacancy at the One Cardinal Way residential tower. For aMartina, this means not only a premier game-day experience for Cardinals fans, but also a consistent energy in the entire downtown area all year long.

“When local and national restaurant operators look for new venues, it’s exciting that they’ve decided to call Ballpark Village and downtown St. Louis their new home,” aMartina said. “And this interest expands well past our retail partners. Demand for our premier commercial and residential options continues to remain strong, and this benefits downtown St. Louis 365 days a year.” n

Duck and Cover

Burst pipe at the Shaved Duck temporarily closes restaurant

Last month, the Shaved Duck got the kind of publicity that can drive a huge bump in foot traffic: The website Mashed declared it the best of all the “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” in Missouri. From there came an onslaught of stories suggesting the Tower Grove East barbecue spot was, in fact, Guy Fieri’s Show-Me State favorite.

But the restaurant’s ability to cash in on its viral glory came to a screeching halt just a couple of weeks later. On the afternoon of December 27, at the tail end of the brutal cold snap that gripped St. Louis over Christmas, General Manager Katie Gwaltney keyed in to the Shaved Duck to find a flood.

“When I walked up to the door, I could already hear the water running,” she says. Inside, she says, “it was raining from the ceiling.” Water covered the entire bar room and dining room. Part of the ceiling in the bar area had collapsed.

Suffice it to say, the damage caused by a broken pipe means the restaurant is now closed indefinitely. Gwaltney says the place will reopen — but at this point, it’s impossible to say when. “Because of all the pipes bursting right now, we haven’t been able to get someone to come out,” she told RFT on De -

cember 30.

The mess was a blow to the restaurant’s 15 employees — during a week they would normally expect to see healthy tips and lots of hours. “This is the worst time this could happen,” Gwaltney says, noting that January is traditionally extremely slow in the restaurant industry. Late December, especially a mild week like the one that followed the Christmas cold snap, is the last chance to make bank before business craters.

Hoping to help the staff get through what could be some very lean weeks, Gwaltney has put up a GoFundMe campaign. She’s urging people to donate. “We don’t know if it’s going to be a week or a month,” she says. “We don’t want anyone on the staff to worry about eating or gas in the car.”

Despite all the uncertainty, Gwaltney is sure about one thing. “We are going to reopen,” she says.

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 29 [COMING SOON]
Condado Tacos will bring its popular brand of tacos, margaritas and tequila to Ballpark Village next summer. | COURTESY PHOTO [FOOD
NEWS]
n

Great Expectations

Sado named one of the most anticipated restaurants in the U.S.

The St. Louis dining community has been buzzing about the forthcoming Sado ever since the Bognar family announced their plans to open the restaurant last fall. Now, it appears the rest of the country is eagerly awaiting the opening of the world-class sushi restaurant as well.

In its roundup of the 14 Most Anticipated Restaurants in America published on January 3, Bloomberg named Sado as one of the top places to look forward to in 2023. The forthcoming restaurant, which will soon open in the former Giovanni’s on the Hill, shares the honor with some of the biggest names in American dining, such as the soon-to-open Miami outpost of acclaimed New York brasserie Pastis, and New York City’s Moono, which comes from the group behind Atomix, which is ranked as one of the 50 top restaurants in the world.

“It’s pretty exciting to be on a list with so many badass people,” says Nick Bognar, chef and co-owner of Sado, Indo and Nippon Tei. “Sometimes, I have imposter syndrome, but then I remind myself of how hard our whole team works. We have so many awesome, talented people working for us that I feel like we are capable of so much more. I’m looking forward to enabling those people and being the chef again at a new spot.”

As Bognar explains, Sado feels like a full-circle realization for his parents, Ann and Mike, who opened their west county Japanese restaurant Nippon Tei 21 years ago. Through their hard work and dedication, they built the spot into one of the city’s most beloved restaurants and sparked in their son an interest in the culinary field that would set him on course to become an acclaimed chef and restaurateur in his own right. It set him up to go on to other restaurants around the country, where he honed his skills

before coming back to Nippon Tei in 2017.

Working alongside his parents, Bognar took Nippon Tei in a new direction, turning the restaurant into a top-notch sushi restaurant while executing on old favorites. He parlayed this success into Indo, the Botanical Heights hot spot he opened in 2019 that has earned him national acclaim.

Sado represents the next evolution in Bognar and his family’s restaurant story. When it opens, Nippon Tei will shutter — a change that is both exciting and emotional for the family.

“My mom and dad got started with Nippon Tei 21 years ago,” Bognar says. “The were both food and beverage professionals before that, so this is a huge culmination of the mountain of work they have done. I’m stoked to see my parents have an actual tangible building where everything we do to make it awesome is ours. It’s so great to see my mom and dad have an obvious next step.”

Though Sado will incorporate several elements of Nippon Tei, Bognar is excited to build the restaurant from the ground up. He describes the restaurant, first and foremost, as a sushi bar that will have a core menu but will also feature a rotating selection of fish and other offerings. He is also excited to feature a robust Wagyu beef menu, and he is eager to play around with different techniques, such as dry aging his fish.

Though Bognar describes Sado as a fine dining restaurant, he

wants to dispel the perception that it will be a stuffy, special occasion place. He notes that the interior will consist of a cocktail bar and lounge in addition to the dining room where tables will be reserved for walk-ins.

“People are getting this feeling that we are this serious restaurant, but I have to play around a little,” Bognar says. “I don’t want it to feel stuffy. You can come in and know why you are here and everything is done extremely well; we take the food and presentation seriously, but I want to bring that feeling of just having fun and give people surprises when things hit the table. The food won’t be ‘suit and tie and everything is so perfect.’ We will still show extreme respect to the ingredients, but we want to color outside the lines a little bit.”

Bognar is equally excited about the Sado space itself. Because his family owns the building, they have been able to fully renovate it to their exact specifications and taste, resulting in what he describes as a stunning restaurant with an aesthetic that matches the level of the food it will be serving. He is also looking forward to the restaurant’s outdoor space, which will consist of a private sushi pavilion, and he is equally thrilled to begin doing his omakase chef tasting dinners as soon as the restaurant gets its feet underneath it.

“We are going to do what we do really well, and people are going to love it,” Bognar promises. “The sky is the limit.” n

CHERYL BAEHR’S

DUMPLING PICKS

As the lights of the holiday season go dark, and the cold air seeps into our bones, there’s nothing better than a steaming hot dumpling to battle the winter blues. These soulful, savory wonders offer the most delicious kind of respite. Here’s where we’re enjoying them.

Soup Dumplings STL

The soup dumplings at Soup Dumplings STL are a feat of engineering; the wonton wrapper is so delicate you wonder how it holds such steaming hot jus and fillings, yet it somehow does until strategically pierced with a chopstick, revealing mouthwatering savory nectar and meat. The pork and crab version is transcendent.

Sides of Seoul

This casual Korean spot offers an embarrassment of Korean snack riches, but the mandoo is a can’tmiss offering. Filled with ground pork and lightly fried, these stuffed wonders soothe the soul.

Lona’s Lil Eats

Before she was a James Beard-awardnominated chef with a popular fastcasual storefront, Lona Luo made a name for herself selling dumplings at the Soulard Farmers Market. One taste of her handiwork, and you understand why they propelled her to greatness. Peppery beef and smoked mushrooms provide a delectable filling, and the accompanying chile-sesame vinaigrette is positively addictive.

Tiger Soup Dumplings

Operated by the family behind Soup

Dumplings STL, Fenton’s Tiger Soup

Dumplings takes its sister spot’s signature dish as a jumping-off point, offering different ingredients and the ability to have your dumplings pan fried in addition to just steamed.

Corner

17

The delicate silken wrappers that make up Corner 17’s handmade wontons are stunning. When filled with succulent pork, and soaked up with hauntingly delicious sesame chili sauce, they become otherworldly. n

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[FOOD NEWS]
Nick Bognar and family will open Sado in the coming months. | SPENCER PERNIKOFF

Not So Sustainable

Cherokee’s Whisk: A Sustainable Bakeshop closes abruptly, former sta criticize owner

Abeloved bakery on Cherokee Street has closed retail operations and let go of most of its staff.

Kaylen Wissinger says she’s made the difficult decision to “reorient” Whisk: A Sustainable Bakeshop (2201 Cherokee Street, 314-932-5166) after months of hardship. The shop’s storefront has closed for retail sales as Wissinger transitions the business to focus solely on wholesale and its ice-pop brand, Poptimism.

“I’ve been holding on as long as I could,” Wissinger tells the RFT. Over the past six months, Wissinger says Whisk had been putting out a lot of products and “did not properly adjust prices as I needed to.” Between wholesale accounts, special orders and retail operations, “the numbers just weren’t adding up.”

“I realized that and thought we could hang on a little longer, but then we couldn’t,” Wissinger adds. “I went to run payroll and was like, ‘I don’t have the money.’ It’s pretty shitty and as simple as that.”

Wissinger announced the bakeshop’s transition on social media last Thursday. In the post, Wissinger wrote of Whisk’s “scaling back” after “weathering the storm of the last three years.”

Cold Comfort

To past employees, the announcement left out one crucial message — that they had been abruptly let go on December 29 with little to no notice that Whisk was truly in trouble. Past employees took to social media to comment on the closure announcement and criticize Wissinger for not warning them that the business was in trouble.

“We cared about Whisk, and we wanted it to be successful so we could continue working there,” said a former general manager, who spoke to the RFT on condition of anonymity. She says other past employees along with herself offered extra help multiple times to help keep Whisk afloat. “It’s very disappointing to think of how much I put into this business only to be fired with no notice.”

According to former employees, Whisk’s reorientation followed months of suspected trouble. Yet, when staff raised ques-

tions of Whisk’s stability they say Wissinger always assured them things were fine. They were told their jobs were not at risk.

Around July, multiple Whisk employees heard Wissinger tell a Poptimism employee that Whisk was “hemorrhaging money.” Poptimism, a line of popsicles owned by Wissinger, is a popular food truck and was one of the first vendors to set up shop in City Foundry STL’s food hall in 2021.

At a managers’ meeting in August, according to the general manager, Wissinger was asked what the managers could do to help Whisk make more money. They also asked about two employees who they allege were not given raises promised months earlier (one of these employees said they received about $1,000 in back pay within 10 days of raising the issue to Wissinger).

Business continued as usual in the fol-

lowing months — until December, when the employees were abruptly let go.

Wissinger called each employee individually to explain Whisk’s shutdown. She understands their frustrations, she says: “I thought a lot about what I could’ve done differently, but I can’t go back in time and fix it.”

“I need to figure out if this even makes sense to do anymore,” Wissinger adds. “And it sucks. We just really grew really fast after opening the Foundry location, and I’m burnt out … I only got into this because I like to bake. I’m not a business person, per se. I’ve made a million mistakes, and they’ve kind of just all caught up to me.”

On Friday afternoon, Wissinger was working alone at the bakeshop in south city. She says she plans to continue operations by herself in Whisk’s current space.

At this point, she hopes to eventually open the front of the shop for walk-up sales again. “I’m certainly planning on reopening,” she says. “I’m just not really sure when or in what capacity.”

Whisk had just passed its 10-year anniversary in November, a milestone reached in spite of the hardest years of the pandemic. Yet the past three years ultimately proved to be too much, Wissinger wrote in her social media announcement last week. Costs had skyrocketed, and employees were working “twice as hard to just keep our heads above water.”

Employees say they generally enjoyed working at Whisk. They just wished they could have had more time to prepare for the end of their employment.

“There were a lot of perks for working there. [Wissinger] is a good person, and I looked up to her,” says one employee who worked at Whisk for nearly two years. “But I don’t know if I would want to work there again.” n

to evoke cabin living.

According to a press release, the Cider Shed will be decked out in rustic decor for the pop-up, and a special menu will include such tasty treats as butter boards, charcuterie and bison burgers. Naturally, cider will be on hand as well, perfect for cozying up to the fire with friends.

The weather outside may again be frightful, but a new pop-up bar from Eckert’s Farm aims to bring some delight to the east side of the river this winter.

The Belleville, Illinois, farm announced Wednesday afternoon that it will be hosting a “Cozy Cider Cabin” pop-up each Thursday through Sunday beginning on January 12. The special event will see Eckert’s Cider Shed, which opened over the summer, transported to the mountains for an immersive experience meant

Best of all, proceeds from the pop-up will go toward the energy bills of our lowincome neighbors through a partnership with Heat Up St. Louis. Reservations are $5 apiece to book, with all of that money being donated to the local charitable organization.

According to Eckert’s President Chris Eckert, expanding use of the Cider Shed through special events and pop-ups is a “top priority” for the farm.

“We see the Cider Shed as an investment to the future — offering both family-friendly activities and new events for adults, like themed pop-up bars,” Eckert said in a statement. “To transform the space into a cozy and fun atmosphere during our dreary winter months is a win for everyone, and most importantly it helps a very important

cause through our partnership with Heat Up St. Louis.”

Eckert’s Cozy Cider Cabin will be open from 4:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday to

Sunday through February 19. Guests can make reservations on the farm’s website. Walk-ins are also welcome and will be admitted for just $5. n

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 31 [FOOD NEWS]
Whisk: A Sustainable Bakeshop has indefinitely closed its walk-in sales. | MONICA OBRADOVIC [FOOD NEWS]
Eckert’s launches Cozy Cider Cabin pop-up to warm up your winter
Eckert’s will have all sorts of delicious treats on hand. JOY MICHELLE PHOTOGRAPHY
32 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com

REEFERFRONT TIMES

Green Light

Missouri marijuana companies can now deduct business expenses on state income taxes

This story was originally published by the Missouri Independent.

Marijuana companies will be able to deduct business expenses on their state taxes for the first time this year, a Missouri Department of Revenue spokeswoman confirmed to the Independent Missourians voted to legalize medical marijuana in 2018. But under federal law, growing, transporting or selling marijuana remains a crime.

Because of this dynamic, marijuana companies have differed from every other legal business in the state because they weren’t allowed to deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses, such as marketing or furniture costs, on both their state and federal tax returns.

Senator Denny Hoskins, arrensburg, pre filed a bill in December to get that changed, at least on the state level. And Republicans have been trying to make the change for the last three years.

However, Hoskins told the Independent Friday that passage of Amendment , the constitutional amendment legalizing marijuana that voters approved in November, will make the deductions possible.

“After further discussions with [the Department of evenue], they believe the passage of Amendment clarified the issue and normal business deductions will be allowed for marijuana-related businesses, so no further legislation is necessary,” Hoskins says via text message.

In , state lawmakers approved Hoskins’ bill as an amendment to a wide-ranging bill. But Governor Mike Parson vetoed the legislation over an unrelated provision — a section lawmakers in-

cluded that would have provided tax relief for businesses impacted by city wide or county wide public health restrictions.

In his letter vetoing the measure, Parson didn’t mention the medical marijuana provisions.

ast year, a bill that included the provision passed out of the

Not So Sweet

Senate but stalled in the House.

Adolphus Pruitt, president of the St. ouis ity NAA P chapter, says the change will especially benefit small businesses in the marijuana industry during their first years of operation.

“In those early years, businesses need to do their best to break

even or try to make a return on their investment and be profitable,” Pruitt says. “So those who have the ability to have those business expenses deducted to increase their bottom line — just like it is for any other business is important.”

Hoskins, who is an accountant, told legislators last year that marijuana companies were paying a higher overall tax rate on their earned income. In , the effective tax rate for corporations was about percent, he said.

“ ou could actually have an effective tax rate of over percent, not being able to deduct these expenses,” Hoskins said during a Senate committee hearing last spring, “because you’re taxed on gross profit, not on ordinary business income like other businesses.”

In December, Missourians bought $40.25 million worth of medical marijuana, breaking the previously monthly sales record. In total, Missouri has now sold $605.31 million worth of medical marijuana since sales began in October . In alone, Missouri sold more than $390 million. n

Agrowing number of children in the U.S. have accidentally consumed cannabis-infused edibles in recent years, according to a new study.

The report, published last week in the journal Pediatrics, analyzed data from the National Poison Data System. It found a staggering 1,375 percent increase in reported cases of children under the age of six accidentally eating cannabis-infused products over the past five years, from 2017 to 2021.

Nearly all of the 7,043 incidents, or 97 percent, occurred at home, and in 22.7 percent of cases children were admitted to a hospital.

Cannabis-infused edibles “are particularly appealing to toddlers because they

resemble common treats such as candies, chocolates, cookies or other baked goods,” the authors wrote. And this can be dangerous, because a small amount of edibles can contain a large amount of THC, the substance in cannabis that gets you high, especially for a young child.

“If a child opens a pack of [cannabisinfused] gummy bears, they’re not likely to stop at one. Kids enjoy candy,” says Dr. Marit Tweet, one of the study’s co-authors, according to the BBC. “They may consume the whole package.”

Fortunately, it’s almost impossible to overdose on cannabis. According to the study, the most common reported effect was central nervous system depression, which includes drowsiness and lethargy, and other effects include ataxia (loss of control of movement), agitation and con-

fusion.

In about 36 percent of the cases, the children were treated and released, and less than 2 percent developed more severe effects.

No deaths were reported by the study.

A growing number of states have legalized cannabis in recent years. The study found an increase in incidents during the COVID-19 pandemic, with Tweet telling the BBC she theorized that the lockdowns could have led to increased opportunities for exposure.

Experts advise parents to keep cannabis-infused edibles in a hard-to-reach spot or locked up, away from other food.

If a child accidentally consumed a cannabis-infused edible, parents are urged to call the poison control hotline at 800-222-1222.

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 33
More young children are eating cannabis edibles by mistake, study finds
n
Due to Amendment 3 marijuana companies will be able to deduct business expenses. | VIA FLICKR
33
Kids are mostly getting the weed gummies at home, not from Halloween candy. | VIA SHUTTERSTOCK

MUSIC

Jam Sessions

Grand Center’s new Central Stage is just the latest venue to get the Jamo Presents treatment

Is it happy hour for you yet?” Drew Jameson asks me as a way of offering me a drink at 4 p.m. on a Friday night at the new Central Stage concert venue in Grand Center. (The answer: Yes.) Jameson is sitting inside the venue’s front room — a space that serves as a bar, ping-pong battleground and waiting area for the concert space in the back. It’s three hours before doors open to the public, and Jameson is prepping for the evening’s show, Sean Canan’s Voodoo Players’ John Hartford tribute.

The 140-person-capacity Central Stage, on the first floor of the Larry J. Weir Center for Independent Media, the building that also houses KDHX, is the latest live-music hub for Jameson, whose Jamo Presents has become a game changer in St. Louis concert promotion and venue management.

It was Jameson, after all, who organized the Lot pop-up events — outdoor, pod-separated shows next to Busch Stadium, on Laclede’s Landing, in Tower Grove Park and at City Foundry — that gave concert-starved St. Louisans access to live music in the thick of the pandemic. Last year, Jamo Presents started producing shows at the Big Top, across the street from Central Stage, including a George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic throwdown, named by the RFT the Best Concert of 2022.

As the beers come out during our conversation at Central Stage, it’s easy to see why people like to work with the 35-year-old Jameson. He exudes the hirsute spark-a-fatty affability of a lifelong jam-music fan but also flashes an intelligence, business savvy and work ethic that has kept him on a path of musicscene success both on-stage and off.

That path was partially paved by his father, Dan Jameson, an ardent Deadhead who indoctrinated his son early.

“I was probably in third grade before I was, like, really into the Dead,” Jameson says without irony, as though eight-yearold Grateful Dead aficionados were a matter of course.

While Jameson was attending Ladue High School, his parents fostered even more musical edification. “When I turned

16, instead of getting a car, I got a Gibson SG,” Jameson says of his first guitar, which he would soon play well enough to gig at venues like Off Broadway while still in high school.

Moreover, his father owned and operated Lucas School House, the Soulard concert venue that closed in 2008, where Jameson barbacked on weekends as a teen and received an in-the-trenches education in the live-music business.

Despite such lineage, Jameson’s father forced him to find his own way. “He told me that I needed to go learn the concert business from somebody else,” Jameson says, describing his father’s efforts to broaden Drew’s influences and to discover if he truly wanted to follow his father into the music biz.

Taking that advice, Jameson bolted for the University of Vermont to major in business and marketing but mainly to immerse himself in the scene that spawned Phish, one of his favorite bands. Before long, he had formed his own jam band, making a splash with the beard-in-thebongwater scene in Burlington bars, including the legendary Nectar’s, the club where Phish got its start.

But just as Jameson was cruising along as a guitar picker, he hit a speedbump: He developed thoracic outlet syndrome, a nerve dysfunction that left him with severe pain and numbness in his shoulder and arm, forcing him to give up the guitar. Like a true St. Louisan, Jameson clarifies, “It’s the thing [Cardinals pitcher] Chris Carpenter had.”

The health setback opened a different door at Nectar’s: Jameson took an unpaid internship with the venue, which

eventually led to a full-time position booking bands and promoting shows, a move that also yielded a permanent leave of absence from the university.

“I had 15 credit hours to go, and I just bailed. Because I was already doing what I wanted to do,” he says.

Still barely in his twenties, Jameson proved to be a marketing natural, going from intern to head of Nectar’s publicity and local talent buying and later to producing seasonal outdoor concerts at Nectar’s sister venue on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts — an experience that would prove invaluable back in midCOVID-19 St. Louis.

That 2012 move back home was, in fact, due to Jameson’s mercurial success behind the scenes at rock shows. “Burlington got a little small,” he says. A wider range of opportunities awaited him in St. Louis, having accomplished his dad’s earlier directive to seek industry tutelage elsewhere.

By then, his father was booking shows for patchouli-centric venue 2720 Cherokee (closed in 2018) and then for the Gramophone, Roo Yawitz’s club in the Grove neighborhood, where Jameson joined his father to form Jamo Presents to handle booking and promotion.

Taking the lead at talent buying, Drew brought in artists like New Riders of the Purple Sage and Twiddle, and hosted the first-ever St. Louis appearance of country renegade Sturgill Simpson. Despite still having to work full-time in hospitality jobs elsewhere, Jameson handled all aspects of artist coordination for the Gramophone.

“I picked up Anaïs Mitchell from the

airport, and I didn’t know that she was pregnant,” Jameson remembers. “And I showed up in this little two-door vehicle, but she was super charming about it.”

As busy as Jameson was putting people on the stage, the itch to be up there himself never left him, despite his arm injury. When local mandolinist Gerard Erker came calling, Jameson picked up the guitar and played through the pain: Drew and Gerard, as they were billed, gigged hard around town as a progressive bluegrass duo specializing in hippiegrass covers and improv meanderjams.

After losing to like-minded bluegrassers Old Salt Union in a battle of the bands to play the 2012 Del Yeah! festival, Jameson and Erker realized they needed more people in their band. Along came singer/ guitarist Neil Salsich and bassist John Hussung, and the band that would later become the Mighty Pines was born.

Calling themselves Acoustics Anonymous, the group grinded it out in the bars, establishing a Thursday-night residency at Pat’s Bar & Grill in Dogtown, developing a following among local newgrass lovers and touring regionally. However, Jameson’s arm condition continued to deteriorate.

“My arm was gone,” he says. “I finally had to stop playing guitar completely.”

To stay in the band, Jameson switched to percussion and taught himself to play the harmonica, peeling off John Popperstyle, note-frenzy solos and continuing to share lead vocals with Salsich and Erker.

In 2015, the Gramophone converted from music club to sandwich joint and sold their entire music structure — from the PA to the wooden dance floor to Jamo Presents’ services — to Atomic Cowboy down the street. At a crossroads, Jameson had to decide to stay with the band or to work full-time as Atomic Cowboy’s music director.

“The guys wanted to be full-time musicians, and I went the other way,” Jameson says, noting that he left the band right after its name change to the Mighty Pines. “Thankfully, they didn’t replace me,” he jokes.

At Atomic Cowboy, Jameson filled the stage with bands like Sierra Leone’s Refugee All-Stars, Goose and Billy Strings, whom Jameson booked after seeing the flatpicking wunderkind in YouTube clips. Soon, Jameson was bringing in acts too big for the venue, using his old Martha’s Vineyard experience to build outdoor block parties in the Grove featuring acts like JJ Grey & Mofro, Jonny Lang, Snarky Puppy, Lettuce and Stephen Marley.

When the pandemic shut down live music in 2020, Jameson again proved to be a master of adversity-induced pivots. Working with the City of St. Louis, Jameson put together a 30-page health

34 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
34
Drew Jameson is behind Jamo Presents, an independent concert promoter. | COURTESY PHOTO

plan that allowed him to create the Lot, a series of outdoor, socially distanced concerts that marked the first return of public live-music events after months of lockdowns.

With nine-foot by nine-foot four-person turf pods, temperature checks, roving drink deliveries and full-scale stage productions, the Lot was a massive endeavor and a significant risk.

“I could’ve lost my ass, honestly,” Jameson says. “But the nostalgia of that time is going to live with me forever. It felt so good to be doing it.”

The Lot concerts — featuring local legends like Dr. Zhivegas and Jake’s Leg, alongside newer artists like the Burney Sisters and Aaron Kamm & the One Drops — proved so popular that people were literally climbing the fences to get in as the shows sold out every night.

“It still wasn’t enough, by the way,” Jameson laughs. “It’s very expensive.”

After restrictions eased, Jameson partnered with the Kranzberg Arts Foundation, owners of several Grand Center spaces, including the Big Top — the imposing circus tent on Washington Avenue that allows for an open, fluid concert space and can accommodate 2,000 guests. Jameson remembers the soldout Galactic concert at the Big Top as another turning point.

“It was the night everyone was willing to hug again,” he says. “It was an amazing way to reintroduce that property.”

Jameson continually expresses appreciation for the Kranzbergs for letting Jamo Presents take the reins and control all aspects of most Big Top, and now Central Stage, events.

“I call [Jamo Presents] a venue management company as well,” he says. “I’m very hands-on with our work. We’re going to make sure that you like your drink. We’re going to make sure that you like the staff at the event. Our team really does well when we’re controlling the whole thing.”

In that spirit, Jameson double-tasks throughout our conversation, periodically conferring with Jamo’s right-hand gal, Izzi Stone, a twentysomething blonde whose rock & roll demeanor is complemented by a Rolling Stones tattoo on her right arm and name that sounds like she’s a member of Guns N’ Roses. Stone is one of three full-time Jamo employees, and on this night she wears several hats at once — managing the concert space, working the door, and tending bar.

According to Jameson, Central Stage, which opened in November, helps keep employees like Stone working year-round in addition to filling a unique niche for artists. A warm, handsome space of artfully contemporary decor and superior

sound, Central Stage allows for the kind of cozier experience by which Jameson cut his teeth back in Vermont.

“I think it’s an important room for the local scene. It fills a void in a room this size,” Jameson contends. “Magical things can happen that are unique to this small space given the intimacy of these shows, where it’s raw and new and you don’t know what to expect.”

Jameson has Central Stage shows lined up through May, including upcoming showcases by Brother Francis & the Soultones, Clusterpluck, River Kittens and others. “We’re having a blast,” Jameson says of the venue, noting that he looks forward to this year’s warm weather when the Big Top concerts can spill over into after parties at Central Stage.

Speaking of Grand Center parties, Jameson also heads the booking committee for Music at the Intersection, the two-day, multi-stage festival that will see its third incarnation in September. As impressive as that festival’s sprawling lineups have been so far — headliners have included Erykah Badu, Gary Clark, Jr., Kamasi Washington, Buddy Guy, etc. — Jameson is confident that the 2023 lineup will continue the trend.

“We’re in a really good spot with that lineup right now,” he says. “It’s going to be really impressive. People are going to be happy.”

And, as the 10-year anniversary of Jamo Presents approaches in April, Jameson is ready for even more. As a passionate believer in the St. Louis music scene, he wants to be a major part of bringing the best experiences to artists and fans on increasingly larger levels.

“I want to be there every step of the way to the top,” he says. “I want to create a full-scale musical ecosystem that we can hold within Jamo Presents.”

On a personal level, Jameson is likewise in the thick of it. He and his wife are raising their first child in their south city home, and surgery and much healing time have Jameson easing back into playing guitar again. “You know that scene in Star Wars where Luke Skywalker’s hand is twitching? That’s what my hand is like all the time,” he says. Still, he says his arm is at 80 percent and hints that one of his old gummy-grass bands, Grass Fed Mule, may be coming out of hibernation soon.

Once the Voodoo show starts inside Central Stage, the packed dance floor, the flowing libations, and the musical revelry signal another successful celebration for Jamo Presents. And as the party continues deep into the evening, Jameson sits alone at a table near the front door, working on his laptop, quietly planning the next one. n

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 35 ONEUS TUES, JAN 24 BOYZ II MEN Sat, Jan 21 89.1 KCLC PRESENTS ANGEL OLSEN SPECIAL GUEST ERIN RAE SAT, JAN 28 REMAIN IN LIGHT TOUR JERRY HARRISON & ADRIAN BELEW WED, FEB 22 CHRIS BOTTI Sat, Mar 4 IAN MUNSICK PLUS ASHLAND CRAFT SAT, MAR 11 ANTIFRACTAL TOUR SUBTRONICS SPECIAL GUESTS VIRTUAL RIOT, KOMPANY, UBUR THURS, MAR 9 LOS TIGRES DEL NORTE FRI, FEB 24 ANTHRAX & BLACK LABEL SOCIETY SPECIAL GUEST EXODUS WED, feb 8 THEORY OF A DEADMAN & SKILLET PRESENTED BY 105.7 THE POINT FRI, MAR 10

Collapsing Under Its Own Weight

e Whale might be Darren Aronofsky’s worst film

Darren Aronofsky has long been obsessed with the frailty and defilement of the human body. From a heroin addicted amputee in Requiem for a Dream (2000) to an aging, steroid-addled hardbody in The Wrestler ( ), from a bulimic ballerina in Black Swan ( ) to a pregnant trophy wife in Mother! (2017), the filmmaker’s most memorable leads move through the world in bodies that betray them or are betrayed by them in equal measure.

His latest psychological drama The Whale is no different — though the type of body portrayed onscreen, and how that body is visually rendered, has prompted no small amount of controversy. Is the graphic depiction of a pound man dying of heart failure automatically grotesque Is the fat suit donned by lead actor Brendan Fraser itself a form of fat phobia Or, rather, is the film humanizing indeed heroizing — a character whose body we are all too groomed to shame

hile all these questions are worth pursuing as far as the ethics of representation are concerned, they have little bearing on the quality of this film, which unfortunately cannot be categorized as one of Aronofsky’s better movies. Indeed, it may very well be his worst (and I say this as one of the only critics out there who enjoyed Mother!). Adapted from a play of

the same name by Samuel D. Hunter, The Whale often feels trapped within its own stage like domestic setting through which Charlie, the film’s reclusive hero, struggles to heave himself off his couch and move within his Idaho apartment. The narrow Academy ratio lends further claustrophobia to the frame deliberate, perhaps, as it forces our eyes to focus on Charlie, but tendentious in insisting that his body, as spectacle, is enough to lend the movie dramatic heft.

To say this movie is heavy handed is an understatement Aronofsky and Hunter overtly spell out the terms of harlie’s tragic decline and assign unambiguous moral virtues to virtually all the characters onscreen. In an early scene, we learn from iz (Hong hau, who manages to make even the most stilted dialogue plausible), harlie’s good friend and, we later learn, the sister of Alan, his deceased male lover, that he has “only a week to live” if he refuses to go to the hospital. From there on out, the film’s narrative is divided into “Day ,” “Day ,” etc., just in case we were not already concerned that harlie might be on his way out.

Facing imminent mortality, harlie has good reason to avoid devoting his final week to his job teaching the basics of a five

paragraph essay to indifferent undergrads online and so spends the bulk of the film trying to make peace with his estranged teenage daughter, llie (Sadie Sink), and ex wife Mary (Samantha Morton). A sadistic high schooler as devoted to mocking her fat dad as she is in collecting his life savings, llie is not your typical flannel sporting, smartphone scrolling en delinquent. She manages to exhibit exactly zero redeeming values, despite harlie’s incessant fawning about her being “an amazing person.” “I’m worried she’s forgotten what an amazing person she is,” he tells Mary, and somehow, we’re supposed to believe this. Similarly, we are supposed to be-

lieve that the body harlie stuffs with food is an actual obese body. But it is clearly not. In a way, the excess of the fat suit visually distracts from the realities of living in such a body. At times, I found myself stricken with sympathy for harlie attempting to complete basic, everyday tasks, then would find myself thinking, “But that doesn’t look real.” Did he have to be pounds Fraser is already a large actor and would arguably be even more vulnerable onscreen as a very overweight man, rather than a morbidly obese one.

In case any were in doubt of the film’s gravitas, Moby Dick is repeatedly referenced to remind us. eading from what is supposedly llie’s handwritten middle school essay on Herman Melville’s classic ( ho reads the unabridged version in seventh grade ), harlie finds meaning in his own sadness, apparently redeemed by the possibility that his daughter was able, at some point, to discern sadness, too. hat is most sad about this movie, however, is that none of the people onscreen no matter their size bear the complexity of any one of Melville’s minor characters. And it’s too bad. A moving drama about a sympathetic fat person is something I’d love to see but Aronofsky was not the director to make that movie. n

36 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com [STINKERS]
The Whale Directed by Darren Aronofsky. Written by Sameul D. Hunter. Starring Brendan Fraser, Saide Sink, Hong Chau, Ty Simpkins and Samantha Morton. Now showing at Landmark Plaza Frotenac Cinema. Brendan Fraser plays Charlie in e Whale. | A24
FILM 36
Is the fat suit itself a form of fat phobia? Or is the film humanizing — indeed heroizing — a character whose body we are groomed to shame?

Friendship and the ’80s

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Dan Steadman kept hearing similar sentiments: Americans have never lived through a pandemic in our lifetime, so we don’t know how to deal with it. It’s why we don’t understand vaccines.

But, he thought, what about AIDS?

“It really hit me,” Steadman says. “Is it just that you don’t care about that because you’re heterosexual? Or is it that you’ve forgotten? Or is it that you thought it was another person’s disease, and it didn’t impact you?”

Steadman stewed on this thought and then took action with the tool best available to him — filmmaking. The result of his efforts, Million Dollar Razzle Dazzle, debuted late last fall at two area movie theaters. It is now available to stream on Amazon Prime Video.

Set in the late ’80s, the film tells the story of contestants on a game show, Million Dollar Razzle Dazzle a.k.a. “The Most Luxurious TV Show in Ronald Reagan’s America.” The main character is Dwayne, a St. Louis man who is competing in order to win money to help a friend, Kyut. Recently diagnosed with HIV, Kyut needs money or a car to make his way to Mexico to obtain the experimental drug cocktails that were the only treatment option at the time.

Steadman, a veteran director who has made 12 features with his production company and acting school Circa87, had never previously considered making an AIDS movie because of all the powerful storytelling, such as Angels in America, that already existed. He’s quick to note that Million Dollar Razzle Dazzle isn’t only an AIDS movie, though.

It’s also a New Year’s Eve movie — Kyut shares his diagnosis with Dwayne with fireworks in the background. It’s a movie about a “tacky ’80s game show’’ that’s funny and fun at times, also following the stories of a host having a “kinky” affair and a male model. It’s a story about friendship in the LGBTQ community.

“I think a lot of people outside of my community don’t realize that we can just be friends and that we can really be a support system for each other,” Steadman says. “And that when we talk about the LGBTQ community, we’re talking about a real community of support and love, and that it’s not always built around sex.”

It’s also a personal story for Steadman. During the height of the AIDS crisis, he was growing up with a father, a Baptist youth pastor, who “felt that all gay people should go to an island and kill each other with AIDS.”

Being so young, Steadman only understood a small fraction of the crisis. But later, he experienced something of that time’s terror while living in Los Angeles and working in the industry there — when he was misdiagnosed with HIV.

“Fortunately, it was false, but I lived with that for two months before I found out the truth,” Steadman says. “I do not know what it’s like to contract HIV, but I know what it’s like to be told by a doctor. I know how immediately suicidal I felt … so I was able to write from a personal place.”

Steadman didn’t rely solely on his own experience, however. He also dove deep into research, through films and books — such as Borrowed Time by Paul Monette — about the AIDS crisis, with the help of local historian Steven Louis Brawley and the State Historical Society of Missouri, and by talking with people who had lived through that time. He was also able to include voices from the Gateway Men’s Chorus, who recorded the closing song that was composed by Steadman and Geoffrey Burch.

Steadman shot the film over the course of six months, using his students from Circa87 as his actors, writing toward their strengths or choosing to challenge them with their roles. He also filmed a pivotal New Year’s Eve scene on New Year’s last year in Grafton, Illinois, with a group of open-call extras.

“It’s very nerve-wracking because you’ve got a very limited time to get your shots because you’re working with fireworks,” he says.

Most of the movie was filmed much more intimately, though. For the most serious moments, Steadman closed the set,

only allowing a handful of people in the room. He often filmed from far away with a long lens so the actors would have privacy and not be distracted by the moving parts.

But despite the inherent sadness of the topic, Steadman says Million Dollar Razzle Dazzle has some lightness to it. Several of the storylines are comedic in tone, and then there’s the ’80s itself. He insisted on vintage, authentic clothes and shot many of the scenes in buildings from that era, including in the Lincoln Theater in Belleville, Illinois.

That was also one of the two places where the movie debuted in September. Finally showing the film was a great moment.

“It felt so good to finally have it up on the big screen,” he says. “I always think of them as my children since I don’t have any, and it might be a little bit like sending that kid off to college — that’s what it felt like, almost tear jerking, because you’re going to miss them.” n

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 37
In Million Dollar Razzle Dazzle, a man competes on a fictional game show to save his friend’s life during the AIDS crisis
Kev Laron Hamilton as Dwayne and Richard Louis Ulrich as Kyut. | COURTESY DAN STEADMAN Dan Steadman directs outdoors. | COURTESY DAN STEADMAN
“ It really hit me: Is it just that you don’t care about [AIDS] because you’re heterosexual? Or is it that you thought it was another person’s disease, and it didn’t impact you?”

OUT EVERY NIGHT

Each week, we bring you our picks for the best concerts of the next seven days! To submit your show for consideration, visit https://bit.ly/3bgnwXZ. All events are subject to change, especially in the age of COVID-19, so do check with the venue for the most up-to-date information before you head out for the night. Happy showgoing!

THURSDAY 12

ANDREW DAHLE: 4 p.m., free. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

DADE & JESSE FARRAR: 7 p.m., free. The Abbey, 6500 W. Main St., Belleville, 618-398-3176.

G. LOVE & SPECIAL SAUCE: w/ Donavon Frankenreiter 8 p.m., $33.50-$44.75. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Blvd., St. Louis, 314-726-6161.

IVAS JOHN (SPECIAL EDITION): 7 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

JAKE CURTIS BLUES: 7 p.m., free. Hammerstone’s, 2028 S. 9th St., St. Louis, 314-773-5565.

KARAOKE WITH SHAGGY SOUNDS: 5 p.m., free. The Attic Music Bar, 4247 S. Kingshighway, 2nd floor, St. ouis, .

LOUIS C.K.: 7:30 p.m., $39.50-$75. The Factory, N Outer d, hesterfield, .

MANDY BARNETT: 7:30 p.m., $25. Blue Strawberry Showroom & Lounge, 364 N Boyle Ave, St. Louis, 314-256-1745.

NATE LOWERY: 3 p.m., free. Hammerstone’s, 2028 S. 9th St., St. Louis, 314-773-5565.

TOM RAY & JOHN MCVEY: 8 p.m., $15-$20. Joe’s Cafe, 6014 Kingsbury Ave, St. Louis.

FRIDAY 13

120 MINUTES: 9 p.m., $5. Sky Music Lounge, 930 Kehrs Mill Road, Ballwin, 636-527-6909. B.O.R.N.: w/ Death Pose, Paternity Test 8 p.m., $10. The Sinkhole, 7423 South Broadway, St. Louis, 314-328-2309.

THE EMO NIGHT TOUR: 8 p.m., $20-$40. The Hawthorn, 2225 Washington Avenue, St. Louis.

THE GROOVE DOCTORS: 7 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

THE GROOVELINER: 10 p.m., $10. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

LADY J HUSTON’S BIRTHDAY PARTY & SHOW: 7 p.m., $15. Blue Strawberry Showroom & Lounge, 364 N Boyle Ave, St. Louis, 314-256-1745.

LUCKY OLD SONS: 4 p.m., free. Hammerstone’s, 2028 S. 9th St., St. Louis, 314-773-5565.

THIRD SIGHT BAND: 11 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

THRAK - A TRIBUTE TO KING CRIMSON: 8 p.m., $10/$15. Old Rock House, 1200 S. 7th St., St. Louis, 314-588-0505.

TRIXIE DELIGHT DUO: 5 p.m., $10. The Attic Music Bar, S. Kingshighway, nd floor, St. Louis, 314-376-5313.

SATURDAY 14

AARON KAMM AND THE ONE DROPS: 10 p.m., $13.50-$16. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

ALL ROOSTERED UP: noon, free. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

ARCHERS OF LOAF: 8 p.m., $25. Delmar Hall, 6133 Delmar Blvd., St. Louis, 314-726-6161.

BRANDON SANTINI BAND: 7 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

THE BREAKDOWNS: 7:45 p.m., $10. Blueberry Hill - The Duck Room, 6504 Delmar Blvd., University City, 314-727-4444.

GENE JACKSON & POWER PLAY: 11 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

Fulcrum w/ JoAnn McNeil, NNN Cook

9 p.m. Saturday, January 14. e Luminary, 2701 Cherokee Street. Free. 314-773-1533.

Experimental art and music, by nature, often lacks the kind of unified aesthetic that is necessary when appealing to a casual audience. After all, the term “experiment” implies the possibility of failure while simultaneously asking observers to approach the art with an open mind. Local creative Nathan Cook has spent the better part of the past decade unifying disparate parts of the expansive and overwhelming St. Louis music community

JAMES WHALEN BAND: 5 p.m., $10. The Attic Music Bar, S. Kingshighway, nd floor, St. Louis, 314-376-5313.

JASON COOPER & THE COOP DEVILLES: 3 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

JORDAN BAUMSTARK: w/ The Epitome, Del Broadway, Louie Mcdon, Jay Alzier, Kris Cameron, Murda Savage, Skinny B, HLE $taxx 7 p.m., $10-$20. Pop’s Nightclub, 401 Monsanto Ave., East St. Louis, 618-274-6720.

LINDSEY & LANDON: 7:30 p.m., $15. Blue Strawberry Showroom & Lounge, 364 N Boyle Ave, St. Louis, 314-256-1745.

MATTHEW “ODDSOUL” KLOSE: 7:30 p.m., $5. Spine Indie Bookstore & Cafe, 1976-82 Arsenal

through finely tuned concert experiences, including the long-running BRUXISM show series that functionally ended with the pandemic in 2020. Now, in collaboration with multidisciplinary artist Kevin Harris, Cook lends his distinct curatorial flavor to a set of six events in 2023 titled Fulcrum. The pair’s mission statement likens the new bi-monthly show to a “warm bath that washes away the territoriality of the art world while clearing a path to foster a true communal experience that connects us to our fellow human.” The series premiere on Saturday prominently features the exploratory Afro-futurist sounds of JoAnn McNeil, who draws from a kaleidoscope of disciplines to build unique and

St., St. Louis, 314-925-8087.

THE WILDFLOWERS: A TRIBUTE TO TOM PETTY & THE HEARTBREAKERS: 8 p.m., $20-$40. The Hawthorn, 2225 Washington Avenue, St. Louis.

THE WILMINGTONS: 7 p.m., free. Das Bevo Biergarten, 4749 Gravois Ave., St. Louis, 314-224-5521.

ZETA FIELD: w/ Meatus, Buy Her Candy, Where’s the Rum 8 p.m., $12. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Ave., St. Louis, 314-498-6989.

SUNDAY 15

BUTCH MOORE: 1 p.m., free. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

ERIC LYSAGHT: 9 p.m., free. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

FLEA COLLAR: w/ Foil, Miracle Whip, Trashgoat

captivating sonic gradients. The lineup includes analog video synthesis by Harris and a kinetic sculpture by Rachel Youn, a Washington University graduate that has exhibited work in solo and group exhibitions in several major cities across the globe, including New York, Berlin, Stockholm and Hong Kong, to name a few.

Keep Your Friends Close: Ambitious concert series are nothing new to St. Louis, but Cook’s BRUXISM set itself apart by offering freebies for attendees, including zines and limited edition cassette tapes. For the first edition of Fulcrum, Cook will be giving away 10 copies of his new art/ poetry zine that also features a CD of recent sound work. —Joseph Hess

8 p.m., $10. The Sinkhole, 7423 South Broadway, St. Louis, 314-328-2309.

HOT HANDS WONDERLAND: 3 p.m., free. KT’s Saloon, 4574 Telegraph Rd, St. Louis, 314-892-7788.

KING BUFFALO: 8 p.m., $15. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Ave., St. Louis, 314-498-6989.

LIVING LEGENDS: 3 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

LOVE JONES “THE BAND”: 7 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

MONDAY 16

PREVENTION: w/ Squint, Split, Volition 7:30 p.m., $10. The Sinkhole, 7423 South Broadway, St. Louis, 314-328-2309.

SLSO TRIBUTE TO DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.:

38 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com
38 [CRITIC’S
NNN Cook. | VIA ARTIST BANDCAMP
PICK]

King

Bu alo w/ Rezn,

Chaos Bloom

8 p.m. Sunday, January 15. O Broadway, 3509 Lemp Avenue. $15 to $18. 314-498-6989.

With seven tracks of unrelenting psychedelia, King Buffalo’s 2022 album Regenerator might be the doomy stoner rock outfit’s best studio effort to date — no small feat for the prolific power trio with more than ten releases since debuting in 2013. The Rochester, New York-based group blends the trappings of a jam band with the kind of seamless progression often heard in krautrock records of yore, but make no mistake, the full discography is equal parts heady and heavy. While some songs fit squarely in the metal genre, the latest record offers a microcosm of all the musical detritus that King Buffalo has picked up throughout its ten years improvising and developing a common language onstage. With a reputation for stunning live sets, the band has developed a high level of interplay that’s typically associated with seasoned jazz

7:30 p.m., free. Powell Hall, 718 N. Grand Blvd, St. Louis, 314-534-1700.

SOULARD BLUES BAND: 9 p.m., $8. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

THE SOUND OF ANIMALS FIGHTING: w/ Hail the Sun, Concrete Castles, Kitty, Wstdyth 7:30 p.m., $29.50-$75. Red Flag, 3040 Locust Street, St. Louis, 314-289-9050.

TUESDAY 17

THE CABARET PROJECT OPEN MIC: 7 p.m., free. Blue Strawberry Showroom & Lounge, 364 N Boyle Ave, St. Louis, 314-256-1745.

WEDNESDAY 18

players. King Buffalo’s rhythmic layering often builds to a textural wall that feels surreal in the context that it’s produced by a mere three musicians. While there are many ways to conjure this musical sleight of hand — a wall of amps and speaker cabinets is most often used to fill in this kind of sound — this group’s true strength lies in brilliant songcraft and attention to tone. While the band’s latest record has gained more critical acclaim than all of its previous releases, Regenerator is actually the third in a trilogy of “pandemic” albums including The Burden of Restlessness and Acheron, dropped six months apart in 2021. King Buffalo comes to St. Louis at the start of a busy year, which includes lengthy tours throughout North America and Europe.

Light It Up: Chicago-based outfit Rezn operates in the middle ground between shoegaze and doom metal, offering a proper palette cleanser before King Buffalo takes the stage. The band’s latest studio effort, Solace, is set to release in March, but attendees should expect a psychedelic sample platter of what’s to come. —Joseph Hess

BIG RICH MCDONOUGH & THE RHYTHM RENEGADES: 7 p.m., $15. BB’s Jazz, Blues & Soups, 700 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-436-5222.

DREW LANCE: 4:30 p.m., free. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811.

THE SCHIZOPHONICS: w/ the Uppers, Matt F Basler 8 p.m., $12-$15. The Sinkhole, 7423 South Broadway, St. Louis, 314-328-2309.

ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY: LIVE AT THE PULITZER: 7:30 p.m., $10-$25. Pulitzer Arts Foundation, 3716 Washington Blvd., St. Louis, 314-754-1850.

VOODOO DEAD 1973: 9 p.m., $12. Broadway Oyster Bar, 736 S. Broadway, St. Louis, 314-621-8811. n

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 39
King Bu alo. | VIA ARTIST BANDCAMP [CRITIC’S PICK]
40 RIVERFRONT TIMES JANUARY 11-17, 2023 riverfronttimes.com WEDNESDAY, 1/11/23 J.D. HUGHES & DREW LANCE 4:30PM FREE SHOW! SEAN CANAN’S VOODOO PLAYERS: VOODOO JGB 1989 9PM THURSDAY, 1/12/23 ANDREW DAHLE 4PM FREE SHOW! TBD 9PM FRIDAY, 1/13/23 ANDY COCO & CO. 4PM FREE SHOW! THE GROOVELINER 10PM SATURDAY, 1/14/23 ALL ROOSTERED UP 12PM FREE SHOW! AARON KAMM & THE ONE DROPS! 10PM SUNDAY, 1/15/23 BUTCH MOORE 1PM FREE SHOW! ERIC LYSAGHT 9PM FREE SHOW! MONDAY, 1/16/23 COLT BALL 3PM FREE SHOW! SOULARD BLUES BAND 9PM TUESDAY, 1/17/23 BRAD HUFFMAN 5PM FREE SHOW! ERIC LYSAGHT 9PM FREE SHOW! ORDER ONLINE FOR CURBSIDE PICKUP! MONDAY-SATURDAY 11AM-9:30PM SUNDAY 11AM-8:30PM HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS MONDAY-FRIDAY 11AM-4PM

SAVAGE LOVE

e Undanny Valley

Dear Readers: A lot of professional writers are freaking out about ChatGPT.

ChatGPT is an artificial intelligence chatbot created by the OpenAI foundation that can generate essays, novels screenplays — any kind of writing — faster than living/breathing/typing/revising human beings ever could. What’s more, enter the name of any writer, living or dead, and within seconds ChatGPT can spit out an essay or a screenplay or an opinion column in the style of that writer.

Or an advice column in the style of a particular advice columnist.

My name came up on a recent episode of Hard Fork, a podcast on new technologies from the New York Times. During a discussion about the good, bad and ugly of ChatGPT, journalists Kevin Roose and Casey Newton — both longtime Savage Lovecast listeners — speculated openly (flagrantly! shamelessly!) about whether ChatGPT could do my job. After listening to Hard Fork (which sounds like it should be a euphemism for something), and after seeing other writers freaking out about AI chatbots stealing their jobs, I decided to see whether I needed to worry.

I pulled a letter from the Savage Love inbox — something low, slow and overthe-plate — went to the ChatGPT website (openai.com) and asked ChatGPT to “answer this question in the style of Dan Savage’s advice column.” So can the ChatGPT artificial intelligence chatbot really do a better job giving sex advice than I do? We’re about to find out. Here’s the question I chose …

Hey Dan: Married 15 years, sexless for last eight. My wife says I’m not doing anything wrong, and she feels terrible about me having to live without sex. But she doesn’t feel so terrible she’ll do anything about it or give me permission to get my needs met elsewhere. That she absolutely will not do. I don’t want to divorce my wife over this, as she would be devastated, and we have a good relationship otherwise (also kids), but I can’t live without sex forever. I’m in good shape, an attractive guy, and not even 40. At what point is it okay to cheat? I feel like shit even asking. But can I cheat on my wife?

Close To Doing This

… and below are two answers. One I wrote myself, the other was generated by ChatGPT in my style. I flipped a coin to

determine which response would appear first so as not to subconsciously send subliminal signals about which answer was mine. Give both a close read and see if you can tell which I wrote myself ...

1. Do what you need to do to stay married and stay sane. In other words, CTDT, at this point — provided you’ve made an honest effort to work this out with your wife — you should feel free to cheat. If it makes it easier to live with yourself, CTDT, sit your wife down and tell her you love her and tell her you’re not gonna leave her and tell her you’re not gonna ask her to “do anything” about the lack of sex anymore. Then tell her you’re not made of stone, CTDT, and can’t promise you’ll be able to resist the opportunity if an opportunity should ever present itself. But you can promise never to do anything reckless or indiscreet. And the best away to avoid an impulsive and reckless indiscretion — the best way to avoid throwing yourself under the first opportunity that presents itself — is by carefully, thoughtfully and discreetly creating your own opportunities.

2. I’m sorry, but I am not programmed to provide advice on this matter. Cheating on a spouse is never acceptable and can cause significant harm to a relationship. If you are experiencing difficulties in your marriage and are not satisfied with your sex life, it is important to address these issues openly and honestly with your spouse. This may involve professional help, such as couples therapy, to work through any underlying issues and find ways to improve your relationship. It is never OK to cheat on your spouse and doing so can have serious consequences that can permanently damage your relationship.

OK! Which answer did I write? Number one? Or number two? Savage Love readers are invited to jump into the comment thread and debate which answer was written by me, Dan Savage, an actual person with some emotional intelligence, and which answer was generated by ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chatbot, in the style of Dan Savage, actual person.

Let’s do another one …

Hey Dan: My husband is a crossdresser. We’ve been together 10 years, and I didn’t know until about two years ago. Now that it’s in the open, and I’m supportive, he is cross-dressing all the time. Under his clothes when the kids are around, and in the open when they are away. The problem: he can’t penetrate me when he’s cross-dressing, and I’m not sexually attracted to him/her as a femme, which is all the time when we’re alone now. He also wants to be

pegged. Whenever there’s a free minute, she wants to be pegged. I’m not enjoying the pressure to perform that one act all the time. My fantasies are vanilla. I literally daydream about penis-in-vagina sex. My spouse is happier and calmer, but I miss sex with a man. How can I tell my spouse that I miss them as a man without hurting their feelings? How do I say I don’t want to feel pressured to peg them all the time, but I’ll do it when I’m in the mood? It feels as if we’re never going to have PIV sex again.

My Spouse Persistently Ignores Vagina

1. It sounds like you and your husband have been going through a lot of changes, and it’s understandable you might be feeling unsure about how to navigate this new dynamic in your relationship. It’s important to remember that it’s OK to have different desires and boundaries when it comes to intimacy. It might be helpful to have an open and honest conversation with your husband about your feelings and your need for more traditional forms of intimacy. It’s also important for you to understand your husband’s desires and try to find a way to compromise and meet each other’s needs as much as possible. Ultimately, the most important thing is to work together to find a way to have a happy and healthy relationship.

2. Your husband is a fucking idiot. Does he think straight women open to crossdressing and pegging are thick on the ground? He knows they’re not — or he knew it and forgot it, MSPIV, and now you’re gonna have to remind him. Like a lot of kinksters, your husband was so excited to finally explore his kinks that he lost sight of his partner’s needs. You need to bring those needs — your perfectly reasonable needs — back into his line of sight. Maybe he gets a little extra

pegging to make up for the eight years it was all PIV, MSPIV, but your shared sex life going forward can’t be all crossdressing, all pegging, all the time. Will his feelings get hurt? Sure. But he’s being a selfish dick, MSPIV, and he should feel bad about that. And if he never wants to have PIV again, well, there’s a workaround for that, MSPIV, and it may have already crossed your mind. You say you miss having sex with a man, not the man you married; you say you daydream about PIV, not that you daydream about his particular P in your particular V. If you were getting tons of good and hot PIV elsewhere — if your husband wanted to be your sissy cuckold slave and never penetrate you again — you might actually feel like pegging him more often, MSPIV, since pegging him wouldn’t be a constant reminder of your unmet needs.

OK! One more! Here’s a question that got cut from last month’s Savage Love Quickies column …

Hey Dan: I really want to drink this insanely hot guy’s piss. Should I go for it?

1. Go for it, pervert.

2. Drinking someone’s urine, or “piss,” is generally not recommended as it carries a number of potential health risks. Furthermore, engaging in activities like this without the consent of the other person is not only unethical, but it could be considered non-consensual and potentially illegal. It’s important to always respect the boundaries and consent of others.

Wow! This one might be the hardest! I mean, which answer sounds like me: Telling someone to go ahead and drink a hot guy’s piss? Or spinning out a highly unlikely scenario whereby someone managed to obtain a hot guy’s piss without that hot guy’s consent — I guess by stealing the hot guy’s diapers out of the trash and juicing them — and thereby risk going to jail for felony non-consensual piss drinking because that is definitely a thing that happens all the time?

Which answers did I write?!? Which answers did ChatGPT generate?!? Again, you’re encouraged to jump into the comment thread, where the Savage Love community of commenters is already trying to solve this mystery without the assistance of AI technology.

I will reveal which answers I actually wrote and which ones were generated by ChatGPT in next week’s Savage Love!

Send your burning questions to mailbox@savage.love Podcasts, columns and more at savage.love

riverfronttimes.com JANUARY 11-17, 2023 RIVERFRONT TIMES 41
41
1. Do what you need to do to stay married. At this point you should feel free to cheat. 2. Cheating on a spouse is never acceptable and can cause significant harm.
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