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WALK THIS WAY
WHY CALIFORNIA WILL LEAD THE WAY IN THE POST-IMPEACHMENT ERA BY STEVE KETTMANN P20
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INSIDE Volume 45, No.36 December 4-10, 2019
FROM CANADA, EH! DO YOU RECALL? Voters face ballot questions and plenty of unknowns as recall moves forward P11
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FEATURES
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OPINION
EDITOR’S NOTE When impeachment fever first started to build earlier this year, some people around here wondered where their Central Coast Congressman Jimmy Panetta stood, and why he wasn’t a more vocal supporter. That’s sort of the question that this week’s cover story originally came out of when I first discussed it with Steve Kettmann months ago. Over the course of reporting this story, Kettmann did get Panetta to talk at length about his feelings on the subject, but he did a lot more, too, broadening the scope of the story to explain how big California’s role has been in the impeachment story so far, and how this state has in many ways come to represent the primary opposition to
LETTERS
DECEMBER 4-10, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
NOT WHITE, NOT FRAGILE
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Re: “On White Fragility” (Letters, GT, Nov. 27) I am glad Sheila Carrillo and a “large study group of white folks” are reading White Fragility.” It’s important for “white folks” to understand their privileged status and focus on systemic racism rather than finger pointing at “racists.” We all make assumptions, as did Ms. Carrillo. Martine is biracial. Her dad was the first African-American elected as County Superintendent of Schools in California and currently serves as president of the California Association of African-American Superintendents and Administrations. Martine is part of a family where race and social justice are discussed regularly. Based on assumptions, “white folks” have attempted to define her racial identity. In high school, her white English teacher returned her paper on James Baldwin with a red circle around her phrase: “as an African-American,” adding “as a WHAT?” Assumptions cause perhaps unintentional, nevertheless hurtful micro-aggressions. Race is complex, and “white folks” generally don’t know much about descendants of enslaved Africans.
Donald Trump’s administration. What I think is key, though, in making this a deeper, important story for GT is that he went beyond even that, encouraging the political insiders with whom he spoke to think about the role California will play in national politics after this impeachment drama comes to an end—whatever that looks like. In Santa Cruz Gives news, we are at press time just a few thousand dollars away from reaching our total from the entire campaign last year— and we still have about a month to go. We can get even closer to our ambitious goal for this year with an extra push this Giving Tuesday week. It’s not just about the dollar total; we also want to bring in more donors than ever before to make this a true community-wide effort. If you’ve been thinking about helping out one of our local nonprofits, make this the week you go to santacruzgives. org and do it! STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR
Martine’s grandparents, though light skinned, were proudly African American. Her great-grandmother had dark skin. “White folks” seldom understand how their whiteness and privilege have created internalized racism. Martine isn’t white, or fragile. She is comfortable talking about race and has integrity. In her professional life and as mayor, she takes seriously the responsibility to work to make things more equitable. I wonder how fragile Ms. Carrillo might be under the vitriolic, abusive attacks Martine withstands in the city council meetings. Ms. Carrillo noted “we all operate with some level of bias and prejudice, and as long as we can’t acknowledge it within ourselves, the resulting unconscious discriminations will not be addressed.” While it’s laudable that the “large study group of white folks” are beginning to work through their fragility, biases and assumptions, it isn’t okay to publicly judge and criticize anyone without being certain of the facts. ANNE WATKINS | APTOS
PHOTO CONTEST VISION IN BLUE Blue heron takes flight at Westlake Pond in Santa Cruz. Photograph by
the Gnomads. 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.
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BREAKING NEWS: SANTA!
Now in its fourth year, the Santa Cruz Recycled Art Program (SCRAP) is an artist residency for local artists of various disciplines. It lets the six artists get creative and access to an array of materials gleaned from the waste stream at the city’s Resource Recovery Facility to convey stories of cultural behavior and environmental messages. This year’s opening reception is Friday, Dec. 8, from 5-9pm at the R. Blitzer Gallery in the Wrigley building, located at 2801 Mission St., Santa Cruz.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Hall somehow convinced the one and only Santa Claus to visit its new location at 1960 Freedom Blvd. this Sunday, Dec. 6 from 8am-noon. Santa’s elves will be there to serve a breakfast of pancakes, eggs, sausage, fruit, and beverages. There will be live performances. Breakfast With Santa is $6 for children and seniors and $7 for adults. Kids under 2 eat free. Holiday games, photos with Santa and build-a-gift activity are all free of charge. There will be raffle tickets and gifts to buy.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“I was not lying. I said things that later on seemed to be untrue.” — RICHARD NIXON CONTACT
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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of December 4 ARIES Mar21–Apr19 In composing this oracle, I have called on the unruly wisdom of Vivienne Westwood. She’s the fashion designer who incorporated the punk esthetic into mainstream styles. Here are four quotes by her that will be especially suitable for your use in the coming weeks. 1. “I disagree with everything I used to say.” 2. “The only possible effect one can have on the world is through unpopular ideas.” 3. “Intelligence is composed mostly of imagination, insight, and things that have nothing to do with reason.” 4. “I’m attracted to people who are really true to themselves and who are always trying to do something that makes their life more interesting.”
TAURUS Apr20–May20 “I’m drowning in the things I never told you.” Famous make-up artist Alexandra Joseph wrote that message to a companion with whom she had a complicated relationship. Are you experiencing a similar sensation, Taurus? If so, I invite you to do something about it! The coming weeks will be a good time to stop drowning. One option is to blurt out to your ally all the feelings and thoughts you’ve been withholding and hiding. A second option is to divulge just some of the feelings and thoughts you’ve been withholding and hiding—and then monitor the results of your partial revelation. A third option is to analyze why you’ve been withholding and hiding. Is it because your ally hasn’t been receptive, or because you’re afraid of being honest? Here’s what I suggest: Start with the third option, then move onto the second.
GEMINI May21–June20 I’ve got some borderline sentimental poetry to offer you in this horoscope. It may be too mushy for a mentally crisp person like you. You may worry that I’ve fallen under the sway of sappy versions of love, rather than the snappy versions I usually favor. But there is a method in my madness: I suspect you need an emotionally suggestive nudge to fully activate your urge to merge; you require a jolt of sweetness to inspire you to go in quest of the love mojo that’s potentially available to you in abundance. So please allow your heart to be moved by the following passage from poet Rabindranath Tagore: “My soul is alight with your infinitude of stars. Your world has broken upon me like a flood. The flowers of your garden blossom in my body.”
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CANCER Jun21–Jul22
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Try saying this, and notice how it feels: “For the next 17 days, I will make ingenious efforts to interpret my problems as interesting opportunities that offer me the chance to liberate myself from my suffering and transform myself into the person I aspire to become.” Now speak the following words and see what thoughts and sensations get triggered: “For the next 17 days, I will have fun imagining that my so-called flaws are signs of potential strengths and talents that I have not yet developed.”
LE0 Jul23–Aug22 An interviewer asked singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen if he needed to feel bothered and agitated in order to stimulate his creativity. Cohen said no. “When I get up in the morning,” he testified, “my real concern is to discover whether I’m in a state of grace.” Surprised, the interviewer asked, “What do you mean by a state of grace?” Cohen described it as a knack for balance that he called on to ride the chaos around him. He knew he couldn’t fix or banish the chaos— and it would be arrogant to try. His state of grace was more like skiing skillfully down a hill, gliding along the contours of unpredictable terrain. I’m telling you about Cohen’s definition, Leo, because I think that’s the state of grace you should cultivate right now. I bet it will stimulate your creativity in ways that surprise and delight you.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Poet Juan Felipe Herrera praises the value of making regular efforts to detox our cluttered minds. He says that one of the best methods for accomplishing this cleansing is to daydream. You give yourself permission to indulge in uncensored, unabashed fantasies. You feel
no inhibition about envisioning scenes that you may or may not ever carry out in real life. You understand that this free-form play of images is a healing joy, a gift you give yourself. It’s a crafty strategy to make sure you’re not hiding any secrets from yourself. Now is a favorable time to practice this art, Virgo.
LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22 In accordance with current astrological omens, here’s your meditation, as articulated by the blogger named Riverselkie: “Let your life be guided by the things that produce the purest secret happiness, with no thought to what that may look like from the outside. Feed the absurd whims of your soul and create with no audience in mind but yourself. What is poignant to you is what others will be moved by, too. Embrace what you love about yourself and the right people will come.”
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 “I swear I became a saint from waiting,” wrote Scorpio poet Odysseus Elytis in his poem “Three Times the Truth.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, you may be in a similar situation. And you’ll be wise to welcome the break in the action and abide calmly in the motionless lull. You’ll experiment with the hypothesis that temporary postponement is best not just for you, but for all concerned.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 “My greatest asset is that I am constantly changing,” says Sagittarian actress and activist Jane Fonda. This description may not always be applicable to you, but I think it should be during the coming weeks. You’re primed to thrive on a robust commitment to self-transformation. As you proceed in your holy task, keep in mind this other advice from Fonda. 1. “One part of wisdom is knowing what you don’t need anymore and letting it go.” 2. “It is never too late to master your weaknesses.” 3. “If you allow yourself, you can become stronger in the very places that you’ve been broken.” 4. “The challenge is not to be perfect. It’s to be whole.” P.S. And what does it mean to be whole? Be respectful toward all your multiple facets, and welcome them into the conversation you have about how to live.
CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 You can’t escape your past completely. You can’t loosen its hold on you so thoroughly that it will forever allow you to move with limitless freedom into the future. But you definitely have the power to release yourself from at least a part of your past’s grip. And the coming weeks will be an excellent time to do just that: to pay off a portion of your karmic debt and shed worn-out emotional baggage.
AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 Aquarian playwright August Strindberg didn’t have much interest in people who “regurgitate what they have learned from books.” He was bored by stories that have been told over and over again; was impatient with propaganda disguised as information and by sentimental platitudes masquerading as sage insights. He craved to hear about the unprecedented secrets of each person’s life: the things they know and feel that no one else knows and feels. He was a student of “the natural history of the human heart.” I bring Strindberg’s perspective to your attention, my dear one-of-a-kind Aquarius, because now is a perfect time for you to fully embody it.
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 “It’s no fun being in love with a shadow,” wrote Piscean poet Edna St. Vincent Millay. And yet she indulged profusely in that no-fun activity, and even capitalized on it to create a number of decent, if morose, poems. But in alignment with your astrological omens, Pisces, I’m going to encourage you to fall out of love with shadows. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to channel your passions into solid realities: to focus your ardor and adoration on earthly pleasures and practical concerns and imperfect but interesting people.
Homework: Evil is boring. Rousing fear is a hackneyed shtick. More: bit.ly/EvilisBoring.
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OPINION
<4
enabling freight trains over passenger service! Years ago, while traveling throughout Switzerland and countries that put our transportation to shame, I envisioned passenger train systems simultaneously providing express and local functions. Unfortunately, constraints—including only allowing single-tracking over the 32-mile Santa Cruz County corridor— makes proper commuter rail impossible. Why wait until at least 2035 for something everyone would regret? (As a practical
engineer, I know what is bunk and what will work.) Incorporating new existing Metro electric buses instead can provide ASOG, safe and efficient mass-transportation, cost-effectively (bicyclists and those on foot can also be accommodated 24/7). We need a government with genuine common sense leaders who truly understand that they were entrusted to work for the people, not for-profit corporations or only for themselves. BOB FIFIELD | APTOS
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NEWS DRAWN TO SCALE Santa Cruz County nonprofits open students to Mother Nature’s healing ways BY SUSAN LANDRY
COUNTER ARGUMENT Santa Cruz City Councilmember Drew Glover tried unsuccessfully to get his colleagues to avoid certifying the recall, which will be on the March 3 ballot. PHOTO: TARMO HANNULA
Shock Caller
Controversy—and a new candidate—as recall election heads to March 3 ballot BY JACOB PIERCE
F
ive months after an effort to recall two Santa Cruz city councilmen went public, the City Council has voted to certify the results and officially send the matter to the ballot after recall organizers met the threshold for petition signatures. The latest step will raise four new questions for Santa Cruz city voters to answer on their March 3 ballots. First, voters will have the opportunity to recall either or both Glover and Krohn. Voters will also get to weigh in on who they would like to replace the councilmembers in the event that either does get recalled. Candidates interested in
replacing Glover or Krohn will be able to run for either race, but not for both of them. The filing deadline for new candidates is Thursday, Dec. 19. The recall has been controversial. Last month, Lee Brokaw, a supporter of Glover and Krohn, filed a complaint against the recall campaign with California Secretary of State Alex Padilla’s office. Recall organizers began officially collecting signatures for the effort this past June. Glover, who was elected last year, and Krohn, who was elected in 2016, have both faced scrutiny for issues including their support of a homeless encampment
and their conduct at the city. The two hold down the most liberal wing of Santa Cruz’s all-Democrat City Council. A big part of the recall campaign going forward will be that City Council meetings have been “just chaos” lately, organizer Dan Coughlin says. But in his complaint, Brokaw, a general contractor, cites various alleged instances where recall signature gatherers either misrepresented themselves or lied in order to get voters to sign—including allegations that GT has reported (“Out Lying,” 10/16). “I’d never done anything like this before,” he says. “I’m a builder, not a lawyer.” >12
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | DECEMBER 4-10, 2019
Helping students scale a rock face or backpack through the wilderness is just a typical day at the office for Mountains 2 Sea co-founders Jamey and Brian King. Through its year-round program, the Santa Cruz nonprofit takes youth ages 15-19 on about 30 outdoor adventures annually. That includes sailing trips, hikes and environmental stewardship activities, like cleaning up beaches, soil sampling and planting native species. “We use outdoor activities as a catalyst to really help the kids challenge themselves and find some new self-confidence,” Brian explains. He says that while the outdoor excursions are fun, they’re about more than just adventure. “Our real goal is to help them find compassion for themselves, which leads to compassion for others, and then compassion for the environment.” Mountains 2 Sea is participating this year in Santa Cruz Gives, the community fundraising drive sponsored by GT that helps support local nonprofits during the holiday season. Mountains 2 Sea is one of 19 education-based organizations participating this year. The group gets a small program fee—usually less than 10% of its total budget—from participating schools, and it relies heavily on fundraising for the rest. The Kings, who both have backgrounds in classroom teaching, focus their program on helping youth who come from difficult, often-traumatic home lives. To help students open up, each weekly lesson begins with an emotional well-being checkin. Students share warm drinks, like tea or hot coco, while setting intentions for the day and sharing experiences. “This honestly is one of the most impactful parts of our day,” says Jamey. “It can last anywhere from 10 minutes to an hour.” Each nonprofit participating in Santa Cruz Gives has a “big idea” that its fundraising haul will support. Mountains 2 Sea is raising money to help fund six sailing adventures and three rock-climbing excursions. Jamey says that sailing in >14
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Brokaw has not heard back from the secretary of state. Former Mayor Mike Rotkin, a veteran of local political campaigns, says his guess is that Padilla’s office is not going to get involved, and he insists he doesn’t say that out of animus or any sense of partisanship. “They have other fish to fry, but we’ll
see,” Rotkin says. “I don’t know many campaigns that everyone agrees it was so clean. Everyone always thinks the other side is scum.” Rotkin has also never heard of anyone local filing an election complaint with the secretary of state. Complaints with the Fair and Political Practices Commission (FPPC) are more common. He says that an FPPC complaint has probably been filed
for one race or another in just about every election since 1970—and often, no one hears a determination on the investigation. (According to the secretary of state’s website, there’s a broad swath of campaign law, and these particular sorts of allegations involving unscrupulous signature gatherers do go to the secretary of state, not the FPPC.) As it happens, Rotkin says >14
NUZ COLUMN OUT The Santa Cruz Sentinel’s website has a feature that has left some readers—Nuz included—scratching their heads. Most pages on the Sentinel’s site display a column featuring the eight stories that are supposedly the “Most Popular” at that time. The list usually contains at least one headline that seems out of place, like “BREAKING NEWS: Man found dead at Santa Cruz Harbor.” What’s so weird about that headline, you ask? Well, if you clicked on that link when it was among the site’s most popular stories a couple months back, it would have directed you to a four-paragraph article from 11 years ago about a man being found dead in a coastal parking lot. This begs the question: How does an 111-word staff report get to be the most read story on the Sentinel, as it supposedly was one day in September? Certainly not because of the depth of its reporting. And it wouldn’t make sense for the ranking to have come from any boost in search engine results or social media, either. It that were the case, the story would have stayed in the queue for longer or rotated back in again at some point. And it’s odd to think that so many readers would suddenly get interested in what’s essentially a police press release from
2009—and all of them at the same time. This happens with very old Sentinel stories pretty much every day. Some of the “most popular” stories are seemingly random dispatches, often with salacious headlines about murders and other frightening events from long ago. It’s anyone’s guess why this carousel of crazy-old stories keeps moving, although Nuz is happy to bat around theories. Is the Sentinel—which is run by an uber-capitalist, profit-hoarding hedge fund— manipulating its back-end algorithms or cherry-picking old stories to get more clicks? In the interest of cutting costs, did the paper hire a 3-year-old to run its website? Nuz acknowledges that this isn’t the most pressing matter facing the Sentinel these days. The bigger story, of course, is that the already thinly staffed paper saw four writers and editors leave this year, and hasn’t replaced any of them… and that the entire operation at this point is held together by a mixture of spit and twine and by the experience of its longesttenured reporters Nicholas Ibarra and Jessica York… aaaannndd that the paper isn’t running editorials anymore. Pretty much the only positive cut they’ve made is axing their crazy, vitriol-driven comments section online, although we do kinda miss watching activist Steve Trujillo graciously try to
shout down right-wing trolls like a birthday kid pounding away at an arcade Whack-aMole game.
WELL OK, THEN Nuz is officially pretty sure it’s a good thing that Santa Cruz is not building a desal plant, an idea city leaders tabled in the face of environmental opposition six years ago. Not only do new regulations place tighter rules on the seawater intakes, but also the California Coastal Commission has spent the last couple months throwing sand in the approval processes of the of the Monterey desal plant. And meanwhile, a water facility in Morro Bay that does have Coastal Commission approval has run into problems with U.S. Fish and Wildlife. But it’s worth noting that, in Santa Cruz County, many desal opponents did also oppose a Soquel Creek Water District project to pump highly treated recycled water into the aquifer in order to rest the area’s wells. That project is happening, and it was recently awarded a $50 million grant. So local plans for indirect potable reuse are looking better than ever.
SNOOZE, YA LOSE The recent petition asking Santa Cruz city councilmembers to sleep outside before taking a vote on homelessness was almost funny. Almost…
This sarcasm masquerading as politics is beyond pointless— it’s unhelpful. It is the local equivalent of the satirical presidential campaign signs from three years ago that read, “Giant Meteor 2016.” Cuz, haha, we would all rather see the world end than compromise on any of our political beliefs, get it? Ugh. (With the benefit of hindsight, most rational voters would agree that the lapsed hypothetical of a Hillary Clinton presidency doesn’t really sound all that bad.) The point is that it’s easy for us all to troll and make cynical jokes about government all day. The danger in that is that, if we’re not careful, we’ll lose sight of solving our problems. And by the way, some of the really big problems shouldn’t even be all that difficult to actually make some progress on. In any case, the local petition did get some attention, and Councilmember Drew Glover announced that he did, in fact, take the bait opportunity to spend a night on the streets. And then he took to social media—telling both Facebook followers and the Twitterverse about his experience. He tagged two reporters, three news organizations (including GT), the ACLU and Congressmember Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. “Nice that you did this, but then tag the press??” one follower responded. “Not being a humble servant, but a politician indeed!”
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particular creates the opportunity for the students to learn how to work as a team. “Every time we go out, the students prepare, rig and even drive the boat,” she says. “That requires high levels of communication and working together.” During the climbing excursions, students receive safety lessons, earn belay certifications, and practice at the local climbing gym Pacific Edge before taking their skills to Castle Rock State Park. Jamey notes that for many students, trusting others can be difficult. Climbing lets them practice trusting their belayer, who controls the climbing rope, with their lives. The nonprofit also helps students get to know the surrounding ecosystems in Santa Cruz County. “Land and access to parks should not be a privilege,” says Brian. “I really believe that students will be healthier and families will be happier if they just
understand how to access the land.” Having a chance to unplug and unwind during outings, all of which are devicefree, also helps students focus on regular classroom studies, Brian says. “Nature has this way of bringing your anxiety down. It’s calming and it’s a slower pace than our technological-driven lives,” he says. “After getting them out for the day, they would come back to the classroom a little more ready to learn or able to process a little more of their lives.” That sentiment is shared by the Bird School Project, another local nonprofit participating in this year’s Santa Cruz Gives. The group works with more than 3,000 middle school-aged students each year, teaching them about the values of birding and environmental awareness. “Our general mission is to inspire and equip both students and teachers to love, study and steward their local environment,” says Kevin Condon, co-founder and executive director of the Bird School Project.
Rather than taking students on field trips, the Bird School Project focuses primarily on introducing students to their own campuses. To do this, instructors lead students through birding lessons in their schoolyards. “The main goal is to show the students that you don’t have to go far to experience nature and start developing a connection,” says Condon, “We really aim to have it be a part of their science class and their schoolyards.” During lessons, students learn how to use a field guide, identify local birds, record their findings and relax in their local environment. “Being an adolescent person is a distracting time. There’s so much going on socially for these students,” he says. “Getting them outside and getting them in a space where they can be undistracted, even just for an hour, to me that feels like the most important part of what we do.”
Visit santacruzgives.org to donate to any of this year’s 37 participating nonprofits.
many have been asking him to run again for the council, in light of the recall. “I’m not interested, and I’m not running,” he says. As far as GT has been able to confirm, the race has only one official candidate so far: school teacher Renee Golder, who served on the Public Safety Task Force in 2013. Golder plans on running for Glover’s seat. Of the two potential openings, that slot would cover a longer timeframe, with the term expiring in December 2022. Former Los Gatos City Manager Greg Larson—a candidate in last year’s council race, whose name had been floated as a possible candidate this time around—says he will not run. Former Councilmember Micah Posner says he won’t, either. Former Mayor Don Lane says he’s considering a run for the Krohn’s seat, which would last through the end of 2020. Lane, who retired from politics in 2016, says he would not be interested in serving a term longer than that. Other potential candidates did not respond to GT’s inquiries. According to a Santa Cruz city agenda report, the election’s estimated cost will be between $79,382 and $158,764—or $2-4 per voter. At the Tuesday, Nov. 26, City Council meeting, Glover argued unsuccessfully that the council should decline to rubber-stamp recall results. That would have forced the county elections clerk to certify the recall instead. Glover called on any one of his colleagues, “not being targeted by the recall” to make that motion. That prompted a long pause from the rest of the council. Councilmember Sandy Brown felt that, although she’s had concerns about the recall process, she wasn’t sure that it would be right for the city to sidestep its responsibility to put the vote on the ballot. She said she wouldn’t make the motion. After another pause, Vice Mayor Cummings made a motion to accept the staff recommendation to place the item on the ballot. It passed 4-3 with, Glover, Krohn and Brown dissenting. Coughlin says he doesn’t fault Glover for trying to get the council to vote differently. If Glover had been successful, >16
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Coughlin argues, the councilman could have used the vote to delegitimize the whole recall process. “I thought it was a good political move on his part,” says Coughlin. Coughlin says he has actually met with Glover and gotten to know him— and that he harbors no ill-will toward him, as Glover’s doing what he said he would do on the campaign trail. “He’s doing what he said he was gonna do, and so I actually don’t dislike him,” Coughlin says. “He’s representing the folks he said he was going to represent. It’s just that I totally have a different philosophical, political position than he does.” Coughlin says conversations about starting the recall went back to early 2019, which was shortly after Glover took office. That was when the council was considering passing a controversial just-cause eviction ordinance similar to the rent control measure that had been soundly defeated at the ballot a mere two months earlier. In the middle of the campaign, the city released an investigation into the conduct of Glover and Krohn— substantiating claims that each had violated the city’s Respectful Workplace Conduct policy. Santa Cruz city employees increasingly started signing onto petitions after that, Coughlin says. Some supporters of Krohn and Glover paint the effort to remove two councilmembers as part of a larger trend of right-wing groups across the country using recalls as coordinated attacks on more liberal politicians. Environmental activist Rick Longinotti, for instance, emailed GT articles about Republicans leveraging the tool to try and get back power in Colorado, Oregon, Nevada, Texas, and California. Coughlin says that the recall campaign hasn’t coordinated with any political group, including the Santa Cruz County Republican Party. The political makeup of those who signed their names, he adds, roughly matches that of Santa Cruz. “I don’t know of anyone who identifies as right-wing that was heavily involved in the recall,” he says.
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Golden Gatekeepers Central Coast Congressman Jimmy Panetta and other insiders on how California will lead the way in the post-impeachment era BY STEVE KETTMANN
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orget the prognostications. It’s anyone’s guess at this point how Donald Trump’s upcoming impeachment will play out, or how it may shape next year’s circusatmosphere national elections, but one important dynamic has already emerged unmistakably: Trump’s impeachment currently unfolding in Washington is a largely Californian-driven undertaking, which is why it has succeeded so far where other moves to hold “Teflon Don” accountable have fallen short. In one recent poll, 70% of those surveyed across the country found it “wrong” that the president hijacked U.S. aid to our key ally Ukraine to serve his personal interests. In the same poll, a majority (51%) favored impeachment and removal from office. Polls will bounce around, and the right-wing media machine will spin, but it’s unlikely any of that can stop Trump from being impeached in the House and landing in a Senate impeachment trial, at the very least. As the headline on a recent column by the Washington Post’s Dana Milbank put it, “Republicans Have a New Enemy: Truth Itself.” “These facts are going to stand the test of time,” Eric Swalwell, the East Bay Congressman who sits on both the House Intelligence and House Judiciary Committee, recently told GT. “It’s just a matter of, at this moment, will they stand the test of courage for Republicans? No president has had more damning facts raised about his conduct than
Donald Trump. I’m confident. I know who we are as a country. I know we will come out of this dark time that he’s set upon us, and I know that our children and grandchildren will look back on the people who tried to hold him accountable and bring light to our democracy. It’s just a question of: Which part of the effort do you want to be associated with?” California has played a big role in the impeachment proceedings, and California will also be called upon to lead the way in the post-impeachment era, whatever that ends up looking like. “Nothing defines this presidency better than Mr. Trump’s war with California,” Clay Risen—deputy editor of the New York Times op-ed page and author of the new book The Crowded Hour, about Theodore Roosevelt—told GT. “California is arguably the most progressive state in America, and it’s also arguably the most powerful, so it was inevitable that the state would clash with such an extremely conservative White House. Even setting aside the unique conflict around impeachment, as well as Mr. Trump’s singular need to personalize his political fights and demonize his political enemies, we’d still be witnessing an epic clash between such a diverse, environmentally forward state and any president with such an extreme deregulatory agenda and racist immigration policy.”
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PUT TO THE TESTIMONY Panetta is impressed with how California Congressman Adam Schiff, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, has handled the impeachment hearings.
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PANETTA ON PELOSI Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, another Northern Californian, has consistently been underestimated, but she has proven a worthy foil to Trump. She enraged many by resisting an impeachment inquiry, but moved on her own schedule with impeccable timing, according to some fellow Democrats. “Her political acumen is like no other,” Central Coast Congressman Jimmy Panetta told GT by phone. “I really don’t think there could be another Democrat who could handle the extreme left in our party and also smack down Donald Trump as she’s been doing. She knows Donald Trump, and that’s why she can get under his skin by just being herself. She’s so politically in tune with people. She understands that Donald Trump has a fear of being exposed that he’s in over his head as
president of the United States.” The knife edge of the impeachment effort has been California Congressman Adam Schiff, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, whose unflappability in the glare of the impeachment hearings has stood out all the more when juxtaposed with the sulky fury and bizarre pushing of debunked conspiracy theories by bizarro-world opposite, Republican Congressman Devin Nunes, whose Central California district includes Fresno. Nunes went from widespread ridicule—“Devin Nunes Accuses Witnesses of Misleading American People With Facts” was the satirical headline of an Andy Borowitz New Yorker piece—to accusations, just as the hearings were wrapping up, that he’s actually implicated in the Ukraine shakedown scandal himself. As Charlie Pierce wrote at Esquire.com, “Lev Parnas, one of Rudy Giuliani’s Volga Bagmen who now sits under federal indictment, has indicated that he can put Rep. Devin Nunes, the famous White House lawn
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ornament, in the middle of the effort to concoct the Ukrainian Fantasy about the ratfucking of the 2016 election.” Nunes, along with Kevin McCarthy the leaders of a shrinking-beforeour-eyes, all-in-on-Trumpism California Republican delegation, both led the party strategy of turning the hearings into a sideshow—the weirder and crazier, apparently, the better. (I kept waiting for Nunes to return from one of his frequent restroom breaks and start juggling flaming torches as he played the kazoo.) The strategy may have had short-term benefits, at least when it came to easily led media types eager to demonstrate that they themselves could be manipulated, but dangerous in that it left an opening for Schiff, by contrast, to come across as serious and trustworthy, willing to let the facts speak for themselves. “I’m very pleased that the investigation into the Ukrainian phone call is under the authority of chairman Schiff,” says Panetta, himself a former prosecutor. “I’ve had a lot of conversations about this with him. He looks at cases like a prosecutor. He makes sure we put all the evidence out there upon which the American people, and Congress, can make a decision.” Not only is Jimmy Panetta the son of former Defense Secretary and California Congressman Leon Panetta, he’s also married to Carrie McIntyre Panetta, a Monterey County Superior Court Judge. “It’s easy to be a good prosecutor when you have the evidence,” says Jimmy Panetta. “That combined with Schiff's amazing knowledge of the law and a very cool demeanor is a very good combination. It reminds me of my wife, who is a judge; she understands the law and she understands people. Schiff did a great job running that hearing, pushing back on the Republican theatrics, and making sure the evidence is getting out there from the witnesses, not from the Republican members. Let’s help the American people rely on what the witnesses said, not the screaming
and yelling of the Republicans on the committee.”
BEYOND IMPEACHMENT Californians like to cut through the fog to form a clear view of the future. This state has led the way often enough that it’s a responsibility and a duty of Californians to continue to look for ways forward, some of which will succeed, and some will fail. But we can confront the future not with fear or anger, but with optimism and hope and belief in the power of bringing diverse people together to forge a stronger whole. We in California have played an outsized role in counterbalancing Trumpism, and we will also play an outsized role in helping lead the way toward a new post-Trump world. Let’s be very clear: This will be hard, very hard. Trumpism played off of–and magnified–weaknesses of human character, the ease with which some are seduced by power, and the the terrifying ease with which hate and recrimination can take over any conversation. The healing and rebuilding need to start even before Trump and the presidency are, somehow, disentangled. “People need to understand that yes, our democracy is based on our values, but it’s left up to people to implement those values,” says Panetta. “It’s left up to moral people, people who have the morality to push these values forward. As we go forward, as we act and work with each other, in Congress but also in our society, we have to realize that … this is a democracy that’s about relationships and about trust, and we have to work on that.” Swalwell believes Panetta will be a big part of that. “My respect for Jimmy is rooted in his service to the community as a trusted prosecutor, to the country as a solider, and now to the Congress as an advocate for bipartisan collaboration,” says Swalwell. “I’ve known him as he’s worked in all three roles, and think very highly of him.” Like the resistance thus far, the
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barely listens to a word anyone says to him? A great fight lies ahead to mobilize and bring about the electoral defeat of Trumpism, whether the orange one himself is actually a candidate next year, or Nikki Haley or someone of her ilk runs as a Trumpist candidate, but it’s a fight we now know we can win–the first step toward undoing the damage of these years, and looking for new ways to bring people together. We also need to point the way forward—as California has been doing, but especially needs to do now, above all by tackling its own problems, which are epic, and making the most of its best qualities, like diversity and a flair for innovation. As I wrote in a June 2018 New York Times piece: “In the Trump era, the state is reinventing itself as the moral and cultural center of a new America.” It now falls to us to challenge ourselves to do better in that role of leadership, both in terms of solving our own problems so we can serve as role models and in being vocal and active, without falling back on easy answers or old pieties. We no longer have the luxury of the smugness this state has developed a reputation for, and I say this as a fifth-generation Californian, the descendent of 49ers and Spanish colonialists. We don’t have to meet anger with anger, or insult with insult. We just have stick up for California values – from innovation to respect for diversity to commitment to fighting climate change, even with bold steps like mandating all new homes be solarequipped. As I wrote in the Times, “California doesn’t just oppose Mr. Trump; it offers a better alternative to the America he promises.” JIMMY PANETTA AND CLAY RISEN IN SOQUEL Congressman Jimmy Panetta will join New York Times deputy op-ed editor Clay Risen, author of the new book on Theodore Roosevelt, The Crowded Hour, for an author talk on Sunday, Dec. 8, at 3pm at the Wellstone Center in the Redwoods, 858 Amigo Road, Soquel. Free. RSVP to info@wellstoneredwoods.org.
Q&A WITH CONGRESSMAN JIMMY PANETTA 28>
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A Q&A with Congressman Jimmy Panetta about legislative priorities, supporting impeachment and more BY STEVE KETTMANN You’re well known in the House for your work to build bridges between Republicans and Democrats, generally a thankless task in today’s Washington. For example, you joined with Republican Congressmen Don Bacon and Michael Walz to found the For Country Caucus to advocate for veterans in a nonpartisan way. Has the group made any progress? CONGRESSMAN JIMMY PANETTA: In November, the U.S. Global Leadership Conference honored us and Speaker Nancy Pelosi. These are the types of caucuses that unfortunately people don’t hear about, but when they do hear about it, they give us a standing ovation. People are yearning to hear about people working together and being civil toward one another. Our constituents want us to continue to sit down at the table, stay at the table, get things done, and do it together. I hear that over and over. Recently the caucus went out as a group and regraveled and landscaped the Korean War Veterans Memorial in Washington as a show of respect for veterans of that war. Earlier, we did the same for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. For Country Caucus so far has no legislative accomplishments, but it is a bipartisan group building the types of relationships that can help us get things done. Why do you have to have relationships? Because of trust. Trust is the foundation of how you get things done. You can’t just come in here and yell and scream. You’re not here to make a point. You’re here to make a difference.
You’ve worked on several green bills, including one to support zero-emission buses. Where does that bill—and others— stand? We just dropped that to be a part of a package in Ways and Means,
the green bus tax credit. It is a slow process—welcome to our democracy—but we joined that together with a bunch of other tax credit bills for this type of renewable energy and we’ll … probably vote on it in the New Year. The bottling up is not in the House of Representatives, since we’ve passed over 500 bills. It’s in the Senate with them not acting on anything. People need to know that we are getting our job done. I didn’t realize how much people didn’t know about the legislation we had done until the Gilroy shooting. My daughter and I were there, and thank goodness, we left three hours before the shooting. After that I heard, “What have you done?” It’s amazing how many people don’t know we passed the Bipartisan Background Checks Act of 2019, and it’s stalled in the Senate.
Did you have a hard time deciding to support impeachment? I based my decision on the way I looked at cases as a prosecutor. In order to make a decision on something as serious as impeaching the president of the United States, you need facts. I was always in support of investigating the facts upon which we could make so serious a decision. That’s why I respect Speaker Pelosi for having that attitude that it was about the facts. These facts hadn’t come out. That’s why I wasn’t screaming and ranting and yelling about impeachment. First of all, that’s not my style. If you’re talking about the impeachment of the president, that’s very serious. That’s not something where you stand up and yell at a fundraiser, “Let’s impeach the mf-er!”
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ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT
HOPING SKILLS Santa Cruz novelist Jonathan Franzen wil be one of the speakers at TedX’s ‘The Art of Hope’ event on Saturday at the Rio. PHOTO: GREG MARTIN
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
Pep Talk
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TEDx brings together writers, scientists, activists and more for ‘The Art of Hope’ BY WALLACE BAINE
A
nother decade is drawing to a close and, to paraphrase a famous ’80s pop song, the future’s so dark, I gotta wear a headlamp. An economy on a high wire, a political system teetering on
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collapse, a social-media hellscape and, most terrifying of all, a looming climate catastrophe that has triggered shock waves of anxiety and depression for almost anyone paying attention. At the end of that road is despair.
MUSIC Julia Nunes is coming to Felton Music Hall to make you feel ‘Ughwow’ P34
As if to provide a U-turn from that inevitability, more than 20 speakers will gather at the Rio Theatre in Santa Cruz on Dec. 7 in a TEDx presentation called The Art of Hope. The day-long event is designed not as a pep rally or a
FILM Who done it? Daniel Craig has the answer in ‘Knives Out’ P58
revival meeting, but as a sober and realistic assessment of how to meet the challenges of the moment. TEDx is an independent and regionally based offshoot of TED, the well-known lecture format centered on “ideas worth spreading.”
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In this case, those ideas deal with community engagement and political activism in the face of climate change and other looming threats. Among the speakers at the event will be novelist Jonathan Franzen, who captured the tone of the debate about hope and climate change in a recent New Yorker piece titled “What If We Stopped Pretending?” Also on board are bestselling writer Lara Love Hardin, County Supervisor Ryan Coonerty, UCSC evolutionary biologist Barry Sinervo, and activist Sara Nelson, the co-founder and executive director of the Santa Cruz-based Romero Institute. Nelson, who has been organizing and mobilizing on social justice issues for 40 years with the Christic Institute, will focus her talk on ongoing activism to address climate change, specifically the outline of the proposed California Green New Deal, which her organization is helping to sketch. “I’m very concerned about this issue of despair and hopelessness, inaction and apathy,” she says. “I’m seeing it in people I talk to. And as the climate impacts continue to escalate—and they will—people are going to get really rattled.” The only way to escape that despair and the tragic consequences of apocalyptic climate change is, says Nelson, to engage in focused, energetic, determined activism. The goal of the California Green New Deal, she says, is to work on both ends of the spectrum, drafting legislation at the state level and doing community activism on the grassroots level. “We have to get together and we have to do this,” Nelson says. “I have a deep faith in the American people being able to do things like this. What’s that old saying? Americans are like a sleeping giant. If they wake up, watch out, because they’ll get it done.” Coonerty, a former Santa Cruz mayor, hosts a podcast called An Honorable Profession that talks to prominent political leaders on the local and state level. His talk at the event will aim to convince people that while national politics seem to be little more than a chaotic food fight, politics in cities, towns
and counties across the country are experiencing something of a Renaissance. “The strange thing is that while things are deteriorating at the federal level, it’s created an opportunity, and a necessity, for local governments to step into the void of leadership,” says Coonerty. “And many people are. That’s a good story that needs to be told.” The news media, focused on conflict and controversy, is generally not telling the stories of people at lower levels of government working for positive change, says Coonerty. Dismissive attacks on Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg for his role as mayor of South Bend, Indiana, he says, tend to overlook political reality. “Most people in the country live in a place like South Bend,” he says. “Regardless of how the election turns out, I hope people recognize that those places are where the election and policies are going to be won or lost.” Barry Sinervo, who has presented at TEDx before, has been intimately facing the questions of existential hope and despair on two fronts. As a biologist studying lizard populations around the world (he’s known at UCSC as “Doctor Lizardo”), he has seen mass extinction up close and harbors no illusions about its devastation. For the past four years, he’s also been battling an aggressive form of cancer that has brought him face to face with his own mortality. Despite his struggles on both fronts (or maybe because of them), he’s also been doing stand-up comedy on the side. “I used to think tragedy and comedy were opposites,” Sinervo told me the day before he was to endure his 13th cancer surgery. “They aren’t opposites. That’s very clear to me now, having gone through the global catastrophe and my own. It’s out of tragedy that we gain hope. I really do have hope to see the carbon curve bending, flattening, and then go down, if I live to see it.” ‘The Art of Hope’ will be presented by TED-x Santa Cruz from 9am-5pm on Saturday, Dec. 7, at the Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. Tickets $75 general/$35 students with valid ID. tedxsc19.eventbrite.com.
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IGNITE EMPOWER
MENTORS LEVEL THE PLAYING FIELD TO ENSURE THAT SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FULFILLS ITS PROMISE TO DEVELOP, EDUCATE, GRADUATE AND BUILD WORLD READY YOUNG PEOPLE!
Big Brothers Big Sisters of Santa Cruz County 1500 41st Ave. #250 Santa Cruz, CA 95010 831-464-8691 www.santacruzmentor.org
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POTENTIAL
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MUSIC
SOUND IT OUT Julia Nunes explores breakups and personal struggle on new record ‘Ughwow.’ She plays Felton Music Hall on Tuesday, Dec. 10.
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
Different Strum
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After breaking through with upbeat ukulele tunes on YouTube, Julia Nunes digs deep on darker new record BY AARON CARNES
D
uring one of the recording sessions for Julia Nunes’ latest album Ughwow, her producer Shruti Kumar put her in a room with a microphone that had lots of washed-out echoing and reverb effects. Kumar told her to make noises—not even music, just noise. “It was a huge wall of sound,” Nunes recalls. “I’ve never done anything like that. I pulled out whatever I felt, and it builds and comes in and out. It was true trial and error.” The resulting song, “Not True,” is one of the singer’s most emotional
efforts. A melancholy breakup tale, it’s a far cry from her breakthrough a decade ago, when she went viral strumming feel-good ukulele songs YouTube. This new record is a dark, R&B-infused pop record. As she sings “I could have sworn that my whole life was leading up to you,” she sounds like the saddest version of herself. Those visceral non-singing sounds are in the background, punctuating the emotion of the song and creating stronger dynamics as they weave in and out. It’s subtle, but it makes what could have been a straightforward
ballad into something much bigger and more heart wrenching. Nunes hadn’t expected to dive into this kind of experimentation for Ughwow. In January 2017, with demos ready for the record, she launched a Kickstarter campaign and thought that in a year, she’d have a complete album recorded, packaged and shipped. Instead, the album took two-and-ahalf years to complete. “It was a rough go. It had a lot to do with where my life was at,” Nunes says. “I was not doing great. Once I failed the deadline, I woke up failing
every day. It wasn’t fun.” It wasn’t just personal life struggles that delayed the album; she was also trying to broaden her musical palette. She wanted to move away from the ukulele-based songs she was known for, and had stepped away from that sound for a few songs on her previous record, Some Feelings. She liked those the best, so when she recorded demos for Ughwow, she set aside the ukulele and wrote mostly a capella. “With every record, I step further out of my comfort zone,” Nunes says. “It’s what made figuring out production so hard, because I had nothing to go off of. I would just have new ideas for the melody, and then want to change it. I could never be sure it was the right thing.” She eventually hooked up with Kumar as her producer, which gave her focus. But it also meant being open to endless experimentation until the right version of a song emerged. She recorded as many as 20 different versions for some songs—sometimes slight variations, others completely overhauled with flipped beats or completely reworked production. Nunes decided she needed to be honest with her Kickstarter backers by giving them private updates on her personal life and the state of the album, so that they didn’t feel cut out of the process. They were really supportive, she says. As far back as her first album, Nunes discovered that with Kickstarter, she could raise as much money as labels were offering her, but retain full control over the finished product. “I think of Kickstarter as my record label. I think it’s really important to maintain total creative control and to have a direct relationship with my fans,” Nunes says. “I get offers every so often from record labels, and it always comes with caveats. I put my life into the music, and I don’t want anyone else to be able to control it.” Julia Nunes performs at 8pm on Tuesday, Dec. 10, at Felton Music Hall, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15 adv/$20 door. 704-7113.
Pacific Grove, CA Anniversary Pacific Grove, CA
Jingle For a Reason
Get Your Jingle On
Jingle For a Reason
Saturday, December 14, 2019: 7:30 - 11:30 am
Lover’s Point Park, 631 Ocean View Blvd., Pacific Grove, CA 93950
Saturday, December 14, 2019: 7:30 - 11:30 am
Lover’s Point Park, 631 Ocean View Blvd., Pacific Grove, CA 93950
Register at JBR.org/PacificGrove
Holiday Costume Contest Saturday, December 14, 2019 | 7:30-11:30 am Doggie Costume Contest 5K Walk Point Park Lover’s Raffles and More! 1K Kids Fun ElfView Run Blvd., Pacific 631 Ocean Grove 5K Run (chip timing optional)
Register at JBR.org/PacificGrove
Jingle For a Reason 5K Run (chip timing optional)
Holiday Costume Contest Doggie Costume Contest
5K Walk
Raffles and More!
1K Kids Fun Elf Run
Come Jingle With Us!
Register at JBR.org/PacificGrove Come Jingle With Us! th
ComeJingle With Us! th
Join us for the 10 annual Pacific Grove Jingle Bell Run for arthritis.
This is a fun and festive way to get moving and raise awareness and cure arthritis. Join usfunds for to the 10th annual
for the 10 annual Pacific Grove • 5K RunJoin (chipusJingle timing optional) • Holiday Costume Contest Bell Run for arthritis. • 5K Walk • Doggie Costume Contest This is a fun and festive way to get moving and raise cure arthritis. • 1K Kids Funawareness Elf Run and funds•toRaffles and More!
Bring your holiday spirit, family, and friends say Bell Yes!Run to supporting a great cause! Pacific Groveand Jingle for arthritis.
This is aholiday fun andspirit, festive way to get moving and raise awareness and funds to cure arthritis. Bring your family, and friends Presenting sponsor: and say Yes! to supporting a great cause! Bring your holiday spirit, family and friends and say Yes! to supporting a great cause. Thank you to all of our local sponsors:
Presenting sponsor:
Chuck Cheatham
Thank you to all of our local sponsors: Chuck Cheatham
Fuqua Family Foundation
Fuqua Family Foundation
Additional funding may be available for low income households with income verification.
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
1) Reside in Monterey, San Benito or Santa Cruz county. No businesses, non-profit, or government agencies. 2) Must take delivery of vehicle before applying for the incentive. Purchase/lease must not be earlier than August 1, 2019 and prior to date of fund exhaustion. 3) Purchase/lease vehicle from list on California Clean Vehicle Rebate Program (CVRP) webpage: cleanvehiclerebate.org/eng/eligible-vehicles 4) Vehicle must be registered with DMV and in Monterey, San Benito or Santa Cruz counties. drive license and utility or cable bill within the past three months. 5) Must provide copy of current California driver’s 6) Must submit full copy of sales/lease agreement and vehicle registration (temporary OK). 7) Must retain ownership of vehicle a minimum of 30 consecutive months. 8) Only one application per household.
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D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
JeWel theatre CoMPanY PRESENTS
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Me Girl y A My ndd M An
Book and lyrics by l. arthur rose and Douglas Furber Book revised by Stephen Fry, with contributions by Mike ockrent Music by noel gay
“A delight from start to finish…Ridiculously tuneful” – The Hollywood Reporter
Nov. 13 – Dec. 8, 2019
at the Colligan theater | 1010 river street, santa Cruz WEDS. THURS. FRI. SAT. SUN. Set in the late 1930s, this classic Nov 13 Nov 14 Nov 15 Nov 16 Nov 17 musical comedy tells the story of 7:30pm 7:30pm 8pm 8pm 2pm (Preview) (Preview) (Opening) an unapologetically unrefined Nov 21 Nov 23 Nov 22 Nov 24 cockney named Bill Snibson, who 7:30pm 8pm 8pm 2pm (Talk-Back) learns he is the 14th heir to the Earl of Dec 1 Thanksgiving Nov 29 Hareford when he is summoned to the Nov 30 2pm No Performance 7:00pm 8pm 8pm Show on 12/1 late earl’s estate to assume his destiny as (Talk-Back) a nobleman. But Bill will have none of Dec 7 Dec 5 Dec 8 Dec 6 2pm 7:30pm it, especially since it involves ditching the 2pm 8pm (Talk-Back) (Talk-Back) 8pm equally unrefined love of his life, Sally. Filled with memorable tunes like “The Lambeth Walk” and “The Sun Has Got His Hat On”, this energetic Tony Award winning musical ran for 3 years on Broadway and 8 years in the West End.
Tickets: Adults $50 / Seniors & Students $45 Preview $27 all tickets
www.JewelTheatre.net (831) 425-7506 This production is funded, in part, by grants from the following organizations:
JTC voted best theatre company in Santa Cruz!
Me and My Girl is presented by special arrangement with SAMUEL FRENCH, INC.
Live TheaTre Thrives in sanTa CrUZ.
Art By Brian Sarinova
ROXA HAMMOCK CAFE | BRIAN SARINOVA Brian Sarinova is exhibiting works in painting, sculpture and photographic prints this First Friday at the Roxa Cafe. Hang in hammocks, enjoy fine art, and sip on exotic herbal mocktails billowing dry ice smoke. Located in the breezeway behind Pour Tap Room
with a large window looking out onto Abbot Square. 110 Cooper St. Suite 110G Downtown Santa Cruz First Friday Hours 5:00pm-12:00am On exhibition Through January 11th, 2020
SPONSOR OF FIRST FRIDAY PROGRAM
GALLERIES DEC 6, 2019
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
DOWNTOWN
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FELTON
Ann Baldwin May Art Quilt at the Santa Cruz Art Center 1001 Center St. annbaldwinmayartquilts.com 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Resource Center for Non Violence Unapologetically Black Art Show 612 Ocean St. rcnv.org/ 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
The Reef Pono Hawaiian Grill Erika Louise Rosendale l120 Union St. info@reefbarsantacruz.com
Artisans Gallery Rosie Eckerman and the Authors of 100 Things Santa Cruz 1368 Pacific Ave. artisanssantacruz.com 5:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Roxa Hammock Café Brian Sarinova 110 cooper St. suite 110G caferoxa.com 5:00 pm - 12:00 am
Botanic and Luxe Caryn Owen 701A Front St. botanicandluxe.com 5:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Santa Cruz County Government Center County Government Center Art Exhibit 701 Ocean St. 1st and 5th floors artscouncilsc.org 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Buttercup Cakes & Farm House Frosting Laurel Bushman 1411 Pacific Ave. farmhousefrosting.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Satellite Flexible Workspace & Digital Media Center jules holdsworth 325 Soquel Ave. satellite.communitytv.org 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Fish Princess Farm Denise Perla Peacock 109 Locust St. fishprincessfarm.com 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Stripe MEN Zia Asuncion 117 Walnut Ave. stripedesigngroup.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Food Lounge Alice Blue 1001 Center St. Suite 1 scfoodlounge.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Stripe Stephanie Martin 107 Walnut Ave. stripedesigngroup.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Kerri Linden Arts 1050 River St. #115 kerrilindenartsstore.com 5:30 pm - 9:00 pm
L’Atelier Salon Genevieve Daly and Cheryl Moreno 114 Pearl Alley lateliersalon.com 10:00 am - 5:00 pm
The Fabrica Joy Schendledecker: Teratoplastica 703 Pacific Ave. thefabrica.org 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Printmakers at the Tannery Group Show 1060 River St. studio 107 pattpress.org 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Pacific Wave Surf Shop Mario Guizar 1502 Pacific Ave. pacwave.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
The Homeless Garden Project Downtown Store Multiple Artists 1338 Pacific Ave. homelessgardenproject.org 5:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Red Dot Gallery MARILYN BOSWORTH 1001 Center St. Suite 5 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
The MAH Santa Cruz Tattoo’d 705 Front St. santacruzmah.org 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Garimo’s Real Soaps Studio hosted by Art Services Steve and Mary Lanctot 6222 Hwy 9 artservicesbystevelanctot.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
MIDTOWN Santa Cruz Art League 526 Broadway scal.org 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History Various 1305 East Cliff Dr. santacruzmuseum.org 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
TANNERY Gallery 125 Lynne Todaro, Linda Fillhardt, Chela Zabin, Beth Shields, Joan Hellenthal, Adrienne Momi, Chris Miroyan, Roger Shields 1050 River St. Space #125 facebook.com/gallery125. theTannery/ 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Radius Gallery Small Works 1050 River St. #127 radius.gallery 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm Studio 119 Tannery Arts Center Tannery Loft Artists Group Show 1050 River St. tanneryartscenter.org/ studio119 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm TANNERY ARTS CENTER Artists of the Tannery 1050/1060 River St. tanneryartscenter.org 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Studio 128 Katie Scott Photography 1050 River St. katiescott.photography 4:00 pm - 8:00 pm
APTOS/SOQUEL Aptos Natural Foods Bradon Melad & Colton Bills 7506 Soquel Dr. aptosnaturalfoods.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Treehouse Brian Collier, Jessica Pidcock, Eliza Rose Powers, Danny Fernandez 3651 Soquel Dr. ourtreehouse.io 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
GALLERIES DEC 6, 2019 WESTSIDE Be Heart Now & Nectar Hear us Howl: Yellowstone Wolf Benefit 330 Ingalls St. BeHeartNow.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm R. Blitzer Gallery SCRAP-Santa Cruz Recycled Art Program 2801 Mission St. rblitzergallery.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm Sesnon Gallery at UCSC Unique Multiples free parking for group tours 1156 High St. at Porter College 2nd Floor D Bld. art.ucsc.edu/sesnon 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Stockwell Cellars Anne Green 1100 Fair Ave. (across the St.from New Leaf Market) stockwellcellars.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm The Art Cave The Big Little Art Show 2801 Mission St Studio #2883 theartcavesc.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm The Loft Salon & Spa 402 Ingalls St. Suite #8 theloftsantacruz@gmail.com 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
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FIRST FRIDAY IN DECEMBER
MARILYN BOSWORTH
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
LIFE TO ART I grew up in an industrial town in the north of England during World War II and spent my girlhood dreaming of green vistas and sea views. I have been lucky to realize my dreams, having lived on the south coast of England, the island of Cyprus in the Mediterranean and now in California.
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My paintings have become less representational and more an emotional response to my surroundings. Nature continues to nourish and inspire me.
TICKETS: santacruztickets.com or scbt.org or 831.420.5260 S p e c i a l t h a n k S t o o u r S p o n S o r S : a rt S c o u n c i l o f S a n ta c r u z c o u n t y, D r e a m i n n / Jack oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;neill lounge, DiverSity center o f S a n ta c r u z c o u n t y, g o o D t i m e S , k a z u 9 0 . 3 , m o n t e r e y p e n i n S u l a f o u n D at i o n , S a n ta c r u z S e n t i n e l , t h e S t u D i o , v i S i t S a n ta c r u z c o u n t y, c o m m u n i t y p r i n t e r S
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December 6, 5-8 PM SANTA CRUZ ART CENTER
1001 CENTER ST, STE 5, DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ
Buyerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Guide December
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The Gift of Art? (Framing Time!)
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Remember how much fun it was in grade school when you got to do art? Wasn’t it a great feeling? How about giving that feeling to someone else as a present? And it’s a fantastic way to take your mind off of work or things you want to briefly escape from. There’s still time for your holiday framing, but don’t procrastinate—our custom framing department will only get busier the closer it gets to Christmas! See you soon! — Andrew (Jr.) Bob Ross
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Art (831) 423-1935 • Framing 425-7111 • Fax 423-6840 • 142 River Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
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December 2019
Andy’s Corner
Merry Christmas! The great thing about being a practicing artist is that you can give a gift that no one else can give because as artists, in giving artwork, we are giving a part of us. The individual artist is just that—a unique individual who makes art like no other. So if you take the time, your art will be a unique creation that cannot no t be duplicated by anyone else in the world. So enjoy doing and enjoy giving! The BEST Christmas to you! MERRY CHRISTMAS from the Lenzes and crew! —Andy Lenz
Arches
Lenz Value Pack
Cold-pressed surface, bright white. 22” x 30.” Package of five 140# or three 300# sheets.
Complete beginner’s watercolor set. Brushes, watercolors, palette, mixing cup, 9x12 90# watercolor pad. Reg. $34.95
Watercolor Paper Packs 140# (5 shts.)
Reg. $59.00
$29.50
50% OFF!
300# (3 shts.)
Reg. $81.38
$40.65
Watercolor Starter Set 50% OFF!
$22.97
Pentel
Daniel Smith
Aquash Water Brushes
Watercolors
Very popular professional grade watercolors. Made in the USA. Unique colors too!
Brushes with a built-in reservoir! Water on the go!
40% OFF
Watercolor Blocks
Aqua Mini WC Set
Variety of surfaces and sizes. Very convenient, no stretching, just paint!
8 professional-grade halfpan watercolors with travel brush in a metal box. Reg. $35.95 17%
$29.97
20% OFF Arches
Sennelier
OFF!
40% OFF
AT GRE T! F GI
Winsor & Newton
Winsor & Newton
Arguably the best brushes for watercolor in the world. Kolinsky sable. Outstanding point, spring and load.
Tubes or ½ pans. Excellent quality paints.
Artists’ Watercolors
Series 7 Brushes
30% OFF
40% OFF ©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
Save 34% !
: LenzArts.com
Facebook.com/lenzarts
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Watercolor
pular! Most Po
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
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December 2019
Custom z Len er’s Buy de Guı
PICTURE FRAMING
Framing
Quote of the Month: “Your elves are more patient, knowledgeable, and precise than my elves! Great work!” S.Claus, N.Pole (Thanks St. Nick!)
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Why wait? Our patient, courteous designers are happy to help select what’s best for your picture. With some 30,000 running feet of moulding on hand and acres of matboard in stock, we can have your order ready when you need it (“It’s Christmas Week!”—of course, we prefer more time!) and at a competitive price. As the area’s oldest frameshop Our picture perfect staff can select we have a reputation for quality work, the experience to Still time just the right frame ... no matter the ll to fi make good on our promises, and we’ll be here down the subject or value! y a Holid road to back our guarantee of excellent craftsmanship. Orders! Learn more about custom We look forward to seeing you soon! framing by visiting our web site: LenzArts.com Framing Department: 831.425.7111
Tons of Pre-Made Frames
Nielsen
Metal Framekits
Sectional assemble-yourself metal frames. From 8” to 40” in 1” increments. Two packages make one frame. Frame profiles: Matte Black, Wide Black, Gold
50% OFF Our frameshop can cut glass and backing while you wait!
We’ve got close to 2,000 ready-made frames in a wide range of sizes— including non-standard— waiting for your art!
Great Prices o Glass to n o!
Rising (or Strathmore)
Museum Board
100% cotton, neutral pH. Choice of white, warm white, antique white, natural or cream. 2 ply 32” x 40” Reg. $14.29
Canson
Photo Corners
Clear, Black, White, or Gold. Self-adhesive. Acidfree. Reg. $5.95
$5.47
Save!
4 ply 32” x 40” Reg. $28.30 4 ply 40” x 60” Reg. $53.12
$10.97 $16.77 $45.97
Precut Mats
We have over a thousand mats already cut in a wide range of colors in standard sizes just for you!
Crescent Matboards
Buy 2 or more
20% OFF
Foam-Core Board
White surface. 32” x 40” x 3⁄16” Regular Reg. $9.05
$4.47 $4.97
(25 sheet box price)
(Single sheet price) ________________________ 32” x 40” x 3⁄16” Acid-free Reg. $14.76
$9.57
________________________ 40” x 60” x 3⁄16” Regular Reg. $28.91
$10.47
________________________ 48” x 96” x 3⁄16” Regular Reg. $50.07
$33.47
Lineco
Linen Hinging Tape
Self-adhesive acid-free cloth tape. 1½” x 400.” #533-1015. Save! Reg. $18.97
$17.97
Art (831) 423-1935 • Framing 425-7111 • Fax 423-6840 • 142 River Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
December 2019 Various
Wood Manikin Caran d’Ache
30 professional-grade watercolor pencils in an durable metal case. Swiss made. #74240. Reg. $87.00
$77.97
SAVE!
Perfectly proportioned manikins aid in drawing difficult human proportions. Flexible steel joints allow movement to any position. With stand: 12” high. Male & Female.
30% OFF!
Values to $14.25
$9.97 Pentalic
Graphite & Charcoal Pencil Set 10 graphite pencils (8B through 6H), 3 charcoal pencils (2B, 4B, 6B), two sharpeners and two erasers in a durable metal case. #897016. Reg. $14.99
$9.97
Pentalic
Pentalic
Illustration Pens 5-Set
Aqua Journals
Great for watercolor on the go! European milled, 140 lb. 48 pages. Range of sizes.
Fade-proof and water-proof ink. #900105. Reg. $11.49
$7.97
Pentalic
Daler-Rowney
Colored Pencil 24 Set 24 colored pencils in a tin.
Sketching Wheel Drawing Set 30 pieces. Pencils, charcoal sticks, blending stumps, erasers, more! Reg. $9.95
! 40% Off
$5.97
20% OFF
Save 30%!
Save 45%!
#897324. Reg. $17.99
$9.97
ArtGraf
Lenz
premium-grade graphite! Reg. $36.95
sheets, pencils, stump, eraser & more! Value $19.95
Jumbo XL Graphite Stick 250 grams of water-soluble
$32.97 ©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
Drawing Starter Set 9x12 sketch pad of 50
Save 10%!
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$14.97 Facebook.com/lenzarts
Save 25%!
Instagram.com/lenzarts
Drawing
Supracolor WC Pencil 30 Set
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
l Anima & s m r o F e Lifesizs, d n Ha ! too
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December 2019
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
Let our staff help you set up your
NEW PAINTER within your budget! Golden
Oil & Acrylic
Richeson
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Golden Acrylics
Grey Matters Palette Pad
Professional line of paints and mediums. Everything with the “Golden” logo.
12x16 disposable gray paper mixing pad. Reg. $14.70
! Save 19%
30% OFF
$11.97
Rembrandt
Talens
Professional quality brushes at a fantastic price! We bought thousands—take them off of our hands!
prices! 120ml tubes. Reg. $7.25
Amsterdam Acrylics Student grade at reasonable
Brushes
$5.07
60% OFF! Loew Cornell
M.Graham
Oil Brush Set
M.Graham Oils
16 hog bristle brushes in a durable protective nylon zippered case. Reg. $29.99
Save 50%!
Highly-pigmented professional grade oil paints bound with walnut oil. Made in Oregon. New colors!
$14.97
40% OFF
Liquitex
Liquitex Acrylics
Daler-Rowney
30% OFF
price. Reg. $21.95
Georgian Oils 225ml Big Tubes Good quality Economical
Professional-grade colors and mediums. Includes the new Liquitex Acrylic Gouache!
Gamblin
Gamblin Oils Set
Professional oil paints. Made in the USA. Set of 9 37ml colors. Reg. $115.95
$89.97
! Save 30%
$10.97
Save 50% !
Sennelier
Abstract Brand Acrylic Paint
A very good student-grade paint. Unique and practical squeeze pouches. Reg. $8.45
Save 34%!
$5.57
Art (831) 423-1935 • Framing 425-7111 • Fax 423-6840 • 142 River Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
December 2019
Encourage your little ones with art supplies that work as they should! Micador
Klutz
Early Start Make & Take Barnyard
Six sheets of Shrinky Dinks material. Many pages of great ideas. Great fun for kids and adults! #085
This award-winning set includes 18 pop-out animals, a barn, fence, tree and over 6,000 stickers. Designed for ages 3+! Reg. $29.95
Reg. $14.95
$11.97S
! Save 10%
$26.97 Pentel
uper Fun!
Faber-Castell
Color Pen 36 Set
Creativity for Kids
An array of different art activity kits for children. Pirate Ship, Magic Bean Garden, and more! $6 & up!
$24.97
15% OFF
Yasutomo
Lenz
Fun! The Asian art of paper folding! Select from a whole wall of different designs!
12 paint tubes, 9x12 paint pad, set of 5 synthetic brushes, and 10 well palette. Reg. $40.95
Acrylic Set
Origami Packs
10% OFF
$24.57 Save 40%!
Crayola
Pentel
Fabric Fun
Markers 10 Set Fine Point
15 fabric crayons/dye sticks. Draw, iron, wash! Nontoxic. #PTS-15. Reg. $4.69
Durable tips. Non-toxic. #58-7726. Reg. $4.89
! Save 19%
Save 15% !
$3.97
$3.97
Dover
Trade Center
Sticker, stencil, coloring, activity. New larger selection! Perfect Christmas stocking stuffer & traveling!
Chalk and dry erase boards, roll of paper, tray. Folds flat. 48” high. #315. Reg. $66.95
Kids Fun Books
Children’s Easel
$49.97
$1.50-$1.99 ©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
Kids
36 fine-line waterbased pens. Non-toxic. Replacements available. #S360R-36. Reg. $35.64
Save 30%!
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
The Shrinky Dinks Book
: LenzArts.com
! 25% OFF
Extra paper rolls available!
Facebook.com/lenzarts
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Great selection of lightweight aluminum easels too!
December 2019
Richeson
Easels & Surfaces 8
French Box Easel
Save 60%!
“French style” easel box. Conveniently folds to sketch box size. Drawer for paints. Carrying strap. Fully adjustable. Lighter weight. Reg. $197.95 (Compare at $249.95!)
$79.97
OVVAALSES
C AN TOO!
Masterpiece, Fredrix, Winsor & Newton Canvas
Prestretched Canvases
Gallery depth, studio depth, 3D depths. Canvases for the serious professional to the hobbyist just messing around!
40%-60% OFF! Includes 50% OFF on Winsor & Newton Canvases too!
MABEF
Ampersand
Deluxe French Box
Basswood Panels
Unprimed. Tight grain. Cradled for stability! Higher quality. Stock up and save!
Italian-made “french style” easel box. Folds for transport/storage. #M22. Reg. $399.95
Save 50%!
$199.97
50% OFF!
• Come See all the EASELS • on Display and on Sale! Make Your Artist Happy! •
Masterpiece
HardCore Plein Air Panels
Archival quality painting panels. Variety of surfaces.
•
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
40% OFF Richeson
Lyptus Dulce Easel
Bivouac Metal Studio Easel
Durable stained hardwood. Holds canvases up to 84.” Assembly required. #840200. Reg. $379.00
$169.97
Holds canvases up to 47” tall and 1½” deep. Weighs only 7 pounds but is sturdy and durable. Black aluminum. Folds up for compact storage. #ES-AL67B. Reg. $148.95
! Save 55%
$89.97
! Save 40%
MABEF
Best Artists’ Products
“Lyre” Easel
University Easel
Tilts to 60˚ for pastels. Canvases up to 84”. 30” wide tray. Solid American oak. Made in the U.S.A. #880400 Reg. $930.00
$530.00
Studio Designs
Save $400!
Height adjustment using simple rachet action. Maximum canvas height: 53”. Oiled beechwood. Made in Italy. Guaranteed for life. #M11D. Reg. $249.95
Save 48%!
$129.97
Art (831) 423-1935 • Framing 425-7111 • Fax 423-6840 • 142 River Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
See us for screen printing, lino printing, etching…! Speedball
Speedball
Carve your own lino block! Set includes five blades and durable handle. Be safe, use sharp tools! (Replacement blades available at Lenz Arts.) #41231.
A terrific basic introduction to fabric screen printing! Screen, inks, squeegee, everything you need! #4520 Reg. $82.73
$59.97
Reg. $15.09
PR T-SHIR INT TS !
$11.97
Save 21% !
ABIG
Speedball
German-made, professional printmaking brayers. Assorted sizes and types.
For use on paper. 1.3 ounce. Water-soluble or oil-based. Use with lino or wood blocks. Reg. $4.90
Rubber Brayers
Block Printing Inks
20% OFF Charbonnel
$3.97 Linoleum & Wood Cut Tools & Tool Sets Available!
Aquawash Etching Inks Professional grade water clean-up inks.
Lenz Arts is your printmakers source!
20% OFF Silk Cut Lino
Rives
Premium printing linoleum. Warm it, cuts easily, holds more detail. 12”x12”. Reg. $14.99
100% cotton. 19x25. White or cream. 115g. Reg. $3.90
Silk Cut Lino
$10.97
26% Off!
Strathmore
Rives Light Weight Printing Paper Unbeatable o! BFK prices to
$2.87
37% Off!
Richeson
Blank Creative Cards Make your own greeting
Clear Carve Linoleum Carvable on both sides.
cards. Different styles/sizes.
Easy tracing! Range of sizes.
40% OFF
©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
19% Off!
20% OFF
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Facebook.com/lenzarts
Instagram.com/lenzarts
Printing
ft! Great Gi
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
Lino Cutter Set #1
Glo’N’Dark Screen Print Set
December 2019
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December 2019
Yes, we have basswood strips for your projects!
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
Richeson
Amaco
Semi-moist cakes. Watersoluble, student paint. Non-toxic. Reg. $16.95
Wax-metallic finish that is perfect for antiquing, stenciling and other craft projects. Reg. $7.95
Tempera 8 Set
$12.97 45S%av!e
See us for PAINT PENS
Crafts
including silver and gold! STYROFOAM shapes in stock!
Pilot
$6.97
Save!
Parallel Pen
Great calligraphy pen! 1.5mm tip size. Excellent for sketching too! Reg. $10.00
20% OFF!
$7.97 Sculpey Modeling Compound Polyform
Oven-hardening modeling compound. Great for oraments! White/Terra Cotta, 1.75 lb. Reg. $14.99
Jacquard
iDye Fabric Dye
Textile Paint
Packets available for natural or synthetic fabrics. No mess! Packet dissolves in the washer! Easy! Reg. $4.19
Save!
Water-based permanent fabric paint. For natural or synthetic weaves. 2 oz. jars. Reg. $4.69
Save!
$3.87
$4.27
Jacquard
Pro-Art/Artworks
Range of pearlescent powdered pigments. Reg. $6.29
Highest quality tempera. Non-toxic. Water clean-up. Works great on windows! Reg. $5.05 Sav
Pearl Ex Pigments
$5.87 Jacquard
Silk Color
Save!
$4.37
Silk Sets 10% OFF too!
Save 26%!
$10.97
Jacquard
Dyes for silk and wool. Popular brand. 60ml. Reg. $4.89
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Rub ‘n Buff
Tempera Paint
Save 10%!
$3.09
e 39%!
Jacquard
Indigo Tie Dye Kit Everything you need. Dyes
up to 15 shirts or 15 yards (5 lbs.) of fabric. For ages 8 and up. Reg. $13.59
Save 27%!
$9.97
Art (831) 423-1935 • Framing 425-7111 • Fax 423-6840 • 142 River Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
SEE CENTRAL CALIFORNIA’S LARGEST SELECTION OF DECORATIVE PAPERS! Strathmore
Pentalic
Drawing Pad
Traveler Pocket Journal
Large 18x24 drawing pad. Heavy weight (80#) offwhite pages. For pen, pencil, ink, other dry media and very light liquid washes. Acid-free. #400-8.
Reg. $23.59
160 pages of acid-free, 74 lb. bright white sketch paper. Elastic closure, ribbon marker, back page pocket and flexible, water-resistant cover. #016163-1.
Save 40%!
$14.17
Fadeless Paper Rolls
NICE GIFT!
8½x11. 75lb. Hardbound. #482159811. Reg. $13.39
$6.97 Japan/Thailand
Unryu Rice Paper
25” x 37” lightweight paper in a variety of colors, some with natural inclusions. Reg. $5.70
$4.70
22 % Off!
Pentalic
Sketch Book 8½x11. Hard bound. 65#. 110 sheets. Acid-free. #020103. Reg. $17.99
$8.97
Save 50%!
Solid colors. Vibrant. 48” wide or 24” wide by 12 feet long! A good range of colors including silver and gold! Use for making your own large banners or for wrapping presents!
10% OFF We offer the biggest and best selection of decorative papers on the Central Coast...
BAR NONE! Canson
Various
Mi-Teintes Pastel Drawing Pads
Marbled Paper
Terrific for the special gift wanting a unique wrap or that handmade book needing a final touch.
Paper
Simply Sketchbook
9x12. Assorted colors. Acidfree. #702-2050. Reg. $13.30
20% OFF
©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
$5.77
Lenzer’s Buy de Guı
Save 51%!
Pacon
Daler-Rowney
! Save 48%
Reg. $11.95
December 2019
25% Off!
: LenzArts.com
$9.97
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Family owned and operated for over 51 years!
O p e n W e e k d a y s 9 : 3 0 a m - 6 p m • S a t u r d a y 10 a m - 6 p m
Good toward purchase of $20 or more of artist materials.
Sale items not included. Sorry, doesn’t apply to custom framing department. One coupon per day per customer. Expires 12/31/19
Fine Custom Picture Framing …just for you!
Closing early DDeecc.2.244th! !
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Sat., Dec. 7, 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
We have DEMOS every month! Get your email notices by signing up at LenzArts.com!
TE WA
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Scott Stevenson, DS brand ambassador, will share history and origin of pigments, granulation, lightfastness, and more. Session also includes hands-on time to play with and test colors. *Registration required. Visit LenzArts.com!
Open to all children 12 and under!
UC
SC
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• Art Materials (831) 423-1935 • Picture Framing (831) 425-7111 • www.LenzArts.com
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Daniel Smith Watercolors
Track down the Doodle Boy cut out hiding in Lenz Arts and win a small prize!
Reo DDeecc.2pen .277th! !
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FREE!* *$15 Credited Fee
KIDS! Find Doodle Boy!
iendg r s s o o l l CC rmlybe ae Deec .-2246t!h! c De25
142 River Street Santa Cruz, CA
DEMO
We were voted “Best Picture Framing” in the Santa Cruz Sentinel Readers Choice Awards and the Good Times “Best Of” Readers Poll!
FREE On-Site Parking! Coupons must be presented at time of purchase. (We want to do art, not extra paperwork. Bleh!)
Sale expires 12•31•19. Some sale items limited to stock on hand. We are not responsible for typographical errors. All contents ©2019 Lenz Arts, Inc.
CALENDAR See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.
GREEN FIX
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.
LIGHTED BOAT PARADE
WEDNESDAY 12/4
This is perhaps the most lit holiday event of the year. Local mariners decorate their boats with lights and holiday decorations and parade them across the harbor for your oohing and aahing pleasure. 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.
ARTS EAST COAST SWING NIGHT A NIGHT OF DANCE LESSONS: 7:30pm Intermediate Swing Lesson, 8:15pm Beginning Swing Lesson 9-10:30pm Swing Dance Party. $14 for classes and party/$6 for party only. 7:30-10:30pm. Palomar Ballroom, 1344 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
FRIENDS OF THE SCPL BOOKSTORE Visit us to see the treasures we have! Our Bookstore sells books great low priced of many genres for adults and children. Sales support the library. Open every day. Mondays-Thursdays 10am-6pm; Fridays and Saturdays 10am-4pm; Sundays 1-4pm. Santa Cruz Public Library, 224 Church St., Santa Cruz.
5:30pm. Saturday, Dec. 7. Santa Cruz Harbor, 135 5th Ave., Santa Cruz. santacruzharbor.org. Free.
ART SEEN
GROUPS CALLING ALL PRESCHOOLERS! TODDLER HOUR AT THE SANCTUARY CENTER! Come enjoy weekly preschool adventures at the Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary Exploration Center, with book readings, show-and-tell, singing songs, and crafts! 10-11am. Monterey Bay Sanctuary Exploration Center, 35 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
FARLEY’S WINTER WONDERLAND— 13TH ANNUAL HOLIDAY LIGHTS WALK THROUGH Farley’s Winter Wonderland brings the magic of the holiday season to life with a spectacular display of lights and holiday vignettes the whole family can enjoy. Nestled in Santa Cruz’s Seabright neighborhood, this free, open-air holiday display has brought joy and holiday cheer to those from near and far for 13 years. Farley’s Winter Wonderland, 108 Seaview Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.
TANNERY WINTER ART MARKET
S.C.R.A.P OPENING RECEPTION
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?
Sometimes, the best art materials aren’t sold in stores. In the annual Santa Cruz Recycled Art Project (SCRAP), local artists collect materials from the dump to repurpose into art. This year’s project includes six residents who have embraced the interactive and humorous altar to “Sapiens” through video, photography, assemblage art, a tiny house, giant Pick Up-Sticks, jewelry and an alchemist’s library of tar paper books. Artwork ranges from the poignant— exploring themes of housing and homelessness in our cultural worship of consumption—to the more ethereal and fun, like a “dump dollar store.” Exhibit runs through Saturday, Dec. 28.
10am-5pm. The Tannery Arts Center, 1010 River St., Santa Cruz. tanneryartscenter.org. Free.
CAPITOLA MALL Join Artists as they teach classes and demonstrate their crafts at a free event every First Thursday at Art of Santa Cruz art gallery located inside Capitola Mall. Free entertainment, free refreshments, free raffle. 5:30pm. Capitola Mall, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola.
Tuesday or Thursday beginning at 10am for a fun and challenging 60-minute, core-based flowing strength class! Bring your own mat. In the spacious social hall at temple Beth El in Aptos. Donation based class. 10am. Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Rd., Aptos.
THURSDAY 12/5
CLASSES
FOOD & WINE
ARTS
COMMUNITY PILATES CLASS
WINTERFEST Come one, come all and
Community Pilates Class led by Pilates Instructor Jennifer Balboni. Drop-in any
celebrate the start of the winter holiday >42 season with ELC at our first ever
FIRST THURSDAY ART EVENT AT
First Friday reception 6-9pm, Friday Dec. 6. Artist talks 2pm, Sunday, Dec. 8. R. Blitzer Gallery, 2801 Mission St., Santa Cruz. Free.
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
OUTDOOR
SATURDAY 12/7
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CALENDAR
Connecting Creativity Opportunity & Community
Visual, Applied, and Performing Arts
Cabrillo VAPA Events NOV | DEC 2019 NOV 26 DEC 3
Cabrillo Samper Recital Hall
DEC 4
Cabrillo Black Box Theater
DEC 5
Cabrillo Samper Recital Hall
DEC 6
Cabrillo Crocker Theater
DEC 7
Cabrillo Crocker Theater
Cabrillo Applied Music Student Recitals Tues Nov 26, 12:40pm Tues Dec 3, 12:40pm The Improv Follies 7:00pm Cabrillo College Orchestra 7:30pm The Big Band Tradition with the Cabrillo College Jazz Ensembles 7:00pm
DEC 68
Holy Cross Church, Santa Cruz
DEC 8
Cabrillo Crocker Theater
DEC 9
Cabrillo Black Box Theater
DEC 9
Cabrillo Samper Recital Hall
DEC 11
Cabrillo Samper Recital Hall
An Evening of Vocal Jazz 7:30pm
Music for the Feast of Christmas Dec 6 & 7, 8:00pm, Dec 8, 4:00pm
A Holiday Celebration featuring the Cabrillo Symphonic Winds 3:00pm Actors’ Showcase 7:00pm Westside Folk & Gospel Choir Fall Concert 8:00pm Cabrillo College Small Ensembles 12:30pm Classical Guitar Ensemble Fall Concert 7:00pm
For a full list of events, please visit: CabrilloVAPA.com For tickets, call: 832.479.6154 | Box Office hours: Th–Sat 12–6pm
FRIDAY 12/6 AND SUNDAY 12/7 ‘FIESTAS MEXICANAS’ December In Mexico is an annual show presented by Senderos that brings the beauty of Mexico to dance this holiday season. There will be different dances from various regions in Mexico and authentic homemade Mexican food. The show benefits Senderos, a volunteer-based nonprofit in Santa Cruz providing free dance and music classes, tutoring and scholarships for Latino youth. 7pm. Harbor High Theater, 300 LaFonda Ave., Santa Cruz. 854-7750, sccenderos.org. $10.
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
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Winterfest! Don’t forget to wear your best Ugly Holiday Sweater attire (and yes, there is a fun prize for the winner of the ugly holiday sweater contest: a gift certificate to Jack O’Neill Restaurant & Bar!) Connect and network with young professionals that are actively engaged in the community and looking to make a lasting difference in Santa Cruz County, Families need a strong foundation to rebuild a happy home. while enjoying tasty bites, good company, photobooth fun, and a beautiful ocean view. Your donation provides critical housing (the roof) and All proceeds and donations from the event skills-building opportunities (the foundation) that move will be donated to United Way to serve youth families from homelessness self-sufficiency. Families needto a strong foundation to rebuild a happy home. all throughout Santa Cruz County. 5:3070% of client families stable housing! 7:30pm. Dream Inn, 175 West Cliff Drive, Yourmove donationinto provides critical housing (the roof) and skillsbuilding opportunities (the foundation) that move families fromSanta Cruz.
More than a roof...
More than a roof…
SUPPORT PAJARO VALLEY SHELTER SERVICEStoTHROUGH SANTA CRUZ GIVES! homelessness self-sufficiency. 97% of graduating familiesfor have Donate now to provide the roof and the foundation a savings happy home! Donate now to provide the roof and the foundation for a happy home!
M N P Pajaro Valley Services PajaroShelter Valley Shelter Services 115 Brennan Street, Watsonville, CA 95076 115 Brennan Street, Watsonville, CA 95076 831.728.5649 • www.pvshelter.org
GROUPS KIDS CREATE! Explore where science meets art with a new STEAM based project every week, and leave the mess at the library! Every Thursday beginning Sept. 19. Program runs through Dec. 12. No program
on Oct. 31 or Nov. 28. For kids 5-12 years old. Check the online calendar for the project of the week: santacruzpl.org/calendar. 3:304:30pm. Garfield Park Library, 705 Woodrow Ave., Santa Cruz.
MUSIC REGGAE THURSDAYS MI DEH YAH Reality Sound International and The Catalyst present Reggae Thursdays with DJ Spleece and friends. Dancehall reggae remix. 7pm. The Catalyst Club, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. santacruzreggae.com. Free.
WOLF JETT + ALISON STEELE + JOE MACKESSY After leaving his home of San Francisco to travel and busk for a year through Spain and Portugal by bicycle, Chris Jones (leader of long-time SF band Scary Little Friends) moves to NYC and starts a bi-coastal project that infuses folk, soul, and blues into the sound of Cosmic Street Gospel. Jon Payne (Elliot Peck, The Painted Horses), Jeff Kissell (Marty O’Reilly >44
events.ucsc.edu
D EC 2019 – JA N 2020
JOIN US AS W E SHARE THE E XCIT EMENT OF LE ARNING
TEDxSantaCruz 2019: The Art of Hope DECEMBER 7, 9AM–5PM RIO THEATRE, 1205 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ $75/PERSON
What does it take to maintain hope in the face of hopelessness? Speakers and performers will address immigration, governance, education, climate change, and AI.
Community Free Day at Seymour Center DECEMBER 5, 10AM–5PM SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER FREE ADMISSION
Enjoy free admission all day as the Seymour Marine Discovery Center opens to the community free of charge.
Fall 2019 Open Studios DECEMBER 6, 12–4PM ELENA BASKIN VISUAL ARTS COMPLEX FREE ADMISSION
Come to see the featured art of our students in a variety of media, including drawing, painting, print media, sculpture, intermedia, photography, and electronic art.
Younger Lagoon Reserve Tours DECEMBER 5, 10:30AM–NOON SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER FREE ADMISSION, ADVANCE RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED
Jasper Rose Memorial DECEMBER 6, 12–2PM ELOISE PICKARD SMITH GALLERY ALL ARE WELCOME
A memorial to celebrate the life of former provost Jasper Rose. Countless students, colleagues, and faculty from the first 20 years of UCSC had their lives transformed by their contact with Jasper.
LE ARN MORE AT
UCSC Jazz Ensembles & Big Band DECEMBER 8, 3PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL $4–$10/PERSON
The UCSC Jazz Ensembles’ combined concert includes the Small Jazz Ensembles, directed by Stan Poplin, and the Big Band, directed by Charles Hamilton. Celebrating the music of Thelonious Monk.
DECEMBER 7, 11AM NORRIE’S GIFT AND GARDEN SHOP AT UCSC ARBORETUM FREE WITH ADMISSION TO THE ARBORETUM
Join us for a docent–led tour of the UCSC Arboretum’s extensive gardens on the first Saturday of every month. The theme is “Around the World in 60–90 Minutes.”
CLOSING SOON: Unique Multiples Exhibition TUES–SAT 12– 5PM; WED 12–8PM THROUGH DECEMBER 6 SESNON GALLERY FREE ADMISSION
Community Science: Fall Phenology Walks
Catch this exhibition before it closes! Explore experimental objects and artifacts by Andy Warhol, Cindy Sherman, Ai Weiwei, and other influential contemporary artists whose works are featured in the Parkett Collection.
DECEMBER 14, 11AM–1PM NORRIE’S GIFT AND GARDEN SHOP AT UCSC ARBORETUM FREE WITH ADMISSION TO THE ARBORETUM
Solitary Garden Public Sculpture & Garden Project
Calling citizen scientists to collect phenology data and contribute to climate change research. Help monitor 18 permanently marked California native plants while touring the beautiful Native Plant Garden.
THROUGH DECEMBER 2020 BASKIN ART STUDIOS FREE ADMISSION
Jingle Shells Arts & Crafts Festival Garden Tour at UCSC Arboretum
ONGOING EVENTS
DECEMBER 15, 12–5:30PM SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER $0–$7/PERSON
This holiday tradition features more than 30 local artists and craftspeople who will tempt you with their oceanand nature-inspired wares. The festival features ocean-themed gifts, and proceeds directly support marine science education.
Solitary Garden is an installation by artist jackie sumell, replicating a standard U.S. solitary confinement cell and imagining a landscape without prisons. Around the 6’ x 9’ cell grows a garden of flowers and vegetables, designed by Tim Young, currently
UPCOMING EVENTS JANUARY 18
Pruning Deciduous Fruit Trees JANUARY 22
Racial Reconciliation & the Future of Race in America JANUARY 23
California All-State Orchestra
Carlos Motta: We The Enemy Opening Reception
DECEMBER 7, 7:30PM MUSIC CENTER RECITAL HALL FREE ADMISSION
JANUARY 25
High school student members of the California Orchestra Directors
events.ucsc.edu
Right Livelihood Lecture: Dr. Vandana Shiva
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This 90-minute, behind-the-scenes hiking tour takes you into Younger Lagoon Reserve adjacent to the Seymour Marine Discovery Center. The Reserve contains diverse coastal habitat and is home to birds of prey, migrating sea birds, bobcats, and other wildlife.
Association (CODA) Honors Symphony and Honors String Orchestra perform.
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Z A R J EOFWFIE - ZOWIE!
and the OSO), and Will Forte (the Naked Bootleggers) round out the lineup for the band. The players are classically trained musicians as well as campfire poets prior to forming the band. 8pm. lille æske, 13160 Central Ave., Boulder Creek.
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OUTDOOR COMMUNITY FREE DAY AT THE SEYMOUR CENTER The Seymour Marine
ue du ith Cirq , & w t is lo o us s Former kle Family Circ ic P , Soleil in JOY! Fun! recently , Wonder & ic g Ma
Tandy Beal & Company Presents
ArtSmart
Family Concert Series
2019 - 2020
SATURDAY - DEC. 14 - 11am
Santa Cruz Veterans Memorial Building TICKETS at tandybeal.com
Discovery Center is open to the community free of charge all day. Come touch a friendly shark, see how marine scientists work, and take in the spectacular Monterey Bay. Our exhibit hall offers a deeper dive into the adventure of ocean research here in Santa Cruz and around the world. Visit us and explore the fascinating world of marine science and conservation. We look forward to meeting you!. 10am-5pm. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz.
EMMETT THOMPSON MEMORIAL DAD’S CLUB TOURNAMENT 2019 The Santa Cruz High School Boys Basketball program is hosting the 64th annual Emmett Thompson Memorial Dad’s Club Basketball tournament. 3:30pm. Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, 307 Church St., Santa Cruz.
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
YOUNGER LAGOON RESERVE TOURS
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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. Come and see what scientists are doing to track local mammals, restore native habitat, and learn about the workings of one of California’s rare coastal lagoons. 10:30am-noon. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz.
FRIDAY 12/06 ARTS ‘THE CHERRY ORCHARD’ The Cherry Orchard, MCT’s final production of 2019, deals with dislocating events in the life of a Russian family of landowners, their neighbors, and the people who work for them. Powerful social forces are in motion, and everyone is altered by them. Despair seems pervasive, and yet joy persists. Chekhov makes each of his characters
simultaneously likable and infuriating, credible and foolish. It was his great gift as a writer to make each life in his plays complex, vivid, and necessary. 8pm. Mountain Community Theater/Park Hall, 9400 Mill St., Ben Lomond.
DECEMBER FIRST FRIDAY Make the MAH a stop on your First Friday Art Tour for three floors of exhibitions, live music, and drop-in craft activities. 10am-9pm. Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History (MAH), 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. FIRST FRIDAY AT FLORA + FAUNA First Friday in December means art loving holiday shopping! FLORA + FAUNA showcases the work of over a dozen local artists and designers. During the holiday season, we focus on small works ... perfect for gift giving! Don’t miss your chance to see the array of original works by ten different artists displayed on the gallery wall. With home goods, jewelry and accessories to boot! Something for everyone on your list. We'll have warm drinks, nibbles to keep you cozy while you shop the show. 5-9pm. Flora and Fauna, 1050 River St. #127, Santa Cruz. FIRST FRIDAY: SEASONAL CRAFTS AND GIFTS Give the gift of nature! Join the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History for a free and festive First Friday event. Explore the Museum, create nature-inspired gifts, and enjoy a storewide sale. Festive treats, drinks, and gift-wrapping will be provided. Local artists Emily Scott and Linnea Gullikson will lead a printmaking station where guests can choose and print a handmade linocut image of endangered species to adorn a greeting card. The Museum will host additional craft and giftmaking stations, including nest necklaces. This First Friday event is part of the Museum’s three-day Winter Open House, Friday, Dec. 6 through Sunday, Dec 8. 5-7pm. Santa Cruz Museum Of Natural History, 1305 E Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz.
FREE FAMILY MOVIE NIGHT: ‘DUMBO 2019’ The City of Capitola’s Recreation Department is very excited to introduce our new event series: Free Family Movie Nights! Bring the whole family out for the evening to enjoy a free screening of Dumbo 2019, as well as free popcorn and churros! Space is limited to 200 people, so arrive early! This is a bring-your-own-seating event. Blankets, pillows and low-back chairs only! You are welcome to bring your own food and beverages, however no alcohol is allowed and you will be asked to leave. We encourage you to bring reusable containers and utensils
CALENDAR to reduce waste. 6pm. Capitola Recreation, 4400 Jade St., Capitola.
FROSTY FUN FEST Enjoy a night of creativity for December’s First Friday. Visit our Snowflake Create Station and add our community art wall. Decorate holiday cards and wrapping paper with potato print stamps. Wear your favorite holiday attire, spread joy and cheer while sipping on delicious hot cocoa. Test your candy construction skills in the Team Graham Cracker House Contest (two-six people per team, pre-registration required by Monday, Dec 2.). There is limited space for teams! Make sure you register early to guarantee your spot! 5pm. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz.
CLASSES CHAIR YOGA Join Suzi Mahler Tuesdays and Fridays at Grey Bears. This chair yoga class is fun, informative. Whether you are rehabilitating after surgery, want to increase flexibility and coordination or just want to add another yoga class to your week, it is time to start! 9:30am. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. $5. GENTLE YOGA / YOGA FOR SENIORS
TAHITIAN DANCE WITH LIVE DRUMMING Learn the exciting, aerobic Ori Tahiti with Yola and Siaosi! Build a solid foundation in Tahitian Dance. This grounded form emphasizes strong, fast hip circles and accents. Learn to dance solo and with a group. Original choreography by Yola. Bring a sarong to tie around the hips. 5:15-6:15pm. Te Hau Nui Dance Studio, 924 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz.
THE ART OF BELLY DANCING WITH YOLA Embrace your inner Goddess through this sensuous, sacred, divinely feminine dance form. Original choreography by Yola. Bring a scarf to tie around your hips. 6:30-7:30pm. Te Hau Nui Dance Studio, 924 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz.
TRIYOGA WITH YOGINI KALIJI Join Yogini Kaliji for three perfectly paced sessions of yogaflow. Come Friday evening for Free the Hips, Saturday afternoon for Free the Spine, and Sunday afternoon for Water and Fire Flow. All are welcome. Preregister at triyoga.com/store/programs. 5:30-9pm. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz.
GROUPS OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS Do you struggle with compulsive eating? Drop into a free, friendly OA 12-Step meeting with the solution. All are welcome! Meets in the Social Hall. Fragrance free. Wheelchair accessible. 12:15-1:15pm. Quaker Meeting House, 225 Rooney St., Santa Cruz.
HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR Every Friday 3-6pm, Thrive offers Vitamin B12 shots for only $15. Vitamin B12 deficiency is common since all B vitamins are depleted by stress and vitamin B12 is not well absorbed in the gut. B12 shots are immediately absorbed. B12 supports energy, mood, sleep, immunity, and stress resilience. Come on by and feel your best for the weekend! 3-6pm. Thrive Natural Medicine, 2860 Park Ave., Soquel.
BARRE FUNDAMENTALS TRAINING We are hosting our first ever in-studio barre training! No ballet experience or prior barre certifications required, just a love for deep beats, inspired movements and muscle toning. 4pm. Bunny’s Home and Garden, 1349 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
MUSIC EDGE OF THE WEST AND THE RAYBURN BROTHERS BAND AT MICHAEL'S ON MAIN Edge of the
10th Annual
Messiah Sing-Along
Tuesday, December 17th, 2019 7:00pm Gala reception to follow
Peace United Church of Christ 900 High Street, Santa Cruz Tickets: $30 General, $28 Student, $27 Senior or online: feastofchristmas.com
Cheryl Anderson, Director of Choral Activities, Cabrillo College Bring your Handel’s Messiah scores; limited quantity available to borrow
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West plus the Rayburn Brothers—Original Americana, Jam, Country, and Rock n' Roll from Santa Cruz. $10. Rayburns play first. 8:30pm. Michael’s on Main, 2591 S Main St., Soquel.
GROUP KARAOKE FUN WITH GINA Sing along in an environment that is completely accepting of all diverse voices with the goal of having a good time! No experience necessary, just sing-along and have fun! There is a $2 suggested donation, but no one is turned away for lack of funds. Taught by Gina Val-Leiva. 1pm. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., >46 Santa Cruz.
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Join us for a very enjoyable and relaxing deep stretch through a variety of postures clearly narrated and slowly paced for safety and personalization; with meditation and pranayama offered. Seated and reclined poses that are relaxing and build flexibility and joint mobility are highlighted. Poses that emphasis balance, healthy digestion, and enhancing bone density will be explored. This class usually has 20 minutes of restorative Yoga. 10:30am. Watsonville Yoga, Dance and Healing Arts, 375 N. Main St., Watsonville.
Cabrillo Chorus & Ensemble Monterey Chamber Orchestra Present
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FRIDAY 12/6 ‘UNAPOLOGETICALLY BLACK ART SHOW’ GRAND OPENING The Resource Center for Nonviolence’s latest exhibit focuses on the theme, “What is black art?” The show questions if black art is supposed to represent black people and issues. Or, is it simply any art produced by artists of African or black heritage? Featured artists include Justice Renaissance, Karren Moorer, TheArthur, Elijah Pfotenhauer, Devi Pride, Kendra Dosenbach, Valeria Miranda, Dwight Tashann Chism, Robert EndacottKeller, and Javance Henderson. There will also be a panel discussion with the featured artists about what is means to be a black artist in today’s world. 6pm. Resource Center for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. 423-1626, rcnv.org. Free.
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D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
VOCAL ENSEMBLE PERFORMS WINTERSONGS Wintersongs is Kitka's
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critically-acclaimed and wildly popular winter holiday program showcasing seasonal music from a wide variety of Eastern European ethnic and spiritual traditions. For countless centuries, people around the world have utilized the power of community singing to infuse warmth, cheer, spirituality, wishes for peace, health, and good fortune into the long, dark, cold and difficult winter season. Eastern Europe's geographic position as a crossroads between Europe and the Orient has produced an astonishingly rich and varied array of seasonal musical rituals. 7:30pm. Peace United Church of Christ, Santa Cruz, 900 High St., Santa Cruz.
OUTDOOR WINTER OPEN HOUSE AT THE MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Give the gift of nature! Join the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History for a free and festive weekend celebrating the changing of the seasons with free admission to the Museum, nature-inspired crafts, and a
storewide sale all weekend long. 11am-7pm. Santa Cruz Museum Of Natural History, 1305 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz.
SATURDAY 12/7 ARTS 12TH ANNUAL $25 AND UNDER ARTISAN GIFT SALE You are invited to a unique sale of exquisite, hand-made gifts, all $25 or less! Find one-of-a-kind items for everyone on your list (or yourself!) All items on sale at this event are locally made, highquality and affordable. Bring your friends, do your holiday shopping early and support local artists. 10am. Santa Cruz County Veterans Memorial Building, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. Free.
19TH ANNUAL SWANTON ARTISANS HOLIDAY SALE 19th Annual Swanton Artisans Holiday Sale featuring all Women North Coast Artists! Organic soaps and body products, leather goods, repurposed cozy cashmere, ceramics, prints and more! And of course Swanton Berry Farms tasty farm made goods! Pies and Cobblers and jams
and so much more! 10am. Swanton Berry Farm, 25 Swanton Rd., Davenport.
Simpkins Family Swim Center, 979 17th Ave., Santa Cruz.
43RD ANNUAL HOME TOUR Announcing the Santa Cruz Symphony League’s 43rd annual home tour featuring five exquisite homes showcasing the best architecture & design in Santa Cruz! Proceeds benefit the Santa Cruz Symphony, which provides concerts & music education throughout Santa Cruz County. Everyone who buys a ticket will bring it to the historic Sesnon House at 6500 Soquel Drive on the Cabrillo College campus. Tour this beautiful former home, pick up your Tour Guidebook and check out the fabulous vendors for some holiday shopping. Noon. Sesnon House at Cabrillo College, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos.
HOLIDAY TREE LIGHTING AND CRAFT FAIR Join us for a free family friendly
BREAKFAST WITH SANTA Santa Is Coming To Town! This time-honored tradition is a holiday favorite for children and adults of all ages. Bring your wish lists and yearly recap of if you've been naughty or nice and share it with Santa. Guests will enjoy a holiday breakfast buffet with made to order waffles and omelets, and children will delight having their own photos taken with Santa and a cuddly take home collectible Chaminade teddy bear! Enjoy writing letters to Santa, while basking in the glow of a beautiful morning overlooking the Monterey Bay. 9-11am. Chaminade Resort & Spa, 1 Chaminade Lane, Santa Cruz. $48. FELTON BRANCH LIBRARY CLOSING SALE There will be Books, Furniture, Shelving and more. Everything must go! We will include a $5 bag sale from 1:30-3pm. 10am start. Felton Branch Library, 6299 Gushee St., Felton.
FRIENDS OF SCPL HOLIDAY BOOK SALE Our usual very reasonably priced books and media. Avoid the rush and shop at the Friends Holiday Sale! Free gift wrap! 10am-2pm. Santa Cruz Public Libraries— downtown, 240 Church St., Santa Cruz.
HOLIDAY ART & CRAFT FAIRE A wide variety of high-quality, handmade art and crafts will be showcased at the annual Holiday Art and Craft Faire, 10am-4pm at the Simpkins Swim Center/Community Room. Free parking and admission! Shoppers will find unique gifts created by local artists and craftspeople, including jewelry, hats and bags, textiles (knitted items, clothing), ornaments, leather goods, soaps, candles, nightlights, pottery, original artwork, cards, pillows, art glass, and much more! Come on by to find that perfect gift, stocking stuffers, or something for yourself! 10am-4pm.
holiday celebration in Aptos on Saturday, Dec. 7. Enjoy a visit from Santa Claus, Christmas carolers, dance performances, gifts for sale from a dozen local craft vendors. Plus free coffee, cookies, ornament making and much more! Please call the Aptos Chamber of Commerce for more information 688-1467. 2-5pm. Aptos New Leaf Community Market, Aptos Village Way, Aptos.
ME AND MY GIRL Set in the late 1930’s, this classic musical comedy tells the story of an unapologetically unrefined cockney named Bill Snibson, who learns he is the 14th heir to the Earl of Hareford when he is summoned to the late earl’s estate to assume his destiny as a nobleman. But Bill will have none of it, especially since it involves ditching the equally unrefined love of his life, Sally. Filled with memorable tunes like “The Lambeth Walk” and “The Sun Has Got His Hat On,” this energetic Tony Award-winning musical ran for three years on Broadway and 8 years in the West End. 2pm. The Colligan Theater, 1010 River St., Santa Cruz. PARKSTORE HOLIDAY SALE Shop four ParkStore locations for thoughtful holiday gifts. All proceeds benefit our local state parks and beaches. Friends members receive up to 30% off on select iconic Michael Schwab park illustrations on apparel and more, plus jewelry, maps, nature guides, local history books, educational toys and other gifts that represent the cultural history and environment of our parks. Non-members receive 20% off. Become a member at the sale to receive the 30% discount! 10am-4pm. Santa Cruz Mission Historic State Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz.
CLASSES SALSA RUEDA FOR BEGINNERS / PARA PRINCIPIANTES Salsa Rueda for the pure beginner. Monthly socials for experienced dancers! Great music and sound system. Learn the footwork, the cues, and the stylizations in an encouraging environment from a great teacher with years of experience teaching dance. Students warm up, learn at the mirror, then learn partner dancing and finally dance in a Rueda or wheel, trading partners and flowing the joy and learning. 7-8pm. Watsonville Yoga,
CALENDAR Dance and Healing Arts, 375 N. Main St., Watsonville. $10.
TRIYOGA WITH YOGINI KALIJI Join Yogini Kaliji for three perfectly paced sessions of yogaflow. Come Friday evening for Free the Hips, Saturday afternoon for Free the Spine, and Sunday afternoon for Water and Fire Flow. All are welcome. Preregister at triyoga.com/store/programs. 1-4:30pm. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz.
have found that mindfulness is the tool that enables leaders to embrace their humanity, focus on being a leader, engage with others in a more meaningful and impactful way, and perhaps even reduce suffering—for themselves and others—along the way. 10am-5pm. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Rd., Soquel.
NATURAL MIND MEDITATION Natural
HOLIDAY BAKING CHALLENGE Teen Kitchen Project presents the first annual Holiday Baking Challenge. This cooking competition is an opportunity for youth to prepare holiday treats at home and bring them in to be judged and tasted. Noon-3pm. Calvary Episcopal Church, 532 Center St., Santa Cruz.
Mind meditation is from Dzogchen in the Tibetan Buddhist traditions. What Dzogchen teaches is that we already have a purity of Natural Mind and all of its qualities. It is said that Natural Mind is beyond mind and beyond description. It is the ultimate truth. It is compared to the inconceivable vastness of space, with luminosity and clarity, and a depth of wisdom. With this meditation we can see through conceptual and emotional patterns and experience a bigger, more open view. 10-11:30am. Corralitos Cultural Center, 127 Hames Rd., Watsonville.
GROUPS
SANTA CRUZ SATSANG WITH JON BERNIE Jon Bernie is a nondual spiritual
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HEALTH MINDFUL LEADERSHIP Leading people is one of the most challenging tasks we can take on in life. And this challenge is made more difficult by the demands of today’s 24/7 always-on, interconnected world where distractions are rampant and change is constant. We often don’t have the breathing space to be clear and focused, to listen deeply to ourselves and others, or to lead with a sense of calm and centeredness. However, in the midst of this autopilot environment, decades of scientific research
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ANTHONY ARYA’S HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS AT KUUMBWA JAZZ The Holidays are a time to be home with friends and family. Anthony Arya invites you to kick off the Holiday season with an evening at the Kuumbwa with Home for the Holidays. Anthony and his band will play all your Holiday favorites for a very special evening not to be missed. A sneak peak at the set list shows Merry Christmas Baby, Feliz Navidad, and Winter Wonderland just to name a few. If you've seen Anthony singing Blues or Jazz at one of the hundreds of shows he performed this year, you know what to expect. If you haven’t caught a show before, now’s a good chance to enjoy one of Santa Cruz’s favorite new performers. 7:30pm. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $15.
JOIN US FOR DANCING, DJS & DRINK SPECIALS @MOTIVSC SATURDAYS! IT’S TIME FOR HOMO HAPPY HOUR, GIRL! C’mon up to MOTIV Saturdays for DJs dancing & drinks! DJ Bad Boo has the party lights lit and the dance grooves mixed. Spend the early evening with the
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natives,” young people are the perfect candidates to help seniors enhance their technology skills. Seniors are invited to drop in for free workshops to gain the skills they desire to stay connected with family and friends online. Volunteers will be on hand to show seniors how to use social media and personal electronic devices or answer any other technology questions. All workshops are led by local teens with an adult supervisor to answer any advanced questions. The program is available free of charge for all interested seniors. Monthly workshops are designed to provide you with the one to one technology support to build the skills you desire. Please Note: We ask that you bring your own devices with you. Noon-3pm. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz.
teacher and author of “The Unbelievable Happiness of What Is” and “Ordinary Freedom.” Join Jon for periods of silent sitting, a talk he will give and also time to dialogue with him one-on-one. 11am-1pm. Pacific Cultural Center / Ashtanga Yoga Institute, 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz.
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MIDTOWN
CALENDAR <47 friendliest LGBTQ crowd in town.
gay, straight, trans or just plain KINKY? All LGBTQ allies & orientations are welcome. Make that move. You’ll love Homo (sapien) Happy Hour! #HHH Curious what the music is like? Mixes from MOTIV parties are found mixcloud.com/athonia-cappelli. Would you like to submit music requests? Send them in advance on Facebook. 3:30pm. Motiv, 1209 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
YALA LATI WOMEN’S CHOIR & HEATHER HOUSTON WINTER CONCERT Please join us for a magical evening of enchanting harmonies from Bulgaria and beyond. These local Santa Cruz women have been singing together for 14 years and they sing as one voice. From deeply meditative mantra to foot stomping fun these women will delight your heart! Director Heather Houston loves to get the audience singing, so be ready to weave your voice in layers of exquisite harmony. Portion of proceeds benefits our Santa Cruz-based nonprofit Rising International, which trains women survivors of human trafficking, domestic violence and homelessness to run socially conscious businesses that support survivors at home and abroad. 7pm. Center for Spiritual Living, 1818 Felt St., Santa Cruz.
OUTDOOR
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
LIFE ON THE RANCH: HOLIDAY TRADITIONS Celebrate the warmth of the
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holiday season with crafts, games, music and merriment from the early 20th century at Wilder Ranch. We will busy your hands with holiday wreath making, invite you to join in an old-fashioned sing-along around the player piano, and provide you with materials to make Victorian and Mexican holiday crafts. Come play games like dreidel, take a draft-horse carriage ride, decorate the tree, or create ornaments to bring home to your own tree. Event is free; parking is $10. For more information, please call 426-0505. Event made possible by Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks and California State Parks. 11am. Wilder Ranch State Park, 1401 Coast Rd., Santa Cruz.
OPEN HOUSE AT THE CASTRO ADOBE: FESTIVOS EN EL RANCHO! Please bring your family and join us as we celebrate the season at our adobe. Warm up with some traditional hot chocolate from our cozy cocina, make new friends over games and crafts, and relax with some festive music. Staff and volunteers will make themselves available to share the stories of the Pájaro Valley’s park as we look back on celebrations
past and look forward to the year to come. Event is free; limited parking (carpooling encouraged). Active construction site, open only during scheduled events like this. 11am-3pm. Castro Adobe State Historic Park, 184 Old Adobe Rd., Watsonville.
SUNDAY 12/8 ARTS DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ ANTIQUE STREET FAIR The Downtown Santa Cruz antique fair has been going strong for 16 years. This monthly event attracts locals and visitors alike to browse, explore, and score one-of-a-kind and unique treasures! Dozens of vendors are anticipating your arrival! Art, ethnic collectibles, jewelry, clothing, tools, militaria, books and ephemera, clothing and accessories, furniture, home decor, toys ... you were bound to find just the thing you’re looking for! Join us in beautiful downtown Santa Cruz. See you there!. 9am-5pm. Downtown Santa Cruz Antique Faire, 100 Lincoln St., Santa Cruz.
DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ MAKERS MARKET Join us at the Downtown Santa Cruz Makers Market on Sunday, December 8 on Pacific Ave. between Water & Locust Streets! 10am-5pm - free admission!Stroll beautiful Pacific Ave. while shopping local with 40+ local Santa Cruz County artists and crafters and enjoy a free concert featuring Whiskey West on the Memorial Plaza stage (in front of Jamba Juice) from 12-3pm! 10am-5pm. Downtown Santa Cruz, Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
HOLIDAY CRAFT WORKSHOP Join us for this holiday family event. Create an ornament, decorate cookies, make a holiday table display, or create your own holiday treasure. Juice and cookies provided. Noon4pm. San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek.
‘THE CHERRY ORCHARD’ The Cherry Orchard, MCT’s final production of 2019, deals with dislocating events in the life of a Russian family of landowners, their neighbors, and the people who work for them. Powerful social forces are in motion, and everyone is altered by them. Despair seems pervasive, and yet joy persists. Chekhov makes each of his characters simultaneously likable and infuriating, credible and foolish. It was his great gift as a writer to make each life in his plays complex, vivid, and necessary. 8pm. Mountain Community Theater/Park Hall, 9400 Mill St., Ben Lomond.
CALENDAR FOOD & WINE
MUSIC
2ND ANNUAL FESTIVUS SEASONAL TASTING TO BENEFIT SECOND HARVEST FOOD BANK OF SANTA CRUZ COUNTY Staff of Life Natural
MONTHLY SANTA CRUZ JAZZ SOCIETY JAZZ JAM Join the Santa Cruz
Foods will host our second Annual Festivus Seasonal Tasting at 1266 Soquel Ave Sunday, December 8th, 3 pm to 6 pm in our beautiful Café del Sol outside covered patio. Award-winning wines and delicacies will be served to benefit Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Cruz County. Please join Staff of Life for this festive tasting all to support Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Cruz County. We will be featuring Grower Champagne, Vintage Port, Napa Cabs, Local Cider, Barolo and Brunello, Mulled Wine, Specialty Meats, Caviar, homemade traditional Italian Sweets, local made Candy and the Finest Artisanal Cheese from around the World. Enjoy an afternoon of tasting the finest that Staff of Life has to offer. Let us help you entertain and celebrate this holiday season, regardless of your budget. 3pm. Staff Of Life, 1266 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $30.
GROUPS THE COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS 23RD ANNUAL WORLDWIDE CANDLE LIGHTING The Compassionate Friends
HEALTH SANTA CRUZ PSYCHIC & HEALING ARTS FAIR Please join some of the area's most respected authorities on health, wealth, love, & happiness, at the Santa Cruz Psychic & Healing Arts Fair at Avalon Visions Center For Creative Spirituality in Soquel. For a Free Pass & a list of Exhibitors, Speakers, Prizes, and more, visit: newearthevents.com/santacruz. 10am. Avalon Visions Center for Creative Spirituality, 2815 Porter St., Soquel.
RUSSIAN GRANDE DAME OF THE PIANO OXANA YABLONSKAYA The Distinguished Artists Concert Series Proudly Presents Internationally Acclaimed Pianist Oxana Yablonskya. Known for her powerhouse virtuosity, exquisite sensitivity, and deep emotional drive, Ms. Yablonskaya has enchanted audiences world-wide. Program: Works by Scarlatti, Beethoven, Brahms and Chopin. 4pm. Peace United Church of Christ, Santa Cruz, 900 High St., Santa Cruz.
Santa Cruz Recycled Art Program Sponsored by Santa Cruz City Arts and Arts Commission Curated by Mary Tartaro
4th Year of Artist Fellows who create from unexpected materials gleaned from the city's Resource Recovery Facility Participating Artists: Andrew Purchin Angela Gleason Janet Fine Jody Alexander Paige Davis Pamela Dewey
opening reception:
First Friday December 6 5-9 pm exhibit runs: December 6 - 28
R. Blitzer Gallery
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2801 Mission Street, Santa Cruz CA 95060 831-458-1217 • rblitzergallery.com Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday noon - 5 pm
T BONE MOJO BLUES & ROCK JOE'S BAR Classic Blues and Rock. Paying tribute to some of the founding voices of the Blues, Motown, Rhythm & Blues, Country, and Rock. Lance adding to the Mojo Grooves! Great music and stories of years of touring with It's A Beautiful Day, Dick Clark Productions, and a multitude of characters from San Francisco's Summer of Love and LA music scenes. T Bone perform regularly at major festivals and concerts along with intimate coffee houses and everything in between. 5pm. Joe's Bar, 13118 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek.
OUTDOOR CLIMATE EMERGENCY DISCUSSION Presented by Alekz Londos. This is an eco-open mic, discussion, encouraging support and networking towards sustainable solutions. Alekz is an international freelance photojournalist, environmentalist and disaster relief expert with two decades of experience. He will discuss the Climate Emergency, our ability to prepare, adapt and implement long long-term solutions. He will also be discussing multiple forms of activism the general public can undertake. Alekz has also contacted politicians, climatologists, scientists, environmentalists and owners of nonprofits that will sometimes speak at the event. 3pm. Blue Lagoon, 923 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. 295-9443.
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GIF T CER TIF IC ATES AVA IL A BLE! 1395 41S T AVE . C A PITOL A , C A | 831. 854. 2700
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W W W. S A G E F L O AT S PA . C O M
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
23rd annual Worldwide Candle Lighting unites bereaved families around the globe in lighting candles to honor our sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, and grandchildren who died too soon. As candles are lit at 7pm local time, hundreds of thousands of persons commemorate and honor the memory of all children we’ve lost. The Worldwide Candle Lighting creates a virtual 24-hour wave of light as it moves from timezone to timezone. Extended family and friends welcome. 7pm. Quaker Meeting House, 225 Rooney St., Santa Cruz.
Jazz Society for our monthly open jam at East Cliff Brewing Company. All players are encouraged to call a song and sit in with our house band. Enjoy craft beers and BBQ while listening. Players are asked for a $5 donation to support the band. The event is free to the public and all ages are welcome. 2-6pm. East Cliff Brewing Co., 21517 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz.
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K
S
CALENDAR
EL CRE QU E O
ANIMAL HOSPITAL CARING PEOPLE...CARING FOR PETS
Free heartworm test with every 12 month supply of heartworm preventative. Plus instant rebates when also purchased with a flea and tick preventative.
Make your pets feel special and bring them in for a $25.00 Wellness Exam
We Now Offer Acupuncture with Dr. Kim Delkener
476-1515
* Daytime Emergency Services*
2505 S. Main St., Soquel www.soquelcreekanimalhospital.com
Jason Miller, DVM Family Owned & Operated
MONARCH BUTTERFLY TOURS MidOctober through December; Saturdays and Sundays at 11am and 2pm. Meet at the visitor center for a free 1-hour guided tour of the Monarch Butterfly Natural Preserve. Monarch migration is variable, please check the website or contact the park to find out the current population at parks.ca.gov or 423-4609. To arrange a tour for groups of 10 or more, please visit thatsmypark.org. Parking is $10. 11am-noon. Natural Bridges State Beach, Swanton Blvd. and West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. SUNDAY SEASIDE CRAFTS AT THE SEYMOUR CENTER Come create and take home a fun souvenir, an activity for the whole family to share! For example, find out what gray whales eat by creating a bright sun catcher for your window, or create a fancy fish with paper, paint, and color. Build a seal or sea lion puppet decorated with your own special seal nose, complete with whiskers! Free with admission to the Seymour Center.1-3pm. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz.
MONDAY 12/9 GROUPS COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS OF SANTA CRUZ Parents of a child who died at any
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
Friday, December 20th @ 7pm
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Rock of Ages Musical Chanukah Shabbat Service
Sisterhood’s GIFT SHOP Your One-Stop Chanukah Shop!
Menorahs, candles, Fair Trade chocolates, Israeli imports, gifts for all ages and gift certificates too! OPEN Extended Hours: Mon to Fri. 10am-4pm and til 6pm on Wed., Sun 9:30am-noon, closed Sat.
3055 Porter Gulch Rd, Aptos, CA (831) 479-3444 | www.tbeaptos.org Events are free and open to all!
age, from any cause, any length of time ago, are invited to join The Compassionate Friends of Santa Cruz for our monthly grief support meeting. Opening circle followed by smaller connection groups. Sharing is optional. Grief materials available. Bereaved grandparents and adult siblings also welcome. Non-religious. 7-8:30pm. Quaker Meeting House, 225 Rooney St., Santa Cruz.
MUSIC WINTER PARTY AND COMMUNITY CELEBRATION CFWN's Annual Fundraiser Party features music, guided meditation, refreshments and a silent auction of many wonderful items. This year proceeds benefit 2 organizations assisting families at the southern border as well as our Season of Giving Project. 7:30pm. Wisdom Center of Santa Cruz, 740 Front St. #155, Santa Cruz.
OUTDOOR LEARN TO CURL Start training for your new Olympic sport! Our new pop-up class is taught by Granite Curling Club. All
equipment provided, just wear comfortable clothes and sneakers. $20 for a one hour class. Call 423-5590 x 2415 to reserve your spot. 6pm. Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. $20.
TUESDAY 12/10 GROUPS HOLIDAY MIXER & GIFT DRIVE Network with other chamber and community members and browse our Shop Local raffle. Mouth-watering appetizers and desserts will be provided by Seascape Beach Resort so you know it’s going to be a fun time! Free with mixer pass or gift for Jacob's Heart Children's Cancer Support Services “Holiday Hearts” Program. Toys are always appreciated but ask that you consider donating Prepaid Gas and Gift cards* which will make a greater impact: 5-7pm. Seascape Beach Resort, One Seascape Resort, Aptos. $25.
SANTA CRUZ CRIBBAGE CLUB— SECOND TUESDAY OF EVERY MONTH! Gather for a friendly game night! There is no fee for play. We are aiming to play a four-game round-robin, as time allows. Following two hours of play, points will be tallied to determine the winner for the night. This club will meet the second Tuesday of the month at Rosie McCann's. While we will have some boards and card decks, players are encouraged to bring their own.Free Event and some prizes! 7pm. Rosie McCann's, 1220 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
MUSIC MONTHLY CHANTEY SING Free community sailor-singalong. Each month, local chantey singer Aaron Clegg co-hosts this event with a different featured guest, leading old traditional songs used by sailing crews to performing rhythmical hard labor. Everyone is encouraged to lead chanteys, sing along with the easy-to-learn choruses, or just listen while enjoying delicious microbrews on tap and great food. Seating within the singing circle is limited (you might want to bring a folding chair), but if you just want to drop in and check it out, you can also stand toward the edges of the room and sing. 6:30pm. Pour Taproom, 110 Cooper St.,Suite B (entrance on Pacific Ave.), Santa Cruz.
North Bay Aquatic & Physical Therapy • Manual Lymph Drainage
• Trigger Point
• Scar Modification
• Traditional & Aquatic
• Cranial Sacral
Physical Therapy
Centrally located near Capitola
| 831.462.5777 | northbaypt.com
Your Family’s Health is Everything Get to the Root of Your Medical Condition
Autoimmune Conditions • Chronic Digestive Issues Fatigue • Complex Pediatric Concerns Hormone Balancing • Thyroid Disorders Anxiety/Insomnia • Brain Health
PREPARING THE EARTH FOR NEW BIRTH We invite you to journey with us through Advent, as we ready our hearts, our Spiritual Homes, for the celebration of Christmas. We are committing ourselves to greater care for our Spiritual Home and our Earthly Home, especially exploring how to respond to the Climate Crisis.
Dr. Mark Carr, from the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UCSC Followed by an earth-friendly luncheon.
United Methodist Church of Santa Cruz 250 California Street • umcsantacruz.org
Lonna Larsh MD • Amber Weiss, PA-C, Lac
info@rootsofhealthsc.com | rootsofhealthsc.com | 709 Frederick St, Santa Cruz | 831.421.0775
16th Annual Native American Market Sat, Dec 7 10am-5pm Sun, Dec 8 10am-4pm Come & shop for unique Native American gifts:
Sterling Silver jewelry, bead work, paintings, handmade drums, dolls, painted gourds, tee shirts, and many more interesting items.
Buy American By Native Americans
READ US ONLINE AT
GoodTimes.SC
Enjoy a Rez Dog, Fry Bread or Indian Taco Food booth benefits 3 Rivers Lodge, Manteca.
FREE Admission | info: 831.601.3051
Spreckels Veterans Memorial Building Exit #21 off Hwy 68 between Monterey & Salinas
5th & Llano Ave, Spreckels CA
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
Join us for a Presentation:
Sunday, December 8th • Noon - 12:30 pm
Call today to register for a free presentation over lunch or dinner
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MUSIC CALENDAR
LOVE YOUR
LOCAL BAND
JOSHUA LOWE & PATTI MAXINE Over the past decade and a half, local singer-songwriter Joshua Lowe found himself writing gentle songs about his family that didn’t quite fit his folkrock group the Juncos. But recently, he’s been playing sporadic gigs accompanied by local lap steel guitarist extraordinaire Patti Maxine, and these vulnerable folk songs about the birth of his son and love for his dad work brilliantly in this intimate setting.
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
“They’re vulnerable songs,” Lowe says. “The depth of love that came from stepping in that role as father I hadn’t felt before. There are songs I haven’t played live because I get choked up. I’ve had to practice not falling so deeply into the emotions.”
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A friend, Stephen Grillos, suggested recording an album of these songs. Lowe thought it was a great opportunity to get Maxine involved, to record what he calls his “heart” songs. The record, Family—a comment on both the record’s exploration of familial love and his work with Maxine—was released in August. On Dec. 6, the pair will do an official record release show. “I see her as a grandmotherly energy in my life,” Lowe says of Maxine. “It feels right that it’s only Patty playing on these songs, as opposed to a full band.” Any of the hundreds of local musicians who’ve played with Maxine know that she improves any song. “I’m very aware of the magic that is Patti Maxine,” Lowe says. “She’s a wizard when it comes to adding without overpowering.” AARON CARNES 7:30pm. Friday, Dec. 6. Ugly Mug, 4640 Soquel Drive, Soquel. $18 adv/$20 door. 477-1341.
SLACKERS
WEDNESDAY 12/4 SALSA
ISSAC DELGADO Timba is a salsa subgenre that incorporates elements of funk, R&B and afro-Cuban folk music. The term was coined in 1988 by Jose Luis Cortes, flutist for Cuban group NG La Banda. Timba has continued on, particularly with Issac Delgado—lead singer of NG La Banda, and later a solo singer on his own—who has become one of the biggest timba stars in Cuba. AC 7 and 9pm. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $31.50-47.25. 427-2227.
GYPSY JAZZ
BARRIO MANOUCHE With members from Spain, Brazil, France, Quebec, Columbia and California, it seems only appropriate that the international troupe known as Barrio Manouche is based in San Francisco. Where else but the Bay could such a blend of extraordinary influences come together for a Latin-jazz fusion spiced with European flavors from both sides of the
continent? Barrio Manouche is not complete without their dancers, as much a part of the band as the musicians. They transform the shows into a sensory experience. Sophomore album Despierta is hot off the presses, and one of the wildest albums of the year. MAT WEIR 7:30pm. Michael’s on Main, 2591 Main St., Soquel. $15. 479-9777.
THURSDAY 12/5 REGGAE
JUNIOR TOOTS Junior Toots has a passion and fiery intensity for reggae that runs deep. Makes sense, as he’s the son of Toots Hibbert from the legendary group Toots and the Maytals, one of the greatest reggae voices ever. How does his son stack up to this legacy? Maytals fans will not be disappointed. He brings that old-school roots-reggae vibe to the stage with immense authenticity. This is a big show for Capitola’s Sand Bar, and will showcase the venue’s potential as the owners seek to expand their live-music offerings. AC The Sand Bar, 211 Esplanade, Capitola. 462-1881.
SATURDAY 12/7 REGGAE
ANUHEA Anuhea is one of Hawaii’s most popular reggae artists. She’s also one of the biggest romantics, with lovesick island jams that will stick in your head and beg you to take the day off work to sit on the beach to dream about your true love. She brings her annual “All Is Bright” tour to Santa Cruz to celebrate Christmas reggae style … or is it Hawaiian style? AC 9pm. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $25 adv/$30 door. 479-1854.
INDIE
DIIV DIIV is a moody band. Within the first song on this year’s Deceiver, they get in both an “everything is nothing” and a “fuck it all,” while evoking Sonic Youth, Joy Division and My Bloody Valentine. Singer Zachary Cole Smith has been open about his struggles with addiction, and Deceiver is meant to be an honest encapsulation of those struggles. But for all its muck and murk, moments of light shine through, as on the gauzy “The Spark,”
MUSIC
BE OUR GUEST NUTCRACKER BALLET: EXPERIENCE THE MAGIC 2019
MARCO BENEVENTO
a warmly medicated dose of shimmering indie rock. MIKE HUGUENOR 9pm. The Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz. $16. 429-4135.
COMEDY
EMMA ARNOLD
7 and 9:30pm. DNA’s Comedy Lab, 155 S River St., Santa Cruz. $20 adv/$25 door. 900-5123
SUNDAY 12/8 SKA
THE SLACKERS I’m sure this band’s name is deliberately ironic, since it’s one of the hardest
9pm. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $15 adv/$20 door. 423-1338.
INDIE
MARCO BENEVENTO Marco Benevento is a mercurial figure. As a songwriter, his music is like a groovier Shins, heavy on tight R&B rhythms and glittering synths. As a player, his keyboard magic is in high demand, having worked with members of The New Pornographers, The Shins and The Lumineers, as well as twee hot-shot Jon Brion. This year, Benevento released his seventh studio album, Let It Slide, a funky indie-pop record with a ton of groove and soul. Ironical-
ly, standout track “Baby Don’t Make Me Wait” makes you wait until the last minute before letting loose the record’s best melody. But I forgive him. MH 8pm. Felton Music Hall, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $19 adv/$21 door. 335-2800.
1 and 4:30pm. Saturday, Dec. 14 and Sunday, Dec. 15. Cabrillo College Crocker Theatre, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. $20-40. Information: cabrillovapa.com. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11am on Thursday, Dec. 5, to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.
MONDAY 12/9 JAZZ
CHESTER THOMPSON Chester Thompson has never wanted for work. After paying dues on the Chitlin’ Circuit in the mid-’60s, he hit the Bay Area scene and hooked up with Tower of Power. He contributed soul-steeped foundation to TOP for about a decade before decamping for rock juggernaut Santana, a gig that ran for a quarter-century and included a monster hit album. Over the past decade, Thompson has been getting back to his roots, working regularly with reliably inspiring tenor saxophonist Howard Wiley. New York drummer Darrell Green, who came up on the East Bay jazz scene with Wiley, and former Steely Dan guitarist Drew Zingg round out the volatile combo. ANDREW GILBERT 7pm. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $31.50 adv/$36.75 door. 427-2227.
IN THE QUEUE SCOTT PEMBERTON
Portland’s funkiest shredder. Thursday at Moe’s Alley KYLE AYERS
Funny guy and inventor of the Complement Contest. Friday at DNA’s Comedy Lab POSSESSED BY PAUL JAMES
Possessed by fiddle-playing insanity! Saturday at Lille Aeske LOS STRAITJACKETS
Instrumental garage rock and brutal wrestling masks. Sunday at Moe’s Alley TOMMY EMMANUEL
Australia’s Beethoven of the acoustic guitar. Monday at Rio Theatre
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
Emma Arnold was not popular in junior high. “But I did run a really solid Dungeons and Dragons group,” she points out. All of that changed when she became the Hamster Don of her middle school, stealing hamsters from the local mall in Boise and flipping them to pre-teens like some kind of pet store Pablo Escobar. As a comedian, Arnold’s small-town charm fills up the stage, but underneath there’s still a ruthless black market hamster dealer waiting for the next big score. MH
working ska groups of the past two decades. Even though the band started in 1991, it didn’t really gain a notable following until the 2000s. When pop culture declared ska dead, the Slackers decided to work twice as hard, writing material and touring the country. Biggest record Wasted Days was released in 2001, and was further promoted by an in-studio performance on NPR. The group’s sound, while initially more along the lines of traditional Jamaican ska, has since evolved to incorporate more garage-rock and soul elements. AC
If you’ve never seen the Nutcracker, you’ve failed at your holiday duties and are borderline anti-Christmas. But don’t worry, you can correct this immediately, and we will all forgive you. The Nutcracker ballet dates back to the late 1800s. In the ’60s, it gained enormous popularity as an American Christmas production. The dancing is gorgeous, the music is splendid, the story is magical, and the sets and costumes are dazzling. Even if you’ve never seen it, you’ve certainly heard these songs before, as long as you’re a living, breathing human being.
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Thursday December 5 –8/8:30pm $10/15 Portland Oregon Roots Rocker
SCOTT PEMBERTON
LIVE MUSIC
+ MATT JAFFE
Friday December 6 –8/9pm $12/15 Grateful Dead Dance Party
CHINA CATS
Saturday December 7 –8/9pm $25/30 Reggae/Island Music From Hawaii
ANUHEA
WED
LOS STRAITJACKETS
BOCCI’S CELLAR 140 Encinal St, Santa Cruz
LiveReggae Music With
JORDAN T
Thursday December 12 –7:30/8:30pm $25/30 A Rare Intimate Performance With THE
THU
12/5
FRI
AC Myles Free 6-8p
12/6
Pete Madsen Free 6-8p
Magpies Blues Band Free 6-8p
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
Kid Dynamite 9:15p-12a
12/8
MON
Chicago Bill & the Next Blues Band Free 6-8p
12/9
Blind Rick Free 6-8p
Karaoke 6p-Close
TUE
12/10
Kim Wilson Free 6-8p Funk Night w/ DJ Ed G 9p
Karaoke 6p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke Old School Free 8p
BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola
Alex Lucero & Friends 8p
Karaoke 9-12:30a
Karaoke 9-12:30a
CAPITOLA WINE BAR 115 San Jose Ave, Capitola
Rich the Trivia Guy Free 6:30-8p
Miss Valerie Lopez Free 7-10p
John Michael Free 7-10p Diiv w/ Froth & Storefront Church $16/$20 9p
Comethazine w/ Max Aly & AJ w/ Armors Thedemon $20-$30 9p $25/$28 8p
The Grough w/ Murs, Power Powers & Soular $20-$30 9p
Friday December 13 –8/9pm $12/15
THE CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Souly Had w/ 12am & Foggieraw $15/$18 9p
1Takejay & Azchike $22/$24 8p
SPACE HEATER
CATALYST UPSTAIRS 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Euphoric Presents Hip Hop Legend
CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville
Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p
CORK AND FORK 312 Capitola Ave, Capitola
Open Mic Night Free 7-10p
DEL THE FUNKY HOMOSAPIEN
SUN
The Box: Gothic/ Industrial Free 9p
THE CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Saturday December 14 –8/9pm $25/30
12/7
Soul Doubt Free 7-9:30p
WHITE BUFFALO Funk Dance Party With
SAT
Luckless Pedestrians Free 7-9:30p
BLUE LAGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, Santa Cruz
Wednesday December 11 –8 /9pm$10/15
Jimmy Dewrance Free 6-8p
APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos
Sunday December 8 –7/8pm $20/25 An Evening With
12/4
ABBOTT SQUARE 118 Cooper St, Santa Cruz
Queen Bingo 9p
One Track Pony Free 3-6p
The Slackers w/ Soul Denm w/ Hearts & Beef Ska & Gabriela Penka $10/$12 9p $15/$20 9p
Karaoke 9p
Jazz Jam 9p KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p
The Depot Dogs Free 7-10p
Jade Free 3-6p
Sunday December 15 –7/7:30pm $10/15 R&B/Soul CD Release Party With
ALEX LUCERO & LIVE AGAIN
Thursday December 19 –8/8:30pm $25/30 The Keepers Of The Flame Return
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
MELVIN SEALS & JGB featuring JOHN KADLECIK
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Dec 20 MIDTOWN SOCIAL + Vitamins Dec 21 SAQI + NOETIK Dec 27 FLOR DE CAÑA Dec 28 CON BRIO + MESTIZO BEAT Dec 30 & 31 THE MOTHER HIPS Jan 2 ROSEBUD Jan 3 ZION I + Alwa Gordon Jan 4 DAVID BOWIE BASH Jan 10 THRIFTWORKS Jan 12 TOMMY CASTRO Jan 16 SA-ROC Jan 17 DREAMING GHOSTS- CD Release Jan 18 BOOSTIVE Jan 19 COLD BLOOD Jan 25 LYRICS BORN Jan 26 CHRIS DUARTE Jan 30 GENE EVARO JR Feb 5 BLACK UHURU + ETANA Feb 7 MIGHTY DIAMONDS Feb 12 ANTIBALAS Feb 26 GREYBOY ALL STARS
Rob Bell “AN INTRODUCTION TO JOY”
RIO
DEC 5
DAVID NELSON BAND BIG SUR WEEKEND DEC 13 + 14
THE
CREPE PLACE OPEN LATE - EVERY NIGHT!
ADVANCE TICKETS ON TICKETWEB
Diamonds In The Rough John Prine Tribute WHISKEY WEDNESDAY $10 adv./$10 door seated <21 w/parent WEDNESDAY 12/4
w/ YOU & YOUR FRIENDS
NO COVER
FRIDAY 12/6
DJ SOULCITER
FREE - SPINNING ALL VINYL - FREE
NORTHERN SOUL - REGGAE - ROCKSTEADY - MOD
SATURDAY 12/7
ONE GRASS TWO GRASS TWO SETS
9PM - $10 DOOR
Barrio Manouche
Wed. Dec. 4 7:30pm $15 adv./$15 door seated <21 w/parent Thu. Dec. 5 7:30pm $10 adv./$10 door seated <21 w/parent
Backyard Birds
Jack Lawton Trio
Fri. Dec. 6 5pm HAPPY HOUR/NO COVER Fri. Dec. 6 8:30pm Band $10 adv./$10 door Dance – ages 21 + Sat. Dec. 7 2pm
Edge of the West Rayburn Brothers Be Natural Music Youth Concert 2pm Matinee
MONDAY 12/9
Cripple Creek CHRISTMAS BANDITOS Open Mic Acoustic Jam
HAPPY HOUR NO 5:30COVER - FREE Dance <21 w/parent
TUESDAY 12/10
FUNK NIGHT w/ SPACE HEATER
9PM - $6 DOOR
FRIDAY 12/13
KASSI VALAZZA w/ LAURA T LEWIS
9PM - $9 DOOR
SATURDAY 12/14
DAVID
CROSBY RIO 5/17
Legendary Artist Returns to Santa Cruz!
SEIZED UP
w/ TWOMPSAX & LAMAZE TECHNIQUE 9PM - $12 ADV $12 DOOR
WEEKEND BRUNCH FULL BAR MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ
1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 429-6994
$7 adv./$7 door seated <21 w/parent Sat. Dec. 7 8pm
KPIG HUMBUG HOEDOWN Carolyn Sills Combo & Special Guests
$15 Adv. $15 door Dance – ages 21 + Sun. Dec. 8 5:30pm GRATEFUL DEAD TUNES / NO COVER Tue. Dec. 10 7:30pm Free Open Mic Jam Wed. Dec. 11 7:30pm with
Grateful Sunday Cripple Creek Frank Sinatra Christmas
John Michael & Will McDougal Band
$15 adv./$20 door seated <21 w/parent
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ COMING UP Thu. Dec. 12 John Doyle and Mick McAuley Fri. Dec. 13 Apple City Slough Band plus
Whiskey West
Sat. Dec. 14 Scott Guberman & Friends ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Full Concert Calendar : MichaelsonMainMusic.com
2591 Main St, Soquel, CA 95073
LIVE MUSIC
Wednesday, December 4 • 7 PM & 9 PM
ISSAC DELGADO WED
12/4
THU
12/5
CORRALITOS CULTURAL CENTER 127 Hames Rd., Corralitos
FRI
12/6
Open Mic 7-10p
THE CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
Yuji Tojo $3 8p
DNA’S COMEDY LAB 155 River St, Santa Cruz
Blind Tiger Open Mic Night 8p
Papiba & Friends $5 8p
FELTON MUSIC HALL 6275 Hwy 9, Felton
12/8
Sasha’s Money $7 9:30p
Kyle Ayers 7&9:30p
Emma Arnold 7&9:30p
Zoso Ultimate Led Zeppelin Experience $19/$24 8p
Moon Hooch w/ Human Ottoman $15/$20 8:30p
MON
12/9
TUE
12/10
Acoustic Open Jam 3-5p
Live Comedy $7 9p
Funk Night w/ Space Heater $6 9p-12a The Summit Sisters $5 8p
Marco Benevento w/ the Mattson Two$19/$21 8p
Tickets: $5 at the door
Saturday, December 7 • 7:30 PM
Julia Nunes w/ Chase Burnett $15/$20 8p
Tickets: brownpapertickets.com
Sunday, December 8 • 7:30 PM
MOLLY’S REVENGE WINTERDANCE Tickets: celticsociety.org
Bingo Night 7p
Prokchop Jefferson & Stonesbro Slim 7p
Blues Mechanics 8p
Groovy Judy 8p
Matias 6:30-9:30p
Scott Slaughter 6:30-9:30p
Nojoken 6:30-9:30p
Groovy Judy Free 8:30p
The Next Blues Band Free 8:30p
T-Bone Mojo Free 5p
Be Natural Music Youth Rock Concert $5 5p
Anthony Arya’s Home for the Holidays $12/$15 7:30p
Molly’s Revenge Winterdance $20/$22 7:30p
Wolf Jett & Alison Steele & Joe MacKessy $15 8p
BE NATURAL MUSIC YOUTH ROCK CONCERT ANTHONY ARYA’S HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS
Bob Basa 6:30-9:30p
Isaac Delgado $42/$47.25 7&9p
An essential figure in salsa and a leader in Cuban music. Friday, December 6 • 5 PM
Christmas Banditos Free 5:30p
Linc Russin 7-9p
JOE’S BAR 13118 CA-9, Boulder Creek
LILLE AESKE 13160 CA-9, Boulder Creek
SUN
Midnight Blues 8p
JACK O’NEILL RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 175 W Cliff Dr. Santa Cruz
KUUMBWA JAZZ 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz
Uncle Marty’s Party & Ben James $10 7p
Spun $6 9p
THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville
HENFLINGS 9450 CA-9, Ben Lomond
12/7
One Grass, Two Grass $10 9p
CROW’S NEST 2218 E. Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz
GABRIELLA CAFE 910 Cedar St., Santa Cruz
SAT
Monday, December 9 • 7 PM
Possessed by Paul James $25 8p
Pro Jam 4p
Open Mic 7p
Karaoke Night 9p
CHESTER THOMPSON QUARTET A powerhouse organist known for his work with Santana and Tower of Power.
1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS
Thursday, December 12 • 7 PM & 9 PM Chester Thompson Quartet $31.50/$36.75 7p
MIKE STERN – JEFF LORBER FUSION FEATURING JIMMY HASLIP & DAVE WECKL A heavy-hitting all-star group.
Saturday, December 14 • 8:30 PM
SIN SISTERS BURLESQUE Tickets: eventbrite.com
Sunday, December 15 • 3 PM
THE MUSICAL JOURNEY OF JEWS IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE Tickets: brownpapertickets.com
Monday, December 16 • 7 PM & 9 PM
CHARLIE HUNTER & LUCY WOODWARD
An exhilirating blast of blues, soul, and funk.
9 PM: 1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS Wednesday, December 18 • 7 PM & 9 PM
SPANISH HARLEM ORCHESTRA
Setting the gold-standard for New York-style salsa. Monday, January 6 • 7 PM
BENNY GREEN TRIO
Joyous and imaginative swinging – both elegant and earthy. Thursday, January 9 • 7 PM
KUUMBWA JAZZ & THE HUMANITIES INSTITUTE AT UCSC PRESENT: SAMUEL TORJMAN THOMAS & ASEFA BECOME A MEMBER TODAY! Unless noted, advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and dinner served one hour before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wine & beer available. All ages welcome.
320-2 Cedar St | Santa Cruz 831.427.2227 kuumbwajazz.org
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
9 PM: 1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS
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LIVE MUSIC WED MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel
• NU-JAZZ
EXPERIMENTAL
• ROCK
12/4
Barrio Manouche $15 7:30p
COUNTRY ROOTS PRESENTS
• AMERICANA
• ROCK/JAM
MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Hi Ya! By Litte John 9:30p
FRI
12/6
12/7
12/8
SAT SUN Jack Lawton Trio Free 5p Be Natural Music Youth Grateful Sunday Edge of the West & more Concert $7 2p Carolyn Free 5:30p $10 8:30p Sills & more $15 8p
Backyard Birds $10 7:30p
The Westside Sheiks Free 6p
AC Myles Free 6p
Scott Pemberton & Matt Jaffe $10/$15 8p
China Cats $12/$15 8p
Anuhea $25/$30 8p
Libation Lab w/ King Wizard & Chief Transcend 9:30p
Eden Roc 9:30p
Thomas Young 9:30p
MON
12/9
99 BOTTLES 110 Walnut Ave, Santa Cruz
12/10
Los Straitjackets $20/$25 7p The Takeover 9:30p Tacos & Trivia Free 6:30p
Trivia 8p Brian Fitzgerald Trio 2-5p
Maddie & Jackie Partida
POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz
Sugar Beats 2-5p
Jianna! 6-9p
Open Mic Free 4-7p
Comedy Free 8p
THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz
TUE
Cripple Creek Open Mic Acoustic Jam Free-$5 7:30p
NEW BOHEMIA BREWERY 1030 41st Ave, Santa Cruz
PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola
• AMERICANA
12/5
MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz
• INDIE POP
THU
Open Mic Free 8-11p ‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p
Variety Show w/ Toby Gray 6:30p
Acoustic Classics 6:30p
Aloha Friday 6:30p
Acoustic Grooves 12:30p Light Acoustic 12:30p Featured Acts 6:30p Acoustic Classics 6p
Open Mic 6p
TedxSanta Cruz $75 9a-5p
Tommy Emmanuel $39/50 8p
Live DJ
Trivia 7:30p
Light Acoustic 6:30p
• ROCK/JAM CALIFORNIA ROOTS PRESENTS
RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Rob Bell $25/$35 8p Comedy Night 9p
First & Third Celtic Jam
Live DJ
• HIP-HOP
TAYLOR RAE, ANTHONY ARYA,
12.12 | & LINDSEY WALL
GARY BLACKBURN BAND
01.03 | & RAYBURN BROTHERS BAND RESTAURANT NOW OPEN
WED-SUN 4-9PM
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
FELTONMUSICHALL.COM
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1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135
9450 Hwy 9 Ben Lomond, CA (831) 586-0606
LIVE MUSIC Thursday-Sunday
OPEN MIC
Up to 3 songs or poems Mondays 7-11pm
KARAOKE
Tuesdays 9pm-1am
BINGO Free to play! Wednesdays 8pm
MEALS
American and Mexican cuisine Daily until 11pm or later
Open every day from 11am to 2am
Wednesday, December 4 • Ages 16+
Comethazine
Wednesday, December 4 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
SOULY HAD plus 12am
and Foggieraw
Aly
plus Armors
Thursday, December 5 • Ages 16+
&
AJ
Friday, December 6 • Ages 16+
THE GROUCH
Friday, December 6 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
1TAKEJAY • AZCHIKE
Saturday, December 7 • Ages 16+
DIIV
plus Froth
Saturday, December 7 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
DENM
plus Hearts and Beef
Sunday, December 8 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
THE SLACKERS
plus Soul
Ska
Dec 13 Lil Tjay (Ages 16+) Dec 13 & 14 The Expendables (Ages 16+) Dec 21 Bone Thugs-N-Harmony (Ages 16+) Dec 27 Cracker Camper Van Beethoven (Ages 21+) Dec 28 Micro Mania Midget Wrestling (Ages 16+) Dec 31 Beats Antique (Ages 21+) Jan 11 Y&T/ James Durbin (Ages 21+) Jan 12 Black Flag/ The Linecutters (Ages 16+) Jan 16 Pennywise/ Adolescents (Ages 16+) Jan 23 The Infamous Stringdusters (Ages 16+) Jan 30 Wynonna & The Big Noise (Ages 16+) Jan 31 Minnesota/ Eastghost (Ages 18+) Feb 1 The Marcus King Band (Ages 16+) Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.
www.henflingsbar.com
Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online
www.catalystclub.com
View changes daily. Please call for today’s view. 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!
OCEANVIEW BREAKFAST DAILY DEAL WITH A VIEW
$9.95 Dinners Mon. - Fri. from 6:00pm
DINING ROOM SPECIALS M-TH Celebrating 50 years of Fun - New low prices!
Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily
(831) 476-4560
crowsnest-santacruz.com
LIVE MUSIC WED THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola
12/4
U-Turn 7p
THU
12/5
Junior Toots & friends 7p
SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos
FRI
12/6
SAT
12/7
John Michael Band 9p
Touch’d Too Much 9p
Calico Nueva 8-11p
Now & Then Trio 8-11p
SUN
12/8
Dennis Dove 7:30p
MON
12/9
Alex Lucero & friends 7:30p
SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 7500 Old Dominion Court, Aptos
Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-9p
Hot Fuse 8-11:30p
Beach Cowboys Band 8-11:30p
SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Road, Capitola
Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p
Joe Ferrara 6:30-9:30p
Claudio Melega 7-10p
SHANTY SHACK BREWING 138 Fern St, Santa Cruz STEEL BONNET 20 Victor Square, Scotts Valley
Servo Free 5p
SUSHI GARDEN S.V. 5600 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley
Paul Trugman Free 5:30p
UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel
Joshua Lowe & Patti Maxine $18/$20 7:30p
Erin Avila Free 5:30p Open Mic w/ Steven David 5:30p
VINOCRUZ 4901 Soquel Drive, Soquel VINO LOCALE 55 Municipal Wharf, Santa Cruz
Jason Keiser & Melissa Garay 6-8p
Steve Ryan 6-8p
ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola
Pacific Avenue 9:30p
The Rudians 9:30p
The Last Great
12/10
Upcoming Shows
DEC 05 Lecture: Rob Bell DEC 07 TEDX DEC 09 Tommy Emmanuel DEC 14 Andy Vargas DEC 27-28 The White Album Ensemble JAN 10 Elude: Surf Film JAN 14 Lecture: How Not to Die JAN 20 Sweet Honey in the Rock JAN 25 Women’s Adventure Film Tour JAN 31 Keith Greeninger/ Dayan Kia and Fred Eaglesmith FEB 09 Postmodern Jukebox SO LD OU T FEB 12 Sinead O’Connor FEB 13 Travis Tritt Solo Acoustic FEB 16 An Evening with Chris Botti FEB 18 Ani DiFranco FEB 20-23 Banff Mountain Film Festival FEB 24 JD Souther FEB 26 Joshua Radin & Friends MAR 03 Colin Hay MAR 07 John Craigie MAY 17 David Crosby & The Sky Trails JUN 10 Uli Jon Roth Follow the Rio Theatre on Facebook & Twitter! info@riotheatre.com www.riotheatre.com
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
Radio Station
TUE
57
FILM
SHARP MIND Daniel Craig plays the detective tracking a family murder mystery in ‘Knives Out.’
Losing His Edge D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
Rian Johnson gathers an excellent ensemble, but can’t think of much to do with them in ‘Knives Out’ BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
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M
iddling, but not without surprises, Knives Out is Rian Johnson’s mystery about a group of greedy heirs in ugly holiday sweaters. They’re the descendants of writer Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer), author of The Menagerie Tragedy Trilogy and other best-selling bafflers. The morning after his 85th birthday party, the old man is found with his throat cut in an apparent suicide. The deceased was no stranger to the macabre. “He basically lives on a Clue board,” says investigating Lt. Elliott (Lakeith Stanfield of Sorry to Bother You and Atlanta); it’s a turreted Victorian manor floating in a sea of dead leaves, with hidden entryways,
creaky floorboards and sinister doodads galore. In a prominent place is a lifesize jolly-sailor dummy in homage to Sleuth, the play starring Lawrence Olivier and Michael Caine (and later, the film starring Caine and Jude Law). Harlan’s parasitic family isn’t exactly weeping over the senseless waste of human life. They include designer Jamie Lee Curtis, whose business was propped up by Harlan’s checkbook and her loafer husband Don Johnson. Their son is a professional wastrel (Chris Evans handles this anti-Captain America role well). Another son is the grumbling Michael Shannon, limping on a cane; he’s furious at the old
man’s refusal to sell his work to the movies. Johnson’s twist is that we know how Harlan died early on. Involved was his good-hearted nurse and companion Marta (Ana de Armas), but she’s exempted from the lineup because she had nothing to gain from the will. In addition, she has a tic; she must always tell the truth, lest she vomit on the spot. (This apparently isn’t a real sickness. Johnson may have read of the tanguin ordeal in Madagascar, in which accused liars prove their guilt by barfing.) On scene is Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc, “Last of the Gentlemen Detectives,” recently profiled in the New Yorker (“I read a tweet about
the article,” says another suspect, Toni Collette’s Joni, burnished by unnatural skin bronzers.) Craig uses a Southern accent with more molasses in it than the one he had in Logan Lucky. This diction increases Craig’s likeness to Robert Mitchum. To Blanc, the case is a sort of doughnut, the hole beckoning. This metaphysical doughnut is mirrored by a frightening living room sculpture: hundreds of knives, all blades pointing to a vortex. The airweight movie is a little furry; we wait in vain for some crack in old Harlan’s stern benignness; he has such good reasons for his ironwilled decisions that you want to see a touch of evil revealed. Knives Out is also strangely sexless—unless Miss Marple is the sleuth, Agatha Christieoid entertainments usually have a bit of plunging neckline and a suggestion of kink. A scene of Evans and de Armas drinking beer at a country inn with Gordon Lightfoot’s “Sundown” playing in the background is about as heated as it gets. Johnson’s superb emulation of Hammett and Chandler in his debut Brick (2006) gave us a more energetic mystery, and this sputters a bit by comparison. But he does have a purpose beyond pastiche: Knives Out is Thanksgiving entertainment for those seething at their relatives over the turkey carcass. Johnson introduces a political element, revealed when the cast starts snapping at each other about the policies of the unnamed Trump; half of these idlers fear dispossession by alien hordes, as represented by Marta’s undocumented mom. One member of the clan is an alt-right 16-yearold who never raises his face from his cellphone; he probably stands in for the little pishers who hounded Johnson about the politics of his The Last Jedi as if they thought Darth Vader would read their tweets and ask for their CVs. And so, Knives Out addresses contemporary turmoil in the cozy world of the manor-murder mystery.
KNIVES OUT Directed by Rian Johnson. Starring Daniel Craig, Jamie Lee Curtis and Chris Evans. PG-13; 130 Mins.
JOIN SANTA CRUZ COUNTY’S HOLIDAY GIVING PROGRAM 38 LOCAL NONPROFITS CONTRIBUTE WITH CONFIDENCE IT’S EASY TO DONATE ONLINE (OR BY MAIL OR CASH DELIVERY)
SANTACRUZGIVES.ORG
Gift Certificates
They are highly coveted. gabriellacafe.com
NOVEMBER 13-DECEMBER 31
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
You Call. We Mail.
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FILM NEW RELEASES
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
BLACK CHRISTMAS This may be the greatest Christmas horror movie ever—and there’s a lot more competition for that title than you might think. Now, I’m not talking about the Black Christmas remake that comes out in a couple of weeks, although that does look cool. (The first remake in 2006 was god-awful, though). No, this weekend the “Midnights at the Del Mar” series is showing the original, and it’s so worth seeing on the big screen. The first holiday slasher film, it arrived in 1974, several years before Halloween. So many horror films have ripped from it since, but there’s nothing like this true original, which has more atmosphere, chills and total bonkersness than its tired ’80s imitators. It starts with a weird series of obscene phone calls to a sorority house over the holiday break? But who is making them? And who will survive when things turn deadly? Directed by the B-movie maestro Bob Clark, and starring Margot Kidder (who wasn’t in nearly enough movies), Olivia Hussey and Keir Dullea. Friday and Saturday at 11:59pm at the Del Mar. (R) 98 minutes. (SP)
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HONEY BOY Who knew there would be a time when the name Shia LaBeouf wouldn’t only be preceded by the phrase “God, I hate?”And yet, here we are! LaBeouf is winning tons of praise for writing and starring as the dysfunctional father in this story of a young actor (played by Noah Jupe at 12 years old and Lucas Hedges at 22) who tries to reconcile with him. He wrote the script in rehab, based on his own relationship with his father. Directed by Alma Har’el. (R) 94 minutes. (SP) WAVES Writer-director Trey Edward Shults, who broke through two years ago with the odd horror film It Comes At Night, shifts gears (but not completely!) with this semiautobiographical drama about a high-school senior on the wrestling team whose life is turned upside down by a series of unfortunate events that turn very, very dark. Starring Kelvin Harrison Jr., Lucas Hedges and Alexa Demie. (R) 135 minutes. (SP)
CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7pm to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to groups. google.com/group/LTATM.
NOW PLAYING A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD I used up a box of tissues just to get through the trailer for this biopic about Mr. Rogers, so I suggest you really stock up before the actual movie. If nationwide shortage of Kleenex is declared sometime in the next two weeks, blame Tom Hanks. Nah, he’s too nice to blame for anything. Blame PG&E. (PG) 108 minutes. (SP) DARK WATERS Ooh, I love Thanksgiving shark movies! Wait, this one is about lawyers? Even sharkier! Specifically, it’s about the real-life lawyer who took on a corporate behemoth after DuPont was linked to a number of unexplained deaths. Directed by Todd Haynes. Starring Mark Ruffalo, Anne Hathaway and Tim Robbins. (PG-13) 126 minutes. (SP) FORD V FERRARI Christian Bale plays rogue British race-car driver Ken Miles, and Matt Damon plays American auto designer Carroll Shelby in this true story of how massive underdog Ford beat Ferrari in the 1966 Le Mans race, which Ferrari had previously dominated for years. I love that in Europe, the title had to be changed to Le Mans ’66, because only Americans care about Americans winning stuff. (PG-13) 152 minutes. (SP) FROZEN II Just when you’d finally scraped the last remnants of that goddamn “Let It Snow” movie out of your head, here comes the sequel, which inevitably has an equally catchy song ready to torture you for the next few years. Otherwise, I’m sure this sequel to the Disney princess blockbuster featuring Elsa, Anna, Kristoff, and that snowman dude is lovely. (PG) 103 minutes. (SP) THE GOOD LIAR The pleasure of watching two wily silver foxes
onscreen together, Helen Mirren and Ian McKellan, is the main attraction in this elegant mystery of con artistry and designated victims that never quite plays out the way you expect. Sir Ian and Dame Helen do not disappoint, testing, cajoling, and beguiling each other (and the audience) in every frame, oiling the gears that make the movie run so smoothly. It's a lovely piece of craftsmanship from director Bill Condon. (R) 109 minutes. (LJ) HARRIET Maybe now that we’re all so woke, the times have finally caught up to the amazing life of Harriet Tubman, a real-life superhero who fought for justice and won major victories in her lifelong battle to end slavery in the American South. An escaped slave herself, she made many perilous trips back below the Mason-Dixon Line to lead other enslaved people to freedom in the North, via the Underground Railroad, armed with little more than raw courage and a flintlock pistol. Filmmaker Kasi Lemmons explores the woman behind the historical footnote, played with bristly moral conviction by Cynthia Erivo. The movie sticks pretty close to the extraordinary facts, despite a few melodramatic flourishes, but Harriet's story is so important, it rises in triumph over all obstacles—like the woman herself. (PG-13) 125 minutes. (LJ) JOJO RABBIT Jojo Rabbit is the diary of a Nazi wimpy kid, trying to fit in with the usual social absurdities— it’s just that the absurdities were heightened in the Reich. In a small village in 1944, young Jojo (Roman Griffin Davis) is trying to be a good little Hitler Youth member. But he’s a thorough reject, drawing a portion of the scorn doled out by the Jugend’s scoutmaster, an invalided-out Captain Klenzendorf (Sam Rockwell, great.) This uproariously satirical version of a quite serious novel might be modeled on Carol Reed’s The Fallen Idol (1948) in the looming staircases, and the expressionism of the boy’s world collapsing around him. Like Waititi’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople, it’s certainly something you could take a smart older child to see. Directed by Taika Waititi. Starring Roman Griffin
Davis and Scarlett Johansson. PG-13. 108 minutes. (RvB) KNIVES OUT Reviewed this issue. (PG-13) 130 minutes. (SP) LAST CHRISTMAS They turned the Wham! songs into one of those holiday rom-coms, but I’m not sure if they knew which George Michael song they were adapting, because this movie’s tagline is “Sometimes you’ve just got to have faith.” I’d rather salute the lyrics of the actual song; if I remember right, they were “Last Christmas, I gave you my heart/ But the very next day, you gave it away/This year, to save me from tears/I won’t see this stupid movie.” Something like that. Directed by Paul Feig. Starring Emilia Clarke, Henry Golding and Emma Thompson. (PG13) 102 minutes. (PS) THE LIGHTHOUSE Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson star in this black-and-white psychological horror film from the director of The Witch about two lighthouse keepers who start to lose their sanity as their nightmares come to life. I find the scariest movies are the ones you can personally relate to, so I am sure to find this terrifying, as I suffer from recurring nightmares of being trapped in a lighthouse with the guy from Twilight. Directed by Robert Eggers. (R) 109 minutes. (SP) MIDWAY Roland Emmerich’s new war film is a remake of the 1976 ensemble epic about the attack on Pearl Harbor (and subsequent Battle of Midway) that featured Charlton Heston, Henry Fonda, James Coburn, Toshiro Mifune, Robert Mitchum, and Cliff Robertson. This one stars Woody Harrelson, Aaron Eckhart, Patrick Wilson, Nick Jonas, Mandy Moore … wait, is this the Wayans Brothers version or something? Like, the Scary Movie version? No? OK, just checking. (PG-13) 138 minutes. (SP) PAIN AND GLORY Pedro Almodovar’s latest is clearly a very personal story, featuring his longtime favorite leading man Antonio Banderas as a director in the autumn of his career. It also features his favorite leading lady, Penelope Cruz, as the director’s … what, mother? Oh, it’s a flashback thing, okay. There
are in fact many flashbacks, as the director “Salvador Mallo” looks back on his life. The result is winning praise as one of Almodovar’s best. (R) 113 minutes. (SP) PARASITE The director of The Host and Snowpiercer returns with a dark comedy/thriller about a poor family that slowly infiltrates the life of a rich family. At Cannes this year, it became the first Korean film to win the Palme d’Or. Directed by Bong Joon-ho. Starring Song Kang-ho, Lee Sun-kyun and Cho Yeo-jyong. (R) 132 minutes. (SP) PLAYING WITH FIRE I clicked a link to watch the trailer for Playing With Fire, and—I’m totally serious about this—former WWE wrestling champion John Cena appeared on screen dressed like a firefighter and said,“Ready to turn up the heat on some serious comedy? Watch the trailer for Playing With Fire!”What do you think I’m trying to do, John Cena? I already clicked on the damn link! Don’t tell me what to do when I’m already trying to do it, John Cena! Get your big, manly John Cena head out of the way so I can find out about this cutesy family comedy that you’re so damn excited to be starring in that you won’t even let me watch the trailer! Directed by Andy Fickman. Starring John Cena, Judy Greer and Keegan-Michael Key, (PG) 96 minutes. (SP) QUEEN & SLIM A Driving While Black situation goes even wrongerer when a cop pulls over Slim (Daniel Kaluuya from Get Out) and Queen (Jodie Turner-Smith) on their first date. Slim ends up shooting him, and immediately the pair are on the run, Bonnie and Clyde style. Directed by Melinda Matsoukas. Co-starring Chloe Sevigny, Sturgill Simpson and Flea. (R) 132 minutes. (SP) 21 BRIDGES I don’t know if this crime drama produced by Avengers: Endgame’s Russo Brothers about an NYPD detective hunting down two cop killers is any good, but I can guarantee it has more bridges than any other film you’ll see this year. Directed by Brian Kirk. Starring Chadwick Boseman, J.K. Simmons and Sienna Miller. (R) 99 minutes. (SP)
MOVIE TIMES
December 4
There is a Better Way
All times are PM unless otherwise noted.
DEL MAR THEATRE
831.359.4447
BLACK CHRISTMAS Fri 12/6, Sat 12/7 11:55 PM DARK WATERS Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5, Fri 12/6 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 10:50, 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45; Mon
12/9, Tue 12/10 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45 HARRIET Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5, Fri 12/6 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50; Sat 12/7 11, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50; Sun 12/8, Mon
12/9 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50; Tue 12/10 1:45, 4:30, 9:50 HONEY BOY Fri 12/6 2, 4:45, 7:30, 9:40; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 11:50, 2, 4:45, 7:30, 9:40; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 2,
4:45, 7:30, 9:40 THE IRISHMAN Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5 3:20, 7:30 NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: HANSARD Sun 12/8 11 AM, Tue 12/10 7 PM
NICKELODEON
831.359.4523
THE GOOD LIAR Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5 2, 4:30; Fri 12/6 1:50; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 11:30, 1:50; Mon 12/9,
Tue 12/10 1:50 JOJO RABBIT Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5, Fri 12/6 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 9:50; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 11:45, 2:15, 4:45, 7:30,
9:50; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 9:50 PARASITE Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5 1:20, 4:10, 7, 9:45; Fri 12/6, Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8, Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 4:10, 7, 9:45 QUEEN AND SLIM Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 9:55; Fri 12/6, Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8, Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10
1:40, 4:30, 7:20, 10:05 WAVES Fri 12/6, Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8, Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 10
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831.761.8200
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12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10 A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5, Fri 12/6 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8
10:15, 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15
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CHARLIE’S ANGELS Wed 12/4 9:40 DARK WATERS Thu 12/5 7, 10; Fri 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 10, 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10;
Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10 EN BRAZOS DE UN ASESINO Thu 12/5 7, 9:30; Fri 12/6 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 10, 12:20,
2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10 FORD VS FERRARI Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5, Fri 12/6, Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8, Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 12:15,
831.334.9539 mediationgroupofsc.com
3:25, 6:35, 9:45; FROZEN 2 Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5 12:20, 1:30, 2:45, 3:55, 5:10, 6:20, 7:35, 8:45, 10; Fri 12/6 12:30, 1:45, 3, 4:15, 5:30,
3, 4:15, 5:30, 6:45, 8, 9:15 HARRIET Wed 12/4 12:55, 3:50, 6:45; Thu 12/5 12:55, 3:50 KNIVES OUT Wed 12/4, Thu 12/5, Fri 12/6 1, 4, 7, 10; Sat 12/6, Sun 12/7 10, 1, 4, 7, 10; Mon 12/8,
Santa Cruz Naturopathic Medical Center
BOOST YOUR MOOD, ENERGY & WELL-BEING B-12 HAPPY HOUR
Tue 12/9 1, 4, 7, 10 MIDWAY Wed 12/4 12:55, 3:50, 6:45, 9:40; Thu 12/5 12:55, 3:50
5:10, 7:35, 10; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 12:20, 2:45, 5:10, 7:35, 10 831.438.3260
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1601 41st Ave. Capitola
Call theater for showtimes.
831-462-3686
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www.the-daisy.org
844.462.7342
736 Chestnut Street • downtown Santa Cruz 831.477.1377 • www.scnmc.com
Benefiting FAMILY SERVICE AGENCY OF THE CENTRAL COAST
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
6:45, 8, 9:15; Sat 12/7, Sun 12/8 10, 11:15, 12:30, 1:45, 3, 4:15, 5:30, 6:45, 8, 9:15; Mon 12/9, Tue 12/10 12:30, 1:45,
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FOOD+DRINK Also, those little jars of tart and spicy heirloom tomato jelly that we’ve come to love plopped down on top of a cracker frosted with brie. Makes a pretty and tasty addition to any holiday cheese plate. You’ll also find organic baking mixes, natural bath and body products, hand-crafted jewelry—check out the earrings!—and hand-dipped beeswax candles. Tons of lovely items perfect for stocking stuffers while supporting a feel-good local culinary staple. 5:30-8pm on Friday, Dec. 6, at the Homeless Garden Project store, 1338 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz.
PRODUCT OF THE WEEK
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
WHAT ARE FRIENDS FOR Friend in Cheeses jams will be part of the celebration at the Homeless Garden Project Holiday Store’s First Friday celebration this week.
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Holiday Heart
How foodies can do good this season at local events BY CHRISTINA WATERS
A
couple of great ideas here for fans of organic success stories and handcrafted culinary gifts. First, there’s a screening of a beautiful documentary about a couple who traded city life for an empty 200 acres just ripe for farming. The Biggest Little Farm records the odyssey toward a stunning organic farm and a biodiverse design for living. The screening is part of an evening of bold ideas and holiday schmoozing
at DNA’s Comedy Lab on Dec. 5, which will begin with drinks and small bites. The screening starts after remarks from Mayor Martine Watkins and words from a Homeless Garden Project trainee. Terrific cinematography and a wake-up call to heed nature’s warnings. Sponsored by Patagonia; 6pm on Thursday, Dec. 5, at DNA’s Comedy Lab, 155 S River St., Santa Cruz. homelessgardenproject.org. $20.
While you’re in the groove, stop by the Homeless Garden Project’s Holiday Store Open House and First Friday Celebration. Enjoy small bites, festive beverages and products made in HGP programs: from farm to workshop to you, the inquiring consumer. That includes lots of special-made products made by Friends in Cheeses—luscious condiments like culinary vinegars and ginger citrus pumpkin jelly.
Winner of the top prize at the World Cheese Awards, Rogue River Organic Blue is seasonal and aged for 9-11 months. This fragrant masterpiece is wrapped in Syrah grape leaves and soaked in pear liqueur before coming to your house for $37/lb. (I paid $11 for a sizeable chunk that has lasted four meals.) Oregon’s Rogue Creamery has won lots of awards, but this is the first time an American cheese has taken the top honors in the competition’s 32 years. One complex cheese, the blue is a major oral experience, if you know what I mean. Terrific with a shot of Jameson’s. Smooth yet angular, this beauty starts out densely loaded with Earthy notes and then opens into a sweet, very complex, buttery suite of flavors. Less is more. Pace yourself. Available at New Leaf Market.
NEW TRADITION Consider ordering your next holiday meal from New Leaf Community Market. They offer everything from non-GMO, antibiotic-free Diestel turkeys to house-made dishes like buttermilk mashed potatoes, local desserts from Beckmann’s Bakery, and plant-based and gluten-free entrées and sides. Convenient onestop pick up. Check online for New Leaf’s holiday menu and reserve your meal up to Dec. 23 at newleaf. com/reserve.
Think Café Cruz for the Holidays!
Holiday Banquets • Office Parties • Christmas Celebrations Sustainable seafood, natural meats, many fresh, local & organic ingredients Heated outdoor dining, open copper-backed kitchen, full bar, covered patio garden room
Café Cruz Gift Cards Make Great Gifts Lunch 11:30-2:30pm Mon-Sat Dinner 5:30pm Mon-Sat, 5pm Sunday Happy Hour Monday-Friday 3:00-6:00 Reservations welcomed
2621 41ST AVE SOQUEL • 831.476.3801 CAFECRUZ.COM
Royal Taj Indian Cuisine
Fine handcrafted furniture
Back in home town
We do catering for all events
SINCE 1989
Daily Lunch Buffet Time 11:30am to 3:00pm
ANDREW CHURCH THE FIRST SESSION IS FREE Piano, Didgeridoo, Drums, and More
(831) 902-0650
Thomaspedersenmusic.com
Daily Menu Dinner Service
719 Swift Street #14, Santa Cruz (near Hotline Wetsuits)
831.818.8051
5:30pm to 9:45pm
805 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz (Downtown)
UCSC and Cabrillo Student Discount 15%
270 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 831.427.2400
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
“The Carver’s Groove” Custom woodworking, antique care & restoration, architectural feature reproduction.
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FOODIE FILE
Free Birthday Meal Free Birthday Meal
One item up to $25 value with two or more entree orders Must present ad with order. Cannot be combined with other offers. 1 offer per table, per visit. Dine in only. See store for more details. Good through December 31, 2019.
One item up to $25 value with two or more entree orders Must present ad with Cannot be combined with other offers. 1 offer per table, Giftorder. Certificates Available! per visit. Dine in only. See store for more details. Good through June 5, 2019.
10% OFF GIFT CERTIFICATES OF $50 OR MORE* Exp. 12/24/19
to use at all locations CAPITOLA Gift Cards are available SCOTTS VALLEY
WATSONVILLE
CAPITOLA VALLEY WATSONVILLE APTOS 820 Bay Ave SCOTTS 5600 Scotts Valley Dr. 1441 Main St.
Shopping (Across 1441 Main St. (Target 38 Rancho Del Mar 820 Bayfrom Ave Nob 5600 Scotts (Victor Valley Dr.Square) Center) Target Shopping Center Safeway Center Victor Square 831-438-9260 831-728-9192 831-728-9192 831-464-9192 831-661-0721 831-438-9260 831-464-9192
Center) AcrossHill from Nob Hill Center
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
days Lunch Lunch 11:30 11:30 -- 2:30 2:30 Dinner Dinner 5:00 5:00 -- 9:30 9:30 Open 77 days Scotts Valley Valley && Watsonville Watsonville Lunch Lunch 12 12 -- 33 (Sat (Sat && Sun Sun Only) Only)
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Holiday Art & Craft Faire Simpkins Swim Center Saturday, December 7, 10:00 AM-4:00 PM Free Admission & Parking Unique handmade gifts for everyone on your list, created by local artists and craftspeople. You’ll find jewelry, ornaments, scarves, bags, art glass, leather goods, craft kits, 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.
NOSTALGIA TO GO Sasha Nemonchok and Chef Hunter sling convenient comfort food by the beach. PHOTO: JORDY HYMAN
Black Point Market Friendly neighborhood beach bodega opens in Live Oak BY JORDY HYMAN
O
nce an employee of the Point Market at Pleasure Point, Sasha Nemonchok partnered with the owners this year to develop his vision for a sister store on East Cliff at 14th Street, right above the beach and the eponymous Black Point. It’s a reinterpretation of the bodegas of Philadelphia with a strong Santa Cruz spin—a friendly mix of corner store, cafe and deli. Top shelf and bottom, staples and luxuries. Black Point Market stocks necessities, from sunblock and candy to beer, wine and kombucha. House Chef Hunter pours espresso and slings hot and cold sandwiches, soups, fresh-baked cookies and pastries, and other prepared entrées and sides.
What’s the vibe you’re going for? SASHA NEMONCHOK: I wanted a bodega-like feel. It’s your corner market. It’s your one-stop shop. Whether you’re a local or just passing through for a day or a week, we just wanted to make sure we had what you would need. So the basics like your butter and milk and eggs, baking supplies, things that you might need in a pinch, like, ‘Oh my god, I need
corn starch,’ or something like that. A little bit of beach stuff. We’re making a point of appealing to everyone, so that just means we typically have an affordable option and then an upper-scale option. Fancy honey, cheap honey. Fancy hot dogs, cheap hot dogs. Everyone deserves to be here, is kind of our mentality.
What’s happening at the deli? Gourmet-to-go sounds a little pretentious, but maybe convenient comfort food is one way to put it. We’re focused on nostalgic sandwiches, sandwiches that bring back memories, so like chicken salad and tuna salad, those are key. We make an authentic Cuban. There’s a hoagie, and that’s an eastcoast-style sub packed full of ham, capicola, salami. Meatball subs should be coming pretty soon here. Our meatloaf is insane… all fresh, made from scratch. It’s all chefdriven, straightforward, simple food, nostalgic food. Black Point Market, 2-1400 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. 713-5842, Instagram: @blackpoint.market, facebook.com/ blackpointmarket.
VINE+DINE
VINE TIME CELEBRATING 40 YEARS
Friday Happy Hour!
as a leader in organic and sustainable practices. Fine Wines since 1979.
Visit our winery & tasting room
75 Mt. Hermon Rd., Scotts Valley 831.234.6253 Tasting Room | Open Friday-Sunday
Winery: On the mountain near Summit Rd. Saturdays 12-5pm SC Tasting Room: 328-D Ingalls St. at Swift, Fri 3-7pm, Sat & Sun 12-6pm
kissedbyanangelwines.com
408.353.2278 • silvermtn.com
NATURAL CHEMISTRY UCSC Chemistry Professor Phil Crews also brews up excellent wines at his Pelican Ranch Winery.
Pelican Ranch A fruit-forward Rosé BY JOSIE COWDEN
A
December 7 & 8th Live Music - Chocolate Jewelry - Hot Mulled Wine
24250 Loma Prieta Ave., Los Gatos ( JUST 1/4 MILE OFF SUMMIT ROAD )
Open Fri-Sun 11-5 408-560-9343 • wrightsstation.com
Pelican Ranch is in a happening spot. You can try wine, beer and juice all in one day! Pelican Ranch Winery, 100 Kennedy Drive, Capitola. 426-6911, pelicanranch.com.
PERSONAL CHEF PONZA Many of you will remember the delicious cuisine prepared by Kirsten Ponza as executive chef at Chaminade in Santa Cruz. Ponza is now a personal chef and baker, preparing everything from meals in your home to baking whatever you need for a party, wedding or celebration. You can contact her at personalchefponza@ gmail.com or 331-5491.
GIFT OF WINE It’s that time of year when you’re wondering what to buy Uncle Fred and Cousin Joe for Christmas. Wine makes such a great gift. Shop for local wines and you will be supporting winemakers and vintners all over the Santa Cruz Mountains. An ideal gift would be a Passport or two for wine tasting, available at the Santa Cruz Mountains Winegrowers Association and many local wineries. scmwa.com.
Lunch
11:30am to 2:00pm Wednesday through Friday Oswald Burger, Salads, Sandwiches and more
Dinner
5:00pm to close Tuesday through Sunday Seasonal Menu Cocktail Hour Tuesday through Thursday 4:00pm to 5:30pm Bar Bites, Craft Cocktails, Beer and Wine Specials
OswaldRestaurant.com 121 Soquel Avenue at Front Street, Santa Cruz 831.423.7427 CLOSED MONDAY
S A N TA C R U Z . C O M | G O O D T I M E S . S C | D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9
s longtime owners of Pelican Ranch Winery, Phil Crews and his wife Peggy certainly know their onions when it comes to making wine. And as a chemistry professor at UCSC, Phil also knows a thing or two about blending components. For his bright 2018 Rosé of Zinfandel, grapes are harvested from Prosperity Grape Field in Fiddletown, Amador County. With its warm Mediterranean climate and an elevation of nearly 1,700 feet, Fiddletown is producing some splendid fruit from its vineyards. “This is classic, dry, pink-style Rosé with fresh strawberry and rose petal nose,” Phil says. I always think of Rosé as a happy wine. And as it gains popularity, more and more lovers of the grape are buying Rosé. It’s an easy-drinking wine with a party-time appeal. Pelican Ranch’s 2018 vintage— its latest release—comes with a convenient screw cap. Clocking in at $20, it can be found at markets and liquor stores all over town. Sandwiched between Sante Adairius Rustic Ales and Drink La Vie (probiotic juices) in Capitola,
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL WINEMAKERS!
Holiday Open House
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H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES NEPTUNE—NUMINOUS & MYSTERIOUS
Last Wednesday, Neptune (imagination, dreams, visions, etc.)—retrograde in Pisces for five months—turned direct. Retrogrades create deep internal musings. Neptune is the planet of hope, vision and religion, all developed in the Piscean Age. Neptune on the Soul level is imagination, dreams, music of the spheres, divinity. Neptune on the personality-building levels is disillusion, confusion and deception (experiences needed to learn discrimination and compassion). Neptune makes us sensitive and refined. We can also feel confused; reality is veiled.
We can be selfrighteous, impaling those who disagree with us on swords of verbal cruelty. We sometimes enter into addictive behaviors to soothe ourselves from difficulties and the unknown. Neptune helps us see others’ wounds, develop compassion and empathy. We can also feel divine discontent, seeking the spiritual in a world of materialism. Neptune dissolves things away and parts the veils between worlds. It both veils and refines reality, creating numinous and mysterious realms all around us. Neptune beguiles us.
ARIES Mar21–Apr20
LIBRA Sep23–Oct22
Have any of your professional endeavors experienced too much expansion, setbacks or transformations? Has a chill, coldness or distance come over relationships? It’s good to introduce the practical in all interactions, plans and agendas. Is there a level of commitment being called for? Try not to let impulsiveness prevail. Travels, journeys, study, justice are part of all decisions to be made. Know that where lines cross, new realities emerge.
You love being at home. You also love being with others, especially in a crowd working together. You love beauty, recognizing it (or its lack) everywhere. As we journey through relationships, we learn to discern outer beauty from inner, true intelligence from glamour, true love from false. Libra experiences many relationships in order to learn about and how to be in them. What are you presently learning?
Esoteric astrology as news for the week of Dec. 4, 2019
Holiday Shopping?
Refuel at Hulas and pick up a Gift Certificate! www.hulastiki.com (831)
426.HULA
221 Cathcart Street • Downtown Santa Cruz
TAURUS Apr21–May21 It’s important to have physical closeness at this time with someone, even if it’s a special pet. Your love nature needs a bit of care so Venus doesn’t feel left out. Venus watches over you, providing a sense of intelligent and loving well-being. Without love you can wilt, droop and fade away, feeling out of contact. Tend with care all resources held with another. Tend with care your loved ones.
You have Saturn in your communication house. Saturn is the Dweller on the Threshold, the purveyor of tests to determine how strong you’ve become in the last seven years. Saturn makes us feel separate at times. Saturn lessens the intensity of emotions. You’ll be less consumed by passions and more directed toward developing the mind. With Saturn in your mental sphere, you increase in discernment, discrimination, balance, and poise. Attractive qualities!
GEMINI May 22–June 20
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20
None of your friends or partners consider life with you boring. You’re the Twins (two in one) of the zodiac, one face then another encountering the world. The purpose of your dual nature is to provide two realities to humanity, a sense of duality, a polarity, of this and that, so humanity can observe two sides of all issues. So few realize your function and gift. Do you? It’s foundational to having intelligence.
Your extreme ideals can sometimes create havoc with life’s realities, so often you are filled with paradoxes and emotional vicissitudes. You see the potential for goodness in everyone. In relationships, you believe all needs will be met. You gaze at the stars; you have faith and practice positive thinking. For greater and real happiness, here’s a newer mantram (which I told Virgo): “We become what we praise.” Practice this new position.
D E C E M B E R 4 - 1 0 , 2 0 1 9 | G O O D T I M E S . S C | S A N TA C R U Z . C O M
CANCER Jun21–Jul20
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SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21
CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20
Tending and caring for the well-being of everyone is your task due to your extreme sensitivity toward humanity and the life process. Sometimes you overlook yourself, believing others are equally nurturing (or should be, you think). That isn’t an astrological reality. Each sign has a different task to cultivate. Begin to nurture yourself. It’s most important, for it creates a sense of selfempowerment.
You display deep constancy and dependability, and when loving someone, you’re there forever. Within all this reliability, steadiness and fidelity, there’s a spontaneous creature (you) seeking creative selfexpression. Your true nature is artistic, imaginative and inventive. Often, being quiet and subdued as you traditionally are, others don’t recognize your true light. Over time this will change as the spotlight swings toward your accomplishments.
LE0 Jul21–Aug22
AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18
You are either a knight or a Joan of Arc, a king or a queen, a savior and a server. Lion or lioness, you’re able to captivate the hearts and minds of everyone, shower others with intense love while needing complete attention in return. In between these dramatic interludes, tend carefully to daily life, health and well-being, and to any small animals that come your way. Chiron entered your house of self-identity. That will change over time.
You will look at your work in the world and wonder at its connectivity with others. This connection with humanity is your life’s purpose. You know that “contact releases love.” Often we find you alone in an endeavor you have created. Always you must have freedom of movement and of choice. Always you need friends around. Be very vigilant and alert with finances. Be responsible with them. All that you need is always given.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22
PISCES Feb19–Mar20
On the surface, you seem quiet, poised, calm, collected and rather cool and distant. Inside, you’re a vessel of desires and passion, love runs deep, and like Taurus, you’re very loyal to those you love, even after death. Here is a rule for Virgos: never criticize, never compare, never judge. Always praise instead. We become what we praise. That’s a mantram of reality.
You have empathy and compassion. Often you see the potential in others and feel it’s your responsibility to bring that potential forward. Sometimes you take lovers (or friends) who are “potentials.” After a time, the potential is not the reality. You learn. Neptune and Chiron are hovering in Pisces. Anything held out to you dissolves. You stand alone. Here you grow.
SERVICES
PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM
DESIGN CONSULTING
Interior Design Feng Shui Home Staging Hosanna Quintin 831 224-4922 hosannaq@gmail.com
TECH HELP FOR ALL
Help make your Computers, WiFi, Phones, and TV easier to operate.
call Jonathan 831 325-2827
jonathan@thehelpinghandcollective.com GARDENING HAPPY GARDENS ROTOTILLING
831 234-4341 HAULING & DEMOLITION
123 Junk Away 831 227-8802
Garbage, Waste, Trash, Demolition Services
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ARBORIST
NATIVE TREE CARE All phases of tree work... Stump grinding • Poison oak removal • Fruit tree pruning • Palm tree pruning *Certified arborist since 1974 *Iinsured PLPD $2M
LOST DOG
1 1/2 years old, 35 lb., cream and RED- tinted female husky with unique marking named Aiya MISSING since Sunday (11/10). She was last seen on Branciforte and Water Street.
SERGIO’S LOVE BITES
Passing family recipes and cooking techniques from my grandmothers to you!
$$$ Reward
Make your Dream Home a Reality! Call for a free consultation
408 421-5089
MICHAEL BATES
Book a fun holiday experience for up to 6 friends and family!
BLUEPRINTS for city or county applications
scamerlo@gmail.com PAINTING
SHELTON PAINTING 831 435-0563 “Bryan infuses his sense of artistic design and high work ethic into each task, from live-in painting projects to brand new construction”
bryan@bryansheltonpainting.com LIC #1050210
COMPUTER REPAIR
COMPUTER ZONE
Now until end of year only $49 computer diagnosis!
$200 off new laptop or computer!
Mission St. Store 831 466-9099 Laurel St. Store 831 466-9065
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING DESIGNER
New Homes/Remodels/Additions/ 2nd Units/Kitchens/Baths/Red Tags/ADU (831) 252-9321
123bates@gmail.com
MEDICAL MASSAGE
North Bay Physical Therapy *Lymph drainage *Cranial Sacral *Neuromuscular
FREE ESTIMATES. REFERENCES AVAILABLE. CALL OR TEXT
FELIPA 831 239-8092 DIAZFELIPA@GMAIL.COM
HANDYMAN
Daniel Borreson call/text 831 332-0558 $35 per hour
SMOG CHECK
GRAND OPENING $5 off any official smog inspection 831 423-1200
Smog Plus Service 1505 Soquel Ave. (behind Grocery Outlet) *Please mention this ad at time of service
831 462-5777
TOP EMPLOYERS TRUST US FOR THEIR CLEANING
ASIAN MASSAGE
Golden Bay Spa 831 420-1688
551 Frederick Street, Santa Cruz, CA *Walk-ins Welcome*
“We love working with Good Times. We get a sizable number of good quality opportunities for Clear View from Good Times.” — RUSS CASTRONOVO
END OF LIFE DOULA
Kendra Barnett Transforming the End Of Life experience to bring meaning and sacredness to the dying person and their loved ones
sunsetservicescollective.com
831 295-8150 *non medical holistic support
call or text Piper at (909) 344-0908
DIAZ HOUSE CLEANING
BLUEPRINTS & PERMITS
MASSAGE
A*wonderful*Touch. Relaxing, Therapeutic, Light to Deep Swedish Massage for Men. Peaceful environment. 14 yrs. Exp.
JEFF 831 332-8594
& LANDSCAPING NEEDS. 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.
Local & Independent. Monterey Bay Green-Certified. 423-5515
mycleanbldg.com Call or email us for a quote using our online form.
GOT A SERVICE? Make your business easy to find! Get listed in our Services Directory Call 831.458.1100 X 200 Email kmansfeld@GoodTimes.sc
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | DECEMBER 4-10, 2019
Julian 831 335-5175
COOKING EXPERIENCE
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SERVICES PAINTING
Berry Mora Painting Interior • Exterior • Commercial • Residential • Kitchen Cabinets • Touch ups
Mario 831 740-7156 moramario271@gmail.com LIC #1051176
WINDOW CLEANING & GUTTER CLEARING
CLEAR VIEW Window
Cleaning & Gutter Clearing BONDED & INSURED, LOCAL, GREEN CERTIFIED
831 420-0111
WWW.CLEARVIEWBAYAREA.COM
KITCHEN & BATHROOM REMODELS
TREE SERVICE/ FIRE SAFETY
Kitchen & Bathroom
HUERTA’S
We handle everything from Design to Permits to Installation!
• Full Tree Service •Stump Grinding • Fire Safety •Winter Landscape Prep
Specialist
Pascual 831 706-5101 extraordinaryconstruction@gmail.com
extraordinaryconst.com LIC #1023400 BASIC HOUSE CLEANING
Quality • 30 yrs exp. • Reliable
TREE SERVICE & DEVELOPMENT INC.
Greg Eiman 201 213-5602
Carpentry•Landscaping•Gutters• Plumbing •Custom Woodworking• General Home Repair•Tiny House/Tree House Construction
Jorge 831 246-1823 408 605-5937
eimangreg@gmail.com
*free estimates C.S.L. #948403 *fully insured
“Hone your skills or Find a new passion”
jorge@huertastreeservice.com
GUITAR INSTRUCTION
Goyo Martin 831 234-8783 goyomartinart.com
English Speaking
ALEXANDRA 831 325-1062
HANDYMAN SERVICES
Read Good Times every week or online at GoodTimes.SC
BODY THERAPY
PER HAALAND ROLFING • Free yourself from pain & movement restriction • Improve your posture & alignment • Learn to move with grace & ease
831 479-9565 perhaaland@baymoon.com Certified Advanced Rolfer®
MASSAGE Delightful body to body massages! Deep tissue and soft light touch included. $160 per session.
AMY 831 462-1033 MASSAGE
DECEMBER 4-10, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Call Curt feel good now!
Muscles relaxed and moods adjusted. De-stress in my warm safe hands. Days and Evenings, CMP.
HYPNOSIS
Clinical Hypnosis
Mark D Wise, MSW 831 420-7038
•over 30 yrs experience •confidentiality
markgtwise@yahoo.com Start early on New Year’s resolutions! HOUSE CLEANING Time for you to destress and let a professional handle the dirty work!G
Coast Cleaning Services 831 539-9322 • regular bi weekly cleanings • deep cleans (ovens & refrigerators) coastcleaningservice831@gmail.com
831 419-1646
scruzcurt@gmail.com
HANDMADE CANDLES
Kathleen M. Pouls LAc,CMP
Santa Cruz Candle Company
~ Acupuncture ~ ~ Refined Bodywork ~ ~ Combination Treatments ~
A little bit of the central coast in every different scent!
santacruzcandleco.com *find online or in select local retailers
FAMILY PORTRAITS
Laracaroline.com
Studio or Location Editorial, Events, Family, Pets, Sports...
Lara (831) 331-7486
68 lara@laracaroline.com
A Family Practice, Pre/Postnatal Care
• Antique Restorations • Furniture Design & Repair
Tim Gillett Tim Gillett Cert Coach TinyHabits® Coach
(Owner of Pondmagic, 20+yrs)
What is the one new habit Free 30 session you minute can createphone right now?
• Wooden Boat Works • Musical Instruments • Unique Projects
831-251-0377 isaiahwilliams13@gmail.com mastercraftsman.webs.com
Small Business Coach
831.475.8885 • 3335 Mission Drive (Doctors Plaza by Dominican Hospital) Serving Santa Cruz since 1984 Insurance accepted kpoulshealingarts.com
• Personal/Business Coaching ‘simplicity wins every time!’ • Complimentary First session
831.588.4397 bayareasmallbusinesscoach.com
CLASSIFIEDS
PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM
ORDINANCE NO. 2019-23 AN URGENCY ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ EXPANDING AB 1482 NO-FAULT EVICTION PROTECTIONS WITHIN THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ BE IT ORDAINED By the City of Santa Cruz as follows: SECTION 1. Findings. A. Pursuant to Article XI, Section 7 of the California Constitution, the City of Santa Cruz (“City”) may make and enforce all regulations and ordinances using its police powers. B. The City has one of the least affordable housing markets in California and the United States, which exacerbates the City’s shortage of decent, safe, affordable, and sanitary rental housing. C. Renters occupy about 56 percent of the City’s housing stock and 67.5 percent of renters are cost burdened under the federal definition, meaning they spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing. D. Through the City’s Fall 2017 Community Outreach on Housing, the City received extensive public testimony about the exorbitant costs and scarcity of rental units.
F. Housing insecurity and excessive rent increases could result in homelessness and displacement of lowincome families. G. On October 8, 2019, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law the Tenant Protection Act of 2019, Assembly Bill 1482 (“AB 1482”), an act adding and repealing Sections 1946.2, 1947.12, and 1947.13 of the California Civil Code, effective beginning January 1, 2020, which prohibits evictions without “just cause” and owners of specified residential rental property from increasing rents each year more than 5 percent plus the percentage change in the cost of living or 10 percent,
H. The City Council wishes to protect renters from no-fault evictions in advance of AB 1482’s effective date, to prevent further homelessness and displacement. I. Among the exempts to the tenant protections enacted under AB 1482 are tenancies that are “subject to an agreement that provides housing subsidies for affordable housing for persons and families of very low, low, or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093 of the Health and Safety Code or comparable federal statutes.” It is the intent of the City Council, in enacting this Chapter, to extend the tenant protections provided by AB 1482 to tenancies whereby the tenant receives subsidized housing pursuant to the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program or the Section 8 Project Based Voucher program. J. The tenant protections conferred by AB 1482 are also inapplicable to residential real property subject to a local ordinance requiring just cause for termination of a residential tenancy adopted or amended after September 1, 2019, that is more protective than AB 1482. K. The City Council hereby finds, determines and declares that, to the extent it extends just-cause eviction protections to tenants in Section 8 housing, and provides tenants with first right-of-refusal re-occupy rental units temporarily vacated for repairs or substantial rehabilitation, it is the intent of the City Council, in adopting this Ordinance, that AB 1482 be fully implemented within the City of Santa Cruz, except to the extent that this ordinance provides just-cause eviction protections that are more protective than AB 1482. L. According to testimony provided to the City Council at the meetings of October 8, 2019 and October 22, 2019, in advance of the implementation of AB 1482, no-fault eviction notices and threats of eviction have been brought to the attention of Council. The Council hereby finds that, if this ordinance were finally adopted in the ordinary course of business on December 10, 2019 pursuant to City Charter Section 608, Section 8 tenants
who received notice prior to October 11, 2019 would be unprotected and could be facing eviction during the holiday season before the ordinance takes effect on January 9, 2020. M. Based upon the abovedescribed facts and circumstances, and for these same reasons, the City Council finds that this ordinance is necessary as an emergency measure for preserving the public peace, health and safety, and therefore that it may be introduced and adopted at one and the same meeting, and shall take effect immediately upon its adoption. SECTION 2. Chapter 21.07 – JUST CAUSE EVICTION ABOVE AB 1482 REQUIREMENTS is hereby added to the City of Santa Cruz Municipal Code to read as follows: “Chapter 21.07 JUST CAUSE EVICTION ABOVE AB 1482 REQUIREMENTS 21.07.010 EXTENDING AB 1482 PROTECTIONS TO SECTION 8 TENANTS. Notwithstanding the language of California Civil Code Section 1946.2(e) (9), the no-fault just-cause eviction protections of Section 1946.2 shall be applicable to tenants receiving subsidy through the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program or the Section 8 Project Based Voucher Program. A full month’s rent shall be provided for relocation assistance, including both the tenant’s portion of the payment and the voucher amount. Any rent control protections that Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher holders are afforded by AB 1482 shall also be applied to such Section 8 Housing Choice tenants. 21.07.030
CIVIL REMEDIES.
Failure by a landlord to comply with the terms of this Ordinance shall be an affirmative defense to any unlawful detainer action pending or filed on or after its effective date. In addition, tenant may bring a civil suit in the courts of the state alleging that a Landlord has violated any of the provisions of this Ordinance. In a civil suit, a landlord found to violate this Ordinance shall be liable to the tenant for all actual damages, as well as an award of reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs. Additionally, upon a showing that
the Landlord has acted willfully or with oppression, fraud, or malice, the Tenant shall be awarded treble damages. No administrative remedy need be exhausted prior to filing suit pursuant to this Section.” SECTION 3. Severability. If any section, subsection, sentence, clause, phrase or word of this Ordinance is for any reason held to be invalid and/or unconstitutional by a court of competent jurisdiction, such decision shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this ordinance. SECTION 4. Effective Date and Term. This urgency ordinance shall take effect immediately upon its adoption provided, however, that it shall apply retroactively to any tenant in possession on its effective date who received or receives a notice of eviction issued on or after September 1, 2019. This ordinance shall also not apply to any tenancy where the eviction lawsuit has already been adjudicated as of the effective date. The ordinance shall remain in effect so long as AB 1482 or any successor provisions are in effect. SECTION 5. Environmental Determination. The City Council finds that the adoption and implementation of this Ordinance are exempt from the provisions of the California Environmental Quality Act under section 15061(b)(3) in that the City Council finds there is no possibility that the implementation of this Ordinance may have significant effects on the environment. PASSED FOR FINAL ADOPTION on this 26th day of November, 2019, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Glover, Meyers, Brown, Mathews; Vice Mayor Cummings; Mayor Watkins. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/ Mayor Watkins. ATTEST: ss/Bonnie Bush, City Clerk Administrator.
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Cal. Civil Code Section 1946.2(e)(9).
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | DECEMBER 4-10, 2019
E. Given the housing cost burden faced by many City residents, excessive rental increases threaten the public health, safety, and welfare of City residents, including seniors, those on fixed incomes, those with low and moderate income levels, and those with other special needs to the extent that such persons may be forced to choose between paying rent and providing food, clothing, and medical care for themselves and their families.
whichever is lower.
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CLASSIFIEDS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001940 The following Married Couple is doing business as IMPACT PHOTOGRAPHY GROUP. 1756 GARZA LN., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. DAVID CHRIS ALLEN & JAMIE JETRINA ALLEN. 1756 GARZA LN., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by a Married Couple signed: DAVID CHRIS ALLEN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/29/2019. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 6, 2019. Nov. 13, 20, 27, & Dec. 4. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001943 The following Individual is doing business as KATIE CO. DESIGN & STILLS. 741 CLUBHOUSE DR., APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. KATHERINE CONRAD COMARTIN. 741 CLUBHOUSE DR., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: KATHERINE CONRAD COMARTIN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 11/5/2019. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 7, 2019. Nov. 13, 20, 27, & Dec. 4. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
FILE NO. 2019-0001935 The following Individual is doing business as NEW PERSPECTIVE SECURITY SERVICE. 244 CHIMNEY CREEK RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. MATTHEW DOTTEN. 244 CHIMNEY CREEK RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MATTHEW DOTTEN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 5, 2019. Nov. 13, 20, 27, & Dec. 4. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001939 The following Individual is doing business as ETHOS REAL ESTATE. 1414 SOQUEL AVE. #100, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. JUSTIN MCNABB. 4960 THURBER LANE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95065. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JUSTIN MCNABB. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 6, 2019. Nov, 13, 20, 27, & Dec. 4. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001880 The following Corporation is doing business as AUTO EXPRESS TIRE PROS. 2842 SOQUEL AVE.,
DECEMBER 4-10, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Monterey Bay Air Resources District NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Public Hearing will be held by the Board of Directors of the Monterey Bay Air Resources District (District) to hear the following actions: 1) Consideration of proposed District Rule 441 Boilers, Steam Generators, and Process Heaters. Date: February 19, 2020 Time: 1:30 PM Place: Monterey Bay Air Resources District Office, Boardroom, 3rd Floor 24580 Silver Cloud Court, Monterey, California Copies of the proposed regulatory action, including the staff report addressing possible fiscal impacts upon regulated sources, are available for inspection at the District office or on our website at www.mbard.org. This proposed rule is exempt from the requirements of Public Resources Code Section 21000 et seq. California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines which allows certain actions to be excluded from the requirements of CEQA. Interested parties are invited to submit written comments and to attend and participate at the hearing. A public workshop to discuss the rule and take public comments will be held on January 15, 2020 at 10:00am at Monterey Bay Air Resources District Office, Boardroom, 3rd Floor, 24580 Silver Cloud Court, Monterey, California. Written comments must be received no later than 4:45 PM on February 7, 2020 to ensure inclusion in the District Board adoption package. Public comment will also be heard at the hearing. Written comments on the items listed above should be directed as follows: Email comments to Seong Kim: skim@mbard.org Phone: (831) 647-9411 Website: www.mbard.org
To mail in comments: Monterey Bay Air Resources District c/o Seong Kim 24580 Silver Cloud Court Monterey, CA 93940
SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. SANTA CRUZ AUTO EXPRESS, INC. 2842 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. Al# 4325943. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: PAUL SALAZAR. 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 October 29, 2019. Nov. 20, 27, Dec 4, & 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001944 The following Individual is doing business as ZK BODYWORK. 101 VAN NESS AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. ZOE KOSOVIC. 101 VAN NESS AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ZOE KOSOVIC. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 6/1/2018. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 7, 2019. November 20, 27, Dec. 4, & 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001959 The following Individual is doing business as OCULUS PHOTO. 110 KAYE ST. APT. 2, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. ADAM SANCHEZ. 110 KAYE ST. APT. 2,
SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ADAM SANCHEZ. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 12, 2019. November 20, 27, Dec. 4, & 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001702 The following Individual is doing business as HOGWARTS KITCHENS. 101 CENTER ST. #1, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. KAREN MIREILLE JUDKINS. 300 TOLAK RD., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: KAREN MIREILLE JUDKINS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on September 30, 2019. November 20, 27, Dec. 4, & 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001946 The following Individual is doing business as SHARP CHOICE. 2605 SOQUEL DR., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95065. County of Santa Cruz. MARTIN ANTHONY LUCICH. 2605 SOQUEL DR., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95065. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MARTIN ANTHONY LUCICH. The registrant
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2019-11)
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2019-22)
The City Council of the City of Santa Cruz having authorized the city clerk administrator, that the ordinance hereafter entitled and described, be published by posting copies thereof in three (3) prominent places in the City, to wit:
The City Council of the City of Santa Cruz having authorized the city clerk administrator, that the ordinance hereafter entitled and described, be published by posting copies thereof in three (3) prominent places in the City, to wit:
The City of Santa Cruz Website www.cityofsantacruz.com City Hall–809 Center Street Central Branch Library–224 Church Street
The City of Santa Cruz Website www.cityofsantacruz.com City Hall–809 Center Street Central Branch Library–224 Church Street
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that copies of said ordinance were posted according to said order. (Original on file with city clerk.) Said ordinance was introduced on November 26th, 2019, and is entitled and described as follows:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that copies of said ordinance were posted according to said order. (Original on file with city clerk.) Said ordinance was introduced on November 26th, 2019, and is entitled and described as follows: ORDINANCE NO. 2019-22 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ ADDING CHAPTER 6.02 – HEALTH IN ALL POLICIES TO TITLE 6 – HEALTH AND SANITATION OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL CODE
ORDINANCE NO. 2019-11 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ ADDING CHAPTER 15.38 TO THE SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL CODE REGULATING SMALL CELL WIRELESS FACILITIES This ordinance adds Chapter 15.38 of the municipal code pertaining to small cell wireless facilities. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 26th day of November, 2019, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Glover, Meyers, Brown, Mathews; Vice Mayor Cummings; Mayor Watkins. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Mayor Watkins. ATTEST: ss/Bonnie Bush, City Clerk Administrator. This ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of December 10, 2019.
This ordinance adds Health in All Policies to Title 6 Chapter 6.02 to the City of Santa Cruz’s municipal code. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 26th day of November, 2019, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Glover, Meyers, Brown, Mathews; Vice Mayor Cummings; Mayor Watkins. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Mayor Watkins. ATTEST: ss/Bonnie Bush, City Clerk Administrator. This ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of December 10, 2019.
CLASSIFIEDS HELP WANTED IT Opening for Sr. Dynamics AX Developer at Driscoll’s, Inc. in Watsonville, CA. Software testing, maintenance, integration/data migrations with legacy systems, development, web services, extensions and configuring workflows. Req. Master’s degree or equivalent in software engineering or computer applications. Please send resume to: Driscoll’s, Inc., Attn: Rebecca Sondreal - 300 Westridge Drive, Watsonville, CA 95076 AIDE DIRECT CARE Hiring Bonus $500 for FT employee. Intellectually challenged adults in residential or day program setting. Shift work. Up to $15 per hr to start DOE Apply M – F 8am-3pm (831) 475-0888 ARF MANAGER/ADMINISTRATOR
DRIVER TO OREGON Driving to Oregon in December? Going to Eugene, or can stop there? Deliver a doll house (28”x27”x15”) to a home address in Eugene and receive $200 on safe delivery. 831425-7973
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001895 The following Individual is doing business as SANTA CRUZ GOLF. 2235 MATTISON LN., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. AARON PETERSON. 2235 MATTISON LN., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: AARON PETERSON. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 10/31/2019 This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 31, 2019. November 20, 27, Dec. 4, & 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001951 The following Individual is doing business as LEARNING LIGHTHOUSE. 9057 SOQUEL DR., APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. MARLYNN LLAMAS. 408 VISTA DEL MAR DR., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MARLYNN LLAMAS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2019-06) The City Council of the City of Santa Cruz having authorized the city clerk administrator, that the ordinance hereafter entitled and described, be published by posting copies thereof in three (3) prominent places in the City, to wit: The City of Santa Cruz Website www.cityofsantacruz.com City Hall–809 Center Street Central Branch Library–224 Church Street NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that copies of said ordinance were posted according to said order. (Original on file with city clerk.) Said ordinance was introduced on April 9th, 2019, and is entitled and described as follows: ORDINANCE NO. 2019-06 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ AMENDING TITLE 24 OF THE SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL CODE (ZONING ORDINANCE) AND THE LOCAL COASTAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN AMENDING SECTION 24.12.1400 REGARDING REQUIREMENTS FOR “SMALL CELL” WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITIES IN THE PUBLIC RIGHT OF WAY This ordinance amends Title 24 of the municipal code pertaining to requirements for small cell wireless telecommunications facilities in the public right of way. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 9th day of April, 2019, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Krohn, Glover, Meyers, Brown, Mathews; Vice Mayor Cummings; Mayor Watkins. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Mayor Watkins. ATTEST: ss/Bonnie Bush, City Clerk Administrator. This ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of December 10, 2019.
Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 12, 2019. November 20, 27, Dec. 4, & 11.
County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 20, 2019. November 27, December 4, 11 & 18.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001981 The following Individual is doing business as CORINA’S HOME CARE FOR YOU. 121 CITRON DR., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. CORINA BAIRD. 121 CITRON DR., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: CORINA BAIRD. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 15, 2019. Nov. 27, Dec. 4, 11, & 18.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0002015. The following General Partnership is doing business as LALO’S MEXICAN ANTOJITOS 2. 70 C MARIPOSA AVENUE, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. County of Santa Cruz. EDUARDO MIGUEL GAMEZ HERNANDEZ. 443 VICTORIA AVENUE SALINAS, CA 93906. LIZ VANESSA IBARRA-REYNOSO. 60 JEANETTE WAY, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. This business is conducted by a General Partnership signed: EDUARDO HERNANDEZ. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 21, 2019. Nov 27, Dec 4,11 & 18.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001841 The following Corporation is doing business as LIGHTHOUSE BANK. 2020 N PACIFIC AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. SANTA CRUZ COUNTY BANK. 75 RIVER STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. Al# 2550801. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: SANTA CRUZ COUNTY BANK. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/21/2019. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 21, 2019. Nov. 20, 27, Dec. 4 & 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001954 The following Individual is doing business as FUN AND FETCH, FUN AND FETCH SANTA CRUZ. 1915 15TH AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. ASHLYN MOORE. 1915 15TH AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ASHLYN MOORE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 12, 2019. Nov. 27, Dec. 4, 11, & 18. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001872 The following Individual is doing business as SUMMIT TO SEA DESIGNS. 712 FREEMAN CT., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. AUDRA MARIE MCKOWN. 712 FREEMAN CT., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: AUDRA MARIE MCKOWN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 28, 2019. Nov. 27, Dec. 4, 11, & 18. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0002001 The following Individual is doing business as BERRY MORA’S PAINTING. 30 WEST BEACH APT 419, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. County of Santa Cruz. MARIO MORA HUERTA. 30 WEST BEACH APT 419, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MARIO MORA HUERTA The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin,
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ.PETITION OF RACHEL ANTICOLI RICE CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO.19CV03506. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner RACHEL ANTICOLI RICE has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: RACHEL ANTICOLI RICE to: RACHEL GRACE ANTICOLI. 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 January 9, 2020 at 8:30 am, in Department 10 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 25, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the Superior Court. Dec. 4, 11, 18, & 25. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0002027. The following General Partnership is doing business as MOUNTAIN ECHO PUBLISHING, SAN LORENZO VALLEY POST, SLV POST, THE MOUNTAIN ECHO, THE SAN LORENZO VALLEY POST. 515 DAVIDSON WAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. County of Santa Cruz. MARY ANDERSEN. 261 REDWOOD DRIVE, FELTON, CA 95018. JULIA ANN HILL HORNER. 515 DAVIDSON WAY, BOULDER CREEK, CA 95006. This business is conducted by a General Partnership signed: JULIA ANN HILL HORNER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 26, 2019. Dec 4, 11, 18, & 25.
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | DECEMBER 4-10, 2019
Experience working with intellectually challenged adults preferred. Ability to become (employer paid) ARF Certified. Training Available. Responsible for 24hr operation of home including employee management, shopping, medical appointments. Work with an existing team & long term clients. DOE up to $54,080 per year. Dental, Vacation, and Sick , California Retirement. Apply M – F 8am-3pm (831) 4750888
commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 7, 2019. November 20, 27, Dec. 4, & 11.
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R E A L E STAT E A smooth transition in real estate requires great organizing skills.
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DECEMBER 4-10, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001983 The following Individual is doing business as KEYS TO MUSIC. 4448 HILLTOP RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. ANGELA DIANE BENNETT. 4448 HILLTOP RD., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ANGELA DIANE BENNETT. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on November 18, 2019. Dec. 4, 11, 18, & 25. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0001899 The following Individual is doing business as THE SHED. 1212 FAIR AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. DAVID KING. 147 SHELTER LAGOON DR., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: DAVID KING. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on October 31, 2019. Dec. 4, 11, 18, & 25.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019-0002022 The following Corporation is doing business as WORLD CHATTERS. 855 41ST AVE., SUITE F08, CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. THE EPP SOLUTIONS CORPORATION. 1231 SERENE VALLEY CT., SAN JOSE, CA 95120. Al# 4251132. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: THE EPP SOLUTIONS CORPORATION. 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 November 22, 2019. Dec. 4, 11, 18, & 25.
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D R O O PE N R E AT O R
Provoking thought since 1990
TOM BREZSNY getreal@serenogroup.com
• 831-818-1431
TERRY BALLANTYNE terry@serenogroup.com • 831-588-8485 BrezsnyBallantyne.com • CalBRE# 01063297 • CalBRE# 01257150
Sign up for the Good Times Newsletter on GoodTimes.SC Supporting you in a changing market
Scarlett Wolford DRE# 01735961
scarlett@serenogroup.com (831) 400-7386
Supporting you in a changing market
Daniel Wolford DRE# 02050043
dwolford@serenogroup.com (831) 400-7334
Brezsny Associates
Brezsny Associates
BrezsnyBallantyne.com
BrezsnyBallantyne.com
There sure is a lot of talk these days about how millennials are cut from a different cloth. How 30-somethings don’t like to make commitments or plunge into the deep end of life by signing up for 30-year mortgages. As the story goes, the majority of millennials prefer to rent minimalist apartments where they can walk or Uber to work, rather than buy bigger homes in the exurbs with large yards, longer commutes and more binding ties to consumer culture. My own opinion is that this represents a deep disconnect from what’s really holding some of those 30-somethings back from full buy-in on a home. Not to mention a huge lack of empathy for the profound challenges millennials face when they try to crack the code of homeownership in today’s difficult real estate market. I don’t think we give them enough credit for the incredible levels of courage they demonstrate. Or the high-degree of commitment it actually takes to get their ducks in order to the degree that every buyer has to in today’s environment. Think about it. Millennials are the generation that came of age during the last 10-15 years. That’s the period of time just before, during and after the Great Recession, the worst financial downturn since the Great Depression. An event that shook the foundations of the real estate and mortgage markets and generated broader waves of culture shock that will reverberate for decades. Millennials going to college, dreaming about the future and moving into the workforce had front row seats for the whole sorry debacle. As first-time buyers of a certain age, they now have a baked-in understanding of certain inalienable facts: people can lose their homes. Real estate values can plummet. Jobs aren’t always secure. Life can change dramatically in difficult ways. They were there and they saw it, and it has no doubt shaped their adult worldviews in ways many of us can’t quite comprehend. A dark, pessimistic outlook might easily have been the legacy that the Great Recession left them. But I have to say that most millennials I’ve come across in the last few years have been remarkably bright, well-grounded and optimistic about life and all its possibilities. When I work with them to buy the houses where they are going to settle down and raise their families, I find my own optimism about the future getting restored. Watching them move through a difficult process and take a huge step forward in life reaffirms my faith in humanity. If anything has delayed their entry into the post-recession real estate market, it’s the newfound norm of historic low inventory that has taken such firm hold of the process.
Tom Brezsny
Realtor® DRE#01063297
831-818-1431 getreal@serenogroup.com PA I D A D V E R T O R I A L
R E A L E STAT E THE ONLY REALTORÂŽ YOU NEED! Serving You at 4 Locations: Carmel, Prunedale, Salinas & Watsonville Broker BRE# 01835165
To download my app: Text BHHSBCAMPOS to 1(844) 558-2447
18643 MCCLELLAN CR, EAST GARRISON, CA 93933
Cell: 818-7607
beckycampos.com rcampos 969@aol.com
250 BELLA VISTA FEATURED LISTING
FEATURED LISTING
Fairytales do come true. This charming home located in East Garrison has it all. One of the few with a private drive to your two car garage which leads you to your extra spacious patio yard and covered lanai off kitchen. Two areas to entertain in. Living room (designed to be formal dining room) and family room, granite kitchen counters, eating bar on the island, designer paint and touches throughout the home. Enjoy coffee by your front window. Once inside this 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath home there is a Very private Special feeling. The Monterey Peninsula is a special place unique in all the world. Just five miles from the the coast lots of sun and blessed with a near perfect climate. East Garrison is designed with opportunities to live, shop, play, explore and enjoy in a village-inspired setting. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t let this opportunity pass you by. Look and purchase today! L#4008 $629,000
500 TRAVERS LANE PARCELS
Becky Campos
REDUCED
Panoramic Monterey Bay View!!! Estate sized property situated on approx 6 Acres, overlooking the coastline of Santa Cruz, Salinas & the Monterey Bay. Perched on a hilltop this private estate has 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths and approx 6095 square feet, formal living and dining rooms, two family rooms, country size kitchen, 2 pellet stoves and one wood burning fireplace. You will love the large size of every room in this home. There is an Eagles nest/ Bar room perfect for getting away by yourself. So many amenities, two ovens, two dishwashers, trash compactor, two refrigerators, stainless steel railing around patio to relax and enjoy the view and privacy with family and friends. Abundant natural light throughout. Gated entry, location is central to Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Monterey & San Benito Counties. 1248 sq feet Shop/Garage with grease pit and one tall door for a motorhome. INCREDIBLE PROPERTY! BRIGHT & OPEN FLOOR PLAN, BRINGS OUTDOORS IN! VIEWS FROM EVERY ROOM! OCEAN, COAST, VALLEY & MOUNTAINS! SPECTACULAR SUNSETS AND CITY LIGHTS! L#4005 $1,695,000
GROUND LEASE
650 TRAVERS LANE (X-ST. GREEN VALLEY RD.)
3 country parcels perfect to build your dream home and or investment properties on. Perhaps modular or Tiny Homes. Nice private location, quiet rolling hills. Santa Cruz county, Easy commute to work then back home to enjoy the country. Consists of parcels with the following acreage 3.49 acres, 3.02 acres and 2.95 acres. $629,000
Downtown Watsonville lot available for GROUND LEASE. Many zoning options, list available. Across the street from the Historic City Plaza, seasonal Farmers market, Cabrillo College, bank, retail stores, restaurants, courthouse and parking garage half a block away. $12,000 p/month
Darling 2 bedroom home on 2.58 acres, 2 car garage, useable land, Water and road agreements in place. Gorgeous views and gentle rolling hills with meadow and some older apple trees, perhaps plant more trees, gardens, vineyard, horses etc. Lots of possibilities. Seller painting inside home and garage and pressure washing exterior, new carpet and pad and cleaning up tile on fireplace hearth. L# 4002 $679,000
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | DECEMBER 4-10, 2019
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R E A L E STAT E List With The Leader! WE’RE LOCAL • WE’RE GLOBAL
FEATURED HOMES APTOS/RIO DEL MAR/LA SELVA BEACH
APTOS/RIO DEL MAR/LA SELVA BEACH
CAPITOLA
745 Mockingbird Ridge, Aptos Relax on the front patios of this ridge top estate & enjoy stunning views of the Monterey Bay & surrounding foothills. An architectural wonder, this 5,100 ft home, on 12 plus acres, matches contemporary style with an open floor plan that has you gliding from room to room. Soaring ceiling & walls of glass invite the views & sunshine into every room. Featuring a master bedroom wing & 5 additional bedrooms, 5.5 baths plus a study, the home is designed for family, entertaining & guests. Don’t forget the 4-car garage which is a car lovers dream. First time ever on market. $3,200,000
130 Las Lomas Dr, Aptos Spectacular Ocean Views! A w rare offering & never before on Ne the market. Lovely 3BR/2BA, 2,483 sq ft home with office, separate family room. Indoor lap pool, & 3-car garage. 1.2 Private acres, yet 2 minutes to town. Ready to move in. $2,100,000
4425 Clares #82, Capitola Loma Vista Estates! Quiet, centrally located 55+ co-op community. Organized events & affordable HOA fee. 2BR/2BA home on spacious lot. Beautiful updated kitchen. Open porch, added sunroom. This home has much to offer & is a special find. Walk to Capitola Mall & the Village. $365,000
1572 San Andreas Rd, La Selva Beach w Stunning multi-level 5BR/4. Ne 5BA, 4,064sf home is perched on a hill. This modern, custom home is only 9 years old. Panoramic views from the master retreat deck on 3rd floor. 12 ft ceilings in living room, gas fireplace & French doors. 2 private units w/kitchenettes attached to main home. $1,475,000
720 Pleasant Valley Ln, Aptos Mostly single level, sunny ridge top, 3BR/2.5BA, 2,353 sq ft home on 1.43 acres. Custom hand crafted oak built-ins throughout & updated custom oak floors. Large family/rec room featuring wet bar, pool table, ping pong table, dart board. Storage sheds, oversized 2-car garage. $1,195,000
999 Old San Jose Rd #23, Soquel YES! There IS a Beautiful 2BR/2BA manufactured home under $350k! Spacious kitchen, Granite counters, high ceilings, wood floors, dual pane windows, new carpet, fresh paint, LOW space rent & a pet is welcome! SO CLEAN!! A MUST SEE! $345,000
165 Tiburon Ct, Seascape Walk to the beach, Seascape Resort & Tennis Club, nearby shops and restaurants from this move-in ready courtside condo with many upgrades! Versatile open floorplan, 2 master suites with private balconies & a 2-car attached garage. $869,000
7117 Somerset Ct, Aptos Stunning 4BR/2.5BA, 1,852sf home close to Cabrillo College. MBR, full bath, laundry downstairs. Built-in caninetry, bright kitchen & dining room, elegant yet cozy living room. Skylights, carved banisters, wood flooring. Immaculate garage. Seacliff State Beach just around the corner. $874,000
46 Sears Cl, Soquel Clean, comfortable, move in ready 3BR/2.5BA home in super convenient Soquel location. This lovingly maintained home is located on a quiet street close to beaches, Capitola Village & Cabrillo College. New carpet & paint, versatile open floorplan with fenced back yard & attached 2-car garage. $799,000
704 Encino Dr, Rio Del Mar Lovely 3BR/2BA home in the trees on sunny spot near the top of the hill. Loving remodeled from head to toe. Move-in ready. Open floor plan. Living area has wall to wall & ceiling to floor windows. Minutes from beaches, great schools, easy freeway access. $699,000
151 Camino Pacifico, Aptos Beautiful contemporary 3BR/2. 5BA, 1,584 sq ft home tucked away in coveted Seascape neighborhood. Location can’t be beat! Vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, fireplace in living area. Dining room slider opens to wood deck & lush landscaping. Enjoy the Beach Lifestyle! $849,000
122 Melba Ct, Soquel Impeccable, well maintained 3BR/2BA, 1,586sf home has all you’ve been looking for: Gourmet kitchen, open beam ceilings, fireplace, wet bar & built-in cabinets/book shelves in cozy living room. Hardwood flooring, updated windows, fresh paint. Deck off LR. Expansive backyard. $839,900
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320 Rio Del Mar Blvd, Aptos Turn-key, 5-star rated beach house & permitted vacation rental. EZ walk to beach & restaurants in exclusive Rio Del Mar/Cement ship area. New glass garage door, hardwood floors, open floor plan, newer appliances. Large level lot, fenced back yard w/artist or home office cottage. $1,199,000 e! us Ho h ac Be
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SOQUEL 100 N Rodeo Gulch #136, Soquel Lovely 2BR/2BA, 1,440 sq ft home. Wonderfully maintained & ready to move it! Spacious living/dining room, lots of natural light opens to large kitchen. Large master bedroom & bath. Separate laundry room. 2-car covered carport & storage shed. Small yard. Clubhouse, pool, rec room. $310,000 ! ee tS us M A
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R E A L E STAT E FEATURED HOMES SANTA CRUZ
BROOKDALE
SOUTH SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
2545 Benson Ave, Santa Cruz Luxury Subdivision! Sunny, w secluded cul-de-sac near Santa Ne Cruz Gardens. Ocean views & green belt access. Custom 4BR/3.5BA, 3,480sf home. Tasteful finishes & amenities. Radiant heat flooring throughout. Custom closet systems, smart wiring, hdwd floors, chef’s kitchen, & so much more. $2,675,000
925 Forest Ave, Brookdale Nice sunny location surrounded by redwoods. Two story 1,920 sq ft home. First level, 1BR/1BA with a kitchen and living room. Top floor, 2BR/1BA with a kitchen and living room. Property is in need of some TLC. $499,000
758 Haines Ranch Rd, Watsonville w Relax and Enjoy this 3BR/2BA, Ne 2,025 sq ft home on 17+ acres. Updated kitchen with granite counters & stainless appliances. Spacious bedrooms, vaulted ceilings. 3-car garage w/separate 2,560sf workshop. Space for horses, gardening, hobbies & all of your toys! $1,699,999
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2395 Delaware Ave #44, Santa Cruz Enjoy life at the edge of the Pacific! Recently remodeled 2BR/2BA home located on a corner lot in a beautiful 40+ park. Hardwood flooring, quality & comfort! Ocean view from living room. Heated swimming pool, spa, sauna, bbq area, fitness center & clubhouse. Planned & organized events. $219,000 2395 Delaware Ave #150, Santa Cruz Beautiful Oceanside 55+ De Anza Park on the Westside! Short walk along quiet community road & paths to the beach. Amenities include a saltwater pool, hot tub, sauna, club house & bbq area. Built in 2013, 3BR/2BA, 1,272sf mfg home. 20% of homeowners may be 40+. $162,500
SCOTTS VALLEY
BEN LOMOND 1144 Dundee Ave, Ben Lomond Lots of possibilities with this versatile property. Workshop. The sale includes the adjacent 4,574 sf parcel. Please call listing agent for details. $449,000
120 Lake Dr #6, Boulder Creek WOW! New Kitchen, Appliances, Bathroom Upgraded. Stunning, sunny 18th Green view, open floor plan, double pane windows, newer wood floors, Great Price. Great Location. EZ 45-minute commute to Silicon Valley. Wood burning fireplace. $329,999
SOUTH SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
PRUNEDALE 15665 Plaza Serena, Prunedale Very private updated 5BR/4BA, 2,726 sf home in Prunedale. Main home connected to guest unit by enclosed hallway. 2 full garages & separate bkyds. Deck area in back. Fruit trees in front. New furnace in main home, new stove & fridge in guest unit. All on 3.08 acres. 15 minutes to beach. $960,000
270 Hames Rd #13, Corralitos Beautiful updated 2BR/1.5BA, 1440sf home in Rancho Corralitos, a picturesque Senior Park on over 40 acres, stunning views in all directions. Open floor plan, bamboo floors throughout, modern kitchen. New decking, fruit trees & garden areas. Spacious shed w/wkbench & storage. $399,000 270 Hames Rd #43, Corralitos Million $ views from this 2BR/2BA home overlooking the hills of Corralitos. Remodeled unit, open kitchen & cozy family room. Gas wood stove, decking, newer roof. Private location in highly desirable 55+ coop park with lots of amenities. Must see this one. $525,000 ! ed ist tL s Ju
Don’t let the stress of the sale take the wind out of your sails.
2038 Eureka Canyon Rd, Corralitos Seller says sell now! 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2,719 per assessor records on 2.5+ majestic acres! Amazing outdoor space - enjoy the sun & stars - plenty of room for extended family. Come visit but be warned you will love this one! X-Street: Upper Highlands/Eureka Canyon. $799,000
Aptos 688.7434 • Santa Cruz 426.4100 • Scotts Valley 438.2300 • Watsonville 722.8874 BaileyProperties.com Sales • Property Management • Vacation Rentals • Mortgage • Relocation DRE#1319514
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | DECEMBER 4-10, 2019
111 Bean Creek Rd #129, Scotts Valley w Stair-free, sunny end unit with Ne all the bells & whistles. Two bedrooms and 2 full baths. Designer touches throughout with carrera herringbone fireplace surround, custom paint, and beautiful flooring. Big sunny deck to enjoy. Complex pool. Best Schools and easy commute location. $539,900 g! tin Lis
BOULDER CREEK
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R E A L E STAT E JOHN SKILLICORN Realtor®
CALBRE #01875872
831-818-1540 | www.JohnSkillicorn.com | johnskillicorn@att.net
DECEMBER 4-10, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
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R E A L E STAT E CO M PA N Y SA N TA C R U Z CO U N T Y
I N
FEATURED PROPERTY
FEATURED PROPERTY
FEATURED PROPERTY
FEATURED PROPERTY
618 SAND DOLLAR LN, LA SELVA BEACH 3 Beds | 2.5 Baths | 2,037 sq. ft. | $1,700,000
5520 FREEDOM BLVD, APTOS 4 Beds | 3.5 Baths | 3,500 sq. ft. | $1,275,000
328 ARTHUR AVE, APTOS 4 Beds | 2.5 Baths | 1,810 sq. ft. | $1,225,000
409 TOWNSEND DR, APTOS 4 Beds | 2.5 Baths | 2,349 sq. ft. | $1,150,000
Angelica Martinez-Curiel
831.818.0100
5 5
P E N N Y
L A N E ,
S U I T E
A BUYERS GALLERY OF FINE HOMES®
Sandi McGinnis-Garcia
831.818.8971
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831.345.7213 C A L I FO R N I A
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ORDER ONLINE / PICK UP ONLY Follow us on social media THCSoquel
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HIGH TECH
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Find your kind. View our full menu at kindpeoples.com
3600 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz 8am – 10pm Daily
533 Ocean Street, Santa Cruz 8am – 9pm 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 12/9 /19
BUTCHER SHOP
Compare & Save
■ IZZE Sparkling Juice 4Pk Bottles, 12oz/ ALL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb, 4.99 only corn-fed Midwest pork, Rocky free-range ■ SAN PELLEGRINO Italian Sparkling chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, Beverage 6Pk Cans, All Flavors, 11.15oz/ wild-caught seafood. Boar’s Head products. 4.99 +CRV BEEF
HARISSA-MARINATED SIRLOIN WINE & FOOD TOP PAIRING Ingredients
■ TRI TIPS, USDA Choice/ 7.98B Lb ■ FLANK STEAKS, USDA Choice/ 7.98 Lb ■ TOP SIRLOIN USDA Choice/ 6.98 Lb
■ SANTA CRUZ ORGANIC Lemonades, 32oz/ 1.99 ■ HIGH BALL ENERGY DRINK, 17.5oz/ 1.69 +CRV
PORK
■ C20 COCONUT WATER Original & With Pulp,
■ PORK LOIN ROAST, Boneless/ 3.98 Lb ■ PORK SHOULDER ROAST, Boneless/ 3.29
2 lbs top sirloin steaks, trimmed of fat (about 1-1/2 inches thick) 4 tablespoons olive oil 4 garlic cloves 2 tablespoons brown sugar 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves 5 teaspoons harissa Salt
Directions
17.5oz/ 1.89
SAUSAGE
Local Bakeries “Fresh Daily”
■ MILD GARLIC & ROMANO CHEESE/ 5.98 Lb ■ GARLIC & BASIL/ 5.98 Lb ■ BEER BRATWURST/ 5.98 Lb ■ VINO & FORMAGGIO/ 5.98 Lb ■ ROASTED BELL PEPPER & CARAMELIZED ■ ONION/ 5.98 Lb
■ BECKMANN’S FRANCESE ROLLS/ 3.09
■ BAY SHRIMP MEAT Fully Cooked/ 14.98 Lb ■ COOKED PRAWNS LARGE, Peeled & Deveined/ 13.98 Lb ■ PACIFIC RED SNAPPER FILLETS/ 6.39 Lb
■ TILLAMOOK SHREDDED CHEESE “Both Kinds”/
FISH
Cut the steak lengthwise in half and slice each half across at an angle into 2-inch wide triangles.
Combine 2 tbsp olive oil, garlic, sugar, soy sauce, thyme and 2 tsp harissa sauce into a zip bag (or large bowl) and add beef. Close the bag and mix by squeezing the bag with your fingers to coat PRODUCE all the beef pieces (or toss in bowl to coat each piece) and cover. Marinate at room temperature for 30 minutes, or refrigerate at least California Fresh, Blemish-Free, Organic, Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organics, Happy 2 hours (or up to overnight), mixing occasionally. Boy Farms Drain the beef. Divide and cook in two batches in a large skillet ■ CRANBERRIES Premium Quality/ 1.99 Ea (or cook them in two skillets simultaneously – preferred). Add 1 tbsp olive oil to the skillet and heat on high. Add beef, taking ■ GREEN BEANS Fresh and Tender/ 1.99 Lb ■ RED YAMS & SWEET POTATOES Top care not to overcrowd. Cook until well browned on all Quality/ 1.49 Lb sides for a total of 6-7 minutes for medium rare. Whisk 2 tbsp olive oil, 1 tbsp harissa and 2 tbsp water in a small bowl to blend. Season this sauce with salt. Drizzle sauce over the steak and serve.
Wine Pairing
Soquel Vineyards Trinity Rosso Shoppers Special 9.99!!!
■ CELERY Always Fresh/ 1.49 Ea ■ RUSSET POTATOES Peak Quality/ .79 Lb ■ AVOCADOS Ripe and Ready to Eat/ 1.49 Ea ■ YUKON GOLD POTATOES Great Roasted or Baked/ .99 Lb ■ SATSUMA MANDARINS, Sweet and Easy to Peel/ 1.79 Lb ■ BROCCOLI CROWNS Great as a Side Dish/ 1.79 Lb ■ YELLOW ONIONS Large Size, Great Flavor/ .49 Lb
■ WHOLE GRAIN CALIFORNIA BLACK/ 4.19 ■ KELLY’S SOUR CHEDDAR, 16oz/ 4.09 ■ SUMANO’S SLICED CIABATTA LOAF/ 4.49 ■ SUMANO’S CIABATTA STEAK ROLLS, 4PK/ 3.99
Delicatessen 6.09 Ea ■ PILLSBURY PIE CRUST “America’s #1”/ 5.99 Ea ■ BOAR’S HEAD HUMMUS All Flavors/ 2.99 Ea ■ KAROUN DAIRIES GOAT MILK CHEESE & FETA/ 6.69 Ea ■ TRUE STORY SMOKED TURKEY BREAST/ 6.99Ea
Cheese - Best Selection in Santa Cruz ■ MILD CHEDDAR “rBST-FREE” ■ LOAF CUTS/ 3.29 Lb
Average Cuts/ 3.49 Lb
■ COLBY JACK “Great Melted”/ 3.19 Lb ■ NORWEGIAN JARLSBERG “Whole Wheel Cuts”/ 9.99 Lb ■ SECRET DE SCEY “Ash Veined Center”/ 8.69
Shop Local First ■ WONNIE’S SAUCE MARINADES, 12oz/ 3.99 ■ TWINS KITCHEN MUSTARDS, 9oz/ 5.99 ■ CALIFORNIA JAM QUEEN, 9oz/ 7.49 ■ OUTLAND JAVA CO. COFFEE BEANS, 12oz/ 7.69 ■ PACIFIC COOKIE CO., COOKIES, 16oz/ 8.99
WINE & SPIRITS Best Buys, Local, Regional, International
Beer ■ LAGUNITAS BREWING CO. Lager, 12Pk Cans, 12oz/ 9.99 ■ 21st AMENDMENT Watermelon Wheat, 12Pk Cans, 12oz/ 9.99 ■ SIERRA NEVADA Asst 6Pks, 12 oz/ 8.99 +CRV ■ STICKMEN BREWING CO. “IPA” or “The Bee’s Knees” 6Pk Cans, 12oz/ 7.99 ■ MAD RIVER BREWING “Steelhead XP” 6Pk, 12oz/ 8.99 +CRV
Quality Gin ■ JUNIPERO (94BTI)/ 22.99 ■ AVIATION American (97WE)/ 23.99 ■ VENUS NO. 1 “Made in Santa Cruz”/ 29.99 ■ ST. GEORGE, 3 Kinds, All Great/ 31.99 ■ TANQUERAY TEN (97BTI)/ 29.99
Best Buy Whites ■ 2016 SECRET RESERVE Sauvignon Blanc (91JS, Reg. 12.99)/ 7.99 ■ 2017 PAZO SERANTELLOS Albariño (Reg 17.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2017 HESS SELECT Sauvignon Blanc (Reg 13.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2016 NOBILO Chardonnay (Reg. 15.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2015 ZACA MESA Z Blanc (91WE, Reg 24.99)/ 8.99
Best Buy Pinot Noirs ■ 2016 SANTA RITA Pinot Noir, Secret Reserve (93JS, Reg 16.99)/ 9.99 ■ 2013 SILVERTIP Pinot Noir Sandstone (Reg 26.99)/ 13.99 ■ 2015 TIN BARN Rocci Vineyard (Reg 33.99)/ 16.99 ■ 2015 DECELLE-VILLA Bourgogne (Reg 21.99)/ 11.99 ■ 2017 BERINGER Founders Estate (91WE)/ 9.99
Connoisseur’s Corner Santa Cruz Mountain Pinot Noir ■ 2017 SOQUEL VINEYARDS Saveria (94WE)/ 36.99 ■ 2016 ALFARO Lester (94WA)/ 39.99 ■ 2017 SANTE ARCANGELI Split Rail (94WE)/ 47.99 ■ 2015 BEAUREGARD Coast Grade (94WA)/ 59.99 ■ 2015 MOUNT EDEN Estate (96WE)/ 64.99
Marie Hoffman-Kitchen, 35-Year Customer, Santa Cruz
SHOP PER’S SPOTLIG HTS
Occupation: Yoga instructor Hobbies: Yoga, family life, baking, camping, skiing, walking, the beach
Korky Hoffman-Kitchen, 12-Year Customer, Santa Cruz
Occupation: Yoga instructor Hobbies: Yoga, family life, camping, skiing, walking, the beach, keyboards/synthesizer Who or what first got you shopping here? MARIE:“I can remember coming here with my parents when I was around 3. I always looked forward to getting candies from the butcher counter, just like my kids now do.” KORKY:“I was living in the neighborhood before I met Marie, and loved Shopper’s old-school meat counter, the wines and the eclectic collection of unusual specialty products, which are still a big draw for me.” MARIE:“Shopper’s is locally owned, which makes a big difference in how it’s run.” KORKY: “I find it attractive that Shopper’s has been around since 1938. It feels solid to shop here.”
What’s generally on your shopping list? MARIE: “I don’t eat meat but I do like Shopper’s seafood, their wide assortment of dried pasta, their local eggs and the fresh salsas.Their chocolate department is the finest in town!” KORKY:“California produce is the best on the planet and much of what Shopper’s carries is local. I enjoy making Asian noodle dishes and curries, and grilling with Shopper’s amazing meats.They employ real butchers who offer tips and will special-cut whatever you need.” MARIE: “Shopper’s has quite the assortment of beers.” KORKY:“Also fine Scotch’s and liquors in general.”
Are you shopping here for holiday meals? KORKY:“Yes. My family will be in from England. ChrIstmas we’ll make what many do for Thanksgiving: a turkey (Diestel), potatoes, veggies, especially Brussels sprouts, and we’ll up pick an apple pie, my favorite!” MARIE:“And wine.” KORKY:“They carry fancy to everyday drinking wines with some amazing bargains.” MARIE:“Shopping here for holiday meals is fun because of Shopper’s community vibe. Our kids, Finn and Chloe, feel at home because of the staff.” KORKY:“Shopper’s is always efficient at the check-out with lots of checkers and baggers.”
“Shopping here for holiday meals is fun because of Shopper’s community vibe.”
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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