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INSIDE Volume 41, No. 22 September 10-16, 2014
SPLASH DANCE Can anyone explain this paranormal whale activity? P12
THEY LIKE TO WATCH Why government surveillance is for amateurs. P22
Lúpulo has hopped on to something good. P62
FEATURES Opinion 4 News 12 Cover Story 22 A&E 32 Music 38 Events 40
Film 58 Dining 62 Risa’s Stars 67 Real Estate 68 Classifieds 69
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THIS WILL BE OUR BEER
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OPINION
EDITOR’S EDITOR R’S NOTE It’s a great It’s great time to be paranoid. paranoid. Edward Edwar d Snowden’ss Snowden’ rrevelations evelations about previously the h pr eviously i l unimagined scope of global spying sp ying by by the National Security Agency National Sec urity Ag ency did what many thought longer many of us th hought was no long er even possible—shocked possible e—shocked us about the extent to o which members members of our own government gove ernment are are willing and able to use u technology technology to take away away our ou ur freedom, freedom, in the supposed pursuit purrsuit of protecting protecting that freedom. freedom m. It’s It’s hard hard to say say what was most disturbing dissturbing about the Wikileaks documents—maybe do ocuments—maybe that NSA agents agents routinely routinely were were (and undoubtedly still are) are) abusing national security secu urity technology technology for personal personal gain, stalking their spouses, lovers love ers and basically anyone crossed anyone who cr ossed them? That the NSA had found a way way to subvert a warrant warrant system system that was a last
meager check on their power? meager m The integrity Th he lack of inte grity and sheer contempt democracy was co ontempt for democr acy that wa as rivals anything rrevealed e evealed anything we’ve seen se een in American history. history. (Glenn n Greenwald’s Gr reenwald’s book “No “No Place to from H Hide” from earlier earlier this year is a great gr reat resource resource for understanding understandin ng how ho ow Wikileaks unfolded, and breaking unsettling br reaking down its most unsettlin ng rrevelations.) e evelations.) week’ss is issue, In this week’ sue, though, Yasha why Y a asha Levine explains wh y we don’t do on’t need the government government to us paranoid. m make paranoid. It’s It’s got got nothing, nothin ng, Levine Le evine argues, on the for-profit for-proffit i surveillance being su urveillance ill b i g run by by tech t h companies co ompanies like Google. Oh, and if i you yo ou thought technologies like Tor Tor o were w wer e keeping your data safe and d anonymous, an nonymous, think again. Levine will be speaking on n Thursday Thursday at the Creative Creative Convergence (C2SV) Co onvergence Silicon Valley Valley (C2S V) conference co onference in San Jose. It’s It’s free free pre-registration; w with pr e-registration; check outt C2SV.com C2 2SV.com for details. STEVE S T VE P TE PALOPOLI ALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF OR IN CHIEF
LETTERS LETTER RS
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It’s gr It’s great eat that you you dedicated dedicated significant significant sp ace ttoo covering covering Automatic Automatic License License Plate Plate space R ecognition (A LPR) (GT, 9/3). But it’s it’s Recognition (ALPR) dis appointing tthat hat author John Malkin disappointing ffailed ailed ttoo pr esennt a me aningful de scription present meaningful description ooff the risk d bene fits. riskss and benefits. It didn’ ake much m web digging to to find a didn’tt ttake web Canadian sstudy tudyy that sho wed what types types of of showed crime actuually ssolved olved and prevented prevented crimess ar aree actually b stly t identifying suspended or byy ALPR—mo ALPR—mostly unlic ensed driv vers and uninsur ed driv ers. unlicensed drivers uninsured drivers. It pr ovides ssome om me sstrong trong arguments arguments in provides ffavor avor ooff ALPR use, u e, but more us more importantly, importantly, it clarifie benefits are are likely likely real real vs. vs. clarifiess whatt benefits imagined. It als ake much digging to to find alsoo didn’ didn’tt ttake a Washington Washington ACLU ACLU report report based based on a FFreedom reedom of of Information Information o Act request request in Act which the ere able to to produce produce some some theyy w were surprising br eache a s ooff priv acy – including breaches privacy ermining wh det here ssome ome polic fficers determining where policee oofficers liv e, wher they like like to to take take their lunch, live, wheree they and whether th hey typically typically speed. they I don’ ve a position p sition on ALPRs, po ALPRs, but don’tt ha have
I pr probably p obably should. I think it w would ould be aawesome wesome if the Good Time Timess ffocused ocused le less e ss onn city city council council drama drama and polarizing hyperbole, hyperbole y , and focused focused instead instead on intelligent intelligent analysis. analysis.
PHOTO CON CONTEST NTEST STUDYING S TUDYING MICHEL MICHELANGELO A ANGEL O AND DONATELLO DONATEL T LO The The grandkids grandkids watch watch ‘Teenage ‘T Teenag e e
Mutant Turtles’ Santa 9.. Phot Photograph Mut ant Ninja T urtles’ at S a a Cruz Cinema 9 ant ograph by by Sandra Sandra Rosslow Rosslow photos@gtweekly.com. information (location, etc.) name.. Phot Photos Submit ttoo photo s@gtweeekly.com. Include inf ormation (loc atioon, et c.) and yyour our name os mayy be cr cropped. Preferably, photos inchess b byy 4 inc inches ma opped. P referab bly, phot os should be 4 inche ches and minimum 250 dpi.
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Santa Cruz p Santa participants articipants in th the he ffourth ourth annual Community justt C ommunity LLeadership eadership Visit Visitt ((CLV) CLLV) V jus Barbara. Each rreturned eturned from from Santa Santa Barb arra. E ach yyear ear leaders from local businesses le aders fr om loc al ggovernments, overnmeents, busine sses three days and ccolleges olleges spend thr ee da ays with their ccounterparts ounterparts in a similar ccounty ouunty ttoo ttalk alk issues: transportation, about ssolutions olutions ttoo is sues: tr a ansport ation, water, arts, economic vitality, housing, w ater, art s, ec onom mic vit ality, education, homelessness, etc. educ ation, homele ssness, et tc.
Hats ooff Hats ff ttoo rising riising ccomedic omedic sstar tar Br Brendan endan Central LLynch, ynch, y who appe aappeared ared on Comedy Comedy C entral past Tuesday this p ast T uueesday night. The Santa Santa Cruz nativee perf performed premiere nativ orrmed on the sseries eries 2 pr emiere of A Adam dam Devine’s Devine’ v ’s House House P Party aartty—p —part art sitcom sitcom and part part standup standup special. It’s It’s a well-deserved well-deserved e break break for for a nice nice guy who has mastered mastered the the art of of making fun of of you you until you you laugh.
RON R O GOODMAN | SANTA ON SANTA CRUZ CRUZ
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P PRAYER FOR CURE I am a luck luckyy to to have have spent sseven even yyears ears inn Senegal S e al and another two eneg two yyears ears in Mali and heartbreaking hear an nd LLesotho. esotho. It is he artbreaking ttoo he a ar the news spreading across th he ne ws ooff Ebola spr eading acr oss West West African People Africa have A f an ccountries. fric ountries. P eople in A frica ha ve always proximity alw ways lived lived in close close pr oximity with family fam mily members. customary embrace m embers. It is cus tomary ttoo embr ace friends.. No Now theree att meeting friends w it seems seems ther Theree sseems is fear fear at ccontact. ontact. Ther eems ttoo be aann acceleration disease spreads across ac cceleration as the dis ease spr eads ac cross boarders theree is a case Ebola bo oarders and now now ther case ooff Eb bola Senegal. in S enegal. Santa vibrant S a a Cruz has a vibr ant ant and friendly African dancee and drum ccommunity. Wee A f an danc fric ommunity. W are incredibly ar re fortunate fortunate ttoo have have incr edibly ttalented alented e African dancee tteachers A f an drum and danc fric eachers livingg here. he ere. There There are are classes classes taught taught
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“I think k it’s wrong that the newspa aper reporters have havve all newspaper these documents—the documents—the 50,000, 50 0,000, whatever whatev ver they have—and d are selling them and giving them th hem out.” — NS NSA A DIRE DIRECTOR CTOR O GEN. KEITH ALEXANDER
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LOCAL TALK
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What's your all-time best Skyview Flea Market score? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT
I scored a nautical compass for $150, and sold it for $3,000. THOMAS CARLSEN
SANTA CRUZ | EBAY BUSINESS
I found an Agfa film box [with original photos] of Andy Warhol. About 20 photographs. I got that for $20, and I sold it, but can't say for how much. CHRISTINE VELGOT
SANTA CRUZ | REAL ESTATE
Five years ago, I bought a diamond ring for $5. I sold it for $800. BRUCE BEGLEY
SANTA CRUZ | CONSTRUCTION
DAVE MICHAELS
CAPITOLA | ANTIQUE SELLER
Probably a $300 locker, and I eventually made about $10,000 off of it. It was full of antique vases and old jewelry and even a couple of dollars in the safe. ED FELDER
SANTA CRUZ | FLEA MARKET SELLER
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A 1906 wind-up toy that was made in Spain. I bought it for $250 and sold it on eBay for $8,900.
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ARIES Mar21–Apr19 In the 2000 film Cast Away, Tom Hanks plays an American FedEx executive who is stranded alone on a remote Pacific island after he survives a plane crash. A few items from the plane wash up on shore, including a volleyball. He draws a face on it and names it “Wilson,” creating a companion who becomes his confidant for the next four years. I’d love to see you enlist an ally like Wilson in the coming week, Aries. There are some deep, messy, beautiful mysteries you need to talk about. At least for now, the only listener capable of drawing them out of you in the proper spirit might be a compassionate inanimate object that won’t judge you or interrupt you.
TAURUS Apr20–May20 As far as I know, there has been only one battleship in history that was named after a poet. A hundred years ago, the Italian navy manufactured a dreadnought with triple-gun turrets and called it Dante Alighieri, after the medieval genius who wrote the Divine Comedy. Other than that, most warships have been more likely to receive names like Invincible, Vengeance, Hercules, or Colossus. But it would be fine if you drew some inspiration from the battleship Dante Alighieri in the coming weeks. I think you will benefit from bringing a lyrical spirit and soulful passion to your expression of the warrior archetype.
GEMINI May21–June20 If you go to a 7-Eleven convenience store and order a Double Big Gulp drink, you must be prepared to absorb 40 teaspoons of sugar. But what will be an even greater challenge to your body is the sheer amount of fluid you will have to digest: 50 ounces. The fact is, your stomach can’t easily accommodate more than 32 ounces at a time. It’s true that if you sip the Double Big Gulp very slowly—like for a period of three and a half hours—the strain on your system will be less. But after the first half hour, as the beverage warms up, its taste will decline steeply. Everything I’ve just said should serve as a useful metaphor for you in the coming week. Even if you are very sure that the stuff you want to introduce into your life is healthier for you than a Double Big Gulp, don’t get more of it than you can comfortably hold.
CANCER Jun21–Jul22
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If you surrender to the passive part of your personality, you will be whipped around by mood swings in the coming days. You will hem and haw, snivel and procrastinate, communicate ineptly, and be confused about what you really feel. If, on the other hand, you animate the proactive side of your personality, you are likely to correct sloppy arrangements that have kept you off-balance. You will heal rifts and come up with bright ideas about how to get the help you need. It’s also quite possible you will strike a blow for justice and equality, and finally get the fair share you were cheated out of in the past.
Our patients have noted some of the following:
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In his 1982 martial arts film Dragon Lord, Jackie Chan experimented with more complex stunts than he had tried in his previous films. The choreography was elaborate and intricate. In one famous sequence, he had to do 2,900 takes of a single fight sequence to get the footage he wanted. That’s the kind of focused attention and commitment to detail I recommend to you in the coming weeks, Leo—especially if you are learning new tricks and attempting novel approaches.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 In 1786, Jacques Balmat and Michel Paccard were the first explorers to reach the top of 15,781-foot Mont Blanc on the French-Italian border. They were hailed as heroes. One observer wrote that the ascent was “an astounding achievement of courage and determination, one of the greatest in the annals of mountaineering. It was accomplished by men who were not only on unexplored ground but on a route that all the guides believed impossible.” And yet today, 228 years later, the climb is considered
relatively easy for anyone who’s reasonably prepared. In a typical year, 20,000 people make it to the summit. Why am I bringing this to your attention? Because I suspect that you are beginning to master a skill that will initially require you to be like Balmat and Paccard, but will eventually be almost routine.
LIBRA Sep23–Oct22 Those who invoke the old metaphor about the caterpillar that transforms into the butterfly often omit an important detail: the graceful winged creature is helpless and weak when it first wriggles free of its chrysalis. For a while it’s not ready to take up its full destiny. As you get ready for your own metamorphosis, Libra, keep that in mind. Have plans to lie low and be self-protective in the days following your emergence into your new form. Don’t try to do loop-the-loops right away.
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you Scorpios are currently the sign of the zodiac that is least likely to be clumsy, vulgar, awkward, or prone to dumb mistakes. On the other hand, you are the most likely to derisively accuse others of being clumsy, vulgar, awkward, or prone to dumb mistakes. I recommend that you resist that temptation, however. In the coming week, it is in your selfish interests to be especially tactful and diplomatic. Forgive and quietly adjust for everyone’s mistakes. Don’t call undue attention to them or make them worse. Continue to build your likeability and finetune your support system.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 You have cosmic permission to be bigger than life and wilder than sin. You have a poetic license to be more wise than clever. And you should feel free to laugh longer than might seem polite and make no apologies as you spill drinks while telling your brash stories. This phase of your astrological cycle does not require you to rein yourself in or tone yourself down or be a well-behaved model citizen. In fact, I think it will be best for everyone concerned if you experiment with benevolent mischief and unpredictable healing and ingenious gambles.
CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 For over 2,000 years, Chinese astronomers have understood the science of eclipses. And yet as late as the 1800s, sailors in the Chinese navy shot cannonballs in the direction of lunar eclipses, hoping to chase away the dragons they imagined were devouring the moon. I have a theory that there’s a similar discrepancy in your psyche, Capricorn. A fearful part of you has an irrational fantasy that a wiser part of you knows is a delusion. So how can we arrange for the wiser part to gain ascendancy? There’s an urgent need for you to stop wasting time and energy by indulging in that mistaken perspective.
AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 Squirrels don’t have a perfect memory of where they bury their nuts. They mean to go back and dig them all up later, but they lose track of many. Sometimes trees sprout from those forgotten nuts. It’s conceivable that on occasion a squirrel may climb a tree it planted years earlier. I see this as a useful metaphor for you to meditate on in the coming weeks. You are on the verge of encountering grown-up versions of seeds you sowed once upon a time and then forgot about.
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 On a German TV show, martial artist Jackie Chan performed a tough trick. While holding a raw egg in his right hand, he used that hand to smash through three separate sets of four concrete blocks. When he was finished, the egg was still intact. I see your next task as having some resemblances to that feat, Pisces. You must remain relaxed, protective, and even tender as you destroy an obstruction that has been holding you back. Can you maintain this dual perspective long enough to complete the job? I think you can.
Homework: What symbol best represents your deepest desire? Testify by going to FreeWillAstrology.com and clicking on “Email Rob.”
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LETTERS
<4 by former members of national dance troupes from West Africa and the Congo. As part of this community, I wish to send a prayer that this epidemic will be contained. I have so many wonderful memories of living in West Africa, and I feel a deep connection to it. I also lived in Lesotho, a small country inside South Africa which suffered the terrible impact of AIDS. It is predicted that as many people who died from AIDS might be cut down by Ebola. Hopefully there will be vaccine and a way to slow down and control the awful spectre of this disease.
ONLINE COMMENTS RE: ALPR TECHNOLOGY How about a tank? I think it would be good if the SCPD had a howitzer maybe. Plus, I think I'll go into the station tomorrow and simply surrender for anything I might ever do in the future, just give it up to them and enter the prison system now, as I just can't be trusted not to some day commit some crime. — HERE’S MY LICENSE PLATE
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WELLNESS
MAKING IT STICK Putting butter in coffee, with the aim of kick-starting the body’s burning of fat, is a new health fad.
Fat Chance
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orget toast. We’ve already moved on. But don’t even think about taking away our butter. Fat fuels the brain, and who doesn’t want to keep their cognitive organ running smoothly under a well-oiled sheen? Yes, the fat revolution is upon us, and it sure feels liberating to reclaim the goodness of every naturally occurring fat short of whale blubber. But is the latest breakfast replacement trend—which calls for two glorious tablespoons of organic grass-fed butter—taking this fat love thing a little too far? Dave Asprey, CEO and founder of Bulletproof(R) coffee, promises weight loss, a slower release of
caffeine, and sustained, intense concentration and focus (like six hours’ worth) when you follow his recipe for the fast-spreading breakfast of champions—“upgraded” Bulletproof-branded coffee ($18.95 for 12 ounces of beans), an optional teaspoon of “Brain Octane” MCT (multi-chain triglyceride) oil— derived from coconut and palm kernel oils—and, of course, a supersized hunk of butter. Blend into a creamy froth, scandalously dotted with globules of pooling butter. Then drink it down, smack those lips a few times (they’ll be greasy) and head out the door. Just be careful not to fly too close to the sun and melt those buttery wings.
While there may be a tendril of truth to Asprey’s claims—and I do have a rather fit friend who calls the concoction a “game changer”—taking your coffee with an oil slick is not going to be good for just anybody. Aside from the 441-calorie mixture not being the most nutrient-filled way to start your day, it may (surprisingly) do more harm than good, depending on how your body works. “He’s not giving you the full story physiologically, and what he’s leaving out is really important,” says Dr. Dawn Motyka of KUSP’s Ask Dr. Dawn. For instance: “You absolutely cannot have any starch or sugar with this.” And no matter how tempting it may be, Asprey really should warn
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Is the butter-in-coffee fad really good for you? BY MARIA GRUSAUSKAS
his followers not to add sugar. “That would be horrible, because then that fat is just going to circulate in your arteries; you can’t burn it.” But even if you follow the recipe without detour, you need to be careful. “If you do that for breakfast and then you have pasta for dinner you're going to screw up your epigenetics,” she says. Epigenetics is the study of how genetic activity can be altered without changing genetic code. She illustrates the fat versus carb epiphany with the “McDonald’s recipe for death”—high saturated fat and high carbs. “If you mix those two, the insulin from the high carbs steps on your body’s ability to use those fats as energy,” says Motyka. In other words, once you eat any starches or carbs at all, your body turns off fat burning for hours. “The problem is that it's really hard to not eat starch and sugar in our society, and in combination with high fat, especially saturated animal fats, it can be very toxic for people.” Also, worth knowing before you jump on the bulletproof bandwagon: the trend is really only OK for people who are on a strict paleo diet—for more than just that day. “If you’re eating paleo, after a couple of weeks your body adjusts and you produce different enzymes, and your body starts to burn fat, and when you do that that’s great, but the adaptation relies on you not eating sugars,” says Motyka. So, in order for the proposed benefits to outweigh the potential damage, your body needs to be in ketosis—burning ketones, watersoluble molecules produced by the liver from fatty acids—rather than glycolysis, when your body is burning glucose for fuel. I promised a tendril of truth: Mental performance is very likely to be at its best when you’re in that euphoric fat-burning state. “Because you’re in ketosis, when your brain is fed fat and is burning fat as fuel, it does alter your concentration, which is why people fast before exams,” says Motyka, who used to fast before her exams in med school. “Burning fat as fuel, because of the ketones, changes things in the brain. So he’s right about that.” And then she empties one last bullet: “But any starch will blow that.”
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MAKING A SPLASH The whale season to end all whale seasons has scientists searching for explanations
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
BY SALLY NEAS
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The last year has been bliss for whale fanatics like myself. I have pictures of whales pinned up in my bedroom, look for them almost every day on West Cliff, and read any article about them that I come across. I am even considering getting a whale tattoo. So the fall of 2013 was the beginning of a special time. That’s when the Monterey Bay began to see an unprecedented amount of whale activity, particularly from humpbacks—so much so that the past year has been called “The Year of Abundance” by media like Monterey County Weekly and researchers like Jodi Fredi, who gave a talk on the subject last month. The trend hasn’t shown signs of slowing. It’s not just the humpbacks that have been active. There have been reports about flocks of pelicans in the tens of thousands. And many may remember the feeding frenzy last Thanksgiving, when hundreds of sea lions, birds and whales were chowing down right off shore; the event was so remarkable it made The New York Times. Then there’s the unforgettably pungent fish die-off last month in the Santa Cruz Harbor, where schools of anchovies were trapped in the harbor, and died in droves due to lack of oxygen. All of this activity has led locals to wonder: what the heck is going on? Is this normal? And is it going to continue? Unfortunately, as is often the case with science, there are no easy answers, but scientists do have some intriguing leads.
WHALE TALES One of the reasons we are seeing more whales is simply that there are more whales in general. “When I started doing this, in the late ’80s, there were only 400 humpbacks,” says Nancy Black, a marine biologist and owner of the whale-watching company Monterey Bay Whale Watch. “But since they’ve been protected, their numbers have increased over the years by six percent a year. There are about 2,500 [now].” >16
HOME MAKEOVER For Sale, For Good is working to renovate a house in Felton and send the proceeds to charity. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
Flipping the Script A local planning expert puts the art of house-flipping to work for the public good BY JESSICA M. PASKO
I
n the fallout from the national mortgage crisis, “house flipping” has gained a stronghold in the cultural vernacular, inspiring a number of reality television series. It’s either a testament to American ingenuity or profiting from others’ misfortunes— or both—depending on one’s perspective. But what if this concept—buying a home at low value, fixing it up and then selling it for a much higher price—could be used for the greater good? That’s what longtime planning expert Michael Bethke and his co-workers are trying to promote through the creation of a program they’re calling For Sale, For Good. Bethke wants to incentivize homeowners to leave their properties to nonprofit organizations through
living trusts and other methods. He and his friends have already begun helping flip one San Lorenzo Valley house, with the proceeds planned to go to charity. Some people have properties they’re holding onto or have inherited‚ that might not be codecompliant. He’s encouraging them fix up the property, sell it, and donate proceeds to a local nonprofit they feel passionately about. For Sale, For Good can help with major renovations, as the group is currently doing in the Valley. “We want it to be all-inclusive for all kinds of public good,” Bethke says. Sometimes that means getting the renovation process under way or connecting them with estate and planning attorneys. “What our group does is we come in and we look at what needs to
be done,” he explains. “We can get red-tagged properties and then sell them at a discount—with the understanding that a sizeable portion of the next proceeds will go to a charity of your choice.”
RAW MATERIALS Currently, For Sale, For Good is working on its first test case, and Bethke believes it’s just the start. Back in October, Bethke was approached about a property in Felton known as Rusty’s Retreat. For years, the Rosebloom Avenue property was not just an eyesore, but also a constant fixture in the county court system. From suits filed by one-time tenants of the property to a barrage of civil actions filed by the county for code compliance issues, the >14
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FLIPPING THE SCRIPT <12 property owned by Rusty Hartman was mired in litigation and red tags. In the world of code enforcement, red tags are housing code violations placed on someoneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s property title, often for unpermitted construction, that can make it difficult to get loan financing. That, of course, also makes it very hard to sell the house until the red tags have been removed and all the issues have been legalized. As part of the renovations, For Sale, For Good is working to fix those problems and get the red tags removed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The one true redemption thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s actually going to save his good name is that he wanted the proceeds of his property to go to programs for disadvantaged children,â&#x20AC;? says Bethke of Hartman. The net proceeds of the sale will be going toward to a group of charities, including Jacobâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Heart, the Resource Center for Nonviolence and the Boys and Girls Club of San Lorenzo Valley and Scotts Valley,
which doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t yet have a brick-andmortar location. Rustyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Retreat had been embroiled in litigation for some 23 years, involving numerous judgments and injunctions that continued on even after Hartmanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s death in August 2013. The property was chock-full of illegal outbuildings, piles of garbage and abandoned vehicles. At one point, Hartman was cited for running an illegal auto wrecking yard at the property, and he had developed an ugly reputation for being something of a slumlord. After his death, Hartmanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s trust was financially responsible for the resulting expenses pertaining to the lawsuit. Bethke hopes the proceeds to charity from the sale will be $200,000, and Bethke points out there is the added bonus of it being a tax write-off. Bethke says heâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s working for free, and the renovation costs for contractors and construction will come out to about $65,000 out of the sale.
LEGALIZE IT Bethke and friends arenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t the only ones working to remove red tags from peopleâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s property titles. The countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Planning Department is working to implement a new construction legalization programâ&#x20AC;&#x201D; the first in 20 yearsâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;called the Legalization Assistance Permit Program, or LAPP. The program would focus not on illegal houses, but issues like renovations and conversions done without property permitting or inspections. County officials hope the program can encourage and incentivize property owners to make their property improvements legal, and to help them obtain permits and inspections with the goal of ensuring everything is brought up to current code and standards. A major component of the plan is to help applicants find affordable ways of doing this. A public outreach campaign is planned, including
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Tucked away in the lofty hills of Bonny Doon, inside the office of the Santa Cruz Comic News, Thom Zajac and the other half of his two-man team, John Govsky, leaf through the yellowing pages of the publicationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s very first issue. The pair become animated as they take a nostalgic look at the 30-year-old editorial cartoons, and point out the custom advertisements of local, iconic businesses still in existence, like New Leaf (then called The Neighborhood Food Co-Op), Logos Books & Records, and Saturn CafĂŠ. â&#x20AC;&#x153;You see this ad I put together? These things were done with a daisy wheel. Do you remember the daisy wheel? It was a typewriter that allowed you to change fonts,â&#x20AC;? says Zajac. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Oh, yeah,â&#x20AC;? says Govsky.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;They were loud.â&#x20AC;? On Sept. 12, 1984, Zajac published the first installment of the Santa Cruz Comic News, and although it has been his sole occupation for the past 30 years, he didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t always know that weaving tales with editorial cartoons would be his fate. Before that, he had been working as a park ranger at the Palo Altoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Foothills Park, but he wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t putting his journalism degree to good use. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I liked it, but it wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t really my calling,â&#x20AC;? says Zajac. He went back to school at UC Santa Cruz and graduated with a creative writing degree. Shortly thereafter, Zajac attended a protest at the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, and was arrested with a slew of others. He used his one phone call to put his two weeksâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; notice in at the rangerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s office. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It just inspired me,â&#x20AC;? he says.
â&#x20AC;&#x153;To have a job and make a living is one thing, but I had to pursue a more meaningful life.â&#x20AC;? Zajac became a political canvasser, living in a co-op, and began to draw his own cartoons. Emulating the style of the comic strip â&#x20AC;&#x153;Doonesbury,â&#x20AC;? he created comics that poked fun at â&#x20AC;Ś political canvassing and living in co-ops. With encouragement from friends, Zajac set out to sell his strip to newspapers, but the outlook for budding cartoonists was bleak. Newspapers rarely bought cartoons from individual cartoonists, and instead bought subscriptions of multiple comic strips from syndicates. After reading a thematic editorial cartoon book, Zajac was struck with an a-ha moment on April 1, 1984, while driving down Highway 17. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The idea came to me: if you get enough cartoons on
the same subject, you can string them together in a chronological order to tell a story,â&#x20AC;? says Zajac. In the subsequent three decades, the Comic News has experienced ups and downs. Govsky, a web designer and teacher at Cabrillo College, came on board in 2004 to create and run the website, in addition to helping with the editorial work. While they hope the paper will continue to grow, its success is partially reliant on right-wing presidents like Reagan and Bush, who were in office during the Comic Newsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; headier days. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The worse the news, the better the cartoons,â&#x20AC;? jokes Govsky. Comic News will celebrate its 30th birthday at Louieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cajun Kitchen on Wednesday, Sept. 17, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. The event is open to the public. ARIC SLEEPER
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DINNER ON THE WATER Scientists say much of the increase in humpbacks can be traced to the abundant presence of anchovies, whose arrival is the real mystery in Monterey Bay. PHOTO: JODI FREDI
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MAKING A SPLASH <12
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So, more whales mean more whales to see. (Humpbacks were placed on the endangered species list in 1970.) The same is true for other animals that have been protected, like sea otters, which were once almost hunted to extinction. But what has been remarkable about this year is that the humpbacks have been sticking around for so long. Typically they come into the bay, eat up what is here, then move on to other feeding spots. These past 12 months, the whales have been more concentrated and slower to move on. That leads us to the next reason we have seen so many humpbacks: anchovies. The last year has seen huge numbers of anchovies. The spawn of anchovies is likely related to a 25-year oscillation between anchovies and sardines, a phenomenon that has been catalogued
by Francisco Chavez of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute. Every 25 years, the California coast fluxes between a “sardine regime” and an “anchovy regime.” During a “sardine regime,” there are historically tons of sardines, warmer ocean temperatures off the coast of California, and fewer nutrients in the water. An anchovy regime, which we entered at the beginning of the new millennium, is typified by the opposite: cooler water, more nutrients and tons of anchovies. But in fact, the ocean hasn’t been cold. It’s actually been warmer than average. On July 28, the Pacific reached the highest recorded temperature of 67.5 F, 10 degrees higher than past July averages. The warmer waters may be related to a strange wind pattern. Starting in the spring, the winds usually blow from the northwest, causing an upwelling of deeper, colder waters. We had a windy spring, like normal, which likely began
the upwelling of these colder waters. These northwest winds usually continue, but not this summer. Instead, we saw lots of south winds, which bring warmer water. It’s hard to get a clear answer on why the southern winds blew during the summer, because no one really seems to know. “It’s incredibly complex,” said Fredi, a researcher and wildlife photographer. “What I do know is the scientists don’t fully understand it.”
NEW NORMAL? In consulting with a handful of experts and reading reports about this strange year, that was a constant refrain. The theory about wind patterns is speculation, and we are likely years away from really understanding what has been going on in the atmosphere. Some scientists are even critical of Chavez’s theory about sardines and anchovies. His data goes back only
100 years, and older records of marine sediments tracing back thousands of years suggest that there were times when both groups were in high populations. It’s hard to say if any of this can really be considered “normal,” especially because populations of many marine animals are still recovering from being heavily hunted and fished. “What we are seeing is not unlike some pre-colonial accounts,” said Fredi, pointing to books such as “The Ohlone Way,” which describes life in the Monterey Bay before Spanish settlers. So, I ask Black while on a whalewatching trip, is this all going to continue? “I would love that,” she says. Her whale-watching business has been booming since word of the amazing phenomenon circulated around the U.S. and the globe. “But really, there is no telling.”
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FLIPPING THE SCRIPT <14 public workshops slated to begin later this month, according to planning director Kathy Previsch. Bethke believes promoting the idea of For Sale, For Good to the public could entice owners of blighted properties to work to improve them, rather than just allowing them to lie fallow—the same goes for foreclosed properties now owned by the bank, and that, he says, could have a positive impact for whole neighborhoods. Bailey Properties, a real estate company, is helping them prepare the Hartman property for staging for open houses, and Bethke says he and his partners are also speaking with banks and county officials about a number of foreclosed properties in the San Lorenzo Valley to see if they could be used in the same way.
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SAFETY ZONES
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Red tags are a personal issue for Bethke, and he is particularly affected by the years he spent in East Palo Alto in the 1990s, when he witnessed the danger of extreme violations firsthand. The case that left the biggest mark on him was when a drug dealer set fire to a home that wasn’t code-compliant. There were people living inside a garage that had been illegally converted when it happened, and a total of nine people—including five children— died in the fire, unable to get out of the home’s single door. At the time, it was considered “one of America’s single worst multifatality residential structure fires,” according to the report by the Menlo Park Fire Protection District. Rescue efforts were hampered by a burning car near the front door, by the protective iron bars on the windows and three seemingly aggressive dogs at the rear of the building. Bethke, then Palo Alto’s planning director, had to go into the torched home afterward. The harrowing details still haunt him. He recalls seeing scratch marks on the wall of the converted garage that were believed to have been made by the children trying to escape. “That’s why I feel so strongly,” Bethke says.
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From F rom Google Google to to the the government government to to data data brokers, brokers, why why your your privacy privacy iis sn now ow a tthing hing o off tthe he p past ast by Yasha Yasha L Levine evine
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astt year, in i response to revelations about NSA surveillance, some of tech’s biggest names got together and
formed for d an organization dedicated to promoting p government surveillan nce refo form. The charade should hav ve been laughed at and mocked— aft fter all, these same companies feed fe on n privacy for profit, and unfettered surrveillance is their stock and trade.
Silicon Valley Sili V ll runs on for-pro Va f fo fitt surveillance, and d it dwarfs an nything being run by the NSA. Technologies championeed d by privacy group ups such as the Elecctronic Frontier n Foundation n off ffer lit ittle protection. For examp mple, the anony nymizing network Tor—ussed by pedophiles, drug dealers, tax cheat c ats, jihadis and everyday porn consumers—may ay turn out ut to be a goverrnment-sponsored d honey pot, an n inad dvertent nt consequ quence of th he need to cloak it its own spying activ ivit itiies.
GOOGLE Google runs the largestt priv ivat ate surveillance operation in the t history of mankind. The compan ny has a de facto monopoly on much of o the digit ital ecosystem: search, emaail, browsers, digit ital advertising, smaartphones, tab ablets. Google is a glo oba b l fo for-profit surveillance behemoth h thaat makes billions in profits t a yearr. Its purpose: to track, analyze and prrofile us as deeply as possib ible—wh ho we are, what at we do, where we go, g who we talk to, what we think ab a ut—and about
then constan th t ntlly figure fi out utt ways tto monetize that in ntelligence. nt What at kind d of info does Google collect? The com mpany ny is very secretive ab about utt that. But ut here are a few data pointss thaat could go int nto its user profiles, glleaned ffrom two pat atents Google fileed a decade ago, prior to launching it itss Gmail service: ] Concepts and d topics discussed in email, as welll as email at attachmen nts ] The conten nt of o websit ites that users have vissiited
] Demographic inffo formation—including income, sex, race, marit ital status ] Geographic info forrmation ] Psychographic in nfo formation—personality type, vaalues, attitudes, interests ] Previous searchees users have made ] Info formation ab abo out documents users viewed and d edited ] Browsing activitty ] Previous purchaases
Tor The Tor browser an nd network has been touted as a scrappy but ut extremely effectiv ivee grassroots technology that can pro otect journalists,
hiis connection would know who he w Nor could a military intel agentt was. in nfiltrate a potential terrorist group up m querading masqu g as an n online animal riight hts forum fo if he had to create an accco ount and log in from an army base IP I ad ddress. As Michael Reed, one of thee in nventors of onion rout uting, explainss: The *PUR *PURPOSE SE* was for fo DoD/ D/ Intellig ige gence usage ge (o (op open source intellig ige gence ga gathering, ng g, covering ng g of forward dep fo eploy oyed assets, whatever) r). Not help No lping ng dissidents in rep epressiive countries. No Not assisting ng g criminals in covering ng g their electronic tracks. Not help No lping ng bit-torrent users avoid MPA MP PAA/R /RIA IAA prosecution. Not giiving ng a 10 year old a way ay to by byp ypass an anti-p -porn filter. r. Of course, we knew those would be other unavoidable uses fo for the technolog ogy gy, y, but that wass immaterial to the problem at hand we were try rying ng to solve (and (a if those uses were go going ng to gi give us more cover traffic to better hide what we wanted to use the network fo for, r, all the better… r…I once told a flag ag officer that much mu to his chag agr grin) n). Very early on, researchers unVe deerstood d that just designing g a system m th hat only technically anonymizes trraffic is not enough—not iff the sy ystem is used exclusively by militarry an nd intelligence. In order to cloak sp pooks better, Tor needed to be used d by y a diverse group of people: Activissts,, student nts,, corporate p researcherss,, so occer moms, journalists, drug deallerrs, hackers, child d pornographers, fo oreign agents, terrorists—the more diiverse the group up that spooks could hiide in the crowd in plain sight ht. Tor also needed to be moved off ff site and disassociated from N Naval research. As Syverson told Blloomb mberg in January 2014: “If you haave a system that’s only a Navy sy ystem, anything popping out of it is obviously b from the Navy. Yo You need to t haave a network that carries traffic fo or otther people as well.”
Tor co-founder Roger Dingledine said the same thing at a cconference in 2004: “The Unit ited Stat ates government can’t simply run an an nony nymit ity system fo for everybody and then use it themselves only. Because th hen every time a connection came fro om it people would say, ‘Oh, iit’s anotther CIA agent.’ t ’ If those th are th the only ly people l using the network.” In 2007, 22-year-old Sw wedish hacker/researcher Dan Egerrstad told Sydney Sy ey Morning Mo ng g He Herald that att he thinks many ny of the major Tor nodes are being run n by y intelligence ageencies or other parties interested d in n liistening in n on Tor communication. Egerstad E had managed to capture a trrove of passwords and other sensitiiv ive info formation n by monit itoring Tor trraffic on five servers he had installed. He can’t fiv help but ut speculate wh who’s beh hind d other Tor servers. “If you actually y look int nto where these Tor nodes are hosted h and how big they are, some of th hese nodes cost thousands of dollars eaach month just to host becau ause they’re using u lots of bandw dwidt dth, they’re heavy y-du dut uty servers and so on, on,” Egerstad d say ays. “Who would pay ay for fo this and be anonymous? For example, fiv fi of six five of them are in Washington Wa D D.C.” Edw dward d Snowden’s leaaks clearly showed the NSA and GCHQ Q run Tor nodes, and are interested in n running more. And running 50 Tor nodes n doesn’t seem like it would be b too difficult for any ny of the world d’s intelligence agencies—whether g g A American, , German, British, Russian, Chinese C or Iranian. Hell, iff you’re an n in ntelligence agency, there’s no reason no ot to run a Tor node. In 2012, Dingledine rev vealed that at the Tor Network is confi figured to priorit itize speed and rout utee traffic through h the fastest servers/ /nodes availab av able. Dingledine was crrit iticized by the Tor communit ity fo for th he obvious ob reason that funneling fu trafficc through a handful of fast nodes made surveilling and sub ubverting Tor much eaasier. In 2013, the Wa Washington Post revealed r
SANTACRUZ.COM SANT A CR UZ . C OM | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKL LY. C OM | S SEPTEMBER EP TEMBER T 1010-16, 16 , 201 2014 4
Googl glemight htb bemaking mo oney off ffadv dvertising no now, but utthe hebig qu questio ion is:How owwil illituseall it lthisdat atainthe i fut fu utur ure? Fiv ive years fro from now? Te Ten yeaars fromnow?Dat from fr now? Dat atahas ata has aaway way ayofneve ay of neverrful fu ful ully ly disap appeaariing or dyi dying. n Will it be passed arou und, re-anal alyzed d, boug ught ht and sol old fo oreverandever?An ndwhat what guaaraant ntee dowehav avethat atthis info fowo on’tendup up dow ownthe heliineinthe i handsofthe heU.S. government go nt… or in i the t hands of rep pressiv ive totalitari it anregi n imes? And if that at waasn’t enough surveillance fo for you, th hen there’s the uncomfo fortab able ties between Google g and the U.S. military-su it urveillance complex—a collab aborat atio on that’s been going on fo for so long that at itt’s sometimes hard to discern where Go oogle ends and d the NatSec apparatus begins. b Over the yearss, Google’s worked to enhance the surv veillance capab abilities of the biggest int it ntel agencies in the world: the NSA, FBI, CIA, DEA, NGA GA and jjust abo a utt every y wing g of the DoD. Google’s DC office o is staffe ffed by former spooks, high fo h-level intelligence officials and d revolviing-door military it cont ntractors: U.S. Army my, Air Force Intelligence, Central nt Intelligence I Agency, Director of Nat atio onal Intelligence, USAID, SAIC, Lock kheed.
dissidentss and whistleblowers from poweerful government fo forces that want to track their every move online. Bu ut according to a recent exposé, To or provides the opposite of anonymity y: it singles outt users for fo total NSA surveillance, potentially sucking up p and recording everything th do they d on nline. li The Tor T Network was developed, built and financed by the U.S. military it an nd surveillance estab ablishments, and d continues to be funded by Departm ment of Defense grants routed through entities such as the Menlo Parrk nonprofit SRI (fo formerly Stanfo ford d Research Instit itute). Governmeent nt-originated d funding dramat aticaally increased d in 2012. 2012 Tor’s original—and d current— purpose iss to cloak the online identit ity of governm ment nt agents and info formants whiile they are in the field. Just everybody y involved d in developing Tor techno ology has been and/or still is fund ded by the Pentagon or related arm m of the U.S. governmen nt. Tor is still very much in activ ive use by the U.S S. government for fo intelli intelligence-gat athering activities. Tor’ss origins go back to 1995, when milit itary scientists at the Naval Research La Laborat atory began developing cloakin ng technology that would prevent so omeone’s activ ivit ity on the Internet frrom being traced back to them. Thee technology was funded by the Offi ffice of Naval Research and DARPA PA. The T original g goal of what’s g called “on nion routing” was to allow intelligencce and d military personnel to work on nline undercover withoutt fear of bein ng unmasked by someone monitorin ng g their Internet activity. In thee ’90s, as pu ublic Internet use and infrastructure grew and multip iplied d, spooks needed d to figure out a way to t hide their identity in plain sight htt online. An undercover spook sittiing in a hotel room in a hostile cou untry somewhere couldn’t simply diaal up CIA.gov on his browser an nd log in — anyone sniffing
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<23 that the NSA had figured out various ways of unmasking and penetrating the anonymity of the Tor Network.
Wikileaks In 2009, Jacob Appelbaum came on board as one of five salaried employees of the Tor Network, earning a salary of $96,000 as a developer. About 90 percent of Tor’s funds that year came from federal grants, mostly from the State Department and the CIA-spinoff International Broadcasting Bureau (IBB). Appelbaum’s Tor gig has continued uninterrupted ever since, netting him somewhere around a half-million dollars. Not a bad haul. Yet in 2010, right in the midst of him being funded by intel grants, Appelbaum emerged as an important Wikileaks volunteer. He used his celebrity status in the hacker world to promote the organization, helped secure Wikileaks’ servers with Tor technology and even bailed Julian Assange out of public speaking gigs when the heat from U.S. authorities got too hot.
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We can get a sense of the kind of info that Google and other Surveillance Valley megacorps compile on us, and the ways in which that intel might be used and abused, by looking at the business practices of the “data broker” industry. Thanks to a series of Senate hearings, the business of data brokerage is finally being understood by consumers, but the industry got its start back in the 1970s. The early operations pulled in information from any source they could get their hands on—voter registration, credit card transactions, product warranty information, donations to political campaigns and nonprofits, court records— storing it in master databases and then analyzing it in all sorts of ways that could be useful to direct-mailing and telemarketing outfits. It wasn’t long before data brokers realized that this information could be used beyond telemarketing, and
quickly evolved into a global for-profit intelligence business that serves every conceivable data and intelligence need. Today, the industry churns out somewhere around $200 billion in revenue annually. There are up to 4,000 data broker companies—some of the biggest are publicly traded—and together, they have detailed information on just about every adult in the western world. No source of information is sacred: transaction records are bought in bulk from stores, retailers and merchants; magazine subscriptions are recorded; food and restaurant preferences are noted; public records and social networks are scoured and scraped. What kind of prescription drugs did you buy? What kind of books are you interested in? Are you a registered voter? To what nonprofits do you donate? What movies do you watch? Political documentaries? Hunting reality TV shows? That info is combined and kept up-to-date with address, payroll information, phone numbers, email accounts, social security numbers, vehicle registration and financial history. And all that is sliced, isolated, analyzed and mined for data about you and your habits in a million different ways. The dossiers are not restricted to generic market segmenting categories like “Young Literati” or “Shotguns and Pickups” or “Kids & Cul-de-Sacs,” but often contain the most private and intimate details about a person’s life, all of it packaged and sold over and over again to anyone willing to pay. Take MEDbase200, a boutique for-profit intel outfit that specializes in selling health-related consumer data. Well, until recently, the company offered its clients a list of rape victims (or “rape sufferers,” as the company calls them) at the low price of $79 per thousand. The company claims to have segmented this data set into hundreds of different categories, including stuff like the ailments they suffer, prescrip-
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WATCH LIST <25 something like 4,000 for-profit intel companies operating in the United States. Many of them sell information that would normally be restricted under federal law. They offer all sorts of targeted dossier collections on every population segments of our society, from the affluent to the extremely vulnerable: ] people with drug addictions ] detailed personal info on police officers and other government employees ] people with bad credit/bankruptcies ] minorities who’ve used payday loan services ] domestic violence shelter locations (normally these addresses would be shielded by law) ] elderly gamblers If you want to see how this kind of profile data can be used to scam unsuspecting individuals, look no further than Richard Guthrie, an Iowa retiree who had his life savings siphoned out of his bank account. Their weapon of choice: databases bought from large for-profit data brokers listing retirees who entered sweepstakes and bought lottery tickets. Here’s a 2007 New York Times story describing the racket: Mr. Guthrie, who lives in Iowa, had entered a few sweepstakes that caused his name to appear in a database advertised by infoUSA, one of the largest compilers of consumer information. InfoUSA sold his name, and data on scores of other elderly Americans, to known lawbreakers, regulators say. InfoUSA advertised lists of “Elderly Opportunity Seekers,” 3.3 million older people “looking for ways to make money,” and “Suffering Seniors,” 4.7 million people with cancer or Alzheimer’s disease. “Oldies but Goodies” contained 500,000 gamblers over 55 years old, for 8.5 cents apiece. One list said: “These people are gullible. They want to believe that their luck can change.” Data brokers argue that cases like Guthrie are an anomaly—a once-in-
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tion drugs they take and their ethnicity: These rape sufferers are family members who have reported, or have been identified as individuals affected by specific illnesses, conditions or ailments relating to rape. Medbase200 is the owner of this list. Select from families affected by over 500 different ailments, and/or who are consumers of over 200 different Rx medications. Lists can be further selected on the basis of lifestyle, ethnicity, geo, gender and much more. Inquire today for more information. MEDbase promptly took its “rape sufferers” list off line last week after its existence was revealed in a Senate investigation into the activities of the data-broker industry. The company pretended like the list was a huge mistake. A MEDbase rep tried convincing a Wall Street Journal reporter that its rape dossiers were just a “hypothetical list of health conditions/ailments.” The rep promised it was never sold to anyone. Yep, it was a big mistake. We can all rest easy now. Thankfully, MEDbase has hundreds of other similar dossier collections, hawking the most private medical information. For instance, if lists of rape victims aren’t your thing, MEDbase can sell dossiers on people suffering from anorexia, substance abuse, AIDS and HIV, Alzheimer’s disease, Asperger’s syndrome, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, bedwetting (enuresis), binge eating, depression, fetal alcohol syndrome, genital herpes, genital warts, gonorrhea, homelessness, infertility, syphilis … the list goes on and on. Normally, such detailed health information would fall under federal law and could not be disclosed or sold without consent. But because these data harvesters rely on indirect sources of information instead of medical records, they’re able to sidestep regulations put in place to protect the privacy of people’s health data. MEDbase isn’t the only company exploiting these loopholes. By the industry’s own estimates, there are
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These for-profit intel behemoths are involved in everything from debt collection to credit reports to consumer tracking to healthcare analysis, and provide all manner of tailored services to government and law enforcement around the world. federal and government agencies: processing government payments, helping states locate tax cheats and even administrating President Bill Clinton’s “Welfare to Work” program. Which is not surprising, as Vin Gupta is a major and close political supporter of Bill and Hillary Clinton. As big as Infogroup is, there are dozens of other for-profit intelligence businesses that are even bigger: massive multi-national intel conglomerates with revenues in the billions of dollars. Some of them, like LexisNexis and Experian, are well known, but mostly these are outfits that few Americans have heard of, with names like Epsilon, Altegrity and Acxiom. These for-profit intel behemoths are involved in everything from debt collection to credit reports to consumer tracking to healthcare analysis, and provide all manner of tailored services to government and law enforcement around the world. For instance, Acxiom has done business with most major corporations and boasts of intel on “500 million active consumers worldwide, with about 1,500 data points per person. That includes a majority of adults in the United States,” according to the New York Times. This data is analyzed and sliced in increasingly sophisticated and intrusive ways to profile and predict behavior. Merchants are using it customize shopping experience— Target launched a program to figure out if a woman shopper was pregnant and when the baby would be born, “even
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a-blue-moon tragedy in an industry that takes privacy and legal conduct seriously. But cases of identity thieves and sophistical con-rings obtaining data from for-profit intel businesses abound. Scammers are a lucrative source of revenue. Their money is just as good as anyone else’s. And some of the profile “products” offered by the industry seem tailored specifically to fraud use. However, InfoUSA is not some fringe or shady outfit, but a hugely profitable, politically connected company. InfoUSA was started by Vin Gupta in the 1970s as a basement operation hawking detailed lists of RV and mobile home dealers. The company quickly expanded into other areas and began providing business intel services to thousands of businesses. By the early 2000s, the company raised more than $30 million in venture capital funding, including $10 million from Palo Alto’s Trident Capital, $10 million from Draper Fisher Jurvetson’s MeVC fund and a strategic investment from Yahoo, Inc. By then, InfoUSA boasted of having information on 230 million consumers. A few years later, InfoUSA counted the biggest valley companies as its clients, including Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL. It got involved not only in raw data and dossiers, but moved into payroll and financial, conducted polling and opinion research, partnered with CNN, vetted employees and provided customized services for law enforcement and all sorts of
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WATCH LIST <29 if she didn’t want us to know.” Life insurance companies are experimenting with predictive consumer intel to estimate life expectancy and determine eligibility for life insurance policies. Meanwhile, health insurance companies are raking over this data in order to deny and challenge the medical claims of their policyholders.
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For the past year, Chairman John D. (Jay) Rockefeller IV has been conducting a Senate Commerce Committee investigation of the data broker industry and how it affects consumers. The committee finished its investigation recently without reaching any real conclusions, but issued a report warning about the dangers posed by the for-profit intel industry and the need for further action by lawmakers. The report noted with concern that many of these firms failed to cooperate with the investigation into their business practices:
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Data brokers operate behind a veil of secrecy. Three of the largest companies–Acxiom, Experian, and Epsilon–to date have been similarly secretive with the Committee with respect to their practices, refusing to identify the specific sources of their data or the customers who purchase it. … The refusal by several major data broker companies to provide the Committee complete responses regarding data sources and customers only reinforces the aura of secrecy surrounding the industry. Rockefeller’s investigation was an important first step breaking open this secretive industry, but it was missing one notable element. Despite its focus on companies that feed on people’s personal data, the investigation did not include Google or the other big Surveillance Valley data munchers. And that’s too bad. Because if anything, the investigation into data brokers only highlighted the danger posed by the
consumer-facing data companies like Google, Facebook, Yahoo and Apple. As intrusive as data brokers are, the level of detail in the information they compile on Americans pales to what can be vacuumed up by a company like Google. To compile their dossiers, traditional data brokers rely on mostly indirect intel: what people buy, where they vacation, what websites they visit. Google, on the other hand, has access to the raw uncensored contents of your inner life: personal emails, chats, the diary entries and medical records that we store in the cloud, our personal communication with doctors, lawyers, psychologists, friends. Data brokers know us through our spending habits. Google accesses the unfiltered details of our personal lives. A recent study showed that Americans are overwhelmingly opposed to having their online activity tracked and analyzed. Seventy-three percent of people polled for the Pew Internet & American Life Project viewed the tracking of their search history as an invasion of privacy, while 68 percent were against targeted advertising, replying: “I don’t like having my online behavior tracked and analyzed.” This isn’t news to companies like Google, which last year warned shareholders: “Privacy concerns relating to our technology could damage our reputation and deter current and potential users from using our products and services.” Little wonder then that Google, and the rest of Surveillance Valley, is terrified that the conversation about surveillance could soon broaden to include not only government espionage, but for-profit spying as well. Portions of this story appeared in PandoDaily. Q
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‘CARS’ TALK Photographer Jeffery Luhn (left) and his nephew Matthew Luhn will speak about the power of visuals at Cabrillo College on Sept. 13.
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Animated Discussion
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Photographer Jeffery Luhn and Pixar’s Matthew Luhn explain how images are bringing us closer together BY ANNE-MARIE HARRISON
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hether it’s Skyping friends, skimming through Facebook profiles, sending texts with emoticons, or just watching television, we rely on the visual more than ever before. Photographer and corporate communications specialist, Jeffery Luhn believes
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pictures have the unique power to cut through the clutter. “You can’t turn away from an image,” he says. Luhn will be giving a workshop at Cabrillo College on Sept. 13 on how to communicate through photography and visual narratives. He’ll present with his nephew,
LIT The culinary curiosity of Sandra Gilbert. P36
Matthew Luhn, who is currently the director of Story Development and Senior Animator at Disney-Pixar Studios. Luhn’s nephew has worked in animation since 1992 and been a part of box office hits such as Toy Story (and its sequels), Cars, Finding Nemo, and Monsters University.
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“He’s worked on 10 of their top films; they've been seen by over a billion people. You don’t need the sound to understand those movies, and that is powerful,” says Luhn of his nephew’s work. “It’s of interest to anyone that wants to communicate with pictures, we do it in different ways. He’s >34
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SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
<32 doing it with motion pictures
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and animation; I’m doing it with photography. But as it turns out, the techniques are very similar.” The two have been collaborating since Matthew was quite young, the Bay Area-based family having always encouraged artistic endeavors. Jeffery Luhn was drawn to photography in his early teens and after becoming a professional photographer at age 17, he began work for United Press International. The job took him all over the world and into more than one precarious situation. “I went to places where there were usually bad things happening,” he says. “In the Philippines when Ferdinand Marcos’s government was falling, I got a camera shot out of my hands while I was photographing a group. It just disappeared.” Although these experiences— including a plane crash in Mexico and getting stabbed in Scandinavia— were a perilous part of the job, Luhn was inspired by the incredible power that images have to transcend language differences. “When I was living in China, I had a studio in Hong Kong, and I learned that Chinese people have so many dialects they can’t [all] speak to each other, but they have
the same written language, so they can read the same newspapers. The symbols and pictographs cross all those language barriers,” he explains. “I couldn't find a parallel in the Western world—a Spaniard can’t speak to a Scandinavian unless they speak English.” On a broader scale, relying more on images could foster less miscommunication where it would matter most and create a stronger collective consciousness, says Luhn. Drawing from the logic of ancient cave-drawings, this is precisely why Luhn invited his nephew to speak with him at Cabrillo, where he’s taught photography for the last seven years. “I think it edges us to a greater worldwide understanding and that's important. Photography is getting less profitable but it’s becoming more important, because it’s more democratic and it’s two-way communication—it’s universal,” he says. “It extends your family, you feel more engaged with humanity because you can communicate and you don't have to speak their language and I think that's important. That's exciting.” Info: 2-5 p.m., Sept. 13, $48-$54, Cabrillo College, Room VAPA 1001.
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LITERATURE animals slept on the ground floor. She was horrified. “Convenient” doesn’t have to mean fast. I’ve spent 25 years on and off in Paris, where there’s a long tradition of food shops and markets where you can buy convenient slow food. You write about what it means to give up the tastes of home and travel into the unknown. How does the assimilation of foreign foods affect our food culture? I actually believe that because we’ve become so steeped in food culture, the foreign foods that we bring into our mainstream culture have become increasingly authentic. When I was growing up, Chinese food here was nothing that you’d recognize in China, but as food of all kinds has become more available and less expensive, it’s also become more varied and complex. At the same time, people everywhere spend more time in the kitchen, so it’s more necessary to talk about food— and more fun.
CONSUMER GUIDE Sandra Gilbert will talk about her new book ‘The Culinary Imagination’ on Sept. 14 at Bookshop Santa Cruz.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
Cooking Up Reality
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Sandra Gilbert gets real about the truths and lies we tell ourselves about food BY WENDY MAYER-LOCHTEFELD
I
n her new book, The Culinary Imagination, Sandra Gilbert asks the question “What do we talk about when we talk about food?” It turns out we talk about art, history, politics, literature, and of course, ourselves. She dives into the vast pool of ideas swirling around the culture of food, and reveals the ways it delights, surprises and disturbs us. Indeed, she graciously sets the table of her own life, and invites us to break bread with luminaries like Pablo Neruda, Wayne Thiebaud, and Gertrude Stein, the better to share her delectable blend of curiosity and insight. I recently
got the chance to talk with her in anticipation of her appearance at Bookshop Santa Cruz on Sunday, Sept. 14.
GT: How has the discussion of food culture evolved? I’m amazed by the evolution in our thinking about food. Food and poetry was my original intent for the content of this book, but it expanded as I wrote it. We add food and stir when we write poetry, but also essays, novels, and history. That stirring of food stirred around everything for me: food and the sacred, food and the secular; food politics engage us all the time. It
used to be, until about the 1920s, that it wasn’t polite to talk about food. When M.F.K. Fisher was growing up, people couldn’t even say food was delicious at the table. Now we talk about it endlessly. Do you think there’s a place for compromise between slow food and fast food? There’s a tension between our desire for convenience and a post-modern pastoral fantasy. My own mother used to say, when I was a kid, that she dreamed of having a farm, but she lived in Queens. When she did go back to Sicily, she stayed with cousins in a farm house where the
How do we maintain an ethical approach to food while feeding the world? We have to be realistic. While I admire the aim not to eat anything your grandmother wouldn’t have eaten, my grandmother grew up outside of Moscow. At that time, the human diet for many was not the beautiful cornucopia that we like to think it was. That said, if you think about Michael Pollan’s hunting adventure or Barbara Kingsolver’s farm, they don’t mean to say we should all go do that. They give us the idea, the dream of fresh food, and the desire to pursue it any way we can. They write food fables for our time. Because of them, we go to farmers markets, cook better, and call out food corporations. But we shouldn’t sentimentalize the food of poverty. Much of the developing world lives in a sustenance culture, where the fantasy of self-sufficiency doesn’t apply. We have to talk about agricultural practices, even controversial ones, in order to feed people. Info: 7 p.m. Bookshop Santa Cruz, Sunday, Sept. 14, Free.
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Monarch Services, formerly Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s M W Crisis Support - De efensa de Mujeres, has been n providing domestic violencce and sexual assault services in Santa Cruz County for the e past 37 years. The services give children and youth th he opportunity to unlearn attitud des and behaviors that could otherwise cause them to pe erpetuate the cycle of violencce in n their adult relationships. Ind dividual counseling sessions are a available in order to help children and teens understan nd th hat domestic violence is nott their fault and to teach the em alternative coping skills. Educational/support group ps are also conducted at severa al high schools, schools which inclu ude group counseling, counseling and domestic d violence and sexual assault prevention education n.
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teven Juliano is no stranger to major label record deals. From 20052010, his band I Am Ghost was on the Epitaph Records roster, and his new band, Requiem, which was voted this year’s “Best Local Band” by GT readers, recently signed with Cleopatra Records. Requiem had several labels looking at them, but the band went with Cleopatra because, as Juliano explains, the Cleopatra staff is excited about the band, they have some ideas for it, and they’ve been in close contact with the band members. Juliano, who’s the singer and primary lyricist, says that was a big factor in choosing a label. “I’ve seen [situations] where you get lost in the mix, or you get on a label and you don’t get as much attention as you’d like,” he says. “We wanted to make sure that we’re not going to be lost in the many bands on a label.” Requiem’s debut album, The Unexplainable Truth, is set to be released on Oct. 28. One key benefit to having a major label behind
the band is the distribution and marketing that they can provide. Blending heavy, metal- and punkinfluenced instrumentation with melodic hooks and catchy choruses, Requiem embraces elements of different genres without limiting itself to just one. The band—comprised of Juliano, Jacklyn Paulette of the Jackie Rocks Band and Stellar Corpses on vocals and guitar, Ryan Heggum on guitar and “screams,” Finn Stobbe on bass and Rick Siegfried on drums— regularly plays shows with punk bands, metal bands, Goth bands and power pop bands. Ironically, Requiem has a bigger fanbase outside of Santa Cruz than here at home, and they play Los Angeles far more often than they play locally. A publicist once told Juliano that there’s not much of a market in the area for Warped Tourstyle bands. Juliano hopes Requiem can change that. “Hopefully with a new album we can create something here in Santa Cruz,” he says. “Get more people to listen.”
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FERMENTATION FESTIVAL Fermentation is so “in” right now. From the Kombucha after lunch to the miso on the dinner table, more is fermented than you might think. This Saturday the Santa Cruz Fruit Tree Project and Seven Bridges Cooperative invites you to the second annual fermentation celebration at the MAH. Fermented food and drink—think kim chi, yogurt, tempeh, pickles, beer, and wine—will be available for sampling as well as DIY workshops and live music. Other sponsors include Farmhouse Culture, Companion Bakeshop, Creative Cultures, El Salchichero, India Joze, VinoCruz, Bonny Doon Vineyard, and Santa Cruz Local Foods. Info: Sept. 13. $20-$50, 6-10 p.m., Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St, Santa Cruz. 429-1964.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
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EVENTS CALENDAR 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 $10 or less received by Friday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be considered 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 gtweekly.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail events@gtweekly.com or call 458.1100 for questions.
WEDNESDAY 9/10 ARTS QI GONG FOR ENERGY BALANCE & HEALTH By Breige Walbridge. Qi Gong is an ancient Chinese healing art that has been used for centuries to balance one's internal body energy and promote good health. 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Donation. STAND-UP COMEDY AT CALLAHAN'S BAR Enjoy a laugh before you head home. No cover, fun times, all welcome (except those under 21 yrs of age). 7:30 - 9 p.m. 507 Water St., Santa Cruz. THROUGH OUR LENSES: CHINA & INDIA Photographic exhibition offering a broad glimpse into the culture and lives of 1/3 of the world's population. Featuring the work of photographers, Mary Altier, Carol Trengrove, Elyse Destout, Shmuel Thaler, Paul Titangos, and Mark Wainer. Opening Reception on Sunday 1:30-4:30 p.m. Exhibit ends Oct.12. Gallery open Wednesday-Sunday 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Pajaro Valley Arts Council, 37 Sudden St., Watsonville.
CLASSES SANTA CRUZ ETHNIC DANCE FESTIVAL This weekend, more than 30 different dance companies from around Santa Cruz will take to the stage at the Tannery Arts Center to celebrate a rich collection of dance heritages. The fourth annual event will present performances and workshops from more than fifteen cultures represented. Get ready to boogie, this two-day event will offer a host of workshops for attendees, all absolutely free. Saturday’s performances will be outdoors at the Tannery—experience a global journey through the art of movement. Info: Free, Sept. 13-14, 10 a.m.-7 p.m.
FREE MUSIC TOGETHER DEMO CLASSES Come experience the joy of family music with Music Together. Free demo classes 9:30 - 11:15 a.m. Sept. 8-13. Various Santa Cruz County locations. Tammy at 438-3514. Free. SALSA DANCING SOCIAL HOUR Salsa social at Portuguese Hall. Everyone is welcome. 9 - 10 p.m. Portuguese (CPDES) Hall, Santa Cruz. Kirsten at 818-8134. Donations accepted. JUNIPER MEDITATION Drop-in meditation that includes meditation, short talk and discussion on meditation for modern life. Beginners and experienced welcome. Chairs/mats provided. Bring your own cushions. 7 - 8:30 p.m. 1729 Seabright Ave., Suite E, Santa Cruz. 8187984. $10.
TUESDAY 9/9 -SUNDAY 9/14 SANTA CRUZ COUNTY FAIR Summer might be slowly drawing to a close, but some of the county’s biggest events are only just beginning—like the Santa Cruz County Fair with all the season’s essentials such as corn dogs, funnel cakes, petting zoos and pumpkin judging contests. Give the kids one last big hurrah before evenings are dominated by hours of homework with a plethora of activities, shows, and contests to see over the six-day fair. They’ve got horses and woodcarving, brewing demonstrations and pig racing, live music and hypnotists—with such a wide array, it’s fair to say there’ll be something for everyone. Don’t miss musical acts by Tsunami, No Respect, and Jamie Lynn Spears—yes, Britney’s little sister. Info: $4-9, Sep 9-14, Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds, 2601 East Lake Ave., Watsonville. 724-5671.
ARTIST WAY GROUP NOW FORMING This class helps you recover your artistic self and soul to bring more depth, light and joy into your personal and professional life. We will use Julia Cameron's book and process, The Artist Way, with journaling and art activities. No experience necessary. See www.joanrosestaffen.com and call 251-0866 to save your spot. 1:30 - 3 p.m. Tannery Arts Center, Santa Cruz. $200 for 12 weeks or $25 per week.
FREE LECTURE Boosting immunity: protect yourself and your family from the flu and beyond. Join Dr. Carol Shwery DC, CCN and learn what you can do to stay healthy and what you can do if you get sick. 6:30 - 8 p.m. Way of Life, 1220A 41st Ave., Capitola. 464-4113. Free.
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FRIDAY 9/12 MUSEUM OF DISCOVERY PREVIEW AND FUNDRAISER After two years of planning, the Museum of Discovery will open in the Capitola Mall on Nov. 1 to highlight the unique beauties of Santa Cruz County. With a variety of exhibits paying homage to local diversity, the MOD will house hands-on exhibits with the help of Alphabots—these programmable robotic arms guide children’s learning and can also be their first introduction into programming a robot. Melding technology, history, and agriculture, the MOD will also include the Space Palette, Infinity Box, and StarLab, all of which you can experience first-hand this Friday at their preview open house event and fundraiser with wine, food, live music, and a silent auction. Info: $10, 5 – 9 p.m., Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery, Capitola Mall, 1855 41st Ave., Capitola.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
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GROUPS
INTENSIVE THERAPY GROUPS Survivors Healing Center is forming new eight-week intensive therapy groups for survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Goals are to break isolation, develop healthy coping skills, reduce shame, increase self-esteem, and build healthy boundaries. Healing is facilitated using group discussion, writing, meditation, expressive arts, and guided imagery. We offer separate groups in English and Spanish for men, women, LGBT, mothers of survivors, partners of survivors, young adults (17-22), teens (14-16) in Santa Cruz and Watsonville. Join a group of 6-7 individuals. Services are offered on a sliding fee scale or through MediCal. Call now to pre-register at 4237601. FEMALE SURVIVOR SUPPORT GROUP Is your partner violent or controlling? Have
you survived a sexual assault? Monarch Services-Servicios Monarca offers a safe, supportive space. Childcare provided. 6 - 7:30 p.m. 1685 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. 425-4030 24hr: 888-900-4232 wcsddm.org. Free.
HEALTH SOUND PLAY FOR THE HEALING JOURNEY Come play with sound in a variety of forms—Tibetan bowls, sound games, and more. For women with cancer. Call to register WomenCARE at 457-2273. 1:30 - 3 p.m. Free. TRIYOGA LEVEL 1 YOGA CLASS Terri Richards presents TriYoga for Level 1. Strengthen the whole body and free the hips and spine. 5:30 - 7 p.m. TriYoga Center, 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. info@ >44 triyoga.com. $10 drop-in.
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GLUTEN-FREE Rebecca Hazelton, licensed nutritionist and author will give a wellness lecture that includes: precautions to take with a gluten-free diet, and tips for meal planning and creating your own action plan to reduce systemic inflammation caused by gluten sensitivity or celiac disease. Preregistration required. 6 - 7:30 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. newleafwestside. eventbrite.com. $10. ORGANIC FACIAL AND CONSULTATION Twenty-minute health and beauty consultation and facial with AcquaCures founder and Certified Organic Lifestyle & Beauty Coach, Mariah Giunta. Includes a complimentary fresh, organic juice shot made for your skin type from the New Beet Cafe. Reserve your spot in the Bloom department with a $5 reservation fee that will be refunded in the form of a New Leaf gift card at the consultation. 1 - 6 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 1210 41st Ave, Capitola. 479-7987. $5.
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BLOOM OF THE PRESENT WEEKLY WEDNESDAY MEDITATION The meeting includes a silent mindfulness meditation and Dharma talk on Buddhist teachings. We encourage the practice of Dana, which means generosity in Pali, the original language of the Buddha. Noon - 1:15 p.m. Pacific Cultural Center, 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. 212-6641. Suggested sliding scale donation $5-15 (more or less gratefully accepted.) No one is turned away due to lack of funds. Non-monetary donations also accepted.
by Magdalena Montagne. 6 - 8 p.m. Watsonville Public Library, 275 Main St., Suite 100, Watsonville. Free. SEPTEMBER BREAKFAST MEETING Welcome back summer with the Aptos Chamber of Commerce breakfast meeting, with special guest speaker Fire Chief Jeff Terpstra, Aptos/ La Selva Fire Department. Please call for reservations. 7:30 - 9 a.m. Best Western Seacliff Inn, Aptos. 688-1467 $20 members, $25 non members.
CLASSES SALSA RUEDA Every Thursday all level drop-in class. No partner required. Two classes at the same time: Intro/Beginner and Beginner 2/Intermediate. Friendly and non-intimidating. Check website for schedule changes. 8 - 9 p.m. Louden Nelson Center, S.C. SalsaGente.com. $8/$4 students. INTU-FLOW With Matt Harris. Ongoing class focusing on joint mobility through a unique portal - gain grace and effortless carriage. Initially for those suffering from PTSD and other related traumas. 10:30 11:30a.m. Veterans Memorial Building, 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. Karina at 425-1944. Donation. RHYTHM & MOTION DANCE WORKOUT CLASS A high-energy dance-based workout that incorporates a dynamic mix of movement and music. Anyone can dance. 5:30 - 6:45 p.m. Also on Sunday at 9 a.m. Motion Pacific, 131 Front St., Santa Cruz. 457-1616. First class free.
SOUL COLLAGE Come and try this wonderful and easy art-based collage method to build and create you own tarot collage deck of cards. 7 - 9 p.m. Elemental Art Studio, 128 Tannery Arts Center, 1050 River St., Santa Cruz. $10 all included.
AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT Come explore Feldenkrais Awareness Through MovementÂŽ classes. These engaging and potent classes will heighten your vitality as they increase your self-awareness, flexibility and overall well-being. Classes are ongoing. Preregistration required. Pacific Cultural Center 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. suzie@suzielundgren.com or call 3327347 to register. First class free for new students. 5:45 - 7 p.m. Also on Tuesdays at 9:30 - 10:45 a.m.
POETS' CIRCLE POETRY READING SERIES Neal Whitman will be the featured reader. Open mic to follow for poets and musicians. Refreshments provided. Sponsored by the Friends of the Watsonville Public Library, and Poets & Writers, Inc. with a grant from the James Irvine Foundation. Produced and hosted
SAMBA: ALL LEVELS DANCE CLASS High-energy Brazilian dance fitness classes infused with Samba Rio, Samba Reggae, Samba de Roda, plus movements from Africa, Cuba, Trinidad, Tobago and more. Live Drumming. 6 - 7:25 p.m. 418 Front St., Santa Cruz. DanceOfBrazil.com $15.
THURSDAY 9/11 ARTS
SATURDAY 9/13 OHLONE DAY AT HENRY COWELL REDWOODS STATE PARK Santa Cruz was built on the legacy of the Ohlone people and this Saturday locals can appreciate a culture rich in history in the beautiful Cowell Redwoods. Learn about the Ohlone through traditional demonstrations of dance, basketry, singing, story-telling, toolmaking, crafting musical instruments, language and history. Visitors can learn how to throw an atlal, how to cook a meal using rocks, and how bay trees can cure headaches. All activities are free—a perfect way to share our county’s history with the whole family. Info: $10 Parking, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m., Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park. 335-7077.
A COURSE IN MIRACLES STUDY GROUP We informally but deeply study this great book, taking a few paragraphs each week. Many laughs and smiles occur as we expose the ego and share happiness. Books provided, regular attendance not required. 7 - 9 p.m. Barn Studio at 104b Agnes St., Santa Cruz. Andrew at 272-2246. Free. LOVING MORE POTLUCK/DISCUSSION GROUP Informal discussion on concerns/issues involved in polyamorous relationships. Feel free to bring your problems, solutions, friends, lovers, and
HEALTH FOOD ADDICTS IN RECOVERY ANONYMOUS Based on the 12-steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. There are no dues, fees, or weigh-ins at FA meetings. FA is a fellowship of individuals who, through shared experience and mutual support, are recovering from the disease of food addiction. 7 - 8:30 p.m. Trinity Presbyterian Church, 420 Melrose Ave., Santa Cruz. 4350680. Free.
make a difference become a big brother or big sister
FRIDAY 9/12 ARTS LANDSCAPE OF THE BODY BY JOHN GUARE A staged reading. The play is a dark comedy with quirky gallows humor and flights of lyricism. Moving back and forth in time, the action of the >46
Big Brothers Big Sisters of Santa Cruz County
Aimee and Tehya, Santa Cruz
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GROUPS
family. Bring a dish to share. 7 - 9 p.m. Diversity Center, 1117 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014
MARINE MAMMAL RESEARCH TOUR Go behind the scenes at Long Marine Lab and learn about research taking place with dolphins, sea lions, elephant seals, harbor seals, and blue whales. Space is limited to 12 participants. Advance reservations and payment required. 2 - 3:30 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 Shaffer Road, Santa Cruz. 459-3800. $6-$8, free for members.
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<45 play is a mosaic of short scenes, monologues and live original songs, all blending together into a revealing and affecting story of the American Dream gone awry. Also on Saturday at 8 p.m. 8 - 10 p.m. Broadway Playhouse, 526 Broadway, Santa Cruz. 475-2854. $15 at www. brownpapertickets.com.
BUSINESS MOD SNEAK PREVIEW & FUNDRAISER Bring the whole family for a first look at the new Santa Cruz Children's Museum of Discovery. There will be select exhibits open, wine and appetizers, live music and a silent auction supporting the museum. Visit sccmod.org/preview. 5 - 9 p.m. Capitola Mall, near the Food Court. $10 for adults, free for kids.
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. Come stretch your body and relax your mind. Every Tuesday and Friday 9:30am at Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. at Yoga Center on Front St. in Santa Cruz. Suzi at 234-6791. $5.00.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
GROUPS
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YOGA OF 12-STEP RECOVERY An addiction recovery and relapse prevention program that combines the practical tools of 12-step programs and the ancient wisdom and movements of yoga. Each weekly Friday meeting includes an hour of sharing recovery and an hour of recovery based gentle yoga practice. Y12Sr.com. 7 - 9 p.m. Yoga Within, 8035 Soquel Drive, Aptos. Donations welcome. CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS 12-step meeting every Friday evening. 5:30-6:45 p.m. Sutter Maternity & Surgery Center, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 3593008. WATSONVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY BILINGUAL BABY LAPTIME PROGRAM An English/Spanish 30-minute program of stories, activities and music for babies. Come to the library and join us for some fun while helping your child build socialization and early literacy skills. This program takes place weekly and is for ages 0-23 months. There is also a Wednesday
program at the Freedom Branch Library at 10:30 - 11 a.m. Watsonville Public Library Meeting Room, 275 Main St., Suite 100 Watsonville. Free.
OUTDOORS COMMUNITY FREE DAY Free admission to the Seymour Center all day. Touch a shark, observe an octopus, think like a scientist. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Seymour Marine Discovery Center, 100 Shaffer Rd., Santa Cruz. 459-3800.
VOLUNTEER ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS Open House for The Clean Oceans Project. Learn about our student programs and recent expedition to Alaska, and upcoming expedition to Hawaii. See the plastic-tofuel conversion system and learn how monetizing plastic waste can make a difference to the oceans. Aloha. 5:30 - 8 p.m. 333 Lake Ave. #D, Santa Cruz Harbor. Capthomer@thecleanoceansproject.org. Free, donations accepted
SATURDAY 9/13 ARTS SANTA CRUZ ETHNIC DANCE FESTIVAL From Bhangra to Butoh, we are excited to host a full day of performances from over 20 local and Bay Area dance groups. Free performances Saturday. Free workshops Sunday. 11 a.m. - 8 p.m. Tannery World Dance and Cultural Center, 1060 River St., #111, Santa Cruz. www.tanneryworlddance.com. WILD & SCENIC FILM FESTIVAL Where activism gets inspired. Join Santa Cruzbased Ventana Wilderness Alliance and MC Adam Scott (Parks and Recreation) for a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act with great films about wild things and wild places that are guaranteed to inspire you to get out and give back. Event also features raffle, special guest speakers and more. Purchase tickets at ventanawild.org. 7-10 p.m. Golden State Theatre, 417 Alvarado St., Monterey. SECOND SATURDAYS SOQUEL SEPT. 13 Art walk, food and music in the Soquel Village on the second Saturday of every month. Businesses will feature local artists, appetizers and music. facebook. com/2ndsatsoquel. 5 - 8 p.m. Soquel Village. 2ndsatsoquel@gmail.com. Free.
SATURDAY 9/13 WILD & SCENIC FILM FESTIVAL If there’s any event that’s worth making the drive to Monterey for, it’s the wild and scenic kind. The third annual screening of wilderness-inspired films will host a raffle with prizes by national and local sponsors. Santa Cruz native and TV/film star, Adam Scott, will be hosting the event to benefit the Ventana Wilderness Alliance, founded 15 years ago to preserve and promote biodiversity in the Big Sur backcountry. Ventana volunteers maintain almost all of the trails in the Ventana and Silver Peak Wilderness areas, host a Ranger program and youth programs serving Santa Cruz, Monterey, and San Luis Obispo. Info: $15-$25, 7 p.m., Golden State Theater, 417 Alvarado St., Monterey. 649-1070.
GROUPS SANTA CRUZ DERBY GIRLS: HARBOR HELLCATS SCDG Harbor Hellcats vs. West Coast Derby Knockouts Bout Theme: Pirates. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Kaiser Permanente Arena, Santa Cruz. santacruzderbygirls.org $14-$34. TALKIN' TRASH AND RECYCLING Learn new ways to keep plastic out of the waste stream and get clarification on everything you can recycle. Santa Cruz’s Reusable
Solutions Group will demo their new Bagito Reusable Trash and Recycle Bin Liners. City of Santa Cruz and GreenWaste Recovery will be on hand. 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. New Leaf Community Markets, 1210 41st Ave., Capitola. Free.
OUTDOORS SAN LORENZO RIVER PADDLE Each attendee is limited to RSVP for one paddle event so that a wide variety of people can enjoy this unique opportunity. Check out www.coastal-watershed.org/even/sanlorenzo-river-paddle-6/. Noon - 3 p.m. San Lorenzo River, 700 River St., Santa Cruz. tours@coastal-watershed.org. Free.
SPIRITUAL MEDITATION Just as singing in a choir provides an added dimension to a singer, group meditation offers a supportive atmosphere to practice with like-minded souls. www.anandascottsvalley.org. 7 - 8:30 p.m. 75 Mount Hermon Road, Scotts Valley. >48 Doug at 338-9642. Donation.
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THE LOCALS Produced by Event Santa Cruz, “The Locals” is a quarterly film screening series that feature a diverse group of local filmmakers; each artist has 15 minutes to screen their work and discuss how filmmaking is evolving. Tonight's event features: Director Consuelo Alba of Veremos Productions, Scott Cervine of Movies from the Heart, Ted Holladay of Studio Holladay, Kelsey Holtaway of Departure Arrival Films, and Steve Weisser of Compass Rose Media. 7 - 9 p.m. Palomar Ballroom, 1344 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Tickets at www.eventbrite.com.
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EVENTS CALENDAR
Capitola Art & Wine Festival September 13 & 14, 2014 | 10am - 6pm
SATURDAY 9/13 AUTO D’ELEGANCE CAR SHOW BENEFIT
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THE SUN KINGS
September 14
JACOB JEFFERIES
S U N D AY
September 13
Art • Wine • Music • Food Beachside in Capitola Village Truly a weekend in paradise! SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
Cars—can’t live with them, can’t live without them. Thankfully, this Santa Cruz Symphony benefit event isn’t asking for you to do either; instead, you can enjoy cars, new and old, from a safe distance at the Canepa Motorsports Museum in Scotts Valley. Visitors can enjoy guided tours of the restoration shops where vintage and racing cars from the ’30s, ’40s, and ’50s, are revived to their glory days. For those interested in newer, techy marvels, there are more than a dozen electric cars including the newest Tesla model. If all those beautiful cars get your engine rumbling, there will also be a tritip and salmon barbecue dinner and beverages hosted by the Symphony League, and musical entertainment by the Brian Quinn Group.
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Info: $15-$95, 3 - 7 p.m., Canepa, 4900 Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley.
<47 MEDICINE BUDDHA PRACTICE
GUIDED MEDITATION Sessions include recitation of traditional Tibetan Buddhist prayers and the Medicine Buddha mantra, as well as some quiet meditation and guided motivational contemplation. All are welcome, no background required. Arrive early to get yourself settled. 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Rd., Soquel. 462-8383. Donation.
SUNDAY 9/14 MUSIC VOICE WEAVERS WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT CHOIR A weekly gathering of women who share a love and desire for expressing themselves vocally. Working with songs, rounds and chants,
singers from beginners to experienced and even those who are shut down around their voices have an honored place. All are welcome; no audition required. Sunday evenings ongoing at 6:30 - 8 p.m. The Center for Healing, 6144 Hwy 9, Felton. rondarice@hotmail.com. Donation.
ARTS SANTA CRUZ POST CARD & PAPER COLLECTIBLES SHOW This show has been held in the spring and fall for more than 30 years. A dozen dealers stock 50 front-facing tables with items of interest to both the seasoned collector and the casual looker. Free appraisals offered. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. The Hilton Hotel, 6001 La Madrona Drive, Scotts Valley. Free admission.
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Your primary care. Our primary goal. We’re committed to keeping you healthy. That’s why we’ve made finding a primary care doctor easy with our Find a Doctor tool. Visit dominicanmedicalgroup.org.
JEWEL THEATRE COMPANY
PRESENTS
SEPTEMBER 4 - 28, 2014 4
AT A T CENTER C E NT ER STAGE STAG E – 1001 10 01 CENTER CE NT ER STREET S T REE T IN SANTA SANTA CR C R UZ Joan, a teena teenage ge country country girl girl who hears voices from God, is determined determined to kick the English out of France Francce and crown the Dauphin, Charles, as a King. Through sheer confidence aand nd na tural charisma, she mana ges too swa natural manages swayy a Captain ptain who, despite despite his own protests, aagrees skeptical Ca grees with his men that that “There is something aabout bout her...” hher...” and gives gives this proud and naïve rebel a soldier’ss armor and the mea means begins Joan’ss soldier’ ans to get to the Dauphin. And so beg ins Joan’ journeyy into the Hundred YYears War history, Shaw’s landmark playy journe eaars W ar and histor y, and Sha w’s land mark pla thatt accelerated Prize. tha accelerated him to the Nobel N
Bernard Shaw “Affecting” –The New York Times
“Riveting” –Stage Magazine
Performance Schedule THURS.
FRI.
SAT.
SUN.
Sept 4 7:30pm
Sept 5 8pm
Sept 6 8pm
Sept 7 2pm
(Preview)
(Opening)
Sept 11 7:30pm
Sept 12 8pm
Sept 13 8pm
Sept 14 2pm
Sept 18 7:30pm
Sept 19 8pm
Sept 20 8pm
Sept 21 2pm
Sept 25 7:30pm
Sept 26 8pm
Sept 27 8pm
Sept 28 2pm
(Talk-Back)
Directed bbyy Susan
Myer Silton M
Featuring: Shaun Carroll*, Featuring: Carrolll*, Andrew Davids,, Jeff Garrett*, Garrett*, Gar ephen Muterspaugh*, Elisa Noe emí, Garyy S. Martinez*, Ste Stephen Noemí, Gabriel A. Ross, Adam Stanton
Tickets: Adults $34 / Seniors & Students $28 P review $23 all ticke ets Preview tickets P urchase tickets on-line aatt www.JewelTheat tre.net Purchase on-line www.JewelTheatre.net O R call (831) 425-7506 425-7 425 7506 7 OR *Member,, Actors’ E *Member Equity quity Associa Association. tion. This production is funded, in part, by grants gran nts from Community Foundation Foundation Santa Cruz County; and Arts Council Santa Santta Cruz County
SAINT JOAN is presented by special speciaal arrangement with SAMUEL FRENCH, INC.
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014
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EVENTS CALENDAR CLASSES
BATERIA SAMBA CRUZ Come be part of Brazil's drum and percussion powerhouse: the bateria. As an ensemble we explore Rio-style samba, samba-afro, sambareggae and more. All levels welcome. Some instruments provided. 6:30 - 8 p.m. Raizes do Brasil Capoeira Center, 207 McPherson St., Santa Cruz. Joe at 435-6813. $10. WOODLAND GARDENING AND NATIVE PLANT DESIGN Join Cari Wagner and Simon Stapleton, Master Gardeners, for a day of tips, ideas and information about the principles of home garden design. Attend either of both of the sections: Woodland Gardening from 10 a.m. - Noon. Native Plant Garden Design from 12:30 - 2:30 p.m. Sign up by calling Lee at 335-9348. 10 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Quail Hollow Ranch County Park, 800 Quail Hollow Road, Felton. $3.
GROUPS
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS: SANTA CRUZ A 12-step program designed to help relatives and friends of addicts recover from the effects of living with an addicted loved one. Members share their experiences, strengths and hopes at weekly meetings. 6:30 - 8 p.m. Santa Cruz Sutter Hospital, Sutter Room, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. Saveyoursanity@aol.com. Free.
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OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS A 12-step support group for those wanting to stop eating compulsively. Meetings daily. www.santacruzoa.org. 9:05 a.m. Sutter Maternity & Surgery Center, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. Nanette at 462-9644. Free.
Harbor Launch Ramp, 135 5th Ave., Santa Cruz. Varies.
MONDAY 9/ 15 ARTS FILM SCREENING: VOICES ACROSS THE DIVIDE The Palestine-Israel Action Committee screens Voices Across the Divide by Alice Rothchild, who will also be in attendance for a Q&A afterwards. The film is a powerful documentary and oral history project exploring the Israeli/Palestinian conflict through personal stories. Rothchild is an American Jew, physician, activist, and author of “Broken Promises, Broken Dreams: Stories of Jewish and Palestinian Trauma and Resilience." She is also co-founder and co-chair of American Jews for a Just Peace-Boston and has organized annual health and human rights delegations to Israel and Palestine since 2003. 7 - 9 p.m. Resource Center for Nonviolence, 612 Ocean St., Santa Cruz. Sami at 234-6522 $5-10 sliding fee.
HEALTH ARM-IN-ARM CANCER SUPPORT GROUP For women with advanced, recurrent and metastatic cancers. Registration required. Call WomenCARE at 457-2273. 12:30 - 2 p.m.
TUESDAY 9/16 VOLUNTEER
WOMEN FOR SOBRIETY MEETING Selfhelp recovery group for women who wish to stop drinking. 4:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Sutter Hospital, Sutter Room, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. $2.00 or donation.
FLOOD CONTROL & WATER CONSERVATION ZONE 7 MEETING Join us for the Zone 7 meeting and learn about what is happening with the river and creek levees. 7 - 8 p.m. Watsonville City Council Chambers, 275 Main St., 4th Floor, Watsonville.
OUTDOORS
CLASSES
CARDBOARD KAYAK RACE Calling all cardboard kayakers. As part of the harbor's 50th anniversary celebration, the Santa Cruz Port District and Santa Cruz Yacht Club Corinthians will host its first-ever cardboard kayak race at Santa Cruz Harbor. Highlight your skills and ingenuity in this fun and wacky event. A variety of prizes will be awarded in each category. For additional details, visit santacruzharbor.org. 1 - 5 p.m. Santa Cruz
WEST COAST SWING Improve your West Coast Swing by using "Extensions" and "Blends." A simple way to spice up your dancing. 8 - 9 p.m. Santa Cruz Dance Company, 2800 Porter St., Soquel. chuck@gonnadance.com. $8.
GROUPS SPECIAL SANTA CRUZ WILPF GATHERING The public is invited to join
SATURDAY 9/13-SUNDAY 9/14 32ND ANNUAL CAPITOLA ART & WINE FESTIVAL This weekend is the weekend to be out and about in Santa Cruz with benefits, festivals, and fairs at every corner of the county! Start your Saturday at Esplanade Park with the Aptos Academy of Performing Arts or wind down after a long Sunday with SambaDa and a glass of Zayante Wineyards’ best. This two-day festival will host more than 160 artists and 23 local wineries, in addition to the gourmet eats, local dance and live music from the Jacob Jeffries Band, The Sun Kings, Extra Large, and others. Mingle with local artists while overlooking the Monterey Bay and enjoying every kind of visual entertainment. Harbor High is also providing free bike valet parking to ensure that all your stresses melt away while you sit back, relax, and enjoy some Capitola living. Info: 13-14, Free, 10 a.m. — 6 p.m., Esplanade Park and Intersection of Capitola & Monterey Avenues, Capitola. 475-6522.
members of WILPF at the launch of its 100th anniversary year. Starting with a potluck and camaraderie, information will be shared on the recent WILPF National Congress, plans for WILPF's 100th Anniversary celebration of our founder Jane Addams and reports from three of our Action Teams: Earth Democracy, Caring Economy and the Mideast Cluster. The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom welcomes all to its free educational and community building programs. 9 - 10 p.m. Center for Spiritual Living, 1818 Felt St., Santa Cruz. Free.
HEALTH THE HEALING COLLABORATIVE TLC's monthly educational series. Rachel Farber, acupuncturist specializing in women's health to discuss how Chinese medicine can be a vital component to the
healing process. 7 - 8:30 p.m. The Lotus Collaborative, 701 Mission St., Santa Cruz. Liz at 588-0497. Free. TAI CHI FOR ARTHRITIS Created by a medical doctor to be safe and effective for those living with arthritis and other chronic diseases. We practice slow, mindful movements to increase strength, flexibility, range of motion and balance. This form also reduces stress, enhances our ability to relax and to have more energy. Participants do not need to have arthritis to attend and to benefit from the class. Come join us to learn, practice, strengthen your body and cultivate a mindful, relaxed perspective. Class meets twice a week, Tuesdays and Thursdays through Dec. 11. Advanced: 2-3 pm, Beginning: 3-4 pm. Please pre-register. 3 - 4 p.m. Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. 475-4787. Free.
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MORNING EDITION 9AM THE DIANE REHM SHOW 10AM HERE AND NOW 12PM ON POINT
2PM FRESH AIR 3PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED 5:30PM MARKETPLACE 6PM THE WORLD
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CONNECTING OUR COMMUNITY to the WORLD
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MUSIC CALENDAR BOSSACUCANOVA
LOVE YOUR
LOCAL BAND THE CAROLYN SILLS COMBO
Singer-songwriter Carolyn Sills is always mining the depths of the human experience to find the best way to write a killer song—even if the experience is not her own. Sometimes this means looking beyond the obvious and fixating on details that some might consider insignificant. Those are the things she finds truly fascinating.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
“I love looking at what’s going on in the background,” she says. “There was a song written about a woman who was shot on stage by her ex-husband who was a sniper. I’ve been obsessed wondering, ‘What song was she singing?’ There’s the facts of the story—the who, what, where, why, when—but what about the little things on the fringe that turn it into something romantic or creepy? I’ve always been attracted to that kind of stuff.”
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The Carolyn Sills Combo released their self-titled debut album last fall, in an attempt to provide the best possible showcase for the vocalist-guitarist’s unique storytelling. “Our whole mission for the album was to capture the feel of our live show, to tell the stories of these songs within the broader picture of the Spaghetti Western/Americana landscape,” says Sills. Her songs tell a series of imaginative stories which are fictional, and yet relatable at the same time. “That’s big for me, writing in that manner,” she says. “With ‘Aces and Eights,’ for example, I’m picturing Wild Bill Hickok’s last moments on earth, that last card game when he got shot, and the feelings that evoked; and then relating that to an experience in my own life.” BRIAN PALMER INFO: 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 13. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Highway 9, Felton. $10. 603-2294.
WEDNESDAY 9/10 AMERICANA
KEITH GREENINGER Soul Connection, the latest album by local singer-songwriter Keith Greeninger (his seventh), is a laid-back contemplative roots record. On it, Greeninger does what he does best—mixing folk, country, blues, rock, and gentle introspective storytelling—and creates one of his deepest, most cohesive releases to date. He assembled members of Little Feat and Bonnie Raitt’s band to back him, after a successful $25,000 indiegogo campaign). AARON CARNES INFO: 7:30 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $26.50/gen, $42/gold. 423-8209.
THURSDAY 9/11 JAZZ
WIL BLADES Wil Blades has proven to be one of the hardest-working jazz musicians in the world over the past decade or so. The B3 Hammond organ player—who has collaborated with jazz luminaries like Scott Amendola, Karl Denson and Billy Martin—formed his new trio so he could release a project of his own. Field
Notes, which came out a few weeks ago, is equal parts funktastic and electrifying, as it combines jazz, funk and R&B in an undeniable fashion. The record holds you in its sway from the start, so expect much of the same from the trio when they come to town. BRIAN PALMER
INFO: 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 427-2227.
TRIP-HOP
BOOSTIVE There’s a dark, moody and emotional presence entrenched within each of Boostive’s beats, which sets the group apart from many hip-hop acts. But that’s the thing; hip-hop is only part of their identity. These locals also fool around with experimental electronics, jazz and worldbeat. The beats are accented by live instrumentation, giving it an altogether warm, lush and trance-y sound. The vocals bounce between a dizzying lead rapper and their surreal female singer, who gives it a Portishead sound when it’s her turn. It’s the direction ’90s alt-rap could have gone in, with just the right amount of acid. AC INFO: 8:30 p.m. Crow’s Nest, 2218 E Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $5. 476-4560.
FRIDAY 9/12 INDIE
MARK EITZEL Though he’s most known for his work with SF indie outfit American Music Club, Mark Eitzel occasionally releases a solid solo album that is every bit as praiseworthy as his main group. His latest, 2012’s Don’t Be A Stranger, is one of those records. It’s a quiet, haunting album, Americana-influenced, but backed with some gorgeous, intimate production. He sings at almost a whisper. He calls it an attempt to make his own version of Harvest by Neil Young or Five Leaves Left by Nick Drake. What it ended up being was a quietly intense, soul-searching batch of tunes, which he made a year after a near-fatal heart attack. Leave it to a near-death experience to put things into perspective. AC INFO: 9 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $16/adv, $20/door. 603-2294.
SATURDAY 9/13 DUB/REGGAE
EASY STAR ALL-STARS The Easy Star All-Stars have a couple of albums of original material, but the
MUSIC
M
KEITH GREENINGER
BE OUR GUEST FASHIONART The best way to describe FashionART is to look to past events where lively ensembles including a Joan of Arcinspired club get-up, a floor-length dress made from the folded pages of Vogue magazine, formal wear crafted from candy wrappers and more have made appearances on our local runway. Founded in 2006 by Angelo Grova, of Michaelangelo Gallery, FashionART rounds up the latest offering from up-and-coming Bay Area designers, and serves to remind us that Santa Cruz, while it may not be the next Paris or New York, has no shortage of its own funky and fabulous styles. CAT JOHNSON
INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $17/adv, $21/door. 423-1338.
ELECTRO-BOSSA
BOSSACUCANOVA Bossa nova, which translates to "new trend" or "new wave," was born in Brazil in the 1950s as a lively, smooth and danceable musical style. Contemporary Brazilian favorite Bossacucanova adds another wave to the genre blending live instrumentation and electronics with traditional sounds to create music that pays heavy tribute to past masters while forging new ground. Formed in 1999, the group features Márcio Menescal, son of bossa nova pioneer Roberto Menescal. CJ INFO: 9 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 479-1854.
SUNDAY 9/14 VOCALS/PRAISE
KATH ROBINSON Music is one of those things that serves a different purpose for different people at different times. Sometimes it's something to commiserate to, sometimes it's something to vent along to and sometimes it's something that raises your spirit above the day-to-day grind. Kath Robinson's music falls into the latter category. A music minister, teacher, performer and more, Robinson uses music to heal, uplift, open and otherwise beautify. Sunday is a CD release concert for her new album, Blessed Be. CJ INFO: 7:30 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $25/gen, $40/gen plus CD, $50/VIP seating plus CD. 427-2227.
MONDAY 9/15 RAP
YG Keenon Jackson, aka YG, sure knows how to make an impression. In addition to co-founding the label Pu$haz Ink, and running his own clothing line, YG has released four albums in four years, the most recent
of which—March’s My Krazy Life—debuted at #2 on Billboard’s Top 200. The rapper has already released two hit singles from the album—“My Nigga,” which peaked at #19 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, and “Who Do You Love?” Krazy features guest appearances from heavy hitters like Kendrick Lamar, Drake, Nicki Minaj and Lil Wayne. BP INFO: 8 p.m. The Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $35. 423-1338.
TUESDAY 9/16 AMERICANA/FOLK
ELIZA GILKYSON AND NINA GERBER Grammy-nominated singer and songwriter Eliza Gilkyson’s career has been an interesting ride. She has released nearly two dozen albums in the 45 years since her debut, Eliza ’69, but when you consider that it wasn’t until 1987 that she released her third album and started getting serious about making music her profession, it becomes clearer just how prolific she is. Joining Gilkyson will be Nina Gerber, whose soulful, blues-infused style of country and folk is a real treat. BP INFO: 7:30 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Highway 9, Felton. $22/adv, $25/door. 603-2294.
INFO: 7 p.m. Saturday, September 20. Civic Auditorium, 307 Church St., Santa Cruz. $20.50/gen, $24.50/reserved. 4205240 WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz. com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, Sep. 12 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.
IN THE QUEUE TOMMY MALONE
Subdudes frontman and his new band make their Santa Cruz debut. Thursday at Moe’s Alley BRYN LOOSLEY & THE BACK PAGES
Local Americana group pays tribute to the Band. Saturday at Kuumbwa LI SOGNO DEL MARINAIO
Transnational power trio featuring postpunk bass player Mike Watt. Saturday at Catalyst BASTARD SONS OF JOHNNY CASH
Johnny Cash-approved alt-country outfit. Saturday at Don Quixote’s ELAINE ELIAS
São Paulo-born jazz pianist, singer and songwriter. Monday at Kuumbwa
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014
group's claim to fame is its ability to transform popular albums—including Michael Jackson's Thriller, the Beatles Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Radiohead's OK Computer—into dubbed-out reggae albums. Their standout project, however, was a reworking of Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, titled Dub Side of the Moon. It put them on the pop music radar and created a most enjoyable bridge between classic rock, psychedelia and reggae. CAT JOHNSON
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LIVE MUSIC
Wednesday September 10th 8:30pm $7/10 Indie Rock Showcase
WILD ONES + CASH FOR GOLD AP TO S ST. APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos Aptos; 662.1721 805 9 Apt os St, Apt os; 662.1 721
TOMMY MALONE
A QUARIUS AQUARIUS 1175 75 W est Cliff D r, S C; 460 .5012 West Dr, SC; 460.5012
SUBDUDES Front Man Debuts New Band & CD
Friday September 12th 9pm $20/25 Jamaica’s Dancehall Legend
THE ART ART B AR & C AFE BAR CAFE 11060 060 Riv er St #112 C; 428 .8989 River #112, S SC; 428.8989
Saturday September 13th 9pm $15/20
BIT TERSWEE T BISTRO BISTRO BITTERSWEET 7787 87 RioD elMarBlvd, Apt os; RioDelMarBlvd, Aptos; 662.9 799 662.9799
YELLOWMAN Brazil’s Electro-Bossa Pioneers Debut Santa Cruz
BOSSACUCANOVA + PAPIBA & FRIENDS & DJ KIKKOMAN Thursday September 18th 8:30pm $7/10 Cumbia/Merengue Latin Dance Party
SEPTEMBER SEP TEMBER 1010-16, 16 , 2 201 2014 4 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKL LY. C OM | SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A CR U Z . C OM
BUYEPONGO
54
WED
Thursday September 11th 8:30pm $15/20
September 19th THE CHINA CATS September 20th THE STONE FOXES + TRAMPLED UNDER FOOT September 21st CHUCK RAGAN September 25th THE WHITE BUFFALO September 26th TREVOR HALL September 27th WAILING SOULS September 28th NEW MASTERSOUNDS + THE NTH POWER September 30th CAROLYN WONDERLAND October 2nd ZACH DEPUTY October 5th BLITZEN TRAPPER October 7th RISING APPALACHIA October 8th SOUL MAJESTIC October 10nd FRONT COUNTRY + STEEP RAVINE October 11th GAPPY RANKS October 14th JUNIOR MARVIN + NAPPY RIDDEM October 15th MICHAEL LANDAU October 17th THE ENGLISH BEAT October 18th BIG MOUNTAIN October 19th COCO MONTOYA October 22nd ROBERT WALTERS 20th CONGRESS October 24th HOT BUTTERED RUM October 31st SAMBADÁ November 1st PIMPS OF JOYTIME November 4th JOHNETTE NAPOLITANO November 6th SECRET CHIEFS 3 November 7th APHRODESIA + PAWN SHOP SOUL November 14th POOR MAN’S WHISKEY November 21st TOMMY CASTRO November 29th MIGHTY MIKE SCHERMER
WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854
9/10 9/1 0
Bleu 6-8p
THU
9/11
Joe Kaplow Kaplow 6-8p
FRI
9/12
Jewl Jewl Sandoval Sandoval 6-8p
Thirds Jazz Trio Trio Minor Thirds 6:30-9:30p
S SAT AT
9/133 9/1
Al Frisby Frisby 6-8p
SUN
9/14 9/1 4
Hawk Hawk & the Blues Blues Mechanics 6-8p Mechanics
MON
9/15
Jewl Jewl Sandoval Sandoval 6-8p
TUE
9/16 9/1 6
Rand Rand Rueter Rueter 6-8p
Thirds Jazz Trio Trrio Minor Thirds 7-10p 7-10p Poetry Workshop, Workshop, Open Open Poetry Late Mic Mic and Late 4-10p 0 4-10p
Arts Trivia Trivia Night Arts 8p
Dirb by Girl Night Dirby 9p
Box (Goth (Goth Night) The Box 9p
House of of Whale C House Whaless w w// S SC Sessions Cypher Sessions 9p
DJ/Live Music DJ/Live
Karaoke Karaoke 9p Karaoke Karaoke 6p
Santa Cru uz Jazz Jam Santa Cruz 77-10p 7-10p West C oast S oul West Coast Soul 8p
BL UE L AGOON BLUE LAGOON 9 23 P acific A ve, S C; 423 .7117 923 Pacific Ave, SC; 423.7117
Comedy / 80’s 80’s Night Comedy 8:30p
Boca Culo A Boca 8p
BL UE L OUNGE BLUE LOUNGE 529 Seabright Seabright A ve, S C; 423 .7771 Ave, SC; 423.7771
Gueests Chas & Special Guests
Rainbow Night w/ w/ DJ DJ AD DJ Rainbow
BO ARDWA ALK BO WL BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, S C; 426 .3324 SC; 426.3324
Karaoke Karaoke 8p
Karaoke Karaoke 8p
Lloyd Whitley Whitley & the Lloyd Blues Band Lucille Blues 9-11:45p 9-11:45p
Karaoke Karaoke 6p
BOCCI’ S CELLAR CELL AR BOCCI’S 1140 40 Encinal Encinal St, S C; 42 7.1795 SC; 427.1795
Kodiak Kodiak
Kactus Liquid Kactus
Br adford Bradford
Reggae Night w/ w/ Blazin Max a Million Reggae Rasta Santa Santa Cruz 9p Rasta 8p
C ATA LYST CATALYST 11011 011 P acific A ve, S C; 423 .1336 Pacific Ave, SC; 423.1336 C ATA AL LYST ATRIUM AT TRIUM CATALYST 11011 011 P acific A ve, S C; 423 .1336 Pacific Ave, SC; 423.1336
Dirt Nasty Nasty $15/$20 8:30p $15/$20
CIL ANTRO S CILANTROS 19 34 Main St, W at; 7761.2161 61.2161 1934 Wat;
Happy Hour Hippo Happy 5:30-7:30p 5:30-7:30p
CREPE PL ACE PLACE 11 34 S oquel, S C; 429 .6994 1134 Soquel, SC; 429.6994
My stic Br aves Mystic Braves 9p $1 0/$12 $10/$12
Jantsen, Dirt Monk ey Jantsen, Monkey 8:30p $12/$15
Easy Star Star All-Stars All-Stars Easy $17//$22 8p $17/$22
Society Black Label Society 8p $29/$33
Il Sogno Sogno Del Del Marinaio 8p $12/$15
The Kennedy Kennedy Veil Veeil 8p $8
DJ Dancing Dancing KDON DJ 9p C omedy Night Comedy 911p 9-11p
R at King, D eath Monk Rat Death 9p $8
Karaoke Karaoke
O pen Mic Open Karaoke Karaoke 8p
Classic Rock Rock Classic 8p
Blues T uesday w Blues Tuesday w// Anthony Jones Jones & S oul Anthony Soul Unlimited 9p Unlimited
Doshy, Sp ace Je sus Doshy, Space Jesus $5/$10 8p $5/$10 Happy Hour KPIG Happy 5:30-7:30p 5:30-7:30p
The Cherry Pickers, Pickers, Jug T own Pir ates 9p $8 Town Pirates
Tickets are available at Ticketmaster.com and select Walmart locations. To charge by phone (800) 745-3000. Limit 8 tickets per person. All dates, acts and ticket prices are subject to change without notice. All tickets are subject to applicable service charges.
7 Come Come 11 9p $5
LIVE MUSIC WE ED WED CROW â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S NEST CROWâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S NE ST 2218 E. Cliff D Dr, r, S SC; C; 4 476.4560 76.4560
9/10 9/1 0
Silvverback Silverback 7:30 0p $3 7:30p
THU
9/11
Boostive Boostive 8:30p $5
FRI
9 9/12
AnimoJJams AnimoJams 9p $5
D AV. ROADHOUSE ROADHOUSE DAV. 1 Davenport Davenport A ve, D av; 426 .8801 Ave, Dav; 426.8801 DON QUIXOTEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S QUIXOTEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; S 62 75 Hwy 9 elton; 60 3.2294 6275 9,, FFelton; 603.2294
For orgotten Sp ace Forgotten Space $10 8p $10
FOG BANK BANK 211 Esplanade, Esplanade, Cap; 462.1881 HENFLINGâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; S HENFLINGâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S 9450 Hwy 9, 9, Ben Lomond; Lomond; 336 .9318 336.9318
Flinngo Flingo 7:30 0p 7:30p
Easst Bay Bay Live, Live, Banshee East Bones 7p Bones
SAT S AT
9/133 9/1
Room Shakers Shakers The Room $7 9:30p $7
SUN
9/14 9/ /14
MON
9/15
San FFrancisco ranciisco C omedy San Comedy Competitioon 9p $10 $10 Competition
TUE
9/16 9/1 6
Tuesday R egggae Jam Tuesday Reggae 8p
Danjuma Adamu Adamu Danjuma 6-9p
Virgil Thr asher Bleu and Virgil Thrasher 6-9p
E el Eitz Mark Eitzel $16/$2 6 0 9p $16/$20
Bastard Sons Sons ooff Johnn Bastard Johnnyy Kenny But tterill, T ooby Kenny Butterill, Toby Carolyn Sills Cash, Carolyn Gray 2p $1 10 Gray $10 8 $10 $10 8p
Eliza Gilkyson, Gilkyson, Nina Eliza 7:30p $22/$25 Gerber 7:30p
Vinny Johns JJohnson on Band Vinny 8:30p-12:30a 8:30p-12:30a
Walker DB Walker 8:30p-12:30a 8:30p-12:30a
Vinny John nson Band Vinny Johnson Blues P ro Jam J Blues Pro
Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Clock Lunch Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Clock 9p
Zebra 3 Zebra 9p
Buffalo Ca anyon Buffalo Canyon 5p
10 Foot Foot Faces Faces 10
Celebrating Creativity Since 1975
Wednesday, September 10 U 7:30 pm
THE BILLS Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com
Thursday, September 11 U 7 pm
WIL BLADES Hammond B-3 funk with deep grooves!
1/2 Price Night for Students Saturday, September 13 U 9 pm
CLUB KUUMBWA: Bryn Loosley & The Back Pages 45th Anniversary of â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Bandâ&#x20AC;? Sunday, September 14 U 7:30 pm
Karaoke with K en Karaoke Ken 7p
KATH ROBINSONâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S CD RELEASE CONCERT â&#x20AC;&#x153;BLESSED BE!â&#x20AC;? Tickets: kathrobinson.brownpapertickets.com
HINDQU ARTER HINDQUARTER 30 3 Soquel Soquel A ve, S C; 426 .7770 303 Ave, SC; 426.7770
Mon. September 15 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps
Karaokke Karaoke
ELIANE ELIAS
HOF FMANâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; S HOFFMANâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S 11 02 P aciďŹ c A ve, S C; 42 0.0135 1102 PaciďŹ c Ave, SC; 420.0135
Wed. September 17 U 7 & 9 pm | No Comps
LARRY CARLTON
IDE AL BAR BAR & GRILL GRILL IDEAL 1106 06 Beach Beach St. S C; 423 .5271 SC; 423.5271 IT â&#x20AC;&#x2122; S WINE T YME ITâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S TYME 312 Capitola Capitola A ve, Cap; 4 777.4455 Ave, 477.4455
Opeen Mic Open 7p
K UUMBWA KUUMBWA 32 0-2 C edar St, S C; 42 7..2227 320-2 Cedar SC; 427.2227
Bills, R ay Bonne ville Wil Wil Blades Blades Thee Bills, Ray Bonneville 730 0p $25 $20/$25 730p 7p $20/$25
Scott Slaught er Scott Slaughter 7-9:30p 7-9:30p
Burning Davis Davis After After Burning 10p-1a Math 10p-1a
Strides Strides 10p-1a 10p-1a
Sundaay Ticket Ticket NFL Sunday
Lisa Ma arie Lisa Marie 7-9:30p p 7-9:30p
Frank Sorci Sorci Frank 7-9:30p 7-9:30p
Depot Dogs Doggs Depot 1-4p 1-4p
Karaoke Karaoke 10p-12:30a 10p-12:30a
Loosley & the Back Kath Kath R obinnson Bryn Loosley Robinson Pages 9p $5 730p $25 Pages 730p
L OUIEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S CAJUN CAJUN KITCHEN KITCHEN LOUIEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S 11 0 Chur ch St, SC; SC; 429 .2000 110 Church 429.2000 MAL ONEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; S MALONEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S 440 Scotts V alley D r; 438 .2244 44022 Scotts Valley Dr; 438.2244
w
Brosario Brosario 6 -9p
Riviere & Simone Simoone Riviere 7-9:30p 7-9:30p
Eliane Elias $27//$32 $27/$32
Auditions Honor Band Auditions 4p
Chris K elly on the Piano Steve Steve A Abr ams T rio r Kelly Abrams Trio 77:30p :30p 5:30p
MAINSWING: VOCAL JAZZ QUARTET $8 student rate at the door Thursday, September 25 U 7 pm
MARK TURNER QUARTET featuring Avashai Cohen on trumpet
Jazz 11a1p 11a-1p Annn Whittington Whittington Jazz T rioo 5:30p Trio
Thursday, September 18 U 7 pm
1/2 Price Night for Students Friday, September 26 U 8 pm
R oadhouse Karaoke Karaoke w Roadhouse w// K en 9p Ken
FREEDOM WITHIN PRISON PROJECT FEAT. TAMMY BROWN Tickets: TheWheelCompany.com 1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-423-1336 ;O\YZKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; In the Atrium Â&#x2039; AGES 16+
DIRT NASTY plus 2Coast also SJ Aspect !DV $RS s $RS OPEN P M 3HOW P M
-YPKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; In the Atrium Â&#x2039; AGES 18+
JANTSEN / DIRT MONKEY
!DV $RS s $RS OPEN P M 3HOW P M
:H[\YKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; AGES 16+
EASY STAR ALL-STARS Tatanka !DV $RS s P M P M
plus
!DV $RS s $RS P M 3HOW P M
:\UKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; AGES 16+
BLACK LABEL SOCIETY Butcher Babies Anti-Mortem plus
also
!DV $RS s $RS P M 3HOW P M :\UKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; In the Atrium Â&#x2039; AGES 21+
THE KENNEDY VEIL plus Inanimate Existence AT THE $RS s $RS OPEN P M 3HOW P M
4VUKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; In the Atrium Â&#x2039; AGES 18+
DOSHY
Jesus also Yheti Intellitard vs Duffrey !DV $RS s $RS 3HOW P M
A CONVERSATION WITH
adam Rogers Proof: thee Science of Booze B SEPTEMBER 11, 4:30-5PM @ ZERO1 GARAGE, GARAGE, 439 S 1ST S ST, T, SAN SAN JOSE FREE - REGISTER @ BIT.LY/ADAMRODGERS BIT.LLY/AD Y DAMRODGERS
plus Space
3EP Andre Nickatina (Ages 16+) 3EP Amon Amarth (Ages 16+) 3EP Karl Densonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Tiny Universe (Ages 21+) 3EP Cat Power (Ages 16+) 3EP Brother Ali/ Bambu (Ages 16+) Oct 2 Through The Roots The Supervillains (Ages 16+) /CT The Aquabats (Ages 16+) Oct 4 Zion I: The Rapture Live from Oaklandia (Ages 16+) /CT American Authors (Ages 16+) Oct 6 Lake Street Dive (Ages 16+) /CT Dirty Heads (Ages 16+)
Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating. Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online
www.catalystclub.com
THE COFFIS BROTHERS TRIBUTE TO THE EVERLY BROTHERS Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com
Sunday, September 28 U 7:30 pm
CARLENE CARTER Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com
Monday, September 29 U 7 pm
THE COOKERS: Billy Harper, Donald Harrison, Eddie Henderson, David Weiss, George Cables, Cecil McBee, Billy Hart 1/2 Price Night for Students 10/2 10/6 10/9 10/13 10/16
Pablo Menendez & Mezcla: Direct from Cuba Joshua Redman Trio Carmen Lundy with Patrice Rushen, Andrew Renfroe, Kenny Davis and Jamison Ross Stanley Clarke Quartet Joe Lovano & Dave Douglas Quintet: Sound Prints
Saturday, November 8 U 8:30 pm at the Cocoanut Grove Ballroom 2014 GRAMMY WINNER!
PACIFIC MAMBO ORCHESTRA
Pre-concert dance lesson w/Mario Avila Unless noted advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records. Dinner served 1-hr before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wines & beer. All ages welcome.
320-2 Cedar St [ Santa Cruz 831.427.2227
kuumbwajazz.org
SANTACRUZ.COM SANT A CR UZ . C OM | GT GTWEEKLY.COM WEEKL LY. C OM | SEP SEPTEMBER T TEMBER 1010-16, 16 , 201 2014 4
:H[\YKH` :LW[LTILY Â&#x2039; In the Atrium Â&#x2039; AGES 21+
IL SOGNO DEL MARINAIO with Mike Watt
plus Lite
Saturday, September 27 U 7:30 pm
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LIVE MUSIC WED
9/10 9/1 0
THU
9/11
FRI
9/12
SAT S AT
9/133 9/1
MANGIAMO’ S MANGIAMO’S M 7783 83 Rio Del Del Mar Blvd, Blvd, Apt os; 688 .11477 Aptos; 688.1477
A coustic Clas sic R ock Acoustic Classic Rock 5-8p
MAR M G ARIT TAV VILLE MARGARITAVILLE 2 E 221 splanade, Cap; 4 76.2263 Esplanade, 476.2263
DJ 9:30p
DJ 9:30p
SUN
9/14 9/1 4
MON M
MICHAEL M ’ S ON MAIN MICHAEL’S 22591 25 91 Main St, S oquel; 4 79.9777 Soquel; 479.9777
D ave Mulda wer Dave Muldawer 7p
Phoenix Rising 7p
Joint Chie fs Chiefs 88 11p 8-11p
Be at Str eet Beat Street 88 11p 8-11p
MOE’ M S ALLEY ALLEY MOE’S 11535 Commercial 1535C ommerrccial W ay, S C; 4 79.1854 Way, SC; 479.1854
W ild O nes, Cash ffor orr Wild Ones, Gold 8p $ 7//$10 $7/$10
T oommy Malone Tommy 77:30p :30p $15/$2 0 $15/$20
Y eellowman Yellowman 8p $2 0/$25 $20/$25
Bo ssaCucaNova BossaCucaNova 8p $15/$2 0 $15/$20
MO M TIV MOTIV 11209 12 09 P acific A ve, S C; 429 .8070 Pacific Ave, SC; 429.8070
Spe akkeasy LLoung oung 6p p Speakeasy D assWassup! 9:30p p DassWassup!
Motiv Cup Beer P ong 9p Pong Lib ation Lab 9:30p Libation
Charly FFusion usion 9:30p-2a
D rgandy DJJJuan Juan Bur Burgandy 9:30p-2a
R asta Cruz R eggae Rasta Reggae P arty 9p-2a Party
Is aiah Pick ett Band Isaiah Pickett 2:30p
Ho ’Omana Ho’Omana 2:30p
9/15
P aul Butler Paul 1212 3p 12-3p
TUE
9/16 9/1 6
Mojo Mix 6:30-8:30p 6:30 8:30p
T aango2Oblivion 6p Tango2Oblivion E clectic 9:30p Eclectic
Hip-hop w /DJ Mar w/DJ Marcc 9:30p-2a
OLIT O TAS OLITAS Liv Livee Jazz 4 Municip 49B al Wharf C; 458 .9393 6:30p Municipal Wharf,, S SC; 458.9393 P AR ADISE BE A ACH PARADISE BEACH 2 Esplanade, 215 Esplanade, Cap 4 76.4900 476.4900 THE POCKE T T POCKET 3 31 02 P ortola D r, S C; 4 75.9819 3102 Portola Dr, SC; 475.9819
Jam S ession w ops Session w// P Pops Phillip Phillipss 7p
Cas ey W ickstrom Casey Wickstrom 9p
POE P T & PATRIOT PATRIO T T POET 3 32 0 E. C edar St, S C; 426-862 0 320 Cedar SC; 426-8620
The Johnn abulous a Johnnyy FFabulous O rkestrio 9p Orkestrio O pen Mic Open 3-6p
THE RED T 2200 00 LLocust ocust St, S C; 425 .1913 SC; 425.1913
The Ale aymond Alexx R Raymond Band 8p
7C ome 11, Come 9:30p
THE REEF T 1120 12 0 Union St, S C; 45 9.9876 SC; 459.9876
O pen Mic Open 6p
AnimoJams Animo Jams 6:30p
RIO THE R AT TRE THEATRE 11205 12 05 S oquel, S C; 423 .8209 Soquel, SC; 423.8209
K eith Gr eeninger Greeninger Keith 77:30p :30p $26 .50/$42 $26.50/$42
K en C onsstable Ken Constable 6-9p Jazz S ession w Session w// Jazz Jam S anta Cruz 7p Santa
O pen C eltic Mic Open Celtic 3:30-6:30p
O pen MIc Open 77:30-11:30p :30-11:30p
Inuds try Night Inudstry 3p P ono’s Aloha FFriday riday Pono’s 6p
Mo(Animo Mo(Animo)) 12:30p
Bert Ja vier Javier 6p
International Music Hall and Restaurant
SEPTEMBER SEP TEMBER 1010-16, 16 , 2 201 2014 4 | GTWEEKLY.COM GT WEEKL LY. C OM | SANT SANTACRUZ.COM A CR U Z . C OM
FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95
56
Thu Sept 11
Forgotten Space
Fri Sept 12
Mark Eitzel of American Music Club + Hod and the Helpers $16 adv./$20 door ALL STANDING DANCE 21+ 9pm
Sat Sept 13
Bastard Sons of Johnny Cash + Carolyn Sills Combo
Grateful Dead National Touring Tribute from Texas $10 adv./$10 door 21+ 8pm
$10 adv./$10 door 21+ 8pm Sun Sept 14
Kenny Butteril + Toby Gray & Friends 2pm matinee
Folk, Country, Blues $10 adv./$10 door <21 w/parent 2pm Sun Sept 14
Fleetwood Mask
Tues Sept 16
Eliza Gilkyson & Nina Gerber
Thu Sept 18
John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme
The Ultimate Tribute to Fleetwood Mac $10 adv./$10 door 21+ 7pm $22 adv./$25 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm performed by John Hanrahan’s Love Supreme Quartet
$10 adv./$10 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm
COMING RIGHT UP
Fri. Sept. 19
Nigel and Clive & The British Invasion + Just Cream Clapton Tribute Sat. Sept. 20 UTURN Tue. Sept. 23 Fantuzzi’s Fan Tuesday Reservations Now Online at
www.donquixotesmusic.com
San Francisco Comedy Competition Sunday 10+ comics give you their best schtick.
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 3:30pm. Wednesday all night!
VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.
SAILBOAT RACES Enjoy every Wednesday evening.
NOW SERVING BREAKFAST Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily
(831) 476-4560
crowsnest-santacruz.com
LIVE MUSIC WE ED WED
9/10 9/1 0
THU
9/11
FRI
9 9/12
SAT S AT
9/133 9/1
RO SIE MCC ROSIE MCCANNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S ANNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; S 122 0P aciďŹ c A ve, S C; 426 .9930 1220 PaciďŹ c Ave, SC; 426.9930
DJ
DJ
S ANDERLINGS SANDERLINGS 1S eascape R esort, Apt os; Seascape Resort, Aptos; 662. 7120 662.7120
Y uji & Steve S eve St Yuji 811p 8-11p
In Thr ee w ammi a Three w// T Tammi Br own & Bob Burnett Burnett Brown 811p 8-11p
SE ABRIG HT BREWERY BREWERY SEABRIGHT 519 Seabright, Seabright, S C; 426 .2739 SC; 426.2739
Andy Santana Santana 6:3010:30p p 6:30-10:30p
SEVERINOâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; S BAR BAR & GRILL GRILL SEVERINOâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S 77500 500 Old Dominion, Dominion, Aptos; Aptos; 688 .8987 688.8987
D on McCaslin & the Don Amazing Jazz Gee zers Geezers 610p 6-10p
Phoen nix Rising Phoenix 77:30p :30p
T ssunami Tsunami 7p
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DROP KICK The late James Gandolfini’s excellent performance is one of the few elements that feel authentic in ‘The Drop.’
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
Untrue Crime
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Despite some good acting, ‘The Drop’ feels like it’s faking it BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
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ennis Lahane’s short story “Animal Rescue,” published in the 2009 anthology Boston Noir, is the source for The Drop; it’s been transplanted from Dorchester to Brooklyn, and it’s graced with some powerful acting by the late James Gandolfini. He is in a lot of the movie, as the namesake of a neighborhood bar called Cousin Marv’s. Marv used to own the place, but he got indebted to some Chechen gangsters. The bartender is Marv’s own placid, soft-witted cousin Bob (Tom Hardy), a quiet lug in a dingy sheepskin-collared denim jacket. Bob has got a good heart and not
much brain, but he has the sense to look the other way when the thugs come in to harvest their money. The title comes from an underground banking procedure— with little or no warning, the cash deposits from the rackets comes to rest for the night in the different safes of an ever-rotating list of “drop” bars. When it’s the Cousin Marv’s bar turn to hold the bag, a couple of tipped-off plastic-masked thugs try to hit the place up. The Chechens take appropriate revenge on the thief they catch. They make sure Marv and Bob are implicated in the killing, in case they feel like talking to the cops.
After a post-Christmas shift, Bob is walking home late and finds a wounded pit bull puppy dropped in a trash can. Nadia (Noomi Rapace) hears her trash can being looked through, and emerges. She’s done some animal rescue work, so she sews the pup up. Bob now has both a reason to live, in the form of a pooch, and a new female friend. The connection between these two plots—the robbers regrouping for a second try, and the tentative friendship between Bob and Nadia—is a psycho called Eric Deeds (Matthias Schoenaerts). He has Nadia under surveillance. Deeds claims that the dog is his,
and he wants Bob to pay $10,000 for it. Director Michaël R. Roskam (Bullhead ) knows the ropes: rather than constant sadism, he shows us a series of vulnerabilities probed, and escalating tension leading to a swift, conclusive act of violence. He also knows how to manipulate the audience—no one wants to see a dog get it. The Drop is not in a rut, but it’s also not a movie that breaks new ground. The international cast is slightly off—Hardy, British, is supposed to be from Central European stock or something. The high toneless voice comes from nowhere, except the movies. There still isn’t any such a thing as a postMarlon Brando performance, and Hardy emulates Terry Malloy in On the Waterfront. Rapace is supposed to be Russian. She looks shell-shocked and scarred, the black eyes are hard as coal, and she holds your view when she licks some Dos Equis off her lips. But she doesn’t fit into the neighborhood either in accent or mannerisms. As Deeds, Schoenaerts, a Belgian actor who starred in Bullhead, is large and looming. In the role we probably needed something more of what Ray Liotta had in Something Wild—the ingratiating boy-who-never-grew-up quality of a grade-A psycho. When an actor plays this kind of role, he should be someone you want dead, but not dead quite yet. Schoenaerts is so abrasive that you want to accelerate the process. The Drop has some dark-alley business in the sick-pink sodium-lit industrial backstreets of New York, a frozen dog park in January, and alleys with beat-up garage doors eaten artistically by salt corrosion. Mostly it’s framed as if for television—talking heads talking to each other. Lahane’s script makes you think of Philip Marlowe describing Hemingway as a writer who repeats things until they sound good; some of the atmosphere evaporates between the script and the mouths of the international cast. THE DROP With Tom Hardy, Noomi Rapace, and James Gandolfini. Written by Dennis Lehane. Directed by Michaël R. Roskam. A Chernin Entertainment and Fox Searchlight Pictures release. Rated R. 106 minutes.
MOVIE TIMES
September 12-18
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All times are PM unless otherwise noted.
DEL MAR THEATRE
831.469.3220
THE DROP Daily 2:00, 4:30, 7:20, 9:40 + Sat-Sun 11:30am THE HUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY Daily 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 11:00am THE GIVER Daily 2:30, 4:40, 7:10, 9:20 + Sat-Sun 12:10
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831.426.7500
THE TRIP TO ITALY Daily 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 11:40am LOVE IS STRANGE Daily 2:40, 4:50, 7:00, 9:10 + Sat-Sun 12:30 THE ONE I LOVE Daily 2:00, 9:40 + Sat-Sun 12:00 CALVARY Daily 2:50, 5:00, 7:20 + Sat-Sun 12:00 BOYHOOD Daily 4:10, 7:30* *No Tue 7:30
APTOS CINEMA
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SHOWTIMES S HOWTIMES 9/12 9//12 - 9/18 9/18
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831.761.8200
DOLPHIN TALE 2 Daily 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 11:00am
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IF I STAY Daily 4:00, 7:15, 9:45 + Sat-Sun 10:45am THE IDENTICAL Daily 1:15 LETâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BE COPS Daily 1:45, 7:30, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 11:15am THE NOVEMBER MAN Daily 4:30 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES Daily 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 + Sat-Sun 11:15am GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY Daily 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 + Sat-Sun 10:45am
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CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504 GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY Daily 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:45 THE GIVER Daily 11:30am, 2:20, 7:30 THE NOVEMBER MAN Daily 4:45, 9:55 DOLPHIN TALE 2 Daily 11:40am, 2:00, 4:40, 7:20, 9:55
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TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLE Fri-Wed 11:15am, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45
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NEW THIS WEEK DOLPHIN TALE 2 The young dolphin rescued in the first movie and given a prosthetic tail becomes the object of more human concern when her handlers have to find her a new aquatic companion or lose her to another aquarium. Morgan Freeman, Ashley Judd, Nathan Gamble, and Harry Connick Jr. return for director Charles Martin Smith. (PG) Starts Friday. THE DROP Tom Hardy stars in this crime drama as a Brooklyn bartender trying to make some easy money funneling cash to neighborhood mobsters when everything goes badly awry. Dennis Lehane adapted the script from his own short story. Noomi Rapace and the late James Gandolfini co-star for director Michaël R. Roskam. (R) 106 minutes. Starts Friday.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
LOVE IS STRANGE John Lithgow and Alfred Molina star as a recently married couple who lose the Manhattan apartment they've lived in together for decades and suddenly have to live apart—with friends and relatives—until they can find an affordable new home. Marisa Tomei co-stars. Ira Sachs directs. (R) 94 minutes. Starts Friday.
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NO GOOD DEED Taraji P. Henson and Idris Elba star in this thriller about a suburban Atlanta mom who's in for trouble when the stranger she lets into her house to use the phone turns out to be an escaped convict on the run. Sam Miller directs. (PG-13) Starts Friday. THE ONE I LOVE Mark Duplass and Elisabeth Moss star in the comedydrama as a young couple hoping to revive their flagging marriage at a weekend retreat to a vacation house. Ted Danson co-stars. Charlie McDowell directs. (R) 91 minutes. Starts Friday. THE TRIP TO ITALY Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon reteam once again as the comedian buddies who ate and wisecracked their way across Northern England as ad-hoc restaurant critics in the first The Trip. This time they're invited to take a culinary road trip to Italy. Michael Winterbottom directs another semiimprovised laugh-and-food fest. (Not rated) 115 minutes. Starts Friday.
SPECIAL EVENT THIS WEEK: DURAN DURAN UNSTAGED Filmmaker David Lynch puts his own inimitable, hallucinatory spin on this musical concert doc of the band's one-night-only reunion concert in Los Angeles in 2011. (Not rated) 121 minutes. At the Del Mar, one night only (Wednesday, Sept. 10), 7:30 p.m. SPECIAL EVENT THIS WEEK: VOICES ACROSS THE DIVIDE Alice Rothchild, an American Jew, physician, activist, and author, presents her documentary and oral history project exploring the Israeli/Palestinian conflict through rarely heard personal stories. The film will be viewed followed by a Q & A session with Ms. Rothchild. Co-Sponsored by the Palestine-Israel Action Committee, Jewish Voice for Peace, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, and the Resource Center for Nonviolence. At the Resource Center for Nonviolence (612 Ocean St. SC), Monday only, 7 p.m. (Sept. 15) Admission: $5 – 10 Sliding Scale. CONTINUING EVENT: LET'S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES This informal movie discussion group meets at the Del Mar mezzanine in downtown Santa Cruz. Movie junkies are invited to join in on Wednesday nights to pursue the elusive and ineffable meanings of cinema. Discussion begins at 7 pm and admission is free. For more information visit groups.google.com/group/LTATM.
NOW PLAYING A MOST WANTED MAN Philip Seymour Hoffman stars in this political thriller adapted from the John Le Carre novel about an illegal Muslim immigrant in Hamburg who gets caught up in the international war on terror. Rachel McAdams, Willem Dafoe, and Robin Wright co-star for director Anton Corbijn. (R) 122 minutes. AS ABOVE/SO BELOW No good can possibly come of it when a team of adventurers decides to explore the catacombs full of ancient bones that lie beneath the city of Paris in this horror thriller, unlocking a dark secret along the way. Perdita Weeks, Ben Feldman, and Edwin Hodge star. John Erick Dowdle (Quarantine, Devil) directs. (R) 93 minutes.
BOYHOOD Kudos to Richard Linklater for such a refreshingly audacious film. Linklater had the simple, yet brilliant idea to shoot a scripted story over a period of 12 years, allowing his cast—including his child protagonists—to age naturally onscreen. Ellar Coltrane (in the central role) was 7 years old when the film started shooting in 2002, 18 when it wrapped last year, and he’s compulsively watchable throughout. It sounds like a stunt, but watching these characters grow up before our eyes (including adults Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke, both terrific, as the divorced parents), makes for a bold, moving, and utterly mesmerizing moviegoing experience. (R) 166 minutes. (****)—Lisa Jensen. FRANK This oddball little comedy about a bizarre art-rock band occasionally achieves the hipster irony it strives for—but more often comes across as dysfunctional as its title character, a would-be musical genius in a giant, fake head he never takes off—ever. For all its quirkiness, there’s not much return for our investment of time. But at least Domhnall Gleeson is an engaging protagonist, and Michael Fassbender contributes some comic body language as the guy in the fake head. (R) 95 minutes. (**1/2)—Lisa Jensen. THE HUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY Engaging performances—especially from the sublime Helen Mirren and Indian national treasure Om Puri—spice up this unsurprising, yet enjoyably romantic foodie film. The location is irresistible, a sun-drenched corner of the South of France where an upstart family-run Indian eatery sets up shop across the street from a venerable French restaurant. Dreamy-eyed Manish Dayal and frisky Charlotte Le Bon make a charming romantic couple. And there’s plenty of good-looking food, from haute cuisine to vivid massala-spiced Indian dishes to simple French country cooking, presented with enough relish to make it all go down smoothly. Lasse Hallstrm directs. (PG) 122 minutes. (***)—Lisa Jensen. THE IDENTICAL What if Elvis Presley’s twin brother had survived, but grown up as the adopted son of a hellfire evangelist? That seems
to be the premise of this Christian family drama about musically gifted twins—one becomes a rock idol, the other a rock impersonator—in a story that spans the Depression ‘30s and the rockin’‘50s to the Glam Rock ‘70s. Ashley Judd, Ray Liotta and Seth Green star; Blake Rayne plays both twins. (PG) 107 minutes. IF I STAY Based on Gayle Forman’s bestselling YA novel, the story revolves around a teenage girl whose life literally passes before her eyes in a moment that changes things forever. Chloe Grace Moretz stars as the heroine trying to determine if and how to go on with her life. Mireille Enos, Jamie Blackley, and Joshua Leonard co-star for director R. J. Cutler. (PG13) 106 minutes. INNOCENCE After losing her mother, a teenage girl moves to Manhattan with her father and enrolls in a strange boarding school whose beautiful female staff harbors a dark secret. Sophie Curtis, Kelly Reilly, Graham Phillips, and Linus Roache star in this horror drama adapted from the YA novel by Jane Mendelsohn. Hilary Brougher directs. (PG-13) 96 minutes. LET’S BE COPS Jake Johnson and Damon Wayans Jr. star in this action comedy as buddies who dress up as cops for a costume party and become the toast of the neighborhood—until their ruse gets them involved with real-life mobsters, criminals, and police corruption. Luke Greenfield directs. (R) 104 minutes. LIFE AFTER BETH Rom-com meets the zombie apocalypse in this farce about a young man (Dane Dehaan) whose joy when he learns his recently deceased girlfriend (Aubrey Plaza) is back goes a little cold when he finds out she’s now a member of the flesh-eating undead. Molly Shannon and John C. Reilly co-star for writerdirector Jeff Baena. (R) 91 minutes. LIFE OF CRIME The Elmore Leonard novel The Switch is the basis for this dark caper comedy about a sleazy real estate developer (Tim Robbins) who opts not to pay the ransom when his wife (Jennifer Aniston) is kidnapped by dysfunctional would-be criminals John Hawkes and Yasiin Bey. Daniel Schechter directs. (R) 94 minutes.
MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT Woody Allen’s second comedy set in France is no Midnight In Paris. But there’s modest fun to be had in this tale of a misanthropic stage magician (Colin Firth) attempting to expose a spiritualist (Emma Stone) he believes is swindling wealthy American expats among the Cote d’Azur elite in the Jazz Age 1920s. Firth is wise enough not to try to imitate Allen’s famous mannerisms in the protagonist’s role, Simon McBurney is fun as his devilish sidekick, the scenery is gorgeous, and the period costumes worn by the great Eileen Atkins (as Firth’s grande dame aunt) are worth the price of admission. (PG-13) 97 minutes. (**1/2)—Lisa Jensen. THE NOVEMBER MAN Pierce Brosnan stars as the hero of the Bill Granger espionage series, a skilled and deadly ex-CIA agent who comes out of retirement to protect a comely witness (Olga Kurylenko) in a conspiracy investigation. Luke Bracey, Bill Smitrovich, and Will Patton co-star for director Roger Donaldson (The Bank Job). (R) 108 minutes. TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES In this mostly live-action reboot of the popular comic book series, New York City is in the grip of evildoers when four masked outcast brothers rise up out of the sewers to become heroes. Megan Fox stars as sympathetic, turtle-friendly girl reporter April O’Neil, and Will Arnett is her cameraman sidekick. Jonathan Liebesman directs. (PG-13) WHAT IF This lightweight rom-com from director Michael Dowse is lucky to have pair of attractive leads in Daniel Radcliffe and Zoe Kazan. It’s adapted from a two-character play where dialogue counts for a lot, and conversation in the film is laced with postmodern irony, and often very funny self-deprecating humor. The premise may be tissuethin (potential soulmates try to just be friends because one of them already has a live-in sweetie), some of the narrative mood swings feel a bit forced, and even the dialogue occasionally fails big time, but the easy charm of the leads keeps us involved. PG-13. 98 minutes. (***)— Lisa Jensen.
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FOOD & DRINK with potatoes and harissa aioli. The savvy kitchen has created a menu that flatters—adores—beer. So go and sip for yourself. There are more than 15 on tap at any given time. At $9 each, these items are geared toward a twenty-to-thirtysomething afterwork crowd of young professionals who love beer but insist on something non-boring to go with their brew.
SMALL BITES Pork belly, crisp on top and bottom, lusciously fatty and flavorful in the middle. Presented with a fluff to something in the key of frisée, plus topnotes of Kalamata, capers and intensely flavored tomatoes. This recent appetizer at Soif ($14) was both substantial and deliciously worth every penny. Nice to have chef Mark Denham asserting his style. God, I love this place, especially with a minerally glass of Hungarian Furmint Sec in my non-fork-holding hand. The kitchen at Ristorante Avanti has noticeable sparkle. Lunch last week of local sea bass on a garlic-intensive bed of zesty shell and pole beans made me smile all day.
HARVEST UPDATE
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
GLASS MENAGERIE Kayla McIntyre makes beer lovers feel welcome at Lúpulo. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER
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Lúpulo: Doing It Right Beer worship, great food and a secret weapon at new hops spot BY CHRISTINA WATERS
K
ayla McIntyre at Lúpulo is exactly the kind of pro-active front counter personality you want in your store. When we came in and started asking questions about the menu in this newish craft beer house, McIntyre had plenty of answers. She not only explained the various styles of beers we were looking at, she also poured us samples to illustrate her point. She walked us through the menu, took our orders and made us feel welcome—all without missing a beat, or neglecting other patrons in
the process. Given the smart, cando quality of our welcome, we were inclined to love Lúpulo (Spanish for “hops”) even before the first bite. From the hefty selection of beers on tap we chose 5-ounce pours of a Belgian blonde-style Evil Twin Joey Pepper, and a Sante Adairius 1903 lager. Our orders were as solid as McIntyre promised. Spiced tacos of slow-roasted pork pibil-style, slathered with anchiote sauce and purple cabbage for Jack; and a sensuous, gooey, Oaxaqueño-style version of a grilled cheese sandwich
for me. My pressed sandwich contained oozing layers of pesto, queso Oaxaca, chèvre, plus arugula and avocado. Crisp toasted bread provided the crunchy contrast. Total yum, as was the trio of pork tacos. On the side was the house secret weapon—pickled veggies, including an incendiary salsa of onions and habañero with the tacos. I adored— no, really—my pickled zucchini and carrots. Even more because these spicy, zippy flavors were perfectly tuned to the rounded flavors of the beers. Next time I'll try the omelette
Richard Alfaro and his crew are “picking like mad” right now. “We started harvesting last Wednesday for sparkling wine,” Alfaro told me. “This week, we picked our first Pinot, and now it’s every day.” And that was a week ago! The winemaker echoed what others are saying: “This is the earliest we have ever picked—and it all looks very good.” Fingers crossed!
WINE OF THE WEEK That would be the crisp, refreshing orange wine (aka skin-crushed Pinot Gris) from Beauregard Vineyards. This baby saw less than a year in neutral oak—barrels that have been much-used and hence are not as likely to overlay the wine's crisp tannic quality with a cushion of butter or vanilla. The result is tart and instantly likeable. At 11 percent alcohol, it is indeed an easysipping “breakfast wine” that adores oysters, green olives, cheeses and warm summer afternoons. $30ish. I’d say to run on up to the redwooddraped tasting room at Pine Flat Road and pick up a bottle while you’re tasting the handiwork of winemaker Ryan Beauregard.
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493 Lake Ave, Santa Cruz located at entrance of Santa Cruz Harbor
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Happy Happ y Hour r 4-10pm 11 Beers on o Tap Tap a WEEKENDS:
Breakfast B reaeakfast f 8:30 8:30am-2pm a am-2pm Breakfast Br B reaeakffast SSpecial: ppecciiaal:l $5. $5.95 95 (8-11am) Bloody B loooddy M Ma Mary’ aryy’s/ M Mimosas immosas $4 Lunch Lu unch 11am 11am-4pm -4pm 3326 3 326 por portola tola Dr, Santa Sant ta Cruz | 831.476.2733 831.476.2733 www.thepointchophousee.com www.thepointchophouse.com
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hen you taste Soquel Vineyardsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; extraordinary 2012 Partnersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Reserve Pinot Noir, you will know why it won a Double Gold in June at the 2014 San Francisco International Wine Competition. Yes, Pinot lovers everywhere, this beautiful garnet wine scored a whopping 98 points at the competition, and, considering the huge number of varietals entered this year, this is a coup indeed. So praise and congratulations to winery partners Peter and Paul Bargetto and Jon Morgan. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m glad they made 200 cases. This crazy-good Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot ($50) has everything going for it. A blend of 14 clones from three Santa Cruz Mountains vineyardsâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;estate, Lester Family Vineyards in Aptos and Coast Grade Vineyard in Bonny Doonâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;the end result is complex aromas of dark fruit, and big bold flavors of strawberry, cherry and cranberry, with some earthy mushroom and clove. Only the finest grapes are selected for this prize wine, and only handmade French oak barrels are chosen for ageing. So if you think you can handle this deliciously seductive Pinot Noir, I suggest you head to Soquel Vineyards to try some. As one master sommelier put it about Pinot, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s sex in a glass.â&#x20AC;? That just about sums it up. Soquel Vineyards, 8063 Glen Haven Road, Soquel, 462-9045. Soquelvineyards.com. Tasting room open weekends from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
SAVE OUR SHORES GALA Save Our Shores is putting on a Toast to the Coast dinner and dance gala at Asilomar in Pacific Grove at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 13. There is still time to get tickets, so visit saveourshores.org for info.
GOURMET TO GO One of the best personal chefs in the area is Elizabeth Bourget. Not only can she cook up a storm, but she also just won Best Website of 2014 from the U.S. Personal Chef Association National Conference (USPCA), held in Long Beach. If you love good food and you want to check out her culinary wonders as well as her website, visit gourmetbourget.com.
This crazygood Pinot has everything going for it.
SEASCAPE MARKET I stopped by the Seascape Farmers Market recentlyâ&#x20AC;&#x201D;a small, intimate farmers market, complete with music. As well as purchasing organic corn and strawberries, I bought honey from Linda Snawder, who makes raw unfiltered honey with her husband on their property in La Selva Beach. Visit laselvabeachhoney.com or call 768-101. I also had a great cup of coffee at Full of Beans. New owner Russell Sanderson has added an updated coffee counter and now carries local Polar Bear Ice Cream. Visit full-of-beans.com. The market runs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sundays through October.
B I R T H D AY BAS H
Thursday, September Sep eptember 18th @ 4pm Born in thee month of September? ? Join us on Thur Thursday, rsday, September 18th 2014 and enjoy a FREE FR REE Prime Prime Rib Dinnerr or a 1/2 Rack of Baby Back Ribs. Just make B m e mak reservations, reservations, show a Photo ID & make maake a purchase purcha hase with h your dinner. d
$10.95 Baby Back B Ribs {Sunday & Monday} Mondday} Lobster {Wednesday} $12.95 Live Maine M {W Wednesday e ay} $12.95 P Prime rime Rib {Friday} {FFrriday} $5.95 Breakfast Breakfast Special {Mon.–Fri, {Mon.–F Fri, r 8-11am 8--11am Sat & Sun, 8-10am}}
O P E N E V E R Y D AY 8 A M – 1 1 P M 106 Beach St. att the Santa Cruz Wharf 831- 423-5271 • www.idealbarandgrill.com ww www.idealbar andgrill.com
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HE DID START THE FIRE Pat Flanagan, who co-owns Scotts Valley’s Wood Fire Woodie with his wife Mariah. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER
Wood Fire Woodie Scotts Valley pizzeria gets fired up the old-school way BY AARON CARNES
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SP ECIALS MOND AY $10.95 Baby Back Ribs (5pm)
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GA M E TIM E Food and Drink SpecialsMon- Sunday
omino’s may have the word “pizza” in its title, but those doughy, calorie-rich wheels on their menu are a far cry from the original pizzas served in Naples, Italy. Neapolitan pizzas have a thin, almost cracker-like dough, and stick to very simple, basic toppings. The other piece of the traditional pizza puzzle is the wood-fired oven, which cooks faster and at a much higher temperature than standard ovens. Pat and Mariah Flanagan modeled their Scotts Valley pizzeria Wood Fire Woodie after a Neapolitan-style pizzeria. The couple started out selling pizza as a catering company in 2007, but opened the restaurant in 2012, advertising the wood-fired oven right there in the title. We interviewed Pat about their business.
GT: What’s so great about woodfired pizza? Pat Flanagan: It’s the only way to go as far as pizza, ’cause you have the intense heat of the wood. It’s nice to get that char on there from the wood fire. You’re also going to get a slight smoky flavor to it. Once the dough hits the really hot heat then it quickly expands, and you get that
really nice crust. There’s a lot of others out there that use gas woodfired ovens. It’s not the same thing. You’re not getting any intensity of just using wood.
Are you an avid surfer? Those pizza names (“The Barrel,” “Hang Ten”) suggest you are. I’ve been surfing since I was 12. I used to surf over here all the time. I grew up in Los Gatos, but I would always surf in Santa Cruz.
Is the Kona Gold basically your version of a Hawaiian? Yeah. It’s our top seller as far as type of pizza. We use applewoodsmoked bacon. We always use fresh pineapples. We always marinate our onions too that are on the pizza.
What about your sauce? We hand-crush all the tomatoes. They’re harvesting all the tomatoes right now. We get them at their peak ripeness and we have it throughout the whole year. We do some garlic and other spices, but it’s always fresh. It’s not too strong. 3105B Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley; 316-9001.
+ RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES A DIFFERENT REVOLUTION Aries Moon late Wednesday and Thursday. We think new thoughts and initiate new ideas. Sun in Virgo with Saturn in Scorpio help disciples to create orderly structures to anchor and bring forth new ideas. Stabilizing Taurus moon Friday and Saturday. We anchor new ideas into form and matter, like seeds planted in the soil. We tend them, waiting for green shoots to emerge. Like the gestating Virgo Sun Madonna, awaiting the birth of the holy child, the Soul, the new light at winter solstice. Mercury and Chiron converse about what hurts and what heals. Saturday is a complex day with Mercury (communication), Mars (action!) and Uranus (revolution). Mercury in Libra is opposite Uranus in Aries. Oppositions (recognizing something new appearing over there somewhere) eventually synthesize. Mercury in
Libra calls for Right Action and Right Relations, especially with money. Uranus in Aries—the revolution this time must be different. Also on Saturday, Mars enters Sagittarius. Where are we going, what are our goals, where’s justice, where’s the mountain, do we have good shoes? Sunday Venus trines Pluto—in-depth assessment of money, values and resources. Gemini moon Monday; we talk a lot, tending to tasks in gardens and neighborhoods. Cancer Moon Tuesday and Wednesday; we nurture and nourish. The stars and planets remind us. Note: William Meader, esoteric author and international teacher, will be speaking on “The Soul of Humanity Evolving Through Crisis” at Meditation Mount, 7pm, Friday, Sept. 12.
ARIES Mar21–Apr20
LIBRA Sep23–Oct22
Speak carefully and harmoniously to loved ones. Realize you may be more critical at this time, which includes self-criticism. Allow others the benefit of understanding you. Always give and ask for explanations, then listen carefully. What you know as real and what you feel (frustration, anger, impatience, etc.) may at first be at odds. Wait a while before acting. Then you can choose the right course of action. Then your heart opens.
Librans always need a social group around where everyone recognizes and loves them. And then there are times when you feel out of place, the odd one, not heard, seen, listened to or understood. During the month, through inner communication and wisdom, you will assess the many paths you’ve taken, and realize new needs. In between, attempting to stabilize a new sense of self you will also be very practical. You will also begin to tithe to those in need.
Esoteric Astrology as news for week Sept. 10- 17, 2014
TAURUS Apr21–May21 Events dissolve, are created, retreat, happen, fall apart and re-emerge again—all defining the breakdown of the past and a defining of the future. Beware of stepping across boundaries where uncontrolled power is an issue. In communications have Right Relations within so Right Relations of others can also be summoned. You teach us to maintain the highest ethics, morals, values and intentions. You know how one begins a project is also how it ends.
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 As you redefine yourself, there may be conflicts and collisions with other people’s ideas of who you are. There may be difficulty communicating and/or being understood. Before speaking, consider your words, intentions, attitude and tone, have the intention for goodwill, and seek to become a “harmonizer.” These are important values to remember and uphold.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 During the month of traveling here and there, you seek a new base of operation, and wonder about your true foundations. You realize your family heritage has given you an identity propelling you forward into new territory. Do not be concerned if chaos is your companion. Chaos is the first step toward greater harmony. Chaos contains the seeds of creativity, provides excitement, experiences and shreds outworn ways of being. Carve a tall sturdy walking stick.
CANCER Jun21–Jul20 New ideas, revolutionary, unusual and revelatory are being impressed upon your mind. You’re therefore learning at an accelerated pace, as if in a school, but actually it’s that you’re concentrating on the value of here and now. There’s extra energy being offered you from Jupiter, which is expanding your heart. You’re loving more, becoming strong, resourceful, intuitive. Your garden is calling. You are to feed the world.
LE0 Jul21–Aug22 It’s important for Leos to always be recognized and praised. The secret of helping Leo evolve is other people’s acknowledgement of their gifts and talents. While hoping to not be seen, we must say you’ve become more attractive and nurturing, flowing with generosity. You offer support when the need arises and tend to those more vulnerable. You keep secrets, prefer working alone, while empowering everyone along the way. You’re a Pathfinder.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 The sun is shining on your gifts and creative abilities and all you’ve wanted to do feels like it can come true. It’s your birthday month. Know that you have everything you need in terms of energy, resources and time. Whereas much has been external, notice you’re beginning to withdraw into yourself. Expansion occurs internally for a year. Creating a time of composure, reflection, contemplation and peace.
CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 Subtle shifts and changes continue in your life, growing ever more present as each new light of day unfolds. Your foundations are being quietly transformed as you become what you were born to be. Tend to things financial. Don’t think unlimited funds are available. A serious plan must be applied to money earned and spent. Notice soon a return to previous realities. Create tasks and disciplines with family; these sustain everyone.
AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 You may feel that all progress is stalled; movements forward take two steps back. This is not failure. It’s a review, revisiting and revisioning that must occur. It’s also the energies under which you experience the coming autumn season. In this Virgo month you are soon to become Persephone, moving underground. Even if often out and about in the world prepare for a simultaneous inner experience of solitude, retreat and contemplation.
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 Something comes to rest and perhaps completion in the coming weeks. You then prepare for new activities that define the rest of the year. Notice all thoughts, impressions, ideas and intuitions. They provide subtle signs and information concerning your next steps. Interactions with loved ones will be loving yet disciplined, kind yet, structured. Eliminate all that’s unnecessary, for soon it will be time to move on. No sadness.
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GEMINI May22–June20 You find you must empower your values and day-to-day ways of being through bringing harmony forth. You must reach out to friends and loved ones from your heart. This expands them. You must alter your habits and ways of living so your health is strengthened. Soon everything must change, and this is good. Each day support world enlightenment on inner levels. Join the New Group of World Servers consciously, with determined loving rhythm and dedication.
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Classifieds FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1566 The following Individual is doing business AGUILERA HANDYMAN SERVICES. 2030 CHANTICLEER AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. JORGE AGUILERA. 2030 CHANTICLEER AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. This business is conducted by a Individual JORGE AGUILERA. 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 August 13 2014. August 20, 27 & September 3, 10.
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1540 The following Individual is doing business CREATIVE HARMONY. 4624 SOQUEL WHARF RD, SOQUEL CA 95073 County of Santa Cruz. DEBORAH S. RYMAN. 4624 SOQUEL WHARF RD, SOQUEL CA 95073. This business is conducted by a Individual DEBORAH S. RYMAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/2/2002. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 7 2014. August 20, 27 & September 3, 10.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1548 The following Individual is doing business KURZ CONSTRUCTION. 829 WESTERN DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. JOEL KURZ. 829 WESTERN DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual JOEL KURZ. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/12/2000.. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 8, 2014. August 20, 27 & September 3, 10. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-1556 The following Corporation is doing business as APTOS MEDICAL AESTHETICS. 9051 SOQUEL DRIVE, SUITE F, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. RICHARD H. GERMAN, M.D., INC., A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION. 150 CORONA ROAD, CARMEL CA 93923. Al#: 794983. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: ELIZABETH H. GERMAN 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 August 11, 2014. August 20, 27 & September 3, 10.
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF ESPERANZA CORTEZ CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV179780. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner ESPERANZA CORTEZ. has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Genesis Ilene Gonzalez Cortez to: Genesis I lene Cortez. 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 September 30 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: August 12, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. August 20, 27 & September 3, 10. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1588 The following Individual is doing business LAUNCH. 2930 MAPLETHORPE LANE, SOQUEL CA 95073 County of Santa Cruz. DAVID EDWIN STROUD. 2930 MAPLETHORPE LANE, SOQUEL CA 95073. This business is conducted by a Individual DAVID EDWIN STROUD. 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 August 15 2014. August 20, 27 & September 3, 10. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1629 The following Individual is doing business FASHIONART, MICHAELANGELO STUDIOS GALLERY & SANTACRUZFASHIONART. 1111 RIVER STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. ANGELO GROVA. 542 HIGHLAND AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual ANGELO GROVA. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name
listed above on 8/1/1989. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 22 2014. August 27 & September 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-1494 The following Corporation is doing business as SURF CITY RENTALS. 4675 CAPITOLA RD., CAPITOLA CA 95010 County of Santa Cruz. SURF CITY RENTALS, INC. 4675 CAPITOLA RD., CAPITOLA CA 95010. Al#: 3685888 This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: TARA FORREST. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 5/6/2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on July 30, 2014. August 27 & September 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-1503 The following Corporation is doing business as SCULPTECH, INC. 111 UNIT E LEE RD., WATSONVILLE CA 95076 County of Santa Cruz. SCULPTECH, INC. 111 UNIT E LEE RD., WATSONVILLE CA 95076. Al#: 3685681. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: JACK LAWTON. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 6/17/2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on July 31, 2014. August 27 & September 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-1573 The following Corporation is doing business as THE GREAT RABBIT. 101 COOPER STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 05062 County of Santa Cruz. THE LAUGHING PHOENIX. 101 COOPER STREET, SANTA CRUZ CA 05062. Al#: 3316702. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: LISA BENSON. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/7//2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 13, 2014. August 27 & September 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-1501 The following Corporation is doing business as MOBILE OUTFITTERS. 2928 LEOTAR CIRCLE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062 County of Santa Cruz. MOBILE OUTFITTERS, INC. 2928 LEOTAR CIRCLE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95062. Al#: 3629756.
This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: . The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 7/31/2014. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on July 31, 2014. August 27 & September 3, 10, 17. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF JORGE EDVARDO PULIDO. CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV179805. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JORGE EDVARDO PULIDO. has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Jorge Edvardo Pulido to: Jorge Edvardo Aguilar. 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 October 1, 2014 at 8:30 am, in Department 4 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: August 14, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court.August 27 & September 3, 10, 17. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1609 The following Individual is doing business IKAVU & LILY KARINA DESIGNS. SWANTON RD/LAST CHANCE RD., DAVENPORT CA 95017 County of Santa Cruz. LILY RUDERMAN. SWANTON RD/LAST CHANCE RD., DAVENPORT CA 95017. This business is conducted by a Individual LILY RUDERMAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/1/2008. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 10, 2014. September 3, 10, 17, 24. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1598
The following Individual is doing business APTOS FOREST RETREAT. 237 CAMPUS DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. DELIA GILLIGAN. 237 CAMPUS DRIVE, APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Individual DELIA GILLIGAN. 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 August 18, 2014. September 3, 10, 17, 24. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 141652 The following Individual is doing business ARTEMIS ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES. 404 1/2 WOODROW AVE., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. GEORGINA BALKWELL. 404 1/2 WOODROW AVE., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual GEORGINA BALKWELL. 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 August 26, 2014. September 3, 10, 17, 24. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 141648 The following Individual is doing business SEACLIFF BOOKKEEPING AND NATARY SERVICES. 505 HARRIET AVENUE, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. KAREN E. HANNAN. 505 HARRIET AVENUE, APTOS CA 95003. This business is conducted by a Individual KAREN E. HANNAN. 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 August 26, 2014. September 3, 10, 17, 24. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1644 The following Individual is doing business ANDREW PADRAIG. 2155 PINE FLAT RD., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. ANDREW P. FIREBAUGH. 2155 PINE FLAT RD., SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Individual ANDREW P. FIREBAUGH. 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 August 25, 2014. September 3, 10, 17, 24. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1624 The following Married Couple is doing business as SUN AND LIFE PHOTOGRAPHY. 2912 DAUBENBISS AVE., SOQUEL CA 95073 County of Santa Cruz.
DORINA MARIA HAMMOND & JEFFREY HAMMOND. 228 WILKES CIRCLE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: DORINA HAMMOND. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 10/6/2010. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 21,2014. September 3, 10, 17, 24.
the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicant’s name from Christian Alexander Perniciaro & Rachel Elizabeth Perniciaro to: Christian Alexander Perniciaro Root & Rachel Elizabeth Perniciaro Root. 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
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OFTRACIE L. ROOT. CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV179856. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner TRACIE L. ROOT. has filed a Petition for Change of Name with
O Antique Restorations O Furniture Design & Repair O Wooden Boat Works O Musical Instruments O Unique Projects isaiahwilliams13@gmail.com http://mastercraftsman.webs.com 768-0474
HAVE A LIFE… Your Way!
• Find a new career! • Get a better salary! • Find passion in your work! • Successful career change! • Start up a business!
John Axel Hansen, MA, JCTC Career Counselor
Job & Career Transition Coach
(831) 476-4078 careers@havealife.com Capitola, Free Parking
www.havealife.com
Classifieds PHONE: 831.458.1100 EXT. 217, 219 | FAX: 831.458.1295 | DISPLAY DEADLINE: FRIDAY 3PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: MONDAY 10AM
HEARING October 14, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: August 25, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. September 3, 10, 17, 24.
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF CARLA MCSWEENEY CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV179924. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner CARLA MCSWEENEY has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicantâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name from Carla McSweeney to: Cola Chloe Constantine. 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 October 23, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: September 4, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. September10, 17, 24 Oct. 1. CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF ANDRIANA ANCIRA CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV179894. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner
ANDRIANA ANCIRA has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicantâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name from Jocelyn Jyzelle Duarte to: Jocelyn Jyzelle Ancira 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 October 16, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 5 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: September 4, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. September10, 17, 24 Oct. 1. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1631 The following Individual is doing business NARAYANI GAIA. 1119 PACIFIC AVE 3RD FLOOR, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. LARA GOLLAND. 1775 KING ST., SANTA CRUZ CA 95061. This business is conducted by a Individual LARA GOLLAND.. 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 August 22, 2014. September10, 17, 24 & OCT. 1.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1705. The following Individual is doing business THE BALLESTEROS CATERING COMPANY. 412 E. RIVERSIDE DRIVE, WATSONVILLE CA 95076 County of Santa Cruz. MARIO JERONIMO BALLESTEROS. 218 E. HIGH ST., WATSONVILLE CA 95076. This business is conducted by a Individual MARIO BALLESTEROS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on September 4, 2014. September10, 17, 24 & OCT. 1. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1664. The following Individual is doing business CAPITOLA LEATHER.
421B CAPITOLA AVENUE, CAPITOLA CA 95010 County of Santa Cruz. MARGARET HANSEN. 601 OAK DRIVE, CAPITOLA CA 95010. This business is conducted by a Individual MARGARET HANSEN. 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 August 27, 2014. September10, 17, 24 & OCT. 1. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1701 The following Married Couple is doing business as HARBOR SANDS. 46 HOLLINS DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ CA 95060 County of Santa Cruz. MATTHEW JACOBS & VICKI JACOBS. 46 HOLLINS DRIVE, SANTA
FELTON
CRUZ CA 95060 This business is conducted by a Married Couple Signed: MATTHEW JACOBS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on September 3, 2014. September 10, 17, 24 & Oct. 1. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 14-1719. The following General Partnership is doing business as VIRIDIS GROUP. 12755 BOULDER STREET, BOULDER CREEK CA 95006 County of Santa Cruz. THOMAS BERTRAND STROUD & JENNIFER LYNN STROUD. 12755 BOULDER STREET, BOULDER CREEK CA 95006. This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: JENNIFER
STROUD. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on September 5, 2014. September10, 17, 24 & OCT. 1. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE No. 141680 The following General Partnership is doing business as WATSONVILLE HOTEL DPO. 6030 HELLYER AVENUE #150, SAN JOSE CA 95138 County of Santa Cruz. JITEN V. PATEL & KATKI PATEL. 887 CANVAS CIRCLE, SAN JOSE CA, 95136 This business is conducted by a General Partnership Signed: KATKI PATEL. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE.
BONNY DOON
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3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, new paint, carpet and fencing. Pleasant setting, mostly level LQ IXOO VXQ (QMR\ ÂżUHSODFH FRQFUHWH perimeter foundation, RV/boat parking!
2600â&#x20AC;&#x2122; elevation ridge top with ocean, bay & mountain views. Paved road, PG&E to property, 2 wells, TPZ zoned. Plans available for mediation center.
$409,900
$1,795,000
Call for open house times or private showing! 831.475.8400 thunderbirdrealestate.com
CAPITOLA
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SANTA CRUZ
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Well Maintained Triplex!â&#x20AC;?
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Two Usable Acres!â&#x20AC;?
On private cul-de-sac! Two 3BR/2.5BA, one with large private fenced back yard. One 2BR/1.5BA, all with 1-car garage. These are non-smoking, no pets units. Walk to beach.
Great opportunity for private/quiet studio cabin in the woods! Water & utilities are aready hooked up. Easy access to property! Fireplace, Well, Perimeter Foundation!
$1,295,000
$350,000
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Call for open house times or private showing! 831.475.8400 thunderbirdrealestate.com
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ. PETITION OF JESSICA ROSE HANAWAYMOORE CHANGE OF NAME CASE NO. CV179921. THE COURT FINDS that the petitioner JESSICA ROSE HANAWAYMOORE has filed a Petition for Change of Name with the clerk of this court for an order changing Applicantâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name from Jessica Rose Hanaway-Moore to: Jessica Rose Zupcic-Moore. 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 October 23, 2014 at 8:30am, in Department 4 located at Superior Court of California, 701 Ocean Street, Room. 110. 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: September 4, 2014. John S Salazar, Judge of the Superior Court. September10, 17, 24 Oct. 1.
69
Real Estate This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 29, 2014. September10, 17, 24 & OCT. 1. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 14-1632. The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as EPICENTER CYCLING. 8035 SOQUEL DRIVE #23, APTOS CA 95003 County of Santa Cruz. EPICENTER CYCLING LLC. 8035 SOQUEL DRIVE #23, APTOS CA 95003. Al#: 26010078.
This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Signed: KEN BRODKEY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 11/9/2009. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on August 22, 2014. September 10, 17, 24 & Oct. 1.
Disclaimer All Real Estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handi cap, familial status or national ori gin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Good Times newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwell ings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Commercial Property Two Office Condos! Excellent for owner/user or investment opportunity with pro forma 6.24 Cap Rate at projected market rents of $1.75/NNN. $425,000 Datta Broker 831.818.0181
Business Opportunities
SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014 | GTWEEKLY.COM | SANTACRUZ.COM
Food and Wellness Product Demo Service Multiple accounts throughout Northern California with niche for high-end and health food retailers. In business since 2007. Annual revenues over $200K. Listed for $99,750 Datta, Broker 831.818-0181.
70
Modern Restaurant in Thriving Center. Successful operating restaurant with seating for 60 plus wine bar. High-end TI’s, over 30’ of hood space, walkin cooler, ADA restrooms and upscale dining. Asking $85,000 Datta, Broker 831.818.0181 Historic Cafe for sale. Iconic Local Landmark Restaurant Since 1947! Over $100K invested in recent makeover. 1500 SF facility with full hood, grease trap and walk-in cooler. Offered for $120,000. Broker Datta, 831.818-0181 Active Womens’s Clothing Label. Includes existing designs
and online retail catalogue with state-of-the-art website. $99,500, Contact agents Datta 831.818.0181, Fred 831-2958850 or Joel 831.234.3379
Lots & Acreage Come play at this pretty recreational parcel close to town. 2+ acres surrounded by Redwoods and ferns with a creek at the base of the property. Offered at $95,000. Call Debbie at 408.395.5754 or visit www.donnerland.com Jamison Creek. Two parcels totalling 4.7 acres close to downtown Boulder Creek. A creek runs through the parcels and there are Redwoods, Oaks and Madrones throughout. Paved road access, power at street and a will serve letter from water district. Offered at $199,000. Call Debbie at 408.395.5754 or visit www.donnerland.com Forest Hills Sunny cul de sac lot in established Boulder Creek neighborhood. Power, water and sewer hook up available. Possible owner financing available. Offered at $225,000. Call Debbie at 408.395.5754 or visit www.donnerland.com Bear Canyon Beauty 17 acres at the end of a private, gated road. 2 sleeping cabins and several garden areas exist. Sunny and surrounded by Timber Preserves. Offered at $539,000. Call Debbie at 408.395.5754 or visit donnerland.com
Housing/Wanted Relocating. Looking for a Section 8 rental or shared housing $1100. Must pass inspection. Pets o.k. Please call 775.432.8746.
Gardening ROTOTILLNG SERVICE . Soil preparation for Summer Gardens.. Call Happy
Gardens Rototilling Service at 831.234.4341.
Collectibles/ Antiques
detail are all part of a successful remodel. General lic 385766. 831.295.3385.
Help Wanted
Echo & Abacus Antiques. Storewide Liquidation Sale. Up to 50% off. Antique, Vintage, Mid-Century Modern, Furniture & Eclectibles. 2544 Soquel Ave. Fri/Sat.10-4ish. Echo Antiques on Ebay / Etsy / Facebook. Restructuring business! Tremendous Savings! 831.247.4419
Counseling
Servers needed. Inquire at Sawasdee Thai cuisine SOQUEL. 5050 Soquel dr. Soquel to fill out application. Experience required. Career Consultant, David Thiermann, Career Services: Self Assessment, Exploring Career Options, Determining Your Focus, Marketing Yourself, Ongoing Career Management, Since 1987, No Charge for Initial Consultation. guru@cruzio.com 831.427.2677 or 1-800-682-8859. www.santacruzuniversity.com HAVE A LIFE YOUR WAY! John Axel Hansen, M.A., JCTC Career Counselor, Certified Job and Career Transition Coach! Why not call John today at 831-4764078. or visit him online, www.havealife.com. Painter & ceramicist looking for femaleartist models. “Clothed and Naked Women Talking”. Be drawn & painted on pottery. $20/ hr. 831-429-8123 www.mattieleeds.com
Massage Call Curt feel good now! On Vacation Till Sept .1st Muscles relaxed and moods adjusted. Destress in my warm safe hands, CMP FeelGoodNowMassage.com. Call 831.419.1646 Therapeutic Masseuse Light deep pressure, all body types ok. M/F welcome. Swedish massage with shiatsu influences. 831.316.8455 A *wonderful* Touch. Relaxing, Therapeutic, Light to Deep Swedish Massage for Men. Peaceful environment. 14 yrs. Exp. Days/Early PM. Jeff 831.332.8594.
Music Transform your songs to sheet music professional look. Lyrics/ chords/charts/ MP3. Call Jesse at 831.335.1108
Remodel If you are buying, selling or staying let me assist you on your next building project. Low cost, good design and attention to
HAVE A LIFE YOUR WAY! John Axel Hansen, M.A., JCTC Career Counselor, Certified Job and Career Transition Coach! Why not call John today at 831-4764078. or visit him online, www.havealife.com.
Bodyworks CONTINUUM & JUNGLE GYM Innerdance & Moving On. Movement classes with Val Leoffler. M/ T/ W & F Westside & Downtown. Call Val at 831-4262063 www.innerdance.com ROLFING: change your body in lasting ways. Tim Greenstreet, Certified Advanced Rolfer. Call 831-462-2105 www.bodyrolfing.com
ROCKETS ROCKETS K-9 K-9 COMETS COMETS
THE THE WILD WILD WEST WEST TURKEY TURKEY STAMPEDE STAMPEDE
2 TIMES DAILY-IN THE BALL PARK
3 TIMES DAILY-THE TANK HOUSE LAWN
2014 2014 ENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT LINE-UP LINE-UP
TUESDAY | NO T NO RESPECT RESPECT BAND BAND
WEDNESDAY | MEGHAN MEGHAN LINSEY LINSEY
ALL SHOWS HOWS ST START TAR A T AT AT 77:30 :30 PPMM - A AMPHITHEATER MPHHITHEATER SSTAGE TAGE
PPLUS LLU PLUS PPL U SS
THURSDAY TH URSDAY | T TSUNAMI TSUNAMI T SSU UN U NA N AM A MII BBBA M BAND BAND AND AN AN A D D
MEGHAN LINSEY formerly of Steel Magnolias with TYLER CAIN Lead Guitarist for Big & Rich
CAPTAIN CAPTAIN JACK JACK SPARERIBS SPARERIBS ALL ALL ALASKAN ALASKAN RACING RACING PIGS PIGS MICHAEL MICHAEL MEZMER MEZMER HYPNOTIST
SSATURDAY ATURDAY | T THE THE TH T HHEE HO HO HOUSEROCKERS HOUSEROCKERS OU USSEEERRO RROC OCKKKER EERRSS
SSUNDAY UNDAY | T THE THE TH T HHEE COC C C COC COCKTAIL COCKTAIL KT KT TA T T AIILL MONKE A AIL MO MONK MONKEYS MONKEYS NKEEY YSSS Y
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2014
FRIDAY FR IDAY | J JAMIE JJAMIE AM A A MIE M IE LYNN LYNN LLLY LY YNN Y NN N SPEARS N SPEARS SSPPPEAR EEAR ARSS
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Where the locals shop since 1938.
VOTED BEST GROCERY STORE BEST BUTCHER SHOP BEST WINE SELECTION
cSpecials Check List Family owned & operated 76 years.
For more weekly specials visit www.shopperscorner.com
GROCERY: Local, Organic, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet Beer/Wine/Spirits: Local Bakeries s Fresh Daily GAYLE’S, Challah Sandwich/ 4.29 KELLY’S. Compagnon 24 oz/ 3.29 BECKMANN’S, Whole Wheat Sour Round 24oz/ 3.89 WHOLE GRAIN, Great White 30oz/ 4.19 GOLDEN SHEAF, Sourdough Rolls 16 oz/ 3.19
Cheese s Best Gourmet Selection in Santa Cruz
Butcher Shop: All Natural USDA Choice Beef & Lamb only, Corn-Fed Midwest Pork, Rocky Free Range Chickens, Air Chilled Mary’s Chicken, Wild-Caught Seafood, Boar’s Head Brand, Saags Sausages PORK CHOPS, Thick Cut Centers/ 3.98 Lb BONELESS PORK LOIN ROAST/ 3.98 Lb PORK COUNTRY-STYLE SPARERIBS/ 3.98 Lb LEMON DIJON CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless Skinless/ 5.98 Lb CAJUN STYLE CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless Skinless/ 5.98 Lb SALMON LOX TRIMMINGS/ 9.98 Lb CAJUN CATFISH FILLETS/ 8.98 Lb PACIFIC RED SNAPPER FILLETS/ 6.98 Lb COOKED PRAWNS, Peeled & Deveined/ 12.98 Lb
Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organics, Happy Boy Farms, Route 1 Farms
S HOPP ER SPOTLIG HT
Domestic Beer NORTH COAST, Assorted Brews 12oz, 6 Pack/ 7.49 +CRV ANDERSON VALLEY, Summer Solstice 12oz, 6 Pack/ 7.99 +CRV MAD RIVER, Extra Pale 12oz, 6 Pack/ 8.49 +CRV LAGUNITAS, IPA 12oz, 12 Pack/ 14.49 +CRV SIERRA NEVADA, Pale Ale & Seasonal 12oz, 12 Pack/ 15.99 +CRV
Tequila HORNITOS, Reposado/ 17.99 CAZADORES, Reposado/ 25.99 MAESTRO DOBEL, Clear Reposado (Reg 42.09)/ 29.99 TRES GENERACIONES, Anejo/ 34.99 DON JULIO, Anejo/ 49.99
BBQ Reds
Delicatessen BLUE HILL BAY HERRING/ “Wine or Cream Sauce”/ 5.99 GALLO LIGHT SALAME, “55% Less Fat” 8 oz/ 4.39 GALBANI FRESH MOZZARELLA, “Great in Caprese Salad”/ 6.99 ATHENOS FETA, “Traditional & Tomato & Basil”/ 5.99 NESTLE CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIE DOUGH, “Ready to Bake” 16 oz/ 3.49
Seafood
Produce: California-Fresh, Blemish-Free, 30% Local / Organic STRAWBERRIES, Locally Grown/ 1.69 Bskt CANTALOUPE MELONS, Ripe and Sweet/ .69 Lb BANANAS, Always Ripe/ .89 Lb RASPBERRIES, Top Quality/ 2.99 Lb AVOCADOS, Ripe and Ready to Eat/ 1.49 Ea SWEET ONIONS, Red and Yellow/ 1.19 Lb LARGE TOMATOES, Great for Slicing/ 1.49 Lb LEAF LETTUCE, Red, Green, Romaine, Butter or Iceburg/ .99 Ea ZUCCHINI SQUASH, Extra Fancy Squash/ 1.19 Lb
LONGHORN, Medium Cheddar “RBST Free” 1/3 Lb Loaf Cuts/ 4.59 Lb, Avg Cuts/ 4.99 Lb SWISS GRUYERE, “Switzerland Import”/ 14.99 Lb RED DRAGON, English Cheddar “With Mustard & Ale”/ 11.98 Lb GOUDA, “Authentic Holland Gouda”/ 7.19 Lb
Best Buys, Local, Regional, International
BUMBLE BEE, Chunk Light Tuna 5 oz/ 1.39 WILD PLANET SARDINES, 4 Kinds 4.3 oz/ 2.99 SUSTAINABLE SEAS, Solid Light Tuna “100% Pole Caught” 4.1 oz/ 2.99 THINK PINK, “Wild Pink Salmon” 7.5 oz/ 3.99 WILD PLANET SOCKEYE SALMON, “Sustainably Caught” 6 oz/ 7.99
Tea – Huge Selection DIVINE TEA CO., “Red Rooibos Bush Tea” 20 Bags/ 3.59 GOOD EARTH, “Sweet & Spicy” 18 Bag/ 4.89 TAYLORS OF HARROGATE, “Est. 1886” 50 Bags/ 5.99 NUMI, “U.S.D. A. Organic” 18 Bags/ 6.79 REPUBLIC OF TEA, “100% White Tea” 2.8 oz/ 13.99
Tapenades & Spreads MOULINS DE LA BRAGUE, “Green Tapenade” 3 oz/ 5.69 TUTTO CALABRIA, “Hot Spreads” 10.2 oz/ 8.49 GIA RUSSA, “Sweet Peppers Bruchetta Topping” 10 oz/ 8.59 ELKI, Tomato Bruschetta 12 oz/ 7.99 ELKI, Artichoke Bruschetta 12 oz/ 8.49
2012 GNARLY HEAD, Zinfandel/ 6.99 2011 GUARDIAN PEAK, Merlot (Reg 17.99)/ 8.99 2011 CARLETTO RICCO, Rosso (92BTI)/ 8.99 2010 CASSONE, Malbec (Reg 15.99)/ 7.99 2011 CASILLERO Del DIABLO, Camenere (Reg 12.99)/ 7.99
Incredible Values 2009 SILVERTIP, Pinot Noir “Petite St.” (Reg 25.99)/ 14.99 2008 SOQUEL VINYARDS, Chardonnay, Trout Gulch (Reg 25.99)/ 12.99 2009 CUMBRE OF VINE HILL, Syrah (Reg 69.99)/ 29.99 2011 HENRY FESSY, Fleurie (90WE)/ 14.99 2011 ESTANCIA, Pinot Noir Reserve (Reg 35.99)/ 17.99
Spanish Wines 2012 MAS DONIS, Barrica (94WA)/ 15.99 2010 CUNE, Rioja Crianza (90WA)/ 14.99 2012 EMILIO MORO, Finca Resalso (91ST)/ 14.99 2009 PUERTO SALINAS, (92WA)/ 17.99 2012 RAZO BARRANTES, Albarino (93W&S)/ 19.99
Connoisseurs Corner – Italy 2008 I BALZINI, Toscana “White Label” (94WS)/ 47.99 2008 FELSINA RANCIA, Chianti Classico Reserva (93WA)/ 47.99 2007 CASTEL GIOCANDO, Brunello di Montalcino (94JS)/ 59.99 2006 LE CHUISE, Brunello di Montalcino Reserva (96WS)/ 79.99 2006 ALLEGRINI, Amarone della Valpolicella (94WA)/ 79.99
MARISA JOHNSTON, 10-Year Customer, Santa Cruz
1938 O U R 76 T H Y E A R
Occupation: Personal chef/caterer, By Marisa Hobbies: Beach volleyball, roller derby skating, hiking, yoga, mountain biking Astrological Sign: Cancer
You shop here for both home and clients? Yes, I specialize in using local ingredients and I’m here almost daily. With produce, I try and stay organic with the “dirty dozen.” Shopper’s is one-stop shopping for me: I can get gourmet products — they have all kinds of oils — pretty amazing spices, really great selections of cheeses and in small sizes, plus gluten-free and cutting-edge healthy items. I believe every local bread bakery is represented here. This is the one store I can shop knowing I will always get quality and at a good price point. It’s important to get the “best bang” for my buck.
Any particular cuisine you enjoy cooking? I just catered the Chardonnay 2. During summer it could be chicken or fresh seafood with salsa, Asian-style meatball appetizers, little Italian meat skewers, watermelon fetamint skewers, and grilled peach burrata basil crostini. Also fresh smoothies — I like mixing savory with sweet — using kale, spinach, basil, mint, apple, peach, yogurt, and protein powder. For myself, it’s mostly salads — Shopper’s produce is so great — but also grilled meats, corn, and vegetables. I love how many work people here, and they all seem to enjoy each other and their jobs at Shopper’s.
You like the environment? It has a family atmosphere. Ambiance in stores and restaurants is important to me. The butchers start my day. I come in early around, 7:30 a.m., and they’re always in a good mood; they’re friendly and know their stuff. They actually break down all their meats and it’s always fresh. I need to be able to trust the source, the people who provide for me and my clients. I prefer shopping local, and here the people are friendly and you never wait very long at the registers. From gourmet dinners to backyard barbecues, Shopper’s has all the items you need — and reasonably priced.
“From gourmet dinners to backyard barbecues, Shopper’s has all the items you need — and reasonably priced.” Corner: Soquel & Branciforte Avenues | 7 Days: 6am-9pm | Meat: 423-1696 | Produce: 429-1499 | Grocery: 423-1398 | Wine: 429-1804
Superb Products of Value: Local, Natural, Gourmet ■ Neighborhood Service for 76 Years