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5.4.16
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After being sidelined by a health scare, Michael Moore reboots his election-year crusade in Santa Cruz By Steve Palopoli P20
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INSIDE Volume 42, No.5 May 4-10, 2016
CHRONIC YOUTH Parents find success with pediatric cannabis, despite the legal risks P13
MOORE TO TELL Michael Moore on his latest film, Flint, and the presidential election P20
CELTIC JOURNEY Grammy-award winning guitarist William Coulter on interpreting traditional music P30
Opinion 4 News 13 Cover Story 20 A&E 30 Music 34 Events 39
Film 58 Dining 62 Risa’s Stars 68 Classifieds 70 Real Estate 71
Cover caricature by D.B. Potter. Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal. Good Times is printed at a LEED-certified facility.
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FEATURES
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OPINION
EDITOR’S NOTE In February, someone asked me “Is Michael Moore all right?” I wasn’t sure if this question was meant in the way that the Who would say “the kids are all right,” but, no, it turned out that the most successful documentary-maker of all time was actually in the hospital, and that it was serious. Then he was out, and apparently recovering from pneumonia, but the news updates about his status quickly became pretty much nonexistent. What exactly had happened and what he was doing afterward were a bit of a mystery. Well, mystery solved, as Moore himself explains it all in an interview I did with him for this week’s cover story. I was
LETTERS
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
NEVER-ENDING STORIES
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Re: “Building Up” (GT, 4/13): Do you want seven stories of development in your neighborhood? Do you already sit in traffic way too long? Yes, that’s right, the Santa Cruz transit quarter zoning update includes approval for up to seven stories of development in these quarters. Please contact the Santa Cruz City Council and let them know this is unacceptable. LOUISA CAPP | SANTA CRUZ
SNUB HUBBUB Re: “Ticket Snub” (GT, 3/23): I can’t feel very sorry for unemployed Section 8 voucher holders; after all, they have won a lottery of sorts with a lifetime annuity of potentially $1,000 or even more per month! Your portrayal of Paul Steffen with his newly minted housing voucher illustrates why these folks have a hard time finding an apartment in Santa Cruz. First, many landlords are conservative after some bad tenant experiences, and may not be all too receptive to someone that chooses to dye his goatee red. Sure, it’s a form of personal expression, but to some landlords it’s a,
impressed with his latest film, Where to Invade Next, and local Bernie Sanders supporters will be interested in the way he ties it in to the current presidential campaign in our interview. I saw Moore’s first film, 1989’s Roger and Me, in high school, and I feel like I’ve kind of grown up with him, in a way, since then. I also covered his last appearance here, at the Civic in 2003, for Metro Santa Cruz, and it was like Santa Cruz’s version of a national political convention. His return on May 14 should be similarly entertaining. See you there; I’ll bring my imaginary delegates. Meanwhile, I hope you all have checked out our new website, goodtimes.sc. You can go there not only to read GT online, but to find exclusive content—for instance, Jacob Pierce’s freshly posted review of last weekend’s Do-It-Ourselves Fest.
GRAVE IMPLICATIONS A shot from Our Lady of Mount Carmel Cemetery in Aptos.
Photograph by Alison Gamel. Submit to photos@goodtimes.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250 dpi.
STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
well, red flag. And then I notice he has a large dog—something few landlords wish to take a risk on at their property. If Paul were serious about finding a place in Santa Cruz, he may want to treat it like he’s looking for a job and lose the dog in the process. However, there is a place with plenty of apartments for folks like Paul and other unemployed voucher holders. Unfortunately, it goes by names such as Modesto, Los Banos and Turlock. Paul says he wants to stay in Santa Cruz. Well, I want to live on the Upper East Side of New York, but I expect no one to give that to me. It’s not a birthright to live in Santa Cruz—it’s a privilege. Taxpayers should not have to subsidize unemployed folks to live here. On the other hand, I’m wholly in favor of providing Section 8 vouchers to those working our notorious low-wage jobs here, and, as a landlord, that’s exactly what I do (I currently have 23 Section 8 tenants). We need our butchers, bakers and candlestick makers, and they deserve a subsidy to live close to where they work. Those not contributing to the economic engine of Santa Cruz: don’t expect us to subsidize your lifestyle and you’ll have better luck finding housing elsewhere. DARIUS MOHSENIN | SANTA CRUZ
PHOTO CONTEST
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GOOD IDEA
GOOD WORK
STRONGER TOGETHER
OPENING SAIL
The Queer Youth Leadership Awards is gearing up for its 19th year. This year’s theme is transgender youth, and Stuart Rosenstein, chair of the Queer Youth Task Force, says a number of the nominees work on transgender issues. There are 12 nominees for the award and nine more nominees for the ally award, as well as seven organizational nominees. The event starts at 5:30 p.m. on May 7 at Aptos High School.
West Marine is having a Cruising for a Cause event in conjunction with opening an Eastside Santa Cruz location on Aug. 26. The nautical supply company, which is headquartered in Watsonville, has announced a call for charities for the $10 event, which will include food, beverages, live entertainment, and several raffle giveaways. The proceeds collected from ticket and raffle sales for the event will be split among local participating nonprofits. Email nathaliep@ westmarine.com for more information.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“You can’t debate satire. You either get it or you don’t.” — MICHAEL MOORE CONTACT
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LOCAL TALK
What’s the most important thing you learned at school? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT
Don’t try to fit in. Be yourself, be unique. ALEX BOSSINGER SANTA CRUZ | FIFTH GRADE
Math and geometry and spelling and language. EZRA WARREN STEINBERG SANTA CRUZ | THIRD GRADE
Algebra. I use it all the time. DENNIS BASSANO SANTA CRUZ | PLUMBER
NATHAN BOSSCHER MADISON, WISCONSIN | MECHANICAL ENGINEER
Grades are not as important as I once thought, and friends are more important than I would have thought. ALICIA BOSSCHER WISCONSIN | DIETICIAN
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
There are things that look like they are hard to do, but you can do them.
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ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of May 4 ARIES Mar21–Apr19
LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22
“Silence is not silence, but a limit of hearing,” writes Jane Hirshfield in her poem “Everything Has Two Endings.” This observation is apropos for you right now. There are potentially important messages you’re not registering and catalytic influences you can’t detect. But their apparent absence is due to a blank spot in your awareness, or maybe a willful ignorance left over from the old days. Now here’s the good news: You are primed to expand your listening field. You have an enhanced ability to open certain doors of perception that have been closed. If you capitalize on this opportunity, silence will give way to revelation.
On cracked.com, Auntie Meme tells us that many commonly held ideas about history are wrong. There were no such things as chastity belts in the Middle Ages, for example. Napoleon’s soldiers didn’t shoot off the nose of the Sphinx when they were stationed in Egypt. In regard to starving peasants, Marie Antoinette never derisively said, “Let them eat cake.” And no Christians ever became meals for lions in ancient Rome’s Colosseum. (More: tinyurl.com/historicaljive.) In the spirit of Auntie Meme’s exposé, and in alignment with the astrological omens, I invite you to uncover and correct at least three fabrications, fables and lies about your own past.
TAURUS Apr20–May20 Your ability to accomplish magic is at a peak, and will continue to soar for at least two more weeks. And when I use that word “magic,” I’m not referring to the hocus-pocus performed by illusionists like Criss Angel or Harry Houdini. I’m talking about real feats of transformation that will generate practical benefits in your day-to-day life. Now study the following definitions by writer Somerset Maugham, and have faith in your ability to embody them: “Magic is no more than the art of employing consciously invisible means to produce visible effects. Will, love, and imagination are magic powers that everyone possesses; and whoever knows how to develop them to their fullest extent is a magician.”
GEMINI May21–June20 According to author Vladimir Nabokov, the Russian word toska means “a dull ache of the soul, a longing with nothing to long for, a sick pining, a vague restlessness.” Linguist Anna Wierzbicka says it conveys an emotion that blends melancholy, boredom and yearning. Journalist Nick Ashdown suggests that for someone experiencing toska, the thing that’s yearned for may be “intangible and impossible to actually obtain.” How are you doing with your own toska, Gemini? Is it conceivable that you could escape it—maybe even heal it? I think you can. I think you will. Before you do, though, I hope you’ll take time to explore it further. Toska has more to teach you about the previously hidden meaning of your life.
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*Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 4/12/16 – 6/27/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners.
*Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 4/12/16 – 6/27/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners.
“Anybody can become angry,” said Greek philosopher Aristotle. “That is easy; but to be angry with the right person, and to the right degree, and at the right time, for the right purpose, and in the right way, that is not within everybody’s power and is not easy.” I’m pleased to inform you, Sagittarius, that now is a time when you have an exceptional capacity for meeting Aristotle’s high standards. In fact, I encourage you to honor and learn all you can from your finely honed and well-expressed anger. Make it work wonders for you. Use it so constructively that no one can complain.
CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 To celebrate your arrival at the height of your sex appeal, I’m resurrecting the old-fashioned word “vavoom.” Feel free to use it as your nickname. Pepper it into your conversations in place of terms like “awesome,” “wow,” or “yikes.” Use a felt-tip marker to make a temporary VAVOOM tattoo on your beautiful body. Here are other enchanted words you should take charge of and make an intimate part of your daily presentation: verve, vim, vivid, vitality, vigor, voracious, vivacious, visceral, valor, victory, and VIVA!
In the 16th century, European explorers searched South America in quest of a mythical city of gold known as El Dorado. Tibetan Buddhist tradition speaks of Shambhala, a magical holy kingdom where only enlightened beings live. In the legends of ancient Greece, Hyperborea was a sunny paradise where the average human lifespan was a thousand years and happiness was normal. Now is an excellent time for you to fantasize about your own version of utopia, Leo. Why? First, your imagination is primed to expand. Second, dreaming big will be good for your mental and physical health. There’s another reason, too: By envisioning the most beautiful world possible, you will mobilize your idealism and boost your ability to create the best life for yourself in the coming months.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 ®
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21
“Gandhi’s autobiography is on my pillow,” writes Cancerian poet Buddy Wakefield. “I put it there every morning after making my bed so I’ll remember to read it before falling asleep. I’ve been reading it for six years. I’m on Chapter 2.” What’s the equivalent phenomenon in your world, my fellow Crab? What good deed or righteous activity have you been pursuing with glacial diligence? Is there a healthy change you’ve been thinking about forever, but not making much progress on? The mood and the sway of the coming days will bring you a good chance to expedite the process. In Wakefield’s case, he could get up to Chapter 17.
Sunlight, beautifully transformed with Hunter Douglas window fashions. rebates on qualifying purchases, Save $100* orAprilmore12 –with June 27, 2016. Ask for details.
Poet Charles Wright marvels at the hummingbird, “who has to eat 60 times his own weight a day just to stay alive. Now that’s a life on the edge.” In the coming weeks, Scorpio, your modus operandi may have resemblances to the hummingbird’s approach. I don’t mean to suggest that you will be in a manic survival mode. Rather, I expect you’ll feel called to nourish your soul with more intensity than usual. You’ll need to continuously fill yourself up with experiences that inspire, teach, and transform you.
CANCER Jun21–Jul22
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SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21
“Anytime you’re going to grow, you’re going to lose something,” said psychologist James Hillman. “You’re losing what you’re hanging onto to keep safe. You’re losing habits that you’re comfortable with, you’re losing familiarity.” I nominate these thoughts to serve as your words of wisdom in the coming weeks, Virgo. From an astrological perspective, you are in a phase when luxuriant growth is possible. To harvest the fullness of the lush opportunities, you should be willing to shed outworn stuff that might interfere.
AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 When he was a boy, Mayan poet Humberto Ak’a’al asked his mother, “What are those things that shine in the sky?” “Bees,” she answered mischievously. “Every night since then,” Humberto writes, “my eyes eat honey.” In response to this lyrical play, the logical part of our brains might rise up and say, “What a load of nonsense!” But I will ask you to set aside the logical part of your brain for now, Aquarius. According to my understanding of the astrological omens, the coming days will be a time when you need a big dose of sweet fantasies, dreamy stories, and maybe even beautiful nonsense. What are your equivalents of seeing bees making honey in the night sky’s pinpoints of light?
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 “Sometimes, a seemingly insignificant detail reveals a whole world,” says artist Pierre Cordier. “Like the messages hidden by spies in the dot of an i.” These are precisely the minutiae that you should be extra alert for in the coming days, Pisces. Major revelations may emerge from what at first seems trivial. Generous insights could ignite in response to small acts of beauty and subtle shifts of tone. Do you want glimpses of the big picture and the long-range future? Then be reverent toward the fine points and modest specifics.
Homework: Thousands of amazing, inexplicable, even miraculous events occur every day. Report yours: http://bit.ly/Amazement
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Trunk Show & Meet Annie of Annieglass at
Thursday, May 5th 11:00 to 3:00 pm Free engraving with your Annieglass purchase and a chance to win a new Annieglass serving piece! Dell Williams Jewelers 1320 Pacific Ave Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.423.4100 www.dellwilliams.com
www.annieglass.com
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ONLINE COMMENTS RE: ‘BUN APPÉTIT’ The larger issue with the advent of Five Guys is that it drove one of the best downtown restaurants out of its space. Taqueria Vallarta offered very good Mexican-style fast food at a price that almost anyone could afford, and their freshsqueezed juices, especially the orange juice, were one of our town’s greatest bargains!
RE: ‘STRING SHOWING’ Do It Ourselves Festival really “brings it on home”—home being a place in the mountains and music for making connections inside yourself and with others and the environment. — JEFFREY FERRELL
RE: ‘SUNSET CLAUSE’ How does shifting sunrise and sunset times forward one hour create more daylight? I for one would like to get rid of DST once and for all. —MARK SMITH
—JIM BROWN
LETTERS POLICY Letters should not exceed 300 words and may be edited for length, clarity, grammar and spelling. They should include city of residence to be considered for publication. Please direct letters to the editor, query letters and employment queries to letters@goodtimes.sc. All classified and display advertising queries should be directed to sales@GoodTimes.SC. All website-related queries, including corrections, should be directed to webmaster@GoodTimes.SC.
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Community Health Education Programs For a complete list of classes, lectures and support groups, or to register, call 831-479-6628 or visit pamf.org/healtheducation
May and June 2016 All our lectures are free and open to the public. Classes may have a fee.
Childbirth and Parent Education Classes
Nutrition and Diabetes Classes
831-460-7333
831-460-7333
• Healthy Eating, Active Lifestyles (pediatric weight management for families) • New Weigh of Life (adult weight management)
• Heart Smart (cholesterol management) • Feeding Your Young Child (ages 1–5) • Living Well with Diabetes (doctor referral required) • Living Well with Prediabetes
Support Groups • Bariatric (weight loss) Surgery Support Group • Diabetes • New Parents Support Group (3 weeks to 4 months and 4 to 9 months) • Postpartum Wellness
Living Well Classes • Mind-Body Stress Management
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
• Baby Basics: Infant Care • NEW: Baby Bundle (combination of all three prenatal classes) • Breastfeeding • Childbirth Preparation • Expectant Parent Tour • From Hospital to Home: Advice from Your Baby’s Doctor • Infant Emergencies & CPR • NEW: Mindfulness-Based Childbirth • Prenatal Yoga • Sibling Tour
Weight Management Programs
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WELLNESS
FACTORY VS. FACTS The beef industry is far from environmentally friendly, but grass-fed beef trumps
grain-fed when it comes to human health.
Fast Food Notion The sobering science behind hamburgers year—a figure that could not possibly be so high without our industrialized, post-agrarian food economy. From an environmental standpoint, the beloved burger remains among the least-green menu choices one can make: Cows emit between 2.5 and 4.7 ounces of methane for each pound of beef produced—and about 13 times more global warming gases than chicken, pound for pound, according to a 1999 study at the University of East Anglia in England. Livestock accounts for about 18 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions globally, including 65 percent of human-related nitrous oxide and 35 percent of methane, which have 296 times and 23 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide, respectively. It takes
more than 3,000 gallons of water to produce one pound of beef, according to the Water Footprint Network, though estimates vary depending on how far back you look in the production line. But while the debate over whether grass-fed or grain-fed beef is better for the environment is a heated one, the debate over which is healthier for the human body is more conclusive. The average feedlot cow eats 2,800 pounds of corn or grain during the “finishing period” of its short life, enabling it to put on about 1,000 pounds in a few months. (This may include organic beef, which is simply fed organic grains during the finishing period.) The problem with grain-fed meat lies in its omega-6 to omega-3
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
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few years ago, blogger and gardener Waldo Jaquith set out to produce a farm-totable cheeseburger entirely from scratch. He even thought he’d write a book about the ordeal. But ultimately, he gave up. “Further reflection revealed that it’s quite impractical—nearly impossible—to make a cheeseburger from scratch,” he wrote. That’s in part because the ingredients of the cheeseburger as we know it are all in season at different times of the year. Plus, “It would be wildly expensive— requiring a trio of cows—and demand many acres of land. There’s just no sense in it,” he wrote. Nevertheless, Americans consume an estimated 50 billion burgers a
BY MARIA GRUSAUSKAS
ratio; it can be as high as 20-to-one, and omega-6s are pro-inflammatory, says Dr. Dawn Motyka of KUSP’s Ask Dr. Dawn radio show. “When you put animals in a pen, you’re increasing omega-6s, and you’re also increasing the saturated fat, which is also inflammatory,” says Motyka, who says she eats only grassfed meat about once every two weeks, since she knows it’s not an efficient conversion of protein. “When you eat game animals that live on grass, the actual cell walls and cell membranes of that meat are rich in omega 3 fatty acids,” says Motyka. “And the ratio in the meat is about two-to-one, two omega-6 to one omega-3. That more closely resembles our ancestral diet.” Grass-fed beef also contains more vitamin E and conjugated linoleic acid—all beneficial to human health— and is slightly lower in saturated fat. Grass-fed cattle are not typically given antibiotics (though this isn’t guaranteed unless it’s organic), while it’s standard for cattle in “concentrated animal-feeding operations” (CAFOs) to get a side of antibiotics with their grain. Why? According to Dr. Andrew Weil, (who happens to be a vegetarian), the need for antibiotics results from the fact that cows are not adapted to digest grains—it wreaks havoc on their digestive systems and results in alterations in the natural flora of their gastrointestinal tracts. In a 2016 test by Consumer Reports, 18 percent of samples of conventional ground beef and 9 percent of samples from sustainably produced beef were contaminated with antibiotic-resistant bacteria. “When you have a hamburger, that’s essentially meat paste, and bacteria can spread very rapidly,” says Motyka. “If you’re going to eat meat, it should really look like a piece of muscle,” says Motyka. Yeah, but, sometimes we just really want a burger. Because we are hungry, because we are spoiled Americans, because it’s Tuesday. In that case, I recommend paying a little extra for the luxury and heading to Motiv’s Ulterior, Gabriella Cafe, 515 Kitchen & Cocktails, or burger., which all serve (delicious) grass-fed burgers. But remember, the healthiest burger—for the planet and for your body—is, alas, a veggie burger.
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Memorial Day Savings May 12 - June 1
Get 10% off any order of Rowe, Robin Bruce or Clayton Marcus seating 2647 41st Ave, Soquel (Across from HomeSpace Furniture) 831.464.2228 | sc41.com
8th Annual
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Health & Lifestyle Expo for Women
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Cheers to Your Health!
Thursday, May 12, 5-8 pm Cocoanut Grove, 400 Beach Street, Santa Cruz It’s a girl’s night out for health! Ladies, grab your friends and family. Moms, take the night off. This event is all about YOU. Offered at NO CHARGE. Call 831.465.7818 or visit mysantacruzdoctor.org to register. facebook.com/pmgsantacruz twitter.com/pmgscc #SCwomensexpo
Enter to win our raffle grand prize:
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NEWS STRAIN OF COMMAND Pediatric cannabis is gaining acceptance, but parents risk losing their kids if they use it BY TOM GOGOLA
BEAMING THERE County Supervisor John Leopold, a supporter of Community Choice Aggregation, praises the sun in all its infinite, energy-producing glory. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
Power Structure Santa Cruz leads the way on push for local green energy grid BY ARDY RAGHIAN
W
hat if the energy that heats your home and keeps the lights on could be cheaper, cleaner and more locally sourced? That may be a reality as soon as the summer of 2017, with Community Choice Aggregation (CCA)—an idea that local leaders from Santa Cruz to King City and the far southern reaches of Monterey County have been talking about for years. Last month, Santa Cruz
County became the first in the group of regional partners to approve a feasibility study for the program. A CCA allows cities and counties to create their own energy system, one that allows residents to drop their PG&E plan and opt-in. CCAs also purchase and support local green projects. The group can fund those projects by pooling revenue from the revenues it collects from ratepayers. One goal of the project, says First District Santa Cruz County
Supervisor John Leopold, is to help create more renewable energy jobs in the Monterey Bay. Leopold says that PG&E profits from energy sales would instead stay in the community to fund clean projects, create jobs and stimulate the local economy. “The millions of dollars leaving our community right now [are] going into a corporation that is not necessarily investing in our community—this is a way to >14
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
The young boy was borderline autistic and suffered from anxiety and a learning disability when he went to see Dr. Jeffrey Hergenrather. “He was like a raccoon in his office on that first visit,” says his mother, “Paula,” who requested anonymity for this story, as she described her son bouncing off the medical-office walls like a wild animal. “Literally—like we brought a raccoon,” she repeats with a slight laugh. That was about four years ago. Hergenrather, a Sebastopol-based physician, has recommended cannabis to children who have come through his practice since the state’s 1996 medical cannabis law was enacted. He recommends its use for medical conditions ranging from autism to epilepsy to cancer to genetic disorders and mental disabilities. For autistic children and teenagers, cannabis “works so well for reducing anxiety, reducing pain and reducing agitation and anger,” Hergenrather says, especially as autistic children become adults. “The calming effect of cannabinoids has been a real plus for families.” After her consultation with Hergenrather, Paula found a woman in Southern California who had developed an edible product, a brownie, especially for autistic kids. “That was our first introduction,” she says, “and we started him on it two days before school started. He was just out of summer school, and that had been a hot mess—he was miserable, they couldn’t get him to do anything. That was two days before. Then he went to school without any protest, and he did every single task they put in front of him,” Paula says. Parents and teachers and occupational therapists were shocked at the sudden change. “What the heck happened, what did you do?” Paula recalls them asking her, “and they were looking for me to say that we had put him on meds,” she says. But Paula played off the inquiries, given the sensitivity and stigma around pediatric cannabis. “I guess we are having a good week,” she told them. “I played dumb. No one put a finger on what happened, but it was a big success.” Paula’s story is one of thousands involving pediatric cannabis in >16
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NEWS POWER STRUCTURE <13 capture those resources for projects we care about,” Leopold says. Nearly half of greenhouse gas emissions created by the Monterey Bay region come from energy production. Regional leaders created Monterey Bay Community Power (MBCP), a public/private partnership, in 2013 to assess the environmental and economic impact of creating a possible CCA for the Monterey region, which includes 21 municipalities in Santa Cruz, San Benito and Monterey counties. Each partner has passed resolutions in support of a CCA and has started reviewing the feasibility study, a cost-benefit-analysis which consultants from Pacific Energy Advisors finished in March. The system puts the control of energy purchasing and pricing into local hands—allowing the community to decide what type of energy mix best serves their needs via CCA administrators who would decide which energy sources to use. PG&E would still transmit and deliver energy, as well as handle customer service. Ratepayers will have an option to stay with PG&E, but Virginia Johnson, the project manager for MBCP, says it will be a tough sell for
PG&E to keep customers. “We can double the amount of green energy that we use, pay the same rates, and we can book surplus revenues to fund local energy projects. That benefits the community, keeps the control local, the rate local, the money local,” says Johnson, also a staffer for County Supervisor Bruce McPherson. CCAs began in Massachusetts in 1997, and have since been approved by six other states including California. As of 2014, CCAs serve about 5 percent of Americans in more than 1,300 municipalities, including the counties of Marin and Sonoma. The law requires PG&E to cooperate with CCAs, whether they want to or not. In 2010, PG&E donated $46 million to a ballot measure that would have made it more difficult for CCAs to form, but it was defeated at the polls. PG&E spokesperson Brandi Merlo says that a CCA’s implementation will not impact PG&E’s ability to provide services. “We respect the energy choices provided to our customers,” she says, “and we are cooperating with CCA programs.”
PLUGGING FOR CHANGE Last year, approximately 30 percent of the energy delivered by PG&E came from state-qualifying
renewable resources like solar and wind. MBCP’s feasibility study offers three possible supply scenarios, all of which would produce more renewable energy than PG&E. Joe Jordan, a former researcher for NASA who teaches renewable energy at Cabrillo College, attended a recent meeting on the CCA proposal. He’s overall optimistic about the possible switch, saying it’s a great opportunity to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. But he’s also concerned that the CCA will be “too timid” in achieving its green goals. “If you’re going through all this trouble, go big, be bold. The sky’s the limit,” Jordan says. “From my NASA background, let me just say: always be wary whenever anyone says it couldn’t be done.” California’s energy regulations require that all electricity retailers, including CCAs, provide a minimum 33 percent of all electricity from eligible renewable energy sources by 2020, and 50 percent by 2030. MBCP recommends using a variety of renewable sources, among them— solar, geothermal and wind. MBCP has highlighted three different supply scenarios they are considering. Each would reduce greenhouse gas emissions, increase renewable energy and keep the rates equal to or lower than PG&E’s. The first scenario’s rates >18
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WORLD OF DIFFERENCE It seems that every day in the news, global leaders squabble over influence and power, trading blame for the world’s problems. But maybe westerners could learn a thing or two by looking elsewhere. A Cinco de Mayo event, led by a UCSC professor at the Live Oak Grange, will discuss what stories from people south of the equator have to offer. “There is so much richness we are missing in cultures of the southern hemisphere,”
coordinator Lynda Francis says. Fernando Leiva, a UCSC professor of Latin American and Latino studies, will present “Decolonizing our Minds with the Epistemologies of the South.” He says people often see European and American histories as “universal,” a problem he plans to discuss. “It’s about freeing ourselves from certain ways of thinking and opening ourselves,” Leiva says. Leiva argues that a history of colonialism continues to shape our world today, excluding
other perspectives from our frame of thinking. And that, he says, has made it hard to tackle major challenges. Those challenges, some of them environmental, are the context for Leiva’s talk. The event is sponsored by two environmental organizations, 350.org and the Santa Cruz Community Action Network, both of which aim to slow and reverse climate change. The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom is sponsoring it, as well. Leiva says many of the
world’s problems, such as wealth inequities or environmental crises, stem from post-colonial mindsets that value progress and growth over community and people. “We have to open ourselves up to other ways of seeing the world,” Leiva says. “We are trying to confront the problems that we face with a very small set of ideas and perspectives.” The event is at 7 p.m. on Thursday, May 5, at the Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Avenue, Santa Cruz. There will be a potluck starting at 6:15 p.m. SALLY NEAS
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DAILY GRIND Many parents looking to use cannabis to help their children are on their own. The legal landscape around pediatric cannabis can put parents at risk.
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
STRAIN OF COMMAND <13
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the state, in a gray-area legal world where the conditions being treated may not be as serious as childhood cancer, but are nonetheless debilitating to families. The 1996 California law legalizing medical cannabis didn’t come with any age limits on who can or can’t access it, but physicians are boxed in by an overarching federal scheduling of the drug that says marijuana has no medical benefits whatsoever, and the absence of a state law that would legalize cannabis outright. Even as pediatric cannabis protocols and attitudes are in flux, parents in Paula’s situation are pretty much on their own, she says, and with the risk of a call to child protective services (CPS) if they are not careful with the cannabis they provide their children. “Because it’s not fully legal here,” says Paula, “[Hergenrather] can’t tell us what strain, what dosage, where to get it—it’s on the parents to figure it out.” She credits the work Hergenrather has done on behalf of children in California, as she points out the twisted ironies of cannabis law
and morality. “He treats so many kids that are so successful, but their parents are afraid to tell their doctors why,” she says. Paula and the doctor agree that the best medicine is whole-plant medicine that balances the compounds cannabidiol (CBD) and THC (the psychoactive compound in cannabis) with the terpene oils in the plant. “CBD is a great physical healer,” Paula says, “but we are focused on cognition.” By itself, she says, CDB-only products “did absolutely nothing” for her son. Paula and her husband took it upon themselves to find the right medicine for their son. Paula’s husband does the medicinal cooking, she says, after they’ve secured one of two strains of Kush, which is hard to come by because you have to grow it outdoors in order to be working with organic product. They use the Northern Lights variety for depression and the Blue Dream to treat their child’s anxiety, she says. “We learned a lot about it [by] cooking it on our own,” says Paula, who has been making cannabis capsules for her child for
four years. She and her husband were open to cannabis treatment for their child all along, she says, unlike many parents who are equally desperate, but “who have this stigma, that this is a horrible drug. For them to have to figure it out on their own, that’s nearly impossible.” But the government’s ban against children feeling any sort of euphoria has meant the advent of products such as Epidiolex, which comes from Great Britain and is “a federal investigational new drug which is 99-percent CBD and 1-percent non-THC cannabinoids,” Hergenrather says. “The reason they took out the THC is purely political,” he adds. “THC is a great anti-convulsant. So when doctors in my specialty are trying to control seizures, sometimes they get access to Epidiolex. People qualify to use it, but if they are not getting as good control for seizures as they’d hope to, they’re bringing back more of the THC into the product that they are using.” Products that contain all the compounds, he says, “work better. You get better pain [relief], better anti-cancer, and it’s a better medication for treating seizures. Kids don’t
seem to have a problem with more THC in the meds. It’s a fiction.” Pediatric cannabis got a big boost from CNN’s resident physician Sanjay Gupta in 2013, when he reported on an extract made from a Colorado strain called Charlotte’s Web that helped to control the grand mal seizures of a young girl named Charlotte Figi. Hergenrather noticed the difference a TV star can bring to a debate. “Parents got a lot more comfortable with it—if they see it on TV. Hey, they can do it too,” he says. In the four years that she has used cannabis to treat her son’s conditions, Paula has noticed a shift in public opinion, too. “Parents are more open to it, now they are bringing it up. But there’s no step-by-step guide to treating your kid with cannabis in 2016,” she says. “They need some guidance, and there isn’t anything. We want so badly to be that voice, be that support group, but it is so risky. Even if it’s legal and there’s not necessarily an age limit, it just takes that one person to call child protective services. In the end, maybe you keep the kids, but who the hell needs that anxiety?”
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would be less than or equal to PG&E’s, with customers saving an average of 42 cents every month in the first year. The CCA proposal would produce an estimated 20 percent fewer emissions than PG&E right away and an estimated 42 percent fewer emissions by year 10. The CCA proposal would double the renewable energy compared with what PG&E provides, and the energy sources would be local. In scenario two, there would be more savings for the ratepayer than in scenario one. The average household would see average monthly cost savings of 68 cents over the first 10 years. Emissions would also be lower than in the first scenario over time. Scenario two outlines a plan for buying more renewable energy credits—importing clean energy, instead of producing the bulk of it locally. The CCA would produce an estimated two and a half more times renewables than PG&E does. Scenario three saves ratepayers the most money, with the average household saving $4.50 per month over the first 10 years. It leverages both local renewable energy and energy credits. This CCA is estimated to produce only 1 percent more renewable energy than PG&E. This is the only option that would leverage hydroelectric power from dams, a power source no longer considered renewable in California because of ecological impacts, even though the energy is carbon-free. The startup cost of a CCA is $2 million, a small burden that all the partners would share. MBCP expects the money to be paid back in less than four years. Partners have until Oct. 31 to decide whether or not they would like to be included in the CCA. And even if they don’t decide at that point, they can still opt-in in the future. Santa Cruz County could go through with the CCA by itself, as it does not require other partners in order to move forward. However, Johnson says it will be beneficial to everyone if more groups join in. “There is a great advantage to an economy of scale,” Johnson says. “The more buying power we have as a tri-county improves our ability to procure the best energy.”
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PATRIOT ACT In his
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
most recent film, ‘Where to Invade Next,’ Michael Moore travels through Europe trying to find some good policy ideas to steal.
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DREAMER DEFERRED How Michael Moore threw himself into election-year politics, made a comeback film, wound up in the hospital, and started all over again with a tour coming to Santa Cruz. And yes, he’s for Bernie. BY STEVE PALOPOLI
R
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
olling into this election year, Michael Moore was in a fighting mood. The 62-year-old director of the highest-grossing documentary of all time, 2004’s Fahrenheit 9/11, had a presidential candidate (Bernie Sanders) he believed in, and several (the entire GOP slate) that he was itching to take down. There was a toxic-water crisis in his hometown of Flint, Michigan—the setting and subject of his debut film, 1989’s Roger and Me—and by January he was calling for the arrest of the state’s governor, Rick Snyder. Perhaps most importantly he was ready to release Where to Invade Next, his first film since 2009’s Capitalism: A Love Story, with a plan to hit the TV and press publicity circuit harder than ever—part promotion, part political crusade. The American left’s foremost provocateur was back.
Then, less than a week before Where to Invade Next opened in theaters, it all came crashing down. Admitted to a New York hospital on Jan. 31, he spent a week in intensive care, forcing the cancellation of his promo tour. Exact details were hard to come by at the time, and though Moore was in good spirits when he posted a Facebook update shortly after, his admission that “trying to get back to just breathing is enough of a burden” didn’t exactly inspire confidence in his health. He says now that he understands why fans were worried about him. “I was worried about me,” he tells me from an “undisclosed location” while on an overseas trip. “But I’m fine now. I got pneumonia. I didn’t get it checked out as soon as I should have, and ended up in the hospital with it. Don’t ever do that.” While he was out of commission, his film hit theaters with less than the typical amount of fanfare for a Michael Moore documentary (though
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FIRE STARTER Moore’s controversial 2004 film ‘Fahrenheit 9/11’ was the most
successful documentary of all time.
<21 of course it did extremely well in Santa Cruz). However, it’s one of his best. Whereas his films like 2002’s Bowling for Columbine and 2007’s Sicko took deadly serious topics and found some humor (and a lot of outrage) in them, Where to Invade Next inverts the paradigm, taking an absurdly funny premise—that Michael Moore himself is going to “invade” several European countries to steal their good ideas—and finding the hard truths about American life inside of it. While stretching geographically, Moore also stretches emotionally, and Where to Invade Next is more pensive and philosophical than anything he’s done before. Sure, there’s outrage to be had over what isn’t being done in the U.S., but there’s also joy and genuine wonder
in the way he celebrates what is being accomplished elsewhere. It’s a shame that, so far, this is probably his least-seen film since his 2002 breakthrough into the mainstream. So you can understand why Moore feels like he’s got some catching up to do. If his to-do list from last week—over the course of which he declared the GOP a “dead party” and wrote a letter to President Barack Obama berating him for what Moore sees as a dismal and shortsighted response from the president to the Flint crisis—is any indication, he’s jumped right on it. On Saturday, May 14, he’ll continue making up for lost time when he speaks at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium. What relevance do you think your new film has to the presidential
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DREAMER DEFERRED <22 election, and how much will you be discussing your support for Bernie Sanders at the Santa Cruz event?
Well, we’re in the craziest election year of anyone’s life—no matter what your age. So I’m going to try to make some sense out of it, if that’s actually possible. Which I think it is. I’m concerned about what’s happening, and what’s going to be happening in November. I have a lot of thoughts, based on the movie I just made, about Bernie’s whole platform. None of it’s new, it’s all being done in dozens of other countries and everybody’s happy. That doesn’t mean those countries don’t have their own problems, but they aren’t problems with seeing a doctor when you get sick, they aren’t the problems of being in a debtor’s prison once you leave college, they aren’t the problems of getting daycare for your kids, or maternity leave when you have a kid, or on and on and on and on. Hillary and others have said he’s all pie in the sky, it’s all up-in-the-air stuff. Actually no, it’s all happening on Planet Earth, as we speak. And I have the proof. I have a two-hour piece of evidence. What inspired the premise of ‘Where to Invade Next’—parodying the idea of U.S. imperialism and using it for positive social change?
When did you decide to turn that into a movie?
Oh, a long time ago. For as long as I’ve been a filmmaker, I’ve thought about it. And I’ve done it at different times in Sicko and other films, I’ve shown people what it’s like in other countries. I live in a country where nearly 70 percent of the population
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I thought the idea you chose for each country was interesting. Many of them were not the ones people would probably expect, like in France. I mean, if Michael Moore is going to talk about something good in France, no one thinks it’s going to be school lunches.
Well, as a filmmaker I like to make movies that are the kind I like to go see. And when I go see a movie, I don’t like to know in advance what I’m about to see. Including while I’m watching the movie—if I can figure out what’s going to happen 10 minutes from now, I’m instantly bored. I know the audience will think I might go to France for something else. So part of it is my fun I’m having with the audience and their expectations. Part of it is we didn’t do a lot of research for this film, we just kind of went over there. A lot of it was things we discovered in the moment. When you see the look on my face when that Italian couple told me they get 15 days for their honeymoon? That what-the-fuck look on my face? That’s a real look. I didn’t know that until they told me on camera.
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They look equally surprised when you tell them how employment works here, after they’ve just said it’s every Italian’s dream to come to America.
I didn’t know about it till they told me that, and it was just heartbreaking standing there listening to it, because I know as a parent—every parent knows—that if you are going to move somewhere, more important than the walk-in closets or how many bathrooms the house has is “How good is the
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Sunday May 15th 2016
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A champagne reception and fine art auction will be held on Sunday May 15 to benefit the United Nations Association and Project Pollinate. Over seventy pieces of art work will be auctioned. With auctioneer Fred Keeley
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
The ideas in the film started coming to me when I was 19 and I got a youth hostel card and a Eurail pass, and I went to Europe with a backpack. I spent the summer seeing something different than the United States, and I was kind of amazed. I kept thinking “why don’t we do this?” or “why don’t we do that?” And every trip I’ve taken since, I have the same feeling.
never leaves home. So it’s very easy to fool Americans, ’cause they haven’t seen it. Using the idea of U.S. imperialism, that’s just my frustration with a decade-plus of this country butting its nose where it’s not wanted. And I thought “What if we did a different kind of invasion? What if we invaded not to kill people, but just to steal some good ideas?”
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<25 school my kids are going to go to?” [The Finnish] mean it, they really mean it. I mean, they really mean it. It is critical to them that every school is of the same quality, no matter if it’s in a poor neighborhood, a rich neighborhood, whatever. Then again, when I say “poor” and “rich” in countries in Europe, their income inequality is not as wide as ours. Bernie Sanders has referenced Finland when defending his proposal to make college tuition free at public universities.
When the [Finnish] education minister told me that thing about no tuition, the law—that applies to colleges, too. So there are no private colleges to speak of. So I said, “You mean you don’t have a Harvard?” And she said, “Yes, we do have a Harvard. We have 19 Harvards. We have 19 public universities.” I said, “C’mon, though, cut the bullshit. You can’t tell me that the person who’s going to the
University of Helsinki is getting the same education as the person going to the University of …”—and then I just made up “Lapland,” you know, where the reindeer are? And she looks at me and goes, “I am a graduate of the University of Lapland. And I am the Minister of Education.” It was like, oh my god. So … they mean it. I wonder what she’d think of our public education system.
When I watch the movie with an audience, the most sniffles I hear from people tearing up is during the Finland scene of the movie. Because we know our kids are getting screwed. Your past films have all been shot in the U.S. What was it like filming internationally?
I had more fun making this movie probably than any other film. We decided right from the beginning that we were going to make a film not about other countries, but about
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Lots of love for Mom Public Meeting INCREASING OPPORTUNITIES FOR DOWNTOWN HOUSING DOWNTOWN RECOVERY PLAN AMENDMENTS TO DEVELOPMENT STANDARDS (Affecting properties on Pacific Ave. between Cathcart and Laurel St. and on Front St. between Soquel Ave. and Laurel St.) Presentations by City staff, ROMA Design Group and McCann Adams Studio urban planners The meeting will also include discussions about proposed changes that primarily relate to defining under what conditions that buildings could be allowed to increase height to allow for the creation of additional housing opportunities downtown. Please join us at the next scheduled meeting date: May 10, 2016 City Council 7:00 pm City Council Chambers 809 Center Street Santa Cruz
1368 Pacific Ave. • Downtown Santa Cruz • 831.423.8183 • artisanssantacruz.com
ALWAYS OPEN LATE
If you would like more information, or have questions, or if you would like to be added to our email list for similar meetings, please contact Ron Powers (831) 420-5216 rpowers@cityofsantacruz.com
DANCE
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
ARTS CAMP
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Food Bin Grocery Store 9am - 11pm Herb Room 9am - 10pm Every Day
1130 Mission St. Santa Cruz
Food Bin • 831.423.5526
Herb Room •831.429.8108
// TWDCC DanceArts Camp for kids ages 5-11 // Summer Intensive for Teens 12 and up // ENROLLING NOW!
Visit tanneryworlddance.com to find out about all of our one of kind summer programming for kids! Or call 831.227.6770 The TANNERY WORLD DANCE & CULTURAL admits all community members and students of any race, color, national origin, and ethnic origin to all of the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis ~race, color, religion (including religious dress and religious grooming), sex (including pregnancy, perceived pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, or related medical conditions), gender identity, national origin, ancestry, citizenship, age, physical or mental disability, or any other basis protected by local, state, or federal laws.
DREAMER DEFERRED
“There are now 11 documentaries that have been made about me by the right wing. One of these days I’m going to have a little film festival of just the anti-Michael Moore films.” - Michael Moore <26 ourselves. And my challenge to the crew was, “Let’s see if we can tell a story about the U.S. without shooting a single frame of film in the U.S.” Because after doing this for 25 years, as an individual this has to be interesting to me, too. I have to get excited about it, and I’m not looking to do the same old thing. I want to do something that’s more challenging. So I thought, what if we did this where we have a little bit of archival footage, of U.S. prisons or whatever, but we will not ourselves shoot through our cameras a single frame in the United States of America. But the entire film is clearly about the United States of America. On some level, I don’t give a rat’s ass about Finland and their education system. I care deeply that we have sunk so low, and maybe we can learn something from them.
Well, people are still being poisoned. They need to remove and replace all the pipes now. That’s a big job, and Obama should be sending in the Army Corps of Engineers to do it—and he isn’t. He announced today that he’s going to go to Flint next week. I wrote a very angry post about that and put it on Facebook a couple of hours ago.
It’s been interesting. Mostly I see the humor in it. There are now 11 documentaries that have been made about me by the right wing. One of these days I’m going to have a little film festival of just the anti-Michael Moore films. I think that’d be pretty funny. And there’s probably been at least half a dozen books written. Look, I’m one of the few people on the left who have crossed over to have a wide mainstream audience, in Middle America especially. We on the left are usually confined to the Church of the Left, which if it’s a movie theatre, it’s, you know, the Film Forum. If it’s a town, it’s Santa Cruz. I mean, right? So they don’t make 11 movies about Noam Chomsky—and they should, because he’s a dangerous man because he puts out a lot of truth. But his audience does not go to movies at the supermall in Hays, Kansas. Michael Moore will speak at 8 p.m. on Saturday, May 14, at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium. Tickets are $33$53.75, call 420-5260 or go to santacruztickets.com.
7th Anniversary Beneet & Health Fair!
Saturday, June 25th 10am - 3pm LLLL MMMMM YYYYY FFFF FFFF DDDDD 831.425.9500 317 Potrero St. Suite C Santa Cruz, CA 95060 www.santacruzcore.com
Happy Mother’s Day! 20% Off All Jewelry Thursday 5/5 - Monday 5/9 Does not apply to sale items or layaways All sales final, except gifts Locally Owned Since 1972 Santa Cruz • (831) 423-3349 • 1224 Pacific Ave Capitola • (831) 476-6109 • 504C Bay Ave
B ring A Friend or
Loved One.... Two 50 Minute Massages & 50 Minute Hot Tub & Sauna for Two $175
Community minded since 1985
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
In 1989, you were documenting devastation in Flint, Michigan in your first film, Roger & Me. Almost three decades later, the situation there is even worse— thanks to the toxic water crisis. You’ve been following this closely, what do you think needs to be done?
Over the course of your career, the biggest change seems to have been that while you started out as an outsider trying to get access to the powerful, you yourself have become powerful, at least in terms of cultural influence. People make movies about you now. What’s it been like for you on a personal level to experience that shift?
Celebrate your health with us!
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
SONGS OF OLD Celtic guitarist William Coulter plays at St. John’s Church in Aptos on Saturday, May 7, and at Don Quixote’s in Felton on Wednesday, May 25. PHOTO: KEANA PARKER
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Fret Not
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Guitarist William Coulter isn’t afraid to take a classical California pop approach to Celtic tradition BY CHRISTINA WATERS
I
f you were in Santa Cruz during the 1980s, you couldn’t have resisted the lilting music of Isle of Skye. At the center of the accomplished quartet, which seemed to play every venue available, was guitarist William Coulter, he of the
HOT TICKET
blond hair and the dancing fretwork. Committed to Celtic music, Coulter found his calling a few decades ago and never looked back. Originally from New Jersey, Coulter came out to Santa Cruz to attend UCSC, where he now teaches classical
guitar. As Coulter grew up, he says “everything was about classical music.” His father had founded a choral group that performed in Carnegie Hall. “We had a harpsichord,” Coulter says. “I grew up surrounded by classical music and instruments.”
After high school, all three of his siblings headed for California. “My brother Steve left a note on the refrigerator. It said ‘Go West Young Man!’” And so he did. Music beckoned seriously in 1984. “My brother Steve, who plays Celtic harp >32
COMEDY
MUSIC
FILM
Stand-up veteran Kathleen Madigan comes to Rio P33
Jim Lewin steps out from the sideman shadows P34
Chet Baker reimagined in ‘Born to Be Blue’ P58
SANTA CRUZ
SHAKESPEARE
Tickets on Sale May 16
JULY 12 – AUGUST 28
Member Pre-sale May 2
IN THE GROVE AT DELAVEAGA PARK
2016
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE’S
season kick-off celebration
Free Groundling Youth Ticket with adult purchase!
starts July 12
May 6, 6pm, Radius Gallery, Tannery Arts Center Come party with us on First Friday to learn about our 2016 Season. Enjoy cupcakes from Buttercup Cakes and wine from Sones Cellars. FREE and open to the public!
help us #buildthegrove
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE’S
fringe show:
• Become a FOUNDING GROUNDLING with a donation
of $50 or more • NAME A SEAT in The Grove with a donation of $2000 • Swing a hammer, pull a weed, be a GROVE VOLUNTEER!
AUGUST 17, 23, 24 Tickets: Call 831.460.6399 or online at santacruzshakespeare.org / tickets
Details at santacruzshakespeare.org/buildthegrove
The Grove at DeLaveaga Park 501 Upper Park Rd, Santa Cruz, CA
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
starts July 26
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LUXURY RETIREMENT LIVING for SENIORS Spacious Apartment with Full Kitchen, Washer & Dryer Nutritious Daily Breakfast & Dinner Weekly Housekeeping Phone, TV & Internet Included Transportation to Local Doctors & Shopping Social & Recreational Activities
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
VALLEY HEIGHTS SENIOR COMMUNITY 925 Freedom Blvd • Watsonville (831)722-4884 www.valleyheights.com
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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
<30 [and teaches in the UCSC Writing Program], inspired me to pursue it,” says Coulter. “We formed Isle of Skye—my brother, me, Chris Reader on fiddle, and singer Beverly Slade.” Armed with hammered dulcimer, harp and guitar, the group played old Irish and Scottish music at Caffe Pergolesi and the Saturn Cafe. “Our gigs were mostly local,” Coulter says. “Still, I always had a strong feeling for classical music,” he says. “Even during the folk music phase, I never got over my love of classical music.” Next came a bachelor’s degree in music at UCSC, thanks to the mentorship of harpsichordist Linda Burman Hall. “Women have always been angels in my life,” he admits, with a wild Irish rover grin. Next came an MFA in classical guitar performance from the San Francisco Conservatory, followed by a second master’s in ethnomusicology from UCSC. After a trip to Ireland, Coulter went to Portland, Oregon to study with the brother of Celtic music icon Enya. Irish music had devoured him. The old tunes cast a deep spell, at once haunted and haunting in their mournful beauty. Coulter felt the allure. “I love it. I listened to a lot of Bach when I was young, much of it contains a dance energy— the Brandenburg Concertos, for example. Irish tunes have that same driving energy,” Coulter says. “That’s what moves me. The dance vibe.” Coulter updates the music he collects from living performers. “I’m not the ‘keep the tradition alive’ artist,” he admits. “I’m more the interpreter and arranger. I make instrumental arrangements from songs.” The melodies, the Irish language—“the sound is old and beautiful to me,” says Coulter. “I listen to contemporary Irish singers. I make arrangements of these melodies. I work with these and make them my own.” Coulter happily confesses to taking “a classical California pop approach to making Irish my own.” Nine out of 10 Irish singers took their material from other sources, he reminds me. “My experience has taught me that the real tradition is to have the music live on and move
on—not be in a museum,” he says. Restless and generous in his performing, Coulter plays and tours with several groups from two to three months out of the year. One is called One Lane Bridge, “with John Weed on fiddle, me on guitar, and Aria DiSalvio on cello. We perform folk music from Galicia, Brittany, Scandinavia, Ireland, and America.” With Coulter’s intricate and driving guitar at the center of the music, the trio’s sound is enchanting and lilting. And more. He’s recently formed a new duo with Edwin Huizinga called Liquid Gold, which he describes as “virtuoso violin meets Celtic guitar” performing arrangements of Bach and Vivaldi, as well as Bulgarian and Swedish folk music. William Coulter won a Grammy in 2005, and he continues to orchestrate performance triumphs. He just completed a residency with the Omaha Symphony, where, as visiting artistic director, he created a lavish production called “Celtic Journey.” “I spent a year building that show—arranging music for traditional musicians, dancers and a storyteller, including an 80-piece orchestra. We had two sold-out shows,” he says, beaming. The prospect of producing more Celtic Journeys is tempting. “It might be that I go on for years doing it with many orchestras. I can reproduce it locally, using local musicians and dancers,” he says. Seasoned performing artists like Coulter exist in a landscape of networking. He can show up anywhere with his guitar and immediately attract collaborators. “I feel so ridiculously blessed by how I’ve lived my life,” he grins. “Music never ends—there’s always more to learn. That’s the beauty of it.” Info: William Coulter plays with Edwin Huizinga as Liquid Gold at 7:30 p.m., Saturday, May 7, St. John’s Church, 125 Canterbury Drive, Aptos. Tickets $16/adv, $20/door, brownpapertickets.com. Coulter plays with One Lane Bridges at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 25, at Don Quixote’s, 6275, Hwy. 9, Felton. $15/adv, $17/ door, donquixotesmusic.info. Also see: williamcoulterguitar.com.
COMEDY
&
2016
MeMoRiAl DaY WeEkEnD
ApToS ViLlAgE PaRk ApToS, Ca
FeStIvAl SaTuRdAy MaY 28Th
BuDdY GuY BuDdY GuY
TrOmBoNe TrOmBoNe ShOrTy ShOrTy & OrLeAnS & OrLeAnS A AvEnUe vEnUe 300 nights a year for more than two decades, performs at the Rio on Thursday, May 5.
RoBeRt RaNdOlPh RoBeRt RaNdOlPh
Just Joking
CaRoLyN CaRoL yN WoNdErL WoNdErLaNd aNd
STAGES OF HER CAREER Kathleen Madigan, who has built her career performing
For Kathleen Madigan, no podcast can replace the thrill of live stand-up BY DNA
C
says. “But I have 75,000 people that already like me, and I’m just entertaining them at work for free. I’m completely aware of what it is. I choose to do it.” A former journalist, Madigan broke into the mainstream in 2004 when she was a finalist on the second season of Last Comic Standing. Her peers and friends, people like Ron White and Lewis Black, are iconoclasts—tried-andtrue unique comedians whose lives are measured in the miles between the gigs they do each night. Providing an equal dose of truth and hilarity, Madigan says that while the miles pile up, the core of her comedy hasn’t changed over time. “The big issues,” she says. “Whether it’s gun control or abortion or racial equality, it’s all still on the table. Nothing has been resolved.” Kathleen Madigan performs at 8 p.m. at the Rio Theatre on Thursday, May 5; $25 general, $40 gold circle.
InDiGeNoUs InDiGeNoUs
SuNdAy MaY 29Th
JoSh TuRnEr JoSh TuRnEr DaViD Da ViD NaIl NaIl
GrAnGeR GrAnGeR SmItH SmItH FeAtUrInG EaRl FeAtUrInG EaRl DiBbLeS DiBbLeS Jr. Jr. CaNaAn SmItH CaNaAn SmItH BrOdIe StEw BrOdIe StEwArT ArT LeAvInG LeA vInG AuStIn AuStIn
SaNtAcRuZaMeRiCaNmUsIcFeStIvAl.CoM
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
omedian Kathleen Madigan has been on the road performing 300 nights a year for 25 years. And unlike many younger comics, she doesn’t feel the need to make her career a whole lot more complicated than that. She still believes in the simple power of just getting in front of people onstage and making them laugh. “Some of the newer comedians think they have to have these podcasts and think they have to have a web series,” she says. “I don’t understand how it’s helping. Just go tell jokes. Write more jokes. Jokes, jokes, jokes. It’s an old-school way of doing it, but it works.” Even trying to keep things as simple as possible, there’s still plenty to do besides her shows, with late-night TV appearances on Conan, CBS’s Late Show and The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore; performing for the troops; and her comedy albums. And she’s certainly not a Luddite. “Sure, I tweet all the time,” Madigan
AnD ThE AnD ThE FaMiL FaMiLy y BaNd BaNd
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MUSIC
NOT QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT Jim Lewin’s Edge of the West plays Moe’s Alley on Saturday, May 7.
Front and Centered MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Santa Cruz’s Jim Lewin steps back from a successful sideman career to focus on his own music BY CAT JOHNSON
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A
s a young music student, Jim Lewin had what he thought was a promising start as a drummer. When it came time to upgrade from his practice mat to an actual drum, however, his mom suggested that he take up the guitar instead. Lewin has since become a renowned guitarist, and his mom hasn’t forgotten why. “I once said, ‘Mom, remember when I was going to be a drummer and you pushed me over to guitar?’” says Lewin, who has performed with Todd Snider, Peter Rowan, Leftover Salmon, Gillian Welch and others. “And my mom said, ‘Yes, and you’re welcome.’”
Despite his musical success, however, Lewin, who hails from Santa Cruz, is not well-known here at home. Early on, he played with “a gazillion bands,” including the Continental Drifters and Harmony Grits, but he eventually left town and launched a career as a professional touring sideman. While playing arenas and big venues on the road with other artists, he didn’t have much opportunity to build a local following. These days, Lewin is back in Santa Cruz, working with his own band, Edge of the West. Residing at the intersection of country, Americana, rock and what Lewin calls “hippie
jam band stuff,” Edge of the West gives Lewin a chance to explore his own ideas and music. “I’ve decided to become a bandleader and push some of my own creative impulses to harvest,” he says, “and to create the sort of band that I think will be of service to the community, and have something to add to the national conversation. Even in this saturated environment, it’s still important to have roots-based hippie music where people can gather to socialize and party and have a shared love of the roots and the future.” Lewin also wants to show his hometown audience what he’s been
working on for decades. “This is my base, and these are my people,” he says. “It means a lot to me to be recognized at home, and for my family to get to see this.” His music is influenced heavily by the artists he’s performed with over the years. In particular, he points to bluegrass mandolin legend Frank Wakefield, who Lewin describes as the missing link between Bill Monroe, the father of bluegrass, and David Grisman, who ushered in progressive bluegrass in the 1960s; Great American Taxi, an Americana and country act formed by Vince Herman of pioneering jam band Leftover Salmon; and country singersongwriter (and one-time Santa Cruzan) Lacy J. Dalton, who Lewin toured and recorded with for years. About his time with Dalton, Lewin says he learned a lot about the music business, about writing, and about “navigating life as a person who’s fated to base their life around music and make that work.” On Saturday, Dalton joins Lewin at Moe’s Alley to celebrate the release of Edge of the West’s selftitled debut. The album, which showcases Lewin’s love of rock, jam and country, is full of wild stories about conspiracies, good times, romance, and the drug-fueled rock ’n’ roll lifestyle. Lewin describes the album as his comic book record, a collection of 12 little stories that are a bit absurd and campy. Beneath the surface, however, the album addresses more serious topics of people making their way through life, searching for meaning and love. On it, he blends elements of the music he loves into an Americana meets garage jam-band sound that he calls “cosmic honky-tonk.” “I use the term ‘cosmic honkytonk’ to describe it,” he says. “I try to plant a tie-dyed flag,” he says of his cross-cultural, openminded appeal. “My concerts are a good place to bring your hula hoops, your tie-dyes, and also your cowboy boots and a jug of moonshine.” Edge of the West will perform at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 7 at Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $10/adv, $13/door. 479-1854. Lacy J. Dalton opens.
ready... ENGAGE
MAY 6TH
MAY FEATURES
Santa Cruz Art League – 61st Annual High School Art Show
Radius Gallery – Santa Cruz Shakespeare
1050 River Street. 6-8pm
As though the international group show Rain Percussions (curated by Margaret Niven) doesn’t provide enough reason to visit the Radius Gallery this First Friday, Santa Cruz Shakespeare is taking over the celebration this month. Help highlight their 2016 summer season, opening this year at its new home in Delaveaga Park.
526 Broadway, 12-9pm
Chances are pretty good that at some point in the last 61 years, you were a high school student. If you were locally, you may recall that the Santa Cruz Art league celebrated the art of high school students. Don’t miss this installment with over 600 works. Remember, even if a venue isn’t new this month, it may be new to you. Go Explore!
111 Cooper Street. 6-9pm
1220 41st Avenue, 3-7:30pm
The Spring Pop Up Party at Inspire Salon in Capitola will feature a number of artists and artisans, and will feature the strong, adventurous abstract work of Pleasure Point artist Whitney Mitchell Wirtz.
Excitement is building on Cooper Street and this First Friday you’re invited to see what the buzz is about. Come celebrate Pure Pleasure’s new location with decadent finger foods, live music, a “self love art station” and the paintings of Aisha Hudson. Must be 18 or older.
FIRST FRIDAY FOCUS
Carolyn (Cat) Klein Lagattuta
Follow Cat on First Friday via our Instagram #FirstFridaySantaCruz Carolyn (Cat) Klein Lagattuta has made a name for herself selling photos of her chalk drawings and many other subjects on Stocksy. Cat now has more than 8,000 photos on her Flickr page, which has been viewed 7 million times. If you look through those images, you’ll discern a certain tone to them — exuberant, joyful, serene. “I’m a happy person,” Cat said. “I want to project happiness.” Find Cat’s work at:
stocksy.com/profile/catklein
GALLERIES sponsored by
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 4-10, 2016
Pure Pleasure – Aisha Hudson
Whitney Mitchell Wirtz
santacruz.com
FRIDAY ART TOUR
FIRSTFRIDAY
FIRST
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FIRST FRIDAY ART TOUR
Galleries/ MAY 6TH Agency Mott Jordan
1519 Pacific Ave. shopagencyhome.com 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Artisans Gallery Sydney Zentall
DOWNTOWN
1368 Pacific Ave. artisanssantacruz.com 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Buttercup Cakes & Farm House Frosting Mezza9 1411 Pacific Ave. farmhousefrosting.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Cornucopia Real Estate G-Stone 1001 Center Street Suite 5 cornucopia.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 4-10, 2016
Stripe Brian Rounds
Network Chiropractic Wellness Center The Photographers of Santa Cruz Waves
The Nook Connie Williams and Audrey Sa
Palace Art Downtown Santa Cruz Audrey Takeshta
The Treehouse Alex Krause
Pure Pleasure
The True Olive Connection Cindy Mori
149 Josephine Street Suite A spinalsense.com 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
1407 Pacific Ave. facebook.com/ PalaceArtSupply 3:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Aisha Hudson
111 Cooper St. purepleasureshop.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Rare Bird Salon Kent Bond Downtown Branch Library Printed
227 Cathcart St. rarebirdsalon.com 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
224 Church St. santacruzpl.org 5:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Rivendell Carolyn Reynolds Felix Kulpa Gallery & Sculpture Garden Ann Altstatt & Bridget Henry 107 Elm St. felixkulpa.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Food Lounge Mark Yanowsky & Vince Broglio
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Nectar Creations Deanna Glenz 1325 Pacific Ave. nectarcreations.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
1001 Center St. Suite 1 scfoodlounge.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
HealthMarkets George Haas
505-A River St. manfredluedge.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Home/Work Whimsy Spot
765 Cedar St. Ste 103 shophomework.com 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
1001 Center St. 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Sanctuary Exploration Center Jodi Frediani 35 Pacific Ave. montereybaynoaagov/vc/ sec/welcome.html 4:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Santa Cruz County Bank Unbridled 720 Front St. santacruzcountybank.com 12:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History FREE First Friday: Bike Night 705 Front St. santacruzmah.org 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Stripe MEN Melody Overstreet
117 Walnut Ave. stripedesigngroup.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
107 Walnut Ave. stripedesigngroup.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
1543 Pacific Ave. Suite 215 thenookus.com 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
108 Locust St. Suite C thetreehouse.us 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
106 Lincoln St. trueoliveconnection.com 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
WESTSIDE R Blitzer Gallery Santa Cruz Woodworkers 2801 Mission St. rblitzergallery.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Smooth Body Lounge Nadia Borysenko , D J OL’Right and Pole Diversity 2345 Mission St. smoothsantacruz.com 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Stockwell Cellars Sefla Joseph’s Thursday Painting Community
1100 Fair Ave (Entrance Ingalls St side) stockwellcellars.com 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm
The Loft Salon and Spa John Webster
402 Ingalls St Suite #8 theloftsantacruztumblr.com 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm
HARVEY WEST/ CAPITOLA TANNERY
Galleries/MAY 6TH
FIRST FRIDAY ART TOUR
Radius Gallery Santa Cruz Shakespeare Kick-Off 1050 River St. #127 radiusgallery.com 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm Santa Cruz Cruz Rehearsal Studios June Glenn and Brescia Rose 118 Coral Street santacruzrehearsalstudios.com 10:00 am - 12:00 am
ADVENTURES IN ABSTRACTION Art by Grant Stoner Music by JRC Rauche
Tannery Arts Center Artists of the Tannery 1050/1060 River Street tanneryartcenter.org 6:00pm-9:00pm
F I R S T F R I D A Y, M A Y 6 , 6 - 9 P M SA NTA CR U Z A R T C EN TER, 1001 CEN TER ST
Gayle’s Bakery & Rosticceria
Sponsored by cornucopia real estate
Susan Howe
504 Bay Ave. gaylesbakery.com 6:30 am - 8:30 pm Inspire Salon
Whitney Mitchell Wirtz
1220 41st Ave. vagaro.com/inspiresalon 3:00 pm - 7:30 pm
FELTON
Chris Zollna
527 Seabright Ave. missmaes.com 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Santa Cruz Art League
61st Annual High School Art Show
526 Broadway scal.org 12:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Celebrate
Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History
California Guild of Natural Science Illustrators
1305 East Cliff Dr. santacruzmuseum.org 11:00 am - 8:00 pm
First Friday Felton Art Walk
Aldina Rubino, Darci Shea Bogdan, Samantha Stone SLV Student Fashion Sketches
Shops along Hwy 9 facebook.com/FirstFridayFelton 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Downtown Store Presents:
Mom
First Friday, May 6th • 6-8:30
pm
Artist: Emily Cafaro • Live music by Amy Obenski • Farm Fresh Nibbles & Drinks • Make a Mother’s Day card using veggie stamps
•
Open: Friday, Saturday 12-7pm • Sunday, 12-6pm 110 Cooper St, Suite 100G • homelessgardenproject.org
SANTACRUZ.COM | GTWEEKLY.COM | MAY 4-10, 2016
MIDTOWN
Miss Mae’s House of Beauty
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䴀唀匀䤀䌀 䤀一 䴀䄀夀 MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
䌀栀愀洀戀攀爀 䴀甀猀椀挀 䈀甀椀氀搀椀渀最 䌀漀洀洀甀渀椀琀礀
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Good Times helps Businesses Grow! “We have advertised with Good Times for many years and are proud to say that we have always received good service, as well as excellent responses to the ads and we are very proud to be associated with this company!” Thunderbird Real Estate, Soquel
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吀椀挀欀攀琀猀 ⸀ 匀漀椀昀 圀椀渀攀 䈀愀爀㨀 㠀㌀⸀㐀㈀㤀⸀㤀 ⸀ 圀圀圀⸀䈀刀伀圀一倀䄀倀䔀刀吀䤀䌀䬀䔀吀匀⸀䌀伀䴀 圀圀圀⸀䴀唀匀䤀䌀䤀一䴀䄀夀⸀伀刀䜀 1101 Pacific Avenue Suite 320, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
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CALENDAR
GREEN FIX
See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.
Free calendar listings in print and online are available for community events. Listings show up online within 24 hours. Submissions of free events and those $15 or less received by Thursday at noon, six days prior to the Good Times publication date, will be prioritized for print (space available). All listings must specify a day, start time, location and price (or ‘free’ if applicable). Listings can be set to repeat every week or month, and can be edited by the poster as needed. Ongoing events must be updated quarterly. It is the responsibility of the person submitting an event to cancel or modify the listing. Register at our website at santacruz.com in order to SUBMIT EVENTS ONLINE. E-mail calendar@goodtimes.sc or call 458.1100 with any questions.
BIKE WEEK
WEDNESDAY 5/4
It’s a whole week dedicated to bikes— or, rather, the people who ride them. It all starts with a Bike Night at the Museum of Art & History, with free helmet giveaways, stencilling, spin bike art, bike decorating, bike stunts, and arts and crafts. Spokesman Bicycles hosts a free class on how to fix a bike flat on May 7 and Epicenter Cycling will take the ladies out for a Girly Ride mountain exploration later that day. And that’s just the beginning— there’ll be cleanups, wilderness rides, movie nights, food, gear, clinics, free breakfasts, and so much more. Check out ecoactbike.org for a full schedule. Ride on, Santa Cruz, ride on.
ARTS
Info: Friday, May 6-Friday, May 13. Various. Ecoactbike.org.
ART SEEN
HOUR LOCAL RADIO SHOW Host Neil Pearlberg sits down with many of the fascinating and diverse members of the community of Santa Cruz. 7-8 p.m. KSCO 1080 AM. 479-1080. COLOR YOUR STRESS AWAY A unique program for adults. Take time from your busy schedule and spend a relaxing hour in the library coloring. Designs and pencils provided. 5:30-6:30 p.m. 230 Gault St., Santa Cruz. 4206330. Free. STORMTROOPERS INVADE DOWNTOWN LIBRARY ON STAR WARS DAY FOR STEAM INTO THE GALAXY In a library very nearby, young people will go on an adventure, exploring possibilities to be found, dodging stormtroopers and Mandalorian bounty hunters along the way. 2-5 p.m. Santa Cruz Public Library, 224 Church St., Santa Cruz. 427-7707. Free.
CLASSES SALSA RUEDA CLASSES Cuban-style dance at the Tannery. Introductory and beginning classes 7-8 p.m. Intermediate and advanced classes 8-9 p.m. Tannery 1060 River St., Suite #111, Santa Cruz. Cesario, Danny, Gilberto. $7/$5.
For the adults in the audience, let’s get real: we could all use some self love now and again. Life is hard. Work is stressful, relationships are difficult, kids are loud, and there’s always room for a little bit of “me time.” That’s why Pure Pleasure is celebrating the grand opening of their new location with sensual finger foods, a masturbation station, a saucy performance by Dark Rose Cabaret, and live music from Santa Cruz’s own Dead Recipe. Treat yourself. Info: 6-9 p.m. Friday, May 6. 111 Cooper St., Santa Cruz. purepleasureshop.com. Free.
BATERIA SAMBA CRUZ Come learn to play drums and the carnival rhythms of Brazil. All levels. Instruments provided. 6-7 p.m. Tannery Arts Center, 1060 River St., #104, Santa Cruz. Joe Mailloux, 435-6813. $7. ARGENTINE TANGO Argentine tango classes and practice every Wednesday with John & Nancy Lingemann. Beginners 7 p.m., Intermediate/Advanced 8:15 p.m. and all levels at 9:15 p.m. Calvary Episcopal Church, 532 Center St., Santa Cruz. 469-3288. $3. BEGINNING BALLET WITH DIANA ROSE An introduction to ballet technique with a focus on posture, balance and strength building. Noon1:15 p.m. International Academy of Dance Santa Cruz. info@iadance.com. $10. VINYASA FLOW Join Michelle for this fun, exploratory vinyasa flow class. We warm the body with rhythmic movement then go deeper into our peak poses. Some experience with yoga
JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL If you’re reading this on May 4, run, go, get to the Del Mar Theatre as fast as your feet can take you! Wednesday, May 4 is the final day of the Jewish Film Festival and the screening of, fittingly, Run Boy Run, about a Polish boy who escapes the Warsaw ghetto and fights against betrayal to survive. To honor Yom HaShoah, or the day of remembrance for those who perished in the Holocaust, viewers are invited to attend the closing day of the film festival with the closing film, Nicky’s Family, a documentary about English stockbroker Nicholas Winton who, while on vacation in then-Czechoslovakia in 1938, was inspired to fight against the Nazis by any means necessary. Info: 6 p.m. Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.
is recommended. 9-10:30 a.m. Santa Cruz Yoga, 402 Ingalls St., Santa Cruz. michellenak2@ gmail.com. $15/$9. WHAT-IF WEDNESDAY “What-If Wednesday” is a combination of science and art that prompts wonder and discovery. Weird, wacky science becomes wonderfully wild, while art and science are brought together. 11:30 a.m.-Noon. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-4248035. Free with admission. SEMI PRIVATE TRAINING This group exercise program has between 2-5 clients, early scheduling is recommended. All sessions incorporate strength, cardio, stability, toning, cardio conditioning, and flexibility into an undulating periodization model. Every Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. 317 Potrero St., Santa Cruz. 425-9500. MEDITATION FOR WOMEN WITH CANCER WomenCARE: Guided meditation and talk with a facilitator from Land of the Medicine Buddha. 2:30-4 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Free. HONORING FEMININE RHYTHMS Discover how to tap into your innate healing essence with Dr. Holly German and Noga Vilozny. In this lecture-based presentation, you will explore how to tune into your feminine circadian rhythms and strengthen your intuitive guidance. 6:30-8 p.m. New Leaf Market, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-1306. $8.
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CALENDAR <39
FOOD & WINE
TRIVIA NIGHT Trivia night at 99 bottles. 21 and up. 8 p.m. 110 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 459-9999. DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ FARMERS MARKET In addition to a large variety of farm products, this market offers a great selection of local artisan foodstuffs, delicious baked goods, and lots of options for lunch and dinner. 1:30 p.m. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. 454-0566.
HEALTH B12 HAPPY HOUR B12 can treat fatigue, anemia, anxiety, depression, PMS, heart disease and more. 3-6 p.m. 736 Chestnut St., Santa Cruz. 477-1377. $29/$17. QI GONG FOR ENERGY BALANCE & HEALTH BY BREIGE WALBRIDGE Qi Gong is a fantastic and easy practice that brings physical happiness and mental calm. 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Donation.
SPIRITUAL WEEKLY MEDITATION GROUP Vipassanastyle meditation group for all experience levels. Beginners welcome. 7-8 p.m. Branciforte Plaza, 555 Soquel Ave., Room 245, Santa Cruz. Russ, 246-0443 or russ@ holeyboy.com. Free/Donations. COMPASSION AND THE SPIRITUAL TRADITION Segyu Rinpoche will discuss how compassion can easily be integrated into our lives so we can each unfold our inner potential and be a positive force in the world. 7:30-9 p.m. 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-8893. Free. PEMA CHODRON AUDIO TEACHING Learn to meditate from one of the world's foremost meditation instructors at weekly Shambala gatherings. Guided meditation and instruction, followed by discussion. 7-9 p.m. 920 41st Ave., Santa Cruz. 316-8282.
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THURSDAY 5/5 05/11/2016
ARTS STORYTIME Join us for Storytime. Free with Museum admission and for MOD Members. 10:30-11 a.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-424-8035. Free.
857 41st Ave, Santa Cruz www.flyinglizard.com 831.515.7484
THURSDAY ART MARKET Check out the new Thursday Art Market with Live Music, demonstrations from artists across
mediums, featured loft artists and food from Jonathan Parvis’ Dead Cow BBQ. New features and performers every week. 3-6 p.m. The Tannery Arts Center, 1050 River St., Santa Cruz. 621-6226.
CLASSES SALSA DANCING CUBAN-STYLE This class is for intermediate dancers and features Cuban casino partnering, salsa suelta and great Cuban music. 7-8 p.m. Louden Nelson Center, Santa Cruz. salsagente.com or 426-4724. $9/$5. SALSA RUEDA SERIES BEGINNER 2 A fun four-week Rueda de Casino series for Beginner 2 and up. No partner required. Need to know the basics in Rueda such as guapea, dame, enchufla doble, el uno, sombrero, and setenta. 8-9 p.m. Louden Nelson Community, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 420-6177. $34. BEGINNING BALLET WITH DIANA ROSE An introduction to ballet technique with a focus on posture, balance and strength building. Noon1:15 p.m. International Academy of Dance Santa Cruz. info@iadance.com. $10. TAI CHI FOR ARTHRITIS Tai Chi for Arthritis is designed to be safe and effective for those living with arthritis and other chronic diseases. Designed to improve balance, flexibility and posture, and to increase strength, range of motion and energy. Advanced 2-3 p.m. Beginner 3-4 p.m. 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz.475-478. $60. YOGA FOR WOMEN WITH CANCER Alllevels yoga for women with cancer. 3:30-4:30 p.m. 8035 Soquel Drive, Aptos. fsa-cc.org/ womencare. Free. HOW TO TEACH YOGA Instructor permission required for enrollment. This course covers lesson planning, class organization, posture sequencing, integrating practices, and how to speak effectively as a yoga teacher. 7:30-9 p.m. Nourish, 130 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 035-9533 ext. 5. TRIPLE P SEMINAR: GETTING TEENS CONNECTED Attend this free parenting seminar to learn strategies to encourage your teen to form positive connections with others. Seminar participants will learn ways to help teens: be confident, develop social skills, plan ahead, keep their commitments and take care of others. 5:30-7 p.m. 4450 Capitola Road, Capitola. 465-2217. DECOLONIZING OUR MINDS Professor Fernando Leiva from UCSC will be discussing how we can change our perceptions and thinking from Anglo-centered >42
LIVE AUCTION
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8 PM SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2016 Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium
POPS CONCERT
“Hits of The Beach Boys” with Special Guests Papa Doo Run Run Badelt | Mendelssohn | Smetana | Sousa Films: Extreme Surfing with Local Legends and Visual History of Surfing in Santa Cruz
Photo: Dan Yoo
Tickets: $27–$72 Civic Box Office: 831.420.5260
Our mission is to end hunger and malnutrition by educating and involving the community.
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Season Media Sponsors: ARTS COUNCIL SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
Street Party with Kuzanga Marimba Band Wear your best Aloha Wear to win a prize! Artist Sponsors: Richard Klevins and Gay Nichols with Lighthouse Bank Film Sponsor: Cheryl Webster
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CALENDAR
the 10th Annaul Santa Cruz
GREEK FOOD FAIRE AUTHENTIC CUISINE • SPIRITS • LIVE MUSIC • DANCING
MAY 13, 14 and 15 2016 FREE ADMISSION! For information call 831.429.6500 or visit our website www.livelikeagreek.com Proceeds benefit Prophet Elias Greek Orthodox Church, Santa Cruz
THURSDAY 5/5 LUNAFEST 2016 Besides the whole pay discrepancy thing, the ridiculous beauty standards, agism, etc., one of Hollywood’s most absurd pitfalls is the glaring lack of women directors. Go to our film guide and scroll through the list of films opening this week. Most directors are men—it’s just the way things are. And it’s really about time that this changes, which is why Lunafest showcases award-winning short films by, for and about women. This year’s festival debuts its nine films featuring a wide array of female stories from boxing to housewifery, fighting breast cancer to parenting a transgender boy. This year’s festival will benefit WomenCARE of Santa Cruz County. Info: 7 p.m. Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. lunafest.org. $20-$35.
<40 precepts to one that embraces all the people of the world. 18 and up. 7 p.m. 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. 476-6424. Free.
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
FOOD & WINE
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TRIVIA NIGHT This festive event brings together trivia aficionados, boneheads and the chic geek for a night of boisterous fun. 8:30 p.m. Woodstock’s Pizza, 710 Front St., Santa Cruz. 427-4444. CHILDISH GRAND REOPENING & CINCO DE MAYO PARTY Come out for the grand reopening of Childish Santa Cruz and a Cinco de Mayo celebration. Enjoy free drinks, food, dancing, art projects and more. 4-7 p.m. Childish, 1127 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. 454-8208. Free.
GROUPS OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS OA is a 12-step program to stop eating compulsively. 1-2 p.m. Trinity Presbyterian Church, Youth Room, 420 Melrose Ave., Santa Cruz. santacruzoa.org/ meetings or 429-7906. Free. VOTE FOR NEW LEAF ENVIROTOKEN
BENEFICIARIES Help decide which local nonprofits will be beneficiaries of New Leaf’s Envirotoken program for a year. Whenever you reuse a grocery bag at New Leaf, you receive a 10¢ Envirotoken to donate to the nonprofit of your choice. Vote online until May 31 at newleaf. com/community/envirotokens. New Leaf Community Markets. Free. SLV CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP Are you a caregiver of someone with Alzheimer's, dementia, or other long-term illness? Connect with others, find out about services to help you, plus get valuable information and support. 2 p.m. Highlands Park, 8500 Hwy. 9, Ben Lomond. facebook.com/valleywomensclub/ Free. BUFFER LOCAL SANTA CRUZ MEETUP As part of the new Buffer Local program, now you can come out and meet new friends in the Buffer community! We'll mix and mingle over snacks and drinks at Midtown Cafe. Must be 21 and older. 5:30-6:30 p.m. 1121 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. Free. LOSS OF SPOUSE OR PARTNER GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP An eight-week grief support group for those grieving the death of a spouse or partner, provided by Hospice
CALENDAR of Santa Cruz County, May 5-June 23. Preregistration is required. 6:30 p.m. 6134 Hwy. 9, Felton. 335-6600. Free.
HEALTH ENTRE NOSOTRAS GRUPO DE APOYO Open to Spanish-speaking women with all types of cancer from diagnosis through treatment and the healing process. Meets every first and third Thursday of the month. Call to register. 6-8 p.m. Entre Nosotras, Watsonville. 761-3973. Free. WOMENCARE: LAUGHTER YOGA Laughter yoga for women with cancer meets the first and third Thursdays. 12:30-1:30 p.m. Call WomenCARE to register: 457-2273. WomenCARE. Free. FOOD ADDICTS IN RECOVERY ANONYMOUS Obsessed with food, weight or dieting? FA is a program based on the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. There are no dues, fees or weighins at FA meetings. 9-10:30 a.m. 420 Melrose Ave., Santa Cruz. Elana, 435-0680. Free. ARM-IN-ARM CANCER SUPPORT GROUP2 For women with advanced, recurrent and metastatic cancers. Registration required. 12:302 p.m. WomenCARE 457-2273. Free.
MUSIC ACOUSTIC THURSDAY Featuring live music by David Jeremy. Enjoy light refreshments at our Santa Cruz showroom from 5:30-8:30 p.m. Tepui Tents, 2703 41st Ave., Soquel. tepuitents.com Free.
FRIDAY 5/6 ARTS STORY TIME Free with Museum admission and for MOD Members. 10:30-11 a.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888424-8035. Free. SENSORY PLAY Join us in the MOD Workshop for this new weekly class exploring sensory play activities. Messy sensory play gives young children endless ways to develop and learn, while using all their senses for creative thinking. 3-3:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of
FIRST FRIDAY SANTA CRUZ Founded by the Santa Cruz Institute of Contemporary Arts, First Friday is an independent event designed to support a strong cultural environment through the promotion of Artists. 5 p.m. Downtown Santa Cruz. firstfridaysantacruz.com. Free. JUICY ABSTRACTS Abstract painter Sonia Calderon opens her studio on First Friday to show her latest works, which explore urban spaces and Kirchner’s One night Stands. Come out and meet the artist, ask questions about her work, and enjoy other artists at the nearby Tannery. Michaelangelo Gallery, 1111 River St., Santa Cruz. 6-9 p.m. GRAND OPENING SELF-LOVE CELEBRATION It’s celebration time. Join us for a our grand opening party at Pure Pleasure’s bigger, better, beautiful new location. 18 and up. 6-9 p.m. 204 Church St., Santa Cruz. 466-9870 or purepleasureshop.com. Free.
CLASSES CHAIR YOGA WITH SUZI Instructor Suzi Mahler, CMT NE will guide you through a series of gentle seated yoga postures that are performed slowly and with breath awareness. 9:30 a.m. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 479-1055. $5. ARGENTINE TANGO DANCING Tango Open Dancing. 8-11 p.m. Tannery World Dance and Cultural Center, 1060 River St., Santa Cruz. For info on beginners classes please contact tangoalternativo@gmail.com. $10/$8/$5. FREE TEEN YOGA (13-17) Teens welcome at the Santa Cruz Teen Center in the Louden Nelson Community Center for FREE yoga. Stretch, strengthen, and relax. 4:30-5:30 p.m. 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. stephaniembain@ gmail.com. Free.
FOOD & WINE EVENT SANTA CRUZ FOOD TRUCK ROUNDUP Event Santa Cruz and Food Trucks A Go Go present: The Food Truck RoundUp. Come on down to our RoundUp, pull up a hay bale, and listen in on a great discussion with area event organizers, enjoy great food, plus great beer from Humble Sea Brewery. 5-8 p.m. Delaware Addition, 2120 Delaware Ave., Santa Cruz. 408-282-3878. $3. WATSONVILLE FARMERS MARKET This market is in the heart of the famously bountiful Pajaro Valley. Peaceful and family>44 oriented, the Hispanic heritage of
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
KEN CONSTABLE IN THE ROCKROOM LOUNGE Ken Constable has been part of the Santa Cruz music scene since the late eighties. He has performed in numerous legendary clubs on the West Coast such as Whiskey-A-Go Go, Slim’s, Bimbo’s 365 Club and the Catalyst. 6:309:30 p.m. Shadowbrook Restaurant, 1750 Wharf Road, Capitola. 475-1222.
Discovery. 888-424-8035. Free with admission.
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2016
CALENDAR <43 this community gives this market a “mercado” feel. 2-7 p.m. 200 Main St., Watsonville.
Thursday, May 5th at 7pm Del Mar Theatre, Santa Cruz Tickets $20-$35
womencaresantacruz.org
GROUPS CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS SUPPORT GROUP Is clutter getting you down? Feeling discouraged about all your stuff? There is hope. Come to this weekly 12-Step group for understanding and support. 5:30 p.m. Sutter Maternity and Surgery Center, 2900 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz.477-2200. Free.
Available at lunafestsc2016.brownpapertickets.com
Help us support WomenCARE of Santa Cruz
HEALTH
LUNAFEST is a national traveling film festival of award-winning shortfilms by, for and about women. (But men are invited too!) Visit LUNAFEST.org for more info about this year’s films.
VITAMIN B12 FRIDAY Receiving B12 via injection means that people can increase their energy. B12 Fridays are a fun time for people to meet and mingle. 3-6 p.m. Thrive Natural Medicine 2840 Park Ave., Soquel. 515-8699.
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CIRCLE TIME Join us in the MOD Lounge for rhythm and song, in both English and Spanish. Let your little one explore musical instruments and finger puppets while everyone sings. Developmentally designed for ages 0-3. 10:1511:15 a.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-424-8035 Free with admission. JOE FERRARA San Jose native, Joe Ferrara, has been entertaining audiences from Santa Cruz to San Francisco since his first gig at the Grog and Sirloin in Los Gatos in 1968. Joe's rich baritone voice and comfort with his audience have attracted fans of all ages. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Shadowbrook Restaurant,1750 Wharf Road, Capitola. 475-1511.
OUTDOORS ECOLOGY ACTION'S BIKE WEEK Ecology Action's 29th Annual Spring Bike to Work program is finally here! We have an amazing lineup of family-friendly, bike-tastic events all week long from May 6th-13th. 877 Cedar St., Suite 240, Santa Cruz. 426-5925 or ecoact.org. Free.
SATURDAY 5/7 ARTS TINKER TIME Come join us for Tinker Time, an open-art hour for kids to learn and explore through art. 1-2 p.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-424-8035. Free with admission. SANTA CRUZ HIGH SCHOOL’S
PRODUCTION OF THE COMEDY OF ERRORS Santa Cruz High School’s Spring Production of Shakespeare’s ‘The Comedy of Errors.’ 7 p.m. on May 6, 7, 13, and 14, in the Santa Cruz High School Auditorium. 415 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 566-1586 or santacruzhightheatre.weebly.com. $8/$6.
BUSINESS KLUB NICO THIRD ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION SALE Klub Nico is Celebrating the third anniversary of their flagship store in Aptos with a huge sale. Beautiful heels, sandals, booties and more all up to 75 percent off. Just in time for Mother’s Day, Graduation and summer. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 783 Rio Del Mar, Aptos. 684-2200.
CLASSES SATURDAY MORNING YOGA AT YOGA WITHIN Class will focus on the fundamentals of basic poses, offering a well-rounded practice emphasizing safe alignment, breathing techniques, and the gradual development of greater flexibility, strength and balance. 10:15 a.m. 8035 Soquel Drive, Aptos. 251-3553. $15. RHYTHM AND MOTION DANCE WORKOUT Rhythm and Motion is a high-energy dance workout. For almost 40 years dancers and nondancers have gathered in San Francisco to learn routines made up of various dance styles—hiphop, modern, jazz, Bollywood, African, Samba. 9:30-10:45 a.m. Motion Pacific, 131 Front St., Santa Cruz. 457-1616 or motionpacific.com. $14. SELF-DEFENSE STRATEGIES AND SKILLS WORKSHOP Learn to physically control your body by using power and strength in your new self-defense fighting skills. Learn how to use strong body language, so you can stop being a target for predators, bullies, and overbearing adults. 2 p.m. 1320 Mission St., Santa Cruz. 458-0900 or selfdefensestrategiesskills.gr8.com. Free. MOTHER’S DAY POSY LUNCHEON WORKSHOP This is a beautiful activity to do for a mother/daughter as well as other family members or friends. This is fun and informative hands-on workshop where you’ll learn how to create these beautiful floral sentiments right from your own backyard. New Leaf, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. 421-0975. $75. SUCCULENT WREATH CLASS Create your own gorgeous succulent wreath. The class fee includes all instruction needed to create a beautiful 12-inch succulent wreath including the sphagnum moss wreath frame and prepped cuttings to fill the wreath. 10 a.m.
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FRIDAY 5/6 ‘FORGOTTEN WORKS’ FIRST FRIDAY OPENING Friday, May 6, Bridget Henry and Ann Altstatt unveil their collaborative work, “Forgotten Works,” at the Felix Kulpa Gallery. It’s mixed-media, installation and film, with a series of 16th-century woodcuts channelling things like “Whom it happened unto,” and “Force cannot be overcome by force.” Wood cuts have been lost in time and Henry and Altstatt seek to give them new life through an exploration of cultural amnesia, loss of species, climate change, and geological memory. The exhibit will also feature paper works from both artists and a short stop-motion woodcut animation during the First Friday opening.
2133 Elkhorn Road, Castroville. 632-0482 or sgplants.com. $85.
FOOD & WINE APTOS FARMERS MARKET AT CABRILLO COLLEGE Voted Good Times best farmers market in Santa Cruz County. With more than 90 vendors, the Aptos Farmers Market offers an unmatched selection of locally grown produce and specialty foods. 8 a.m.-Noon, Saturdays, Cabrillo College. montereybayfarmers.org or akeller@montereybayfarmers.org. Free.
WESTSIDE FARMERS MARKET The Westside Farmers Market takes place every week at the corner of Hwy. 1 and Western Drive, situated on the northern edge of Santa Cruz’s greenbelt. This market serves the communities of the west-end of Santa Cruz including Boony Doon, North Coast, UCSC Campus and is a short trip from Downtown. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Mission St., and Western Drive, Santa Cruz. 454-0566. SCOTTS VALLEY FARMERS MARKET Started in 2009 with the City of Scotts Valley, the market represents farmers and specialty food purveyors along with cook-to-order >46
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Did you know that....
CALENDAR
in 2001, the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit was formed at Dominican? Prior to that, 100% of newborns needing intensive care went to Stanford Hospital, requiring their parents to stay in hotels or make the drive to be near their baby. 85% now stay at Dominican for their care.
Your donations help us stay on the leading edge. www.supportdominican.org
SATURDAY 5/7 DAVENPORT RESOURCE SERVICE CENTER CINCO DE MAYO
Angel Martinez, Magdalena Kokot and their son Jacob.
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Jacob was born at the Dominican Hospital Neonatal Intensive Care Unit on June 5, 2014, four weeks earlier than his due date. He is now 12 lbs and growing every day.
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“The doctors and nurses at Dominican were so supportive during a very scary time for us. It felt great to give back and recognize them,”
- Angel Martinez.
Together we are bringing the very best medical care to our community
To help, call us today at 831.462.7712 givingtodominican@dignityhealth.org
Let’s put the “Cinco de Drinko” aside for a second (or eternity) and celebrate what Cinco de Mayo is really all about: culture. It’s why the Davenport Resource Service Center puts on their fundraising celebration every year, and this one will include the requisite amount of fun, food and festivity. Los Mejicas will perform their timeless folkloric dance, and White Hawks Mariachi El Jaliciense bring their Aztec dance, in addition to Zumba, belly dancing, Mexican food, art and activities. A program of the Community Action Board of Santa Cruz County, Inc., the Center provides programs for the area’s culturally diverse, low-income North Coast community with emergency and regular food distributions, recreation programs, tutoring, health services, and more. Info: Noon-4 p.m. Davenport Resource Center, 150 Church St., Santa Cruz. Free.
<45 food. This local market is the place for
the Scotts Valley community to get their fill of fresh, healthy, locally grown fruits and vegetables. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 360, Kings Valley Road, Scotts Valley. 454-0566. LESBIAN HAPPY HOUR Join us at Tampico Kitchen & Lounge for liter margaritas, $17, and full nachos con todo $9 special. Everyone welcome. 3-6 p.m. Tampico’s Kitchen & Lounge, 822 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. BIG BREW Join the Central Coast Zymurgeeks for their annual Big Brew at Seabright Brewery. This will also be a fond farewell to Brewmaster Jason Chavez as he is moving north to become owner/brewer of Kelsey Creek Brewing along with his lovely wife Caroline. 11:30 a.m. Seabright Brewery, 519 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-2739. Free.
MUSIC MUSIC TOGETHER WITH MUSICAL ME Lizz Hodgins teaches the essential Music Together class for all ages. Music Together is hosted by Musical Me in the MOD Workshop. 10-11 a.m. and 11 a.m.-Noon. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. Register at musicalme. com or 438-3514. SEASON FINALE CONCERT 5: “ODE TO JOY” Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, which includes the Choral, “Ode to Joy,” contains no less than one of Mankind’s supreme epiphanies of love and goodwill. 8 p.m. Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, 307 Church St., Santa Cruz. 462-0553. $27. VIVE OAXACA CALENDA (PARADE) & FIESTA Senderos invites you to join the parade, music, dance, food fiesta to preview the Vive Oaxaca Guelaguetza. Oaxacan tamales and
CALENDAR tejate beverage for sale to benefit Senderos, an all-volunteer nonprofit in Santa Cruz providing free dance and music classes, tutoring and scholarships for Latino youth. 4-7:30 p.m. 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. 429-1964 or scsenderos. org. Free/donation. VIRTUOSO VIOLIN MEETS CELTIC GUITAR School of SC, this duo makes music that will take you on a journey into the universal Fire & Grace that connects the elements of classical, folk, and contemporary musical traditions from around the world. 7:30 p.m. 125 Canterbury Drive, Aptos. 426-9155 or communitymusicschool.org. $15. UGLY BEAUTY PLAYS BEAUTIFUL JAZZ Featuring jazz standards, boogie-woogie, and New Orleans funk, gypsy jazz. Family-friendly, just 10 minutes from downtown Santa Cruz. Davenport Roadhouse Restaurant, 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport. 426-8801. Free. MARIACHI VARGAS The universally renowned and acclaimed “Best Mariachi in the World,” Mariachi Vargas De Tecalitlan will perform one night only. 8 p.m. City National Civic of San Jose, 135 W. San Carlos St., San Jose. 408-792-4111. $43. CLAUDIO MELEGA IN THE ROCKROOM LOUNGE Claudio Melega is an eclectic and exciting vocalist and guitarist with a vast repertoire of classic rock, blues, jazz, bossa nova, flamenco and traditional Italian music. 7-10 p.m. Shadowbrook Restaurant, 1750 Wharf Road, Capitola. 475-1222.
OUTDOORS
SPRING WILDFLOWER WALKS The wildflowers are blooming! Join entertainer and wildflower expert/photographer Al Frisby on a leisurely hike, and learn how to identify and photograph several types of California wildflowers. Meet at Kelly’s Bakery on the Westside at 9 a.m. for coffee and a chat, then head north to see what’s in bloom. Optional: Bring a notebook for identification notes and camera/phone to take photographs. Details and RSVP to aljfrisby@yahoo.com. $15. BOARDWALK DEAF FEST Enjoy a fun-packed day with friends as we celebrate Northern California's deaf community. A special ride
package includes a live comedy show, rides and exclusive arcade time in Neptune's Kingdom. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. 400 Beach St., Santa Cruz. 4235590 or beachboardwalk.com/asl. $40. FULL BLOOM IN THE ROSE GARDEN AND MOTHER’S DAY OPEN HOUSE Come enjoy the full bloom in the rose garden and Mother’s Day Open House Saturday and Sunday of Mother’s Day weekend. Free cookies, ice tea and lemonade, and great wineries nearby on the Corralitos Wine Trail. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 803 Browns Valley Road, Watsonville. 728-1901 or rosesofyesterday.com. Free.
This year the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Santa Cruz County Bowl for Kids’ Sake was a great success thanks to the 400+ bowlers, corporate and organization sponsors, and community volunteers! More than $107,000 was raised over the 2 day event on April 23rd & 24th. All the proceeds stay local to help match waiting youth with their own Big Brother or Big Sister.
Thank You To All our Major Sponsors!
SPIRITUAL MEDICINE BUDDHA PRACTICE GUIDED MEDITATION Sessions include recitation of traditional Tibetan Buddhist prayers and the Medicine Buddha mantra, as well as some quiet meditation. 9:30-10:45 a.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 4628383. Donation. ZEN MEDITATION & LIFE How do you practice equanimity, kindness and compassion? Four classes on The Awakened Mind & Heart. Meditation 8:30 a.m. Class and tea: 9-10:30 a.m. Ocean Gate Zen Center, 920 41st Ave., Capitola. 8:30-10:30 a.m. 920 41st Ave., Suite B, Capitola. info@oceangatezen.org. Donation.
VOLUNTEER
We also Thank all of our Lane Sponsors for the Event: ANB Insurance Services; Appenrodt Commercial Properties; April/Vaughn Advertising; B&B Small Engine Repair; CAN Insurance; Cartwright, Scruggs, Fulton & Walther; Chris Bordner Auto Body; Erik’s Deli; Chad Hoesing CPA; Clarion Pacific Insurance; Dignity Health Dominican Hospital; Digital Benefit Advisors—Santa Cruz; Dunbar Productions; Edward Jones—Luanne Lauesen; Epic Insurance Brokers & Consultants; Erik’s Deli Café, Inc.; Freedom Lion’s Club; Graniterock; Hot Spring Spas Santa Cruz; Jacob Young Financial; JR Parrish; Santa Cruz Family Law Center; Lloyd’s Tire & Auto Service; Marathon Landscaping Service; Mauldin & Company CPA; Michael Petti Painting; Ocean Honda; Oliver Property Management; Pacific Leather Group; Pacific Underground Construction; Patrick Scheufler, An Accountancy Corporation; Print Smith; Progressive Benefit Group; Redtree Partners LP; RV’s Computers; Santa Cruz County Bank; Santa Cruz Family Law Center; Santa Cruz Host Lions Club; Santa Cruz Nutritionals; Santa Cruz Sunrise Rotary; Scarborough Lumber & Building Supply; Scott’s Body Shop; Scotts Valley Host Lions; Subaru-Mazada of Santa Cruz; Sun Ridge Farms; The Skylight Place; The Wedeen Hammer Group at Morgan Stanley in memory of Peter Middlekauff; Vaughn Marketing Group; and Watsonville Coast Produce.
38th Annual Mother’s Day Weekend
Plant Sale
Breakthroughs happen here™
ANIMAL SHELTER RELIEF RESCUE ADOPTION FAIR Come meet some adorable animals who are looking for their forever homes! Animal Shelter Relief rescues cats and dogs from high-risk situations in Santa Cruz and the surrounding areas. Our ultimate goal is to reduce euthanasia numbers at local shelters. Noon. PetSmart, 490 River St., Santa Cruz. animalshelterrelief.org.
SUNDAY 5/8 ARTS THE SANTA CRUZ OLDIES BUT GOODIES RADIO SHOW A new old radio show is debuting on KSCO. For those who remember Santa Cruz in the ’50s, ’60s, and ’70s, the show will feature a variety of guests. 6 p.m. KSCO 1080 a.m. 475-1080.
CLASSES GOOD MORNING WORKOUT Get your juices flowing. Enjoy the music and get fit at the same time. You’ll learn movement, patterns,
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Pre-Sale Fri. 3-7
May 6, 7 & 8
Friends of the Garden pre-sale, silent auction and refreshments. $25 memberships available at the gate.
Public Sale Sat. 9-2 & Sun. 10-2 All proceeds directly benefit the Horticulture Program.
”Top of Campus” Cabrillo College 6500 Soquel Dr. Aptos
Plant Inventory: http://www.cabrillo.edu/academics/horticulture/plantsale.html
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
THE HUMAN RACE WALKATHON AND FUN RUN The torch has been passed and 135 Human Race Teams have hit the pavement ready to reach their goal. You can be a champion for your community and help them Go for the Gold. Walk or jog for your favorite charity. 9 a.m. 2300 Delaware Ave., Santa Cruz. 427-5075 or humanracesc.org. Free/donation.
Thank You To All Who Participated in the 2016 Bowl For Kids’ Sake
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MAY 13-14, 2016
CALENDAR
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FRIDAY 5/6 - SATURDAY 5/7 RETHINKING MIGRATION Migration is borderless, if not for the simple reason that countries all over the globe are currently facing the countless implications and quandaries that accompany it. That’s why thinkers, scholars, students, and everyone in between are coming together on Friday, May 6, to expand the discourse on migration by delving deeper into the pervasive discord that puts “alien,” “deferral,” “detention,” and the like above “human.” This two-day seminar features guest speakers from all over the U.S., including Leisy Abrego of UCLA, Lisa Marie Cacho of University of Illinois, Alicia Schmidt Camacho of Yale University, and many more. Registration required. Info: 8:30 a.m. Merrill Cultural Center, Merrill College, UCSC, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. Free.
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environment. No partners needed. Drop-ins are welcome. 9-10 a.m. The Tannery, 1060 River St., Suite #111, Santa Cruz. Cesario $7/$5. CYPRESS HEALTH INSTITUTE, UPCOMING CLASS This is a 42-hour class with Randy Masters that may accrue toward a massage certification course. April 24-May 29. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 1119 Pacific Ave., Suite 300, Santa Cruz. Larry, larry@ cypresshealthinstitute.com or 476-2115.
FOOD & WINE MOTHER’S DAY BRUNCH Enjoy panoramic views of the Monterey Bay while treating mom to a lavish buffet brunch complete with sparkling champagne. A bountiful selection of traditional brunch favorites, complete seafood bar, omelets made to order and mouthwatering carvery
station featuring slow roasted prime rib, turkey breast and honey glazed ham. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Chaminade Spa and Resort, 1 Chaminade Lane, Santa Cruz. 475-5600. $65. SPARKLING POP-UP A surprise for moms on Mother’s Day: a tasting of prosecco, mocktails, chocolate, strawberries and more. 11 a.m.-2 p.m. New Leaf stores in Santa Cruz and Capitola. 464-7748. Free. LIVE COMEDY AT THE CROW’S NEST Crow’s Nest features live comedy, with talent from the national circuit, every Sunday night year-round. 21 and up. 2218 E. Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. 476-4560. $7. TOBY GRAY AT THE PONO Acoustic Sweet Classic Favorites & Jammin’ Originals at the Downtown Santa Cruz Oasis. 1:30-4:30 p.m. 120 Union St., Santa Cruz. 426-7666. Free.
OUTDOORS 32ND ANNUAL MOTHER’S DAY RUN FOR SHELTER This well-loved event can be enjoyed by attendees of all ages and skill levels, from the competitive runners to the weekend joggers to families who want to walk together. Starting and ending in Ramsay Park, the race route is a beautiful trek around Watsonville’s slough trails. 7-10:15 a.m. 115 Brennan St., Watsonville. 7285649 or pvshelter.org. MOTHER’S DAY WALK: WOMEN OF BIG BASIN Celebrate Mother’s Day in the park by honoring the spirited women who lived in, worked in and fought for the Basin throughout its history. Living history reenactments bring you back in time where you will meet admirable pioneer women. 1 p.m. 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. 338-8883 or parks.ca.gov. DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ ANTIQUE FAIR The Santa Cruz Antique Faire is on the second Sunday of every month from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Vendors offer an eclectic blend of antiques and unique items, vintage clothing, collectibles and more. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. 454-0566. Free.
SPIRITUAL
MEDICINE BUDDHA PUJA Medicine Buddha Puja is a prayer ceremony that is performed daily at Land of Medicine Buddha. One Sunday a month it is done in English. The other three Sundays it is done in Tibetan. 2-3 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383 or landofmedicinebuddha.org. Free/donation. INSPIRATIONAL MEDITATION SERVICE Join the Santa Cruz SRF Meditation Group for
SUBUD INTRODUCTION Subud is a worldwide association of people who follow the spiritual practice known as the Latihan Kejiwaan, an exercise of surrender to the divine force within each one of us. Reservation required. 11 a.m.-Noon. Subud Center, 3800 Old San Jose Road, Soquel. 588-3013 or santacruz.subudcalifornia.org. Free.
MONDAY 5/9 ARTS MAKE ART MONDAY Explore the creative human expression of objects through the use of varied artistic mediums. Children will paint, sketch, sculpt, design, and assemble as they make new discoveries and are delighted by art and science. 3-3:30 p.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-424-8035. Free with admission or membership.
CLASSES JAZZ: BEGINNING JAZZ FOR ADULTS An introductory study in classic American jazz choreography and technique. This class begins with placement, strength and an emphasis on turns, kicks and jumps. 1:30-2:30 p.m. International Academy of Dance Santa Cruz. info@iadance.com. $10. BEGINNING HIP-HOP FOR ADULTS HipHop is a great way to build strength, stamina and flexibility while having fun and learning to dance. No prior dance experience required. 7-8 p.m. 320 Encinal St., Santa Cruz. International Academy of Dance Santa Cruz. $10. TRIYOGA LEVEL 1 YOGA CLASS Enjoy the wealth of TriYoga. Taught by Terri Richards.9:30 a.m. 708 Washington St., Santa Cruz. 4648100. $15. DOES THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT HELP RECOVER LISTED PLANT SPECIES? Connie Rutherford, Listing and Recovery Coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Ventura-based office, will discuss >50
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NEED CERTIFICATION HOURS OR MBLEX PREP? Classes starting in May & June.... Physiology Pathology Anatomy Craniosacrial sound healing level I begins June 19th $25 community massage clinic Sun & Tues 1-5 PM reservations required 1119 Pacific Ave, Suite 300 Santa Cruz 476-2115 | CypressHealthInstitute.com
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GUIDED MEDITATION Led by Venerable Drimay, an excellent way to learn how to set up a daily meditation practice. Stabilizing meditation followed by guided contemplation on various Dharma topics. 9:30 am - 10:30 am Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Donation.
CHANUKAH HOSTED BY CHADEISH YAMEINU Celebrate with Santa Cruz’s Jewish Renewal congregation. Join with entire congregation and Munchkin Minyan lighting candles, singing, and snacking. Visit website for more details. 4:30-6:30 p.m. Peace United Church, 900 High St., Santa Cruz. cysantacruz.com. Free.
Recycle
FIESTA DE CANTE GITANO AT KUUMBWA SANTA CRU— FLAMENCO DIRECT FROM SPAIN Their singing and dancing embody a deep ancestral memory passed down through the generations in a language of gestures and melisma. They take us back to a time when the Gypsy cantes were enmeshed in the harsh reality of poverty and social marginalization from which they emerged. 320 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. 427-2227. $30.
Sunday morning Inspirational Service. This service includes inspirational readings from the teachings of Paramahansa Yogananda. 11 a.m.noon. Call for location, 334-2088.
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CYPRESS HEALTH INSTITUTE New Class. Physiology (36hrs), is taught by Athene Eisenhardt. and is offered as a stand alone class or counts towards your massage certification program. It begins on May 9th thru June 6th. 8 a.m.-Noon. 1119 Pacific Ave. Suite 300, Santa Cruz. 476-2115.
HEALTH ARM-IN-ARM CANCER SUPPORT GROUP For women with advanced, recurrent and metastatic cancers. Registration required. 12:30-2 p.m. WomenCARE. 457-2273. Free.
MUSIC BILL CHARLAP TRIO Pianist Bill Charlap is a master of the piano trio format. From American Songbook classics to obscure bebop tunes, his sense of phrasing and harmonic intuition keeps the music percolating at all times. 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. 427-2227. $30. MUSIC TOGETHER WITH MUSICAL ME Lizz Hodgins teaches the essential Music Together class for all ages. Music Together is hosted by Musical Me in the MOD Workshop. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 438-3514. Register through musicalme.com.
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progress and setbacks in conservation and recovery efforts using examples of listed plant species from Central Coast counties. 7:30 p.m. 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. 427-2998. Free.
(831) 462-2105
SPIRITUAL MONDAY DROP-IN MEDITATION Led by Venerable Yangchen and Venerable Gyalten Basic meditation instruction and practice. One session of mindfulness meditation, followed by guided reflection meditation. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha, 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. 462-8383. Donation.
TUESDAY 5/10 ART STORY TIME Join us for Storytime. Free with Museum admission and for MOD Members. 10:30-11 a.m. Santa Cruz Children’s Museum of Discovery. 888-424-8035. Free with admission. OFF THE LIP RADIO SHOW Tune in to the Off the Lip Radio Show, the world's only live show dedicated to surfing and skateboarding. 7-8 p.m. 1080 AM KSCO. 818-7225.
CLASSES HOW TO TEACH YOGA This course covers lesson planning, class organization, posture sequencing, integrating practices, and how to speak effectively as a yoga teacher. The ethics of yoga teaching professionalism will also be explored. 7:30-9 p.m. 130 Walnut Ave., Santa Cruz. 035-9533 ext. 5. GUIDED MEDITATION FOR STRESS REDUCTION Guided meditation to reduce your stress with Renee Rowe. Every Tuesday evening. 7-7:45 p.m. The Barn Studio, 104 S. Park Way, Santa Cruz. awakentoyourpath.com. Donation.
HEALTH CANCER SUPPORT GROUP WomenCARE support group for women newly diagnosed or undergoing treatment for cancer. Registration required. 12:30-2 p.m. WomenCARE. 4572273. Free. 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. 9:30 a.m. California Grey Bears, 2710 Chanticleer Ave., Santa Cruz. 479-1055. $5.
MUSIC SHERRY AUSTIN WITH HENHOUSE Gritty folk with a bit of twang, Henhouse delights fans with a blend of folk, country and rock. 6-9 p.m. Davenport Roadhouse, 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport.
OUTDOORS FELTON FARMERS MARKET The Felton Farmers’ Market started in 1987 and is the second oldest market in Santa Cruz County. In 2009, SCCFM took over operations and has since increased the variety of certified organic fruits and vegetables, artisan foods and implemented the EBT/SNAP benefit program. 2:30-6:30 p.m. 120 Russell Ave., Felton. 454-0566.
SPIRITUAL OUR BUDDHA POTENTIAL In this course we are working with the root text Sublime Continuum which explains our Buddha potential by way of ten similes. This is a course for those interested in the advanced level of Buddhist studies. 7-9 p.m. Land of Medicine Buddha 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. office@landofmedicnebuddha, 462-8383 or landofmedicinebuddha.org. Donations.
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SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
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51
MUSIC CALENDAR
LOVE YOUR
LOCAL BAND HENRY CHADWICK
What’s a Stupid Brother to do? For years, Henry Chadwick played poppunk with his brother George (hence their name My Stupid Brother), but that’s slowed way down now that George has left Santa Cruz. “He moved to New York and got his master’s,” says Henry of his brother George Chadwick. “He’s married, working at Apple. He’s having a life, being a real grown-up.”
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Even though Henry stayed in Santa Cruz and continues to focus his energy on music, he’s doing some growing up as well. He’s been playing drums for the Coffis Brothers, but folks can get a listen to his new tunes on his debut solo record, Guest At Home, which he’s releasing Sunday at Moe’s—only his second show with live band Henry Chadwick and Battlesnake. Fans of My Stupid Brother’s pop-punk sound might be a little surprised at the direction Henry has gone.
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“I’ve definitely been into other music for a while. It’s definitely a new sort of sound for me,” Henry says. “Most of the songs have a blend of old ’60s and ’70s influence—the Kinks, the Beatles, and some Bowie and T-Rex—but also some Nirvana, too. Hopefully it falls pleasantly between genres.” The first song that Henry released off his EP, “Alright,” has a bit of an electronic feel and a mid-tempo groove, which is an outlier for the rest of the record. Also, his live band, Battlesnake, performs all the tunes in a much more rock ’n’ roll style. AARON CARNES
INFO: 8 p.m. Sunday, May 8. Moe’s, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $7/adv, $10/door. 479-1854.
LANEY JONES & THE SPIRITS
WEDNESDAY 5/4 FOLK-ROCK
LANEY JONES & THE SPIRITS When Laney Jones first picked up the banjo, it was to escape the pressures of life as a college student pursuing an international business degree. Jones soon found herself thrust into a career as a roots singer-songwriter, where she garnered acclaim and even attracted the attention of bluegrass legend Alison Krauss. Not one to be stuck in any one genre, however, Jones started experimenting with incorporating pop and rock into her sound. The result is a fresh and rocking blend of old-time strings and contemporary styles. CAT JOHNSON INFO: 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $10. 429-6994.
FRIDAY 5/6 FUNK-JAZZ
KARL DENSON’S TINY UNIVERSE Why don’t more funk jams have flutes?
When Denson’s funky-jazzy band the Tiny Universe starts up with one of their infectious grooves, and Denson pulls out his flute to lay down the melody, I’m not going to lie—I need to dance. On their latest record, they even do a rendition of the White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army” that is downright funkalicious. Is that even possible? Denson’s also an excellent sax player, and he’ll bust that out, too. Fans of good dance music will appreciate how he melds raw, hip-shaking funk rhythms with jazz-level compositions. It’s satisfying to the heart and the head. AARON CARNES INFO: 9 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 479-1854.
FOLK
SHARON ALLEN With a sweet, strong voice that brings to mind early Joan Baez or Kate Wolf, Sharon Allen is one of the quiet standouts of the local music scene. From 1979 to 2002, she fronted blues-rock band the Firebirds, and she’s performed with a number of legendary musicians, including B.B. King, Boz Scaggs, and Robben Ford. It was her work with local all-star group Sherry Austin and Henhouse, however, where she cultivated her
songwriting chops. On Friday, Allen and her band, the Dusty Boots, blend folk, alt-country and blues into a swinging, danceable celebration of music. CJ INFO: 8 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15/adv, $18/door. 335-2800.
ACOUSTIC
TOMMY EMMANUEL Tommy Emmanuel’s set list might include some Chet Atkins, Beatles, or even “Somewhere Over The Rainbow” from The Wizard of Oz. So it isn’t so much a genre (or genres) that Tommy Emmanuel plays, it’s how he plays the songs. He’s a phenomenal acoustic guitar player that utilizes some very complex, nuanced fingerpicking techniques. He plays bass parts, melodies and chords all at once. AC INFO: 8 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $39.50. 423-8209.
SATURDAY 5/7 ROCK
BEGGAR KINGS Even in a town as famous as Santa
MUSIC
BE OUR GUEST FORMANISM: BRUCE FORMAN TRIO
SHARON ALLEN
INFO: 8 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $20. 427-2227.
ROOTS
EMI SUNSHINE How many 11-year-olds do you know who count the Louvin Brothers as a key musical influence, can sing the cobwebs off of traditional old hymns, and have already made their Grand Ole Opry debut? Probably none. Unless, of course, you already know about Emi Sunshine. Hailing from East Tennessee, this extraordinary young multi-instrumentalist has a soulful sound that is as deep and true as just about anything you’ve heard coming out of Appalachia.
Where Ms. Sunshine is headed remains to be seen, but roots music fans would be wise to keep an eye on this one. CJ INFO: 8 p.m. Don Quixote’s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15. 335-2800.
Bay Area native. Together, this trio exemplifies the quicksilver wit, ebullient joy and improvisational imperative of jazz at its best. ANDREW GILBERT INFO: 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $30/adv, $35/door. 427-2227.
MONDAY 5/9
POST-METAL
JAZZ
SO HIDEOUS
BILL CHARLAP TRIO Bill Charlap’s trio is one of the marvels of straight-ahead jazz, a sleek and efficiently swinging ensemble that interprets standards with entrancing momentum, exquisite dynamic detail and probing harmonic insight. The scion of an accomplished show biz family (his father was Broadway composer “Moose” Charlap and his mother is Grammy-nominated vocalist Sandy Stewart), Charlap refined his craft as an accompanist for masters such as altoist Phil Woods, vocalist Carol Sloane and baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan. Since stepping forward as a leader in 1997, he’s performed and recorded with the superlative rhythm section tandem of drummer Kenny Washington and (unrelated) bassist Peter Washington, a
What’s a metalhead to do if they secretly love sweeping, orchestral classical music, but don’t want to be labeled as “square” by their friends? Aha! So Hideous is here to save the day. Here’s a band that, first off, has a name that is pure metal, and second, has some brutal hardcore/black metal guitars. But really, So Hideous is an orchestral band. They even write all their music on piano first, before flushing it out with the rest of the instruments. On their latest record Laurestine, they even hired a 30-piece orchestra to play on their tunes. It’s emotionally stirring and marries gorgeous and ugly music really well. Hell, maybe So Hideous can be the gateway drug for classical fans to start digging on some metal. AC INFO: 8:30 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $12/adv, $15/door. 429-4135.
INFO: 7 p.m. Thursday, May 12. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $22/ adv, $27/door. 427-2227. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Friday, May 6 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.
IN THE QUEUE DAKHABRAKHA
Eastern European folk-fusion quartet from Kiev. Wednesday at Kuumbwa SISTERS MORALES
Blues, Americana and ranchera for Cinco de Mayo. Thursday at Don Quixote’s JADAKISS
New York-based rap giant. Thursday at Catalyst SCRATCHDOG STRING BAND
Acoustic trio out of Portland, Oregon. Saturday at Crepe Place LUCIUS
Celebrated pop quintet from Brooklyn. Saturday at Catalyst
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
Cruz, there are still hidden gems, if one knows where to look. This Saturday, two of those jewels shine together as the Beggar Kings perform at the Kuumbwa Jazz Center. Consisting of a “who’s who” in the local music scene, the Beggar Kings are the Bay Area’s premiere Rolling Stones tribute band. Throughout the years, they’ve tackled some of the Stones’ toughest albums, like Sticky Fingers, and keep a wide array of Jagger and Richards classic hits in the back pocket. It’s only rock ’n’ roll, but you’ll like it. MAT WEIR
Does 20 appearances at the Monterey Jazz Festival secure your standing as a musical superstar? How about 17 albums, or work on three Clint Eastwood films? These are just a few of the feathers in the cap of jazz guitarist Bruce Forman. Drawing from be-bop, western swing and more, Forman bridges eras and styles with a lighthearted approach to making music and an unceasing work ethic. His group Cow Bop was inducted into the Western Swing Hall of Fame in 2014, and he’s provided more than 2,500 free music lessons for young musicians through his JazzMasters Workshops. On May 12, he brings his trio, comprising Alex Frank on bass and Marvin “Smitty” Smith on drums, to town. CAT JOHNSON
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LIVE MUSIC
Thursday May 5th 9pm $25/30 New Orleans Funk Favorites
DUMPSTAPHUNK Friday May 6th 9pm $25/30 Funk & Soul Dance Party
KARL DENSON’S TINY UNIVERSE Saturday May 7th 8:30pm $10/13
AQUARIUS RESTAURANT Santa Cruz Dream Inn 175 W Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz
Americana/Country Double Bill & CD Release
EDGE OF THE WEST + LACY J. DALTON Sunday May 8th 8pm $7/10
Album Release Celebration With
HENRY CHADWICK + JESSE DANIEL Thursday May 12th 8:30pm $8/12 THE SPECIALS Lead Guitarist
RODDY RADIATION + TINGLY w/ MIKE MATTINGLY Friday May 13th 9pm $9/12
Red Hot Roots Rock Band Debuts Moe’s
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
THE RECORD COMPANY
54
WED THE APPLETON GRILL 410 Rodriguez St, Watsonville
May 14th 7 COME 11- album release party May 15th CURTIS SALGADO (afternoon) May 15th MATT ANDERSON (eve) May 18th MIPSO + STEEP RAVINE May 19th KING JAMMY May 20th NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE May 21st SAMBADÁ May 24th KING GIZZARD May 27th, 28th THE ENGLISH BEAT May 30th GONDWANA + Fayuca June 1st WORLD’S FINEST + ABALONE GREY June 2nd ROYAL JELLY JIVE + SOUL OF JOHN BLACK June 3rd THE ITALS June 4th THE DAVID NELSON BAND June 23rd DAVE & PHIL ALVIN June 25th ISRAEL VIBRATION July 7th SIERRA LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL STARS July 8th THE COFFIS BROTHERS + MCCOY TYLER July 15th LOS AMIGOS INVISIBLES July 16th MELVIN SEALS & JGB July 23rd LA SANTA CECILIA July 28th SISTER SPARROW & THE DIRTY BIRDS July 31st ANA POPOVIC August 20th B-SIDE PLAYERS August 26th UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE August 27th THE MEDFLYS September 2nd LUCIANO
WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854
APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos
BAYVIEW HOTEL 8041 Soquel Dr, Aptos
5/4
Al Frisby 6-8p
5/5
THU Fulminante, Loteria Bingo 6-8p
FRI
Preacher Boy 6-8p
5/6
SAT
5/7
5/8
SUN Mother’s Day Brunch Special 3-7p
Happy Hour 3-7p
Happy Hour 3-7p
Mark Hummel 6-8p
Lloyd Whitney 1-5p Al Frisby Blues Mechanics 6-8p 6-8p
Minor Thirds Trio 6:30-9:30p
MON
5/9
TUE
5/10
Happy Hour 3-7p Kid and Lisa 6-8p
Rand Rueter 6-8p
Minor Thirds Trio 7-10p
Live Jazz & Wine Tasting Salsa Bahia 6-9p 6-9p
Tango Ecstasy 6-9:30p
DJ
BLUE LAGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Comedy Night/80s Night Free 8:30p
Wally Joyner, Nerves & guests Free 9p
Year of the Fist, The Sea The Box (Goth Night) Wolves, 12tomidnight 9p $5 9p
Post Punk Night 9p
BLUE LOUNGE 529 Seabright Ave, Santa Cruz
Pride Night 9p
Party w/Raina 9p
Incidental Live Music Revue w/Alisha
Karaoke
Locals Night, Music w/Lil Billy
Karaoke 8p-Close
Karaoke 8p-Close
BOARDWALK BOWL 115 Cliff St, Santa Cruz
Karaoke 8p-Close
BOCCI’S CELLAR 140 Encinal St, Santa Cruz
Funk Night w/ Light the Band Free 8p
Drifting Compass 9-11:45p Roadhouse Karaoke Free 8p
BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola CASA SORRENTO 393 Salinas St, Salinas
Swing Dance $5 5:30p Al Pancho & Dub Warriors Free 9p
Sound Off Saturdays Reggae Party Free 9p
Karaoke 9p
Karaoke 9p
Songwriter Showcase 7-10p
Lucius $16/$18 8p
Aesop Rock $18/$22 8p
Jazz Society Donation 3:30p Lis the Songwriter Free 8p
Intangabillies Free 8p
DJ Luna 9p
CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Comedy Night 9p
Jadakiss $20/$25 8p
Ninkasi Tap Takeover Free 8p
Terravita $25/$30 7:30p
OPEN LATE EVERY NIGHT! wednesday 5/4
So Hideous $12/$15 8p
International Music Hall and Restaurant
FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95 Thu May 5
LANEY JONES AND THE SPIRITS w / SUN MAIDEN
thursday 5/5
ANTON DOTY w / SUPERFOOL w / HIS AND HER ANATOMY
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $10 Door
free Show 9pm
w / THE DESERT KIND
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $8 Door
$15 adv./$18 door 21 + 8pm Sat May 7
Sun May 8
7 COME 11 Show 9pm $5 Door
wednesday 5/11
DOGGONE LONESOME
w / CHRIS ACKER AND THE GROWING BOYS w / TODD DAY-WAITE'S PIGPEN Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $8 Door MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz
429-6994
She’s 11 & A Stunning Rising Star from Tennessee
Rick Scott, Neal Hellman, Verlene Schermer 7pm Concert Funny Stories and Great Songs
$15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7pm Thu May 12
Jeffrey Foucault
Smart, Literate, Engaging
$18 adv./$18 door 21 w/parent 7:30pm Fri May 13
Show 9pm $3 Door
TUESday 5/10
EmiSunshine plus The Rain
$15 adv./$15 door 21 w/parent 8pm
monday 5/9
mix tape monday
Sharon Allen with Her Dusty Boots and Blues Folk, Alt-Country and Blues
saturday 5/7
SCRATCHDOG STRING BAND
Cinco de Mayo Concert
$12 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm Fri May 6
friday 5/6
THE 2ND EVER PEOPLE'S DISCO!
Sisters Morales
Mexican-American sisters from San Antonio COME EARLY FOR CHICKEN MOLE DINNER SPECIAL
Advance Tickets at www.ticketweb.com
Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $10 Door
Jeffery Austin $10/$12 7:30p
Almost Cut My Hair Tribute to Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
$15 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 8pm Sat May 14
Foreverland Electrifying 14-Piece Michael Jackson Tribute $17 adv./$20 door 21 + 8pm
COMING RIGHT UP
Sun. May 15 Villanelle 2pm Jazz, Celtic, Folk Sun. May 15 Ronny Cox + Stevie Coyle 7pm Ronny, singer-songwriter, movie star, & Stevie of Waybacks Wed. May 18 A Bear’s Choice Dave Abear of Melvin Seals & JGB Reservations Now Online at www.donquixotesmusic.com Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am
LIVE MUSIC WED
5/4
CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville
Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p
CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
Lany Jones and the Spirits, Sun Maiden $10 9p
CROW’S NEST 2218 E. Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz
Yuji Tojo $3 8p
THU
5/5
FRI
5/6
SAT
5/7
SUN
5/8
MON
5/9
5/10
KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p Anton Doty, Superfool, His and Her Anatomy $10 9p Cinco de Mayo, The Redlight District $5 8:30p
The 2nd Ever People’s Disco Free 9p
Scratchdog String Band, The Desert Kind $8 9p
The D’Oh Bros $7 9:30p
Pacific Grove $7 9:30p
DAV. ROADHOUSE 1 Davenport Ave, Davenport
Live Comedy $7 9p
Mix Tape Mondays $3 9p
7 Come 11 $5 9p
Open Funk Jam Free 8p
Reggae Party Free 8p Sherry Austin w/ Henhouse
Ugly Beauty
DON QUIXOTE’S 6275 Hwy 9, Felton
TUE
Sisters Morales $12/$15 7:30p
THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville
Sharon Allen w/Her Dusty Boots and Blues $15/$18 8p
EmiSunshine, The Rain $15 8p
Soul Doubt
Hendu VooDoo
Mike PZ 9p
Olde Blue 2p
HENFLING’S 9450 Hwy 9, Ben Lomond
Flingo 7:30p
IT’S WINE TYME 312 Capitola Ave, Capitola
Open Mic 7p
KUUMBWA 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz
DakhaBrakha $25 7p
Beggar Kings $20 8p
MALONE’S 4402 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley
Live Music 5:30-9p
Karaoke w/Ken 9p
MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel
7th Wave 7-10p
10 O’Clock Lunch Band 7-10p
Tsunami 8-11p
Bombshell Bullys 8-11p
MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz
Broken Shades 6p
Al Frisby 6p
Lloyd Whitley 6p
Al Frisby 6p
The Present Tense Free 8p
Rick Scott, Neal Hellman, Verlene Schermer $15 7p
Rob Vye 6p
Wednesday, May 4 • 7 pm
DAKHA BRAKHA Everything from punk-pop to traditional Ukrainian songs Saturday, May 7 • 8 pm
BEGGAR KINGS
Tickets: Streetlight Records and Tix.com Sunday, May 8 • 7 pm
Bay Area Flamenco presents: FIESTA FLAMENCA DE CANTE GITANO Tickets: BayAreaFlamenco.org
Monday, May 9 • 7 pm | No Comp Tix
Beat Street 4p
Bay Area Flamenco $30/$50 7p
Celebrating Creativity Since 1975
Roadhouse Karaoke 7:30p
Thursday, May 12 • 7 pm
FORMANISM: BRUCE FORMAN TRIO Bop-oriented guitarist!
Bill Charlap Trio $30 7p
Rand Rueter 6p
BILL CHARLAP TRIO From the Great American Songbook classics to obscure bebop tunes
Monday, May 16 • 7 pm
Preacher Boy 6p
ALFREDO RODRIGUEZ TRIO A new generation of Cuban pianistss featuring guest vocalist Ganavya Doraiswamy 1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTS Tuesday, May 17 • 7 pm | Free!
MASTER CLASS SERIES MURRAY LOW: Rhythm and the Jazz Language Thursday, May 19 • 7 pm
THE GUITARSONISTS: CHRIS CAIN, MIGHTY MIKE SCHERMER AND DANIEL CASTRO A trifecta of blues guitar slingers! Sunday, May 22 • 7:30 pm
CAFE MUSIQUE
Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com
Monday, May 23 • 7 & 9 pm | No Comp Tix
JACK DEJOHNETTE TRIO One of the greatest drummers the genre has ever known Tuesday, May 24 • 7 pm
Wednesday, May 25 • 8 pm
HAPA
Tickets: Streetlight Records & Ticketfly.com
5/26 6/2 6/6 6/9
Santa Cruz Women of Jazz Julian Lage Trio Quest: Dave Liebman,Richie Beirach, Ron McClure, Billy Hart Joey Alexander Trio
Unless noted advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records. Dinner served one hour before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wines & beer. All ages welcome.
320-2 Cedar St x Santa Cruz 831.427.2227
kuumbwajazz.org
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
KUUMBWA JAZZ HONOR BAND The top high school jazz performers in the county! Final performance of the year! 1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTS
55
1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135
LIVE MUSIC
Thursday, May 5 • In the Atrium • Ages 21+
JADAKISS plus DJ Aspect
also DJ Salatiel
Friday, May 6 • In the Atrium • Ages 21+
NINKASI TAP TAKEOVER
Lucius
FREE SHOW
Saturday, May 7 • Ages 16+ plus
Margaret Glaspy
Saturday, May 7 • In the Atrium • Ages 18+
TERRAVITA plus Rekoil
Monday, May 9 • In the Atrium • Ages 21+
SO HIDEOUS plus Bosse-de-Nage Tuesday, May 10 • Ages 16+
AESOP ROCK
Tuesday, May 10 • In the Atrium • All Ages
JEFFERY AUSTIN plus Mike Annuzzi Wednesday, May 11 • Ages 16+
Luca Turilli’s
Rhapsody
Primal Fear
May 13 Memphis May Fire/ We Came As Romans (Ages 16+) May 15 Illenium/ Said The Sky (Ages 18+) May 16 Charles Bradley (Ages 16+) May 17 Somo/ Quinn XCII (Ages 16+) May 18 B.o.B./ Scotty ATL (Ages 16+) May 19 Young Thug (Ages 16+) May 20 Leon Russell (Ages 21+) May 27 Stephen “Ragga” Marley (Ages 16+) Jun 2 Jon Pardi (Ages 16+) Jun 3 Bad Religion (Ages 21+) Jun 4 The Budos Band (Ages 16+) Jun 5 Prong (Ages 21+) Jun 10 Louis The Child (Ages 16+) Jun 16 Immortal Technique (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
WED
5/4
MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz
Hi Ya! by Little John 9:30p-2a
THU
5/5
FRI
5/6
SAT
5/7
5/8
Dumpstaphunk $25/$30 8p
Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe $25/$30 8p
SUN MON Henry Chadwick, Edge of the West, Lacy J Jesse Daniel & the Slow Dalton $10/$13 8p Learners $7/$10 7:30p
Libation Lab w/Syntax 9:30p-1:30a
Tone Sol 9:30p-1:30a
Tech Minds 9:30p-1:30a
5/9
Rasta Cruz Reggae Party Eclectic Bass Event 9:30p-Close 9:30p-Close
NEW BOHEMIA BREWERY 1030 41st Ave, Santa Cruz 99 BOTTLES 110 Walnut Ave, Santa Cruz
5/10
Hip-Hop w/DJ Marc 9:30p-Close Trivia 6-8p
Trivia 8p
PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola
Dennis Dove Jam Session w/ Vinny Johnson 7p
THE POCKET 3102 Portola Dr, Santa Cruz POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz
Groove Service 8p
THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz
Bert “Animo” Javier 6p
RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz
Ho’Omana
Eric Morrison & the Mysteries $5 9p
TBA
Jazz Jam Santa Cruz 7p
Comedy 9p
The Crux 4-7p
The Kitchenetts 4-7p
Comedy Open Mic 8p
Open Mic 7:30-11:30p
Shea Butter 10p
‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p
Johnny Hazard 6p
Traditional Hawaiian Music 6:30p
Asher Satori 12:30p Featured Acoustic 6:30p
Kathleen Madigan $25/$40 8-10p
Tommy Emmanuel $40 8-10p
Ocean Film Tour $15 7:30-9:30p
Toby Gray 1:30p Chas Cmusic 6p
Coastal Connection 6p
Ten O’Clock Lunch Band DJ 7-11p 8-12p
www.catalystclub.com
Jake Nielson Triple Threat 8-12p
The Joint Chiefs 8-12p
Kenny of Water Tower 6p Mandel Lecture, UCSC Astronomy Free 7-9p
ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola
TUE
Pam Hawkins Pro Jam 7-11p
Trivia 8p
Open Mic 7:30p
Alex Lucero 7-11p
Scratch Dog String Band 7-11p
BBQ BEER BLUES
MAY 4-10 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
BBQ
56
BEST DANCE CLUB
BEER
BLUES
Wed. May 4 Al Frisby 6-8 pm
Good Times Ad, Wed. 05/04
7 years in a row
M&A Productions Proudly Presents:
Thurs. May 5 Preacher Boy 6-8 pm
Fri. May 6 Mark Hummel 6-8 pm
Sat. May 7 Lloyd Whitney 1-5 pm Blues Mechanics 6-8 pm Sun. May 8 Al Frisby 6-8 pm Mon. May 9 Kid and Lisa 6-8 pm Tues. May 10 Rand Rueter 6-8 pm
Grammy Award-Winning Artists
Mother’s Day Sunday Mom: Thanks for having us!
LOCATED ON THE BEACH
Amazing waterfront deck views.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
See live music grid for this week’s bands.
STAND-UP COMEDY
Presented by Deacon Melvin Williams
Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily crowsnest-santacruz.com
In Memory of Sister Mattie-Mae Franklin
HAPPY HOUR
Mon–Fri from 3:30pm. Wednesday all night!
VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET
Wood-fired pizza, ice cream, unique fine gifts.
DEAL WITH A VIEW
NOW SERVING BREAKFAST
8059 APTOS ST, APTOS APTOSSTBBQ.COM | 662.1721
Special Guests - The Legendary Oakland Silvertones and local choirs
Saturday, May 14th Garfield Community Church 111 Errett Circle, Santa Cruz Doors Open - 7:00 pm Concert - 7:30 pm Tickets Sold at Location. Adult $25 Advance, $30 at the Door For More Information: 831.229.2491
Three live comedians every Sunday night.
$8.95 dinners Mon.-Fri. from 6:00pm. 209 PACIFIC AVENUE SANTA CRUZ 831.429.8070 MOTIVSC.COM
The Original Five Blind Boys of Mississippi
(831) 476-4560
LIVE MUSIC WED
5/4
THU
5/5
FRI
5/6
SAT
SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos
Nitrio w/Ron Work, Dan Robbins, Steve Roberston
SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright, Santa Cruz
Not So Young
5/7
Wally’s Cocktail Combo 7:30-11:30p
Johnny Neri Band 8-11:30p
SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola
Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p
Joe Ferrara 6:30-10p
Claudio Melega 7-10p
SIR FROGGY’S PUB 4771 Soquel Dr, Soquel
Karaoke w/Eve Ghost Town Hangmen Free 9p
WHALE CITY 490 Highway 1, Davenport
5/9
TUE
5/10
MAY 07 Warren Miller Ocean Films MAY 10 Mandell Lecture: The Search Taco Tuesday
Ricky Torres Group 6p
for Life in the Universe
MAY 18 Lecture: Chris Wilmers
Michael Gaither and Steve Kritzer $15 7:30p
Open Mic w/Mosephus 5:30p
MAY 20 Billy Elliott the Musical MAY 21 Billy Elliott the Musical
Robert Elmond Stone 5:30-7:30p
WHARF HOUSE RESTAURANT 1400 Wharf Rd, Capitola
Upcoming Shows MAY 06 Tommy Emmanuel
Brett Fowler 7-9p
Trivia Night
Thirsty Thursday, Local Music $4 5-7p
UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel
MON
MAY 05 Kathleen Madigan
Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-10p
Chas & Friends 6-9p
5/8
Yuji and Steve
SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 7500 Old Dominion Court, Aptos
TROUT FARM INN 7701 E Zayante Rd, Felton
SUN
Jessie Sabala and the Soul Pushers
YOUR PLACE 1719 Mission St, Santa Cruz
Danny Lawrence 6-9p
Daniel Martins 6-9p
Danny Lawrence 6-9pm
ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola
Kurt Stockdale Jazz Trio 6p
Live Again 9:30p
John Michael Band 9:30p
ZIZZO’S COFFEEHOUSE & WINE BAR 3555 Clares St, Capitola
Jon Kennedy 7-9:30p
Ruby & Bob Show 7-9:30p
Scotty Wright 7-9:30p
MAY 22 Mac DeMarco S O L D
Otilia and the Back Alley Boys
OUT
MAY 27 Billy Elliott the Musical MAY 28 Billy Elliott the Musical JUN 03 Billy Elliott the Musical JUN 04 Billy Elliott the Musical JUN 09 Film: Vertical Lines JUN 25 David Bromberg AUG 13 The Beggar Kings
Follow the Rio Theatre on Facebook & Twitter! National Geographic Live Speaker Series Presents:
Our 7th Year • Same Great Reputation
Same Great Location
501 River St, Santa Cruz • 831-466-9551
831.423.8209 www.riotheatre.com
May 18 Bob Poole Gorongosa Reborn 7pm
Jul 13 Pete McBride Chasing Rivers 7pm Aug 17 Ami Vitale - Rhinos, Rickshaws & Revolutions 7pm
Growrs e Lettb a le dto avail ifie qualie pat nts
We’ll matc h any local clin ad specia ic l! w/copy of th is ad
May 7 Big Bad Voodoo Daddy 8pm May 11 Jewel 8pm Jun 25 Al DiMeola 8pm Jul 2 Judy Collins 8pm Sep 15 Art Garfunkel: In Close Up 8pm
MON-SAT 12-6PM ONE STEP EVALUATION PROCESS WALK-INS WELCOME GET APPROVED OR NO CHARGE!
TUESDAY DINNER SPECIAL 2-TOPPING LARGE PIZZAS 1/2 PRICE DINE IN ONLY 6-9 ALSO KARAOKE 6-10 FRIDAY MAY 6TH DJS SIR ELEGANCE & JOEY MARTINEZ CINCO DE MAYO WEEKEND MEGA PARTY!
Sep 22 Iris Dement & Loudon Wainwright III 8pm
SATURDAY MAY 7TH QIENSAVE & THE REDLIGHT DISTRICT REGGAE ROCK, FUNK GROOVE, HIP HOP
For Tickets www.GoldenStateTheatre.com 831-649-1070
393 Salinas St, SALINAS (oldtown) 831.757.2720 // casasorrento.com
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
Jun 14 Nizar Ibrahim - Spinosaurus: Lost Giant of the Cretaceous 7pm
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FILM
CHANELLING CHET Ethan Hawke plays Chet Baker in Robert Budreau’s ‘Born to Be Blue.’
False Notes MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Invented plot can’t do justice to jazz great in ‘Born to Be Blue’ BY LISA JENSEN
58
T
he publicity for Robert Budreau’s Born to Be Blue calls it an “anti-biopic” on the troubled life of jazz trumpeter Chet Baker (now as famous as a lifelong heroin junkie as he once was as an icon of the cool West Coast jazz scene). Instead of trotting out mundane and depressing facts, the filmmaker zeroes in on a crisis point in Baker’s life, then invents a fictive character to act as Baker’s muse, conscience and sounding board. While most of what happens in their main story is not strictly true, Budreau tries to stay true to the essence of Baker through the process of invention—the way a
jazz musician might improv his way through a familiar tune. It’s not a bad idea, but it might have worked better if Budreau’s stylings as a filmmaker were more dynamic. (Think of Bob Fosse, reimagining his own life in showbiz as a glitzy musical fantasia in All That Jazz.) Budreau doesn’t quite muster up the same pizzazz; he mostly makes up stuff and presents it straightfaced, without revealing any more than a more truth-oriented telling would. Yes, there are moments when Ethan Hawke’s performance as Baker strikes just the right note of fragile, demon-haunted vulnerability— especially in the final act. But these
moments are set in a larger story that takes too long to get going, and too often loses its way. In 1966, Chet Baker (Hawke) is shivering through withdrawals in a jail cell in Italy when a Hollywood movie producer comes to see him. Flashback to 1954, a moody blackand-white sequence when youthful Chet, already a star on the West Coast, is playing at the famous Birdland jazz club in New York City for Miles Davis and Dizzy Gillespie. Between sets, nervous Chet takes a girl from the bar back to his dressing room; she introduces him to heroin just before his wife walks in on them. All of which turns out to be a
movie about Chet’s life in which he’s starring as himself. (Which must be the only way Budreau could think of to introduce scenes from the youth of a beautiful man known as “the James Dean of Jazz”—and have him played by 45-year-old Hawke.) There never was any such movie, nor was there a saucy young black actress named Jane (Carmen Ejogo), who plays his wife in the film-withinthe-film. But that doesn’t stop Budreau from turning her into the most sympathetic character in this movie. Sort of a composite of a black Frenchwoman Baker was attached to in the ’50s, and an English actress he married in the ’60s, Jane is warm, loyal and sensible. (In Budreau’s version, she even teaches Chet how to have better sex.) She stands by her man, even after a beating by drug dealers knocks out all his upper teeth, and Chet has to learn to play the trumpet all over again. This incident did happen, and Budreau uses it as a turning point for Chet to face his life. But it would be nice to see (and hear) more of the young Baker in his prime. There’s hardly enough music in the first act to justify our interest, or to understand what he lost in giving in to drugs. But Baker was also a singer, and Hawke does a credible job approximating Chet’s sweet, stark, reedy tenor on “My Funny Valentine.” But the movie Chet never emerges as a person of substance. Early on, Jane talks to somebody on the movie set, asking why so many women are attracted to Chet—even though he spends all of his pay on drugs and doesn’t have a place to live. It’s a question the movie never answers. When Chet tries to romance Jane, chiefly by pawing her and trying to talk his way thorough her defenses, it’s kind of creepy; it’s creepier still when she capitulates so soon. Yes, women were always drawn to him, even after his good looks and stardom were gone. But Budreau can’t draw us in in the same way. He sticks to the surface of the Chet Baker mystique, without ever making us care about the man underneath. BORN TO BE BLUE **1/2 (out of four) With Ethan Hawke and Carmen Ejogo. Written and directed by Robert Budreau. An IFC Films release. Rated R. 98 minutes.
MOVIE TIMES May 6-12
All times are PM unless otherwise noted.
U2’s BONO
“At the same stage, U2 were not as good as the characters in ‘Sing Street.’
IN TRUTH, MOST FILMS YOU’LL SEE THIS YEAR WON’T TOUCH ‘SING STREET.’”
★★★★
“
DEL MAR THEATRE
SANTA CRUZ SHOW TIMES FOR FRI. 5/6/16 – THURS. 5/12/16 From the Director of “Once”
AN INSTANT CLASSIC! ”
831.469.3220
PG-13
A HOLOGRAM FOR THE KING Daily 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20*, + Sat-Sun 12:00 *No Wed, Thu show A LETTER TO MOMO Fri, Sat Midnight EYE IN THE SKY Wed-Thu 2:30, 9:30
(2:00, 4:30), 7:10, 9:40 + Sat, Sun (11:30am)
GREEN ROOM Daily 2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:40* + Sat-Sun 12:20 *Fri-Wed, 9:30
Patrick Stewart & Anton Yelchin in
SING STREET Fri-Wed 2:00, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40 + Sat-Sun 11:30
NICKELODEON
831.426.7500
DOUGH Fri-Tue 2:40, 4:50, 7:05, 9:15 + Sat-Sun 12:30 BORN TO BE BLUE Daily 2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 12:10
From
JOHN CARNEY, BEGIN AGAIN
the Writer and Director of ONCE and
MILES AHEAD Wed-Thu 2:40, 5:00, 7:20, 9:30 Fri-Tue 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:30 + Sat, Sun 12:15 VAXXED Fri-Tue 2:50, 5:00, 7:15, 9:25 + Sat-Sun 12:40
GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8
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the
STARTS FRIDAY!
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Daily: (2:00, 4:30) 7:10, 9:40 Plus Sat-Sun (11:30am) • ( ) at discount
THE BOSS Wed-Thu 1:00, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15 Fri-Tue 6:30, 9:15 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR Fri-Tue 12:35, 1:45, 4:05, 5:15, 7:35, 8:45, 9:55 + SAT, SUN 11:15am
FEATURING THE MUSIC OF DURAN DURAN, NOW ON TOUR! FOR MORE INFORMATION, VISIT: Duranduran.com
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR 3D Fri-Tue 2:55, 6:25 COMPADRES Daily 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 + Sat-Sun 10:45am
THERE’S A NEW WEBSITE IN TOWN.
THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR Daily 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 +Sat-Sun 11:00am THE JUNGLE BOOK Wed-Thu 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45 Fri-Tue 1:15, 4:00, 6:45, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 10:40 KEANU Daily 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 11:45
D E L M A R
GoodTimes.SC
MOTHER’S DAY Wed-Thu 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 Fri-Tue 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:45 RATCHET AND CLANK Wed-Thu 1:45, 3:00, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Fri-Tue 1:00, 3:45
(2:40, 5:00), 7:20, 9:30 + Sat, Sun (12:20) Tom Hanks in R
(2:20, 4:40), 7:00*, 9:20* + Sat, Sun (12:00) *no shows & 5/12 George Clooney & Julia Roberts in R
CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA 831.438.3260 THE BOSS Wed-Thu 11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR Thu 7:00, 7:45, 8:30, 10:20 Fri-Tue 11:45,
12:45, 2:00, 3:15, 4:15, 5:30, 6:45, 7:45, 9:15, + Fri-Sat 10:15
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR-DBOX Thu 7:00, 10:20 Fri-Tue 12:45,
4:15, 7:45
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR-3D Fri-Tue 1:30, 4:55, 8:30 CRIMINAL Wed-Thu 1:00, 3:45 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR Wed-Thu 11:15, 2:00, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15
Fri-Tue 1:00, 3:45, 6:30, 9:30
THE JUNGLE BOOK Wed-Thu 11:00, 11:55, 1:30, 2:45, 4:15, KENAU Wed-Thu 11:45, 2:15, 4:45, 5:30, 7:30, 10:00 Fri-Tue 11:00, 2:20,
4:45, 7:30, 10:00
Advance Shows Thursday 5/12 7:00 & 9:20 Regular engagement starts Friday 5/13!
THE FILM THEY DON’T WANT YOU TO SEE
MIDNIGHTS @ THE DEL MAR presents G
“I think the movie is something people should see.”
VAXXED -Robert De Niro on “TODAY”
FROM COVER-UP
In Japanese w/English subtitles Fri & Sat @ MIDNIGHT
1124 PACIFIC AVENUE | 426-7500
TO CATASTROPHE
MOTHER’S DAY Wed-Thu 11:30, 1:15, 2:15, 4:00, 5:15, 7:15*, 10:15 + Fri-Tue
NR
11:30, 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 *No show Thu
RATCHET AND CLANK Wed-Thu 11:15, 12:15, 1:45, 3:00, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Fri-
Tue 11:15, 1:45, 4:15, 5:30, 7:00, 8:30*, 9:45 Fri-Tue 11:00, 11:45, 1:45, 2:30, 4:30, 5:15, 7:15, 10:00 *No show Thu
(2:50, 5:00), 7:15, 9:25 + Sat, Sun (12:40)
N I C K
CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504 THE BOSS Wed-Thu 11:45, 2:30, 5:15, 7:45, 10:15 CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR Thu 7:00, 7:30, 8:15, 10:15 Fri-Tue 11:45,
12:45, 2:00, 4:15, 5:30, 6:45, 7:45, 9:00
CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR-3D 3:15, 10:15 EYE IN THE SKY Wed-Thu 11:30, 2:15, 4:55, 7:30, 10:00 HELLO, MY NAME IS DORIS Wed 1:30, 6:45 + Thu 1:30 THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR Wed-Thu 11:15, 2:00, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15
Fri-Tue 1:00, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15
Jonathan Pryce in NR
(2:40, 4:50), 7:05, 9:15 + Sat, Sun (12:30) Ethan Hawke in R
(3:00, 5:10), 7:20, 9:30 + Sat, Sun (12:50) Don Cheadle in R
THE JUNGLE BOOK Wed-Thu 11:00, 11:5, 1:45, 2:45, 4:15, 5:30*, 7:00,
8:30*, 9:45 Fri-Tue 11:00, 11:55, 1:15, 2:30, 4:00, 5:15, 7:00, 8:00, 9:45 *No show Thu
MOTHER’S DAY Wed-Thu 11:30, 1:15, 2:30, 4:30, 5:30*, 7:20, 8:15, 10:15*
Fri-Tue 11:00, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 *No show Thu
MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING 2 Wed- Thu 11:00, 4:00 PURPLE RAIN Wed 9:15
vaxxedthemovie.com
STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 6 3.45" X 5.25"
@vaxxedthemovie SANTA CRUZ THE NICKELODEON 210 Lincoln St (831) 426-7500
WED 5/04
(2:30, 4:45), 7:00, 9:20 + Sat, Sun (12:15)
210 LINCOLN STREET | 426-7500
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
the
PURPLE RAIN Wed-Thu 8:00
59
FILM NEW THIS WEEK A BIGGER SPLASH IMDB may have given this only a 6.5/10, but we give the trailer alone a solid 9/10. That mystery! That intrigue! And with Ralph Fiennes and Tilda Swinton (she’s a rock star—no, really, she’s literally playing a rock star), plus the pretty love interest from The Danish Girl, can you really go wrong? Dakota Johnson is in it as well: we’ll allow it. Luca Guadagnino directs. Matthias Schoenaerts co-stars. (R) 124 minutes. BORN TO BE BLUE Reviewed this issue. (R) 97 minutes. CAPTAIN AMERICA: A bunch of superheroes! Captain America and Iron Man fight! Marvel things! Anthony Russo, Joe Russo direct. Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johanssen co-star. (PG-13) 146 minutes. CODE OF HONOR Hey, so Steven Seagal is still making action films. Michael Winnick directs. Craig Sheffer and James Russo co-star. (R) 106 minutes.
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
GREEN ROOM With a slew of brilliant young indie actors, including Imogen Poots, Anton Yelchin, Alia Shawkat and Joe Cole (seriously, these kids have done some terrific under-the-radarflicks very much worth Netflixing), this terrifying thriller looks like something that even a scaredy cat film blurb writer might sit through. Add Patrick Stewart to the mix in a very twisted punk rock thriller about maniacal skinheads and you get something terrifyingly good. Jeremy Saulnier directs. (R) 95 minutes.
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SING STREET From the man who brought Once and Begin Again into this world, it’s another promising coming-of-age tale, but this time with all the horrendously fantastic fashion of Dublin in the ‘80s. Add in teen aspirations of love, fame, and just making it out of high school alive and it’s a heartwarming tale that doesn’t make you want to puke (we hope). John Carney directs. Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, Aidan Gillen, Maria Doyle Kennedy co-star. (PG-13) 106 minutes. VAXXED If the local anti-vaccination crowd want someone to rally around, they’d be hard-pressed to find a worse person than Andrew
Wakefield, the director of this documentary. The co-author of a 1998 study that claimed to find a link between autism and the mumps, measles and rubella (MMR) vaccine, Wakefield’s misconduct was so extensive it can’t be summed up in this space; rather, it’s best to read every word you can find about both his study (which was fully retracted in 2010, after more than a decade of wrongly persuading innocent people that there was genuine science behind his assertions) and its fallout. The end result was that a review board investigating him in his native Britain upheld dozens of charges against him, and he was barred from practicing medicine there. Yet he’s continued to maintain his innocence—including in a book where he laid out the supposed conspiracy against him—and now he continues his crusade with this film. It wasn’t screened in advance, but this line from a review in the Guardian speaks volumes: “Vaxxed isn’t quite as inept or loony as YouTube docs in the vein of 9/11 hoax film Loose Change. There are even some stretches where it feels like a real (albeit boring) movie.” Ads bought for this film (including in this paper) are trying to spin this kind of response into “the movie they don’t want you to see!” Uh, who, movie critics? Why? Because it’s boring? (NR) 91 minutes.
NOW PLAYING CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to https://groups. google.com/group/LTATM. APRIL AND THE EXTRAORDINARY WORLD Stuck in the age of steam without the hope of innovation and under the rule of Napoleon V, France’s minds begin to disappear. Avril (voiced by Marion Cotillard) goes out in search of her missing parents with help from her talking cat and an unlikely ally. French with English subtitles. Christian Desmares, Franck Ekinci direct. Marion Cotillard, Philippe Katerine, Jean Rochefort co-star. (PG) 106 minutes.
BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT Calvin’s Barbershop is threatened when the surrounding community takes a turn for the worse, but the hair-cutting heroes band together to make a permanent change. And with Ice Cube, Nicki Minaj, Common, Eve, Cedric the Entertainer, Sean Patrick Thomas, Anthony Anderson, Regina Hall, and Lamorne Morris (only the best character on New Girl, hey Winston!) at the helm, they’ll surely be able to make their neighborhood safe again. Malcolm D. Lee directs. (PG-13) 112 minutes. BATMAN V. SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE It’s the ultimate battle of chiseled jawlines. And Jesse Eisenberg is the villain! But who is the real villain here? Who are the real heroes? Who’s the beauty playing Wonder Woman? What’s Holly Hunter doing here? Who wore the spandex better? But, most importantly, is Ben Affleck’s back tat real? So many questions, and only 153 minutes of Marvel to find answers. Zack Snyder directs. Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams costar. (PG-13) 153 minutes. THE BOSS Melissa McCarthy in the snazziest selection of turtlenecks you ever did see. Ben Falcone directs. Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Bell, Peter Dinklage co-star. (R) 99 minutes. CRIMINAL Kevin Costner as a convict who has no feelings? How strange, he’s generally so emotive. Ariel Vromen directs. Kevin Costner, Ryan Reynolds, Gal Gardot co-star. (R) 113 minutes. DEADPOOL He’s a special ops dude who’s transformed into a super-human in a rogue experiment, left with an indestructible body and the face of chopped liver. How many almost-funny superheroes with the voice of a Disney prince has Ryan Reynolds played now? Tom Miller directs. Ryan Reynolds, Morena Baccarin, T.J. Miller co-star. (R) 108 minutes. EYE IN THE SKY “If they kill 80 people, we win the propaganda war. If we kill one child, they do.”Would you be willing to risk the collateral damage of one innocent girl to save uncounted thousands in the future? Putting a face to a faceless killing machine, Helen Mirren, Aaron Paul, and the late Alan
Rickman take on the implications of modern drone warfare. Gavin Hood directs. (R) 102 minutes. GOD’S NOT DEAD 2 It’s Sabrina the teenage witch! Except she’s a high school teacher who, when asked a question about Jesus in class, says something that lands her in court, arguing the existence of God. Remember the hot gardener from Desperate Housewives? He’s in it, too. Yes, they made two of these films. Harold Cronk directs. Jesse Metcalfe, David A.R. White, Ray Wise co-star. (PG) 121 minutes. HARDCORE HENRY You, yes you, are Henry—a crazy superhuman who has been resurrected from the dead without memory of your former life. Now you have to save your wife from a warlord who wants to bio-engineer soldiers. It’s a first-person action film from Henry’s point of view. Pro-tip: to avoid freaking out, it’s probably best to not do any drugs before watching this film. Ilya Naishuller directs. Sharlto Copley, Tim Roth, Haley Bennett co-star. (R) 96 minutes. THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR Everyone is super fierce, excellently CGI’d and wearing the best in fairytale attire (especially Emily Blunt as Freya and Jessica Chastain as badass huntswoman Sara) in this sequel. Charlize Theron’s faux English accent is still a little hard to swallow, but we’ll let it go because Chris Hemsworth may be getting shirtless in this one. Plus, no Kristen Stewart in this pre-Snow White rendering. Cedric Nicolas-Troyan directs. (PG-13) 114 minutes. KEANU Dear cat lovers, stoners, maybe cat-loving stoners: rejoice, a movie entirely about cats, as told by cats. Cats undercover. Cat gangs. Cat strippers. Cat alcoholics—cataholics? Cat drug dealers with guns ablazing. It’s catacular. Peter Atencio directs. Keegan-Michael Key, Jordan Peele, Will Forte co-star. (R) 98 minutes. THE JUNGLE BOOK Did anyone think just how terrifying a live-action version of The Jungle Book would be when they saw the 1967 Disney classic (and no, the 1994 version doesn’t count even if Westley from The Princess Bride was in it)? All adults are invited to be equally excited for this fantastic reinterpretation brought
to life with newcomer Neel Sethi as Mowgli and the various jungle animals voiced by Hollywood heavy-hitters Billy Murray, Ben Kingsley, Idris Elba, Lupita Nyong’o, Christopher Walken, and Scarlett Johansson. Jon Favreau directs. (PG) 105 minutes. KNIGHT OF CUPS Christian Bale gets to party through Hollywood with six different women, all perfectly proportioned and with a zero-percent BMI, including Natalie Portman and Cate Blanchett—and he’s all lost and tortured about it. But it’s “experimental drama,” so, it’s really meaningful and zeitgeisty. Terrence Malick directs. (R) 118 minutes. MILES AHEAD Don Cheadle is Miles Davis, and Don Cheadle directs Don Cheadle as Miles Davis. Enough said. Emayatzy Corinealdi, Ewan McGregor co-star. (R) 120 minutes. MOTHER’S DAY A heartwarming tale about love, life, and motherhood. Or, whatever. Gary Marshall directs. Jennifer Aniston, Kate Hudson, Julia Roberts co-star. (PG-13) 118 minutes. MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING 2 Right, because we’ve all been on the edge of our seats in anticipation of a sequel to the Greek family comedy … for 14 years. Kirk Jones directs. Nia Vardalos, John Corbett, Michael Constantine co-star. (PG-13) 94 minutes. RATCHET & CLANK For those who might’ve gotten overly excited at the movie title, it’s not that kind of ratchet. Instead it’s an animated film based on the video game series featuring a Lombax with a dream, a nefarious space captain, a robot and a mechanic. Kevin Munroe, Jericca Cleland direct. James Arnold Taylor, David Kaye, Jim Ward co-star. (PG) 94 minutes. ZOOTOPIA Thank goodness it’s become OK for adults to watch kids’ movies (it has, right?). We’d gladly take a cunning bunny cop with her fox informant trying to uncover a conspiracy in a city of adorable animated animals than watch Gerard Butler do … well, anything, really. Byron Howard, Rich Moore, Jared Bush direct. Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Idris Elba co-star. (PG) 108 minutes.
Exceptional Grill. Stylishly Casual.
Make your Mother’s Day reservations now!
Wed Sat ‘til 8pm Prime Rib Nightly Steaks • Chicken • Pasta Beer & Wine
Serving a special brunch menu from 10am – 2pm
Breakfast and Lunch Daily
Join us to make your Mom feel special!
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BELLA ROMA Authentic Italian Cuisine Dinner only Closed Mondays reservations recommended
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ESTHETICS
In Santa Cruz Findings
World of Stones & Mystics 835 Front St. (831) 316-5159
Permanent Cosmetics for BROWS EYES & LIPS Book a complimentary consultation online at www.purebeautyesthetics.com
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Pure Beauty
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FOOD & DRINK arugula, and satiny vinaigrettes adorn my latest favorites. The lamb burger has a following, as does the remarkable lasagna and the house signature Brussels sprouts appetizer, dotted with squash, pancetta and pumpkin seeds. Last week we split a strawberry pie dessert and moaned our way through ripe berries, a cookie crust and a sexy layer of whipped cream. Martinez keeps an eye on the house from his steamy kitchen, always upbeat and radiating energy. Service is strong and the prices are friendly. Everybody has a neighborhood spot, a go-to dining room that offers just what you feel like having, the wine you enjoy without having to think too hard, and an atmosphere that is welcoming. Pizzeria Avanti has achieved that rare balance, and chef/ owners Martinez and Serna are the key to that appeal. Pizzeria Avanti, 1711 Mission St., Santa Cruz. Open 5-9 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and 5-9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. 425-1807, pizzeriaavanti.net.
MOTHER’S DAY WINE
PIE GUYS Rene Serna (left) and Hugo Martinez of Pizzeria Avanti, with a basil pizza. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
Fired Up
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Longtime chefs become owners of neighborhood favorite Pizzeria Avanti, plus Mother’s Day at Alfaro BY CHRISTINA WATERS
I
t’s hard to believe it’s been almost four years since the original Avanti concept moved down Mission Street, leaving the former cozy bistro to blossom into its new identity as Pizzeria Avanti. Since that time, chefs Hugo Martinez and Rene Serna have been firing up the pizza oven and finessing nightly specials—and in the process reminding Westside locals just why they’ve always loved this little spot in the tiny Palm Street strip mall. Well, now it’s official. The two talented chefs are officially the sole owners of Pizzeria Avanti. Congratulations! It’s
a tough business in any economy, but growing a restaurant, sticking with it, re-inventing the salads and pizzas every night, and adding depth to the wine list—all of this requires more than just skill. Martinez worked as chef at the Ristorante Avanti for 15 years before the transition to pizzeria. Serna cooked at Carried Away in Aptos before joining Martinez in the busy Avanti kitchen. Their chemistry as collaborators and menu creators is obvious and notable. Whenever we dine there—at least once a month—the main dining room fills up, with some regulars at the wine
bar and a steady steam of patrons coming to pick up their takeout pizza orders. The pizza specials—last week we inhaled a delicious creation of portobello mushrooms, organic asparagus, olives and feta—are always deeply satisfying. Did I mention that not only do Avanti’s pizzas showcase perfect thin crusts, but the dough itself is addictively delicious? Old World pizza made by New World experts. But the salad specials—always featuring what’s just come into the farmers markets—are remarkable. Beets, avocados, shaved fennel,
If your mom is like mine, she appreciates a lively afternoon in the vineyards. And so you might just consider a visit to the everlively, ever-welcoming Alfaro Family Vineyards this coming Mother’s Day weekend. There’s a lot to interest even the most finicky, worldweary mom. For example, there’s winemaker Richard Alfaro—a force of nature himself and a one-man tribute to living well, drinking well and dining well. But if your mom needs more than just one winemaker to make her day, there will be live music from 1-4 p.m. (on Saturday by Those Guys, on Sunday by Ken Constable). Also, seven wines poured for your mom’s edification and delight, and light snacks. All of this is free for members of Alfaro’s rapidly expanding wine club. For those not yet in the club, there is a fee for tasting and snacks. If your mother wants to extend her special day all the way to Wednesday, May 11, take her to the Shadowbrook where the Alfaros will be on hand pouring halfpriced wines with complimentary hors d’oeuvres in the Rock Room Bar and Lounge. Be good to your mom!
GOOD TASTES AUTHENTIC NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA
Sushi, Sashimi, Rolls
Happy Hour Daily 5-7pm Delicious Thai Food Specialties
$3 OFF
orders of $15 or more
$5 OFF orders of
$30 or more How do you make a great pizza? Dumplings • Soups
Local, Organic Seasonal Produce from Farmers Markets Amazing salads Niman Ranch Meats
TAKE OUT OR EAT IN.
1711 Mission St. Santa Cruz • 425.1807 (next to Coffeetopia)
Nightly Specials • Craft Beer & Wine With Coupon. Put a little New York in Santa Cruz style. One offer per table. Open Late, Closed Tues 1209 Soquel Ave. Seasonal, organic pizza, pasta, 831.464.9898 (next to the Rio Theatre) West coast salads, desserts. 469-9900 | oyunaas.com Brown Ranch Marketplace 4.5 Stars on Niman Ranch meats — good stuff! 3555 Clares St. Ste. M, Capitola Affordable holiday parties. Mon-Sat 11am-9pm, Sun 12-8pm Exp. 5.25.16
Breakfast sandwich! OPen At 8AM, 6 DAyS A week!
1534 Pacific Ave. Downtown Santa Cruz 831.423.1711 | zoccolis.com Open Mon - Sat 8-6, Sun 10-6
Open everyday : Lunch & Dinner Where FRESH CATCH is
MADE YOUR WAY.
Join Us For Taco Tuesdays! 5pm-Close BRUNCH SUNDAYS 10AM-2PM
Dine-in | Take-OuT | FRee DeLiVeRY
1632 Seabright ave 831-427-2559 realthaisantacruz.com also available 9.95 Lunch Buffet MOn-FRi 11am-3pm
LUNCH & DINNER SERVED DAILY
493 Lake Ave, Santa Cruz Harbor 831.479.3430 | johnnysharborside.com
brunch: 8am-2:30p dinner: from 3pm Choose any one of
8 Entrées for
$10.95 ON THE SANTA CRUZ WHARF
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At tHE FUN • FOOD • LIVE MUSIC • PANORAMIC VIEWS
Capitola's Best Kept Secret! UPPER DECK OPEN Saturdays & Sundays 12:30pm - 5:30pm Fabulous Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner • Full Bar Open 8am til Close
831.476.3534 wharfhouse.com
Monday-Friday Lunch & Dinner
831.420.0135 – hoffmanssantacruz.com 1102 Pacific Ave, Downtown Santa Cruz
LOCAL . FARM FRESH . ORGANIC
Located at the end of the Capitola Wharf
NeW oRgaNiC JUiCe BaR!
BREAkFASt, CAtERING, LuNCH Next to PatagoNia 415 RiveR St. Santa CRuz • 831.420.1280
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
Make your Mother’s Day Reservations today!
Wharf House R E S TA U R A N T
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ON TAP British Style Ales now in Santa Cruz
LOVE AT FIRST BITE
Eight German Beers on Tap Stored cold. Poured properly. Served promptly.
A gathering place for great Cask Ales in the public house tradition, unique to Santa Cruz. Served in our taproom with local passion. 21517 East Cliff Drive In East Cliff Village near 17th Ave, Santa Cruz
(831) 713-5540
eastcliffbrewing.com
Hours
Mon-Thurs 4-9 pm Friday 4-9:30 pm Saturday 12-9:30 pm Sunday 11 am-8 pm
SANTA CRUZ'S
Original Microbrewery Tour
Public & Private Tours
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
scbrewcruz.com
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Happy Hour Tues.-Thurs. 5-7 pm Fri. 4-6:30 pm $2 off Beers 1/2 Off Appetizers
TYROLEAN INN 9600 Hwy 9 - Ben Lomond (831) 336-5188
COOL BEETS Chef Zachary Mazi of Ulterior at Motiv, with his Dueling Beet Salad,
a ‘bite of the moment’ appetizer. PHOTO: CHIP SCHEUER
Ulterior
Discovering the bite of the moment with the Akamai Pupu BY LILY STOICHEFF
T
he first time I met chef Zachary Mazi of LionFish SupperClub, I tried duck carnitas ice cream. It was cold, creamy, tasted exactly like taco filling—and was, surprisingly, not that bad. He and business partner Tighe Melville had recently moved into the kitchen above Motiv and used the unusual concoction as a demonstration of how they’re trying to maintain the spontaneity and playfulness of a popup in a brick and mortar space. There is no better reflection of that mission on their menu than the Akamai Pupu, or “clever appetizer.” Neither the customer, server or chef knows what this $10 bite will be when it’s ordered. The ticket prints out in the kitchen, and the chef is forced to improvise. So, on my most recent visit, I sidled up, hoping the kitchen was up for a challenge. The first pupu arrived cradled in an abalone shell: two cilantro marinated prawns with a pleasant spicy heat over bacon and polenta. I sipped a tangy Country Road cocktail with bourbon, mint and ginger beer, and ordered another. The server returned with a flavorful salad of golden and ruby beets, cucumbers, radish, a generous amount of feta, feathery New Zealand spinach and
strawberry vinaigrette. By the time I ordered the last pupu, the kitchen was on to me. The final bite to arrive involved three colorful crostini spread with a bright green pesto of spring herbs, the first dry-farmed tomatoes from the farmers market, luscious smoked salmon, and arugula sprouts. As I took the last bite, the sous chef came out with a grin. “Is that your last one? I’m just getting warmed up!” I told him for the moment, it was, but I’ll definitely be back for more. Ulterior is open from 5 p.m. until late Wednesday through Saturday.
DOUBLE THE LÚPULO
Lúpulo Craft Beer House teamed up with Sante Adairius Rustic Ales to celebrate their second anniversary. The downtown pourhouse and Capitola brewery collaborate yearly to create Doble Lúpulo, a double IPA bursting with orange aroma and flavors of zesty pink grapefruit. Hints of pineapple and lemon peel finish off this well-balanced—but at 8.2 percent alcohol, heavy hitting—brew. Head to either establishment to grab yourself a glass, and hurry. Like a birthday, this joyous occasion only comes around once a year, and will be here and gone before you know it.
Celebrate Mom! Lively - and Local 2621 41ST AVE SOQUEL • 831-476-3801 • CAFECRUZ.COM •
ay!
Happy
11:30am to 2:00pm Thursday through Saturday
Cocktail Hour
4:30pm to 6:00pm Tuesday through Saturday $5-8 Bar Bites | $6 Wine $8 Cocktails | $8 Whiskey w/ Draft Beer
OswaldRestaurant.com 121 Soquel Avenue at Front Street, Santa Cruz 831.423.7427 CLOSED MONDAY
Specializing in Natural and Organic Foods Supplements & Bodycare Local Wines & Beer
Great Gift Options 831.685.3334 7506 Soquel Drive Aptos, CA Open Everyday 8am to 8pm
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
NEW Now Open for Weekend Brunch
's D r e h t Mo
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&
VINE TIME
VINE & DINE
WINE TASTING SATURDAYS ALL YEAR SUNDAYS ALL SUMMER
420 HAMES RD. CORRALITOS 831.728.5172 | ALFAROWINE.COM SIPPING AL FRESCO Byington Winery in Los Gatos is a popular picnic destination.
Byington Vineyard Handcrafted in the Santa Cruz Mountains 1100 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz on the Ingalls St. side of the bldg. (831) 818-9075 Live Open Fridays 5-9 Music Every Saturdays 2-7 Friday! stockwellcellars.com
Mother’s Day Craft Faire This Saturday! 2 for 1 WINE TASTING COUPON 6 WINES, $10 VALUE Up to a Party of 4!
1 coupon per party – 21 years old +
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
subject to change
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103 Stockton Ave, Capitola
(Next to Stockton Bridge, Capitola Village) 831-462-1065 Open 7 Days a Week!
Wed-Fri 3-7pm • Sat & Sun 1-7pm 334-C Ingalls Street • Santa Cruz www.equinoxwine.com • 831.471.8608
Local Wines From Local Vines
Specializing in Custom Wine Tours of the Santa Cruz Mountains and Monterey County
MounTainSToThebay.CoM � 831.275.4445
Tastings every 3rd Saturday & Sunday of the month 12-4pm 2 for 1 Tastings with this ad BottleJackWines.com | 831.227.2288 1088 La Madrona Drive, Santa Cruz
Award-winning Chardonnay from picnic-worthy estate BY JOSIE COWDEN
B
yington Winery is a wonderful place to visit. The estate consists of 95 acres of stunning property, including a lovely tasting room and impressive vineyards. Weddings, corporate events and private parties are held both outdoors and indoors. Picnic tables, umbrellas, and gas and charcoal grills are available for visitors to use (bring your own tools) for a fee, and require advance booking. Picnic tables are on a firstcome, first-served basis, but can be booked in advance for parties of 10 or more. Space heaters are also available, as well as a bocce ball court to enjoy. The last time I visited Byington was to attend a friend’s gettogether, and those invited brought food to share. To picnic, all that’s required from the winery is that you buy half a bottle of wine per person. Santa Cruz native Andrew Brenkwitz is the winemaker at Byington, and he’s producing some excellent varietals. His 2013 Santa Cruz Mountains Chardonnay ($30) won a silver medal (American Wine Society) and gained 90 points in Food & Beverage World. With its delicate aromas of orange blossom, green apple and flavors of oaked vanilla and spice, this crisp and delicious wine is
a great addition to your picnic, be it at Byington or elsewhere. Grapes for this wine are harvested from the lush vineyards of Wrights Station, which produces “amazingly aromatic Chardonnay with poetic stories of concentrated green apple, universal citrus and finest vanilla flowers.” In a nutshell, this Chardonnay is delicious nectar captured in a bottle. Byington Vineyard & Winery, 21850 Bear Creek Road, Los Gatos. 408-3541111. byington.com. Open Wednesday to Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Check the website for tasting fee.
PARTY AT BARGETTO The Capitola Art & Wine Festival Kick-Off—called Toga Party/A Celebration of Wine—will be held on the patio at Bargetto Winery from 6-9 p.m. on Thursday, May 19. Tickets are $40 in advance, $50 at the door and include a 2016 Capitola Art & Wine Festival glass, wine tasting from festival wineries, hors d’oeuvres, and live, silent and art auctions. Music by Music Now DJs. Reserve tickets at capitolachamber.com/events or call 475-6522. Bargetto Winery is at 3535 N. Main St., Soquel. This year’s Capitola Art & Wine Festival is on Sept. 10 & 11.
Sunday May 8 island
grill
Mother’s Day Special Menu available until 5pm
BASIC BREAKFAST $11.95
three eggs scrambled served with homefries & two strips of bacon
ROASTED VEGGIE & HAM FRITTATA $13.95
three eggs scrambled with roasted vegetables and ham, served with homefries
CALIFORNIA CHICKEN CLUB $14.95
grilled chicken, bacon, jack cheese and avocado on ciabatta
SANGRIA $9
red wine mixed with peach schnapps, black raspberry, OJ & 7up
Come enjoy fun in the sun on our new lanai! Thank you to everyone who made this possible!! (831)
MOTHER’S DAY PINK MIMOSAS $9
champagne mixed with cranberry, pineapple and OJ
STRAWBERRY FIELDS MARGARITA $9
Herradura silver tequila, fresh lime juice, triple sec, strawberry puree and a splash of sweet & sour, served on the rocks! We will also offer a limited menu with additional egg items, appetizers & seafood entrées from 8am-5pm
426.HULA
221 Cathcart Street • Downtown Santa Cruz www.hulastiki.com
Two Locations to Serve You— By the Mountains or By the Sea
Sawasdee Soquel 5050 Soquel Drive 831.462.5051 Sawasdee by the Sea 101 Main Street 831.466.9009
SAWASDEESOQUEL.COM Catering and to-go orders available
SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | MAY 4-10, 2016
Delicious Thai Cuisine
Join us on our sunny ocean view deck from 8am-close 106 Beach st. at the Santa Cruz Wharf 423-5271 • www.idealbarandgrill.com
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Mothers Day Brunch Specials 8:30-2pm Reservations Recommended
Creme Brulee French Toast $12 candied pecans . fresh berries . homemade whipped cream
Lobster Spinach & Wild Mushroom Benedict $16 Cedar Baked Cod $20
cedar plank baked true cod . pineapple & grape tomato salsa . seared kale Breakfast 8:30-2pm Lunch 11am-4:30pm limited menu Dinner 5pm-9pm
H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES HONORING THE MOTHER Friday is the new moon, 17 degrees Taurus. Sunday is Mother’s Day—for everyone who has the task of “mothering.” Monday, Jupiter is stationary direct. Mother’s Day has a Gemini moon. Moon is mother and Gemini is communication. Mercury, Gemini’s ruler, retrograde, helps us to turn inward, to find the true value of our mothers, and to offer words of kindness, gratitude and nurturance to our mothers. All mothers, a task and job description, are learning how to be mothers. The task of mothering is difficult, confusing, filled with suffering and paradox. Mothering is an initiation, actually. Some (adult) children are estranged from their mothers. Such sadness! It’s good to remember the prayer of St. Francis of Assisi, saint of Right Human Relations with everyone. “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where
there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; and where there is sadness, joy.” In our mothers’ later years, they will look to us for guidance. Let us promise this to them with understanding, compassion and love. During new moon times, reciting the Great Invocation together, we “strengthen the hands and arms and endeavors of the New Group of World Servers and women and men of Goodwill everywhere.” Jupiter stationary direct. After 120 days of retrograde, Jupiter pauses, stands still for three days, before beginning to move forward again (13 degrees Virgo). “Stations” (stillness) of a planet are potent and significant. Jupiter is concerned with freedom, justice, culture, religion, adventures, education, expansions of all types and love/wisdom. Jupiter in Virgo (retrograde) has all of humanity tending to their health. As Jupiter moves forward, we are called to focus on our health in daily and practical ways. An opportunity.
ARIES Mar21–Apr20
LIBRA Sep23–Oct22
Careful how you interact with others. Do not rely only on possessions and monetary realities (though tending them is important). Rely also on instinct and then intuition to direct and guide you into knowing the quality of a person, event, resource, choice and investment. You will be called to courage, a virtue of the heart and to a deep calmness that results when one knows all is well, because you made it so.
Are you harboring a secret, perhaps one or more? Is there money or resources you share with another? Is everything clear and aboveboard in this area? It is time to arrange your finances so that debts are paid quickly. These times call you to be frugal, economically prudent, thrifty and careful, thus being able to conserve resources with confidence. Be prepared to teach others very soon in these ways. You will be efficient, informative and illuminating.
Esoteric Astrology as news for week of May 4, 2016
TAURUS Apr21–May21 Be aware that you make impressions on many, leading them to follow your every thought, idea, action and move. Therefore, it’s important to act always with ethics and complete all plans, agreements, promises and agendas. You’re attempting to initiate new projects impacting life far into the future. You may be one of the few able to accomplish this. The future of humanity awaits. Carry on through any obstacles or hindrances.
GEMINI May 22–June 20
3326 portola Dr • 831.476.2733 • www.thepointchophouse.com
You may feel a sense of tiredness, exhaustion and needing rest. You may also be dreaming at night and while awake. It’s good to create an Esoteric Journal, a Dream Journal, a Retrograde Journal, recording your experiences each day. Over time the message of your life emerges. Maintain a light, fresh-foods diet, eliminate anything excess, drink pure water, love more, and look to the stars each day for direction.
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
CANCER Jun21–Jul20
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It’s important to maintain close connections with like-minded group(s) and with the values you find important. See all interactions as opportunities and seek to understand what the hopes, wishes and needs of others are. Know that no matter how life is now, greater community will be available to you and your family later. Careful while walking, lest you stumble. Careful.
LE0 Jul21–Aug22
New Weekend Brunch Menu Saturday and Sunday 10am–Noon
Featuring Endless Mimosas
$3
OFF
Pancake Breakfast, Basic Burger
$2
OFF
Basic Breakfast 831.477.9384 655 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz
Exp. 5/13/16 Tues-Fri with coupon
Open Tues–Sun, 7-2:30p
819 pacific ave., santa cruz 427.0646
Career matters assume new dimensions, co-workers need more care, you want to improve your health, create new work methods and tend to the necessities of your life. Big jobs! You realize this takes balance so you go slower than usual, foregoing adventure in order to create a long-term plan of practical goals. Your greatest success is acceptance of everything present in your life. Then everything shifts.
VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 You may be traveling to teach and/or to study far away this summer. You may be planning meetings, conferences, classrooms and/or curriculum. You will definitely be communicating with others on a large scale, either personally or through writing, speaking, teleconferencing, conference calling. Some or all of these will occur and all the while you gain knowledge, happiness and goodness. You have an adventure.
SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 Relationships are primary now so listen very carefully to what others are communicating and have the intentions to respond with care, interest and emotional equilibrium. Should you be uncooperative, imbalance will ensue and you will feel you have neglected a responsibility. Direct attention toward others now. Because only from you can they feel special care, love and safety.
SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 You may be creating many and various lists consisting of tasks and errands—cars that need tending, accounts that need reckoning, travels that need considering, responsibilities that need completing, and problems that need easing. Spending time alone will help you complete incomplete projects. You may dream more at night as you travel about in the ethers. Record all dreams. Over time, dreams offer a clear message.
CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 Setting out each day’s agenda and assessing priorities allows you to have more wisdom and brings a clarity and focus to things routine. Try not to criticize yourself or anyone. Compassion tells us everyone’s doing their very best at different stages of development. New opportunities appear at first as philosophical ideas. Then they become goals. Rest more so you can imagine more. And then create more.
AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 Home, family, property, community and parents become very important. Give them attention, attempting to improve relationships with family while also improving the beauty and organization of the environments you find yourself in. Do nothing that unsettles your safety or security, challenge no one, and calm tensions with exercise, prayer, vitamins, minerals and herbs. No storing them!
PISCES Feb19–Mar20 It’s best to set this year aside to gain better health. A new sense of self identity results from this. With Jupiter in Virgo, you are working with the shadow side of your health (things hidden), as well as your Sun side (things apparent). You feel the need for clear direction and the resources that provide stabilization, constancy and the right sense of home. Sometimes there’s simply the need for silence. Inner and outer silence that let’s us hear, “Be still, and know that all is well.”
Day or Night
Enjoy Our Gorgeous View & Award Winning Food
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Mother’s Day Buffet
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Classifieds classifieds PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0684The following Individual is doing business as SEABRIGHT EQUIPMENT COMPANY. 104 BRONSON ST., #17E, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. IAN DAVIS. 104 BRONSON ST., #17E, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: IAN DAVIS. 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 Apr. 4, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May 4.
conducted by an Individual signed: DAVID AARON PALMER. 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 Apr. 4, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May 4.
statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 1, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May 4.
NO. 16-0850 The following Individual is doing business as LG ELECTRIC. 3374 PUTTER DR., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. LEONARDO GUTIERREZ. 3374 PUTTER DR., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: LEONARDO GUTIERREZ. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/1/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 26, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25.
LOS GATOS, CA 95033. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: DAVID PECK. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/13/2011. Original FBN number: 2011-0000862. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Mar. 28, 2016. Apr. 20, 27, & May 4, 11.
statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 5, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25.
2222 EAST CLIFF DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. DEVA LAGGNER, LAUREN MOSER & ANNA SURBER. 2222 EAST CLIFF DRIVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by a General Partnership signed: DEVA LAGGNER. 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 Apr. 14, 2016. Apr. 27, & May. 4, 11, 18.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0738The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as PRINTMAKERS AT THE TANNERY. 1060 RIVER STREET #107, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. PRINTMAKERS AT THE TANNERY. 1060 RIVER STREET #107, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. AI# 27110226. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: GEORGE NEWELL. The registrant commenced to transact business under
real estate
MAY 4-10, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0782 The following Individual is doing business as R&G CLEANING SOLUTIONS. 4622 W. WALNUT ST. APT A., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. CORNELIO RIVERA. 4622 W. WALNUT ST. APT A., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: CORNELIO RIVERA. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/15/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 15, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25.
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0682 The following Individual is doing business as SANTA CRUZ ABA. 221 MAR VISTA DR. #D, APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. DAVID AARON PALMER. 221 MAR VISTA DR. #D, APTOS, CA 95003. This business is
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0825 The following Individual is doing business as CBD BLENDS, COCREATIS, SACRED BUD, THE SACRED ROSE. 1205 WARREN DR., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. CATHERINE CHOPE. 1205 WARREN DR., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: CATHERINE CHOPE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 5/1/2004. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 22, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0680 The following Individual is doing business as DIRTY DOG PIZZA. 112 HAMMOND AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. JOSEPH DANIEL DIGIROLAMO. 112 HAMMOND AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JOSEPH DANIEL DIGIROLAMO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT APPLICABLE. This
• Antique Restorations • Furniture Design & Repair
• Wooden Boat Works • Musical Instruments • Unique Projects
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0834 The following Individual is doing business as LLN VENTURES. 710 BROADWAY, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. WENDY ANN IRIBERRI. 710 BROADWAY, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: WENDY ANN IRIBERRI. 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 Apr. 25, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0671 The following Corporation is doing business as POUR TAPROOM - SANTA CRUZ. 110 COOPER STREET, SUITE 100-B, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. CAEDMON HALL CORPORATION. 331 COMMERCIAL STREET, SAN JOSE, CA 95112. Al# 3812018. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: CHRISTOPHER J. RENO. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on: NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 1, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May 4. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0659 The following Individual is doing business as TREASURE CHEST PUBLICATIONS. 119 PASTURE ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. SCOTT MORLEY. 119 PASTURE ROAD, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SCOTT MORLEY. 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 March. 30, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May 4. REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 16-0648 The following Individual is doing business as DAVID PECK CONSTRUCTION. 940 BEAR MOUNTAIN ROAD, LOS GATOS, CA 95033. County of Santa Cruz. DAVID PECK. 940 BEAR MOUNTAIN ROAD,
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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0735The following Individual is doing business as TECHNOLOGY INVESTMENT RESEARCH CENTER. 185 FREDERICK STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. BEAT NAEF. 185 FREDERICK STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: BEAT NAEF. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/8/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 8, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May. 4.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0770 The following Individual is doing business as SEQUOIA PRESERVATION WORKS. 529 BELLEVUE STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. FALLIN E. STEFFEN. 529 BELLEVUE STREET, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: FALLIN E. STEFFEN. 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 Apr. 13, 2016. Apr. 27, & May 4, 11, 18.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0746 The following Individual is doing business as BLUE ROOSTER FARM. 555 MUIR DR., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. LORRAINE J. JACOBS. 555 MUIR DR., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: LORRAINE J. JACOBS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/11/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 11, 2016. Apr. 20, 27, & May. 4, 11.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0698 The following Corporation is doing business as MUMBAI DELIGHTS. 810 PACIFIC AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. DDT PASTA INC. 540 LIGHTHOUSE AVENUE, MONTEREY, CA 93940. Al# 3540041. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: THINLEY LAMA. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above: NOT APPLICABLE. This
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16 - 0778. The following General Partnership is doing business as GLOW & GRACE COLLECTIVE.
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NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF ORDINANCE BY POSTING (ORDINANCE NO. 2016-06)
The City Council of the City of Santa Cruz having authorized the city clerk administrator, that the ordinance hereafter entitled and described, be published by posting copies thereof in three (3) prominent places in the City, to wit: The City of Santa Cruz Website www.cityofsantacruz.com City Hall–809 Center Street Central Branch Library–224 Church Street NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that copies of said ordinance were posted according to said order. (Original on file with city clerk.) Said ordinance was introduced on April 26, 2016 and is entitled and described as follows: ORDINANCE NO. 2016-06 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF SANTA CRUZ AMENDING CHAPTER 16.04 PERTAINING TO WATER SERVICES, AMENDING SECTION 16.13.010 PERTAINING TO UNIFIED UTILITIES BILLING SYSTEM, AND ADDING CHAPTERS 16.00 FOR GENERAL WATER SERVICE DEFINITIONS, 16.09 PERTAINING TO WATER SERVICE IMPROVEMENTS, 16.11 PERTAINING TO WATER SERVICE ACCOUNTS,16.14 PERTAINING TO SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT CHARGES,AND 16.15 PERTAINING TO WATER USE This ordinance amends Chapter 16.04 pertaining to water services, amends Section 16.13.010 pertaining to unified utilities billing system and adds chapters 16.00 for general water service definitions, 16.09 pertaining to water service improvements, 16.11 pertaining to water service accounts, 16.14 pertaining to system development charges, and 16.15 pertaining to water use. PASSED FOR PUBLICATION on this 26th day of April, 2016, by the following vote: AYES: Councilmembers Noroyan, Lane, Terrazas, Posner, Comstock; Vice Mayor Chase; Mayor Mathews. NOES: None. ABSENT: None. DISQUALIFIED: None. APPROVED: ss/Cynthia Mathews, Mayor. ATTEST: ss/Bren Lehr, City Clerk Administrator. This Ordinance is scheduled for further consideration and final adoption at the Council meeting of May 10, 2016.
real estate PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM
the fictitious business name listed above on NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 8, 2016. Apr. 13, 20, 27, & May. 4. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0652 The following Individual is doing business as DIVA NAILS & SPA. 813 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. VAN TRAN. 813 SOQUEL AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: VAN TRAN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 3/29/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Mar. 29, 2016. Apr. 20, 27, & May. 4, 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0854 The following Individual is doing business as TOURMORE. 101 COOPER ST. #288, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. MISCHA GASCH. 101 COOPER ST. #288, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MISCHA GASCH. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 1/1/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County
Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 26, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0764The following Married Couple is doing business as RIVERSIDE DRIVE APARTMENTS. 139 RIVERSIDE DRIVE. WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. County of Santa Cruz. ANNA MARIE PONCE & ROGELIO Q. PONCE. 139 RIVERSIDE DRIVE. WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. This business is conducted by a Married Couple signed: ANNA MARIE PONCE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above: NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 12, 2016. Apr. 20, 27, & May. 4, 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0723 The following Individual is doing business as BIG WAVE BBQ. 3368 ONEILL ST., SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. KRIS MACKELLAR. 3368 ONEILL ST., SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: KRIS MACKELLAR. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/5/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 8, 2016. May 4, 11, 18, 25.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16 - 0558. The following Joint Venture is doing business as VILLAFANA-MONTESINOS ASSOCIATES. 1285 N. MAIN STREET, SUITE 101, SALINAS, CA 93906. County of Monterey. REBECA VILLAFANA & FRANCISCO MONTESINOS. 1285 N. MAIN STREET, SUITE 101, SALINAS, CA 93906. This business is conducted by a Joint Venture signed: REBECA VILLAFANA. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 12/22/2015. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on March. 14, 2016. Apr. 20, 27, & May. 4, 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0712 The following Individual is doing business as ROSE BLOSSOM ENTERPRISES. 6401 FREEDOM BLVD., APTOS, CA 95003. County of Santa Cruz. SHARON MICHELLE ROSE. 6401 FREEDOM BLVD., APTOS, CA 95003. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SHARON MICHELLE ROSE. 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 Apr. 6, 2016. May. 4, 11,
18, 25. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0620 The following Individual is doing business as HOBBS MOTORS. 1850 47TH AVE., CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. DAVID HOBBS. 1850 47TH AVE., CAPITOLA, CA 95010. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: DAVID HOBBS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 3/23/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Mar. 23, 2016. Apr. 20, 27, & May 4, 11. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-0748 The following Individual is doing business as BRAQUET DESIGN GROUP. 237 BLUE BONNET LANE #2031, SCOTTS VALLEY, CA 95066. County of Santa Cruz. SUSAN BRAQUET SCURICH. 237 BLUE BONNET LANE #2031, SCOTTS VALLEY, CA 95066. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SUSAN BRAQUET SCURICH. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 4/8/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Apr. 11, 2016. May. 4, 11, 18, 25.
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With U All You Mi The Wor
71
Where the locals shop since 1938. VOTED BEST BUTCHER SHOP BEST WINE STORE BEST CHEESE SELECTIONS BEST LOCALLY OWNED GROCERY STORE BEST MURAL
Family owned & operated 78 years. 622 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz
OUR 78 TH YEAR
WEEKLY SPECIALS
WINE & FOOD PAIRING Mothers Day Brunch
Egg White Frittata with Lox and Arugula Ingredients
Beer/Wine/Spirits
A
Bakery “Fresh Daily”
Cervezas
PRODUCE
C
ALIFORNIA-FRESH, blemish free, 30% local/ organic: Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organic, Happy Boy Farms, Route 1 Farms.
DIRECTIONS Put an oven rack in the center of the oven. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
■ APPLES, Fuji, Gala, Granny Smith, Braeburn Roederer Estate Brut 92 Points Wine Enthusiast!
In a 10-inch, ovenproof, nonstick skillet, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the arugula and garlic. Cook, stirring frequently, until the arugula has wilted, about 1 minute. Pour the egg mixture into the pan and stir to combine the ingredients. Cook, without stirring for 4 minutes. Transfer the skillet to the oven and bake until set, about 10 to 12 minutes.
Slide the frittata onto a platter. Using a serrated knife, cut the frittata into wedges and serve warm or at room. Serve with mimosas! Roederer Estate Brut The fruit flavors are apparent, fresh and lively in this medium-bodied, beautifully balanced brut. Light pear and pineapple aromas are followed by richer pear and citrus flavors, and subtle hints of baking spices, almonds and a nice earthy touch emerge. Reg 26.99, SHOPPERS SPECIAL 19.99!
SHOP PER SPOTLIG HTS
Grocery
LL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb only, corn-fed Midwest pork, Rocky freerange chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, wild-caught seafood, Boar’s Head products. ■ NEW YORK STEAK, All Natural Choice/ 12.98 Lb ■ TRI TIPS, U.S.D.A. Choice/ 7.98 Lb ■ LAMB CUBES, Plain or Marinated/ 8.49 Lb ■ BABY BACK PORK RIBS/ 4.98 Lb ■ HONEY HAM, Sweet Slice/ 8.49 Lb ■ BLACK FORREST HAM, Smoked Flavor/ 8.49 Lb ■ DANISH STYLE HAM/ 8.49 Lb ■ MESQUITE CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless, Skinless/ 5.98 Lb ■ WINE & GARLIC CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless, Skin On/ 5.98 Lb ■ SANTA MARIA CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless, Skin On/ 5.98 Lb ■ BAY SHRIMP MEAT, Fully Cooked/ 12.98 Lb ■ TIGER PRAWNS, Large/ 12.98 Lb ■ LARGE PRAWNS, Peeled & Deveined/ 14.98 Lb
• 8 egg whites, at room temperature • 1/2 cup whipping cream • 6 ounces lox, chopped into 1/2-inch pieces • 1 lemon, zested • 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper • 2 tablespoons olive oil • 2 packed cups (2 ounces) arugula • 1 clove garlic, minced
In a medium bowl, whisk the egg whites until fluffy, about 30 seconds. Add the cream, lox, lemon zest, salt, and pepper.
BUTCHER SHOP
& Pink Lady/ 2.29 Lb
■ GREEN BEANS, Fresh and Tender/ 1.99Lb ■ AVOCADOS, Ripe and Ready to Eat/ 1.19 Ea ■ BANANAS, Always Ripe/ .89 Lb ■ BROCCOLI CROWNS, Delivered Fresh Daily/ 1.19 Lb ■ YELLOW ONIONS, A Kitchen Favorite/ .49 Lb ■ NAVEL ORANGES, Sweet and Juicy/ 1.09 Lb ■ ZUCCHINI SQUASH, Extra Fancy Squash/ 1.19 Lb ■ CLUSTER TOMATOES, Ripe On The Vine/ 1.99 Lb ■ ORGANIC BANANAS, The Perfect Snack/ .99 Lb ■ RADISHES & GREEN ONIONS, Super Fresh Bunches/ .49 Ea ■ LARGE TOMATOES, Great For Slicing/ 1.49 Lb ■ SEEDLESS GRAPES, Red and Green/ 3.79 Lb ■ JALAPEÑOS & TOMATILLOS, Top Quality/ .89 Lb ■ ROMA TOMATOES, Ripe and Firm/ 1.19 Lb ■ PINEAPPLE, Sweet & Juicy/ 1.09 Lb ■ LOOSE CARROTS, Fresh from the Field/ .59 Lb ■ CAULIFLOWER, Premium Quality/ 2.29 Ea ■ BABY CELLO CARROTS, 1Lb Bags/ 1.19 Ea ■ LEAF LETTUCE, Romaine, Red, Green, Butter, Iceberg/ 1.49 Ea
■ BECKMANN’S, Whole Wheat Sour Round oz/ 3.89 ■ WHOLE GRAIN, Nine Grain 30oz/ 4.19 ■ KELLY’S, Sour Cheddar oz/ 3.89 ■ GAYLE’S, Organic Capitola Sourdough Sandwich oz/ 4.79 ■ SUMANO’S, Garlic & Rosemary oz/ 3.99
Cheese
■ CORONA EXTRA & LIGHT, Mexican Lager, 12oz Bottles, 6 Pack/ 8.49 +CRV
■ DOS EQUIS, Mexican Lager & Amber, 12oz Bottles, 6 Pack/ 7.49 + CRV
■ PACIFICO, Mexican Lager, 12oz Bottles, 6 Pack/ 7.49 +CRV
■ MODELO ESPECIAL & NEGRA, Lagers,
■ MONTEREY JACK, “Great Melting Cheese” Loaf Cuts/ 3.19 Lb, Average Cuts/ 3.39 Lb ■ PEPPER JACK, “rBST Free”/ 6.99 Lb ■ SPANISH MANCHEGO, “Crumbly Texture
12oz Bottles, 6 Pack/ 8.49 +CRV
■ 21st AMENDMENT, Mexican Style Lager, 12oz Cans, 6 Pack/ 8.49 +CRV
w/ a Smooth Finish”/ 11.59 Lb ■ ITALIAN RICOTTA SALATA, “Made from Sheep’s Milk”/ 6.79
Tequila
■ SAUZA, Silver & Gold/ 11.99 ■ HORNITOS, Reposado/ 17.99 ■ EL JIMADOR, Silver & Reposado/ 18.99 Delicatessen ■ ALTOS, Silver & Reposado/ 19.99 ■ Mi ABUELITA BONITA TORTILLAS, “All Varieties” 12oz/ 2.09 ■ CAZADORES, Reposado/ 25.99 ■ ORGANIC VALLEY SHREDDED CHEESE, ■ CENTENARIO, Añejo/ 52.99 “Mexican Blend” 6oz/ 4.99 ■ TRES GENERATIONS, Añejo/ 34.99 ■ SONOMA HARBANERO JACK, “100% Natural & rBST Free” ■ PATRON, Silver/ 39.99 5.3oz/ 4.39 ■ CASAMIGOS, Añejo/ 49.99 ■ DON FRANCISCO QUESO, “All Varieties” 8oz/ 3.29 ■ WILDWOOD TACO CRUMBLE, “Gluten & Meat Free” 8oz/ 5.09 ■ DON JULIO, Añejo/ 49.99 ■ CLASE AZUL, Reposado/ 97.99 Chocolate for Mother’s Day ■ DON JULIO, 1942/ 119.99 ■ LULA’S 9pc. SALTED CARAMELS, In Gift Boxes!
Best Buy Reds
4.1oz/ 12.89
■ LULA’S ALMOND TOFFEE, Milk & Dark In Gift Boxes
■ 2010 MANOS NEGRAS, Pinot Noir (Reg 25.99)/ 9.99 ■ 2012 ABRAS, Malbec (Reg 18.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2012 CASILLERO DEL DIABLO, “Devil’s Cut”
9oz/ 14.49 ■ CHOCOLATE VISIONS, Local Assorted Chocolates 2.9oz/ 9.99 ■ RICHARD DONNELLY, Local Fine Chocolates 1.6oz/ 4.99 ■ MOONSTRUCK CHOCOLATES, Asst. Ounces w/ Herb Sugars/ 7.99
Cinco De Mayo Musts
(Reg 16.99)/ 8.99
■ 2013 CAMPO VIEJO, Rioja (Reg 12.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2010 CLOS LA CHANCE, Zinfandel (Reg 17.99)/ 8.99
Celebration Sparkles
■ EMBASA JALEPEÑOS, Whole or Sliced 12oz/ 1.69 ■ LAS PALMAS ENCHILADA SAUCE, Red or Green 28o/ 3.39 ■ ROSARITA REFRIED BEANS, All Kinds 16oz/ 1.99 ■ CHILI GODS HOT SAUCE, “Heat Never Hurt So Good”
■ MICHELLE, Brut (Reg 17.99)/ 9.99 ■ VALDO, Prosecco (88WS)/ 11.99 ■ SHARFENBERER, Brut (91WE)/ 19.99 ■ ROEDERER, Estate Brut (92WE)/ 19.99 ■ G.H. MUMM, Cordon Rouge (92WS)/ 29.99
■ TERESA’S SIMMER SAUCES, “Totally Fresh” 16oz/ 6.59
Connoisseur’s Corner – Merlot
10oz/ 4.99
Fresh Salsa & Guacamole
■ MRS. A’s SALSA BUENO, “Traditional Salsa” 12oz/ 4.59 ■ HAPPY JACKAL ORGANIC 14oz/ 3.59 ■ ROBERTOS of SANTA CRUZ, “All Natural” 13oz/ 5.39 ■ TERESA’S, “Totally Fresh” 16oz/ 6.59 ■ CASA CHILAS, Guacamole’ 12oz/ 6.49
■ 2011 K VINTNERS, Northridge Vineyard (95WE)/ 49.99
■ 2010 ST. SUPERY, Rutherford (94WA)/ 47.99 ■ 2012 FREEMARK ABBEY, Napa Valley (92WA)/ 39.99 ■ 2012 KEENAN, Napa Valley (91W&S)/ 39.99 ■ 2010 SHAFER (95WA)/ 59.99
LARRY FRIEDMAN,40-Year Customer, Santa Cruz Occupation: Part-time social worker Hobbies: Travel, hiking, singing Astrological Sign: Capricorn TOM ELLISON,43-Year Customer, Santa Cruz Occupation: Retired restaurateur Hobbies: Singing in choir, cooking, art, hiking, yoga Astrological Sign: Capricorn What do you gents like to cook? LARRY: “He’s the cook; l’m the eater!” TOM: “I cook a wide variety ranging from Asian, Middle Eastern, and American. I love Shopper’s butcher shop! They have great seafood selections, and I really enjoy their beef, chicken, pork, and the sliced turkey.” LARRY: “I’m very particular about my seafood, and Shopper’s fish is always fresh. The butchers are excellent and they’re attentive to my questions.” TOM: “The butchers are the best. If you need to special-order something they are happy to accommodate.” LARRY: “From the meat to the produce to the cheeses and more, you’re getting quality for a fair price. Shopper’s is an important community business.”
How so? TOM: “There’s history here. Shopper’s takes pride in their building, the mural, the clock… The entire neighborhood is alive because of Shopper’s.” LARRY: “They keep their own traditions alive while being the main attraction to midtown. This is the happening spot.” LARRY: “I love the ambiance here and the small-town feel... like the wooden floors. The lighting shows off their wonderful produce.” TOM: “They have the best avocados in town! It’s amazing how much they carry, including fresh herbs, a variety of mushrooms, local and organic strawberries, tomatoes, apples, lettuces, spinach, and more. We love the idea of shopping local, be it the eggs, coffees, breads, ice cream, or chocolates.”
What would say about Shopper’s to a new community resident? TOM: “It’s where the locals meet. You haven’t really seen Santa Cruz until until you visit Shopper’s Corner. It’s probably the quintessential local business.” LARRY: “I would let them know they have a great variety of olive oils, balsamic vinegars, pasta, and wines. Someone recommended a particular Spanish wine that I had never heard of. I was amazed that Shopper’s had three different varieties of it.” TOM: “Shopper’s also has a very good selection of local wines, and their sale selections are incredible — quality and pricing. There’s always a wine person available if you have questions. I like that kind of service.”
“You haven’t really seen Santa Cruz until until you visit Shopper’s Corner. It’s probably the quintessential local business.”
|
Corner: Soquel & Branciforte Avenues 7 Days: 6am-9pm
| Meat: (831) 423-1696 | Produce: (831) 429-1499 | Grocery: (831) 423-1398 | Wine: (831) 429-1804
Superb Products of Value: Local, Natural, Specialty, Gourmet ■ Neighborly Service for 78 Years