Good Times Santa Cruz 1848

Page 1

11.28.18

FLIGHT PLAN

JONATHAN FRANZEN ON FAME, BIRDS AND WHY HE LIVES IN SANTA CRUZ BY WALLACE BAINE P18

GoodTimes.SC SantaCruz.com


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INSIDE Volume 44, No.35 Nov 28- Dec 4, 2018

Film is back!

RESULTING CHAOS A tight race has council candidates waiting to exhale P11

We develop, scan and print 35mm and 120 film. #filmisnotdead www.bayphoto.com/local

WORDS WITH FRANZEN Santa Cruz author Jonathan Franzen on his new book of essays P18

Comedian Brian Regan loves the stand-up life P26

FEATURES Opinion 4 News 11 Cover Story 18 A&E 26 Events 34

Film 48 Dining 52 Risa’s Stars 57 Classifieds 58

Cover photo of Jonathan Franzen by Shelby Graham. Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal. Good Times is free of charge, limited to one copy per issue per person. Entire contents copyrighted © 2018 Nuz, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form is prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Good Times is printed at a LEED-certified facility. Good Times office: 107 Dakota Ave., Santa Cruz, CA 95060

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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

LIFE OF BRIAN

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OPINION

EDITOR’S NOTE Here in Santa Cruz, I think we have a bit of cognitive dissonance around Jonathan Franzen, just because he lives here and has made himself such a part of the community. Obviously, we know about his Great American Novelist status. We may have even been blown away ourselves reading The Corrections and Freedom and Purity. And yet, a lot of us see him as a pretty normal dude with particularly fetching glasses who shows up at local library events, or as a bartender at a Bookshop Santa Cruz charity mixer, or out

LETTERS

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

HERE’S THE DEAL

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Re: “Particular Exposure” (GT, Nov. 21): As California burns around us, it’s easy to lose hope. For years, as the climate crisis has worsened, our nation has had neither a plan nor the will to face the problem. Now, thanks to the Blue Wave of young people in Congress, we have a plan, but it will take all our efforts to make it happen. I support Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s resolution to create a House Select Committee for a Green New Deal in Congress. United Nations climate scientists tell us we have just 12 years to move our country off fossil fuels to avert catastrophic climate disaster. The Green New Deal does that, while also creating millions of green jobs and protecting working people of all backgrounds. The Democrats must share a compelling vision for the future to win in 2020. The Green New Deal is our best hope. Representative Panetta should get behind his progressive colleagues and support the Green New Deal. HANNAH JONES | SANTA CRUZ

BUS IT Re: “Push Track (GT, 11/21): A novelty train can run once a year and call itself the “Polar

in the scrub while he’s doing some birdwatching. So the various “Jonathan Franzen said this, and now the internet is mad at him” so-called controversies seem a million miles away. And of course, that’s how he likes it, as Wallace Baine discusses in this week’s cover story. It’s a great read, and an insightful look into Franzen’s life here, and his new collection of essays. I also urge you to take a look at the story by Ryan Masters in this week’s news section about CERT, one of the nonprofits you can donate to through Santa Cruz Gives. There are only 34 days left in our holiday giving drive—so many great local causes, so little time. So go to santacruzgives.org and find your perfect philanthropic match! STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Express.” A genuine high-speed train may be able to run only once an hour and yet serve a useful purpose. A “commuter train” running only once per half-hour is a stretch, and even every 15 minutes may be on the edge of acceptability. Such infrequency obviously deters interest in public transportation, so a goal should always be to do better. Properly providing strategic bursts of every five minutes would seem very desirable. Such a passenger commuter train traveling through Santa Cruz County on a single track (intended only for slow moving freight) isn’t going to happen! A simple solution that should satisfy all is to replace the obsolete freight track with a low-cost, multi-use arrangement that would safely accommodate bus passengers, bicyclists, pedestrians, families and genuinely improve Highway 1 traffic during rush hours. Briefly, the existing single railroad track could be covered with a surface that is drivable by existing buses. During morning commutes, buses depart the Watsonville bus terminal to pick-up this upgraded “single vehicle lane” corridor at the most convenient spot and travel westward unimpeded through the corridor to the Santa Cruz bus terminal and then return via the free-moving (at this time) eastbound Highway 1, back to the Watsonville >8

PHOTO CONTEST DO YOU EVEN LIFT, CROW? Circling birds above Natural Bridges last weekend.

Photograph by Nanda Currant. Submit to photos@goodtimes.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250 dpi.

GOOD IDEA

GOOD WORK

SEE AN OPENING

COMMON THREADS

Thanks to a much-needed soaking, the city of Santa Cruz is reopening five open spaces it had recently closed due to fire danger: Pogonip, Arana Gulch, Moore Creek Preserve, DeLaveaga Park, and Arroyo Seco Canyon Trail. All of them are ready to have hiking trails traversed by outdoor lovers. Rains greeted Santa Cruz County this past week, starting on Wednesday, Nov. 21. As of press time, there are more showers in the forecasts ahead.

A heart-warming Facebook video posted by Clare Campbell recently made the rounds showing two children playing patty-cake at the Ishara House orphanage that Campbell founded in the Congo. Campbell, who owns Felton’s Outback Trading Company, launched scholarships to improve the lives of young Congolese. She also started Congo Threads, a sewing project to employ women in the region. Campbell carries Congo Threads clothes in her store.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“Fame is a series of misunderstandings surrounding a name.” — JONI MITCHELL CONTACT

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LOCAL TALK

What do you think about Black Friday and Cyber Monday? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT

I live in a town where we all value small business and community, so I would rather shop at a local shop than Amazon. ALICIA SHIVELY SANTA CRUZ | OFFICE MANAGER

I don’t really care for either one of them. I care for small business owners. SONDI CARCELLO CAPITOLA | ASSISTANT

I don’t need any impetus or extra attention to buy gifts. DAVID JONES

I spent money on wine Friday, and saved some money, and that’s all I care about. MIKE GRABILL CAPITOLA | GENERAL CONTRACTOR

Destroy capitalism. ANDREW JAMES SANTA CRUZ | BARTENDER

ARTIST DEMOS CRAFT ACTIVITIES FOOD • BEER • WINE

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

SANTA CRUZ | LAND DEVELOPER

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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of November 28 ARIES Mar21–Apr19 Every year the bird known as the Arctic tern experiences two summers and enjoys more daylight than any other animal. That’s because it regularly makes a long-distance journey from the Arctic to the Antarctic and back again. Let’s designate this hardy traveler as your inspirational creature for the next eleven months. May it help animate you to experiment with brave jaunts that broaden and deepen your views of the world. I don’t necessarily mean you should literally do the equivalent of circumnavigating the planet. Your expansive adventures might take place mostly in inner realms or closer to home.

TAURUS Apr20–May20 When the American Civil War began in 1861, the United States fractured. Four years later, the union was technically restored when the northern states defeated the southern states. At that time, African American slavery became illegal everywhere for the first time since the country’s birth decades earlier. But there was a catch. The southern states soon enacted laws that mandated racial segregation and ensured that African Americans continued to suffer systematic disadvantages. Is there a comparable issue in your personal life? Did you at sometime in the past try to fix an untenable situation only to have it sneak back in a less severe but still debilitating form? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to finish the reforms; to enforce a thorough and permanent correction.

GEMINI May21–June20 Does an elusive giant creature with a long neck inhabit the waters of Loch Ness in northern Scotland? Alleged sightings have been reported since 1933. Most scientists dismiss the possibility that “Nessie” actually exists, but there are photos, films, and videos that provide tantalizing evidence. A government-funded Scottish organization has prepared contingency plans just in case the beast does make an unambiguous appearance. In that spirit, and in accordance with astrological omens, I recommend that you prepare yourself for the arrival in your life of intriguing anomalies and fun mysteries. Like Nessie, they’re nothing to worry about, but you’ll be better able to deal gracefully with them if you’re not totally taken by surprise.

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

CANCER Jun21–Jul22

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Does moss really “eat” rocks, as Cancerian author Elizabeth Gilbert attests in her novel The Signature of All Things? Marine chemist Martin Johnson says yes. Moss really does break down and release elements in solid stone. Gilbert adds, “Given enough time, a colony of moss can turn a cliff into gravel, and turn that gravel into topsoil.” Furthermore, this hardy plant can grow virtually everywhere: in the tropics and frozen wastes, on tree bark and roofing slate, on sloth fur and snail shells. I propose that we make moss your personal symbol of power for now, Cancerian. Be as indomitable, resourceful, and resilient as moss.

LE0 Jul23–Aug22 Let’s shout out a big “THANKS!” and “HALLELUJAH!” to the enzymes in our bodies. These catalytic proteins do an amazing job of converting the food we eat into available energy. Without them, our cells would take forever to turn any particular meal into the power we need to walk, talk, and think. I bring this marvel to your attention, Leo, because now is a favorable time to look for and locate metaphorical equivalents of enzymes: influences and resources that will aid and expedite your ability to live the life you want to live.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 “Every dreamer knows that it is entirely possible to be homesick for a place you’ve never been to, perhaps more homesick than for familiar ground,” writes author Judith Thurman. I’m guessing you will experience this feeling in the coming weeks. What does it mean if you do? It may be your deep psyche’s way of nudging you to find an energizing new sanctuary. Or perhaps it means you should search for fresh ways to feel peaceful and well-grounded. Maybe

it’s a prod to push you outside your existing comfort zone so you can expand your comfort zone.

LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22 Venice, Italy consists of 118 small islands that rise from a shallow lagoon. A network of 443 bridges keeps them all connected. But Venice isn’t the world champion of bridges. The American city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania holds that title, with 446. I nominate these two places to be your inspirational symbols in the coming weeks. It’s time for you to build new metaphorical bridges and take good care of your existing metaphorical bridges.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 To aid and support your navigation through this pragmatic phase of your astrological cycle, I have gathered counsel from three productive pragmatists. First is author Helen Keller. She said she wanted to accomplish great and noble things, but her “chief duty” was “to accomplish small tasks as if they were great and noble.” Second, author George Orwell believed that “to see what is in front of one’s nose” requires never-ending diligence. Finally, author Pearl S. Buck testified that she didn’t wait around until she was in the right mood before beginning her work. Instead, she invoked her willpower to summon the necessary motivation.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Blackjack is a card game popular in gambling casinos. In the eternal struggle to improve the odds of winning big money, some blackjack players work in teams. One teammate secretly counts the cards as they’re dealt and assesses what cards are likely to come up next. Another teammate gets subtle signals from his card-counting buddy and makes the bets. A casino in Windsor, Ontario pressed charges against one blackjack team, complaining that this tactic was deceptive and dishonest. But the court decided in the team’s favor, ruling that the players weren’t cheating but simply using smart strategy. In the spirit of these blackjack teams, Sagittarius, and in accordance with astrological omens, I urge you to better your odds in a “game” of your choice by using strategy that is almost as good as cheating but isn’t actually cheating.

CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 What has become of the metaphorical seeds you planted during the weeks after your last birthday? Have your intentions flourished? Have your dreams blossomed? Have your talents matured? Have your naive questions evolved into more penetrating questions? Be honest and kind as you answer these inquiries. Be thoughtful and big-hearted as you take inventory of your ability to follow through on your promises to yourself. If people are quizzical about how much attention you’re giving yourself as you take stock, inform them that your astrologer has told you that December is Love Yourself Better Month.

AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 If you want to play the drinking game called Possum, you and your friends climb up into a tree with a case of beer and start drinking. As time goes by, people get so hammered they fall out of the tree. The winner is the last one left in the tree. I hope you won’t engage in this form of recreation anytime soon—nor in any other activity that even vaguely resembles it. The coming weeks should be a time of calling on favors, claiming your rewards, collecting your blessings, and graduating to the next level. I trust your policy will be: no trivial pursuits, no wasted efforts, no silly stunts.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 In his song “Happy Talk,” Academy Award-winning lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II offered this advice: “You gotta have a dream. If you don’t have a dream, how you gonna have a dream come true?” Where do you stand in this regard, Pisces? Do you in fact have a vivid, clearly defined dream? And have you developed a strategy for making that dream come true? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to home in on what you really want and hone your scheme for manifesting it. (P.S. Keep in mind Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s idea: “A goal without a plan is just a wish.”)

Homework: Hug yourself as you tell yourself your biggest secret.

© Copyright 2018


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OPINION

View of Your Life!

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bus terminal to repeat the process for hours. All this can be accomplished within the schedule of the present RTC “approved plan” along the corridor for the “freight train to nowhere.” BOB FIFIELD | APTOS

ONLINE COMMENTS Re: Homeless Camp Closure: Good. Our citizens have been denied the use of our parks, and the parks have been polluted and damaged by illegal use. I’m very sorry

14 Kite Hill

that people are homeless. But Santa Cruz city is destroying itself through its generosity. Scotts Valley, Capitola, Aptos, Soquel offer few services. Since Santa Cruz has many services, and because it’s a nice place to hang out, we have attracted a disproportionate portion of the homeless population in the area. This problem needs solutions at the county, state and federal level. Santa Cruz will destroy itself if we persist in the folly that we can solve this problem on our own. — GARY

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NEWS FIRST RESPONDERS Teaching disaster preparedness and fire safety, Santa Cruz Gives participant CERT builds stronger communities BY RYAN MASTERS

FIRST PLACED Justin Cummings was the top vote getter in the 2018 November election.

Splitting the Odds

What the election of Justin Cummings and Donna Meyers means in a tight Santa Cruz City Council race BY JACOB PIERCE

W

ith the vast majority of the ballots counted, environmental educator Justin Cummings is currently the top votegetter in a very tight Santa Cruz City Council race. As of press time, community organizer Drew Glover, who ran on a slate with Cummings, is third in the race for three seats, which would be good enough for a majority for the council’s far-left wing, currently led by councilmembers Chris Krohn and Sandy Brown. Environmental consultant Donna Meyers is in second, but only 44 votes behind Cummings, who was leading by a wider margin last week. Cummings remembers feeling

overwhelmed and “pretty shaken” the day after the election—he was in second place in the early ballot counting, and it was starting to sink in that the hard work on his campaign had truly paid off. The more time Cummings had to recuperate from the campaign trail, the more excited he became. “I’m just trying to figure out how I’m gonna organize my time,” says Cummings, who already works long hours at his day job. Customarily, the top two vote getters each serve one year as mayor, although the decision is ultimately left up to the council. There are a few thousand provisional ballots left for election workers to

research and count, but Meyers is currently 1,400 votes ahead of Glover for second place. Before deciding how he would approach his year as mayor, Cummings says he wants to get to know city staff, and continue thinking about the issues. If selected to serve a term as mayor, Meyers says she would focus on homelessness issues, climate readiness and housing affordability— especially in light of the affordable housing bond failing to earn a twothirds majority at the polls. Glover and Cummings have, for the most part, steadily risen in the vote count ever since results started coming in. As GT reported >12

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

There’s an adage these days that health care should not begin in the emergency room—given that preventative care is more impactful and more cost-effective than a last-minute trip to the ER when a patient is already in serious trouble. It is equally true that emergency preparation should not begin in the midst of a fire, flood, mudslide, or earthquake. That’s why Santa Cruz County CERT, which stands for Community Emergency Response Team, brings neighbors together to train, plan and prepare for a wide variety of hazards before they happen. Safety is a serious concern this fall, as fires are raging throughout California. But CERT goes beyond thinking about worst-case scenarios. “This is about community more than anything. It’s about neighbors learning to work as a cohesive unit,” says Santa Cruz County CERT executive director Mary Edmund, 69, of Aptos. “People expect the government to step in and handle things in an emergency. That’s a dangerous way of thinking. The government cannot do everything for us.” This holiday season marks the first time that Santa Cruz County CERT has been selected to participate in the holiday fundraising program Santa Cruz Gives, a partnership between GT and the Santa Cruz County Volunteer Center. A retired U.S. Army colonel, Edmund’s 30-year military career ranged from duty as a nurse to medical advisor for the chief of the U.S. Army Reserve. She spent the final 10 years of her career working for the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness at the Pentagon. After retiring from the Army in 1996, Edmund moved to Santa Cruz County and became a self-described “career volunteer.” She spent 16 years with the Homeless Garden Project and more than 20 years with the Monterey Bay Master Gardeners. When Edmund took a CERT class in 2012, she immediately realized the potential benefit of expanding the >14

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NEWS Connecting Creativity

Breakthroughs happen here™

Opportunity & Community

Visual, Applied, and Performing Arts

EVENTS DEC 2018

For more information please visit cabrilloVAPA.com

NOV 30 DEC 2

Samper Recital Hall

NOV 30 DEC 2

Holy Cross Church

DEC 05

Black Box Theater

DEC 06

Samper Recital Hall

DEC 07

Crocker Theater

DEC 7-9

Black Box Theater

Cabrillo Winter Dance Concert Fri & Sat 7:30pm; Sun 2:00pm

Cabrillo Symphonic Chorus Music for the Feast of Christmas Fri & Sat 8:00pm; Sun 4:00pm

Improv Follies 7:00pm

Cabrillo Orchestra Concert 7:30pm

Vocal Jazz Concert 7:30pm

Vintage Hitchcock A Live Radio Play

SPLITTING THE ODDS <11 last week online, the tally announced Tuesday, Nov. 20, showed Glover finally inching ahead of Larson, who wrote on Facebook shortly after that it looked unlikely that he would surpass Glover. But new results came in Monday, after election officials added a whopping 1,500 additional vote-bymail ballots, which tend to come from slightly older voters and skew more conservative. Those returns narrowed the race for third place; Glover is still ahead of Larson, but only by 20 votes. Larson stresses that he did not concede the race in his Facebook post. Although optimistic about the returns, Glover never announced victory, even last week when things were looking pretty good for him. “I try not to focus on things that are totally out of my control,” he told GT. If nothing changes, Cummings and Glover would be the first two black men to serve on the Santa Cruz City Council, where they’ll join Vice Mayor

Martine Watkins, who became the first African American ever elected to the body two years ago. Incumbent Councilmember Richelle Noroyan is currently in fifth place, 180 votes behind Larson. Psychotherapist Cynthia Hawthorne is sixth. All eyes have turned to the outstanding provisional ballots, which historically skew left. (Nationally, they overwhelmingly backed Obama in 2012, and Clinton in 2016.) But in Santa Cruz County, where most voters cast ballots by mail, there is more uncertainty about how those results will break. A number of provisional ballots could come from vote-by-mail voters who lost their ballots at home. If the results hold, the arrival of a new majority would call into question the future of several majors projects, including a mixed-use parking garage and library, as well as current attempts to ease the housing crisis.

(Krohn cast the lone dissenting vote this past summer against a robust housing plan initially kick-started by Councilmember Cynthia Chase’s outreach as mayor.) There is already talk of passing a rent control ordinance, now that the rent control ballot measure, which Cummings and Glover supported, failed at the polls. That initiative, Measure M, earned 36.4 percent of the vote. “Rent control by ordinance, here we come!” local activist James Weller wrote Tuesday in a Facebook post, in which he tagged both Cummings and Glover. Glover says that if the council chose to pass a rent control ordinance, he believes it would want to tone down some of the more controversial elements of Measure M to address concerns from opponents. People are sure to dissect the election looking for takeaways, and one lesson may be that fundraising >14

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Friday and Saturday, 7pm, Sunday 4pm

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DEC 08

Samper Recital Hall

DEC 08

Crocker Theater

DEC 09

Crocker Theater

DEC 10

Black Box Theater

DEC 10

Samper Recital Hall

DEC 12

Samper Recital Hall

Chorale Winter Concert 7:00pm

Big Band Jazz Concert 7:30pm

Symphonic Winds Concert 3:00pm

Actors Showcase 7:00pm

Westside Folk & Gospel Choir 8:00pm

Classical Guitar Concert 7:00pm

DEC 13-14

Black Box Theater

DEC 15

Black Box Theater

DEC 16

Holy Cross Church, Santa Cruz

DEC 18

Peace United Church, Santa Cruz

Latin Jazz Ensembles 8:00pm

Jazz Combos 7:30pm

Concert for a Winter’s Eve 8:00pm

Messiah Sing-Along and Gala 7:00pm

NEWS BRIEFS FAREWELL, MAH LOVELY The Nina Simon era at the Museum of Art and History in Santa Cruz is coming to an end. Simon and the MAH’s board of directors announced this week that she will leave her position as the museum’s executive director in 2019, and the board will begin the search for a replacement in December. Simon will become the director of a new nonprofit, in association with the MAH, to help cultural organizations around the world pursue innovations in developing their communities. She and her family will remain residents of Santa Cruz County. Simon radically transformed the MAH during her eight-year tenure as its leader. Before she assumed the job in 2011, the MAH was a traditional, if unremarkable, community museum with a twin

mission of preserving local history and promoting fine art through periodic exhibitions. Today, it’s the vortex of a wide range of community activities from sociopolitically oriented exhibitions to celebratory fire festivals. Simon’s leadership also includes the $5 million Abbott Square project, which transformed the small plaza adjacent to the museum into a bustling urban community space in the spirit of San Pedro Square in San Jose and the Grand Central Market in Los Angeles. Attendance to the museum has roughly tripled under Simon. Once a successor is hired, Simon will spearhead a new organization called OF/BY/FOR ALL, which will seek to take the lessons from the transformation of the MAH and create a framework for other communityfocused organizations to emulate—including not only other museums, but parks, libraries and media organizations.

Simon is quick to correct the notion that she’ll take on the role of a consultant. “We’re really seeing this as a movement,” she says. “The MAH is a beautiful place and it is perceived as a leader and an incubator of these kinds of approaches. This is about putting more fuel into sharing that energy and these opportunities globally.” The new effort has been in the planning stages for about a year, and the specific relationship between the MAH and the new organization has yet to be determined. “The idea,” says Simon, “is to have strong separate entities—the MAH doing great local work, and OF/BY/FOR ALL sharing the secret sauce and the framework [of the MAH] that we see being adaptable in many different contexts.” The move is a natural extension of Simon’s career

as a kind of agent for bold democratization of historically elitist museum culture. She laid the groundwork of her vision in her ongoing blog “Museum 2.0,” which began in 2006, and the publication of her book The Participatory Museum in 2010. Her mission, she says, is to break down the barriers that have prevented full participation of communities in their local institutions, not only as audiences but as creators and decisionmakers, an approach reflected in her new organization’s Lincolnesque use of the prepositions “of,” “by,” and “for.” Though she’s ready to take the MAH model global, Simon says that leaving her position was “a very hard decision to make.” Of her successor, she says, “I honestly think this is the best executive director job in the world. [Whoever is hired] is going to be one of the luckiest people in the world.” WALLACE BAINE


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program across the county. The former colonel took it upon herself to do exactly that. “Considering my background, CERT seemed like a natural fit, and I wanted to do something for my neighborhood,” Edmund says. “At that time, there were only one or two classes a year in the entire county. Watsonville hadn’t had a CERT class in nine years.” CERT plans to use its Santa Cruz Gives funds to partially cover the cost of training equipment, including two mannequins, for search-and-rescue and disaster medicine training units. Edmund says the program aims to expand and adapt its FEMAcertified basic and advanced training to reflect the unique geographical areas in Santa Cruz County. She wants to develop a training branch that focuses on mountain communities’ needs and another that serves coastal communities. Edmund says Santa Cruz County CERT operates on an annual budget of roughly $40,000. To date, the program has survived on grants and donations, yet a sudden drop

off in donations has strained resources in 2018, she says. “This year has been a tough one. I’m not sure if it was because of changes to the tax law or all the calls to action in the wake of the wildfires, but I’ve noticed the decrease,” Edmund says. At the same time, demand for Santa Cruz County CERT’s classes is climbing. FEMA-certified instructors train volunteers in basic disaster response skills, such as fire safety, disaster medical operations and search and rescue. “Last year we didn’t post our 2018 classes until January,” says Santa Cruz County CERT registrar Dawn Mackey. “This year we’re getting requests in October for classes in March of next year. People are jumping on registration. We’re seeing far more interest even than last year.” Mackey, 70, has lived in Bonny Doon since 1974. She joined CERT three years ago because she wanted to help her neighborhood prepare for fire, heavy rains and other hazards. Mackey sees CERT as not only emergency preparedness, but also invaluable community building. “In the event of an emergency, people

may have to rely on one another for seven to 10 days, especially if they’re living in remote areas or places with limited access,” Mackey says. Community exercises, such as Map Your Neighborhood, teach neighbors to rely on each other during the hours or days before fire, medical, police or utility responders arrive. Map Your Neighborhood also prompts neighbors to locate natural gas and propane tanks and create a contact list to identify the homes containing the elderly, disabled or children. The FEMA-certified training classes are free to all residents of Santa Cruz County. The only requirements are time and the willingness to support your neighborhood and community, according to Mackey. “When you’re done, you’re prepared to give first responders a specific, valuable map of your neighborhood when they arrive during an emergency,” Mackey said. “It can save them a lot of crucial time.”

For more information or to enroll in a Basic CERT Training class, visit santacruzcountycert. org. To donate to CERT Santa Cruz County as part of Santa Cruz Gives, visit santacruzgives. org through Monday, Dec. 31.

isn’t everything. Glover set a surprisingly low fundraising limit for himself of about $10,000. He ended up raising $12,800, as of Oct. 31, according to reporting forms submitted to the city of Santa Cruz. Glover, who grew up in Santa Cruz, feels that voter response to his candidacy sends a powerful message. “It’s more in the connections you make in the world than the money you raise in the campaign,” he says. Glover wouldn’t recommend his strategy to everyone, however. He says that a candidate needs deep roots in the community in order to pull it off. In Larson’s campaign effort, the city management consultant went in the opposite direction. He broke the voluntary campaign spending limit of $39,900, after initially signing on to it when kicking off his campaign. City Council candidates have yet to submit their final round of paperwork, but Larson says he ended up spending more than $50,000. Larson says he felt he needed to raise lots of money to make up for his late start in the campaign, which he launched in August, shortly before the filing deadline. He believes that if he had launched his campaign earlier, he would have had better results on election day, but says that he wasn’t able to announce sooner because of business and personal reasons. Although the field looked crowded on paper, Larson felt at the time that there were only a few serious candidates, and he believed that was good enough to provide an opening for him. He says that if the results don’t turn around for him in the final vote count, he will consider another run in 2020 or 2022. There may also be lessons in the race’s crowded field, which had 10 candidates vying for just three seats. Other than Cummings and Glover, all of the candidates were either relatively moderate or right-leaning. Supporters of the public safety group Take Back Santa Cruz, which doesn’t make endorsements, had their eyes on four candidates, all of whom were active and popular on the group’s Facebook page: Larson, Noroyan, Ashley Scontriano and Paige Concannon, the race’s >16


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only Republican. With the quite possible exception of Larson, all of them are expected to come up short. Those four were also the only candidates that the local public safety blog Santa Mierda wrote about favorably in its election guide. There was also disagreement and confusion about who the strongest public safety candidates were. Meyers, for example, wasn’t typically lumped into that group, but did earn endorsements from the Police Officers’ Association, the local firefighters’ union and the Police Management Association. “They splintered each other,” Glover says. “There was infighting going on. There was combativeness that was made public. There were all of these obstacles that they basically put up themselves. The question I would pose to voters is, ‘What kind of leaders are you looking for? Do you want leaders who would lift each other up and work together or rip each other down in a conquest of power?’” Former Mayor Mike Rotkin endorsed three of race’s centrists: Meyers, Larson and Noroyan. He gives credit to Cummings and Glover for running on a united front. Rotkin, a Marxist UCSC lecturer, says both Cummings and Glover were popular on campus, and he figured that the two candidates would do well with voters who chose same-day registration at their polling places. In late returns, which included same-day registration ballots, both Cummings and Glover made major gains. “Those guys were united, they were the only candidates who supported M,” Rotkin says. Rotkin says that Larson, who he called the most qualified candidate in the race, probably should have entered the race earlier. If he had, Rotkin says, Larson’s presence may have dissuaded other candidates from jumping in. In hindsight, Rotkin suggests that instead of declaring late, maybe Larson should have just sat the election out. “You run seven or eight candidates for three seats,” he says, “you’re gonna get your butt kicked.”


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18

BIRDING RIGHTS Jonathan Franzen is known for

indulging his love of birdwatching in Santa Cruz. He became a full-time local resident this year, after giving up his New York home. PHOTO: SHELBY GRAHAM


Blowback Jonathan Franzen is willing to go all the way to Santa Cruz to escape the New York literary world, but his new book of essays shows he still loves a good argument BY WALLACE BAINE

H

broad-shouldered feature stories in the national and international media, which by their general aimlessness indicate that editors feel about Franzen as a mom feels about her daughter away at college: “Just checking in to see what’s new with you.” One New York Times feature was titled “Jonathan Franzen is Fine With All of It.” Another in the online magazine The Outline says only “Jonathan Franzen is Fine.”) At the same time, Franzen, 59, still finds himself trapped in the online dunking booth of social media, where little more than clearing his throat can draw shrieks of derision. Last week, with the publication of his new collection of essays The End of the End of the Earth (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), Twitter exploded in response to a list of rules for writers that Franzen included in the collection. If such an assertion as “It’s doubtful that anyone

with an internet connection at his workplace is writing good fiction” had come from any one of 10,000 creative-writing professors, it would have barely merited a shrug. But from Franzen, such a mildly provocative notion turbocharged the outrage machine for days. It’s the kind of situation that would drive many writers into vampire-like misanthropy or at least a Salinger-esque selfexile. But Franzen’s strategy to cope with this particular kind of trending-topic hell is simple: 1) keep working, 2) stay off social media, and 3) live in Santa Cruz.

SANTA CRUZ HORIZONTAL In October, I followed the path, already well-worn by other feature writers, to Jonathan Franzen’s front door to discuss the new book of essays. He lives with writer

20>

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

e is famously fond of birds. But you could argue that Jonathan Franzen’s spirit animal is of a different phylum altogether. Like some exotic Amazonian butterfly pinned under glass, Franzen has for years been the object of a brand of obsessive public curiosity like no other writer of his generation. Franzen’s landmark 2001 novel The Corrections is a consensus choice for the canon of the greatest novels of the 21st century, and you could make a good argument for its follow-ups, Freedom and Purity. So, he is in no way undeserving of widespread recognition. But Franzen’s fame is as much a condition of the mosquito-swarm nature of today’s information-decadent media culture as it is of his literary accomplishments. Just in the last few months, he has been the subject of several

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Kathryn Chetkovich on Santa Cruz’s Westside. Franzen’s history with Santa Cruz County goes back two decades to when he and Chetkovich first lived together in Boulder Creek. He has lived on and off in Santa Cruz for years, but in 2018, he sold his New York City apartment, making Santa Cruz his only home address. “I’m a ’70s guy,” he says. “When I first came here, it was: ‘Oh, I recognize this. This is what I liked about the ’70s.’ And it’s still here.” For such a literary heavyweight,

he has maintained a refreshingly regular-guy lifestyle. This year, he has made public appearances in such decidedly cozy local venues as the Porter Memorial Library in Soquel and the Wellstone Center in the Redwoods. At Porter, he even read a passage from his new novel, a project not likely to see publication until the next decade. On Thursday, Nov. 29, Franzen, as he has done for most of his books, will begin his tour with an appearance at Bookshop Santa Cruz.

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“There are a lot more horizontal relationships among writers here than there is New York,” he says. “In New York, everything is vertical. You have your agent, your publisher and that’s generally who you’re dealing with. I had my friends in Brooklyn, certainly. But the horizontal relationships weren’t organized [in New York] the way they are here. I find that very sweet. The idea of community is taken seriously here.” Franzen is originally a Midwesterner—he grew up near St. Louis—and ended up in California, a pattern that fits many of his literary peers such as George Saunders, Michael Chabon, Dave Eggers and the late David Foster Wallace. “My worry before coming here was that I would never get any writing done, because it’s the good life,” says Franzen. “I had the wrong idea about California. When you live in the East, and grew up in the Midwest, California exists in your imagination in this kind of golden light—red wine, golden hills, hot tubs, redwoods. It looks like your brain is going to rot there.” To Franzen’s delight, he found early on that, at least in Santa Cruz, the Beach Boys endless-summer fantasy gave way to gray summers and fog-smothered mornings. Of the summer of 2018, he said, with satisfaction, “It was the best summer in a decade for morning fog and low temperatures. I just love the weather.” Not that the weather or anything about his surroundings matter when it comes time to write. Franzen calls his home office a “sensory deprivation chamber,” a signifier of his ongoing personal vendetta against distractions. Not only does he keep the internet and cellphones out, he cannot even tolerate a window. “I look

at some venetian blinds that are shut. I can tell that there are some redwood trees out there. But I can’t see them well enough to risk getting distracted by a bird.” Franzen’s new book, however, belies the notion that he’s a hermit trapped in his writer’s distractionproof booth. It’s a wide-ranging collection of his nonfiction, much of it published before, though “in completely invisible places.” The short piece that finishes the collection was actually originally published on a Chipotle bag. “Literally nothing in this book is exactly the way it was when it was published,” says Franzen. “In a number of cases, there have been substantial revisions.” The book features mostly recent material, the outlier being a piece written in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. Franzen owes the success of The Corrections, in part, to a quirk of timing at the intersection of commerce and tragedy. The novel was released the same week as the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and became the book people turned to as an escape from the tragedy. “I went on the road almost as soon as the planes got back in the air,” he says, “and everywhere I went, people were like, ‘Oh my God. You’re the only writer coming to town. We’re so happy to think about something that isn’t what we’re seeing on CNN.’”

BIRD WATCH The rest of the collection is a potpourri of memory pieces, literary and arts criticism, reported travel pieces, and polemics, much of it touching on the dimensions of climate change and even more of it about birds, put most urgently and succinctly in the essay “Why Birds Matter.” “After my first two novels, I

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BLOWBACK <22 stopped trying to persuade people of anything with the novel. Part of what enabled me to stop that is that I discovered the essay. I’m an opinionated guy. I’m an argumentative guy,” he says. “When it comes to certain issues, I can be an angry guy. Argumentation, opinion and anger are not the best things to make a novel out of.” In the realm of anger comes a takedown of the National Audubon Society, “better known for its holiday cards and plush-toy cardinals and bluebirds, which sing when you squeeze them, than for generating hard science, taking controversial positions, or partnering with groups that do real conservation work.” More memorable are Franzen’s astounding field reports, including a trip to Albania to see firsthand an avian apocalypse at the hands of hunters, a killing field in which thousands of birds entered and none escaped. These accounts are reported somewhat dispassionately, as a way to tackle the inconsistencies and paradoxes of modern-day conservation. Still, Franzen’s piece on Albanian hunters’ indiscriminate slaughter of migratory birds was partially responsible for a two-year ban on hunting birds there. Franzen realizes that his writing about birds is only effective insofar as it avoids sentimentality. “If you take birds seriously and find out about them and watch them carefully, it’s hard to be too sentimental about them. My friend [UC Santa Cruz Professor] Todd Newberry refers to birds as killing machines. Most birds are all about killing, killing, killing and being killed, often by other birds. I don’t sentimentalize them. I respect that they are different from me, and I do love them. But when I see a dead bird, the only time I get upset is when I hit one myself. I’ve killed three birds with cars, that I know of, and I can describe exactly where each of those bird deaths happened.” The book’s showcase essay may be the title piece, which weaves together personal reflections of fraught family relationships with

a vivid account of traveling to Antarctica on a Lindblad cruise ship. The takeaway image from the story features a majestic Emperor Penguin, spotted by Franzen from aboard the ship, holding court for a bunch of orange-bejacketed eco-tourists with cameras, as if it were holding a press conference. Franzen, always the contrarian, had already vowed he would not take a single photo on the trip. But, he allowed himself to bathe a bit in the congratulations of his fellow tourists for spotting the penguin: “I finally had an inkling of how it must feel to a be a high-school athlete and come to school after scoring a seasonsaving touchdown,” he wrote. There is no indication in the essay, however, of the other travelers’ acknowledgement that they were with one of the world’s most famous bird lovers and a man who once appeared on the cover of Time magazine under the headline “Great American Novelist.” Antarctica is far to go to escape the pressures of literary fame, but they were there when Franzen returned to the unfrozen world, and they remain today, including the flaming arrows launched from social media. “By living in Santa Cruz, it’s much easier to ignore it all than it is being in New York,” he says. He says he does not participate in social media. He has not googled himself since 2001. He points to Chetkovich—who he slyly refers to in his new book as “The Californian”—as his anchor to the non-internet world. “My first line of defense is Kathy. She knows who I am,” he says. “Whatever persona I have publicly is meaningless to her. I know who I am. My friends know who I am. I do feel there is less of all that stuff here in Santa Cruz, that this is a self-selected cultural community that looks inward, not in a bad way, but in a good way, that’s not obsessed with the world’s opinion. And that feels good.” Jonathan Franzen will read from his new book of essays, The End of the End of the Earth, at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 29, at Bookshop Santa Cruz, 1520 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Free. bookshopsantacruz.com.


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THE REGAN ERA Considered by many to be the funniest comedian working today, Brian Regan performs at the Rio Theatre on Nov. 30.

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COMEDY

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“I miss the camaraderie of comedy clubs. What’s weird at a theater is that you say good night and the audience goes and walks out one door, and you walk out another door. Aren’t we supposed to cuddle when we’re done?” -BRIAN REGAN <26 people laugh that was foremost in his mind. “It took a while before I played on the West Coast,” says Regan. “I was limited geographically. I literally bought Greyhound bus passes where you could go anywhere you want for 30 days. It wasn’t until after I moved to New York in 1986 that I began branching out and playing the West Coast states.” It took a decade on the East Coast circuit and a chance gig with Jerry Seinfeld to open Regan’s eyes to the beauty of playing theaters, rather than clubs. “I love the complete focus you get from a theater. When you go back to a comedy club, it’s people eating nachos and there’s a blender going off in the background and the people over here, they came from New York and it’s Jack’s birthday,” Regan reflects. “It’s a different vibe, I enjoy it, but I don’t enjoy it as much as everyone sitting in velvet chairs and paying 100 percent attention.” Even with an audience giving a comic 100 percent of their undivided attention, there is something that Regan misses from the early comedy club days, and that’s hanging out with other comedians after a gig. Which is why after a Mountain Winery show earlier this year, Regan popped by Rooster T. Feathers in Sunnyvale, just to hang out and say hello. Because for Regan, comedy clubs are his home away from home. “That’s a great way to put it. I miss the camaraderie of comedy clubs. What’s weird at a theater is that you say good night and the audience goes and walks out one

door, and you walk out another door,” he says. “Aren’t we supposed to cuddle when we’re done?” Over the years, Regan has been adamant that he was not a comic looking to move toward a TV show or some lame sitcom about his life. Call it kismet, but the stars lined up, and Regan is now on a Farrelly Brothers-directed show called Loudermilk on the somewhat obscure AT&T Audience Network channel. “I love the autonomy of being a standup comedian and all the choices that come with that,” Regan admits. “Besides the amount of time I get to perform, it’s all up to me and I get to do whatever I want to do.” But when asked about the differences, it seems Regan is no longer against being on the tube. “Acting is a whole other animal. I’m thrilled that I get to do it because it’s a big deal for me. You only get this one life—might as well take on some challenges. I like the team aspect of acting. It’s real interesting to see how a TV show is made.” For season two, Regan is being directed by either Peter or Bobby Farrelly in various episodes. “Both of them are great,” he says. “Both of them are very cool about letting me branch out and do what I want to do, but if it goes beyond what’s going to help the scene they have to reign me in. And I don’t mind because I’m serving somebody else’s creative vision. I like the difference, and I like being able to do both.” Brian Regan performs at 7 p.m. on Nov. 30 at the Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $47.50/General Admission, $63/Gold Circle. riotheatre.com.


Friday, December 7th 8:00pm at

A benefit for Pajaro Valley Loaves and Fishes and the Food Bank for Low Income Pet Owners at Santa Cruz County Animal Shelter

November 1 through December 31. Limit one free game per person, per day. Open play only. All donations will be given to Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Cruz County.

115 Cliff Street Santa Cruz (831)426-3324

15th Annual Native American Market

Holiday Art & Craft Faire

Sat, Dec 1 10am-5pm Sun, Dec 2 10am-4pm Come & shop for unique Native American gifts:

Simpkins Swim Center Saturday, December 1, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM Free Admission & Parking

Sterling silver jewelry, beadwork, paintings, handmade drums, & interesting gift items for family & friends.

Buy American By Native Americans Enjoy a Rez Dog, Fry Bread or Indian Taco

FREE Admission | info: 831.601.3051

Spreckels Veterans Memorial Building Exit #21 off Hwy 68 between Monterey & Salinas

5th & Llano Ave, Spreckels CA

- Unique hand-made gifts for everyone on your \ list, created by local artists and craftspeople. You’ll find jewelry, ornaments, scarves, bags, art glass, chocolates, photographs, cards, soaps, ceramics, hats, original art, candles, & more!

For more info. including the list of artists and images of their work, please visit www.scparks.com.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

Buy Advance Tickets @ BrownPaperTickets.com

boardwalkbowl.com

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&

THEATER

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

MANY A MIRACLE MCT’s “Miracle” runs through Sunday, Dec. 9 in Ben Lomond. PHOTO: ALIE MA

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Santa, Baby

MCT’s 10th ‘Miracle on 34th Street’ puts the holidays into perspective BY GEORGIA JOHNSON

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fter a couple of years of playing Kris Kringle, Peter Gelblum has traded in his Santa cap for a director’s hat. Maybe he’s looking to change things up, or maybe it’s that he hasn’t quite gone gray enough yet. Regardless, his new role suits him, and Mountain Community Theater’s new Santa Claus, Jackson Wolffe, fills Gelbum’s boots ably. MCT is rounding out their 36th season with Miracle on 34th Street, a tried and true original classic

not only as a film, but also for the theater. Now in their 10th installment of the show, Miracle on 34th Street was MCT’s first show ever after opening its doors in 1982. The founders and original cast members wrote a new version of the play adapted from the 1947 black-andwhite film starring Maureen O’Hara and Edmund Gwenn. MCT’s latest production has its own modern twists, of course, including cell phones and online holiday shopping. No, Miracle on 34th Street never goes

out of style. Despite having probably seen the film’s heartwarming ending, the thought of committing Santa Claus to a mental institution is enough to keep children and adults alike on the edge of their seats. Still, Miracle seems particularly important this holiday season. In a year filled with so much sadness and anger, particularly in the aftermath of disasters across California, I had a little extra appreciation for Gelblum and the cast’s determination to bring the holiday spirit to the stage.

In fact, the very existence of MCT’s Miracle is somewhat of a miracle in its own right. After losing the rights to produce and publish the play 10 years ago, Gelblum, also an attorney, sought to regain them from 20th Century Fox. Gelblum’s brother represented Fox, and they were able to make a deal to insure that MCT could continue their Miracle legacy. This time of year, it’s easy to get caught up in the details, the prices and the planning of the holidays. Some of us are already on the edge of panic over Christmas presents and party planning, and there’s still Thanksgiving turkey in the fridge. Too many holiday shows leave cast members and audiences alike drowning in red bows and holiday lights, or on the contrary, throw a fat man in a red suit and expect it to just “work.” It’s no easy feat to put on a successful holiday show, particularly one rooted in so much history and tradition. MCT’s Miracle promised extra laughter and warmth, and delivered both. This Miracle is a gentle reminder that though the holidays are drawing near, there’s no need to stress, because they are about more than planning and presents. It’s silly and goofy, with a good amount of holiday carolling for a hefty two-and-ahalf-hour production (including intermission), and the heart of it all is community. There’s nothing particularly profound or provocative about Miracle—but then again, there doesn’t need to be. I don’t know if it was the holiday lights, the extraconvincing Santa Claus or the trio of young, somewhat clumsy unionized elves—but I left feeling like there’s enough enchantment to breathe a little magic into the most shriveled holiday hearts. To the Santa Claus naysayers and holiday pessimists: I believe the front seats are reserved for you. MCT’s ‘Miracle on 34th Street’ runs Friday-Sunday at 2 and 8 p.m. through Sunday, Dec. 9. 9400 Mill St., Ben Lomond. 336-4777. mctshows.org. $10-$20.


KUUMBWA JAZZ PRESENTS

Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles:

Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn

at the Rio Theatre Sunday, December 9 7 PM | $10 Youth Tickets!

at the Rio Theatre Tuesday, December 11 7:30 PM

Navidad Mexicana

media sponsor

Tickets at kuumbwajazz.org & Streetlight Records - Santa Cruz | Info: kuumbwajazz.org

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

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MUSIC

HEAD HONCHO Blockhead performs at the Catalyst on Tuesday, Dec. 5.

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Block Aid

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Producer Blockhead is a hip-hop poet’s best friend—but he saves some of the best beats for himself BY MIKE HUGUENOR

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roducer Blockhead has never worked with Justin Bieber, but he kind of wants to, despite building his entire career on collaborating with some of the most respected names in underground hip-hop. “If Justin Bieber wanted to do a beat that I made, as is, then he could have that beat,” says Blockhead aka Tony Simon. “I’d be curious to know what he does with it, to be honest with you.” For many pop music fans, the name Blockhead doesn’t ring a bell. But for a generation of hardcore hip-hop heads, he’s right up there with RZA, Pharrell and Dr. Dre as one of the greatest producers to ever do it. His brilliance isn’t as overt as

some of the household beatmakers. There’s a moody atmospheric quality and subtle complexity to his beats. As a young artist, he didn’t really know what he wanted to do. In the mid-90s, the young Manhattanite enrolled at Boston University, a stone’s throw from Harvard and MIT. Less than a year later, he dropped out. His college career was a nonstarter, but one good thing came out of it: he met a fellow New Yorker on campus, a lanky guy named Ian Bavitz with a similar taste in rap. The two got along immediately. The rap world would soon know Bavitz by his stage name: Aesop Rock. “Back in that era, you knew what kind of music people listened to by

how they dressed,” Simon says over the phone. “You just see someone and you’re like, ‘That’s gonna be my friend. I know that person is into what I’m into.’” Soon after meeting, the two began to collaborate. When Aesop Rock signed to tastemaking label Def Jux (founded by El-P, of Run the Jewels), Simon produced the lion’s share of the album, a production job that drew praise from Pitchfork for his “remarkably lush, cinematic spread of subtly weaving beats.” “I made my beats on a cassette back then,” Simon remembers. “I’d just play them, and he’d be like, ‘I want that one, I want that one, I want that one.’ Then he’d write, and we’d make the

song. It was a very simple time.” During the Def Jux era, Simon made many of the label’s rappers’ best beats. Since then, he’s worked with a wide array of the underground’s finest: Open Mike Eagle, Murs, Billy Woods, and Cannibal Ox’s Vordul Mega. By the mid-2000s, Simon had developed a taste for producing his own instrumental hip-hop music—a niche taste for sure, but a place where his subtle beat-making gifts shine. He crafts songs which trace a strange and invisible architecture, curling along the faultlines of their own internal logic. “I find instrumental music in general to be pretty predictable and boring, so I purposefully make mine not that,” Simon says, describing his Frankensteinian process of beats chopped and sutured. The process can be particularly complicated, but the results when done right are a disorienting kaleidoscope of sounds. “I’m taking two or three beats that weren’t originally made together and kind of fusing them,” he says. The seven-minute “Festival Paramedics” from 2017’s Funeral Balloons opens with a piano melody straight out of Halloween, transforms into a pulsing mutant disco, and then settles into an odd lounge/juke hybrid complete with wood flute, soul horns, and an unfurling harp. Elements arise and disappear only to reappear at unexpected times, creating the odd contiguity of a cryptid skeleton. Live, things only get stranger. “I have all the parts separated, then I sequence and mix and match. It’s like putting all my songs in a blender,” Simon says. It’s also a chance to see the producer in his element: sampling; mixing; pulling elements out of the ether and fusing them into alchemical combinations. He may not be working with mainstream pop stars anytime soon, but after 20 years in the game, Blockhead remains one of the strongest, most enduring undercurrents in hip-hop. Bieber take note. Blockhead performs at 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 5, at the Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $18/ door. 429-4135.


Saturday, December 1, 2018 TOM RALSTON’S ALL-STAR BAND TOM RALSTON songwritter, lead vocals & keyboards LISA TAYLOR & JEN KARNO vocals KEN HARRILL guitar JIMMY NORRIS drums GARY KEHOE percussion DANIEL VEE LEWIS bass JENNIFER CASS harp KRISTEN GARBEFF cello SHANNON DELANEY D’ANTONIO violin BRIAN MOORE trombone NICK BIANCHINI trumpet PAUL TARANTINO baritone sax/alto flute GARY REGINA sax/percussion MATEO LETTUNICH harmonica JEFFERY LUHN videographer/photographer DAVE EGAN & JUSTIN MAYER production & sound engineers

For more info, visit us at

tomralstonmusic.com

Purchase tickets at https://brownpapertickets.com or call 800 838 3006

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

Join the celebration!

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CALENDAR

GREEN FIX

See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.

REDWOOD GROVE LOOP WALK The oldest redwood tree is thought to be around 5,000 years old—that’s more than 50 Betty Whites combined. Considering their age and height, redwoods actually have a fairly shallow root system. But what they lack in depth they make up for in width—some roots spread out as far as 100 feet. Join the Big Basin state park staff on an informative guided half-mile stroll through their old-growth redwood forest to learn more about these giants. The tour will stop at the famous Mother Tree, the Father of the Forest and the incredible Chimney Tree. The 90-minute walk is stroller and wheelchairaccessible. 11 a.m. Friday, Nov. 30. Big Basin State Park Headquarters, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. 338-8883, thatsmypark. org. Free event, $10 day parking.

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

ART SEEN

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PAINT A CHEETAH, SAVE A CHEETAH Mark your calendars—International Cheetah Day is Dec. 4. This special day was developed in memory of Khayam, a cheetah that Dr. Laurie Marker raised from a cub at Wildlife Safari in Oregon. Khayam was trained for the first research project in rewilding, and inspired Dr. Marker’s first trip to Namibia in 1977, and another to found the Cheetah Conservation Fund in the ’90s. For the love of cheetahs everywhere, the Painted Cork is hosting a fundraiser that includes instruction on how to paint a cheetah face. There will be snacks and drinks, plus a raffle. 12:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 2. The Painted Cork. 1129 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz. paintedcork.com. 471-8939. $70, all supplies included.

Free calendar listings in print and online are available for community events. Listings show up online within 24 hours. Submissions of free events and those $15 or less received by Thursday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be prioritized for print (space available). All listings must specify a day, start time, location and price (or ‘free’ if applicable). Listings can be set to repeat every week or month, and can be edited by the poster as needed. Ongoing events must be updated quarterly. It is the responsibility of the person submitting an event to cancel or modify the listing. Register at our website at santacruz.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail calendar@goodtimes.sc or call 458.1100 with any questions.

WEDNESDAY 11/28 CLASSES LOCALS ‘SEYMOUR’ IN NOVEMBER Santa Cruz County locals can visit the Seymour Marine Discovery Center for free from Tuesday, Nov. 27 through Friday, Nov. 30. Simply present a current photo ID showing Santa Cruz County residence. Current student ID from any school in Santa Cruz County or current utility bills are also valid proof of residence. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter. ucsc.edu. Free.

FOOD & WINE DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ FARMERS MARKET In addition to a large variety of farm products, this market offers a great selection of local artisan foodstuffs, delicious baked goods and lots of options for lunch and dinner. 1-6 p.m. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. 454-0566. WEDNESDAY NIGHT TRIVIA Grab your smartest group of friends and get ready for a challenge! We’ve got the rest. Wine. Beer. Cider. Tapas. 8-10 p.m. Cantine Wine Pub, 8050 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Cantinewinepub. com.

HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR Come and get your Happy Hour B12 shot. Your body needs B12 to create energy and is not well absorbed from the diet or in capsule form. Everyone can benefit from a B12 shot. After B12 injections many patients feel a natural boost in energy. 3-6 p.m. Santa Cruz Naturopathic Medical Center, 736 Chestnut St., Santa Cruz. 477-1377 or scnmc.com. $29/$17. B12 HAPPY HOUR B12 deficiencies are common, as the vitamin is used up by stress, causing fatigue, depression, anxiety, insomnia and more. Not well absorbed in the gut, B12 injections can be effective in helping to support energy, mood, sleep, immunity, metabolism and stress resilience. Come get a discounted shot from 1:30-4:30 p.m.

FRIDAY 11/30 ‘SHE SPEAKS OUT’ Everyone knows that Santa Cruz has been home to some powerful women throughout the years. From Angela Davis to Florence Thompson, it’s hosted many feminine truth-telling change makers. Join some strong women dancers, singers, musicians, entertainers and storytellers in listening to and drawing inspiration from women’s voices to benefit Monarch Services. 8 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz Center. 320 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. 427-2227. kuumbwajazz.org. $20/$25.

Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. thrivenatmed.com/b12-injections or 515-8699. $15.

MUSIC TOBY GRAY REEF PONO WEDNESDAYS Toby takes on songs made famous by the Eagles, Beatles, Bob Dylan, Peter Rowan, Bob Marley, and many other classic artists adding his own interpretations and owning the songs. 6:30 p.m. The Reef Bar and

Restaurant, 120 Union St., Santa Cruz. 459-9876. WORLD HARMONY CHORUS The World Harmony Chorus is a community chorus that welcomes participants of all ages and ability levels. There are no auditions nor entrance requirements. 7:15-9:15 p.m. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. instantharmony.com. MISNER & SMITH WITH HILARY & KATE A combination of soaring >36


events.ucsc.edu

NOV/ DEC 2 018

JOIN US AS W E SHA RE THE EXCIT EMENT OF LE ARNING

Microbiomes: From the White House to the Lab DECEMBER 5, 7PM COWELL RANCH HAY BARN FREE ADMISSION

Dr. Jo Handelsman served as a science adviser to President Barack Obama and is recognized for her contributions to science education and diversity and gender bias in science. Part of the Kamieniecki Lecture Series.

Between Paradise and Chamber Singers: Peril: The Natural Disaster Out from the Desert History of the Monterey DECEMBER 1, 7:30PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL Bay Region $4–$10/PERSON NOVEMBER 29, 6PM SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER FREE ADMISSION

What will the future of paradise hold? Join the Seymour Center for a special evening with Gary Griggs. His new book, Between Paradise and Peril, chronicles 200 years of earthquakes, tsunamis, coastal storms and shoreline retreat, rainfall and flooding, landslides and mudflows, plus current droughts and climate change.

NOVEMBER 29 & DECEMBER 4, 7PM; DECEMBER 1, 2PM SCOTTS VALLEY LIBRARY (11/29), WATSONVILLE MAIN LIBRARY (12/1), APTOS LIBRARY (12/4) FREE ADMISSION

An original piece written by JoAnna Rottke, former assistant director of the Dickens Project, and directed by Karen Schamberg. Presented by Willing Suspension Armchair Theater and the UC Santa Cruz Dickens Project.

Fuzzy Face Frisbee Friday NOVEMBER 30, 1–5PM EAST FIELD DISC GOLF COURSE FREE ADMISSION

Disc golf tournament, taco party, and raffle! Supports the Movember Foundation, promoting men’s health and cancer awareness. Free hat and disc with team participation.

LE ARN MORE AT

UCSC Jazz Ensembles and Big Band DECEMBER 2, 3PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL $4–$10/PERSON

A two-part jazz extravaganza featuring UCSC’s Small Jazz Ensembles and the UCSC Jazz Big Band. The Big Band will perform music from four jazz eras.

ONGOING EVENTS

DECEMBER 5, 1–4PM HUMANITIES PLAZA FREE ADMISSION

Pop Up! Movable Books & Art at the Library

Find a great book for yourself or a gift for a friend. A $5 donation will get you two books! Sponsored by the Friends of the Santa Cruz Public Libraries and the UCSC Humanities Division.

Open Studios DECEMBER 7, NOON–4PM ELENA BASKIN VISUAL ARTS CENTER FREE ADMISSION

Open Studios features student artwork in a variety of media—drawing, painting, print media, sculpture, intermedia, photography, and electronic art.

Reserves of Inspiration Exhibition Open House DECEMBER 7, 5–8PM ELOISE PICKARD SMITH GALLERY FREE ADMISSION

A look at UC Santa Cruz’s Natural Reserves through artwork by students, faculty, and community that opens our eyes to the intricacies of the natural world and sparks our connection to nature.

DECEMBER 4, 7PM DIGITAL ARTS RESEARCH CTR (DARC), 108/FREE ADMISSION

LASER is an international program that brings artists, scientists, and scholars together for informal presentations and conversations. Hear from chemist Peter WeissPenzias, artist and game designer A. M. Darke, artist and computer scientist Angus Forbes, and seismologist Susan Schwartz.

events.ucsc.edu

Fall Drop-In Figure Drawing WEDNESDAYS THROUGH DECEMBER 5, 7–9PM UCSC ART DEPARTMENT M-101 FREE ADMISSION

Drop-In Figure Drawing provides a live model and a room monitor. There is no formal lesson; the sessions are free and open to the public. ONLY DRY MEDIA ALLOWED.

UPCOMING EVENTS

UCSC Wind Ensemble: Stravinsky and Respighi

DECEMBER 4, 10AM–5PM SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER FREE ADMISSION

Leonardo Art & Science Evening Rendezvous (LASER)

Explore the world of movable books— from commercially produced works to inventive handmade artists’ books— all drawn from Special Collections & Archives at McHenry Library.

DECEMBER 8

Community Free Day Enjoy free admission to the Seymour Center all day!

THROUGH DECEMBER 14, MON–FRI 10AM–NOON & 1–4PM UC SANTA CRUZ MCHENRY LIBRARY, THIRD FLOOR FREE ADMISSION

DECEMBER 8

UCSC Concert Choir: Stravinsky’s Symphony of Psalms DECEMBER 7, 7:30PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL $4–$10/PERSON

The Concert Choir performs Gyorgy Sviridov’s Songs of Kursk; Russian peasant songs for choir, soloists, and chamber ensemble; and selections from Sergei Rachmaninov’s All Night Vigil. The UCSC Wind Ensemble and guest musicians join to perform Stravinsky’s masterpiece, Symphony of Psalms.

Norrie’s Gift & Garden Shop Holiday Open House DECEMBER 10

Altai Kai Music Ensemble DECEMBER 19

A Celtic Christmas JANUARY 18–20

CruzHacks

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

Christmas with Dickens

The UCSC Chamber Singers, under the direction of Michael McGushin, presents a program of choral music inspired by the cultures stemming from the three Abrahamic religious traditions.

Used Book Sale

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Chartwell School:

Empowering students who think and learn differently.

CALENDAR

For students with dyslexia and other learning differences.

Prospective parents:

join us for a Tuesday Tour Tuesday, December 4 at 10:30 am or call for a private tour. For more information call 831.394.3468 or visit www.chartwell.org Chartwell School | 2511 Numa Watson Rd. | Seaside, CA 93955

SATURDAY 12/1 LIGHTED BOAT PARADE This is perhaps the most lit holiday event of the year. Mariners decorate their boats with lights and holiday decorations and parade them across the harbor for your oohing and aahing pleasure. There are few things more magical than watching the festooned boats glide through the harbor on a cold December night. The event will happen rain or shine, so grab a hot chocolate and a blanket and get there early for a good seat. The parade can be viewed from either side of the harbor, so feel free to stroll along the channel, too. Parking is extremely limited, so biking or carpooling is encouraged.

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

5:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Harbor, 135 Fifth Ave., Santa Cruz. santacruzharbor.org. Free.

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<34 vocal harmonies, extremely tight instrumental arrangements, and story-filled, poetic songwriting, adding up to some of the most electrifying music on the scene today. Misner & Smith's sound harkens back to the bedrock of American rock and folk. They can shake the walls like a freight train and then quiet the room to a whisper in a single song.7:30 p.m. Michaels On Main, 2591 S Main St., Soquel. Michaelsonmainmusic. com. $12.

THURSDAY 11/29 ARTS GARY GRIGGS PRESENTATION AND BOOK SIGNING Join the Seymour Center

1320 PACIFIC AVENUE • DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ 831.423.4100 | DELLWILLIAMS.COM

for a special evening with Gary Griggs. Between Paradise and Peril: The Natural Disaster History of the Monterey Bay Region chronicles 200 years of earthquakes, tsunamis, coastal storms and shoreline

retreat, rainfall and flooding, landslides and mudflows, plus current droughts and climate change. 6-7:30 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu. Free. CHRISTMAS WITH DICKENS Charles Dickens just wants to talk about his book, A Christmas Carol, but what happens when Scrooge, Tiny Tim, Mrs. Catherine Dickens, and the Ghost of Christmas Present show up? Chaos, confusion, conflict, and complaints, just like a normal holiday gathering. 7-8 p.m. Scotts Valley Public Library, 251 Kings Village Road, Scotts Valley. Free. VISUAL ARTIST MEET UP Meet other local artists, find inspiration, motivation, and new friends. There will be a skillshare and artist presentation. Artist Meetups will be every other month. Join the Santa Cruz Visual Artist Meetup group. 6-7:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Art League, 526 Broadway Ave., Santa Cruz. tanneryartscenter.org. Free.


CLASSES TRIYOGA BASICS/THERAPEUTIC YOGA TriYoga flows are presented with personalized guided alignment assistance. Everyone is welcome. 9:30 a.m. Triyoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. 310589-0600. $15.

MOM & BABY CONNECTION Nursing Mothers Counsel and Luma Yoga host a weekly Mom & Baby Connection support group. Every family presents their own unique situations and challenges. This is a time to get together with other moms in a group setting to explore and discuss the tips and tricks of successful breastfeeding, and much more. 1:30-2:30 p.m. Luma Yoga and Family Center, 1010 Center St., Santa Cruz. lumayoga.com. Free. COMMUNITY PILATES CLASS Community Pilates class led by Pilates Instructor Jennifer Balboni. Drop-in any Tuesday or Thursday for a fun and challenging 60-minute core-based flowing strength class. Bring your own mat. 10 a.m. Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Road, Aptos. tbeaptos.org. Free.

FOOD & WINE

MAKING MUSIC WITH OUR FRIENDS Come sing, drink, eat, and enjoy a night of music and fun. Every fourth Thursday of the month is Making Music with our Friends. Sheet music will be provided. 6-9 p.m. Santa Cruz Food Lounge, 1001 Center St., Santa Cruz. scfoodlounge.com. Free.

HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR B12 helps support energy, mood, sleep, immunity, metabolism

MUSIC THE SANTA CRUZ TREMOLOS SINGING GROUP FOR PEOPLE WITH PARKINSON’S Singing is known to be a good voicestrengthening exercise for people with Parkinson’s disease. Santa Cruz County has an ongoing singing group for people with Parkinson’s and their caregivers. 1-2:30 p.m. The Episcopal Church, 125 Canterbury Drive, Aptos. easepd.org/singing. Free.

FRIDAY 11/30 ARTS ‘SUDS: THE ROCKING ’60S MUSICAL SOAP OPERA’ This high energy, hilarious musical tells the story of a down-on-her-luck laundress named Cindy and the colorful guardian angels who come to teach her about finding true love. SUDS is loaded with good clean fun, bubbling energy and more than 50 well-known songs that topped the charts in the 1960s. 8 p.m. The Colligan Theater, 1010 River St., Santa Cruz. jeweltheatre.net. $50/$45/$27. HOLIDAY SALE PREVIEW DAY Shop four ParkStore locations for thoughtful holiday gifts. All proceeds benefit our local state parks and beaches. Friends members receive up to 30 percent off on select iconic Michael Schwab park illustrations on apparel and more, plus jewelry, maps, nature guides, local history books, educational toys and other merchandise that represent the special cultural history and environment of our parks. 4-7 p.m. Natural Bridges State Park, Swanton Blvd and West Cliff Drive, Santa >38 Cruz. thatsmypark.org.

10-15% off Select Wood,

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EL CRE QU E O

ANIMAL HOSPITAL CARING PEOPLE...CARING FOR PETS

IT’S NATIONAL PET MONTH

Make your pets feel special and bring them in for a

$25 Wellness Exam

We Now Offer Acupuncture with Dr. Kim Delkener

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2505 S. Main St., Soquel www.soquelcreekanimalhospital.com

Jason Miller, DVM Family Owned & Operated

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

THANKSGIVING DAY DINNER Join us for Thanksgiving day dinner! Enjoy a festive buffet dinner the whole family will enjoy. Noon-6 p.m. Chaminade Resort and Spa, 1 Chaminade Lane, Santa Cruz. chaminade. com. $65/$20.

MEDICARE MADE EASY 2019 Are you ready for the new Medicare changes? Come hear a free presentation designed to help you navigate the changes coming in 2019. New plans are available for Santa Cruz County residents. 2-3 p.m. Watsonville Senior Center, 114 E. 5th St., Watsonville. pattifagan.com. Free.

Proud Sponsor for Community Events

K

OPEN MIC NIGHT FEAT. POP-UP KITCHEN Open Mic Night at the Santa Cruz Food Lounge every third Thursday. This month features a pop-up kitchen meal with food from Moles & Oaxacan Cuisine. Featuring the talents of local musicians. Come out, enjoy with friends and family, or take a turn behind the mic. Our craft bar will be serving up local brews and cocktails. 5:30-9 p.m. Santa Cruz Food Lounge, 1001 Center St., Santa Cruz. scfoodlounge.com.

and stress resilience. Since B12 is not absorbed well during digestion, and all B vitamins are depleted by stress, most Americans are deficient. Having B12 in the form of an injection bypasses the malabsorption problem, and people often feel an immediate difference. Every Thursday morning, we offer discounted vitamin B12 by walk-in or appointment. 9 a.m.-Noon. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. thrivenatmed.com or 515-8699. $15.

New Floors by the Holidays!

S

CALENDAR

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CALENDAR

Anti-Aging & Acne Solutions Easy Online Booking & Our Full Menu at: PacificSkinCareSC.com

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2628 Soquel Drive, Santa Cruz 831.476.1060

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT PUBLIC COMMENT HEARINGS

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UC SANTA CRUZ KRESGE COLLEGE PROJECT Members of the public and public agencies are invited to learn about the Kresge College Renewal and Expansion Project and provide oral comments on the Draft EIR. Louden Nelson Center, 301 Center Street, Santa Cruz Tuesday, November 27, 2018, 6:30–8:30 PM Kresge Town Hall, UC Santa Cruz Main Campus Wednesday, November 28, 2018, 5:30–7:30 PM For more information, call 459-3732 or visit: ppc.ucsc.edu/planning/EnvDoc.html.

SATURDAY 12/1 AND SUNDAY 12/2 TANNERY WINTER ART MARKET The Tannery is one of the most creative hubs in the county, and their Winter Arts Market is a prime example. The annual event features 20 Tannery studios and dozens of artists, including ceramicists, jewelers, sculptors, and embroiderers, each selling one-of-a-kind gifts for the holidays. There’s something for everyone at this one-stop shop, so why not invest in local arts while getting your holiday shopping done early? Saturday 11 a.m.-7 p.m. and Sunday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. The Tannery Arts Center, 1010 River St., Santa Cruz. tanneryartscenter.org. Free.

<37 NO ROOM AT THE INN—OPENING GALA St. Philip the Apostle Episcopal Church in Scotts Valley is grateful to host our third annual No Room at the Inn event. No Room at the Inn is a Nativity Display and fundraiser to benefit those for whom there is no room. Join us for our Opening Gala where we will enjoy appetizers and wine, a silent auction, an opportunity drawing, and door prize. 6-8:30 p.m. St. Phillips Episcopal Church, 5271 Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley. $30/$25.

5G MICROWAVE ONSLAUGHT—WHAT IT MEANS FOR US The FCC voted to institute Federal control of the construction and management of 5G infrastructure. More than 180 scientists in 36 countries have petitioned for a moratorium on the use of 5G because of its unknown effects on humans and all of life. Join experts and other informed community members to find out what’s going on with the breakneck roll out of fifth generation Wifi technology. 7 p.m. Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz.

facebook.com/EMF-Aware-Santa-CruzCounty-2141939496046491/. MONTEREY BAY ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP 2018 STATE OF THE REGION CONFERENCE Over the past four years, MBEP has brought people together to solve problems and do grand things that they cannot do on their own. MBEP’s fourth Annual State of the Region will be another compelling gathering of leaders from across the region and the state with relevant topics to inspire collaboration and action. 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Monterey Embassy Suite, 1441 Canyon Del Rey Blvd., Monterey. mbep.biz. $149/$129.

FOOD & WINE WATSONVILLE FARMERS MARKET This market is in the heart of the famously bountiful Pajaro Valley. Peaceful and family-oriented, the Latino heritage of this community gives this market a “mercado” feel. 2-7 p.m. 200 Main St., Watsonville.


CALENDAR HEALTH VITAMIN B12 FRIDAY Every Friday is B12 Happy Hour at Thrive Natural Medicine. B12 improves energy, memory, mood, immunity, sleep, metabolism and stress resilience. Come on down for a discounted shot and start your weekend off right! Walk-ins only. 3-6 p.m. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. thrivenatmed.com/b12injections or 515-8699. $15.

MUSIC SENDEROS DECEMBER IN MEXICO: COLORES DE MI TIERRA Colorful folkloric dancing by Centeotl Danza y Baile will be featured showcasing traditional dances from many states in Mexico. Also performing will be Ensamble Musical, the youth band of Senderos. 7 p.m. Harbor High School, 300 La Fonda Ave., Santa Cruz. scsenderos.org. $10/$5. UCSC ORCHESTRA CONCERT Join us for a wonderful evening of live instrumental music. UCSC Music Center Recital Hall, Heller and Meyer Drive, Santa Cruz. arts. ucsc.edu. $10/$8/$4.

OUTDOOR

SATURDAY 12/1 ARTS LIVING NATIVITY & CHRISTMAS BAZAAR Begin your holidays with a living Nativity. We have choirs with holiday music, a jazz band, children’s crafts, warm cider, popcorn, petting zoo, and of course, our Living Nativity. For over 40 years Messiah Lutheran Church has had this community event. Kick off the season with us. 5-7 p.m. Messiah Lutheran Church, 801 High St., Santa Cruz. messiah-lutheran.us. Free. HOLIDAY SALE PREVIEW DAY Shop four ParkStore locations for thoughtful holiday gifts. All proceeds benefit our local state parks and beaches. Friends members receive up to 30 percent off on select iconic Michael

ANNUAL HOLIDAY SALE Don’t miss this opportunity to find that unique gift of art for someone special—handcrafted art and beautiful, unique pieces you won’t see in any mall. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Santa Cruz Mountain Arts Center, 9341 Mill St., Ben Lomond. mountainartcenter.org. Free. 11TH ANNUAL $25 AND UNDER ARTISAN GIFT SHOW All items priced at $25 or less. More than 30 vendors will be selling beautiful handmade gifts. Browse locally made clothing, accessories, jewelry, art, candles, soaps, artisan food and more. Come down to celebrate and support our local artists and finish your holiday shopping early. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Santa Cruz County Veterans Memorial Building, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. artisansgiftsale.com. Free. HOLIDAY ART & CRAFT FAIRE Shoppers will find unique gifts created by local artists and craftspeople, including jewelry, hats and bags, textiles, ornaments, chocolates, candles, nightlights, pottery, original artwork, pillows, art glass, and much more. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Simpkins Family Swim Center, 979 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. facebook.com/ events/280682525863411/. Free.

CRUZCAL.ORG YOUR ART & CULTURE COMMUNITY CALENDAR Planning your weekend? Go to CruzCal.org Have an arts & culture event to share? Post it on CruzCal.org It’s FREE to submit events and so EASY to use! Help us spread the word!

Questions? Email CruzCal@cityofsantacruz.com or call the City’s Economic Development Department at 831.420.5150

GIVE THE GIFT OF RECREATION

CLASSES ZEN MEDITATION & DISCUSSION Ocean Gate Zen Center. Meditation and talk on Zen Buddhism. Every Saturday. All are welcome. 9 a.m. Ocean Gate Zen Center, 920 41st Ave., Suite B, Santa Cruz. 824-7900 or oceangatezen.org. Free. INTERMEDIATE TRIYOGA CLASS TriYoga flows are presented with personalized, guided alignment assistance. With Jamie Andres-Larsen. For levels 1 and 2. 10:30 a.m. Triyoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. 310-589-0600. $15. COME AS YOU ARE ZEN This is an informal Saturday morning program focused on investigating Buddhist teachings for creating ease and skillful response in our daily life. The program begins with meditation followed by a dharma talk by one of our teachers: Rev. Daijaku Kinst or Rev. Shinshu >40 Roberts. Talks are for both the

• Classes • Group Picnics • Senior Trips • Field Rentals • Summer Camps • Meeting Space Purchase online, by phone or in person

GIFT CERTIFICATE

323 Church Street 831- 420-5270 santacruzparksandrec.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

REDWOOD GROVE LOOP WALK Join us for this fun and informative guided half-mile stroll through a magnificent old-growth redwood forest. Meet the famous Mother Tree, the Father of the Forest and the incredible Chimney Tree on this 90-minute walk. 11 a.m. Big Basin Redwood State Park, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. Thatsmypark.org. Free.

Schwab park illustrations on apparel and more, plus jewelry, maps, nature guides, local history books, educational toys and other merchandise that represent the special cultural history and environment of our parks. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Wilder Ranch State Park, 1401 Coast Road, Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org.

VIEW AND POST SANTA CRUZ EVENTS AT

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CALENDAR <39 beginner as well as the advanced practitioner. 9 a.m. Ocean Gate Zen, 920 41st Ave. Suite F, Santa Cruz. oceangatezen. org. Free.

TRANSFORM your YOGA Practice through AYURVEDA HEALING WITH AYURVEDA: A JOURNEY OF SELF-DISCOVERY Jan 4 - 6, 2019 Citizens of Humanity AG • Mother Denim • Paige Michael Stars • Splendid Stateside • Sundry • Velvet Free People • Johnny Was Sanctuary • Lucky Brand Jag • Cut Loose Nic & Zoe • Eileen Fisher

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Locally Owned Since 1972

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Santa Cruz • (831) 423-3349 • 1224 Pacific Ave Capitola • (831) 476-6109 • 504C Bay Ave

BECOME AN AYURVEDIC HEALTH COUNSELOR (AHC) Begins Feb 8, 2019 BECOME AN AYURVEDIC PRACTITIONER (C-AP) Begins Jan 3, 2019 MASTER OF ARTS – AYURVEDA Open enrollment MountMadonnaInstitute.org 408.846.4060

Located in the redwoods overlooking Monterey Bay near Santa Cruz, CA

HOLIDAY GIFT SHOW 2018 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2ND 11AM-5PM WESTSIDE’S CIRCLE CHURCH 111 ERRETT CIRCLE LOCAL ARTISTS AND CRAFTSPEOPLE GREAT MUSIC • SHOCKWAVE FOOD TRUCK

ART * JEWELRY * CERAMICS * GLASS HANDBAGS * CLOTHING * SCARVES ACCESSORIES * PRINTS * BASKETS GOURDS TILES * MUSIC & MORE

Free Event BENEFITS WPENS (WESTSIDE PARENT EDUCATION NURSERY SCHOOL) FOR MORE INFO: 831.425.0574

SANTA CRUZ SYMPHONY LEAGUE HOME TOUR This year’s Symphony League Home Tour is going to be better than ever with five breathtaking homes featuring some of the best architecture and design in Santa Cruz. Don’t miss the new Opal Cliffs stunner home, the Farm Style home with ADU, the ArtFilled home in Aptos, fabulous West Side family home, and brand new Twin Lakes beach house. Noon-5 p.m. Santa Cruz Symphony, 307 Church St., Santa Cruz. santacruzsymphonyleague.org. $45. NATURAL MIND MEDITATION & KUNSANG GAR WISDOM Whether you are an experienced meditator or you are curious and wish to learn about meditation, join Geshe Dangsong Namgyel for lecture, meditation, questions, answers, and the inspiration of Kunsang Gar Wisdom. During this six-week course, we will explore Natural Mind or DzogChen meditation. 7 p.m. Corralitos Cultural Center, 127 Hames Road, Watsonville. kunsanggarcenter.org.

FOOD & WINE APTOS FARMERS MARKET AT CABRILLO COLLEGE Voted Good Times best farmers market in Santa Cruz County. With more than 90 vendors, the Aptos Farmers Market offers an unmatched selection of locally-grown produce and specialty foods. 8 a.m.-Noon, Saturdays, Cabrillo College. montereybayfarmers.org or akeller@montereybayfarmers.org. Free.

WESTSIDE FARMERS MARKET The Westside Farmers Market takes place every week at the corner of Highway 1 and Western Drive, situated on the northern edge of Santa Cruz’s greenbelt. This market serves the communities of the west-end of Santa Cruz, including Bonny Doon, North Coast, UCSC Campus and is a short trip from downtown. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mission Street and Western Drive, Santa Cruz. 454-0566. PARTNER YOGA AND WINE TASTING Share sacred energy the second and fourth Saturdays of each month at Poetic Cellars Winery. Wine tasting will follow the class. 10 a.m.-Noon. Poetic Cellars, 5000 N. Rodeo Gulch Rd., Soquel. 462-3478.

GROUPS WITCHY WINTER SOCIAL Our 17th Annual Yule Social. Come and meet other pagans, young and old, in the Santa Cruz area with a feast, a blessing, a wild and wacky raffle, an enigmatic storyteller, and lots of coloring books. This is a holiday party for Earth-worshipping, feisty, witchy people who love parties, but not so much the holidays. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Masonic Temple, 828 N. Branciforte Ave., Santa Cruz. communityseed.org.

HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR Come and get your Happy Hour B12 shot. Your body needs B12 to create energy and is not well absorbed from the diet or in capsule form. Everyone can benefit from a B12 shot! After B12 injections many patients feel a natural boost in energy. 10 a.m.-Noon. Santa Cruz Naturopathic Medical Center, 736 Chestnut St., Santa Cruz. 477-1377 or scnmc.com. $29/$17.

VOLUNTEER VOLUNTEER TO FEED THE HUNGRY WITH FOOD NOT BOMBS We need help sharing vegan meals with the hungry every Saturday and Sunday in downtown Santa Cruz: Cooking from noon-3 p.m, 418 Front St., Santa Cruz. 515-8234. Serving from 4-6 p.m. at the Post Office, 840 Front St., Santa Cruz.

SUNDAY 12/2 ARTS SUNDAY SEASIDE CRAFTS Make it and take it! Come create and take home a fun souvenir, an activity for the whole family to share. Join the hands-on fun in the crafts room every Sunday. 1-3 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu. HOLIDAY SALE PREVIEW DAY Shop four ParkStore locations for thoughtful holiday gifts. All proceeds benefit our local state parks and beaches. Friends members receive up to 30 percent off on select iconic Michael Schwab park illustrations on apparel and more, plus jewelry, maps, nature guides, local history books, educational toys and other merchandise that represent the special cultural history and environment of our parks. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Seacliff State Beach, State Park Drive


CALENDAR Exit Hwy. 1, Aptos. thatsmypark.org. FREE GIFT MAKING WORKSHOP Drop in to make holiday crafts and gifts for free. Holiday fun for the whole family. The workshop is tailored to an inter-generational age range; kids attend accompanied by an adult of choice. 12:30-3 p.m. Santa Cruz Mountain Arts Center, 9341 Mill St., Ben Lomond. mountainartcenter.org. Free. ADOPT A SAILOR Screening of the awardwinning feature film Adopt A Sailor starring Bebe Neuwirth, Peter Coyote and Ethan Peck. Q&A after with writer/director Charles Evered and producer Sherry Halperin, a Santa Cruz resident. Donations appreciated and welcome to benefit the CJE House, an artist residency for Veterans where they are housed and mentored in their discipline. 4 p.m. Santa Cruz County Veterans Memorial Building, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. veteranshall.org. Free.

GROUPS HOLIDAYS IN THE PLAZA—SNOW DAY The North Pole has returned to downtown Watsonville. Bring a canned food item for your ticket to the winter wonderland. Kids and kids at heart can board the train for a magical tour around the Plaza. Join Santa in his workshop and snap a pic. 2 p.m. Watsonville City Plaza, 174 Main St., Watsonville. cityofwatsonville.org. Free.

WATSONVILLE NATURE WALKS Come experience the incredible bird life that the Wetlands of Watsonville have to offer. Located along the globally important Pacific Flyway, the Wetlands of Watsonville provide a resting stop for birds on their migratory journey. 1:30 p.m. City of Watsonville Nature Center, 130 Harkins Slough Road, Watsonville. cityofwatsonville.org. Free.

YOUNGER LAGOON RESERVE TOUR This 90-minute, behind-the-scenes hiking tour takes visitors into Younger Lagoon Reserve adjacent to the Seymour Marine Discovery Center. Part of the University of California Natural Reserve System, Younger Lagoon Reserve contains diverse coastal habitat and is home to birds of prey, migrating sea birds, bobcats, and other wildlife. 10:30 a.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter.ucsc.edu.

“Astonishin and gorgeoug s.”

presents

MONDAY 12/3

- Santa Cruz

Sentinel

ARTS POETRY OPEN MIC A project of the Legendary Collective, the weekly Santa Cruz Word Church poetry open mic is a community of local writers who recognize the power of spoken word. They gather every Monday for a community writing workshop, then host a 15-slot open mic followed by a different featured poet each week. 4 p.m. Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. santacruzmah.org. Free.

FOOD & WINE TRIVIA Discover the Joy of Trivia with your friends! Win food and beer for your otherwise trivial knowledge. 7:30 p.m. Rosie McCann’s Irish Pub, 1220 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. rosiemccanns.com. Free.

TUESDAY 12/4

A holiday show

with circus, dance, AND a cappella stars SoVoSó

Nov. 23-DEC.2 in Santa Cruz! UCSC Theater Arts Center (831) 420-5260 Tickets at:

featuring Cirque du Soleil soloists

Jeff Ra z and

Diane Wasnak

www.Holiday-Joy.com

ARTS CHRISTMAS WITH DICKENS Charles Dickens just wants to talk about his book, A Christmas Carol, but what happens when Scrooge, Tiny Tim, Mrs. Catherine Dickens, and the Ghost of Christmas Present show up? Chaos, confusion, conflict, and complaints, just like a normal holiday gathering. 7-8 p.m. Santa Cruz Public Library, 240 Church St., Santa Cruz. Free.

CLASSES CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler, CMT, NE will guide you through a series of gentle seated yoga postures that are performed slowly and with breath awareness. This wonderfully therapeutic practice will help you increase strength and range of motion. 9:30 a.m. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 234-6791. $5.

WOMENCARE: LAUGHTER YOGA Laughter yoga for women with cancer meets the second and fourth Tuesdays. Pre registration required. 3:30-4:30 p.m. Inner Light Center, 5630 Soquel Drive, Soquel. fsacc.org/womencare/. Free. HOMEWORK HELP Drop-in homework help for students through grade 12. 3-5 p.m. Various locations throughout the county. santacruzpl.org. Free.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

OUTDOOR

Tandy Beal & Company

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MUSIC CALENDAR

LOVE YOUR

LOCAL BAND

VINTAGE POINT Sometimes you want to hear the music that instantly puts a smile on your face. That’s the idea of local band Vintage Point, who aren’t searching for the obscure gems. They’re looking for the songs that are vintage.

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

“Everybody has something in their own time period, songs that are instantly recognizable and memorable for everybody,” says co-vocalist Steve Jonsson. “That’s the whole concept of ‘vintage’—that a three-minute song can have a hook that everybody loves.”

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The group, which formed a couple years ago, understands that these sort of culturally satisfying songs are specifically tied to people’s ages and the time period they grew up in, which is why they include material ranging from Etta James to present-day pop songs in their set—though you will tend to see a lot of the material coming from the important decades in Johnson’s musical life. “My heart is kind of in the ’60s and ’80s, because of the music I grew up playing and loving, and the bands I was in,” Jonsson says. He wants other people, when they come out to see them, to just bask in the pleasure of good music that takes you away for at least a moment. “We’re doing things that are crowd pleasers, like Loverboy songs,” Johnson says. “‘Working for the Weekend,’ that’s a song that everyone appreciates and understands, especially in a club on the weekend.”AARON CARNES 9 p.m. Friday, Nov. 30, Crow’s Nest, 2218 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $6. 476-4560.

MISNER AND SMITH

WEDNESDAY 11/28 AMERICANA

MISNER AND SMITH Misner and Smith are an eclectic folk duo whose vocal harmonies are chillingly beautiful, but also haunting—even foreboding. To really understand the diversity of influences of the group that covers a wide range of American songwriters, you should check out their latest project Headwaters. It’s an all-covers album made with the purpose of giving folks a little sneak behind their creative curtain. It includes songs written by Paul Simon, Neil Young, the Lovin’ Spoonful, Talking Heads, and Dr. Dog. They transform all of these songs with the group’s unique stirring folk sound. AC 7:30 p.m. Michael’s on Main, 2591 Main St., Soquel. $12/adv, $15/door. 479-9777.

BLUES

SUE FOLEY It’s hard to know which to admire more: Sue Foley’s confident, full-throttled guitar skills, or her sultry, kick ass vocals. The blues-rocker effortlessly struts

from sweet-as-you-please rhythm and blues to fiery, whiskey-rasp roadhouse rock, even throwing in some Texas shuffle, because it ain’t no thing. Anyone with a pulse who hears Foley’s fevered heartbreak ballads will be smitten all the way down to their cowboy boots and immediately take to drinking bourbon. It’s just what happens when faced with an extraordinarily talented, guitar-slinging blueswoman. AMY BEE

perfect opportunity to toast the ghosts of past and to kick off the new year. MAT WEIR

8 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 479-1854.

Born and raised in São Paulo, Luciana Souza is one of the most expressive and versatile singers in jazz. Her recent album The Book of Longing stands out as an extraordinary achievement at a time when many of jazz’s leading artists have found inspiration in verse. With her luxuriantly velvet-smooth tone, she delivers her original compositions, creating incantatory songs from the prose and poetry of Emily Dickinson, Edna St . Vincent Millay, Christina Rossetti and Leonard Cohen. Joined by the acclaimed Brazilian guitarist Chico Pinheiro and bass virtuoso Scott Colley, Souza says she plans on mixing in uptempo pieces from the Brazilian songbook. ANDREW GILBERT

THURSDAY 11/29 CELTIC

MOLLY’S REVENGE Just before the dawn of December, the Central Coast’s own Celtic folk trio Molly’s Revenge kick off the holiday season at Flynn’s with their special annual Winterdance show, with traditional (and new) Celtic Christmas songs. What makes Celtic music and Christmas go together so well? Maybe it’s the light-hearted melodies, the penny whistle, or the holiday’s pagan origins. Whatever the reason, Molly’s Revenge’s annual Winterdance is always the

8:30 p.m. Flynn’s Cabaret & Steakhouse, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $18/adv, $20/door. 335-2800.

JAZZ

LUCIANA SOUZA

7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $31.50/adv, $36.75/door. 427-2227.


MUSIC

BE OUR GUEST BAND OF FRIENDS

BROTHER ALI

SATURDAY 12/1 AMERICANA

PATTI MAXINE

7 p.m. & 9:15 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $25-35/adv, $30/door. 427-2227

ROCK

TOM RALSTON AND THE ALLSTAR BAND Have your children shown an interest in the concrete business lately?

they couldn’t kill the legend. He returns to the Catalyst with his “white shirt, blue jeans and Nikes.” Santa Cruz’s own Chris Rene will open. MW

7 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $20. 423-8209.

For almost two decades, Brother Ali has been one of the most uplifting and socially conscious voices in hip-hop. Ali comes to the Catalyst to celebrate the 15th anniversary of Shadows on the Sun, the flawless LP that made the Minneapolis emcee a bona fide heavyweight of the underground. With him is Busdriver, a genre-defying artist who just this June released the mammoth Electricity is on Our Side. Formless and bracing, Electricity is a wild ride through hip-hop’s outer edges, and an excellent compliment to Ali’s reverent boombap. MH

HIP HOP

KEAK DA SNEAK The word legend gets thrown around a lot, but when it comes to Keak Da Sneak and his role in hip-hop, there’s no other way to describe him. Along with other Bay Area rappers like Mac Dre and E-40, Keak pioneered the hyphy movement—even down to coining the name. After building a career spanning two decades, he was almost taken in a flash last year when he was shot in a calculated attack. Lucky for us and hip-hop,

9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $16/adv, $20/door. 423-1338.

SUNDAY 12/2 HIP HOP

BROTHER ALI

9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $24/door. 423-1338.

8 p.m. Friday, Dec. 7, Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. Information: moesalley.com. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 30 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.

IN THE QUEUE CARL VERHEYEN

Supertramp guitarist gets bluesy. Thursday at Moe’s Alley RICK SHEA

Touching honky tonk. Thursday at Ugly Mug ONE GRASS TWO GRASS

Big city bluegrass. Saturday at Crepe Place AJ LEE AND BLUE SUMMIT

Santa Cruz’s great bluegrass hope. Sunday at Flynn’s Cabaret and Steakhouse HOLLY NEAR

Feminist folk legend. Sunday at Kuumbwa Jazz Center

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

It’s impossible for Patti Maxine to add up how many shows she’s played in her 80 years on the planet. But in that time, the queen of the lap steel has played mostly on the sidelines: sitting in with other people, or as part of someone else’s band. It’s not often that she gets the spotlight. This pair of upcoming shows are particularly special because not only is Maxine the star, but it’s her 80th birthday party and the release of her debut album Steelin’ Home. She can play country, Hawaiian music, Western swing, and anything that a lap steel will make sound better, which is everything! AC

If so, be on alert. If they’re anything like Tom Ralston—local concrete layer and award winning concrete artist—the cement game may just be the first step on that paved sidewalk leading to celebrated musical showmanship, 15-person bands, and the dusky AM pop of Hunky Dory era Bowie. It’s a tale as old as time, and one that Santa Cruzans can experience live when Tom Ralston and the All Star Band lays it down at the Rio Theatre this Saturday. MIKE HUGUENOR

Rory Gallagher (above) was an Irish heavy-blues rocker from the ’60s known for his unhinged guitar playing and wild vocal attack. He wasn’t the most famous rocker of his era, but he had a loyal, dedicated fanbase all over the world. Unfortunately, his life was cut short in 1995 due to complications from a liver transplant. To celebrate his memory, Gerry McAvoy and Ted McKenna, who backed him for years, are bringing his music to Moe’s with Davy Knowles fronting the group for the evening. Knowles is an impressive, young rising bluesrocker in his own right.

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LIVE MUSIC

Wednesday November 28 – 7:30/8pm $20 Blues Favorite Returns

SUE FOLEY Thursday November 29 – 7:30/8pm $15/20

Legendary Guitarist’s Long Awaited Return

CARL VERHEYEN BAND Friday November 30 – 8/9pm $25/30

WED

11/28

FRI

11/30

SAT

12/1

Afrowawa 6:30-9p

Hip Hop Night 7:30-9:30p

Lloyd Whitley 1p Magpies Blues Band 6-8p

SUN

12/2

MON

12/3

TUE

12/4

THE APPLETON GRILL 410 Rodriguez St, Watsonville

Hot Roux 6-8p

Preacher Boy 6-8p

James Murray 6-8p

Andy Santana 6-8p

Broken Shades 6-8p

Mojo Mix 6-8p

BLUE LAGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Live Bands 9p

Comedy Night, ’80s Night Free 8:30p

Live Bands/Club 2000 Live VJ Dancing 9p Free 9p

The Box (Goth Night) 9p

Post Punk Dance Floor 9p

Funk Night w/ DJ Ed 9p

BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, Santa Cruz

Karaoke 8p-Close

Karaoke 8p-Close

Johnny Tsunami & Shoulder Hoppers 9:30-12:45p

Karaoke 6p-Close

Karaoke 6p-Close

Karaoke 8p-Close

SOLD OUT THANK YOU

BOCCI’S CELLAR 140 Encinal St, Santa Cruz

Generation Hopeless 8p

Karaoke Free 8p

Swing Dance $5 5:30p Dufunkus 8p

Wednesday December 5 – 8/9pm $17/20

BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola

Alex Lucero & Friends 8p

Karaoke 9-12:30a

Karaoke 9-12:30a

COCOA TEA

CAPITOLA WINE BAR 115 San Jose Ave, Capitola

John Michael Free 6:30-9:30p

Paul Psarri Free 7-10p

Frank Sorci Free 7-10p

Thursday December 6 – 8/9pm $10/15

CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Bhad Bhabie $20/$25 8p

LUV FYAH TRIBUTE

CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

The Brevet $12/$14 8:30p

THE ENGLISH BEAT Sunday & Monday December 2nd & 3rd

CA HONEYDROPS Rare Performance w/ Jamaican Reggae Legend

Live Reggae Showcase & Benefit

Friday December 7 – 7/8pm $20/25 2 Sets- No Opener

BAND OF FRIENDS CELEBRATION OF RORY GALLAGHER W/ DAVY KNOWLES

CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville

Sunday December 9 – 3/4pm $35/40 Afternoon Blues Series With

ELVIN BISHOP Dec 12 TATANKA Dec 13 Dec 14 Dec 15 Dec 21 Dec 22 Dec 23

PAPIBA & FRIENDS + SONAMO BERNHOFT & THE FASHION BRUISES THE SAM CHASE + HILLSTOMP ANUHEA + SOULWISE ROCK COLLECTION w/ MELVIN SEALS THE GUITARSONISTS w/ CHRIS CAIN, MIKE SCHERMER & DANIEL CASTRO Dec 27 DUMPSTAPHUNK Dec 29 CON BRIO + MIDTOWN SOCIAL Dec 30 & 31 THE MOTHER HIPS Jan 5 DAVID BOWIE BASH Jan 6 COCO MONTOYA Jan 11 METALACHI Jan 18 CORB LUND Jan 19 LYRICS BORN Jan 25 JUNIOR REID + KING SCHASCHA Jan 26 B-SIDE PLAYERS Jan 27 TOMMY CASTRO Jan 30 FRONT COUNTY Jan 31 LARRY & HIS FLASK + WILLY TEA TAYLOR

MOESALLEY.COM

1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854

SC Jazz Society, Beat Weekend w/ DJ Monk Earl Free 3:30p

Comedy Night w/ Shwa Free 8p

TBA Free 3-6p

Dom Kennedy $25/$30 8p Sammy Johnson $25/$28 8:30p

Keak Da Sneak $16/$20 8:30p

Brother Ali $20/$24 8:30p

Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p

Americana/Bluegrass Favorites

POORMAN’S WHISKEY

Armnhmr $15-$22 8p

Karaoke 6p-Close

Blockhead $15/$18 8:30p

CHAMINADE RESORT 1 Chaminade Ln, Santa Cruz

Saturday December 8 – 8/8:30pm $12/15

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

11/29

APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos

& Saturday December 1 – 8/9pm $30/35 2 Night CD Release With UK Ska Legends

44

THU

ABBOTT SQUARE 118 Cooper St, Santa Cruz

KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p

THE

CREPE PLACE OPEN LATE - EVERY NIGHT!

Misner & Smith Hilary & Kate

Wed. Nov 28 7:30pm plus

Folk, Gospel, Bluegrass, Americana $12 adv./$15 door seated <21 w/parent

Thu. Nov 29 7:30pm

Tell Me More

Sex, Drug, and Rock Stars Master Storytellers

$10 adv./$10 door seated – ages 21 +

Fri. Nov 30 5pm

Jazz The Dog

Fri. Nov 30 8:30pm

AZA

Sat. Dec 1 8pm Sun. Dec 2 5:30pm Wed. Dec 5 7:30pm

HAPPY HOUR NO COVER

Rockin’ Moroccan

$15 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21

Joint Chiefs

ADVANCE TICKETS ON TICKETWEB WEDNESDAY11/28

SCIENCE ON TAP

7PM - FREE IN THE GARDEN

WEDNESDAY11/28

WHISKEY WEST

w/ LATE FOR THE TRAIN & ONA STEWART SHOW 9PM - $8 DOOR

THURSDAY 11/29 AND FRIDAY 11/30

BOURBON & BURLESQUE w/ LULU AND THE LUSHES $25 VIP TICKETS AVAILABLE ONLINE

“THE BOURBON EXPERIENCE - FULL TASTING”

Grateful Sunday

ONE GRASS TWO GRASS

NO COVER

Mary Gauthier

New Album: “Rifles & Rosary Beads” $22 adv./$25 door seated <21 w/parent

COMING UP Thu. Dec. 6 BROOKDALE BLUEGRASS WINTERFEST 2018 Fri. Dec. 7 KPIG HUMBUG HOEDOWN

The Carolyn Sills Combo and Friends! Sat. Dec. 8 Jim Kweskin & Meredith Axelrod w/Suzy Thompson 2pm

Sat. Dec. 8 Sun. Dec. 9

Shred Zeppelin + Liquid Sky A Love Supreme 2pm

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Full Concert Calendar : MichaelsonMainMusic.com

2591 Main St, Soquel, CA 95073

SUN, DEC 9 Bret Harte Hall

Robyn Hitchcock Michael’s on Main Saturday, Dec. 29

or $12 GENERAL ADMISSION

SHOW 7PM (vip) & 8PM (general admission)

Grateful Dead Tunes

Fernwood BIG SUR 11/30

LIVE AT ROARING CAMP RAILROAD

DO WE INHERIT EXPERIENCES?

Funk & R&B Dance Party

$6 adv./$6 door Dance – ages 21 +

Marty O'Reilly

& The Old Soul Orchestra

SATURDAY 12/1 w/ WILD IRIS

SHOW 9PM - $8 DOOR

SUNDAY 12/2

SEAN ROWE w/ GIRL BLUE

SHOW 9PM - $15 ADV. OR 15 DOOR

TUESDAY 12/4

7 COME 11

9PM UNTIL MIDNIGHT WEDNESDAY 12/5

AGOUTI

w/ DREAMING GHOST & REV. STEPHAN SAMS SHOW 9PM - $8 DOOR

MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ

1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 429-6994

MATTSON 2 KUUMBWA JAZZ CENTER JAN 20

Kikagaku Moyo

Big Sur 3/9


LIVE MUSIC WED CORK AND FORK 312 Capitola Ave, Capitola

11/28

Open Mic Night Free 7-10p

THU

11/29

Steve’s Jazz Kitchen Free 7:30-10

CORRALITOS CULTURAL CENTER 127 Hames Rd., Corralitos

FRI

11/30

Bonny June & Bonfire Free 7-10p

SAT

12/1

The Beach Cowboys Free 7-10p

12/2

SUN Matt Massih & Cameron Logan Free 4-7p

MON

12/3

TUE

12/4

LUCIANA SOUZA: THE BOOK OF LONGING WITH CHICO PINHEIRO & SCOTT COLLEY Morphing the written word into music, through spellbinding vocals.

Acoustic Open Jam 3-5p

Open Mic 7-10p

Thursday, November 29 • 7 PM

Friday, November 30 • 8 PM

SHE SPEAKS OUT -- A BENEFIT FOR MONARCH SERVICES

THE CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Science on Tap Free 7p Whiskey West & more $8 8p

Bourbon & Burlesque $12-$25 7p

Bourbon & Burlesque $12-$25 7p

One Grass Two Grass w/ Sean Rowe w/ Girl Blue Wild Iris $8 9p $15 9p

Funk Night ft. 7 Come 11 $6 9p-12a

CROW’S NEST 2218 E. Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz

Hot Club Pacific $3 7:30p

Soul Riders $5 8:30p

Vintage Point $6 9p

Ten O’Clock Lunchband $7 9:30p

John Michael Free 8p

Saturday, December 1 • 7 PM & 9:15 PM

Wild & Blue Free 6-9p

Tickets: snazzyproductions.com

DAV. ROADHOUSE 1 Davenport Ave, Davenport DISCRETION BREWING 2703 41st Ave, Soquel

Samba Cruz Free 6-9p

Linc Russin 7-9p

Molly’s Revenge Scotty G & the Winterdance Celebration Goldblues Breakers $18/$20 8:30p $10/$12 9p Jeannine Bonstelle & Sweeney Schragg 6:30-9:30p

Judo No w/ Grex $10/$12 9p

STEVE GADD BAND

Led by one of the most acclaimed and prolific drummers in history.

AJ Lee & Blue Summit $10/$12 8:30p

Thursday, December 6 • 7 PM

HELEN SUNG: SUNG WITH WORDS

Scott Slaughter Free 7-10p

Brian Fitzgerald Group Free 7-10p

KUUMBWA JAZZ 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz

Luciana Souza $31.50/$36.75 6p

She Speaks Out: Monarch Services Benefit $20/$25 7p

The Patti Maxine Experience $25-$35 7&9:15p

Holly Near & the Band $27-$37 6&8p

Tell Me More Sex, Drugs, and Rock Stars $10 7:30p

Jazz the Dog Free 5p AZA $15 8:30p

The Joint Chiefs $6 8p

Grateful Sundays Free 5:30p

MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel

Sunday, December 2 • 6 PM & 8 PM

Monday, December 3 • 7 PM & 9 PM

JACK O’NEILL LOUNGE Santa Cruz Dream Inn 175 W Cliff Dr. Santa Cruz

Misner & Smith, plus Hilary & Kate $12/$15 7:30p

THE PATTI MAXINE EXPERIENCE

Tickets: pulseproductions.net Simply Put

FLYNN’S CABARET 6275 Hwy 9, Felton

Tickets: brownpapertickets.com

HOLLY NEAR & THE BAND

Jenny & the Bets Free 6:30-8:30p

THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville

GABRIELLA CAFE 910 Cedar St., Santa Cruz

Live Comedy $7 9p

Steve Gadd Band $42/$47.25 7&9p

Melding jazz with poetry for the acclaimed pianist’s new artistic chapter. Saturday, December 8 • 8:30 PM

SIN SISTERS BURLESQUE Tickets: eventbrite.com

Sunday, December 9 • 7 PM

MARIACHI REYNA DE LOS ANGELES: NAVIDAD MEXICANA

Groundbreaking - the United States’ first women-led mariachi group.

AT THE RIO THEATRE! $10 YOUTH TICKETS AVAILABLE WHILE SUPPLIES LAST Monday, December 10 • 7 PM & 9 PM

A powerhouse unit.

Tuesday, December 11 • 7:30 PM

BÉLA FLECK & ABIGAIL WASHBURN

Banjo royalty and fearless musical innovators.

AT THE RIO THEATRE!

Thursday, December 13 • 7 PM

NEW • VINTAGE • CONSIGNMENT FURNITURE • ACCESSORIES

ADAM SHULMAN TRIO: A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS

Vince Guaraldi favorites performed by a Bay Area piano combo.

1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS! Friday, December 14 • 8 PM

MAYIM: A CAPPELLA TRIO Tickets: brownpapertickets.com

BECOME A MEMBER TODAY! kuumbwajazz.org/donate Unless noted, advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and dinner served one hour before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wine & beer available. All ages welcome.

1523 Commercial Way, SC 831.439.9210 redoconsign.com

320-2 Cedar St | Santa Cruz 831.427.2227 kuumbwajazz.org

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

MIKE STERN-DAVE WECKL BAND WITH BOB MALACH & TOM KENNEDY

45


LIVE MUSIC

We are now open Tuesday-Sunday for dinner. Stop by for an amazing farm to table dining experience! Thur Nov 29

Molly’s Revenge Winterdance Celebration Winterdance Celtic Christmas Celebration $18 adv./$20 door seated – <21w/parent 8:30PM

Fri Nov 30

Scotty G and the Goldblues Breakers

A band loaded with all local star players $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM Sat Dec 1

Judo No w/Grex

Afro-Peruvian Music from Santa Cruz $10 adv./$12 door seated – ages 21+ 9PM

WED

Hawaii’s Legendary Slack Key Guitar and Ukulele Master $20 adv./$25 door seated – <21w/parent 8:30PM Fri Dec 14

Lacy J Dalton w/Edge of the West

12/2

MON

12/3

Sue Foley $15/$20 7:30p

Carl Verheyen Band $15/$20 7:30p

The English Beat $25/$30 9p

The English Beat $30/$35 9p

The California Honey Drops SOLD OUT 8p

The California Honey Drops SOLD OUT 8p

Libation Lab w/ King Wizard & Chief Transcend 9:30p

Trevor Williams 9:30p

MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz NEW BOHEMIA BREWERY 1030 41st Ave, Santa Cruz 99 BOTTLES 110 Walnut Ave, Santa Cruz

THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz

Ledward Kaapana w/Fran Guidry

SUN

MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz

Painted Mandolin

Thu Dec 13

12/1

Virgil Thrasher & Rick Stevens Free 6p

Sat Dec 8

An evening of Music with a True Legend $12 adv./$15 door seated – <21w/parent 8:30PM

SAT

Scott Kail Free 6p

POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz

Jeremy Clyde

11/30

Al Frisby 1p Blues Mechanics 6p

Vintage Point

Wed Dec 12

FRI

Lloyd Whitley Free 6p

Fri Dec 7

Tribute to Jerry Garcia’s Acoustic Music $15 adv./$18 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

11/29

Broken Shades 6-8p

A.J. Lee and Blue Summit Rock n’ Roll Dance Music from Santa Cruz $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

THU

Jimmy Dewrance Free 6p

Sun Dec 2

Homegrown Bluegrass and much more $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 8:30PM

11/28

MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz

Nomad Free 6:30-9:30p Trivia 8p

PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola

Toys for Tots Tournament 7:30p

Rasta Cruz Reggae Party 9:30p

TUE

12/4

Blues Mechanics Free 6p

Hip Hop w/ DJ Marc 9:30p

TBA Free 7p

Taco Trivia Tuesday w/ Hive Mind 6:30p

Blind Rick Free 10p-12a Alex Lucero 6-9p

Dennis Dove 2-5p

Live Again w/ Alex Lucero 2-5p

The Good Sams, Chris Jesse Ray & the Soriano & Seaside Carolina Catfish Free 8p Attraction Free 9p

Medicine Road Free 9p

Queer Bingo $5 4p

Erin Avila 6-9p Comedy Free 8p

Open Mic Free 8-11p ‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p

THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz

Variety Show w/ Toby Gray 6:30p

Acoustic Reggae Jam 6:30p

RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Aloha Friday 6:30p

Featured Acts 6:30p

Brian Regan $47.50/$63 7p

Tom Ralston & The All Star Band $20 7p

Live DJ

Live DJ

ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Comedy Night 9p

First & Third Celtic Jam

THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola

The John Michael Free 7:30p

Javier y Su Salsa Machine Skylar Lutes Free 7:30p $5 8:30p

TBA $5 8:30p

The Human Juke Box 6p

Open Mic 6p

Tuesday Trivia Night 6:30p Warren Miller’s Face of Winter $15 7:30p

Trivia 7:30p TBA $3 7p

TBA Free 7:30p

American Country Singer/Songwriter $20 adv./$25 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM Sat Dec 15

Sol Nova w/Southern Pacific

Local Rock and Roll/Americana Favorites $12 adv./$15 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Wed Dec 19

46

Fri Dec 21

Fri Dec 28

Supernaut

Friday, November 30 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

Heavy Psychedelic Rock $10 adv./$12 door Dance - ages 21+ 8:30PM

Ten O’Clock Lunch w/HWY 9 Jeff Rye

Classic Rock from the ‘70s to the ‘90s $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

Levi Jack w/ Grampa’s Chili

Americana, Psychedelic Rock and more! $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM Sat Dec 29

Mon Dec 31

Bhad Bhabie

Wednesday, Nov. 28 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

Rock‘n’ Roll and Blues from Santa Cruz $10 adv./$12 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM Sat Dec 22

Wednesday, November 28 • Ages 16+

Mike Renwick’s Holiday Deluxe w/Special Guests

Dazzling synthesis of Rock, R&B, and Old Soul $20 adv./$25 door Dance – ages 21+ 8PM Thu Dec 20

1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135

Foreverland

The Electrifying Tribute to Michael Jackson $25 adv./$25 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM

The China Cats New Year’s Eve Celebration

Ring In The New Year with California’s Premier Grateful Dead Tribute Dinner Packages with Champagne Available $30 adv./$35 door Dance – ages 21+ 9PM COMIN G RIGH T U P

Wed, Jan 9 Fri, Jan 25

Sver Soft Machine w/Levin Brothers

Tickets Now Online at flynnscabaret.com

Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am

THE BREVET

plus The Jacks

Thursday, November 29 • Ages 18+

armnhmr SAMMY JOHNSON

plus Etana

Saturday, December 1 • Ages 16+

Dom KenneDy Saturday, Dec. 1 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

KEAK DA SNEAK

plus Rich Rocka (ya boy)

Sunday, December 2 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

BROTHER ALI

plus Busdriver

Tuesday, December 4 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

BLOCKHEAD

plus Yppah

Dec 5 Whitechapel (Ages 16+) Dec 8 P-Lo/ ALLBLACK (Ages 16+) Dec 11 Wavves/ Beach Fossils (Ages 16+) Dec 13 Yung Bans/ Joey Trap (Ages 16+) Dec 14 & 15 Iration/ HIRIE (Ages 16+) Dec 16 Night Of The Blue Swan (Ages 16+) Dec 21 Thundercat (Ages 16+) Dec 28 Cut Chemist/ Chali2na (Ages 16+) Dec 31 Eagles Of Death Metal (Ages 21+) Jan 12 Bone Thugs-N-Harmony (Ages 16+) Jan 19 Petty Theft (Ages 16+) Jan 20 Ozomatli (Ages 16+) Jan 25 Wifisfuneral/ Robb Bank$ (Ages 16+) Jan 26 Y & T (Ages 21+) Jan 31 Tritonal (Ages 16+) Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.

Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online

www.catalystclub.com

Atmospheric Conditions

LOCATED ON THE BEACH

Amazing waterfront deck views.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

See live music grid for this week’s bands.

STAND-UP COMEDY

Three live comedians every Sunday night.

HAPPY HOUR

Mon–Fri from 3:00pm. Wednesday all night!

VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET

Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.

DEAL WITH A VIEW

$10.95 Dinners Mon.-Fri. from 6:00pm

NOW SERVING BREAKFAST

Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily

(831) 476-4560

crowsnest-santacruz.com


LIVE MUSIC WED

11/28

THU

11/29

FRI

11/30

SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos

Calico Free 7:30-10:30p

SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright, Santa Cruz

The Joint Chiefs

SAT

12/1

SUN

Nora Cruz Band 8-11:30p

Hank & Ella Swing Band 8-11:30p

SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola

Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p

Joe Ferrara 6:30-9:30p

Claudio Melega 7-10p

Rev. Stephan Sams 7-9p

DJ Olright 7-9p

Cameron Jones 7-9p

SID’S SMOKEHOUSE 10110 Soquel Dr, Aptos

Bonny June & Bonfire 7-9p

STEEL BONNET 20 Victor Square, Scotts Valley

Joe Kaplow Free 5p

SUSHI GARDEN S.V. 5600 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley

Dave Muldawer Free 5:30p

12/3

TUE

12/4

AJ Lee & Jesse Fichman Free 5:30p

UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel

Open Mic w/ Steven David 5:30p

VINOCRUZ 4901 Soquel Dr, Soquel VINO LOCALE 55 Municipal Wharf, Santa Cruz

Eve Oh & the Four Seasons Free 6-8p

ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola

TBA 9:30p

TOP EMPLOYERS TRUST US FOR THEIR CLEANING

TBA 9:30p

HELPING YOU TO

ACHIEVE YOUR GOALS

Local & Independent. Monterey Bay Green-Certified.

Piano, Didgeridoo, Drums, and More

(831) 902-0650

Thomaspedersenmusic.com

Tahloula Wishes You All Happy Holidays!

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Main Street Realtors ESTABLISHED RESTAURANT $499,500 Santa Cruz ICONIC BAKERY & COFFEE SHOP $425,000 Carmel

Herbal medicine, homeopathy, nutrition, IV therapy, hydrotherapy, lifestyle counseling. • Hormone Balancing • Digestive Health • Acute Care

FRANCHISE SANDWICH DELI $75,000 Seaside REGIONAL SANDWICH DELI $75,000 Carmel

423-5515

DATTA KHALSA,CABB

mycleanbldg.com Call or email us for a quote using our online form.

Follow the Rio Theatre on Facebook & Twitter! 831.423.8209 www.riotheatre.com

2840 PARK AVE. SOQUEL, CA

831.515.8699 | THRIVENATMED.COM

PREGNANT MARE RESCUE PO Box 962 Aptos, CA 95001 pregnantmarerescue.org • 408.540.8568

Cal DRE#01161050 831.818.0181

datta@mainstrealtors.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

Our clients include local government, health care facilities, and corporations in Santa Cruz County. Our loyal employees make us the trusted, professional service of choice.

Call to schedule a FREE 15 minute consultation!

JAN 14-15 Patti Smith & her band JAN 18 Janeane Garofalo JAN 26 Women’s Adventure Film Tour JAN 28 Jake Shimabukuro

MAR 05 The Wood Brothers

THE FIRST SESSION IS FREE Dr. Juli Mazi is a Naturopathic Doctor, teacher and healer who empowers people of all ages to achieve an optimal and vibrant state of well-being.

DEC 01 Tom Ralston DEC 09 Mariachi Reyna DEC 11 Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn DEC 15 Mac Powell DEC 20 Windham Hill Winter Solstice DEC 21 ABBA-Solutely Christmas DEC 28 Cash & King DEC 29-30 White Album Ensemble

FEB 02 Land of the Jaguars FEB 16 Paula Poundstone FEB 21-24 Banff Mountain Film Festival

2017

& LANDSCAPING NEEDS.

Upcoming Shows

NOV 30 Brian Regan

Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-9p

Kage O’Malley 7-9p

MON

Sambassa Trio Free 7:30-10:30p

SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 7500 Old Dominion Court, Aptos

SHANTY SHACK BREWING 138 Fern St, Santa Cruz

12/2

47


FILM

STRAIGHT LIES Theodore Pellerin (left) and Lucas Hedges as gay teenagers undergoing ‘conversion therapy’ in ‘Boy Erased.’

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

No Mercy

48

Religious ‘gay conversion therapy’ outed in harrowing ‘Boy Erased’ BY LISA JENSEN

T

alk about the politics of fear. What kind of demonic cult would subject its own impressionable children to shame and torment in order to force them into its own rigid code of behavior? If you’re thinking Jim Jones or Charles Manson, think again. The culprits are a fear-mongering group of Baptist church elders convinced they’re doing the lord’s work in Boy Erased, a harrowing look inside the practice of so-called “gay conversion therapy” in small-town America. Written and directed by co-star Joel Edgerton (who gives himself one of the juiciest supporting roles), the movie is adapted from the book Boy Erased: A Memoir

of Identity, Faith and Family, by Garrard Conley. Disturbing as only a true story can be, it recounts the experiences of a teenaged college freshman still trying to figure out his own identity who’s forced into a draconian program to drive the “sin” out of him. Besides exposing the wrong-headed horrors of the program itself, the story delivers a tutorial for resistance in the way the young protagonist manages to find his own moral compass—at last—and stick to it, in spite of daunting pressure to conform. Lucas Hedges stars as Jared, only son of folksy-seeming but strict Baptist pastor Marshall Eamons (Russell Crowe), at a small-town

Arkansas church. Jared’s mom Nancy (Nicole Kidman) is the perfectly coiffed and manicured pastor’s wife; she loves her son to pieces, but is in all ways obedient to her husband. They’re a close, loving family until Jared’s first semester at college, where he has a brutal encounter with an upperclassman. Fleeing for the security of home, he’s shocked to learn his parents have been told he was involved in some sort of scandalous liaison. Seeking advice from the church elders, his father enrolls him in a program called Love In Action. His mom drives him to the center where the program takes place in another town, and rents a hotel room nearby. It’s supposed to last 12 days.

First, they isolate the kids from their families; no phone calls or texts are allowed during the day, and the inmates are forbidden to discuss what goes on in the program with outsiders—especially their parents. Herded around by burly henchmen, the kids are subjected to the psychological abuse of chief interrogator Victor Sykes (Edgerton), a bullying martinet under a facade of reasonableness who insists that homosexuality is a “choice,” forces them to always refer to it as a “sin,” and declares, “God can’t love you the way you are now.” Budding writer Jared’s notebook is confiscated upon entry, and scrutinized for any dubious content. When it’s returned to him, half of his stories have been ripped out. Yet, when it’s his turn to get up and read the confession everyone in the program is required to write, describing the nature of their sins, Jared’s isn’t salacious enough for Sykes, who keeps probing him for more lurid details. The irony is that Jared is so inexperienced, he can’t even make up the kind of stuff his interrogators want to hear. The private mantra whispered among the inmates —“Fake it ’til you make it”— takes on a more sinister meaning; not to achieve heterosexuality, but survive the program. (Some don’t, as punishments shift from psychological bullying to the corporeal.) Ever-dutiful Jared tries to ignore the red flags and “get better”—until Sykes starts pressuring him to ditch college and spend a year imprisoned in the program instead. It’s the insider’s view of this predatory “therapy” that gives the movie its infuriating power. Jared isn’t an envelope-pushing rebel, he’s just trying to be a good kid, at a most vulnerable time in his life when he’s still trying to understand who he is. The zealous way the adults in charge try to to snuff out (or erase) what they fear in him is chilling. His solitary journey to trust his own judgment and determine right from wrong is heroic. BOY ERASED With Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman, Russell Crowe, and Joel Edgerton. Written and directed by Joel Edgerton. From the book by Garrard Conley. A Focus Features release. Rated R. 114 minutes.


FILM NOW PLAYING BEAUTIFUL BOY If you were wondering what you’re getting for Christmas, I’m going to spoil it for you. You’re getting Steve Carell! He’s in three movies coming out in the next two months—Vice, Welcome to Marwen and this film, the heaviest but maybe most important of the trio (although Vice looks to be pretty awesome, as well). Beautiful Boy is unusual in that it adapts not one but two memoirs about addiction, each looking at the same story from a different perspective. Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Addiction was written by David Sheff, who Carell plays here. Tweak: Growing Up on Methamphetamines was written by Sheff’s son, Nic, who is portrayed here by Timothee Chalamet. Directed by Felix Van Groeningen. Co-starring Maura Tierney, Amy Ryan and Timothy Hutton. (R) 120 minutes. (SP)

BOY ERASED Reviewed this issue. Starring Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman and Russell Crowe. (R) 114 minutes. (SP) CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME? Melissa McCarthy has been in some duds lately, but she’s already getting awards buzz for her portrayal of Lee Israel, a real-life writer who made her name writing celebrity biographies, but later

CREED II Really, they should have just called this Rocky IV 2, since it brings back Dolph Lundgren as Ivan Drago, who is this time training his son to fight against Apollo Creed’s son. This franchise is really starting to get into Ghost of the Son of the House of Frankenstein territory, but as long as Michael B. Jordan is playing Adonis Creed, I doubt anyone is going to mind. Co-starring Sylvester Stallone and Tessa Thompson. Directed by Steven Caple Jr. (PG-13) 130 minutes. (SP) FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE CRIMES OF GRINDELWALD J.K. Rowling used to let others adapt her Harry Potter stories, but for this spinoff series of Fantastic Beasts films, she’s writing the screenplays herself. I think it’s fair to say the results have been mixed, but if you liked Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, which moved all the wizarding action to 1920s New York, you’ll probably like this sequel which picks up a few months later, focuses more on Johnny Depp’s character from the previous film, and brings back Dumbledore. Directed by David Yates. Co-starring Eddie Redmayne, Jude Law and Katherine Waterston. (PG-13) 134 minutes. (SP) GREEN BOOK Sure to be the feelgood movie of the year about racism, Green Book is based on the real-life friendship between Jamaican piano great Don Shirley and his driver Tony Vallelonga. The film follows a tour of the Deep South in the 1960s by Shirley (portrayed by Mahershala Ali), who hires New York City bouncer Vallelonga (Viggo Mortensen) to be his guide and security. While Shirley comes to grip with the toll racial bias has taken on him

personally, Vallelonga has his eyes opened to the injustice of Jim Crow laws. Directed by Peter Farrelly. Co-starring Linda Cardellini, Mike Hatton and Sebastian Maniscalco. (PG-13) 130 minutes. (SP) THE GRINCH They keep making adaptations of Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch Who Stole Christmas like they’re ever going to be better than the 1966 TV special. But with Benedict Cumberbatch voicing the famous green grump, this new cartoon version’s gotta be better than the live-action Jim Carrey mess. Directed by Yarrow Cheney and Scott Mosier. Starring the voices of Cumberbatch, Rashida Jones, Kenan Thompson and Angela Lansbury. (PG) 90 minutes. (SP) FREE SOLO Right now, you’re probably thinking “Wait, there’s a new Star Wars movie already?” But oh, my friends, this is so much more insane than that. A documentary about rock climber Alex Honnold, it follows his attempt to “free solo” El Capitan. That means doing the climb without ropes, harnesses or, um, anything that would keep you from falling to your death with one wrong move. As discussed in the film, the mortality rate of free solo climbers is somewhere around 100 percent. Forget about horror movies, this is the most harrowing film you’ll see this year. Directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin. (PG-13) 100 minutes. (SP) INSTANT FAMILY I watched a trailer for this Mark Wahlberg comedy, and I’m almost 100 percent certain it’s actually just a trailer parodying terrible Mark Wahlberg comedies, and not actually a real movie. I mean, it has kids getting hit in the face with basketballs! My guess is that if you go down to the movie theater and ask for a ticket to this movie—which is allegedly about a couple that adopts a bunch of foster children—Mark Wahlberg will jump out from around the corner and say, “Hey fool! You’re a fool! This movie doesn’t even exist, fool! Say hi to your mother for me!” And then hit you in the face

with a basketball. Directed by Sean Anders. Co-starring Rose Byrne, Isabela Moner and Tig Notaro. (PG13) 119 minutes. (SP) MID90S This story of a 13-year-old who discovers skateboarding as an escape from his dysfunctional family life is winning acclaim for writer-director Jonah Hill, who developed it from his own spec script. Starring Sunny Suljic, Lucas Hedges and Katherine Waterston. (R) 84 minutes. (SP) THE NUTCRACKER AND THE FOUR REALMS Disney attempts to turn the Nutcracker story into some kind of weird Narnia-type universe … I guess? Hard to tell from the extremely generic trailers, which promise magic and wonder while looking neither magical nor wonderful. Directed by Lasse Hallstrom and Joe Johnston. Starring Mackenzie Foy, Keira Knightley and Morgan Freeman. (PG) 99 minutes. (SP) OVERLORD Originally, this was supposed to be the latest movie in the Cloverfield series, but after that godawful debacle with The God Particle, I have a feeling no one’s going to want to touch that cinematic universe for a while. So apparently this is now just a standalone film about U.S. soldiers in World War II who drop behind enemy lines in preparation for D-Day and discover the Nazis preparing a zombie army. No big whoop! Good thing they didn’t bring it into the Cloverfield universe and make it all crazy! Directed by Julius Avery. Starring Jovan Adepo, Wyatt Russell and John Magaro. (R) 109 minutes. (SP) RALPH BREAKS THE INTERNET Wreck-It Ralph was a fun surprise that lovingly poked fun at video game culture. More importantly, it gave me and my eight-year-old daughter an excuse to walk around yelling “I’m gonna wreck it!” for like a month. So you can see why we’re excited for this sequel, which applies the same send-up concept to the internet. Let the catchphrase screaming begin! Directed by Phil Johnston and Rich Moore. Starring the voices of John C. Reilly, Sarah

Silverman and Gal Gadot. (PG) 112 minutes. (SP) ROBIN HOOD Recently, someone asked me, “Is that new Robin Hood movie set in modern times or what?” The answer is definitely no, but I can see from the trailer—in which all of the nobility seems to be dressed like they’re going to an L.A. nightclub in 2005—why somebody might think that. (Star Taron Egerton offered in an interview that “it’s set in a universe that’s set in Medieval England.” OK, so it’s set in Medieval England—thanks for finding the most unnecessarily complicated way to say that, Taron!) Actually, a Robin Hood set in 2005 where people still use bows and arrows for some reason would probably be a lot more interesting than this eight-millionth retelling of the medieval folktale. Directed by Otto Bathurst. Co-starring Jamie Foxx, Ben Mendelsohn and Jamie Dornan. (PG-13) 116 minutes. (SP) WIDOWS This all-star crime thriller brings a dose of class to the heistfilm genre, starting with writerdirector Steve McQueen of 12 Years a Slave fame, through co-writer Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl and Sharp Objects) to a cast that includes Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Colin Farrell, Robert Duvall and Liam Neeson. Plus it’s based on an award-winning British TV series. Elegant! The plot has a group of women whose husbands were killed in a heist attempt trying to finish off the job in order to pay back a crime boss. (R) 129 minutes. (SP) WILDLIFE Actor Paul Dano from Little Miss Sunshine and There Will Be Blood makes his writer-director debut with this story of a family falling apart in the early 1960s. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Carey Mulligan and Ed Oxenbould. (PG13) 104 minutes. (SP) CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to https:// groups.google.com/group/LTATM.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY When the subject of a movie biography is the innovative rock group, Queen, at least we know the soundtrack is going to be killer. Bryan Singer’s tribute is also heroic in depicting the band’s late ’70s-early ’80s era, and its phenomenal creative energy and output. Rami Malek is an actor unorthodox enough to embody the legendary Freddie Mercury’s outsider persona, yet soulful enough to engage us in Freddie’s lifelong quest to become himself. From the opening 20th Century Fox fanfare scorched out of an electric guitar to the ecstatic grand finale of “We Are the Champions” live onstage, this is a non-stop joyride for Queen fans. (PG-13) 134 minutes. (LJ)

turned to selling forgeries when her career went south. One New York bookstore who had bought some of Israel’s forged letters wasn’t even mad, later saying, “She made the letters terrific.” That, people, is some quality fraud! Directed by Marielle Heller. Co-starring Richard E. Grant, Dolly Wells and Jane Curtin. (R) 106 minutes. (SP)

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&

FOOD & DRINK of the most delightful holiday gift pit-stops; from jewelry to textiles, teas and cookies and herbal soaps. Gorgeous stuff.

PUMPKIN PIE FINAL

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52

Locally made gifts abound, plus the final ruling in the quest for the perfect pumpkin pie BY CHRISTINA WATERS

H

oliday honey, artisanal ciders, aromatic wreaths— it’s time for the annual Holiday Fair at the Downtown Farmers Market, now through the last Wednesday before Christmas, Dec. 19. If you’re in giftgiving mode and looking for some unique, distinctive goodies, then you’ll love this holiday expansion of the downtown market. Selected local artisans will be showing their finest handmade goods to add to the fun of the already abundant al fresco scene. The sensory joys of holiday wreaths made by the UCSC Arboretum are frankly irresistible. Gorgeously designed and arranged succulent

wreaths are one of the Arboretum’s specialties. Truly vibrant, bristling with a lively mix of textures and more than 50 shades of green, these wreaths are legendary among collectors. And who wouldn’t love an artfully designed potted plant or dried flower bouquet? Only the Grinch! Handmade pottery makes an ideal gift, so don’t miss the stoneware collections from Santa Cruz Pottery and LizzeTee. One-of-a-kind aprons, pot holders and shopping totes from seamstress Violet Resser, or handmade beeswax candles—such a luxury—from R+K Honey Bees. And yes, there are tons of intriguing gifts everywhere in the eclectic market—wines, cheeses,

small-batch chocolates, preserves, organic body products, and the oldfashioned stocking stuffers: citrus and pomegranate. If you think of the Downtown Farmers Market as onestop holiday shopping, you would be just about right. And many of the holiday vendors and their wares will also be on site each Saturday at the Westside Market through Dec. 22.

GIFTS GALORE The Homeless Garden Project Holiday Store is now open at 1338 Pacific Ave. in downtown Santa Cruz—between El Palomar and the Santa Cruz Coffee Roasting Company. Store hours are 11 a.m.-7 p.m. through Dec. 6 and 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Dec. 7-24. This is one

Our panel moaned in unison at the first (and last) bite of Beckmann’s pumpkin pie. While I’d put it neck and neck with Kelly’s for the top slot, I could easily be convinced that this is the Holy Grail of pumpkin pies. On every level—texture, flavor, tenderness—Beckmann’s excels. The crust is so delicious it’s worth eating all by itself. And while the actual slices are not quite as thick as Kelly’s or Gayle’s or the Buttery’s, they are just fine. A small pie retails at $11.99 and provides four adult-sized slices of pie. Three, for those with larger needs. Leading with nutmeg and ginger, the first bite unfolds into a rich pumpkin flavor laced robustly with cloves and cinnamon as well. Confident spices. Complex pie, not too sweet. Firm, creamy texture, and that wonderful tender, flaky butter crust make this an outstanding example of the classic autumn dessert. Here’s a pie I would serve at a holiday diner and claim to have made myself. That’s an endorsement. At Shopper’s, New Leaf, Whole Foods, and the Aptos Farmers Market.

COOKIE OF THE WEEK:

Il Biscotto’s local, handmade almond cookies, in an orgy of various traditional Italian shapes and sizes, are available at the farmers markets these days. The mouth-watering array at last week’s Westside Market included four types of GF cookies, and we’ve been enjoying the Lady Almond cookies—chewy, dense with almonds, honey and nutmeg—for the past week. $10/dozen.

POST-TURKEY INTERLUDE

Sushi! The perfect palate cleanser between holiday dinners loaded with turkey, gravy, stuffing, and traditional desserts. Hamachi nigiri, tekka maki, spicy tuna roll, etc. Head on over to Sushi Totoro to reboot your palate with the bright flavors of seaweed and wasabi. 1701 Mission St., Santa Cruz. Open for lunch and dinner daily.


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Santa Cruz Balsamics

The vinegars fit for breakfast, lunch, dinner and dessert BY GEORGIA JOHNSON

J

ust over two years ago, Kim Tush was asked to make infused balsamics for a local farmers market. She’d previously worked as a paralegal for more than 30 years and ran a gluten-free bakery, so balsamic infusions were a bit of a change. Tush started Santa Cruz Balsamics out of a Watsonville industrial kitchen incubator around a year ago, importing barrel-aged balsamic vinegar from Italy and infusing it with six California fruit concentrate flavors including mango, pear, black cherry and chocolate raspberry. She found that there are some similarities between baking and balsamics—so much so that she wants to do a vanilla bourbon balsamic to replace vanilla extract. She spoke to us about the finer points of making great vinegar.

So what makes this vinegar particularly unique? KIM TUSH: Usually when people are selling flavored balsamics they have customers try it with oil and bread. We don’t do that—it disguises the flavor, and we want people to really

taste the different depth of flavor. People aren’t used to the kinds of balsamic we have. There are way more uses for it than just in oil. If you try other balsamics, like the ones from Medina that people make such a big deal about, they can be really acidic. Balsamics need to be aged so that they don’t have that bitter acidic taste.

Also, those bottles are really cool looking. We import those from Italy, too! They are hand-blown and shaped over there, then sent here in the different sizes. It took six months for the little bottles to get shipped here. Then once we put them in the dishwasher, they take weeks to dry before we can pour anything into them. There can’t be any speck of water when we pour balsamic into them, or else it goes bad. It’s definitely a lengthy process, but it’s a labor of love. Santa Cruz balsamics will be at several upcoming holiday fairs, check online for more info. santacruzbalsamics.com. 272-0111.


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A notable 2016 Chardonnay BY JOSIE COWDEN

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

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eluxe Foods, in the Deer Park Shopping Center in Aptos, carries a very good selection of local wines—many of them on sale at various times. Cinnabar’s Monterey County 2016 Chardonnay, which comes with a twist-off cap, is a bargain at $16.99 in the store. This 2016 Chard garnered 87 points from Wine Enthusiast, which described it as having roasted pear, light banana and baked-earth aromas. But its crisp flavors of peach, apricot, lemon citrus and baked pineapple are what make it a delicious mouthful of wellmade wine with bright minerality. Cinnabar’s tasting room in the heart of Saratoga is an upbeat place to visit. They make a goodly number of varietals and hold regular live music events on the patio or in the Mudd Room, named after winery founder the late Tom Mudd. George Troquato is the longtime winemaker at Cinnabar—now celebrating 35 years in business—with Mudd’s two children, Jack and Karina, working with him to uphold Cinnabar’s commitment to producing “ageworthy wines, elegant in nature and bold in taste.” Cinnabar’s best-known wine

is Mercury Rising, and it’s now available in growlers. Your first full growler will cost you $50, with refills coming in at $40. (Members: $40/$30 refills.) Note: One growler holds 2.5 bottles of wine, and is perfect for gifts, dinner parties, weddings, and your everyday easy drinking. Cinnabar will be at Taste of the Mountains Wine Walk in Menlo Park from 1-4:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 1. Contact Santa Cruz Mountains Winegrowers Association for more info at scmwa.com or email contact@ scmwa.com. Tickets are $49. Cinnabar Winery’s tasting room is at 14612 Big Basin Way, Saratoga. 408-867-1012, cinnabarwine.com.

BARGETTO WINERY WINE CRUISE

A popular trend these days is to go on a wine cruise. With more wineries pouring their wines on top-notch cruise ships, Bargetto Winery is jumping on board Crystal Cruises to sail around the Caribbean in November 2019. If you want to celebrate Bargetto’s 85th anniversary with them, call Scott Pinheiro of Santa Cruz Travel at 426-4900 or email Scott@ SantaCruzTravel.com. Book by Nov. 30, 2018 to save $150 per person.


H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES SAGITTARIUS—A BEAM OF DIRECTED LIGHT

Every month, the light distributed to Earth from each sign (Spiritual Hierarchies) is different, holding different tasks for humanity’s evolution. Each sign also describes the connection between the Soul and personality. Each year, within each human, the light grows from Aries to Pisces, from a “dim point of light within the circle of life seeking where it can be used for divine expression” (Aries) to a light that “saves the world” (Pisces). In Pisces, the light “reveals the Light of Life itself and ends forever the darkness of matter.” The light of each sign (Aries to Pisces) describes the Soul in relationship to the personality. Eventually the Soul, which is light itself, completely encompasses the personality, becoming its director, its shield, and its protector. The Soul then “uses” the personality as a vehicle to bring light to matter, which in

religious terms means the “redemption” (upliftment into the Light) of matter. From dark to light. Sagittarius is a beam of directed, focused light, revealing a greater light (the Soul, then Spirit) ahead (toward Capricorn) and illumining the pathway to the Center of the Light. Always, Sag is on a quest following the “beam of light revealing the greater light ahead.” That is why the “archers” are great travelers, wanderers, philosophers, teachers, professors, truth-tellers, publishers—all armed with goals, aims and self-realized inner truths. The wandering and wanderlust of Sagittarius is the outer manifestation of the inner spiritual seeking of ever-pushing Sagittarius, like an arrow, onward and upward. Outer pilgrimages bring into awareness the inner subjective worlds of truth, light, love and the cosmic music of the spheres.

ARIES Mar21–Apr20

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

Finances and resources, personal and with others, are highlighted. Careful attention is needed, along with concentration, efficiency, economy and strength. Accomplish these each day in a slow, consistent rhythm. You may uncover more resources. So many things are hidden during retrogrades. Remember others who have much less. Tithing creates great abundance.

You’re called to a past situation and then to a present-future one. The past holds and keeps you for a while in order for it to be liberated. The present-future creates optimism. However, there are two sides working within you. One contains judgment, the other love. Both are risky. One keeps you spiritually lonely. The other shifts you into a loving community. Can you identify the two sides and where you're positioned? All the past needs to be forgiven. Forgiveness is alchemical.

Esoteric Astrology as news for week of Nov. 28, 2018

TAURUS Apr21–May21 You want to move consistently into the future with new ideas and plans, but there are so few who understand, few with your illumined vision, and even fewer with your force of will and stamina. Always you strive for poise during transition times while sending prayerful requests for able, intelligent and financial assistance in order to manifest all that is new into form and matter. Your prayers prepare the field. Maintain a winter garden.

GEMINI May 22–June 20

CANCER Jun21–Jul20 You may experience stress and overwork as constant change occurs to everyone everywhere in your life. These daily changes reflect the pulse of humanity playing through your body. You need stabilization, an immediate sense of purpose and remaining within the safety of home. Make changes in small ways. When viewing the big picture stand with compassion and dispassion. Children bring both blessings and hard work.

LE0 Jul21–Aug22 It seems you need a retreat to bring forth creative freedom. This week should bring heightened sense of feeling separated from others, which you may enhance should your communication be harsh. You are able to be very intuitive, so observe your thoughts carefully. Is daily life feeling like a transformation is about to occur? Are financial needs being served? A sudden revelation occurs which expands you into other worlds. Take us with you.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Small changes occur in your personal life, which in turn create big changes. Money may feel restricted, communication may be hidden (from whom, why, where?), there’s a desire to run away from home and a need for regeneration. It feels like seeds of the future, life-changing, are breaking through. You’re restless for emotional independence. Moving forward is slow. Allow inner spiritual intentions to hold you. Transformation arrives for a long visit.

For about a year, you will participate in changes behind the scenes, internal changes that create your coming future. Change comes with a revelatory impact. Since you live within this field constantly, be aware of a need to serve others. Be aware of growing compassion and becoming a model for others. As Scorpio is the warrior of the zodiac, you’re prepared for the coming times where the death of the old finally occurs. Strength and courage will be needed.

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SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 You’re restless, yet duty-bound, responsible yet rebellious, seeking security yet craving freedom, pleased yet dissatisfied and stimulated within conflicts. You’re a paradox once again. Allow contradictions to work psychologically within. They create new insight, revelations. Don’t push them aside. They are the Harmony Through Conflict process Sag works through to bring new consciousness forth, a natural trajectory into the future.

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CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 Do you feel pulled between self needs and responsibility to family, relationship and work? Are you seeking freedom? Are your needs upsetting home, family and relationships? Are you able to communicate clearly what your needs are? Do you need new communication skills for others’ understanding? You are definitely on the “cross” of change. It’s imperative you learn how to communicate to others so they can understand. Study and learn Compassionate Communication techniques (nonviolent communication).

AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 Some Aquarians are experiencing great success. Some will be traveling the world soon seeking community. Even more are experiencing love, honor and popularity, expanded social and work reputations, tending to financial responsibilities, developing new business or life plans. They’re climbing the ladder of success as they define it (some don’t), and doing more than they thought capable. Keep going.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 You need flexibility in great amounts as interruptions and unexpected events occur in all parts of your life, geographically and in terms of your self-identity. You cannot prepare for what will happen. You can only soothe yourself with knowledge that what occurs is redesigning your life in ways you could never have done yourself. You’re capable, sensitive, sensible and smart. And being looked after aways.

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Deep feelings emerging from early life at home may be playing out in present relationships. Because of this, be careful with thoughts, actions and communication. Careful that you don’t become part of the difficulty or project onto others your pain. Don’t hide your vulnerability, because everyone else will be vulnerable, too. Showing yours eases barriers, allowing heartfelt communication and contact. You want love. Love comes from intentional contact.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21

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REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 20180001744 The following Married Couple is doing business as TONIC SALON AND DAY SPA IV. 349 SOQUEL AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. AJAY MISTRY AND RAXA MISTRY. 234 FELIX STREET #2, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Married Couple signed: RAXA MISTRY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. Original FBN number: 2018-0001480. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Oct. 30, 2018. Nov. 7, 14, 21, & 28.

41ST AVENUE SUITE C, CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. GANG HU LIANG. 1255 38TH AVENUE SPACE 78, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: GANG HU LIANG. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Oct. 30, 2018. Nov. 7, 14, 21, & 28. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001737 The following Corporation is doing business as R.R.M., INC AND TRITON CONSTRUCTION. 2560 SOQUEL AVE., STE 202, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. REMEDIATION RISK MANAGEMENT, INC. 2560 SOQUEL AVE., STE 202, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. Al# 1850064. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: REMEDIATION RISK MANAGEMENT. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/11/2001. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Oct. 29, 2018. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec 5.

the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: ROSE MARY BEAM to: ROSE MARY AMARU. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Dec. 7, 2018 at 8:30 am, in Department 4 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Oct. 23, 2018. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec. 5.

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF ROSE MARY BEAM CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.18CV03093. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner ROSE MARY BEAM has filed a Petition for Change of Name with

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001706 The following Individual is doing business as LIBERATION SUPPER CLUB. 316 MAIN ST. UNIT 1, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. SHOSHANA DEVRA PERREY. 316 MAIN ST. UNIT 1, SANTA CRUZ, CA

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001784 The following Corporation is doing business as CBD BLENDS, CHAMELEON CREATIONS, SACRED BUD, THE SACRED ROSE. 1205 WARREN DRIVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. COCREATIS. 1205 WARREN DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. Al# 395330. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: COCREATIS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 5/1/2004. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 7, 2018. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec. 5.

EMERLYE. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING December 28, 2018 at 8:30 am, in Department 4 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: November 8, 2018. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec. 5.

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF RACHAEL EDITH LYNCH CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.18CV03274. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner RACHAEL RIDENOUR has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: RACHAEL EDITH LYNCH to: RACHAEL EDITH

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001656 The following Individual is doing business as BLOOMING MINDS. 4470 SOQUEL DRIVE, SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. COURTNEY LYNN PRIDDY. 4470 SOQUEL DRIVE, SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: COURTNEY LYNN PRIDDY. The registrant commenced to transact

95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SHOSHANA DEVRA PERREY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Oct. 24, 2018. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec. 5.

business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 16, 2018. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & December 5.

granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING December 7, 2018 at 8:30 am, in Department 4 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Oct. 23, 2018. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec. 5.

business under the fictitious business name listed above on 11/13/2018. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Nov. 13, 2018. Nov. 21, 28, Dec. 5, & 12.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001806 The following Individual is doing business as FURTHER. 560 30TH AVE., SPC 60, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. MARK CHARLES JAMES NELSON. 560 30TH AVE., SPC 60, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MARK CHARLES JAMES NELSON. The registrant commenced to transact

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001803 The following Individual is doing business as FINE ART BY MARIANA. 403 LAGUNA ST., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. INES MARIANA SUAREZ BARNES. 403 LAGUNA ST., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: INES MARIANA SUAREZ BARNES. The registrant commenced transacting business under

NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001748 The following Individual is doing business as ROAMING NATUROPATH. 626 FREDERICK STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. LISA C. FORTES-SCHRAMM. 206 ROBERTS STREET #B, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: LISA C. FORTES-SCHRAMM. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Oct. 30, 2018. Nov. 7, 14, 21, & 28. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001745 The following Individual is doing business as SAPPORO RAMEN. 1240

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001791 The following Individual is doing business as CLEANING EXPRESS. 4300 SOQUEL DR. #51, SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. GERI E. ALLEGRE. 4300 SOQUEL DR. #51, SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: GERI E. ALLEGRE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 2/8/2018. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Nov. 8, 2018. Nov. 14, 21, 28, & Dec. 5.

CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF JONAH YUNUS WILSON CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.18CV03096. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JONAH YUNUS WILSON has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: JONAH YUNUS WILSON to: YUNUS RAHEEM AMARU. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001807 The following Married Couple is doing business as SEASIDE WASH & DRY. 1911 MISSION STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. DIANA LORD AND BRYAN LORD. 880 WEST CLIFF DRIVE, UNIT 12, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Married Couple signed: DIANA H. LORD. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 12/9/2013. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Nov. 13, 2018. Nov. 21, 28, Dec 5, & 12.

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the fictitious business name listed above on 11/1/2018. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Nov. 9, 2018. Nov. 21, 28, Dec. 5, & 12.

OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF PATRICIA ANN BROWN CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.18CV03362. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner PATRICIA ANN BROWN has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: PATRICIA ANN BROWN to: PATRICIA WHITE BUFFALO. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a

hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING Jan 04, 2019 at 8:30 am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street. Santa Cruz, CA 95060. A copy of this order to show cause must be published in the Good Times, a newspaper of general circulation

printed in Santa Cruz County, California, once a week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition. Dated: Nov. 20, 2018. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Nov. 28, Dec. 5, 12, & 19.

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2018-0001844The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as HIGHER. 2890 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95072. County of Santa Cruz. HIGH HONEY, LLC. 7840 GLEN HAVEN ROAD, CA 95073. AI# 2610293. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: DONNA PRICE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Nov. 19, 2018. Nov. 28, Dec. 5, 12, & 19. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT

HELP WANTED Superior Court of California in Santa Cruz, CA Business Applications Analyst. BS in CS, Info. Sys. Com App or rltd. 1-year exp. as Prog. Analyst, Bus. Analyst. Soft. Eng or rltd. Exp. in database desing, implementation, main., & integration techn. SQL. Visual Basic, PERL, Python, and C++. Windows Server & SQL Database. Data Reporting tools SSR. Data org. & access methods in automation sytms. Data warehousing. Travel to annual conference & occasional travel to Watsonville Court. hrinfo@santacruzcourt.org. EOE/No Calls Direct Care Career Opportunities Positions available working with intellectually challenged/developmentally disabled adults in both residential and day care. No

Tonic Salon & Spa IV has moved to a brand new location at 349 Soquel Avenue. We are looking for energetic, hard-working and responsible hair stylists to join our team! We have full-time chairs available. We also have a private room to accommodate someone for eyelash extensions or threading. Rent will be negotiated with the owner and will be a good and fair price for the area. If you are interested please contact us by text message at (831)428-2349

HOUSING Looking for 1 or 2 bdrm - rural, private rental home. Off-grid possible. Great credit, good bank + local refs. Quiet Engineer gentleman – Robert (831) 239-8790 Small Cottage/Studio Wanted $$$+ Trade/ Caretaker. 30yrs carpentry exp. + yard maint. Can complete unfinished rental project. Good References. 831-234-4341 Think you have a site for a tiny house?

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Tom Brezsny’s

R E ON ATO DR PER O

#3 HAS A LOBBY, RECEPTION SPACE, A LARGE ROOM, KITCHENETTE. #4 HAS A SPACIOUS ROOM AT THE ENTRANCE, & FOUR SMALLER ROOMS. parking to be discussed. This midcentury modern building is located on the new riverwalk path and footbridge over branciforte creek.

There’ll be lots more choices going forward. You won’t have to have commit your life savings to a place you’ve only seen for a few minutes. And you won’t find yourselves locked in multiple-offer combat vying with ten other buyers for the same place. And you won’t have to feel so galled by greedy Sellers playing puppet-master with your emotions. The tide is turning. Power is shifting away from an abject sellers’ market to a much more balanced one. Where confident Buyers have more say and a modicum of sway in how future transactions go down. So here’s the million dollar question: why aren’t you more excited? After six years of looking for some kind of leverage over sellers, isn’t this the kind of real estate you wanted? More inventory? Softer prices? More negotiating room? What’s not to like? Why is the big worry suddenly: “What if I buy a house today and it’s worth less six months from now?” When did short-term doubt become a such a viable substitute for long-term decision making? Let’s take a quick trip down memory lane and look for some insight into the current mindset. It’s 1990 and we’re on the waning edge of a bull market, the likes of which everyone said we’d never see again. If you bought a home in 1990, it was worth less in 1991. If you panicked in 1992 and tried to sell, you might have had to bring in extra money to close escrow. 1993 was tough too. It felt like you could shoot a cannon through the marketplace and not hit a buyer. By 1995, things had changed. Values were back to where they were in 1990. By 1997, things were pretty rosy. By 2000, your equity had transformed you into a shrewd real estate investor. By 2003, you were a financial genius and you thought you should have your own late night infomercial teaching others how to share in the wealth. By 2005, you were planning retirement around the equity you’d amassed in your brilliant real estate career! Now step back and take a look over the scope of that same time horizon. Same house. Changing cycles. If you were in it for the short haul, you could have lost big time. If you were in it for the long haul - it paid off in ways you couldn’t have imagined.

Tom Brezsny

Realtor® DRE#01063297

Contact Kari Mansfeld: 831-458-1100 • kari@goodtimes.sc

831-818-1431 getreal@serenogroup.com PA I D A D V E R T O R I A L


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3600 Soquel Ave Santa Cruz 8am – 10pm

140 Dubois St, Suite C Santa Cruz 10am – 7pm

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Licenses: A12-17-0000002-TEMP • A10-17-0000002-TEMP • A10-17-0000003-TEMP

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | NOVEMBER 28-DECEMBER 4, 2018

Two Locations Open Daily

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Where the locals shop since 1938. VOTED BEST BUTCHER SHOP BEST WINE SELECTION BEST CHEESE SELECTION BEST LOCALLY OWNED GROCERY STORE BEST MURAL /PUBLIC ART

Family owned & operated 80 years. 622 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz

OUR 80 TH YEAR

WEEKLY SPECIALS Good th r u 12/4 /18

BUTCHER SHOP

GROCERY

ALL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb, Local, Organic, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet only corn-fed Midwest pork, Rocky free-range Compare & Save chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, ■ OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY SAUCE Jellied and Whole Berry, 14oz/ 1.69 wild-caught seafood, Boar’s Head products.

WINE & BITES FOODWITH PAIRING STEAK GARLIC BUTTER

■ TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS, USDA CHOICE/ 5.98 LB ■ FLANK STEAKS, USDA CHOICE/ 7.98 LB ■ VEAL RIB CHOPS, PASTURE FED/ 12.98 LB

SAUSAGE ■ PORK BREAKFAST LINKS/ 5.98 LB ■ MILD ITALIAN SAUSAGE/ 5.98 LB ■ HOT ITALIAN SAUSAGE/ 5.98 LB

Ingredients

1-1/4 lbs sirloin steak, cut into small cubes 1 tablespoon olive oil 2 tablespoons butter 2 teaspoons minced garlic Salt and pepper to taste 1 tablespoons minced parsley Heat the olive oil in a large pan over high heat. Season the steak with salt and pepper to taste. Place the steak in the pan in a single layer; you may have to work in batches depending on the size of your pan. Cook for 3-4 minutes, stirring occasionally, until golden brown. Repeat with remaining meat if needed. Add the butter and garlic to the pan; cook for 1-2 minutes, stirring to coat the meat in the sauce. Sprinkle with parsley and serve.

Local Bakeries “Fresh Daily”

■ BLACK PEPPER LONDON BROIL/ 5.98 LB ■ SANTA MARIA LONDON BROIL/ 5.98 LB ■ BLOODY MARY TRI TIP/ 8.98 LB ■ WINE & GARLIC TRI TIP/ 8.98 LB

■ BECKMANN’S California Sour Round, 16oz/ 3.49 ■ WHOLE GRAIN 9 Grain, 30oz/ 4.19 ■ KELLY’S Four Seed, 16oz/ 4.09 ■ SUMANO’S, Garlic Rosemary Sliced Loaf, 24oz/ 3.99 ■ SUMANO’S, Sweet Seeded Sliced Loaf, 24oz/ 3.99

FISH

Delicatessen

MARINATED TUMBLED MEATS

Instructions:

■ LIBBY’S PUMPKIN 100% Pure, 15oz/29oz/ 1.99/3.49 ■ BECKMANN’S STUFFING 3 kinds, 14oz/ 5.99 ■ PACIFIC BROTHS Organic, 32oz/ 2.99 ■ MARTINELLI’S SPARKLING CIDER Conventional Flavors, 25.4oz/ 2.99

■ BAY SHRIMP MEAT, FULLY COOKED/ 12.98 LB ■ FOLLOW YOUR HEART Vegan Shredz/ 4.69 ■ SALMON LOX TRIMMINGS/ 10.98 LB ■ WOODSIDE MONET, Chèvre w/Beautiful Flowers/ ■ MEDIUM PRAWNS, DEVEINED/ 10.98 LB 11.99 ■ PILLSBURY BUTTERMILK BISCUITS “Grands”/ 2.99 ■ BOAR’S HEAD SALAMES, Blanco & Peppered/ 6.29 California Fresh, Blemish-Free, Organic, Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organics, Happy ■ NIMAN RANCH BACON, All Kinds/ 8.99

PRODUCE

Boy Farms, Route 1 Farms

Cheese - Best Selection in Santa Cruz

■ NAVEL ORANGES, Seedless and Sweet/ 1.49 Lb■ WISCONSIN SHARP CHEDDAR RBST-FREE LOAF CUTS/ 5.29 LB AVERAGE CUTS/ 5.49 LB ■ BANANAS, Always Ripe/ .79 Lb ■ DOMESTIC SWISS, GREAT MELTING CHEESE/ ■ ZUCCHINI SQUASH, Extra Fancy/ 1.19 Lb 4.99 LB ■ PEARS, Bartlett, Bosc, D’Anjou, Comice, ■ PROVOLONE, DOMESTIC/ 4.69 LB Red/ 1.49 Lb ■ STELLA PARMESAN, WHOLE WHEEL CUTS/ ■ LOOSE CARROTS, Great Source of 7.39 LB Vitamin A/ .59 Lb

TRUVÉE RED BLEND 2013

Red Blend from the Central Coast Elegant and refined, the blend is evocative of the Côtes du Rhône Villages style. A rich layered wine with intense character and accessible delivery. Dark fruit and space unfold into layers of cocoa, blackberry, cherry, rose, plum and spice. The palate is velvety and rich, with a long finish.

Clover Sonoma-Best Prices in Town! ■ YELLOW ONIONS, Premium Quality/ .49 Lb ■ ORGANIC HALF & HALF Pint 1.99 ■ SATSUMA MANDARINS, ■ ORGANIC SOUR CREAM Pint 2.59 Sweet and Juicy/ 1.99 Lb ■ ORGANIC BANANAS, The Perfect Shack/ .99 Lb ■ ORGANIC HALF & HALF Qt 3.49 ■ WHIPPING CREAM Pint 3.49 ■ RED POTATOES, Top Quality/ .89 Lb ■ SEEDLESS GRAPES, Red and Green/ 2.99 Lb ■ ORGANIC MILK Gallon 6.99

Reg. 20.99 Incredible Value at 8.99!!!

WINE & SPIRITS

Best Buys, Local, Regional, International

Beer

■ MOTHER EARTH BREW CO. “Say When” IPA, 6Pk cans, 12oz/ 6.99 + CRV ■ NEW BELGIUM BREWING “Fat Tire” Amber, 6Pk Btls, 12oz/ 8.99 +CRV ■ NORTH COAST BREWING “Pranqster” or “Old Rasputin”, 4Pk Btls, 12oz/ 7.99 +CRV ■ LAGUNITAS BREWING “Brown Shugga”, “Maximus”, “Hop Stoopid”, 6Pk Btls, 12oz/ 8.99 + CRV ■ SIERRA NEVADA “Snow Pack”, 12Pk Variety, 12oz/ 14.99 + CRV

Best Buy Spirits- 750ml

■ BEEFEATER London Dry Gin/ 14.99 ■ JUNIPERO SF Strength Gin/ 22.99 ■ VENUS Gin No. 1, “Local”/ 27.99 ■ STOLI ELIT Vodka (98WE, Reg 48.99)/ 19.99 ■ BELVEDERE Vodka/ 22.99

Wine Specials

■ 2010 HAHN Pinot Noir/ 9.99 ■ 2016 MARK WEST Santa Lucia Highlands (Reg 15.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2015 VILLA BARBI Orvieto (90WE, Red 18.99)/ 8.99 ■ ZACA MESA Z Blanc (91WE, Reg 24.99)/ 9.99 ■ CHALK HILL Rosé of Pinot Noir (Reg 28.99)/ 9.99

Sparkling Wine

■ LUCIEN ALBRECHT Brut & Rosé/ 19.99 ■ GH MUMM Cordon Rouge/ 29.99 ■ CANARD DUCHÊNE Authentic Brut/ 29.99 ■ ÉTOILE Brut & Rosé/ 29.99 ■ KATHRYN KENNEDY Brut/ 38.99

Connoisseur’s Corner - Pinot Noir

■ 2014 MELVILLE Estate (94WE)/ 34.99 ■ 2015 WINDY OAKS Estate Cuvée (93PF)/ 35.99 ■ 2016 SOQUEL Lester (93WE)/ 36.99 ■ 2014 GARY FARRELL Russian River (95WE)/ 44.99 ■ 2016 ALFARO Lester (94WA)/ 40.99 ■ 2014 FLOWERS Sonoma Coast/ 49.99 ■ 2014 GOLDEN EYE Anderson Valley/ 54.99 ■ 2013 BEAUREGARD Coast Grade (93WE)/ 59.99 ■ 2014 PATZ & HALL Chenoweth Ranch (94WA)/ 59.99 ■ 2013 MOUNT EDEN Estate (96RP)/ 65.99 ■ 2013 ROCHIOLI Russian River/ 89.99 ■ 2016 SEA SMOKE Ten *Very Limited*/ 109.99

JACKIE CROSSLEY, 20-Year Customer, Santa Cruz

S HOPPER SPOTLIG HT

Occupation: Social worker Hobbies: Hiking, walking, gardening, cooking, family fun Astrological Sign: Aquarius Is Shopper’s your go-to market? Yes, there’s a lot to like about Shopper’s: the products are high quality and reliable, there’s always plenty of parking, and the early hours are so convenient: I can shop at 7am and get in and out quickly. I like Shopper’s physical layout, which makes it easy to find what you’re looking for.The staff is really friendly to my kids, Brian and Andy, and they remember their names.The checkers will even let them scan our food! My boys get excited when they know we’re coming to Shopper’s because they’re included in the shopping experience. It’s fun shopping here!

What do you like cooking? Italian, Asian … everything! I appreciate Shopper’s extensive variety of dried pasta for my Italian dishes. It’s fun letting the boys select the pasta. I enjoy making Asian noodle dishes because of Shopper’s sauces and other ingredients.We love to barbecue.You can’t beat their skirt steaks and other marinated meats for grilling. Shopper’s sausages, including breakfast sausages, are always on our shopping list.Their local products — salsas, eggs, coffees, breads, bagels and seasonal organic produce — are the best.The avocados are always ripe and ready to eat!

Are you shopping here for holiday meals? Thanksgiving, we’ll get a Diestel turkey and all the sides, including Beckmann’s stuffing. Shopper’s superb cheeses and fresh olives and pickled vegetables are perfect for holiday trays.Their smoked salmon and trout make delicious appetizers. For Christmas, it’ll be a prime rib or fresh crab, brioche for French toast in the morning, along with apple sausages. I love the holiday hustle and bustle at Shopper’s.The butchers move quickly but are still friendly as always, while people chat and share recipe ideas while patiently waiting. Everyone is in a festive mood!

“I love the holiday hustle and bustle at Shopper’s. Everyone is happy and in a festive mood!”

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Corner: Soquel & Branciforte Avenues 7 Days: 6am-9pm

| Meat: (831) 423-1696 | Produce: (831) 429-1499 | Grocery: (831) 423-1398 | Wine: (831) 429-1804

Superb Products of Value: Local, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet ■ Neighborly Service for 80 Years


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