6.26.19
SANTA CRUZ EXPAT’S BOOK ABOUT AMERICANS MIGRATING TO MEXICO TELLS ‘WHY WE LEFT’ BY WALLACE BAINE P22
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INSIDE Volume 45, No.13 June 26-July 2, 2019
LITTER RIP Concern about syringe waste leads to push for needle exchange reforms P14
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SOUTH LANDING U.S. women who’ve moved to Mexico explain their motives in new book P22
ARTISTIC INDEX
FEATURES Opinion 4 News 14 Cover Story 22 A&E 32 Events 36
Film 50 Dining 54 Risa’s Stars 60 Classifieds 61
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Santa Cruz’s experimental music scene gets a boost from Indexical P32
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OPINION
EDITOR’S NOTE It doesn’t always register at first when someone you’ve been seeing around Santa Cruz for years seems to vanish, especially if they were more of an acquaintance you’d run into on Pacific Avenue every so often—maybe shared a mutual friend or two with, or worked together at one point—but didn’t know all that well. Eventually, however, something clicks in your head: “Whatever happened to so-and-so?” I certainly had that moment about Janet Blaser, especially since she was part of the same local media landscape that I was back in the early 2000s, and I was used to reading (and running) her stuff, and seeing her at various things around town. But I wasn’t expecting her name to come up when Wallace Baine told me about a book by a former
LETTERS UNDERSTAND THE HISTORY
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Re: “Hack Channels” (GT, 6/19): Thank
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you for the reporting on El Salvador by J. Pierce. We in S.C. are fortunate to have some El Salvadorans among us, and as an educator who’s worked with them, I know them to be especially loving, caring, hard working people. Most of them have been through trauma and still experience worry and grief because of the instability, poverty and violence which continues to affect their families. It’s good to understand more history and know about Les Gardner and others who are supporting positive changes. It would be good to include information about ongoing efforts that we all might contribute to. It is so obvious, as pointed out, that if we share our resources for education and positive solutions, we all benefit. Also, I appreciate the concise, readable articles in GT concerning important issues like Credit Union/banking that I’d otherwise be uninformed about. NANDA WILSON | FELTON
TOP OF THE LIST Re: “Hack Channels”: I am so thrilled to see both the editorial and interview of
Santa Cruz resident about finding a new life in Mexico. “Do you remember Janet Blaser?” he asked me. “Of course,” I said. “So that’s what she’s doing now.” When I saw the pictures of her living it up in Mazatlán—a city I’ve visited myself and really enjoyed—I definitely had a momentary pang of longing for the expat life. In a time when there’s a hugely politicized attempt to frame Mexico as a scary, suspicious place, Blaser’s book Why We Left, which features stories from 27 women who have moved there from the U.S., is especially timely. As Wallace writes in his cover story this week, these contributors are not trying to sell readers on emigrating to Mexico, but their stories about the hardships and benefits of making that leap—one that, let’s face it, a lot of people here talk about in one form or another when someone they really don’t like gets elected in the U.S.— provide a window into the real issues with living on both sides of the border. STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Les Gardner. I have known and worked alongside Les for a number of years and what the article missed is that Les’ heart is what drives him. He sometimes hurts for people, and then digs in to correct what he considers wrong. He is extremely generous with his time, has a ferocious spirit and does not stop until the task he has set forth in front of him is complete. He works both quietly and effectively. Thank you to the Good Times for highlighting Les Gardner, who is on the top of the list of those in our community who make a difference. LESLIE STEINER | FELTON
ONLINE COMMENTS RE: PUBLIC BANKING Thanks to Jennifer Wadsworth for the article on public banks. Just a heads up, Santa Cruz has its own active group lobbying for public banking called People for Public Banking. The Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors, the City of Santa Cruz, and the City of Watsonville have all signed on to support AB 857, a bill which when passed will allow for licensing of >8
PHOTO CONTEST THIS MOMENT Snapped at last weekend’s performance by Niger-born singer-songwriter Bombino at the Catalyst. Photograph by Amy Buchanan.
Submit to photos@goodtimes.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250 dpi.
GOOD IDEA
GOOD WORK
DON’T FEEL POWERLESS
LEARNING THE CORNER
County leaders are reminding residents that power outages may happen this summer. To mitigate the risk of catastrophic forest fires, Pacific Gas & Electric will shut off portions of the electricity grid during periods of high temperatures and extreme winds. Shut-offs could last for days. Individuals relying on respiratory devices, dialysis, feeding devices, motorized equipment, and refrigerated medication are all at risk during extended power outages. Those who rely on such equipment can fill out a brief survey at https:// www.surveymonkey.com/r/YRBCNZN.
Georgiana Bruce Kirby Preparatory School has received a $200,000 matching grant from the Monterey Peninsula Foundation to build a new recreation area. The space will include a sports court, an amphitheater, an outdoor classroom, and a community gathering space. The campaign to complete the Kirby School campus is now more twothirds of the way to its $1.275 million goal. Groundbreaking will begin this month on a project to convert one of Kirby School’s exterior parking lots into an acre of studentcentric space.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“I have learned that if you must leave a place that you have lived in and loved and where all your yesteryears are buried deep, leave it any way except a slow way, leave it the fastest way you can.” — BERYL MARKHAM CONTACT
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LOCAL TALK
What is your favorite music venue in Santa Cruz? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT
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Kuumbwa Jazz Center. They’ve got world-class acts every week, and it’s the only place you can really hear something swinging in town. DUNCAN SHIPTON MUSICIAN/TEACHER | APTOS
I love going to the Crow’s Nest. You see a lot of different artists right on the ocean for free. CALI KING PUBLIC FIGURE | SANTA CRUZ
The Crepe Place. I think it has the warmest vibe, and I love that it has a lot of consistent acts, like Funk Night. LAUREN ALBERT PRIVATE TUTOR | SANTA CRUZ
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The Rio, because Folk Yeah puts on shows there and I like the shows they promote. BRANDON OWENS BEERTENDER | SANTA CRUZ
Capitola Twilight Concerts in the summer. I think it’s a great place to have your families and friends together. LISA SEEGER HOSPITAL REGISTRATION | SOQUEL
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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of June 26 ARIES Mar21–Apr19 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Discipline your inner flame. Use your radiance constructively. Your theme is controlled fire. August: Release yourself from dwelling on what’s amiss or off-kilter. Find the inspiration to focus on what’s right and good. September: Pay your dues with joy and gratitude. Work hard in service to your beautiful dreams. October: You can undo your attractions to “gratifications” that aren’t really very gratifying. November: Your allies can become even better allies. Ask them for more. December: Be alert for unrecognized value and hidden resources.
TAURUS Apr20–May20 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: If you choose to play one of life’s trickier games, you must get trickier yourself. August: Shedding irrelevant theories and unlearning old approaches will pave the way for creative breakthroughs. September: Begin working on a new product or project that will last a long time. October: Maybe you don’t need that emotional crutch as much as you thought. November: Explore the intense, perplexing, interesting feelings until you’re cleansed and healed. December: Join forces with a new ally or deepen an existing alliance.
GEMINI May21–June20 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: It’s time to take fuller advantage of a resource you’ve been neglecting or underestimating. August: For a limited time only, two plus two equals five. Capitalize on that fact by temporarily becoming a two-plus-two-equals-five-type of person. September: It’s time and you’re ready to discover new keys to fostering interesting intimacy and robust collaboration. October: The boundaries are shifting on the map of the heart. That will ultimately be a good thing. November: If you do what you fear, you’ll gain unprecedented power over the fear. December: What’s the one thing you can’t live without? Refine and deepen your relationship to it.
CANCER Jun21–Jul22 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Acquire a new personal symbol that thrills your mind and mobilizes your soul. August: Reconfigure the way you deal with money. Get smarter about your finances. September: It’s time to expedite your learning. But streetwise education is more useful than formal education. Study the book of life. October: Ask for more help than you normally do. Aggressively build your support. November: Creativity is your superpower. Reinvent any part of your life that needs a bolt of imaginative ingenuity. December: Love and care for what you imagine to be your flaws and liabilities.
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LE0 Jul23–Aug22
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Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Transform something that’s semi-ugly into something that’s useful and winsome. August: Go to the top of the world and seek a big vision of who you must become. September: Your instinct for worthy and constructive adventures is impeccable. Trust it. October: Be alert for a new teacher with a capacity to teach you precisely what you need to learn. November: Your mind might not guide you perfectly, but your body and soul will. December: Fresh hungers and budding fascinations should alert you to the fact that deep in the genius part of your soul, your master plan is changing.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: I’d love to see you phase out wishywashy wishes that keep you distracted from your burning, churning desires. August: A story that began years ago begins again. Be proactive about changing the themes you’d rather not repeat. September: Get seriously and daringly creative about living in a more expansive world. October: Acquire a new tool or skill that will enable you to carry out your mission more effectively. November: Unanticipated plot twists can help heal old dilemmas
about intimacy. December: Come up with savvy plans to eliminate bad stress and welcome good stress.
LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Say this every morning: “The less I have to prove and the fewer people I have to impress, the smarter I’ll be.” August: Escape an unnecessary limitation. Break an obsolete rule. Override a faded tradition. September: What kind of “badness” might give your goodness more power? October: You’re stronger and freer than you thought you were. Call on your untapped power. November: Narrowing your focus and paring down your options will serve you beautifully. December: Replace what’s fake with the Real Thing.
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Stretch yourself. Freelance, moonlight, diversify, and expand. August: Having power over other people is less important than having power over yourself. Manage your passions like a wizard! September: Ask the big question. And be ready to act expeditiously when you get the big answer. October: I think you can arrange for the surge to arrive in manageable installments. Seriously. November: Dare to break barren customs and habits that are obstructing small miracles and cathartic breakthroughs. December: Don’t wait around hoping to be given what you need. Instead, go after it. Create it yourself, if necessary.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Can you infuse dark places with your intense light without dimming your intense light? Yes! August: It’s time for an archetypal Sagittarian jaunt, quest or pilgrimage. September: The world around you needs your practical idealism. Be a role model who catalyzes good changes. October: Seek out new allies and connections that can help you with your future goals. November: Be open to new and unexpected ideas so as to get the emotional healing you long for. December: Shed old, worn-out self-images. Reinvent yourself. Get to know your depths better.
CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: You have an enhanced capacity to feel at peace with your body, to not wish it were different from what it naturally is. August: You can finally solve a riddle you’ve been trying to solve for a long time. September: Make your imagination work and play twice as hard. Crack open seemingly closed possibilities. October: Move up at least one rung on the ladder of success. November: Make yourself more receptive to blessings and help that you have overlooked or ignored. December: You’ll learn most from what you leave behind—so leave behind as much as possible.
AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: I’ll cry one tear for you, then I’ll cheer. August: Plant seeds in places that hadn’t previously been on your radar. September: You may seem to take a wrong turn, but it’ll take you where you need to go. October: Open your mind and heart as wide as you can. Be receptive to the unexpected. November: I bet you’ll gain a new power, higher rank or greater privilege. December: Send out feelers to new arrivals who may be potential helpers.
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 Here are your fortune cookie-style horoscopes for the months ahead. July: Your creative powers are at a peak. Use them with flair. August: Wean yourself from pretend feelings and artificial motivations and inauthentic communications. September: If you want to have greater impact and more influence, you can. Make it happen! October: Love is weird but good. Trust the odd journey it takes you on. November: If you cultivate an appreciation for paradox, your paradoxical goals will succeed. December: Set firm deadlines. Have fun disciplining yourself.
Homework: What were the circumstances in which you were most vigorously alive? freewillastrology.com.
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OPINION
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public banks. Right now, the Department of Business Oversight grants licensing for commercial banks, but there is no method to apply to be a public bank. This bill will allow cities, counties, regions and combinations of the same to apply to become a public banking institution. — LYNDA FRANCIS
RE: DISC GOLF A few corrections: Walter Morrison invented the Frisbee in 1948 and sold the rights to Wham-o, Ed Hedricks improved the design by adding the concentric rings on the top, called the rings of Headricks. It was Dan Roddick, not Riddick.
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In Santa Cruz, we started playing Frisbee golf at UCSC with object golf, such as fire hydrants and poles. The course ran through the campus and the quarry was the hardest hole. The next course was at Cabrillo. The suburban courses had the undesirable buildings and crowds during class time. Tom Schott found DeLa and we would work a job during most of the day and then go clean and build the course after work. It wasn’t until after the course was built (4×4 posts) that it became popular and Tom started World Disc that it needed permission from the City.
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WELLNESS
IN YOUR HEAD Limited exposure to loud noise, coupled with wearing earplugs, can reduce the likelihood of developing tinnitus and hearing loss.
Tinnitus, or that sound of ringing in the ears, affects 1 in 5 Americans BY GEORGIA JOHNSON
T
here have been many times I’ve come away from a concert or Fourth of July fireworks with my ears buzzing. I usually chalk it up to a great time, maybe the liquor, or both. When I finally go to sleep in a daze, thinking about how good the show was, it’s easy not to give a second thought to the background noise still reverberating in my head hours later. The next day, I’d
wake up and the noise would be gone—and I’ve always taken that temporary quality for granted. For more than 50 million Americans, the ringing, hissing or humming background noise won’t stop after a few hours. It continues for days, weeks, months and, for some 2 million people, it never goes away at all, impairing their dayto-day life. Prolonged exposure to loud noises increases the risk of
developing the constant perceived ringing, but any damage can cause symptoms. The receptive issue—that ringing sound—is often diagnosed as tinnitus, says Santa Cruz Ear Nose and Throat Doctor Daniel Spilman. It’s common for patients to come in complaining about ongoing ringing, Spilman says. He and his two partners generally see a few people per day about tinnitus, which adds
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
Hearing Damage
up to about 10% of their clients. The doctors start by asking patients to rank the ringing and discomfort they are experiencing. “What it comes down to is, if you hear ringing, does it bother you? The levels of bothersomeness start with, ‘Well I notice it a little bit, but it doesn’t bother me,’ then moves up to, ‘I notice it when I’m trying to fall asleep and it’s irritating,’ to, ‘Well, I hear it all the time and sometimes I can’t hear people over it, I can’t concentrate or get work done. It’s driving me crazy,’” Spilman says. “Obviously that last group is a pretty miserable group. Most people don’t fall into that group. Most people are in the mild level of symptoms, where they notice it and it occasionally irritates or distracts them.” Repeated, loud noise exposure can lead to permanent damage to the inner ear, but Spilman says that alcohol coupled with loud noise can also exacerbate the issue—not ideal for those that frequent concerts, or on the Fourth of July. “There are tiny hairs in there that pick up the vibrations of sound, but when you hit them with a high enough pulse of energy, you actually kill them,” he says. “Not every time, but repeatedly the tiny hairs die off and you have spots in your ear that aren’t picking up sound anymore.” Spilman says that one theory for the symptoms of tinnitus is that when the brain sends signals to the ear, it doesn’t receive anything back from particular spots. The perceived, ongoing, ringing may come from that signal. But tinnitus doesn’t always stay forever. It can fade away, or it can come and go. Regardless, Spilman says the best thing to do after loud noise exposure is give the ears a break to prevent permanent injury. People who develop tinnitus are often exposed to sounds louder than noisy traffic—particularly those who work in construction, with firearms or in the music industry. But tinnitus can happen to anyone, regardless of workplace or background. Prevention mostly involves hearing protection. Overthe-ear headphones and earplugs are the best preventative >12
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measures to take for long periods of loud noise, but they aren’t always used since standard noisereduction earplugs can degrade the quality of music. While basic foam ear plugs are the go-to inexpensive solution to protect hearing, they block out sound rather than filtering it. This is probably why many people choose not to wear ear plugs, because they can “spoil the experience.” There are plenty of cheap, hi-fidelity ear plug options that don’t block sound altogether, but just let less sound through. Although they’re more expensive than foam ear plugs, they’re still available at around a $10 starting price. Beyond preventative measures, there aren’t many fixed one-time solutions for those experiencing tinnitus. One of the first steps is called masking, or playing loud background music or white noise to cover up or “mask” the noise. For people with more hearing loss, hearing aids, counseling and biofeedback can help teach the
brain to ignore certain signals. Not all services are covered by general health insurance, though, especially for more extreme cases. Many seek therapy or support groups for tinnitus, and there are research links between tinnitus and anxiety, depression, selfharm, or even suicide. It’s the most common disability for veterans. Around 1.5 million vets live with tinnitus, and in 2012, the country spent $1.2 billion on tinnitusrelated compensation to veterans, according to the American Tinnitus association. “You’re cured if it never comes back, right? But it’s not like we can do an X-ray and it’s gone,” Spilman says. “When you get it and you have good hearing, there is a very good chance that you will resolve it—especially if you don’t injure your ears again. Once you have hearing damage, you’ll probably be living with it, but it’s still very common that it fades away and disappears. Even if that happens, is it cured? We don’t know, it could come back.”
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NEWS PUFF OF SMOKE Tobacco retailers sweat new e-cigarette regulations and flavored nicotine bans BY HUGH MCCORMICK
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
[This is part one of a two-part series on vaping. Part two runs next week. — Editor]
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At the Mission Street Rotten Robbie gas station, a normally colorful display behind the counter now sits empty. General manager Ken Lazier has taken flavored tobacco products off the shelves. “A lot of people are coming in and asking, ‘You don’t have any of these?’” he says. “They think we’re sold out. And they just walk out the door.” The store is making changes to follow new regulations on flavored nicotine laid out by the Santa Cruz City Council in the fall. The council approved an ordinance banning the sale of flavored electronic cigarettes and liquids, as well as flavored tobacco products like cigarillos and flavored chewing and pipe tobacco. The county Board of Supervisors approved a similar ban this month, and the city of Capitola will consider a version on Thursday, June 27. Although the city of Santa Cruz’s ban has technically already gone into effect, enforcement won’t begin until 2020. The goal of the policy is to keep nicotine from ending up in the hands of kids. Tara Leonard, an educator with the Santa Cruz County Tobacco Education and Prevention Program, says that flavored nicotine products appeal to children at a time when more youth are vaping than ever before, with a 78% increase between 2017 and 2018 at the national level. “This is a relatively new product, and we really don’t know yet what the long-term effects are going to be,” she says. “We absolutely know that these devices are attractive to youth.” But once enforcement begins, businesses are going to take a big hit, says Jaime Rojas of the National Association of Tobacco Outlets (NATO). “It’s not just tobacco sales,” Rojas explains. Businesses also stand to lose revenue from snacks and everything else that customers buy when they come in to pick up their favorite e-cigarette flavors. NATO >18
TABLE TO HELP A 2018 display from the Harm Reduction Coalition offers a bevy of safety information
and materials for addicts. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
Point of Contention Amid litter concerns, county weighs changes to needle programs designed to halt spread of disease BY JACOB PIERCE
O
ne afternoon in September 2010, I was sorting plastic bottles for a man with a bedraggled beard who needed cash. This was in Portland, Oregon, and I was working a grocery store job that I was thrilled to have, given that autumn’s lackluster economic recovery in the shadow of the Great Recession. I was reaching into a shopping cart and tossing the bottles into various bins when I felt a prick on
my fingertip and noticed a squirt of blood. In the bottom of the shopping cart, I spotted a dirty syringe. I gave a cash voucher to the man who’d brought the bottles in and told him he had some nerve leaving a used needle in a cart that he was passing over to me. He told me that he had no idea what I was talking about, that the needle wasn’t his. “Hey, you should get yourself tested!” he shouted as I stormed back to the supermarket’s main building.
“Oh, ya think?” I yelled back. Thankfully, the tests for Hepatitis and HIV came back negative. Thinking back on the experience reminds me of a few lessons relevant to the debate over Santa Cruz County’s Syringe Services Program (SSP), also known as the needle exchange, which aims to prevent disease spread among injection drug users. First, the issues surrounding syringe waste are far from a Santa Cruz-only problem. That’s something supporters of syringe >16
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NEWS POINT OF CONTENTION <14 distribution have been keen to point out over the years. Another is that the risk of contracting a disease like HIV from a crusty needle is nearly nonexistent. It was something I knew at the time of my supermarket run in, and why it ultimately took me several months to get my final round of tests. But I was still scared, at least until I knew for sure that all the results were negative. While the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors debated possible changes to the needle exchange earlier this month, District 3 Supervisor Ryan Coonerty said that
accidental needle sticks have grown to be a health problem, and that public fear continues to grow. The county is over-emphasizing the aim of reducing the spread of disease, he said, at the expense of a separate goal to reduce litter. Coonerty added that the county should have a goal of no needles in public spaces. Parents and grandparents come up to him, he explained, and say that they will no longer take their kids to many public spaces because they saw a needle, or heard about one, at a beach or a park or a library. “As the father of young children, there is no conversation I can have
where, if my child steps on a needle, it’s OK because the relative chances of disease are small,” Coonerty, the board chair, said at a June 11 meeting.
SKIN DEEP This month, supervisors voted 5-0 to take action on changes to the needle exchange program, including initiating a study to learn more about the actual number of needles the county is distributing—and how many it gets back. Supervisor Bruce McPherson noted that the number of unique individual clients has fallen 40% over the last four years, even while the number of syringes >18
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TROLLING WITH IT After losing her local platform for spewing vitriol about “white genocide,” former KSCO radio host Georgia “Peach” Beardslee has resurfaced—not on another right-wing show on the Central Coast, but on an anti-Semitic online broadcast from the Middle East. “It’s a beautiful day here in Bolshevik, communist-run Santa Cruz,” Beardslee said during a May 18 interview on Inside the Eye—Live! with Dennis Fetcho (aka “The Fetch”), who says he’s a U.S. expat in Amman, Jordan. “I kinda feel like I’m coming out of the closet today.” Beardslee’s return to far-right broadcasting came just after her former boss of eight years, KSCO 1080 AM Owner Michael Zwerling, used his May 4 show to address the aftermath of a late April decision to end her twice-weekly program. “Because of my and our commitment to free speech, I allowed a monster to be created on the radio station,” the owner said. Zwerling, who is Jewish, who insisted that Beardslee had
“changed,” and that allegations of promoting hate speech “had become a distraction.” Staff at KSCO, Zwerling added, have faced a range of abuse. “Stinking, miserable, bleeping, Jew, gay, slimeball, crook,” he said of the backlash. “Never did I expect such unbelievable nastiness and personal slurs.” He didn’t get any sympathy from the former host of KSCO Presents: Georgia. “I wouldn’t shed one tear if someone did something dastardly to KSCO, the antiwhite radio station,” Beardslee said in her May 18 interview. Beardslee, who goes by @ peachescapitola on Twitter, speaks with a grandmotherly voice that at first almost makes it seem like her schtick could be an extreme act of performance art for notoriously liberal Santa Cruz. In a prime example of the hellscape of online posturing, the host who traffics in conspiracy theories and race baiting said of KSCO that, “These sub-humans are never fair … The most woke people were [on] my show.” The host won fans among other extremist pundits like The Fetch, who called her
“one of the great voices” for "European diaspora politics.” He praised Beardslee’s efforts to “re-moralize” Santa Cruz while employed by “a Jewishowned and operated station in KSCO.” What’s that old saying about the crazy racist snake coming back to bite you?
SHOW OFF Nuz’s ears perked up last week when Thomas Cussins, co-owner of the new Felton Music Hall, told GT that Grateful Dead tribute bands make a great fit for the beloved San Lorenzo Valley music venue once known as Don Quixote’s. You might even say it was— sorry we can’t resist—music to our ears … Now, don’t get the wrong idea—we’re not “dead heads” or anything. Seriously, our idea of an acid trip is a walk to the corner store to buy a quart of orange juice, and our favorite teddy bear is Fozzie from the Muppets. But we do know the county’s music scene. It so happens that the joint’s previous owner Bradd Barkan— who changed the venue’s name
from Don Quixote’s to Flynn’s Cabaret and Steakhouse— showed signs of steering away from the alt-country, psychedelic rock and world music vibes that made the space special. Before launching in late 2017, he told GT that he wanted to bring in different kinds of acts and threw shade at the approach of longtime booker Tom Miller, who left for a job at Michael’s on Main. Barkan said he wanted his spot to be, “a nice, high-quality five-star restaurant” with music. After a year and a half in business, Barkan, a realtor by trade, surely discovered how tough the industry really is. It’s a lesson he must’ve learned the hard way, since he took out the biggest loan in Santa Cruz Community Credit Union history, according to an advertisement that ran in a September 2018 issue of GT. Felton doesn’t need the biggest band names or the juiciest steaks. It simply longs for good music from a reliable venue that can stay above water. Cussins, who’s known locally for his work booking the Catalyst, says he’s ready to give the people what they want.
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CARTRIDGE FAMILY The city and county have taken action to ban flavored nicotine, including many electronic
cigarette liquids. A tobacco industry representative says those items can make up most of a vape shop’s sales.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
PUFF OF SMOKE <14
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represents more than half of all tobaccoselling businesses in Santa Cruz County, including Rotten Robbie. Rojas says that he asked Santa Cruz County officials for an economic impact report to show how much sales tax would be lost if the now-passed ordinance were to take effect. The county declined. In San Rafael—a community smaller than the city of Santa Cruz, with 59,000 people—city staff estimated that a similar proposed ban on the sale of flavored tobacco products could result in a loss of up to $100,000 in sales tax revenue annually. In communities with similar bans, stores like Rotten Robbie typically lose 20% of their overall business, Rojas says. For vape shops, he says that number rises to 50-70%. At Green Vapors in downtown Santa Cruz, flavored nicotine “e-liquids” represent
60-70% of the overall business, says Nolan Abreu, the shop’s manager, who argues that the products also help smokers get off cigarettes. Abreu and other vape shop employees, like Caine McClelland, owner of Santa Cruz Vapors, say they’ve always been serious about asking for identification before selling anyone e-cigarettes and flavors, and that they never sell to anyone under the age of 21. Damon Hancock, the tobacco compliance officer for the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office, said at an April 11 meeting that the county has not seen a major problem with local stores selling to minors. Lazier, Abreu and Rojas all believe that a prohibition on flavored tobacco products in Santa Cruz County will only create an underground economy for tobacco products. “Vaping won’t be as controlled, and people are still going to do it. There will be a black market,” says Abreu. “Prohibition
never works. It won’t work this time around.” Others have pointed out that the industries of flavored alcohol drinks and flavored cannabis also often appear to be marketing themselves as kid-friendly with colorful branding and large, edgy fonts. Leonard, from the county, says that she can’t comment on any of that, as her purview is tobacco. If the county loses tax revenue once the flavor ban goes into effect, she anticipates that, “We will be saving much more in health care and other expenses.” The county Board of Supervisors unanimously approved its new rules last spring, followed by the Santa Cruz City Council in November. When it comes to ramping up enforcement, the county “will give retailers six months,” Leonard says. “Plenty of time to sell their entire stock.”
distributed has nearly tripled. Part of that shift comes from a local group of volunteers called the Harm Reduction Coalition of Santa Cruz County, which gets needles from the SSP and distributes them off-site to a community of injection drug users. The coalition has been fending off controversy over its efforts, and though it filed an application with the state to expand services and create an official mobile exchange in Santa Cruz County that would be certified by California’s health department, it has since been withdrawn. The Board of Supervisors also supported installing more syringe disposal kiosks throughout the county, with the approval of local cities. Coonerty will write a letter to neighboring jurisdictions about the proposal. After staff presents more analysis this fall, supervisors will look at making other changes, including possibly regulating the Harm Reduction Coalition’s independent exchanges and limiting the number of needles that individuals, including volunteers, can pick up from the county. To compensate, the board may expand the number of hours that the county’s SSP is open. Over the past couple of years, the county has taken in 50% more needles, including the syringes collected at kiosks, than it has given out. Coonerty noted that when the Ross homeless encampment closed down, there were hundreds of needles on the ground and in the San Lorenzo River area, even though there was a kiosk just yards away. He also called that the Coral Street area, where the Harm Reduction Coalition has been running needle distributions “a public policy failure,” since it’s near educational and summer programs. He compared it to “an open-air drug market.”
DEALING WITH IT Research has not shown that more tightly regulated exchanges actually reduce litter waste. Denise Elerick, the leader of the Harm Reduction Coalition, says needle litter does worry her, but she says that by keeping >20
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infections from spreading, syringe access reduces the risk that a given needle, discarded or not, will carry disease. Arnold Leff, the county’s recently retired health services officer, says that the Harm Reduction Coalition has filled a major void after the county began cutting back hours for syringe distribution at its Emeline health campus. “The majority of people who inject drugs today will not be injecting drugs in 10 years, if they survive,” says Leff, who retired at the end of May. “We need to recognize that a lot of these people who use drugs are our family members. And if we don’t provide safe treatment, they will develop Hepatitis C or HIV or something like [them], and that will spread into the community. Once they get over the hump, they can become tax-paying citizens. We need to help them get over the hump and also prevent them from doing personal damage.” County administrators picked Leff’s successor Gail Newel, who the Board of Supervisors approved and who will step into her new role July 1. On Sunday evenings in the Harvey West neighborhood, Ruthy, an injection drug user who asked GT not to use her last name, has been going to Coral Street near the Homeless Services. There, she meets with the Harm Reduction Coalition and gets clean syringes, sanitizing pads, a hot meal, and a hug. She says that she never would have shown up to the county’s official SSP hub at the Emeline Avenue health clinic for fear that she might get hassled by cops or public safety activists. Since she started going to the needle exchange, she’s learned not to reuse needles, even on her own body, because it can create abscesses. The abscesses she previously had on her body have now healed. For users like her, she says the exchange is the first step toward taking care of themselves, and hopefully getting clean. “When you’re making these small moves to take care of yourself,” she says, “it changes into you wanting to take care of yourself even more.”
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s l r i G e n o G A new book from Santa Cruz expat Janet Blaser features 27 women explaining why they moved to Mexico—and aren’t coming back BY WALLACE BAINE
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
J
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anet Blaser feels it the minute she lands in an American airport. It’s like a discordant, all-enveloping buzz, a palpable tension in the air, a crackling, anxious energy. Like the constant hum of an air conditioner, it’s always there, everywhere. Call it the vibe of living in the U.S.A. “You get used to it if you’re living here,” Blaser says, sitting at a café table in the Santa Cruz sunshine. “But when you’re not living like that every day, it’s weird, very weird.” Blaser was born in the U.S. and lived here most of her life. For close to 20 years, she was a writer, editor and community activist in Santa Cruz. But in 2006, on the verge of turning 50, she left Santa Cruz and moved to Mazatlán, Mexico, alone and knowing no one. On the trip south in her packed-to-the-gills Toyota Echo, she cried herself to sleep in roadside hotel rooms, consumed with worry that she was making a disastrously wrong decision. More than a dozen years later, she’s still in Mexico, happier than she has ever been. “I can’t imagine ever living in the U.S. again,” she says. That line comes from the introduction of Blaser’s new book Why We Left: An Anthology of American Women Expats. It is also the dominant theme across the series of testimonials from 27 American women about their decision to take a one-way trip to Mexico. The book features women from wildly different backgrounds, and different parts of the U.S., but their stories strike similar chords: the differences between life in the U.S. and life in Mexico are stark and transformative; many of the oppressive stresses of American life are absent, even if they are replaced by uniquely Mexican problems; the deprivations of living outside the U.S. are compensated by unexpected bounties; and, to quote cancer survivor Joanna Karlinsky, another writer in the collection, “I have no interest in going back to America. I left so I could recover, get back my lost energy and find myself again. And I have.”
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PHOTO: MATT MAWSON
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LEAVING CALIFORNIA
Janet Blaser reflected on her experience moving from Santa Cruz to Mexico—and invited more than two dozen other women to do so, as well—for her new book ‘Why We Left.’
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Why We Left articulates and makes real a common fantasy of many Americans, particularly those struggling to maintain a decent life among shifting economic realities or distressed by ugly and ruthless political developments: Can you find the American Dream by leaving America? Blaser was a prominent and wellconnected personality around Santa Cruz in the 1990s and into the 2000s, as a food columnist and feature writer for the Santa Cruz Sentinel and contributor to Good Times, as well as a representative of the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk and manager of the downtown Santa Cruz farmer’s market. In the mid 2000s, she found herself at an uncomfortable pivot point in her life. She was approaching 50. Her three children were grown, and she was feeling the pinch from the stresses of maintaining a career
in journalism—a field that was shedding jobs—while dealing with the ever-increasing cost of living in Santa Cruz. She didn’t want to leave, but staying was becoming untenable. She was mulling making a move, maybe somewhere in inland California. All this was on her mind when she took a long-planned vacation to Mazatlán, Mexico, a place she’d never been before. On her third day there, she visited the city’s historic Plaza Machado, a leafy and colorful downtown center that dates back to the early 19th century. Seeing the plaza was her first epiphany moment; she couldn’t escape a feeling of elation and enchantment. “It was like coming home,” she says now. The second epiphany came soon after, when she learned that there was no reliable English-language source of information about Mazatlán attractions and businesses for tourists, expats and seasonal “snowbirds.” What if she started
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“In the U.S., I was basically going through the motions. But here, especially for a single girl, you have to be a scrapper. You do. Even now, it’s scary and lonely sometimes. But I’m a different person in the sense that I’m cognizant of the joys of living every day.” —MORGAN LELLERO
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a monthly magazine celebrating all things Mazatlán for an Englishspeaking audience? “That’s when it went, ‘Ding! I know how to do this,’” Blaser says. She returned to the U.S. with a crazy new plan to start over in Mazatlán. But leaving Santa Cruz— particularly her three adult children, Spike, Vrinda and Dennis—was more emotionally difficult than she had anticipated. The four-day drive from California through the Sonoran Desert to Mazatlán proved to be an ordeal of self-doubt and unpleasant surprises. She had two cell phones, neither of which worked. Any confidence gained from a year of learning Spanish evaporated pretty quickly in the Mexican sun. The days turned to weeks, the weeks to months. The struggle was intense and the culture shock was profound. But eventually, Blaser found her footing, and even became grateful for the struggle. Her magazine idea took off and, as editor of M!, she assumed a central role in Mazatlan’s culture, a valuable link between the expat community and the locals. “It’s definitely home now,” she says of Mexico, during a recent visit to Santa Cruz. “It’s a simple life. There’s something wonderful about constantly being humbled. I mean, I say I speak Spanish, but I’m not great at it. I speak like a cave person. Sometimes I think, ‘Jeez, I’m 63 years old and I can’t order
a sandwich.’ But I think there is something really refreshing to the soul about that.” Blaser’s story of moving to Mexico is included in her new book, but she didn’t want to focus primarily on her own experience. Instead, she wanted to collect other stories of Americanborn women who have emigrated. “There are many ‘My Mexico Experience’ memoirs out there,” she says, “One person’s story wasn’t enough. For me, it was the breadth of experiences which was interesting and exciting.” She drew from fellow expats whom she had met, but she also solicited submissions from the various Facebook groups of expats all over Mexico, which she estimates reach about 300,000 people. What she ended up with was more than two dozen essays, each a personally revealing account of what went into a life-altering decision. The portraits that emerge of different regions of Mexico are often compelling and vivid. “I eat freshly cubed mango from the corner fruit vendor for less than a dollar,” says former South Carolinian Nova Grahl, who now lives in Guadalajara. “I hear the screeching of green parrots flying overhead.” Former Florida resident Judy Whitaker now lives in El Golfo de Santa Clara at the very northern end of the Gulf of California. She regularly eats fish “fresh from the ocean, before it ever hits the
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“[Mexico]’s definitely home now. It’s a simple life. There’s something wonderful about constantly being humbled. I mean, I say I speak Spanish, but I’m not great at it. I speak like a cave person.” —JANET BLAZER <26 fridge.” Of her life in Mexico, she writes, “Stress is a word not in my vocabulary.” Almost all of the essays are careful not to paint Mexico as some sort of paradise. The drawbacks are plentiful: diffident bureaucrats, corrupt cops, scary insects, dangerous drinking water, having to do without such luxuries as gourmet dark chocolate and California wine. Many have a hard time adjusting to seeing a breadth of poverty unusual in the U.S.
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The stories in the new book operate from two seismic sociological assumptions, ideas that some Americans would openly resist or deny. The first is that whatever benefits, rewards and perks come with living as a citizen of the mighty United States of America, they might just come at too high a price for our mental and physical health, and to our sense of purpose and well-being. The second assertion is that Mexico, though not without its problems, is a nation of grace and beauty in which millions live abundant and fulfilling lives, many of those American expats. It’s a country, the book contends, that many Americans, perhaps influenced by inflammatory political rhetoric coming primarily from the White House, have gotten way wrong. According to State Department
statistics, there are about 9 million American citizens living as full-time residents in countries outside the U.S., and an estimated 1 million of those are in Mexico. Many Americans who have “permanent residence” status or otherwise live mostly in Mexico come with preconceived notions earned from a lifetime north of the border. California-born Norma Schafer, who worked in academia in North Carolina, moved to Mexico in 2005 at the age of 58. She was drawn to Oaxaca by its distinctive textiles and natural dyes. But she first came to the region hampered by stereotypes that Mexico was primitive, its people were simple, that poverty, filth and crime were daily facts of life. In her experience, none of that turned out to be true. “This place is very much like it used to be in rural America, when most people lived on farms, where people still work in small family enterprises,” says Schafer by Skype from her home in small village a few miles east of the city of Oaxaca. “I feel a huge sense of honor to be living in a traditional Zapotec village of 10,000 people who have been here for 8,000 years. I mean, these people discovered corn! Corn was first hybridized right up the road from where I live.” Schafer still maintains a residence in the U.S. that allows her to vote and stay involved in the affairs of her native country. She says that she is baffled by some of the
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GONE GIRLS <28 attitudes Americans have about Mexico. Recently, she hosted a small group of undergraduates from North Carolina State University to her sleepy, artistically inclined rural village. “Most of them said that their parents didn’t want them to come, that they had to beg their parents to let them come,” she says. “The one faculty member that was with them had to do a complete evacuation itinerary at every point of contact on the ground in case there was an emergency and the kids needed to get out.” “Quite frankly, I feel much safer here,” says Susie Morgan Lellero, another contributor to Why We Left. Lellero first moved to Mazatlán in 1996 and stayed only for a few years. The isolation of that pre-Facebook, pre-Vonage age was too much for her and she left, only to return less than a decade later, this time to stay. “It was the best, worst, hardest, most fun, most grueling time of my life,” she says via Skype of her first stint in Mazatlán. At 63, she’s semi-retired now, makes bagels for a small deli in her neighborhood and rides a Yamaha V-star motorcycle. “In the U.S., I was basically going through the motions. But here, especially for a single girl, you have to be a scrapper. You do,” Morgan Lellero says. “Even now, it’s scary and lonely sometimes. But I’m a different person in the sense that I’m cognizant of the joys of living every day, seeing a green parrot fly by my window or finding a pineapple (plant) in my backyard.” In collecting the stories of expat women in the book, Blaser thought she would run into a strong vein of political anti-American exhaustion or disappointment. “I had anticipated that there would be more women who would say, ‘Oh, when Trump was elected, that was it. I’m outta here,’ or had some other complaints about America. But that was really not the case.” Many of the contributors instead talk about the seductions of Mexico, both culturally and environmentally, and certain priorities about the value of living. “It was like I was given the gift of new eyes,” is how
writer Nova Grahl put it. Contributor Lina Weissman wrote of “a sense of wonder, of challenge, of peace.” Others talk of an elemental lifestyle that by comparison casts a bad light on the pressures of living in the U.S. “What we don’t do here,” writes contributor Virginia Saunders, “is sit in traffic, worry about how we’ll afford health insurance, or dread Mondays.” Many of the essays delve into the financial benefits of moving to Mexico, and several claim to live comfortably on little more than Social Security benefits. “Here you can live for about $1,000 a month and live well enough,” said Norma Schafer. “But I’m of the belief that that should not be the first reason you choose to live in Mexico. The first reason should be the love of the art, the history, the architecture, the culture, the food. There are so many rich traditions here than Americans have no idea about.” Now in her seventies, Schafer still travels across Mexico alone. “I’m trying to see more of the world before I can’t walk anymore.” (Schafer has a sister, Barbara Beerstein, who lives in Santa Cruz County and, ironically enough, she also has a burial plot in Santa Cruz.) Many contributors in Why We Left make a point to declare their commitment to living in Mexico. Morgan Lellero, for example, is anything but ambivalent when it comes to the idea of coming back. “I pray to God,” she says, “that I never have to return to the United States. That would be a really sad day.” For a significant part of the American electorate, suspicion or even open hostility to Mexicans in the United States has become a norm. For many of the contributors to Why We Left, the opposite is the case in Mexico for native-born Americans. “It’s my experience that neighbors are very welcoming,” says Blaser of her expat status in her adopted country. “They are curious about us. They’ve been told that America is the Land of Milk and Honey, and they wonder, ‘Why would you ever want to leave that?’”
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&
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
RESIDENT ZERO Carmina Escobar, experimental vocalist from Mexico City, is the first artist in residence under the new Indexical program. PHOTO: GUILLERMO GALINDO
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Expanding Experiment
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Local nonprofit Indexical launches artist residency program BY WALLACE BAINE
S
ometimes an artistic subculture emerges in a particular time and place spontaneously, like a patch of weeds. Other times, it needs cultivation. When it comes to Santa Cruz and its long relationship with avant-
HOT TICKET
garde and experimental music, the newest cultivator is a nonprofit called Indexical, which began in Brooklyn but relocated to Santa Cruz in 2015. Indexical is planning to make noise in town this summer with an intriguing concert at the Kuumbwa
Jazz Center, a vocal workshop at Henry Cowell State Park and an ambitious collaborative project to take place outside on West Cliff Drive. “Our basic goal with Indexical,” explains Andrew Smith, the organization’s executive director, “is to create an experimental music
scene here and to be a resource to help it grow. We also want to connect musicians in Santa Cruz with people in other cities, and bring people from other cities to Santa Cruz to give them a chance to experience this town.” One of those people is Indexical’s
MUSIC
FILM
DINING
Olympia punkers rage in their Bad Sleep P34
In search of ‘The Last Black Man in San Francisco’ P50
Westside’s Primal re-opens as Vida P54
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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The aim, says Executive Director Andrew Smith, is to give artists the room to experiment without having to worry about the commercial implications of high-profile concerts. operations director David Kant relocated to Santa Cruz to work with UCSC composer and musician Larry Polansky. Smith and Kant found potential for building a musical community in Santa Cruz. “We saw that people in Santa Cruz have some context for experimental music and for contemporaryclassical music, but we felt we could expand it a little bit,” says Smith. “Santa Cruz has this context and this community of artists, but didn’t necessarily have the producing organizations to allow people to try out new ideas throughout the year.” Since its relocation, Indexical has produced several events with a variety of artists, mostly in small venues like the Radius Gallery at the Tannery and Wind River studios in the Santa Cruz Mountains. The aim, says Smith, is to give artists the room to experiment without having to worry about the commercial implications of high-profile concerts. “You need more things happening on a smaller scale. You get some energy built up and you do a lot of things that might not work,” Smith says. “But the things that do work end up being bigger projects.” He says that Santa Cruz audiences have responded well to Indexical’s plans, and that the organization’s budget, drawn from local donations, has quadrupled in size. He also said that Indexical is considering the idea of opening its own venue. “The last year has been incredible. We’re now at the point where we’re hiring three full- or part-time staff members to really increase the capacity of the organization to take on some significantly more ambitious projects.” For more information on Indexical, its concerts or the June 29 workshop with artist-in-residence Carmina Escobar, go to indexical.org.
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first artist in residence, Mexicoborn experimental vocalist Carmina Escobar, who leads a Mexico City ensemble and is on the faculty of the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). On June 29, Escobar kicks off her residency with a workshop and performance outdoors at Henry Cowell called The Voices from Within Into the World. The all-day workshop (11 a.m. to 7 p.m.) will explore the dimension of the human voice in space through games, exercises and improv activitIes. Escobar will then turn her attention to the creation of a sitespecific work called Feast of Beams: Keeper of Light in collaboration with local artists and Indexical curators Madison Heying and Laura Steenberge, to take place at Lighthouse Point on West Cliff Drive on Saturday, Aug. 10. “There will be multiple things happening,” says Smith, around the lighthouse, the field, along West Cliff and on the beach as well. Carmina’s vision is to basically pull everyone together. She’s been using the word ‘converge.’ All of these works are to converge at the end of this piece to create some kind of communal experience at the lighthouse.” On July 27, Indexical will present a concert by vocalist and composer Amirtha Kidambi and her group Elder Ones at the Kuumbwa Jazz Center. Of Kidambi, Smith says, “Her idea is to fuse black protest music as it came out of the free jazz tradition with Hindustani and Carnatic music, which were influential in her development.” From the Cabrillo Music Festival to New Music Works to the UCSC music department, Santa Cruz has engaged with various styles of avant-garde and contemporaryclassical music for decades. Indexical began in New York in 2011. Smith, a composer in his own right, said that he and Indexical’s
SUPER SUMMER SPECIAL
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MUSIC
NEED SOME SLEEP Bad Sleep plays at SubRosa on Saturday, June 29.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Punk Awakening
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Lily Richeson of Bad Sleep is living her best mosh-pit life BY MIKE HUGUENOR
L
ily Richeson didn’t find punk. Punk found her. “Someone handed me a weird flyer at the mall in the suburbs, and here I am,” says the singer of Olympia punk band Bad Sleep. This week, the band plays Santa Cruz’s anarchist bookstore SubRosa on a tour supporting its debut album. The self-titled record plays like the Thermals gone riot grrl, filled with scrappy, vulnerable poppunk anthems about life, love and science fiction. Barely clocking in at 20 minutes, Bad Sleep is a testament to the enduring power of good, raw, honest punk.
“So much of my adolescent joy was from discovering DIY punk and being like, ‘What is in this room? What is happening?’” says Richeson. Richeson is now an active part of that world, connected to her fellow musicians through a DIY network of community spaces, fanzines and small labels. “It’s totally an access point,” she says. “You just kind of stay in it if you’re committed to it, and the community. I want to play music and create art, but also want to be connecting with other people who are doing like-minded things and have like-minded politics.”
Before starting Bad Sleep, Richeson was living in Boston. She had toured the country in the band Parasol and got a taste for the national underground scene. After visiting Olympia on tour, she decided she liked its scene enough to move. “I kinda knew Cailey, the drummer, through punk,” she says. “I had just moved to town and was without a project, but I was like, ‘I have these songs. They’re cheesy pop songs. Do you want to hear them?’ I was super nervous. But he was like, ‘Totally!’” In 2016, Bad Sleep emerged out of Olympia’s vibrant underground scene with a five-song 7 inch.
Jammed with concise power-pop nuggets like “Bad Rep” (which squeezes three choruses and two guitar solos into less than two minutes), the 7 inch was the first sound of a promising new band. The next year, they followed it with the No Fun cassette. More punk than its predecessor, No Fun signaled a step away from power-pop, and a step toward the riot grrl roots of their hometown. “I’m kind of a nerd about bands from Olympia,” Richeson says. “Even though I’ve only lived here for four years, the music that I love and grew up listening to is from here.” After a European tour in 2017, the band hooked up with UK label Specialist Subject, and began planning an album. In the summer of 2018, the group took to the studio. Then, life got in the way. “Our bass player moved away literally a week after we got done recording,” says Richeson. The timing was unfortunate, as it came on the tails of Bad Sleep’s strongest release so far. The album kicks off in high gear, opening on a riff that recalls the Exploding Hearts’ “I’m a Pretender.” On album highlight “Don’t Have To,” Richeson turns on the spigot, letting flow all the anger building from years of interactions with men’s rights activists, incels and otherwise terrible dudes: “I don’t wanna tell you my name, there’s nothing wrong with my personality/ It’s you that sees me and the world around you like something is owed, like I have no value,” she sings, her words coming to a froth and pouring over into the chorus of “Ooo, I don’t have to.” It’s a powerful, confrontational moment, exhilarating in its honesty. While punk has changed a lot in the last 40 years, there is still something to be said for an honest statement delivered with volume and passion. “I feel a little like I’m aging out— which is ridiculous because I’m only 31,” she says now. “A lot of my friends have been doing this for 10 years longer than me, and they’re still doing it. They’re like, ‘Shut up, wait till you’re 40.’” Bad Sleep performs at 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 29, at SubRosa, 703 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $7. 426-5242.
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N O W P L AY I N G !
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CALENDAR
GREEN FIX
See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.
Free calendar listings in print and online are available for community events. Listings show up online within 24 hours. Submissions of free events and those $15 or less received by Thursday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be prioritized for print (space available). All listings must specify a day, start time, location and price (or ‘free’ if applicable). Listings can be set to repeat every week or month, and can be edited by the poster as needed. Ongoing events must be updated quarterly. It is the responsibility of the person submitting an event to cancel or modify the listing. Register at our website at santacruz.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail calendar@goodtimes.sc or call 458.1100 with any questions.
WEDNESDAY 6/26 ARTS BIG TREES EXHIBITION Enjoy the
PINE NEEDLE BASKETMAKING WORKSHOP Join docent Cheryl VanDeVeer in learning how to make a woven basket from local Ponderosa pine needles. No experience is necessary, though expert pine-needle basket weavers are welcome to join. Children 10 and older may attend if accompanied by an adult. Get there early; the class capacity is 20 and may fill up. Meet at the visitor center. 10 a.m.-noon. Saturday, June 29. Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, 101 N Big Trees Park Rd., Felton. 335-7077. Free event/vehicle day-use fee $10.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
ART SEEN
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history, in images, of Welch’s Big Trees, now the Redwood Loop Trail at Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park. See images of features no longer in the park and learn about others that have unusual stories to tell. Noon-4 p.m.San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum. com. Free.
FRIENDS OF SCPL DOWNTOWN BOOK GIVE AWAY The Friends of Santa Cruz Public Libraries receives so many books that we are giving away the books we aren’t able to sell. Some gems, some books only eclectic lovers of discards would like. Come one, come all, and take the books so that we can clear room for more useful books. Noon1:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Public Library, 224 Church St., Santa Cruz. fscpl.org. Free.
CLASSES STRONG VINYASA Join seasoned instructors Marilu Shinn and Angela Rocchio for a class that will challenge, invigorate, and open you deeply. Strong Vinyasa is equivalent to a level 2/3 practice and is recommended for experienced practitioners. 5:30 p.m. Watsonville Yoga, Dance and Healing Arts, 375 N. Main St., Watsonville. 713-9843.
SEACLIFF HISTORY TOUR Learn the history of Seacliff and surrounding Aptos in this onehour, half-mile history walk. Led by docent Pete Wang, the tour focuses on the Ohlone, Raphael Castro, Claus Spreckels, Aptos Landing Wharf, the development of Seacliff Park—including Paul Woodside, the “Madman of Seacliff”—and the Cement Ship. 11 a.m. Sunday, June 30. Seacliff State Beach Visitor Center, State Park Drive exit from Highway 1, Aptos. 685-6442. Free/vehicle day-use fee $10.
ONGOING CONGA DRUMMING CLASS WITH JIM GREINER IN SOQUEL Play Conga drums with multiple award-winning percussionist and educator Jim Greiner for fun and as a positive life practice. Release stress, ground and center yourself, tap into your innate ability to enter the flow state, learn fundamental and rhythmic principles, and celebrate life. All levels are welcome. Instruments provided and bring your own. 7-8:30 p.m. Jim Greiner’s hands-on drumming events, 2745 Daubenbiss Ave., Soquel. 462-3786. $80.
LEGO: EV3 ROBOTICS Create advanced mechanical devices and program motors with Lego Mindstorms. Open to ages 10-17.
SATURDAY 6/29 INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT Ah, summer. The flowers are blooming, the birds are singing, fruits and vegetables abound— and there are plenty of pests to go with them. Michael Pollan likes to find roadkill pests and put them down woodchuck holes as a warning, but that seems a bit dramatic, doesn’t it? (Disclaimer: he only did that once.) Join UC master gardeners Delise Weir and Trink Praxel to learn how integrated pest management strategies are used to control insects, weeds, vertebrate pests, and plant diseases while keeping health and environmental risks as low as possible. They will cover the basic steps of integrated pest management, which help to identify the pest and its impact, explain various control options available and find the least toxic approach. Arrive 15 minutes early for check-in or registration. 10 a.m.- noon. UC Cooperative Extension, 1430 Freedom Blvd. Suite E, Watsonville. Free.
Space is limited and registration is required. 3-4:30 p.m. Live Oak Branch Library, 2380 Portola Drive, Santa Cruz. santacruzpl.libcal. com. Free.
FOOD & WINE DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ FARMERS MARKET In addition to a large variety of
farm products, this market offers a great selection of local artisan foodstuffs, delicious baked goods and lots of options for lunch and dinner. 1-6 p.m. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. 454-0566.
OUTDOOR COAST PADDLE BOARDS SUMMER >38 SALE Come on by Coast Paddle
events.ucsc.edu
J U N E / J U LY 2 0 1 9
JOIN US AS W E SHARE THE E XCIT EMENT OF LE ARNING
Science on Tap: How Stable Is West Antarctica? JUNE 26, 7:30PM THE CREPE PLACE, 1134 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ FREE ADMISSION
The future of civilization on earth is closely tied to predicting sea-level rise with accuracy. The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is actually more dynamic than previously thought. Sarah Neuhaus of UCSC discusses recent findings. To ensure a seat, reserve a table: (831) 429-6994.
Farm and Garden Market Cart JUNE 28, 12–6PM CORNER OF BAY AND HIGH STREETS AT THE BASE OF THE UCSC CAMPUS FREE ADMISSION
Organic vegetables, fruit, herbs, and flowers are sold weekly. Early-season offerings include strawberries, blueberries, and an array of tender lettuces and other greens. Flower bouquets are also available.
Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf Experience Learn about Monterey Bay from a vantage point a half-mile out to sea, without ever leaving land! Seymour Marine Discovery Center volunteers are available to answer your marine science questions every Saturday from noon to 3 p.m., through August 24. Look for the people wearing khaki pants and navy blue Seymour Center shirts.
Community Day at the Arboretum & Botanic Garden JULY 2, 9AM–5PM UC SANTA CRUZ ARBORETUM & BOTANIC GARDEN FREE ADMISSION
Free admission to the Arboretum & Botanic Garden on the first Tuesday of every month. Due to limited parking and the popularity of Community Day, we encourage visitors to carpool, bike, walk, or use public transportation.
Sunday Seaside Crafts JUNE 30, 1–3PM SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER FREE WITH ADMISSION TO THE CENTER
Make it and take it! Come create and take home a fun souvenir—an
LE ARN MORE AT
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JULY 6, 11AM UC SANTA CRUZ ARBORETUM & BOTANIC GARDEN FREE WITH ADMISSION TO THE ARBORETUM
Join us for a docent-led tour of the UCSC Arboretum & Botanic Garden’s extensive gardens on the first Saturday of every month. Tours leave from Norrie’s Gift and Garden Shop at 11 a.m.
Younger Lagoon Reserve Tours JULY 7, 10:30AM SEYMOUR MARINE DISCOVERY CENTER FREE WITH ADMISSION TO THE CENTER
This 90-minute, behind-the-scenes hiking tour takes visitors 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. Advance reservations recommended: (831) 459-3800.
ONGOING EVENTS
Put Your Gold Money Where Your Love Is, Baby: Counterculture, Capitalism, and the Grateful Dead DURING LIBRARY HOURS UC SANTA CRUZ MCHENRY LIBRARY FREE ADMISSION
This exhibit explores how the Grateful Dead invented, improvised, redefined, and pioneered business practices that revealed new ways of thinking about work, about being in business, and about the relationship between creators and their communities. It draws on the newly processed business records of the band.
Songs of Labor & Transcendence: The Trianon Press Archive DURING LIBRARY HOURS UC SANTA CRUZ MCHENRY LIBRARY FREE ADMISSION
Founded in Paris in 1947, theTrianon Press published an astonishing catalog of fine art books in the latter half of the 20th century. This exhibit explores the breadth of this renowned press’s publications and the highly skilled printers’ art behind each edition’s creation.
Humanizing Artificial Intelligence with Nicanor Perlas JULY 8–12 UC SANTA CRUZ PORTER COLLEGE $130–$860/PERSON
“Humanizing Artificial Intelligence: Using Cultural Power, Governance & Business to Address the Challenges of Our Time” is the topic of the inaugural UC Santa Cruz Right Livelihood College Summer Institute—a powerful small-group seminar experience for participants from a wide range of backgrounds. Nicanor Perlas received the Right Livelihood Award for “his outstanding efforts in educating civil society about the effects of corporate globalization.”
UPCOMING EVENTS JULY 7
Docent-Led Tour of the UCSC Farm JULY 21
Foam-Free Floral Design for Vases and Vessels SEPTEMBER 21
An Evening with Malcolm Gladwell in San Mateo
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
JUNE 29, 12–3PM SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL WHARF FREE ADMISSION
activity for the whole family to share. For example, build a seal or sea lion puppet decorated with your own special seal nose, complete with whiskers!
Arboretum & Botanic Garden Tour
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CALENDAR TRIYOGA BASICS CLASS WITH TERRI TriYoga flows are presented with personalized guided alignment assistance. 9:30 a.m. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. triyoga-santacruz.com. $15.
TRIYOGA BASICS/THERAPEUTIC YOGA WITH KIM TriYoga taught by Kim Beecher, DC (chiropractor) includes sustained postures with prop support. Everyone is welcome. Suitable for those with chronic conditions. 7:30-9 p.m. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. triyoga-santacruz.com. $15.
LEGO NXT ROBOTICS Kids ages 8-17 will work in groups of two to build a competition Lego robot to battle on the last day of class for a Lego prize. They will build and program their robots to knock the other team’s robots out of the circle. 3-4:30 p.m. Branciforte Library A Santa Cruz City County Public Library Branch, 230 Gault St., Santa Cruz. santacruzpl.libcal.com.
BRAZILIAN PERCUSSION CLASS Join
SUNDAY 6/30 PLANNED PARENTHOOD RUMMAGE SALE The organizers of the Planned Parenthood rummage sale are still collecting items, but they already have some highlights, like fancy tables and a single-person sea kayak. There will also be books, clothing and shoes, kitchenware, small appliances, sporting goods, and jewelry. All profits go to Planned Parenthood to support reproductive health, education and rights. In the previous three years, the organizers have raised over $18,000 for the organization. For those wishing to sell items, contact Eric Hoffman at erichoffman50@yahoo.com. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 840 Eddy Lane, Live Oak. Free.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
<36 Boards this weekend for our
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incredible summer sale. Check out our high-quality, affordable Vesl paddle boards as well as some awesome accessories. 10 a.m. Coast Paddleboards, 916 A Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. coastpaddleboards.com.
THURSDAY 6/27 ARTS BIG TREES EXHIBITION Enjoy the history, in images, of Welch’s Big Trees, now the Redwood Loop Trail at Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park. See images of features no longer in the park and learn about others that have unusual stories to tell. Noon-4 p.m. San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum.com. Free.
CLASSES COMMUNITY PILATES CLASS Community Pilates class led by pilates instructor Jennifer Balboni. Drop in any Tuesday or Thursday beginning at 10 a.m. for a fun and challenging 60-minute, core-based flowing strength class. Bring your own mat. 10 a.m. Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Rd., Aptos. tbeaptos.org. Donation.
POWER VINYASA FLOW YOGA Surf your edge in this energetic, inspired yoga flow designed to help you dive deep into your personal power. Instructor Tim Brattan will lead you through a fun sequence to move, sweat, smile, detox, discover, focus and play on the mat. Designed for all levels, you’ll build strength, endurance, flexibility, balance and concentration. 5-6:15 p.m. DiviniTree Yoga and Arts Studio, 1043-B Water St., Santa Cruz. oneyoga.org.
instructors Mestre Papiba Godinho and Joe Mailloux, MM, in a hands-on exploration of Samba and other drumming traditions of Brazil. All Levels. 7:30-9 p.m. Raizes do Brasil Capoeira, 207 McPherson St., Santa Cruz. 435-6813. $25/$10.
FOOD & WINE POPUP PICNICS IN THE PARK Take a break to enjoy tacos on the terrazza, with food by Taquitos Gabriel available for purchase. The full menu includes tacos, plates, burritos, quesadillas, and drinks with occasional specials, such as mole. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Mission Historic State Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org.
style partner for intermediate dancers. Featuring Salsa Suelta, Casino partner dancing and latest tunes from Cuba. No partner required, Age 16+. 7p.m. Motion Pacific, 131 Front St., Santa Cruz. salsagente. com. $10/$5.
VINYASA AND YIN YOGA WITH LIVE SAXOPHONE Join Brendan Sick, professional musician and Yoga instructor, for a warming and mindfully-paced Vinyasa practice followed by a meditative soak in Yin Yoga postures. Bask in the beautiful stream of Brendan's live music on the saxophone. 5:45-6:45 p.m. Watsonville Yoga, Dance and Healing Arts, 375 N. Main St., Watsonville. watsonville.yoga.
MUSIC TOGETHER MUSICALME SPECIAL STORYTIME Experience firsthand just how fun learning and playing musically with your child can be. We’ll teach you how to take music out of the box and put it into the hearts and hands of your young children, and you. 10:30 a.m. Santa Cruz Public Libraries - downtown, 240 Church St., Santa Cruz. santacruzpl.libcal.com. Free.
‘BEEHIVE, THE ’60S MUSICAL’ Beehive: The ’60s Musical is the ultimate celebration of 1960s female empowerment. Featuring such timeless classics as “My Boyfriend’s Back,” “Be My Baby,” “Son of a Preacher Man,” and “Me and Bobby McGee,” Beehive nostalgically recalls the days of miniskirts, transistor radios and flower power. 7:30 p.m. Cabrillo Crocker Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. cabrillostage.com. $26/$16.
OUTDOOR JUNIOR RANGERS—OHLONE ECONOMY: TRADE NETWORK GAME
Reality Sound International and The Catalyst present Reggae Thursdays. DJ Spleece and Friends. Dancehall Reggae Remix. 7 p.m. The Catalyst Club, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. santacruzreggae.com. Free.
Get to know three California native plants and how to use them. We’ll work with soap root, tule reeds, and oak trees to discover how to make food, tools, and toys to take home. Junior Rangers is a statewide program for 7-12 year olds. 11 a.m. Santa Cruz Mission Historic State Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org. Free.
WEST AFRICAN DRUM CLASSES AT DRUMSKULL DRUMS Two teachers teach
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Djembe at Drumskull Drums every Thursday. Sahar El Khatib teaches the beginner class every first and third Thursday of the month. 7 p.m. Drumskull Drums, 105 Pioneer St., Santa Cruz. 420-7803. $40/$30/$20.
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this weekend for our incredible summer sale. Check out our high quality, affordable Vesl paddle boards as well as some awesome accessories. 10 a.m. Coast Paddleboards, 916 A Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. coastpaddleboards.com.
CALENDAR
FRIDAY 6/28 ARTS PRESCHOOL STORYTIME Join us at the Aptos Library for our weekly Preschool Story Time. We'll read books, sing songs and make simple crafts. Suggested ages 3-6. 10-11 a.m. Aptos Branch Library, 7695 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Free.
CABRILLO STAGE 2019 SUMMER SEASON Tickets on sale, online only. Cabrillo Crocker Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. cabrillovapa.com.
BIG TREES EXHIBITION Enjoy the history, in images, of Welch’s Big Trees, now the Redwood Loop Trail at Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park. See images of features no longer in the park and learn about others that have unusual stories to tell. Noon-4 p.m.San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum. com. Free.
FOOD & WINE WATSONVILLE FARMERS MARKET This market is in the heart of the famously bountiful Pajaro Valley. Peaceful and family-oriented, the Latino heritage of this community gives this market a “mercado” feel. 2-7 p.m. 200 Main St., Watsonville.
FARM TO TABLE WINE DINNER AT CHAMINADE RESORT Chaminade Resort
MUSIC 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. 1 p.m. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. cityofsantacruz.com. $2/Donation. ‘BEEHIVE, THE ’60S MUSICAL’ Beehive: The ’60s Musical is the ultimate celebration of 1960s female empowerment. Featuring such timeless classics as “My Boyfriend’s Back,” “Be My Baby,” “Son of a Preacher Man,” and “Me and Bobby McGee,” Beehive nostalgically recalls the days of miniskirts,
transistor radios and flower power. 7:30 p.m. Cabrillo Crocker Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. cabrillostage.com. $26/$16.
EVERCLEAR The Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk’s Free Friday Night Bands on the Beach concert series features top 40 bands from the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s on the Boardwalk’s beach bandstand. 6:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. beachboardwalk.com. Free.
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OUTDOOR POP-UP CAMPFIRE Bring your camp chair—we’ll bring the marshmallows, songs and stories. Sit around the campfire, roast marshmallows, sing some songs, and hear stories about Big Basin. 7 p.m. Big Basin Redwoods State Park, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. thatsmypark.org. Free. REDWOOD GROVE LOOP WALK Join us for this fun and informative guided, half-mile stroll through a magnificent oldgrowth redwood forest. Meet the famous Mother Tree, the Father of the Forest and the incredible Chimney Tree on this 90-minute walk. Stroller and wheelchair accessible.Two walks available between 11 a.m-3:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Mission Historic State Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org. $10/Free.
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ARTS BIG TREES EXHIBITION Enjoy the history, in images, of Welch’s Big Trees, now the Redwood Loop Trail at Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park. See images of features no longer in the park and learn about others that have unusual stories to tell. Noon-4 p.m. San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum.com. Free.
SCOTTS VALLEY FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY SUMMER BOOK SALE Gently used books, cds, dvds, and audio books will be sold. Some specialty items include children's books, trains/railroad books, and vintage books. Kids, come spend your summer reading coupon for a free book. Little libraries, come stock your shelves. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Scotts Valley Branch Library, 251 Kings Village Rd., Scotts Valley. santacruzpl.org.
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
& Spa, a Benchmark Resort, has announced the dates for its highly acclaimed Farm to Table Wine Dinner series that takes place May through October. 6 p.m. Chaminade Resort & Spa, 1 Chaminade Lane, Santa Cruz. chaminade.com. $115.
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JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
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‘A DECADE OF DANCE, DRUM AND DISSENT’ Duniya Dance and Drum Company’s A Decade of Dance, Drum and Dissent is coming to Santa Cruz’s Tannery Arts Center. The San Francisco-based company performs and teaches traditional and innovative pieces from Guinea, West Africa and Punjab, India. This performance features a wide range of Duniya Dance and Drum Company’s repertoire, including Bhangra, Bollywood, Dancehall, Afro-Pop, spoken-word, and live West African dance and drumming. Photo: Vijay Rakhra. 2 and 8 p.m. Colligan Theater, 1010 River St., Santa Cruz. $25 general admission.
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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. 7-8 p.m. Watsonville Yoga, Dance and Healing Arts, 375 N. Main St., Watsonville. watsonville.yoga.
BIG LOVE: A DAYLONG RETREAT ON THE 4 IMMEASURABLES His Holiness the Dalai Lama has often commented that the essence of spiritual practice is cultivating a good heart. 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Rd., Soquel. landofmedicinebuddha.org. $108/$85/$54.
COME AS YOU ARE ZEN This is an informal Saturday morning program focused on investigating Buddhist teachings for creating ease and skillful response in
our daily life. The program begins with meditation followed by a dharma talk by one of our teachers: Rev. Daijaku Kinst or Rev. Shinshu Roberts. Talks are for both the beginner as well as the advanced practitioner. 8:30 a.m. Ocean Gate Zen, 920 41st Ave. Suite F, Santa Cruz. oceangatezen. org. Free.
ZUMBA Y FERIA DE SALÚD Instructora de Zumba Catalina nos acompañará para empezar nuestros días con baile. Después habrá arte y actividades para niños y distribución de alimentos de parte de Second Harvest Food Bank. 9-10:30 a.m. Live Oak Branch Library, 2380 Portola Drive, Santa Cruz. santacruzpl.libcal.com. Free.
FOOD & WINE APTOS FARMERS MARKET AT CABRILLO COLLEGE Voted Good Times best farmers market in Santa Cruz County. With more than 90 vendors, the Aptos Farmers Market offers an unmatched selection of locally-grown produce and
Thrive
CALENDAR
WESTSIDE FARMERS MARKET The Westside Farmers Market takes place every week at the corner of Highway 1 and Western Drive, situated on the northern edge of Santa Cruz’s greenbelt. This market serves the communities of the west-end of Santa Cruz, including Bonny Doon, North Coast, UCSC Campus and is a short trip from downtown. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mission Street and Western Drive, Santa Cruz. 454-0566.
FOR KIDS: PLAYING WITH FOOD— LEARN SPANISH WHILE YOU COOK
VEGAN FRENCH BAKING & WINE PAIRING CLASS: SWEET AND SAVORY TARTS AND GALETTES Join me for a delightful afternoon enjoying the beautiful art of Vegan French Baking & Wine Pairing at the gorgeous Farm Discovery at Live Earth, nestled in the beautiful foothills of Central Coast. 1-5 p.m. Live Earth Farm Discovery Program, 172 Litchfield Lane, Watsonville. liveearthfarm.net. $175.
MUSIC JOIN US FOR DANCING, DJS & DRINK SPECIALS @MOTIVSC SATURDAYS. IT’S TIME FOR HOMO HAPPY HOUR, GIRL Spend the early evening with the
MONTEREY INTERNATIONAL BLUES FESTIVAL The Monterey International Blues Festival is back for a third year at the Historic Monterey Fairgrounds, carrying on a great American and Monterey Peninsula tradition. 11 a.m. Monterey County Fairgrounds, 2004 Fairground Rd., Monterey. montereyinternationalbluesfestival.com. $125/$35.
BOHEMIAFEST An outside monthly event. Come down for new beer release, bands, dj, BBQ, corn hole, local vendors, art, and sunshine in our outside beer garden. We even have a jumpy house for the kids. Noon.
NISENE TRIO: SUMMER MUSICAL SAVORIES A benefit concert for the Santa Cruz County Youth Symphony's Chamber Music Academy. The Nisene Trio performs Piano Trio No. 1 in B major, by Brahms, Piano Trio, Op. 1 No. 3 in C minor (first movement), by Beethoven, and Estaciones Portenas by Astor Piazzolla. 7-8:30 p.m. The Episcopal Church of St. John the Baptist, 125 Canterbury Drive, Aptos. $20/Donation.
‘BEEHIVE, THE ’60S MUSICAL’ Beehive: The ’60s Musical is the ultimate celebration
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of 1960s female empowerment. Featuring such timeless classics as “My Boyfriend’s Back,” “Be My Baby,” “Son of a Preacher Man,” and “Me and Bobby McGee,” Beehive nostalgically recalls the days of miniskirts, transistor radios and flower power. 7:30 p.m. Cabrillo Crocker Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. cabrillostage.com. $26/$16.
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OUTDOOR COAST PADDLE BOARDS SUMMER SALE Come on by Coast Paddle Boards this weekend for our incredible summer sale. Check out our high quality, affordable Vesl paddle boards as well as some awesome accessories. 10 a.m. Coast Paddleboards, 916 A Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. coastpaddleboards.com.
OLD COVE LANDING TRAIL On this 2.5 mile, two-hour family friendly walk, we’ll explore the plants, animals, and geology of our coastal bluffs. Bring water, hat, closed toe shoes, layered clothing, and binoculars if available. Meet at the interpretive center. 11 a.m. Wilder Ranch State Park, 1401 Coast Rd., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org. Free.
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OUTLOOK FROM MT. MCABEE Hike Join Docent Hal Anjo on a 6-mile, 3.5 hour moderate hike to McAbee Outlook. We'll stop at the top and enjoy the lovely ocean views, returning through a beautiful oldgrowth redwood forest. 10:30 a.m. Big Basin Redwoods State Park, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. thatsmypark.org. Free.
SKILL AND LUCK: GAMES OF THE MISSION What kind of games did the Ohlone play? When the Spanish came did they bring games? Did the Ohlone still play their games during the missions? Come and find the answers to these questions about games at the mission. 1 p.m. Santa Cruz Mission Historic State Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz. 425-5849. Free. >42
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
friendliest LGBTQ crowd in town. Gay, straight, trans or just plain KINKY? All LGBTQ allies and orientations are welcome. Make that move. You’ll love Homo (sapien) Happy Hour #HHH. 3-7 p.m. Motiv, 1209 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. motivsc.com.
• Naturopathic Medicine • Functional Medicine • Acupuncture • Massage Therapy • IV Therapy • Energy Work • Family Medicine • Nutritional Counseling • Herbal Medicine • Theta Healing • Ozone Therapy
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In this fun and creative class, kids will work in teams to make different Spanish-themed recipes: Melon and Ham kebabs and Tortilla Española and learn some nutrition basics. They will also learn some basic Spanish language. 2-4 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. newleaf.com.
Natural Medicine
New Bohemia Brewing Co., 1030 41st Ave., Santa Cruz. nubobrew.com.
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specialty foods. 8 a.m.-noon, Saturdays, Cabrillo College. montereybayfarmers.org or akeller@montereybayfarmers.org. Free.
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CALENDAR DISCOVER BIG BASIN REDWOODS HIKE Explore the park’s less travelled backcountry with Docent Barry Grimm. This moderately paced hike will be individually tailored to your group. Based on group size, experience level, and weather conditions, we will choose from the many trails that explore the park’s most scenic areas. Noon. Big Basin Redwoods State Park, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. thatsmypark.org. Free.
CASTLE ROCK LOOP HIKE On this 1-mile, 1-hour interactive journey we will discuss the various park ecosystems, Ohlone history, Black Oak ecology, wildfire, and more. Bring water, closed toe shoes, snacks, and a camera. 11 a.m. Castle Rock State Park, 1500 Skyline Blvd., Los Gatos. thatsmypark.org. $8/Free.
REDWOOD GROVE LOOP WALK Join us for this fun and informative guided half-mile stroll through a magnificent oldgrowth redwood forest. Meet the famous Mother Tree, the Father of the Forest and the incredible Chimney Tree on this 90-minute walk. Stroller and wheelchair accessible.Two walks available between 11 a.m-3:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Mission Historic State Park, 144 School St., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org. $10/Free.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
RANCH TOURS Discover what life was like a century ago on this innovative dairy ranch. This hour-long tour includes the 1897 Victorian home, 1859 Gothic Revival farmhouse, 1896 water-powered machine shop, barns and other historic buildings. 1 p.m. Wilder Ranch State Park, 1401 Coast Rd., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org. $10/Free.
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SUNDAY 6/30 ARTS 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. 1-3 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz. seymourcenter. ucsc.edu.
BIG TREES EXHIBITION Enjoy the history, in images, of Welch’s Big Trees, now the Redwood Loop Trail at Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park. See images of features no longer in the park and learn
about others that have unusual stories to tell. Noon-4 p.m. San Lorenzo Valley Museum, 12547 Hwy. 9, Boulder Creek. slvmuseum.com. Free.
CLASSES BECOMING YOUR OWN THERAPIST In this interactive workshop you will: learn techniques to still the mind, explore a 2,500year time-tested psychology, find lasting solutions, not “feel-good” band aids, become familiar with your mind and how it produces problems, participate in discussion. 3:305 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Rd., Soquel. landofmedicinebuddha. org. $15/$5.
RESTORATIVE YOGA We will be having our ever popular Restorative Yoga workshop with Roxanne this month on Sunday, June 30, at Nourish. Come quiet the mind and body in this soothing, peaceful workshop. 4-6 p.m. Nourish, 130 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. nourishsantacruz.com. $45. SUMMER CIRCLE DANCING Originating at the Findhorn Community in Scotland, these dances have since spread all over the World (Each dance is first taught). 3-5 p.m. Redwood Amphitheater, Alba Rd., Ben Lomond. 332-8340. Donation.
MUSIC ‘BEEHIVE, THE ’60S MUSICAL’ Beehive: The ’60s Musical is the ultimate celebration of 1960s female empowerment. Featuring such timeless classics as “My Boyfriend’s Back,” “Be My Baby,” “Son of a Preacher Man,” and “Me and Bobby McGee,” Beehive nostalgically recalls the days of miniskirts, transistor radios and flower power. 7:30 p.m. Cabrillo Crocker Theater, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. cabrillostage.com. $26/$16.
T-BONE MOJO MISSION BBQ Robert Johnson, Willie Dixon, Howling Wolf, Lightnin' Hopkins, Muddy Waters, JJ Cale and their influences on Taj Mahal, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, Ry Cooder, Hot Tuna, Allman Brothers, etc. Award winning barbecue, craft beer and blues seven days a week. 6 p.m. Mission Street Barbecue, 1618 Mission St., Santa Cruz. missionstbbq.com. Free.
OUTDOOR COAST PADDLE BOARDS SUMMER SALE Come on by Coast Paddle Boards this weekend for our incredible summer
sale. Check out our high quality, affordable Vesl paddle boards as well as some awesome accessories. 10 a.m. Coast Paddleboards, 916 A Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. coastpaddleboards.com.
TWILIGHT ADAPTATIONS WALK Twilight marks the end of day and the beginning of night. Animals who come out at night have special adaptations to survive. Come test your nocturnal abilities on this fun, half-mile, 1.5 hour walk. Meet at park headquarters. 7:30 p.m. Big Basin Redwoods State Park, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. thatsmypark.org. $10/Free. RANCH TOURS Discover what life was like a century ago on this innovative dairy ranch. This hour-long tour includes the 1897 Victorian home, 1859 Gothic Revival farmhouse, 1896 water-powered machine shop, barns and other historic buildings. 1 p.m. Wilder Ranch State Park, 1401 Coast Rd., Santa Cruz. thatsmypark.org. $10/ Free. BIRDING FOR BEGINNERS Join birder extraordinaire Jim Williams for a tranquil morning filled with our little flying friends. Learn about the birds in our park, receive a Henry Cowell RSP birding brochure, and begin your career as an energized birder. 8 a.m. Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, 101 N Big Trees Park Rd., Felton. thatsmypark. org. $10/Free.
SEACLIFF HISTORY TOUR Learn the history of Seacliff and surrounding Aptos in this one-hour, half-mile history walk. Led by docent Pete Wang, the tour focuses on the Ohlone, Raphael Castro, Claus Spreckels, Aptos Landing Wharf, the development of Seacliff Park — including Paul Woodside, “the Madman of Seacliff”—and the Concrete Ship. 11 a.m. Seacliff State Beach, State Park Drive exit from Highway 1, Aptos. thatsmypark.org. Free/parking $10.
MONDAY 7/1 OUTDOOR COAST PADDLE BOARDS SUMMER SALE Come on by Coast Paddle Boards this weekend for our incredible summer sale. Check out our high quality, affordable Vesl paddle boards as well as some awesome accessories. 10 a.m. Coast Paddleboards, 916 A Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. coastpaddleboards.com.
TUESDAY 7/2 CLASSES CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler, CMT, NE, will guide you through a series of gentle seated yoga postures that are performed slowly and with breath awareness. This wonderfully therapeutic practice will help you increase strength and range of motion. 9:30 a.m. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 234-6791. $5. COMMUNITY PILATES CLASS Community Pilates class led by pilates instructor Jennifer Balboni. Drop in any Tuesday or Thursday beginning at 10 a.m. for a fun and challenging 60-minute, core-based flowing strength class. Bring your own mat. 10 a.m. Temple Beth El, 3055 Porter Gulch Rd., Aptos. tbeaptos.org. Donation.
TRIYOGA BASICS CLASS WITH TERRI TriYoga flows are presented with personalized guided alignment assistance. 9:30 a.m. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. triyoga-santacruz.com. $15.
GENTLE YOGA / YOGA FOR SENIORS 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. 10:30 a.m. Watsonville Yoga, Dance and Healing Arts, 375 N. Main St., Watsonville. watsonville.yoga.
CHI PHYSIOLOGY CLASS Starts July 7. Topics include the study and understanding of: muscles, connective tissue, joints, selfcare, biomechanics, inflammation, and the stages of inflammation. 1 p.m. Cypress Health Institute, 1119 Pacific Ave., Suite 300, Santa Cruz. cypresshealthinstitute.com.
FOOD & WINE LIVE MUSIC AND TACO BAR Chaminade Resort & Spa’s live music series begins March 26 and runs through Aug. 27. Enjoy live music on our outdoor patio (weather permitting) performed by some of Santa Cruz’s well-known musicians. 6-8 p.m. Chaminade Resort & Spa, 1 Chaminade Lane, Santa Cruz. chaminade.com. $18. TACO TUESDAY Tuesdays are better with tacos, especially when you can enjoy two delicious tacos with a locally crafted beer and a B-rated movie. 6-9 p.m. Solaire Restaurant + Bar, 611 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. hotelparadox.com. $10.
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MUSIC CALENDAR
LOVE YOUR
LOCAL BAND GRAND LARSON
There’s a lot going on in Grand Larson’s debut EP released last year, simply titled E.P. It’s got dingy funk, bluesy grooves, jazzy licks, and rock ’n’ roll attitude. But what sticks amid all this genre overload is a band clearly interested in older music, and smashing it all together into something new. “The stuff I like predates 1978. I grew up on the Allman Brothers, Cream, Hendrix, Pink Floyd—a lot of the British Invasion blues bands,” says guitarist/singer Tyler Larson.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
The grit and soul of the group has a distinctly rustic ’70s rock sound, which seems the most natural. But all six songs on the E.P. have an easy, laid-back groove that holds together nicely.
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The idea behind the group was experimental. When Larson and bassist Duncan Shipton started working on songs, they were aiming to mix hip-hop beats with folk instrumentation. “The hip-hop drumming style is super, super tight,” Larson explains. “Then this more loosey ethereal guitar part that you can overlay over the drums.” The band had a different drummer at the time these songs were recorded, who was pretty focused on the hiphop beat. Now sitting in is Rowan Decosse-Graves, a diverse player who brings a distinctly jazz element to his beats. It’s a subtle difference, but one that’s noticeable on Grand Larson’s new material. AARON CARNES 8:30 p.m. Thursday, June 27. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $8 adv/$12 door. 479-1854.
THE DOGON LIGHTS
WEDNESDAY 6/26 FOLK
CRYS MATTHEWS AND HEATHER MAE Crys Matthews and Heather Mae are longtime social justice songwriters and friends, and the Singing OUT tour, a spirited stage show they put on during Pride month, is a natural extension of that friendship. Singing OUT has all the empowering missives and compassionate dissents found within Mae’s and Matthew’s music, but they’re not just gigging together—they’ve curated songs to tell a story of love and struggle, culminating in a message of pride. As Mae says, it’s about “where we have been, where we are going, and not losing hope.” AMY BEE 7:30 p.m. Michael’s On Main, 2591 Main St., Soquel. $15. 479-9777.
FRIDAY 6/28 PUNK
BAT! Deep within an American metropolis, there is a crime-fighting bat keeping the city safe from evil men and bad music. We’re not talking about that billionaire
Bruce Wayne. This is a three-piece rockabilly, punk rock, surf outfit that is—let’s be honest—better than the DC comics character. Come to a Bat! show and you will have some actual fun, not sulk in your drama. The group’s songs are fueled with rock ‘n’ roll mayhem and a non-stop party atmosphere. And they sport some pretty cool outfits, too. AC 8:30 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $12 adv/$15 door. 423-1338.
ROCK
JOHN HIATT Even if his name is only vaguely familiar, John Hiatt has had a successful four-decade career in music. Beginning with Three Dog Night covering his “Sure As I’m Sitting Here,” which went to No. 16 on the Billboard charts in 1974, Hiatt has been covered by, performed with or written for names like B.B. King, Eric Clapton, Bruce Springsteen, and Iggy Pop. He even had Ry Cooder and Nick Lowe as part of his backing band during the late ’80s and early ’90s. This year finds Hiatt touring the country solo with just his trusty acoustic guitar, on the tails of new release The Eclipse Sessions. MAT WEIR 8 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $45. 423-8209.
SATURDAY 6/29 WORLD
THE DOGON LIGHTS Ride It, the Dogon Lights’ recent full length, is a kind of celestial Afrobeat—roots music planted not in soil, but in the dusty expanse of night sky. Using traditional African instruments from Mali, Morocco and Burkina Faso, Dogon Lights craft a uniquely hypnotic, psychedelic hip-hop that’s not quite Afro-futurist, but always keeps an eye to the stars. Self-described as “Afro-galactic hip-hop,” the Oakland group takes its name from the creation myth of Mali’s Dogon people, who regard themselves as the descendants of Sirius. MIKE HUGUENOR 9 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $10 adv/$15 door. 479-1854.
INDIE
MOBILITIES For indie-progressive band Mobilities, music’s not about playing to the esoteric elitists who exploit a niche and then play gatekeeper. No, music’s for the hordes, so why not incorporate all the best tidbits and cast the widest
MUSIC
BE OUR GUEST PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
MOBILITIES
net? Why not flow through rock, indie, punk, alt, and hip-hop the same way moods flow through the neurological system? If feelings are transient, then music must be, too. Not static, but eternally crumbling like sand into the shores of the psyche, only to be built up again by the next person with a bucket, a shovel and a dream of sandcastles. AB
COMEDY
KASEEM BENTLEY In this post-Chappelle, call-out age of progressivism, many comedians are having a hard time discussing sensitive topics. Kaseem Bentley has no problem gracefully diving into race, economic divides, gentrification, and every other issue currently at the forefront in his native city of San Francisco. It only made sense to name his debut stand-up album Lakeview after his hometown neighborhood, even if he has spent most of his recent time in L.A. writing for Problematic With Moshe Kasher. MW 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. DNA’s Comedy Lab, 155 S. River St., Santa Cruz. $20 adv/$25 door. (530) 592-5250.
BLUES
VANESSA COLLIER When you hear “blues legend,” do you picture a sweaty guitarist with intense facial expressions, or maybe a spazzy harmonica player? Forget all that. The blues singer-songwriter you need to see is Vanessa Collier, mistress of the saxophone. This isn’t sweet, sexy jazz; she plays roots music with a deep funky groove, and her sound boils over with blues at its rawest. AC 4 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $10 adv/$15 door. 479-1854.
MONDAY 7/1 ROCK
FUTUREBIRDS On paper, the Futurebirds are a southern rock band. They’ve got the acoustics, the vocal harmonies and the slide guitar, all coated in a fine layer of twang. But then there’s also the expansive reverb, the Sonic Youth-y shredding, and the trippy jam interludes. On 2017’s Portico II, the Fat Possum signee takes the traditional American rock format,
and twists it just enough for some weird colors to show through—kinda like if the Band had collaborated with Wayne Coyne instead of Dylan. MH 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $12. 429-6994.
8 p.m. July 9–Aug. 31. Audrey Stanley Grove in DeLaveaga Park, 501 Upper Park Rd., Santa Cruz. $20-$55. Info: santacruzshakespeare.org. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, July 5, to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.
JAZZ
KENNY WERNER Growing up in the 1960s and ’70s, you didn’t have to be a jazz fan to encounter the unmistakable sound of Toots Thielemans’ chromatic harmonica. Featured on many film and television soundtracks, pop albums and classic Brazilian recordings, he was a singular studio musician and jazz artist of the first rank. Piano master Kenny Werner, one of jazz’s great improvisers, toured widely with the harmonica master in the years before his death in 2016 at the age of 94, and he’s put together a tribute to Thielemans with Swiss-born harmonica master Gregoire Maret. Thielemans himself passed the torch by appearing on Maret’s debut album, one of his final recordings. ANDREW GILBERT 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $31.50 adv/$36.75 door. 427-2227.
IN THE QUEUE MISS LEO AND HER BLUEGRASS BOYS
Bluegrass music you can stomp your feet to. Thursday at Crepe Place RED LIGHT RADICAL
Punk rock in the key of world beat. Friday at Blue Lagoon SKERRYVORE
Depressed indie rock meets traditional Scottish celttic band. Saturday at Rio Theatre JORDAN T
Reggae with a heavy dose of aloha. Sunday at Moe’s Alley ELECTRIC SIX
High-voltage rock ’n’ roll. Tuesday at Catalyst
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
8 p.m. Blue Lagoon, 923 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. TICKET. 423-7117.
SUNDAY 6/30
Theatre in the park is one of those things you have to do if you live in a hippie-dippy, tree-hugging town like Santa Cruz. Thank goodness Santa Cruz Shakespeare is putting on Jane Austen’s classic Pride and Prejudice— and not the stuffy version your English teacher forced you to read, but Kate Hamill’s recent adaptation. It’s fun, fast-paced and highlights the absurdity and excitement wrapped up in finding one’s soul mate. It’s performed by just eight actors, who play multiple roles.
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Thursday June 27 –8/8:30pm $8/12
Special Double Bill – 2 Great Bands
PAT HULL + GRAND LARSON Friday June 28 –8/9pm $10/15 Funk/Rock/Hip-Hop
BOOSTIVE AFROLICIOUS, TV
BROKEN 3RD EYE OPEN Saturday June 29 –8/9pm $10/15
Members Of DIRTWIRE & HAMSA LILA
DOGON LIGHTS HEATHER CHRISTIE KR3TURE Sunday June 30 –3/4pm $10/15 Afternoon Blues Series
VANESSA COLLIER Sunday June 30 –8:30/9pm $12/15 Hawaiian Reggae Favorite Returns
LIVE MUSIC WED
6/26
THU
6/27
FRI
6/28
Bebos Free 7p
ABBOTT SQUARE 118 Cooper St, Santa Cruz
7/1
TUE
7/2
James Murray Free 6-8p
Lloyd Whitley Free 6-8p
Steven Itterly Free 6-8p
Broken Shades Free 6-8p
Mojo Mix Free 6-8p
BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, Santa Cruz
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
Spun 9:15p-12a
Karaoke 6p-Close
Karaoke 6p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
BOCCI’S CELLAR 140 Encinal St, Santa Cruz
Karaoke Free 8p
Swing Dance 5:30p
BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola
Alex Lucero & Friends 8p
Karaoke 9-12:30a
Karaoke 9-12:30a
Kip Allert Free 6:30-9:30p
Dave D’Oh Free 7-10p
Nomad Free 7-10p
CAPITOLA WINE BAR 115 San Jose Ave, Capitola
CWB Bartenders Free 6:30-8p
CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Together Pangea, Vundabar $18/$20 7p
CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
XXXTentacion Memorial Bat! $12/$14 8:30p $12/$15 8p
Beat Weekend 8p
John Michael Free 3-6p
Galactic Ft. Erica Falls $30/$35 8p
CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville
THE INCITERS
CORK AND FORK 312 Capitola Ave, Capitola
The Beach Cowboys Free 7-10p
CORRALITOS CULTURAL CENTER 127 Hames Rd., Corralitos
Open Mic 7-10p
LUTAN FYAH
MON
Little Jonny Lawton Free 6-8p
Wednesday July 3 –8/8:30pm $7/10
Jamaican Reggae Favorite Returns
6/30
Al Frisby Free 6-8p
CHAMINADE RESORT 1 Chaminade Ln, Santa Cruz
Friday July 5 –8/9pm $20/25
SUN
APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos
JORDAN T Soul Dance Party
6/29
SAT The Keshav Batish Group Free 7p
Electric Six $13/$15 8:30p Beach Cowboys Free 6-8p
Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p
KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p Bonny June & Bonfire Free 7-10p Acoustic Open Jam 3-5p
+ NORRIS MAN
Saturday July 6 –8/9pm $12/15 Gypsy Rock Favorites Return
DIEGO’S UMBRELLA + DREAMING GHOSTS
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Jul 7 Jul 12 Jul 13 Jul 14 Jul 17
46
CATE LE BON MIDTOWN SOCIAL ARISE ROOTS HOWELLDEVINE HONEYSUCKLE + Jamie Coffis & Burt Budwig Jul 18 TROPO + Isaac Chambers Jul 19 MATT COSTA, MATT HARTKE, J.D & THE STRAIGHT SHOT Jul 21 SUGARAY RAYFORD Jul 24 SUN HOP FAT + ELEKTRIC VOODOO Jul 26 ATERCIOPELADOS Jul 27 THE SUBDUDES Aug 2 ALO Aug 3 NATTALI RIZE Aug 4 GARY HOEY Aug 9 DIRTY REVIVAL Aug 15 DIGGIN DIRT + WALK TALK Aug 18 JIMMY THACKERY Aug 23 DAVE ALVIN + JIMMIE DALE GILMORE Aug 28 JESSE DANIEL + VINCENT NEIL EMERSON Aug 30&31 METALACHI
WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854
THE
CREPE PLACE
LIVE in Monterey!
FRIDAY, JULY 5
OPEN LATE - EVERY NIGHT!
ADVANCE TICKETS ON TICKETWEB WEDNESDAY 6/26
SCIENCE ON TAP
Wed. June 26 7:30pm
“HOW STABLE IS WEST ANTARCTICA” 7:30PM - FREE - IN THE GARDEN
THURSDAY 6/27
MISS LEO & HER BLUEGRASS BOYS w/ WILD IRIS 9PM - $7 DOOR
& Heather Mae feat. JJ Jones & Joe Stevens
$15 adv./$15 door seated <21 w/parent Thu. June 27 7:30pm
FRIDAY 6/28
DIGGIN’ IN THE CREPE SANTA CRUZ HIP HOP SHOWCASE 9PM - $8 DOOR
SATURDAY 6/29
SPECIAL SHOW
FREE BLUEGRASS IN THE BEAUTIFUL GARDEN 5PM MONDAY 7/1
FUTUREBIRDS
w/ ZEB ZAITZ 9PM - $12 ADV. OR $12 DOOR TUESDAY 7/2
FUNK NIGHT w/ SPACE HEATER
9:30 PM UNTIL MIDNIGHT
WEEKEND BRUNCH FULL BAR MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ
1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 429-6994
Bill Kirchen & Five Lost Planet Airmen Fly Again
$20 adv./$20 door seated <21 w/parent
DDR
Fri. June 28 5:00pm HAPPY HOUR / NO COVER Fri. June 28 9:00pm
CHECK THE CREPE PLACE WEBSITE 9PM - $10 DOOR
SUNDAY 6/30
The Singing OUT Tour 2019w/Crys Matthews
Foreverland
Electrifying Michael Jackson Tribute
$20 adv./$20 door Dance – ages 21 +
Not So Young
Sat. June 29 8:30pm Neil Young Tribute $10 adv./$10 door Dance – ages 21 + Sun. June 30 5:30pm GRATEFUL DEAD TUNES /NO COVER
Grateful Sunday
Wed. July 3 8:00pm
Heavy Traffic Tribute to Traffic
$10 adv./$10 door Dance – ages 21 +
COMING UP
Groovity Space Heater The Turbans UK Based Balkan & Eastern Music Sensations Wed. July 10 Tell Me More Master Storytellers Fri. July 5 Sat. July 6 Tue. July 9
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Full Concert Calendar : MichaelsonMainMusic.com 2591 Main St, Soquel, CA 95073
Golden State Theater
MANDOLIN ORANGE 7/5
CATE LeBON SUNDAY, JULY 7
MOES SANTA CRUZ
Benmont Tench Kuumbwa Jazz Center 7/21 Santa Cruz
Big Sur 9/8 HENRY MILLER LIBRARY Please CARPOOL / RIDEHSARE to Big Sur.
OCT
13
HMML BIG SUR BIG SUR
LIVE MUSIC WED
6/26
THE CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
Science on Tap Free 7:30p
CROW’S NEST 2218 E. Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz
Hot Club Pacific $3 7:30p
6/27
6/28
Thursday, June 27 • 7 PM
6/29
THU FRI SAT Miss Leo & Her Diggin’ in the Crepe w/ Bluegrass Boys, Wild Khan & more 9p Iris $7 9p The Leftovers Free Vintage Point Spun 5:30p Touch’d Too Much $6 9p $7 9:30p $5 8:30p
DAV. ROADHOUSE 1 Davenport Ave, Davenport
SUN
6/30
Open Bluegrass Jam Free 5p
MON
7/1
Live Comedy $7 9p
Comedian: Kevin Camia Comedian:Kaseem 7& 9:30p Bentley 7&9:30p
Magicology: All Ages Magic & Comedy 7p
Friday, June 28 • 7:30 PM Saturday, June 29 • 7:30 PM
Monday, July 1 • 7 PM
THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville
KENNY WERNER & GREGOIRE MARET – BETWEEN A SMILE & A TEAR: A TRIBUTE TO TOOTS THIELEMANS
Blues Mechanics 8p Linc Russin 7-9p
Jeannine Bonstelle & Sweeney Schragg 6:30-9:30p
JACK O’NEILL RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 175 W Cliff Dr. Santa Cruz
Matias 6:30-9:30p
7th Wave 6:30-9:30p
KUUMBWA JAZZ 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz
Kuumbwa Summer Jazz A Winter’s Tale Remix Camp Concert Free 7p $42/$47.25 7:30p
A Winter’s Tale Remix $42/$47.25 7:30p
Bill Kirchen & Five Lost Planet Airment Fly Again $20 7:30p
Not So Young: Neil Young Grateful Sunday Free Tribute $10 8:30p 5:30p
MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel
FREE
A special co-production and melding of theatre and jazz.
FELTON MUSIC HALL 6275 Hwy 9, Felton
GABRIELLA CAFE 910 Cedar St., Santa Cruz
The culminating concert of our annual Summer Jazz Camp.
KUUMBWA JAZZ & SANTA CRUZ SHAKESPEARE PRESENT LE BOEUF BROTHERS & TOMMY GOMEZ: A WINTER’S TALE REMIX
DISCRETION BREWING 2703 41st Ave, Soquel
Speakeasy Night, Open Mic $5 8p
7/2
Johh Michael Free 8p
Ugly Beauty Free 6-9p
DNA’S COMEDY LAB 155 River St, Santa Cruz
TUE
Futurebirds w/ Zeb Zaitz Funk Night ft. 7 Come 11 $12 9p $6 9p-12a
KUUMBWA SUMMER JAZZ CAMP CONCERT
The Singing Out Tour 2019 $15 7:30p
DDR Free 5p Foreverland $20 9p
A heartfelt piano and harmonica duo celebration of a legendary harmonica player. Kenny Werner & Gregoire Maret Toots Thielemans Tribute $31.50/$36.75 7p
Wednesday, July 10 • 7 PM
MASTER CLASS: GARY MEEK – MUSIC & MOTION
Techniques and methods from an acclaimed local saxophinist.
FREE
Thursday, July 11 • 7 PM & 9 PM
ACOUSTIC ALCHEMY
Pioneers of instrumental guitar music, embracing a spectrum of genres. Friday, July 12 • 7 PM
CAMINOS FLAMENCOS WITH YAELISA & EL RUBIO
At the forefront of the nuevo flamenco movement.
1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS Saturday, July 13 • 8:30 PM
SIN SISTERS BURLESQUE: 80s vs. 90s Tickets: eventbrite.com
Thursday, July 18 • 7 PM
Celebrating an iconic jazz saxophonist.
1/2 PRICE STUDENT TICKETS Monday, July 22 • 7 PM
KIM NALLEY: PAYING RESPECT TO ARETHA
A salute to the Queen of Soul from one of the Bay Area’s favorite vocalists. Monday, July 29 • 7 PM
ALICIA OLATUJA – INTUITION: SONGS FROM THE MINDS OF WOMEN 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
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
JOHN HANRAHAN QUARTET WITH ANDREW DIXON: A TRIBUTE TO WAYNE SHORTER
47
LIVE MUSIC WED MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz
6/26
Jimmy Dewrance Free 6p
MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
The Get Down w/ Groove 9:30p
THU
6/27
FRI
Trivia 8p
6/29
SUN
6/30
MON
7/1
Boostive, Afrolicious, TV The Dogon Lights & Broken 3rd Eye Open more $10/$15 9p $10/$15 8p
Vanessa Collier $10/$15 4p Jordan T $12/$15 9p
Libation Lab w/ King Wizard & Chief Transcend 9:30p
Brandon Beach 9:30p
Aaron The Era 9:30p
Rasta Cruz Reggae Party 9:30p
The Takeover, Hip Hop w/ DJ Marc 9:30p
Six String Pharmacy
Caribbean Son 7-10p
Live Again 2-5p
Erin Avila 6-9p
Casey Wickstrom Free 6p Steve Itterly Free 8:30p
Paperback Ryders 2-5p
Cool Pistol String Band Free 8:30p
T-Bone Mojo Free 6p
Kid Andersen Free 6p
Astral Caverns Free 9p
Variety Show w/ Toby Gray 6:30p
Acoustic Reggae Jam 6:30p
Open Mic Free 4-7p Queer Bingo $5/ Blind Mountain Holler & Card 3:30-6:30p more Free 9p Trivia Free 7:30p
Aloha Friday 6:30p
Featured Acts 6:30p
John Hiatt $45-$60 8p
Skerryvore $35 8p
Live DJ
Live DJ
ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Comedy Night 9p
First & Third Celtic Jam
THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola
The Joint Chiefs 8p
Original Music Showcase The Joint Chiefs 7:30p 9p
UpFront 9p
1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135 Thursday, June 27 • Ages 16+
Together Pangea VUNDABAR
Thursday, June 27 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
XXXTENTACION MEMORIAL
Friday, June 28 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+
plus Fulminante also The Infamous Swanks
Saturday, June 29 • Ages 16+
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
featuring
ERICA FALLS
Tuesday, July 2 • In the Atrium • Ages 21+
ELECTRIC SIX
plus Kyle Shutt
Friday, July 12 • Ages 16+
The Brothers Comatose Jul 14 Toots & The Maytals (Ages 16+) Jul 20 Shwayze (Ages 16+) Aug 13 Matisyahu (Ages 16+) Aug 15 Hawthorne Heights/ Emery (Ages 16+) Aug 16 The Original Wailers (Ages 16+) Aug 22 Tuxedo (Ages 16+) Aug 31 Danny Duncan (Ages 16+) Sep 2 Xavier Rudd (Ages 16+) Sep 13 Iya Terra (Ages 16+) Sep 14 The California Honeydrops (Ages 16+) Sep 24 Hot Chip (Ages 16+) Oct 12 Manila Killa (Ages 16+) Oct 14 Yung Gravy (Ages 16+) Oct 19 & 20 Santa Cruz Music Festival (Ages 16+) Oct 23 The Distillers (Ages 16+) Nov 14 Suicide Girls Blackheart Burlesque (Ages 21+) Nov 20 Hippo Campus (Ages 16+) Nov 22 Cold War Kids (Ages 16+) Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.
Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online
48
Johnny Fabulous Free 6p
Comedy Free 8p
Open Mic Free 8-11p ‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p
RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
BAT!
7/2
Pat Hull & Grand Larson$8/$12 8p
Gil De Leon Trio Free 6p
THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz
TUE
Bert Javier Free 10p
PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz
SAT
Lloyd Whitely Free 6p
NEW BOHEMIA BREWERY 1030 41st Ave, Santa Cruz 99 BOTTLES 110 Walnut Ave, Santa Cruz
6/28
Broken Shades Free 6p
www.catalystclub.com
A people-friendly establishment. LOCATED ON THE BEACH
Amazing waterfront deck views.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
See live music grid for this week’s bands.
STAND-UP COMEDY
Three live comedians every Sunday night.
HAPPY HOUR
Mon–Fri from 3:00pm. Wednesday all night!
VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET
Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.
FREE BEACH BBQ PARTIES
Live Music, Thursdays, 5:30pm, All Ages
NOW SERVING BREAKFAST
Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily
(831) 476-4560
crowsnest-santacruz.com
The Human Juke Box 6p
Open Mic 6p
Trivia 7:30p Alex Lucero Open Jam 7:30p
Tuesday Trivia Night 6:30p
LIVE MUSIC WED
6/26
THU
6/27
FRI
6/28
SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos
Groovin’ w/ Jan Hagge & more 7:30-10:30p
SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright, Santa Cruz
Sasha’s Money 6:30p
SAT
6/29
SUN
6/30
MON
Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-9p
Mojo Cruz 8-11:30p
Patio Acoustics 1-4p Sasha’s Money 8-11:30p
SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola
Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p
Joe Ferrara 6:30-9:30p
Claudio Melega 7-10p
Kai Killion Free 6-9p
Jive Machine Free 6-9p
DJ Olright Free 6-9p
Wildflower & the Bees Free 6-9p
Paperback Ryders Free 5p
The Rayburn Brothers Free 5p
Carie & the Soulshakers Free 5p
Scott Slaughter 5:30p
Wild & Blue, Steve Bennett 5:30p
Flypaper Blues Free 6-9p
STEEL BONNET 20 Victor Square, Scotts Valley SUSHI GARDEN S.V. 5600 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley
Patio Acoustics 1-4p
UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel VINO LOCALE 55 Municipal Wharf, Santa Cruz
TUE
7/2
Highway Buddha 6-9p
Steve Ryan 6-8p
Kiyoe Wakabashi 5-7p Harpin’ Johnny & Ten O’Clock Lunchband the Groovehounds 1p 1p DJ Yosemite & the Spicy Boys 9:30p
WHARF HOUSE 1400 Wharf Road, Capitola ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola
Cruz Patrol 9:30p
June-Sept 2019
SEP 07 Int. Ocean Film Tour Vol. 6 SEP 15 Kevin Nealon SEP 20 Banff Centre Mountain Film SEP 23 Bobby McFerrin OCT 01 Madeleine Peyroux NOV 17 NOV 20 NOV 21 NOV 25
The Last Great
Felton Music Hall
Wed, July 3 8:00 pm $26 Gen. Adv.
JUL 05 Rising Appalachia AUG 02 Rodney Crowell: The Texas Tour AUG 03 The Waifs
Open Mic w/ Steven David 5:30p Open Mic Night 6-8p
Upcoming Shows
JUN 28 John Hiatt JUN 29 Skerryvore
SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 7500 Old Dominion Court, Aptos
SHANTY SHACK BREWING 138 Fern St, Santa Cruz
7/1
Yuji & Steve 7:30-10:30p
Jesse Cook A Tuba to Cuba Built To Spill Kirtan with Krishna Das
DEC 09 Tommy Emmanuel FEB 25 Teada Follow the Rio Theatre on Facebook & Twitter! info@riotheatre.com www.riotheatre.com
co-promote with Felton Music Hall
Kuumbwa
Fri, Aug 2 7:30 pm $37 Gen. Adv. $47 Gold Circle
Rio Theatre Jesse Daniel opens
Sat, Aug 3 7:30 pm $27 Gen. Adv. $40 Gold Circle
Rio Theatre
Fri, Aug 9 7:30 pm $25 Gen. Adv. $40 Gold Circle
Kuumbwa
Snazzy at Michael’s On Main Wed, June 26 7:30 pm Fri, July 12 8:30 pm Tues, July 16 7:30 pm
The Singing Out Tour (Pride Month Celebration) Hank and Ella with The Fine Country Band Martha Scanlan & Jon Neufeld Will Fourt & Shelia Golden Open
each side (40 seats). Additional $4 for each ticket purchased at the door. Tax is included.
$15 Adv/ $15 Door $12 Adv/ $12 Door $15 Adv/ $15 Door
Radio Station
$3
OFF
$2
OFF
Pancake Breakfast, Basic Burger Basic Breakfast Exp. 7/5/19 Tues-Fri with coupon
Open Tues–Sun, 7-2:30p
819 pacific ave., santa cruz 427.0646
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
Fri, July 19 7:30 pm $25 Gen. Adv. $40 Gold Circle
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FILM
‘LAST’ DAYS Jonathan Majors (left) and Jimmie Fails in ‘The Last Black Man in San Francisco.’
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Out At Home
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Displacement fuels poignant, dreamy ‘Last Black Man In San Francisco’ BY LISA JENSEN
T
he vintage hippie anthem “San Francisco (Be Sure To Wear Flowers In Your Hair),” keeps popping up throughout The Last Black Man In San Francisco. Its use is ironic, referencing the mythology of the city’s fabled past while its characters—two young black men born and raised in the city—reckon with the uncertainty of its present. The most apropos lyric from the song, however, is never actually sung in the movie: the recurring refrain “People in motion.” Everything is on the move here— the protagonist on his skateboard, navigating the city’s steep hills
and ramshackle neighborhoods; passers-by in the streets; chattering Muni bus passengers; platoons of sanitation workers in neon vests marching out to clean up the toxic waterfront. And yet, despite all the activity around them, the protagonists seem rooted in place, unable to move forward as time marches on, struggling to imagine viable new lives for themselves in the rapidly evolving city they love. This is the first feature from rookie director Joe Talbot, who wrote the script with Rob Richert, based on a story Talbot concocted with his longtime friend and fellow
San Francisco native Jimmie Fails. In the movie, Fails stars as a semiautobiographical character named Jimmie Fails, who spends most days with his best bud Montgomery Allen (Jonathan Majors). Softspoken, kind-hearted Jimmie works as a caregiver in a nursing home. Mont sells fish on the waterfront but devotes every spare minute to drawing in his sketchpad and trying to write a play. Jimmie’s passion is the stately, Victorian-style home in the Fillmore district that his grandfather built in the postwar 1940s, after entire communities of Japanese-Americans had been removed to internment
camps. It’s long since fallen out of his family’s possession, but Jimmie is so fixated on the house that he drops by often to repaint the window trims and spruce up the yard—to the ire of the current owners. The idea of home is important to Jimmie, who has lived for a time in both a group home and a car. His affectionate auntie (Tichina Arnold) lives in the suburbs across the bay. He rarely sees his small-time scammer father (Rob Morgan). His businesswoman mother is almost entirely absent. At present, Jimmie is crashing at the house where Mont lives with his blind but still feisty grandpa (Danny Glover)—until the owners of Jimmie’s family home move out, leaving “his” house tantalizingly unoccupied. The story is based in part on the experiences of the real-life Fails, who once lived with his family in a gingerbread San Francisco Victorian. It may seem a bit thin, plot-wise, but the storytelling is everything in this splendidly atmospheric mood piece. Themes of displacement, gentrification and cultural identity are there to be pondered in every dreamy, thoughtfully composed shot, without Talbot beating us over the head with them. That Fails and Majors are in their late 20s feels odd at times, when plot elements like skateboarding and the absence of any romantic relationships suggest teenagers. Mont seems almost childlike in his social wariness and compulsive creativity, yet he is savvy enough to de-escalate a scary trash-talking incident. (Majors also delivers a moment of electrifying poignancy as Mont acts out a scene from his play.) Majors and Fails establish a vein of friendship and loyalty that goes far deeper than the usual buddybonding movie. They couldn’t be any better at conveying their characters’ yearning to stitch together random fragments of experience into a life. THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO ***1/2 (out of four) With Jimmie Fails, Jonathan Majors, Rob Morgan, Tichina Arnold, and Danny Glover. Written by Joe Talbot and Rob Richert. Directed by Joe Talbot. (R) 120 minutes.
MOVIE TIMES
June 26-July 2
All times are PM unless otherwise noted.
DEL MAR THEATRE
YOUTH activities
831.359.4447
High School Students From Italy & France are Coming
BOOKSMART Wed 6/26 2:20, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45; Thu 6/27 2:20, 4:40 LATE NIGHT Wed 6/26 2, 4:40, 7:10, 9:35; Thu 6/27 2, 4:40, 9:35; Fri 6/28 1:40, 4:20, 7, 9:20; Sat 6/29, Sun
6/30 11, 1:40, 4:20, 7, 9:20; Mon 7/1 1:40, 4:20, 9:20 THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 1:50, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50; Fri 6/28 1:50, 4:30,
7:10, 9:40; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 11:10, 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40; Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40 NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE: SMALL ISLAND Thu 6/27 7
HOST FAMILIES NEEDED NOW International Student Services Santa Cruz is a locally-based program linking families with overseas friends for many years. Summer groups have a busy day-time schedule of English classes, local activities and bus excursions.
YESTERDAY Thu 6/27 7; Fri 6/28 2, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 11:20, 2, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50; Mon 7/1, Tue
7/2 2, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 DECONSTRUCTING THE BEATLES: ABBEY ROAD SIDE 1 Mon 7/1 7
NICKELODEON
831.359.4523
THE BIGGEST LITTLE FARM Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 2:20, 4:50, 7:20, 9:35; Fri 6/28 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:30; Sat 6/29,
Sun 6/30 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:30; Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:30 THE DEAD DON’T DIE Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30; Fri 6/28 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 12,
2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20; Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20 ECHO IN THE CANYON Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 2:10, 4:20, 7:10, 9:20; Fri 6/28 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:35; Sat 6/29, Sun
6/30 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:35; Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:35 NON-FICTION Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 2:15, 4:40, 7:15, 9:45 THE SPY BEHIND HOME PLATE Fri 6/28 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:25; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:25;
Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:25
GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 9
831.761.8200
TOY STORY 4 Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 10:15, 11:35, 1, 2:20, 3:45, 5:05, 6:30, 7:50, 9:15; Fri 6/28 1, 2:20, 3:45, 5:05,
HIGH SCHOOL YEAR & SEMESTER Eager to become part of an American family. THE TIME FLIES.
Interests Include: Dance, soccer, languages, theatre, cooking, horseback riding, martial arts, tennis... and more! Call NOW for more info.
6:30, 7:50, 9:15; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 10:15, 11:35, 1, 2:20, 3:45, 5:05, 6:30, 7:50, 9:15; Mon 7/1 1, 2:20, 3:45, 5:05, 6:30, 7:50, 9:15; Tue 7/2 10:15, 11:35, 1, 2:20, 3:45, 5:05, 6:30, 7:50, 9:15 CHILD’S PLAY Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 10:15, 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50; Fri 6/28 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50; Sat
2-3 WEEK SUMMER GROUPS: ITALIANS July 20-August 3 & 10, Contact Jessica & Steve @ 831.239.9860 jlowewilson22@gmail.com July 20 - August 3, Contact Sandi FRENCH July 21 - August 13, Contact Sandi
Sandi 831.419.9633 or 831.335.3088 sandispan@aol.com
6/29, Sun 6/30 10:15, 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50; Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50 ANNA Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 10:30, 1:20, 4:10, 7, 9:50; Fri 6/28, Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30, Mon 7/1 3, 5:40 GODZILLA: KING OF THE MONSTERS Wed 6/26 12:30, 6:20, 9:25; Thu 6/27 12:30 ALADDIN Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27, Fri 6/28, Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30, Mon 7/1, Tue 7/2 12:20, 3:20, 6:20, 9:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 2 Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 10:15, 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30; Fri 6/28 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15,
9:30; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 10:15, 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30; Mon 7/1 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30; Tue 7/2 10:15, 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:15, 9:30
SHAFT Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 3:35
$100
off tuition discount extendedthrough summer ‘til we are sold out
PETER RABBIT Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 10 a.m. THE STAR: Tue 7/2 10 a.m. ANNABELLE COMES HOME Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 11:05, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45; Fri 6/28 12:25, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05,
8:25, 9:45; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 11:05, 12:25, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 8:25, 9:45; Mon 7/1 12:25, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 8:25, 9:45; Tue 7/2 11:05, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 THE DEAD DON’T DIE Thu 6/27 7, 9:30; Fri 6/28 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:20; Sat 6/29, Sun 6/30 10:40, 1:15, 4, 6:45,
9:20; Mon 7/1 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:20; Tue 7/2 10:40, 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:20 SPIDER-MAN: FAR FROM HOME Tue 7/2 10:10, 11:35, 1:05, 2:30, 4, 5:25, 6:55, 8:20, 9:50
CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA
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Call theater for showtimes.
CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504 Call theater for showtimes.
REGAL SANTA CRUZ 9 Call theater for showtimes.
844.462.7342
Register NOW to get your spot Five weeks of filmmaking camps Ages 7 to 17
SAVE THE DATE All films made at camp will be screened together on Sunday, August 25th! 7 pm @ DNA’s Comedy Lab and Experimental Theatre Location of all camps: Thomas Family Farm, 770 Del Valle Road, Aptos
Thomasfarmfilms.com • 831.612.6312
SUMMER CAMP DATES WEEK 1 T! U June 24th-28th LD O
SO
WEEK 2 July 8th-12th
A FEW SPOTS LEFT
WEEK 3 July 15th -19th Weeks 3-5
HALF FULL WEEK 4 July 29th-Aug 2nd
WEEK 5 August 5th-9th
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
SUMMER CAMPS Great News!
MEN IN BLACK: INTERNATIONAL Wed 6/26, Thu 6/27 10:45, 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45; Fri 6/28 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45; Sat
6/29, Sun 6/30 10:45, 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45; Mon 7/1 1:30, 4:15, 7, 9:45
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FILM NEW RELEASES
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
ANNABELLE COMES HOME OK, whoa, enough with the doll movies already. No more killer robot Chuckys, puppets, ventriloquist dummies, action figures, or sporks that come to life, either. I’m done with the whole damn garage-sale lot of them. It might be different if even one of these Annabelle movies spun off from the “Conjuring Universe”—featuring an evil doll that gets passed around like Advil at a bell-ringing convention— had been good. But in fact, they seem to be getting progressively worse as they swerve from original timeline to prequel to sequel. From now on, I’ll get all of my wooden acting from Vin Diesel, thank you very much! Directed by Gary Dauberman. Starring Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson and McKenna Grace. (R) 106 minutes. (SP)
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THE SPY BEHIND HOME PLATE This documentary tells the story of Moe Berg, a Jewish major-league catcher in the ’20s and ’30s who later spied on the Nazis for the U.S. Office of Strategic Services during World War II. I see what they were going for with the title here, but it might be a case of trying a little too hard, as Berg didn’t start as an OSS agent until almost a decade after he gave up playing catcher. I sure hope he wasn’t trying to find intelligence behind home plate in the 1940s, when Yogi Berra was catching. Although, come to think of it,“Yogi-isms” like “I really didn’t say everything I said,” and “If you can’t imitate him, don’t copy him,” would be the perfect way for a captured spy to confuse the enemy. (NR) 101 minutes. (SP) YESTERDAY British director Danny Boyle has reinvented himself countless times over the years, from Trainspotting to 28 Days Later to Slumdog Millionaire to Trance. Incredibly, this may be his most out-there concept yet: a struggling musician is involved in a freak accident and subsequently discovers that no one has heard of the Beatles, and he can pass their music off as his own? BUT AT WHAT COST? I don’t know if there actually is a cost, I’ve just always wanted to say that. Starring Himesh Patel, Lily James and Kate McKinnon. (PG-13) 116 minutes. (SP)
CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to https://groups.google.com/group/ LTATM.
NOW PLAYING THE BIGGEST LITTLE FARM When TV director John Chester and his wife got kicked out of their L.A. apartment in 2010, they decided to start a farm on some of the most unfarmworthy land around outside of L.A. Chester documented the entire experience over the next several years, and the resulting film is winning praise not only for its first-person storytelling, but also for the incredible cinematography of the landscape and life that makes up the ecosystem of their farm. (PG) 91 minutes. (SP) BOOKSMART Actress Olivia Wilde directed this comedy about two straight-A high school students who try to cram all of the fun they missed into one night before graduation. Starring Kaitlyn Dever, Beanie Feldstein, Lisa Kudrow, and Jason Sudeikis. (R) 102 minutes. (SP) CHILD’S PLAY My favorite quote about Child’s Play came years ago, when Dee Snider of Twisted Sister fame explained exactly why Chucky is not the least bit terrifying: “It’s a doll. Kick it.” Kick it, indeed! There has never been anything even remotely scary about this particular horror franchise, but you have to give credit to series creator Don Mancini for realizing that (even if it took three movies) and taking his killer-doll concept in a whole new comedic, selfreferential and really weird direction with Bride of Chucky, Seed of Chucky and so on. This reboot is the first Chucky film Mancini isn’t involved with, and the new producers have turned it into a very serious sci-fi thing where the doll’s AI goes haywire. Wait, are you telling me I should be wary of technology? OMG this is just like that show about the mirrors that are black! I have an idea for that show: Hollywood studio executives become sentient and … OK, you’re right, that’s
too ridiculous even for sci-fi. Directed by Lars Klevberg. Starring Aubrey Plaza, Gabriel Bateman and the voice of Mark Hamill as Chucky (!) (R) 90 minutes. (SP) DARK PHOENIX I don’t care if they’re totally different franchises, it’s still hard to watch the trailer for this last pre-Disney-Fox-merger X-Men movie—which mainly features Sophie Turner as super-powerful mutant Jean Grey rage-melting everything with her fire/laser/ generally incendiary powers—and not imagine it as Turner’s other famous character, Game of Throne’s Sansa Stark, getting her revenge for having to give up her chance to rule the Seven Kingdoms so stupid Bran could be king. Burn them all! Directed by Simon Kinberg. Co-starring James McAvoy, Jennifer Lawrence and Michael Fassbender. (PG-13) 113 minutes. (SP) THE DEAD DON’T DIE In some circles, the words “Jim Jarmusch zombie comedy” are all you’d need to sell a movie. Especially when the cast includes Jarmusch stock company stalwarts like Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Steve Buscemi, Tilda Swinton, Iggy Pop, Carol Kane and Tom Waits. But while it looks promising on paper, the onscreen result could use some more brains. It would be shameless punning to employ words like “stilted” and “catatonic” to describe a movie about reanimated dead people. (That’s the point, right?) Everybody involved certainly seems to be having a swell time. But the audience, not so much, as they endure long stretches of ennui between unsubtle moments that drive home the message, and namethat-zombie celebrity-spotting. (R) 104 minutes. (LJ) ECHO IN THE CANYON With Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time in Hollywood coming out next month, it’s prime time for nostalgia around L.A. in the ’60s. This documentary about the Laurel Canyon scene in the mid-’60s traces how groups like the Beach Boys, the Mamas and the Papas, the Byrds, and Buffalo Springfield defined the California sound. It features interviews with and performances from classic artists like Brian Wilson,
Michelle Phillips, Eric Clapton, and Ringo Starr, as well as later artists who were influenced by the scene like Beck, Cat Power, Regina Spektor, and Norah Jones. Directed by Andrew Slater. (PG-13) 82 minutes. (SP) JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 3— PARABELLUM Keanu Reeves, who in recent years has ascended to become Hollywood’s Most Likable Man, returns to his role as the world’s Most Killiest Hit Man. This time, there’s a price on his head, and he has to survive all the other hit men and hit women. Hold on, wasn’t that the plot of the last John Wick movie, too? And possibly the other before that? I’m not being facetious, they all just kind of blend together into a non-stop ballet of Reeves twirling around while he shoots people at close range. Directed by Chad Stahleski. Co-starring Halle Berry, Ian McShane and Laurence Fishburne. (R) 130 minutes. (SP) THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO Reviewed this issue. (R) 121 minutes. (SP) LATE NIGHT Mindy Kaling plays an untested would-be comic hired by a failing late-night talk show to keep it from being cancelled, with Emma Thompson as the longtime host who is initially resistant to change. (R) 102 minutes. (SP) MEN IN BLACK: INTERNATIONAL The Men in Black franchise is 20 years old, and there’s definitely something a little squickier in 2019 about its premise of immigrant hunters with big guns as cool heroes. What’s the over/ under on how many big things will turn out to be run by tiny aliens inside it? 11? 25? 38? I feel that these are all good guesses. Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones are long gone, but we do have the reteaming of Thor: Ragnarok’s Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson leaving behind the NYC branch of the organization that polices “illegal aliens” (har, har) for London. Directed by F. Gary Gray. Co-starring Liam Neeson, Emma Thompson and Rebecca Ferguson. (PG-13) 115 minutes. (SP) ROCKETMAN Elton John says there were studios who wanted to take the sex and drugs out of his life story
and turn it into a teen-friendly PG-13 movie. Of course that would have been a really bad, soulless triumph of crass commercialism over artistic truth, and I’m glad Sir Elton was able to talk them out of it. But what I really want to know is: what were they planning to put in a movie about Elton John’s life that didn’t have any sex or drugs in it? Directed by Dexter Fletcher. Starring Taron Egerton, Jamie Bell and Richard Madden. (R) 121 minutes. (SP) THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 2 The same crew of voice actors returns for another animated adventure that reveals what your pet is doing when you’re not around. Well, not your pet specifically. Your pet is kind of boring. Featuring the voices of Patton Oswalt, Kevin Hart, Tiffany Haddish, and Lake Bell. (PG) 86 minutes. (SP) SHAFT What's the blaxploitation series from the ’70s that won’t stop making sequels even though everybody forgot about it? (Shaft!) Right on. They say this cat Samuel L. Jackson is a bad mother- (Shut your mouth!) But I’m talkin’ about Samuel L. Jackson in Shaft sequels! (Then we can dig it!) He’s totally fun to watchhhh, and now in this one he has his dad played by the original Shaft Richard Roundtree, and also a sonnn (John Shaft Junior!). You’re damnnnn right. Directed by Tim Story. Starring Samuel L. Jackson, Richard Roundtree and Jessie T. Usher. (R) (SP) TOY STORY 4 Last night I woke up in the middle of the night and thought, “Should I be worried that both the Child’s Play and Toy Story movies are about a kid named Andy whose toys come to life?” I am definitely not eating spicy foods before bed anymore. In other news, this fourth installment of the animated Pixar franchise is said to be the sweetest and most poignant of them all, which is also what they said about Toy Story 3. And probably what they’ll say about Toy Story 5, as long as Tom Hanks as Woody, Tim Allen as Buzz Lightyear and the rest of the gang keep pouring on the sweet poignancy. Directed by Josh Cooley. (G) 100 minutes. (SP)
! r e m Sum 2621 41 ST AVE SOQUEL • 831-476-3801 • CAFEC RUZ.C OM
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FOOD & DRINK a larger fanbase to include a few simple morning favorites like eggs and bacon; or even, yes, an avocado toast. I love watching this place evolve to match the time and the place. Kudos to Morgan and team. Vida, 1203 Mission St., Santa Cruz. Open daily 8 a.m.-2 p.m.
VINTAGE HARMONY Food by India Jozseph Schultz filled the long, long picnic table at the recent New Music Works Avant Garden Party. And to join it—on one of the hottest afternoons of the month—were two wines that pleased the partiers. One was the chilled, dry, crisp La Playita Estate Gruner Veltliner 2015 from Alfaro Family Vineyards. The other was a lovely pink Vin Gris Rosé 2016 from Birichino. Like pale strawberries, lime and chalk, it’s quite refreshing. You can taste the compelling GV from Alfaro at the upcoming July Winemaker Dinner at Persephone in Aptos, with the winemaker in residence fresh from a recent trip to Italy.
FIELD FLAVORS
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
DYNAMIC DUO Vida Executive Chef Sebastian Manjon Cubero (left) and founder Jason Morgan. PHOTO: JULES HOLDSWORTH
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Second Life Westside’s Primal Santa Cruz reopens as Vida BY CHRISTINA WATERS
S
pun slightly, Primal Santa Cruz has re-awakened as Vida, with a new brunch menu that expands its appeal. This menu is all gluten-free, and now comes with table service— what a treat for diners trained to ask whether a dish is GF or not. They can now order at will from a short but creative listing of brunch items loaded with intriguing spices, fresh veggies and intelligent design. Vida looks good—plants, pale wood banquettes and tables, polished concrete floors, bold artwork—but it’s not overdone.
The evolving brainchild of Jason Morgan, who opened Primal late last year, this restaurant is closing in on its true identity—one that reflects how we live and eat right now on the Central Coast. Bread-free breakfasts filled with flavor and visual appeal are no longer just a fantasy. A breakfast “salad” involved colorful arugula, avocado, red and golden beets, all tossed in a delicious seed-and-macadamia-nut dressing with a perfect fried egg for $12 (though it might be nice to stack all those items instead of forming a ring of veggies around the egg).
My companion’s very large plate with a grass-fed burger on a GF sesame seed bun—nice brioche-like texture, topped with local cheddar and wonderful caramelized onions— arrived alongside seriously addictive plantain chips, green salad and an acreage of delicious fresh pickles ($18). A pot of fukamushi green tea ($4) and a bracing Americano ($3) made it our major meal of the day. The Vida menu offers tons of creative plates—breakfast tacos, fried chicken and waffles, cast iron hash, sweet potato pancakes—priced from $10-18. It would help build
The atmospheric al fresco dinner to support the Homeless Garden Project was gorgeous as always with the fields, the folks, the food. But my taste buds told me that I was experiencing something rather special at the recent Sustain Supper with appetizers by Peter Henry from the Cremer House, especially the BBQ smoked brisket on corn johnny cakes with collard greens. Big flavors and sensuous textures made this my top app, paired with a well-balanced Santa Lucia Highlands Pinot Noir from Hallcrest Vineyards. I also loved a tangy salad of farm greens with strawberries, snap peas, radishes, and feta in a tart lemon vinaigrette by Monique Plossl from The Glass Jar empire. The sweet, the crunch and the salty feta all made for true bites of summer. Desserts from chef Laci Sandoval of Wind & Rye were beautiful; nothing topped her densely creamy chocolate espresso tart inflected with candied orange zest and sea salt. Easily one of the most sophisticated desserts this side of the macaron from Alderwood.
Restaurant, Tap Room & International Music Showcase Enjoy a glass of wine, mug of beer or any cocktail while dining on our patio overlooking the Soquel Creek, in our Fireside Room or Tap Room
Brunch
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2591 MAIN STREET, SOQUEL 831.479.9777 MICHAELSONMAIN.COM TUES-FRI OPEN AT 11AMÂ SAT/SUN OPEN AT 9AM
CLOSED MONDAYS
Dog Friendly Patio
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
Tuesday - Friday 4pm -6pm $5 Draft Beers, House Wines & Well Drinks $6 Margaritas, Cosmos, Lemon Drops & Mojitos
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please add brunch Saturday and Sunday at 10am - 2pm to both locations.
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ON TAP 9
FOODIE FILE
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HAPPY HOUR TWICE A DAY!
Westside - Santa Cruz
ur o y t r o p p u S 841 Almar Ave, Santa Cruz Open everyday for lunch & dinner 11am - 2am Saturday & Sunday Brunch 10am-2pm
831.421.0507
theparishpublick.com
NEW Aptos Location 8017 Soquel Dr, Aptos Open everyday for lunch & dinner 11am - Midnight Fri/Sat open until 1am Saturday & Sunday Brunch 10am-2pm
BEHIND THE CUP North Coast Coffee roasters Chris Carhart and Ken Noyes
831.708.2036
North Coast
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A local roaster’s global search for the best beans BY GEORGIA JOHNSON
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
BREWERS
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with owner Vince Legari.
N
orth Coast Coffee Roasting has flown under the radar for nearly 20 years. With a focus on certified-organic coffee, head roaster Chris Carhart and colleague Ken Noyes have traveled the world in search of the best cup of coffee. Though the labor involved in the roasting and brewing process can be overshadowed at some coffee houses by slick marketing and indoor plantintensive decor, it all comes down to the sourcing and final product for Carhart and Noyes. It’s not easy to maintain more than two-dozen blenda. Both Cathart and Noyes worked at grocery stores in Santa Cruz before they landed their jobs roasting coffee five days a week.
Why organic coffee?
A Taste of New Orleans!
Authentic down home Cajun and Creole food
3555 Clares St, Ste. TT in the Brown Ranch Shopping Center, CAPITOLA 831.295.6372 • rouxdatcajuncreole.com New Abbott Square location opening soon!
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Fried Green Tomatoes Sweet Potato Fries or Fried Pickles with any entrée Must present coupon. Not valid with any other offer. Exp. 7/9/19
CARHART: Going organic, we feel, is the best way to affect change. We are interested in sustainability and someone getting paid what they deserve for their work. But for many farms, it’s really difficult to go organic. NOYES: Some roasters aren’t strictly organic, so they have other options of sourcing that we don’t. With our paperwork, even if the farm is using organic practices and inputs, if they haven’t been able to get organically certified, we
can’t use that coffee. And for some smaller farms going organic doesn’t work. It’s a really expensive, long process, and some people can’t justify it. But for us, it gives us a floor for quality.
You travel to source the beans yourself, right? CARHART: In the last six months, we’ve been to Guatemala and Honduras meeting with other roasters from around the country and visiting farms and mills. It’s kinda neat to meet other professional roasters from all over. We traveled over 500 miles and cupped over 100 types of coffee. It was intense. It wasn’t a vacation. At the end of it, I was like, “Kenny, are you tasting anything?” My palate was shot. NOYES: Yeah, you can only taste so much. With our Honduras trip, we were able to secure a lot from one particular female-owned farm, and we’d like to highlight that at some point. It was special to find that farm. North Coast Coffee Roasting will be pouring free cups of joe starting at the TAC Skimblast Contest at Seabright Beach on Saturday, June 29. Their coffee is available at Staff Of Life, New Leaf and Shopper’s Corner. northcoastroasting.com.
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Drink well. Live well. Stockwell. SILVER SOUTH Silver Mountain’s Cabernet Sauvignon 2013 is made with grapes
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL WINEMAKERS!
from Bates Ranch Vineyard in Gilroy. 9
Santa Cruz Urban Winery Tasting room open Thursday-Sunday
1100 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz stockwellcellars.com - 831.818.9075
Silver Mountain A Cabernet Sauvignon with a sturdy backbone BY JOSIE COWDEN
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
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ETHICALLY SOURCED PRODUCTS FOR THE WELL BEING OF OUR COMMUNITY & PLANET...
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inemaker Jerold O’Brien of Silver Mountain Vineyards is celebrating 40 years in the business of making wine. He must be doing something right! One of the things he is definitely doing right is organically farming his estate grapes, stewarding the environment and handcrafting all his wines. He also carefully sources non-estate grapes from respected vineyards. Fruit for his Cabernet Sauvignon 2013 ($44) comes from the esteemed Bates Ranch Vineyard in Gilroy, resulting in a luscious and very drinkable deep-red wine with lots of backbone. “The tannins are soft and well-integrated with flavors of wild blueberry, cedar, vanilla, forest floor,” says O’Brien. This is the kind of wine that you open to reward yourself at the weekend. Sit back and savor all the Cab’s typical aromas of black currant, tobacco and coffee, plus the sublime flavors of rich, dark fruits such as black plums and blueberries. Silver Mountain has two very different tasting rooms, one on the
Westside of Santa Cruz and the other on O’Brien’s estate in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Silver Mountain Vineyards, 402 Ingalls St. Suite 29, Santa Cruz; Silver Mountain Drive, Los Gatos. 408-353-2278, silvermtn.com.
CRUISE ON THE RHINE
If cruising is for you and you love good wine, then you might want to sign up for a cruise on the River Rhine with Steve and Lori Johnson of Lester Family Vineyards in Aptos. This high-end, seven-night cruise aboard the AmaSerena includes free-flowing wine with lunch and dinner, visits to historic wineries and vineyards, daily Sip and Sail happy hour, an onboard wine tasting with the Johnsons, and a gourmet wine-paired dinner prepared by AmaWaterways’ award-winning culinary team featuring Lester Estate Wines. Dates are Nov 17-24, 2019. Contact Margaret Miner at Barefoot Travel Agency, VinoDestinations, mminer@dreamvacations.com, or 925-399-4269.
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
SWIMMING IS A LIFE SKILL
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H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES SIGN OF THE TEACHER
The energies of the planets circling the Sun, from the moon to Pluto, have a deep and lasting effect on humanity. The present Pluto/ Saturn/South Node configuration in Capricorn is reorienting humanity from the past to the present and presenting humanity (individually, nationally and globally) with a bare-bones reality. There is a feeling of no comfort. Experiences are harsh, difficult and challenging. This will continue for the next year. A good mantra to recite during these times of change is, “May all hindrances be removed, and may I integrate all that is new.” Pluto transforms us. Saturn restructures us. The South Node brings the past to the present. Changes are coming. Using the mantra helps us to prepare for the changes with calmness, equanimity and poise. Opposite the South Node is the North Node (presently in Cancer), where the new realities come forth. It is our new pathway. Cancer provides us with nurturance and a new birth.
Chiron is in Aries. Humanity is newly identifying as Souls. Asking what is our real and true identity? Note in the media the words “identity politics.” The media always reflects inner realities. The U.S. sun is in Cancer, with a birthday soon (July 4). The sign of Cancer is reflective, fluid, preparing us for self-knowledge in Leo. Cancer is the moon’s house. The month of Cancer is dedicated to teachers of wisdom. The Teacher, like the moon, reflects the rays of the sun. Cancer distributes Rays 3 (divine intelligence) and 7 (anchoring the teachings upon the Earth). The month of Cancer (sign) is thus dedicated to the teacher (soul, guru, God the father, Christ, the teachings, etc.) Students are called to rededicate themselves to the teacher (whomever one learns from) or the wisdom teachings, because Jupiter (higher expanded learning) is exalted in Cancer.
ARIES Mar21–Apr20
LIBRA Sep23–Oct22
A revelatory idea, dream or vision held long in your heart and mind, perhaps for years, is emerging more and more into form and matter, about to manifest. The next seven years, which seems like a long time but is only a blink in the eye of God/Buddha, will forth what you’ve longed for, hoped would occur, envisioned. It emerges due to your persistence, belief, faith, and love. Be sure all of it is shared.
This is a special time of communication for you, wherein you can begin to explain to intimates (family, friends, etc.) choices you have made and what has concerned you deeply. Do not go into anything new without consulting loved ones. It’s best to have another’s input providing perspective. This helps you clarify, choose and accomplish more than you would alone. Discuss everything. You need love and care. This comes from open communication.
Esoteric Astrology as news for week of June 26, 2019
come trip on the CURB you’ll always hit grass 6535 Highway 9 Felton CA
TAURUS Apr21–May21 You never lose sight of your vision or of tasks you are to perform. No matter what occurs—surprising events, losses, people, ideas, and hopes falling away—you know that love underlies all happenings of the times. This love isn’t from a person, but from greater realities guiding and directing our lives. You are to focus now only on what’s in front of you. Also, choices (and events) made during this time may reverse. Mercury retro is soon.
JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
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Most of us think we have free will. We do, to an extent. We can choose what we do each day, somewhat. We can choose how we behave, sometimes. We can think about who we want to live with and where we live, sometimes. But really, it’s best to be more fluid, to know we have very little free choice, and to discover what that greater reality is that hovers, surrounds and penetrates our little lives. Make its acquaintance.
GEMINI May 22–June 20
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20
Your thoughts, ideas and communications return somewhat, though not fully. This last month just about everything mental deserted your ability to understand and be understood. Mercury is retro soon remaining behind the scenes. Misinterpretations slowly may turn around and long lost friends may call (again). Actions for the next month remain obscure in order that you plan and choose to externalize all actions. Notice you keep a lot to yourself.
Great opportunities seem to appear in your life in their own time and place. Be aware of this; however, don’t expect anything specific. That’s a paradox, but it’s true and real and practical. Listen to all communications, from yourself and others, assessing carefully. Messages could wound, uplift, destroy, deny, or be a refuge (sangha). The latter is greatly needed by everyone at this time.
CANCER Jun21–Jul20
@curbstoneexchange
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21
CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20
You think about, ponder upon and consider goals for the coming months. They are bound up with expectations you have about life and your ideals. Up to this point, the goals and expectations of the past have served you. However, life has changed so radically that newer and freer points of view are forming. This is also due to influences of friends, colleagues, family, community, and nature all around.
In your daily (successful, ambitious) life, you might find yourself in two places at once. Your mind is here and your body over there somewhere. This is the Gemini experience in the daily life of everyone. You will attempt to bring a synthesis to this duality. Amidst the constant changing events, amidst the vicissitudes and instability of our present times, you will find poise, balance and harmony. This is the soul. Call upon it each moment.
LE0 Jul21–Aug22
AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18
Bringing forth your creativity is most important now. What you create constitutes your real professional life. They are closest to your heart, they define the qualities and gifts that best assist others and Earth’s kingdoms, and if you continue, your creativity (and you) will improve more and more. What studies have you put off that you know must be initiated soon? Greater mastery is yours should you pursue it.
It’s best to be among the young and playful, the innocent and childlike, the romantic and creative. Then you will become all of these, too, and discover new outlets of art and creativity and interests. You’ll see things in a newer, more golden light, and your imagination will flow outward, making your entire life a place of happiness and joy.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22
PISCES Feb19–Mar20
You are thinking deeply so you can have better perspective. Mortality (the idea of death, what death means, the reality of life after death) is something you will think about in the coming months. This is a healthy response to the changes occurring on our planet at this time. There is an underground river of communication occurring between you and others. It’s not verbal or externalized. Fill that river with love.
Know that everyone and everything in your environments supports you. Show that you trust them, and give them gratitude for being in your life at this very moment and all the moments to come. Something’s coming to an end. A new life will be built from the ashes of the old – a new community that creates the foundation for newer and greater achievements. Bid the old farewell. It served its purpose well. Now you have new promises to keep.
Classifieds classifieds Phone: 831.458.1100 | email: classifieds@goodtimes.sc | DisPlay DeaDline: thursday 2pm | line aD DeaDline: friday 2pm
housing wanted mature working professional looking for 1 or 2 bdrm - private rental Good credit + local refs. – Craig (831) 435-0484
cruZ, ca 95060. County of santa Cruz. mary-eliZa schmidt. 155 felKer street #12., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. This business is conducted by an individual signed: mary-eliZa schmidt. 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 may 29, 2019. June 5, 12, 19, & 26.
26, & July 3. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000832 The following individual is doing business as cluB ZayaNte. 9210 e ZayaNte rd., feltoN, ca 95018. County of santa Cruz. daVid m faulKNer. 9210 e ZayaNte rd., feltoN, ca 95018. This business is conducted by an individual signed: daVid m faulKNer. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 1/1/2019. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on may 6, 2019. June 5, 12, 19, & 26.
santa Cruz. KsK smoothies, iNc. 260 18th aVe., saNta cruZ, ca 95062. al# 3875880. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: KsK smoothies, iNc. 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 June 5, 2019. June 19, 26, July 3, & 10.
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Aide Direct Care. $500 Hiring bonus. Full and PT positions available. Work with intellectually challenged adults. No exp. necessary. We train. Up to $14 per hr. to start. Join our team and make a difference! Apply M – F 9am-3pm (831) 475-0888 caregiVer Needed ~ job is for 5 Days a Week – 5 hours per day – salary is $20 per hour. For more details about the position, email me: mr Clifford (cliff.meltzerr@gmail.com) fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000914 The following Corporation is doing business as solar motioN. 528 piNe street, aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. adVaNced reNeWaBle coNcepts. 528 piNe street, aptos, ca 95003. al# 4191870. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: adVaNced reNeWaBle coNcepts. 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 may 17, 2019. June 5, 12, 19 & 26.
fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000957 The following individual is doing business as reBirth BusiNess coNsultiNg. 223 mar Vista dr. apt. c, aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. carolyN ladoNNa ecKmaN. 223 mar Vista dr. apt. c, aptos, ca 95003. This business is conducted by an individual signed: carolyN ladoNNa ecKmaN. 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 may 28, 2019. June 5, 12, 19, & 26. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000971 The following individual is doing business as mermaid iNK, the mechaNical mermaid. 155 felKer street #12., saNta
chaNge of Name iN the superior court of califorNia, for the couNty of saNta cruZ. petitioN of alistar osBourNe Vargas chaNge of Name case No.19cV01604. the court fiNds that the petitioner alistar osBourNe Vargas has filed a Petition for Change of name with the clerk of this court for an order changing the applicants name from: alistar osBourNe Vargas to: alistar osBourNe miracle. 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 July 19, 2019 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: may 30, 2019. Paul P. Burdick, Judge of the superior Court. June 5, 12, 19, & 26. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000941 The following Corporation is doing business as sergio's loVe Bites. 248 sWaNtoN BlVd., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. County of santa Cruz. famBriNi tech iNc. 4006 faWN creeK Way, el dorado hills, ca 95762. al# 3633816. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: famBriNi tech iNc. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 5/19/2019. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on may 23, 2019. June 5, 12, 19, & 26. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000875 The following Corporation is doing business as highWay 1, highWay i distriButioN, highWay 1 saNta cruZ. 1210 fair aVe., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. County of santa Cruz. highWay 1 distriButioN, iNc. 1210 fair aVe., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. al# 4146014. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: highWay 1 distriButioN, iNc. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/13/2018. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on may 13, 2019. June 12, 19,
fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000961 The following individual is doing business as aptos family chiropractic. 7765 soQuel dr., ste. d, aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. deeNa aBreu riggiNs. 412 BoNita dr., aptos, ca 95003. This business is conducted by an individual signed: deeNa aBreu riggiNs. 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 may 28, 2019. June 12, 19, 26, & July 3. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000986 The following individual is doing business as ace's floWers. 7520 soQuel dr., aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. amy h scott. 1029 NueVa Vista dr., WatsoNVille, ca 95076. This business is conducted by an individual signed: amy h scott. 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 may 31, 2019. June 12, 19, 26, & July 3. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000985 The following individual is doing business as Bes, Bes cyBer security, Bes NetWorKs. 50 happy Valley rd., uNit B, saNta cruZ, ca 95065. County of santa Cruz. BeNJamiN erNest saNdel. 50 happy Valley rd., uNit B, saNta cruZ, ca 95065. This business is conducted by an individual signed: BeNJamiN erNest saNdel. 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 may 31, 2019. June 12, 19, 26, & July 3. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001015 The following Corporation is doing business as Blue Beach BuNgaloW. 260 18th aVe., saNta cruZ, ca 95062. County of
fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001064 The following married Couple is doing business as pelicaN raNch WiNery. 100 KeNNedy dr. ste 102, capitola, ca 95010. County of santa Cruz. peggy creWs & phil creWs. 403 isBel dr., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. This business is conducted by a married Couple signed: peggy creWs. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 9/4/1997. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 13, 2019. June 19, 26, July 3, & 10. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001051 The following Corporation is doing business as JaNus alcoholism serVices. 200 7th aVe., ste 150, saNta cruZ, ca 95062. County of santa Cruz. JaNus of saNta cruZ. 200 7th aVe., ste 150, saNta cruZ, ca 95062. al# 1078878. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: JaNus of saNta cruZ. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/1/2017. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 12, 2019. June 19, 26, July 3, & 10. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001002 The following Corporation is doing business as pediatric therapy ceNter, iNc. 1940 BoNita dr., aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. pediatric therapy ceNter, iNc. 1940 BoNita dr., aptos, ca 95003. al# 2886493. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: pediatric therapy ceNter, iNc. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 7/1/2017. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 4, 2019. June 19, 26, July 3, & 10. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001018 The following individual is doing business as charlie's goods. 7231 millie ct., uNit a, aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. misty Nicole torres. 7231 millie ct., uNit a, aptos, ca 95003. This business is conducted by an individual signed: misty Nicole torres. The registrant commenced to transact business under
Coaching For Contractors
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JUly 2, 2019
refiliNg of fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file With chaNge No. 20190000930 The following Corporation is doing business as cBm laNdscape compaNy, cleaN BuildiNg maiNteNaNce compaNy. 116 huBBard st., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. County of santa Cruz. alVareZ iNdustries, iNc. 116 huBBard st., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. ai# 3668772. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: alVareZ iNdustries, iNc. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 5/1/2014. original FBn number: 2014-0000976. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on may 21, 2019. June 5, 12, 19, & 26.
fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0000976The following limited liability Company is doing business as Woodhouse BleNdiNg aNd BreWiNg. 119 madroNe st., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. County of santa Cruz. hops & dreams, llc. 115 BeachVieW aVe., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. ai# 201621610038. This business is conducted by a limited liability Company signed: hops & dreams, llc. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 9/1/2018. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on may 30, 2019. June 5, 12, 19, & 26.
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Phone: 831.458.1100 | email: classifieds@goodtimes.sc | DisPlay DeaDline: thursday 2pm | line aD DeaDline: friday 2pm 330 15th Ave. Santa Cruz
A smooth transition in real estate requires great organizing skills.
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110 Lauren Cir. Scotts Valley $2,695,000
Tom Brezsny’s
3881 Winkle Ave. Santa Cruz
EC TO
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REAL ESTATE OF MIND
Provoking thought since 1990
IN SP
$1,395,000
Brezsny Associates
Terry B Brezsny
Daniel Wolford
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415-987-0277 DRE# 01735961
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H C OU LE S A E N ER
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LA N LE
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Supporting your success in 2019
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50+ Years of Combined Dedication, Attention to Detail, and Care
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415-250-6344 DRE# 02050043
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831-588-8485 DRE #01257150
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Scarlett Wolford
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Tom Brezsny
831-818-1431 DRE #01063297
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D O SI G TT ER
D R O O PE N R E AT O R
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TOM BREZSNY getreal@serenogroup.com
• 831-818-1431
TERRY BALLANTYNE terry@serenogroup.com • 831-588-8485 BrezsnyBallantyne.com • CalBRE# 01063297 • CalBRE# 01257150
Daniel Wolford CalBRE# 02050043
JUNE 26-JUly 2, 2019 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
dwolford@serenogroup.com (415) 250-6344
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Brezsny Associates BrezsnyBallantyne.com
the fictitious business name listed above is Not applicaBle. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 6, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, & 17. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001090 The following individual is doing business as the hairy haNdymaN. 10538 laKe BlVd., feltoN, ca 95018. County of santa Cruz. peter maX BrioNes. 10538 laKe BlVd., feltoN, ca 95018. This business is conducted by an individual signed: peter maX BrioNes. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 6/7/2019. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 17, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, & 17. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001047 The following individual is doing
business as W. coast Bait aNd tacKle distriButioN. 1039 freedom BlVd., WatsoNVille, ca 95076. County of santa Cruz. sergio urBiNa. 1039 freedom BlVd., WatsoNVille, ca 95076. This business is conducted by an individual signed: sergio urBiNa. 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 June 12, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, & 17. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001095 The following individual is doing business as the Net Zero eXistiNg BuildiNgs compaNy. 1470 oaKleaf driVe, WatsoNVille, ca 95076. County of santa Cruz. Barry Nicholas giles. 1470 oaKleaf driVe, WatsoNVille, ca 95076. This business is conducted by an individual signed: Barry Nicholas giles. 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 June 18, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, & 17. refiliNg of fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file With chaNge No. 20190001022 The following Corporation is doing business as alliaNce physical therapy. 7887 soQuel driVe, suite d, aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. iNtuitiVe health maNagemeNt aNd physical therapy, iNc. 7887 soQuel driVe, suite d, aptos, ca 95003. ai# 3941947. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed:
iNtuitiVe health maNagemeNt aNd physical therapy, iNc. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 9/27/2016. original FBn number: 2016-0000682. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 6, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, & 17. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001108 The following individual is doing business as life iN motioN therapy. 340 soQuel aVe., #207, saNta cruZ, ca 96062. County of santa Cruz. yVoNNe o'BrieN. 105 rutherford court, aptos, ca 95003. This business is conducted by an individual signed: yVoNNe o'BrieN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 6/20/2019. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 20, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, & 17. fictitious BusiNess Name statemeNt file No. 2019-0001084 The following individual is doing business as Jaegar physical therapy. 2603 WilloWBrooK lN. uNit 24, aptos, ca 95003. County of santa Cruz. stephaN BiaNchi. 515 VaN Ness aVe., saNta cruZ, ca 95060. This business is conducted by an individual signed: JeNNifer aNN Jaegar. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is 1/3/2017. This statement was filed with Gail l. Pellerin, County Clerk of santa Cruz County, on June 17, 2019. June 26, July 3, 10, 17 .
Here we are…right on cue. It’s the 6th day of summer and, not uncoincidentally, we’ve been talking about the seasonal downshift that often happens right about now, despite all the ad hoc wisdom that likes to insist that summer is the best time to sell a house. That’s when the weather is warm, the catfish are jumpin’ and the prices are high. But if you want to hear why that just isn’t the case anymore, read my recent columns that deconstruct the myth of an always-bullish summer market. Today, let’s catch up on local sales stats for SC County to see if they shed any light on where things are headed. Trying to get an accurate read on what the market is doing from random newspaper articles and posts selling some kind of spin is next to impossible. So let’s all start out on the same page, with the same stats moving forward. Next week I’ll tender a few predictions about what Sellers and Buyers can expect to see between now and 2020. Anyone interested in receiving more detailed breakdowns on market trends in Santa Cruz, Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties, can email me. I’m happy to forward complete metrics for each. If you don’t understand why it’s important to follow those neighboring markets, it’s time to get a refresher course on how Silicon Valley drives real estate sales here on the Coast. Here’s a quick review of single family home sales in Santa Cruz County: Median Price: This number was up significantly year-over-year as it approached an all-time high. It was $945,000 for May of 2019 compared to $863,000 for May of 2018. # of Closed Sales: This number dropped by about 20%. 147 Sales were recorded in May of 2019 versus 184 Sales in May of 2018. Average Days on Market or DOM (I’ve written extensively about the importance of days on market as an indicator of market value for buyers): This number increased from 28 DOM in May of 2018 to an average of 36 DOM in May of 2019. % of List Price Received: In May 2018, sold listings, on average, received 102% of their list price. In May 2019 sold properties received 99% of their list price. Average # of Months to Sell: In May 2018 it took an average of 2.7 months for a home to sell. In May 2019 that number rose to 3.7 months. Heading into the summer, these are decidedly mixed results. The median price point is close to its all-time high but virtually every other indicator is down, suggesting that inventory is growing and things are slowing. More next week.
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
services
Phone: 831.458.1100 | email: classifieds@goodtimes.sc | DisPlay DeaDline: thursday 2pm | line aD DeaDline: friday 2pm
handyman services
greg eiman
(201) 213-5602 Carpentry•Landscaping•Gutters• Plumbing •Custom Woodworking• General Home Repair•Basic Welding•Tiny House/Tree House Construction
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solar installing & maintenance
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aN iNNoVator iN her field are you subconsciously running from a painful past? or, has your pet become anxious, sad, or skittish? If so, it’s time to heal!
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Help make your TV, phones, WiFi and computers easier to operate.
call Jonathan (831) 325-2827 jonathan@thehelpinghandcollective.com santa cruz tango progressiVe Beg. CLasses eveRY TUes. drop iN CLasses eveRY THURs. 7:30Pm at the Vet’s hall.
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call curt feel good now! muscles relaxed and moods adjusted. De-stress in my warm safe hands. Days and evenings, CmP.
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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”
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psychic readings
maria’s Psychic Readings palm and Tarot card Readings $65 reading for $45
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general building contractor
eXtraordiNary coNstructioN
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“sky’s the limit! you dream It! We Build It!” extraordinaryconstr.com LiC #1023400
& 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.
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JACK WHITE
Jack White is a playful, fun companion. His zest for life is contagious and he is always excited to meet new people. He loves to chase the ball, so his forever home should give him ample time to play fetch. He is a Jack Russell Terrier at 7 years old and 22 pounds. If you’d like to meet Jack, please fill out an online adoption questionnaire.
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New State-of-the-Art Location 533 Ocean St. • Santa Cruz 8am – 9pm Daily
Original Location 3600 Soquel Ave. • Santa Cruz 8am – 10pm Daily
Dubois Street location now closed. Licenses: C10-0000172-LIC • C10-0000234-LIC
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2019
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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 7/2/19
BALSAMIC BEER BRAISED WINE & FOOD PAIRING PORK ROAST INGREDIENTS: 3 tablespoons vegetable oil 4-pound boneless pork roast* 12 ounces beer 3 tablespoons balsamic vinegar 2 teaspoons salt 2 teaspoons black pepper 2 teaspoons garlic powder 2 teaspoons oregano ¼ cup brown sugar Instructions: 1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.
BUTCHER SHOP
GROCERY
ALL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb, only corn-fed Midwest pork, Rocky free-range chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, wild-caught seafood, Boar’s Head products. LAMB
Local, Organic, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet
■ LEG OF LAMB/ 6.98 Lb ■ LAMB BONELESS CUBES/ 8.49 Lb
PORK
5. Cover and bake in 450-degree F oven for 15 minutes, then lower oven temperature to 300 degrees F and continue to bake for another 2 hours and 45 minutes.
Tellus Merlot 2013 91 Points James Suckling Reg 22.99 Incredible Value 12.99!
17.5oz 1.99
■ SANTA CRUZ ORGANIC LEMONADE All Kinds,
■ SPINDRIFT Sparkling Water 8PK, 12oz Cans/
■ PORK LOIN ROAST Boneless/ 3.98 Lb ■ PORK TENDERLOINS/ 4.98 Lb
5.99 +CRV
■ IZZE Sparkling Juice 4Pk, 12oz Bottles/ 4.99
FISH
4. Whisk together beer, balsamic vinegar, salt, pepper, garlic power, oregano and brown sugar; pour over pork roast.
■ C20 COCONUT WATER Original & With Pulp
32Oz/ 1.89
■ BLACK PEPPER LONDON BROIL/ 5.98 Lb ■ SANTA MARIA LONDON BROIL /5.98 Lb ■ MESQUITE CHICKEN BREAST Boneless, Skinless/ 5.98 Lb ■ WINE GARLIC CHICKEN BREAST Boneless, Skinless/ 5.98 Lb ■ SANTA MARIA CHICKEN BREAST Boneless, Skinless/ 5.98 Lb
3. When oil is rippling, brown pork roast a couple of minutes on each side.
Compare & Save
■ ODWALLA Orange Juice 1.8Qt/ 4.99
MARINATED TUMBLED MEATS
2. In a Dutch oven (or an oven-safe heavy bottomed pan with tight-fitting lid), heat oil over medium to medium high heat.
WINE & SPIRITS
■ FRESH TILAPIA FILLETS/ 10.98 Lb ■ SALMON LOX TRIMMINGS/ 10.98 Lb ■ COOKED LARGE PRAWNS, Peeled & Deveined/ 12.98 Lb ■ FRESH PETRALE SOLE/ 14.98 Lb
PRODUCE
Local Bakeries “Fresh Daily” ■ BECKMANN’S Eat. Good. Bread. “New Item”/ 5.29
■ WHOLE GRAIN California Black/ 4.19
■ KELLY’S Sour Cheddar/ 2.69
■ SUMANO’S, Ciabatta Mini Baguette/ 3.29
■ SUMANO’S, Ciabatta Steak Rolls, 4Pk/ 3.59
Delicatessen ■ BITCHIN’ SAUCE All Flavors/ 5.99
■ TILLAMOOK BARS All Kinds/ 3.69
■ COLUMBUS SALAME Pepper & Original/ 7.99 ■ FARMER JOHN BACON All Natural/ 6.69
■ DOLMATHES FACTORY GARLIC EGGPLANT New Item/ 5.29
Cheese - Best Selection in Santa Cruz
California Fresh, Blemish-Free, Organic, Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organics, Happy Boy Farms
■ WISCONSIN SHARP CHEDDAR “rBST-Free”
■ Loaf Cuts/ 5.09 Lb
■ CANTALOUPE MELONS Ripe and Sweet/ .69 Lb ■ FRESH CORN White and Yellow/ .69 Ea ■ TOMATOES Roma and Large/ 1.49 Lb ■ SWEET ONIONS Yellow and Red/ 1.29 Lb ■ CLUSTER TOMATOES Ripe on the Vine/ 1.69 Lb ■ RED POTATOES Premium Quality/ .89 Lb ■ AVOCADOS Ripe and Ready to Eat/ 2.69 Ea ■ HONEYDEW MELONS Great in Fruit Salads/ .99 Lb ■ LEAF LETTUCE Red, Romaine, Butter & Iceberg/ 1.49 Ea ■ BUSHBERRIES Black, Blue and Raspberries/ 4.49 Ea
Average Cuts/ 5.49 Lb
■ PRESIDENT BRIE Perfect for Picnics/ 11.89 Lb ■ NORWEGIAN JARLSBERG Imported/ 9.99 Lb ■ STELLA PARMESAN Whole Wheel Cuts/ 7.99
Clover Sonoma ■ HALF & HALF Qt/ 2.09
■ ORGANIC LOWFAT YOGURT Plain & Vanilla Bean 32oz/ 3.49
■ ORGANIC CREAM TOP YOGURT 24oz Plain & Vanilla 24oz/ 3.49
■ ORGANIC KEFIR 16oz/ 3.69
■ ORGANIC BUTTER 16oz/ 6.89
Best Buys, Local, Regional, International
Beer ■ TIN CITY CIDER Asst 4Pk Cans, 12oz/ 9.99 +CRV ■ TW PITCHER Shandy or Radler, 6Pk Cans, 12oz/ 9.99 +CRV ■ CORONA Extra or Familiar, 12Pk Btls, 12oz/ 14.99 +CRV ■ PABST Blue Ribbon, 12Pk cans, 12oz/ 9.99 +CRV ■ MASON ALE WORKS Asst 4Pk Cans, 16oz/ 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
Summer 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
BBQ Reds ■ 2013 McBRIDE SISTERS Truvée Red (Reg 20.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2013 CHATEAU STE MICHELLE Indian Wells Merlot (90WS, Reg 18.99)/ 9.99 ■ 2015 SANTA EMA Reserve Merlot (91JS, Reg 17.99)/ 9.99 ■ 2013 MEDALLA REAL Cabernet Sauvignon (92JS, Reg 21.99)/ 11.99 ■ 2016 TWO HANDS Tenacity (Reg 24.99)/ 13.99
Connoisseur’s Corner - Santa Cruz Mountain Chardonnay ■ 2016 ALFARO Trout Gulch (93WA)/ 26.99 ■ 2014 SANTE ARCANGELI (92WE)/ 31.99 ■ 2012 CENAY Bald Mountain (93WE)/ 31.99 ■ 2015 RIDGE Montebello Vineyard (92WS)/ 49.99 ■ 2016 BEAUREGARD Bald Mountain (93WE)/ 49.99 ■ 2013 MOUNT EDEN Estate (93V)/ 63.99
MARTA SPRAGUE, 30-Year Customer
S HOPP ER’S SPOTLIG HT
Occupation: Medical translator and interpreter Hobbies: Cooking, tennis, rescuing dogs Who or what first got you shopping here? I had moved here in 1989 and was looking for a really good butcher shop, and my neighbors directed me to Shopper’s Corner. I’ve been shopping here at least twice a week ever since. I’ve always liked the store’s ambiance and its size — you know where things are and can easily find them. If you need assistance, you’ll always find helpful staff in the aisles; the same is true with produce and actually all of the departments.You don’t always find that in other markets. I find Shopper’s very convenient. I can easily find parking, no matter the time of day, and they open at 6 am daily!
What do you like to cook? First of all, I love to cook. It’s my therapy. My family is from Spain, and I enjoy making Spanish and Mediterranean-style dishes. I cook lots of fish, roasted vegetables, rice dishes — Shopper’s carries paella rice! — also papas and lots of pasta. Shopper’s carries so many terrific specialty products — olive oils, vinegars, anchovy- stuffed olives, imported prosciutto (they slice), and superb spices! Shopper’s ice creams and gelatos are the best, same with their fabulous liquor selection and local wines, like Soquel Vineyards, Storres,Windy Oaks and Bargetto, just a few of my favorites.
You’re a fan of shopping local? Yes, and I appreciate that Shopper’s offers many locally produced items:There are Kelly’s breads and pastries, Companion breads, Bagelry bagels, Pasta Mike’s pasta, and the beautiful produce. The butcher counter’s a lively spot. I may be talking to people I know while eating the free candy. Butchers are laughing along with each other and customers.And then my number’s called.They may ask,‘Can I get you ground turkey? Would you like salmon today?’The guys know what you want and they’ll specialcut whatever you need.This is what shopping local feels like.
“Shopper’s is a wonderful community store; the people are friendly and knowledgeable, and you’ll find things you cannot get elsewhere.”
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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