Good Times

Page 1

9.21.16

FashionART brings the creativity and values of Santa Cruz to a rapidly changing world of style P19 WIN TICKETS TO THE WATSONVILLE FILM FESTIVAL SANTACRUZ.COM/GIVEAWAYS

GoodTimes.SC SantaCruz.com


Back to School, Back to You! $

3 ENROLLMENT FEE*

3 FREE additional locations* First-25 members only ($100 value)

3 FREE training sessions ($120 value)

*Some restrictions may or may not

apply. Ends 9/28/16

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Everything you need

2

Really nice and personable trainers!

NEW TRX suspension training at all locations

Friendliness – Cleanliness – Personality Support – Variety – Motivation

Nothing you don’t!

Attitude – Corporate Ways – Waiting Loud Music – Intimidation

TOADAL FITNESS

FITNESS CLUBS

“The local alternative to the big impersonal clubs” NEWLY REMODELED Toadal Fitness Live Oak Toadal Fitness 4 Kids

464-3764

www.toadalfitness.com

Toadal Fitness Downtown Toadal Anytime

423-3764

Cabrillo Fitness Aptos

475-5979

NEWLY EXPANDED BRAND NEW WESTSIDE LOCATION

NEWLY EXPANDED 269 Mount Hermon Rd.

466-3764

430-9200

Toadal 4 Kids II

SCOTTS VALLEY


INSIDE Volume 42, No.25 September 21-27, 2016

ENTER CONTINENTAL Santa Cruz start-up launches online marketplace for African goods P11

FASHION FORWARD FashionART Santa Cruz returns to the Civic Auditorium this weekend P19

GOING WEST Craig Johnson comes to Bookshop Santa Cruz P26

Opinion 4 News 11 Cover Story 19 A&E 26 Music 32 Events 34

Film 50 Dining 54 Risa’s Stars 61 Classifieds 62 Real Estate 63

‘Agua’s Art Clothing’ line by Marise Oliveria. Photo by Jana Marcus. Cover design by Tabi Zarrinnaal. Good Times is free of charge, limited to one copy per issue per person. Entire contents copyrighted © 2016 Nuz, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form is prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Good Times is printed at a LEED-certified facility.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

FEATURES

3


OPINION

EDITOR’S NOTE Fashion never slows down, and neither does FashionART. In order to keep its reputation as the most fashionforward event not only in the local scene but also possibly in all of Northern California, its organizers have to constantly keep pushing the boundary between wearable and art. That’s what makes it so much fun for us to cover every year, and usually we try to provide an overview of what kind of craziness to expect in the upcoming show. In this week’s cover story, however, Maria Grusauskas takes a different approach, focusing on a more in-depth study of one of the fashion minds behind this year’s event, FashionART’s

new design coordinator Christina Morgan Cree. Though she’s been involved with FashionART almost since it started, this is her first year in this role, and her ascent is part of that constant drive to mix, expand and push that has made the event a huge success. Reading about her background in fashion—how she’s had both an insider’s and outsider’s view of design throughout her life made me think about the line that FashionART walks between loving embrace of the industry’s artistic ideals and witty satirizing of them. (And I don’t mean just the involvement of the Great Morgani—has he ever done anything that wasn’t tongue-in-cheek?) Santa Cruz loves to reject trends and support the outlier, which is why FashionART has thrived here. Check out some pics from last year and read the story to find out why this 11th FashionART could be the best yet.

PHOTO CONTEST

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

BUZZ FEED Bees gravitate to homegrown poppies in Capitola. Photograph by Lisa Saporta.

LETTERS

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

QUITTING TIME

4

There was a recent blurb about the City of Santa Cruz contemplating putting the Warriors Arena at the Depot Park location (GT, July 13). This is ludicrous. There is no parking in the vicinity, and the streets get clogged on a normal weekend. On busy summer weekends, there are even parked cars in the “Flats” so people there can’t get out of their driveways or their cars parked on the streets. The soccer folks tried for years to get a field. They finally have one. The city needs to wake up to the fact that there is no area between Swift Street and Capitola or from Mission Street to Beach Street in which to build anything! It’s time for a reality check and time to stop! ROWENA FULK | SANTA CRUZ

REAL PLAN I run a locally owned business and lose valuable time sitting in traffic. My clients, my business, our local economy and the environment would be better off if small businesses like mine were not trapped in a continuously congested highway with no end in sight. The back roads and

neighborhoods are not much better. Besides, cutting through them just to avoid the highway is endangering children and cyclists. I plan to vote for Measure D because it actually has a real plan to address these issues. JUSTIN WHITE, CEO, K&D LANDSCAPING INC. | WATSONVILLE

BUSES NOT ENOUGH I will be voting no on the transportation sales tax measure this November because it provides $100 million for Highway 1 widening. Studies have consistently shown that adding more lanes to a highway does not result in long-term congestion relief. To decrease travel times, the number of cars on the highway must be reduced. Coming to the decision to oppose the measure was very difficult for me because a percentage of the tax money will fund the METRO. However, the amount of money to be allocated to the METRO will be insufficient to accomplish a goal of providing innovative plans needed to increase bus ridership and decrease cars on the highway. When I moved to California a year ago, I was drawn to the City of Santa Cruz because of its natural beauty, walkability

>8

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

GOOD IDEA

GOOD WORK

HALIBUT THAT

RECIPE FOR SUCCESS

Aldo’s Bakery & Café in Soquel has expanded its menu to include more recipes from its Santa Cruz Harbor restaurant location, which closed for renovations in June. The new additions include the Olivieri family’s cioppino, calamari, fish sandwich, fish and chips, and fish tacos, as well as some breakfast favorites. Aldo’s Bakery has been making everything fresh in house since opening in 1977.

As nonprofit FoodWhat?! celebrates its 10th anniversary, it has helped more than 400 low-income and struggling youths gain job skills and confidence growing organic produce, cooking from scratch, and eating healthy. Food justice, environmental sustainability and the importance of reading labels are just part of an education that creates empowered youth. For more information, visit foodwhat.org.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

“It’s not about design. It’s about feelings.” — ALBER ELBAZ

CONTACT

GoodTimesSantaCruz

@GoodTimesSC

GTVSC

LETTERS: letters@goodtimes.sc

CALENDAR/EVENTS: calendar@goodtimes.sc

ADVERTISING: sales@goodtimes.sc

DINING: xtina@cruzio.com

NEWS: jake@goodtimes.sc

LOVE AT FIRST BITE: bite@goodtimes.sc

ENTERTAINMENT: anne-marie@goodtimes.sc

CIRCULATION: mick@goodtimes.sc


LOCAL TALK

Should Edward Snowden be pardoned, or should the government throw the book at him? BY MATTHEW COLE SCOTT

Pardoned. What he did is not actually bad for America. MAYA GUPTA SANTA CRUZ | LIBRARY ASSISTANT

Pardon him. He is someone who is tearing down the wall that has been created between the people and the government. G WONG SANTA CRUZ | STUDENT

I agree with what he did. We need more bold characters speaking out about the wrongs of society. BEN HARTLEY SANTA CRUZ | TRAVELER

SAM FULTON SANTA CRUZ | CARPENTER

Pardoned, and he should get a free book thrown at him. But only if he wants it. MARTIN DEVECKA SANTA CRUZ | TEACHER

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

[They’ll] do neither. He’ll be working for the government.

5


ROB BREZSNY FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Week of September 21 ARIES Mar21–Apr19

LIBRA Sep23–Oct 22

Even if you are a wild-eyed adventure-seeker with extremist views and melodramatic yearnings, you’ll benefit from taking a moderate approach to life in the coming weeks. In fact, you’re most likely to attract the help and inspiration you need if you adopt the strategy used by Goldilocks in the fairy tale “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”: neither excessive nor underdone, neither extravagant nor restrained, neither bawdy, loud, and in-your-face nor demure, quiet, and passive—but rather just right.

Here’s my translation of a passage from the ancient Gospel of Thomas, a gnostic text about the teachings of Jesus: “If you do not awaken and develop the potential talents that lie within you, they will damage you. If you do awaken and develop the potential talents that lie within you, they will heal you.” Whether you actually awaken and develop those talents or not depends on two things: your ability to identify them clearly and your determination to bring them to life with the graceful force of your willpower. I call this to your attention, Libra, because the coming months will be a highly favorable time to expedite the ripening of your talents. And it all starts NOW.

TAURUS Apr20–May20 Some of my readers love me but also hate me. They are drawn to my horoscopes in the hope that I will help relieve them of their habitual pain, but then get mad at me when I do just that. In retrospect, they feel lost without the familiar companionship of their habitual pain. It had been a centerpiece of their identity, a source of stability, and when it’s gone, they don’t know who they are any more. Are you like these people, Taurus? If so, you might want to avoid my horoscopes for a while. I will be engaged in a subtle crusade to dissolve your angst and agitation. And it all starts now with this magic spell: Your wound is a blessing. Discover why.

GEMINI May21–June20 In my dream last night, bad guys wearing white hats constrained you in a canvas straitjacket, then further wrapped you up with heavy steel chain secured by three padlocks. They drove you to a weedy field behind an abandoned warehouse and left you there in the pitch dark. But you were indomitable. By dawn, you had miraculously wriggled your way out of your confinement. Then you walked back home, free and undaunted. Here’s my interpretation of the dream: You now have special skills as an escape artist. No cage can hold you. No riddle can stump you. No tangle can confuse you. (P.S.: For best results, trust yourself even more than you usually do.)

CANCER Jun21–Jul22 The next four weeks will be a favorable time to come all the way home. Here are nine prompts for how to accomplish that: 1. Nourish your roots. 2. Strengthen your foundations. 3. Meditate about where you truly belong. 4. Upgrade the way you attend to your self-care. 5. Honor your living traditions. 6. Make a pilgrimage to the land where your ancestors lived. 7. Deepen your intimacy with the earth. 8. Be ingenious about expressing your tenderness. 9. Reinvigorate your commitment to the influences that nurture and support you.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

LE0 Jul23–Aug22

6

McCARTY’S WINDOW FASHIONS 1224 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Duette® Honeycomb Shades

Fashionably early.

M-F: 10am-4pm Sat: By Appointment

831.466.9167

Order your shades now and be ready for holiday parties. Plus, save $100 with rebates on select purchases of Hunter Douglas window fashions, now through 12/12/16.*

mccartyswindowfashions.com

McCarty's Window Fashions *Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/17/16–12/12/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. For certain rebate-eligible products, the 1224 Soquel Ave purchase of multiple units of such product is required to receive a rebate. If you purchase fewer units than the required multiple you will not be entitled to a rebate; partial rebates Santa Cruz,card CAand mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, will not be awarded. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward M-F: 10:00 amissuance - 4:00 pm a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 6 months after card and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. ©2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. AllAppointment trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners.3266413 Sat: By 831-466-9167 www.mccartyswindowfashions.com ~B

~B

~B

~B

~B

~B

*Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/17/16–12/12/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. For certain rebate-eligible products, the purchase of multiple units of such product is required to receive a rebate. If you purchase fewer units than the required multiple you will not be entitled to a rebate; partial rebates will not be awarded. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid

What tools will work best for the tasks you’ll be invited to perform in the coming weeks? A sledgehammer or tweezers? Pruning shears or a sewing machine? A monkey wrench or a screwdriver? Here’s my guess: Always have your entire toolbox on hand. You may need to change tools in mid-task—or even use several tools for the same task. I can envision at least one situation that would benefit from you alternating between a sledgehammer and tweezers.

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 I’m confident that I will never again need to moonlight as a janitor or dishwasher in order to pay my bills. My gig as a horoscope columnist provides me with enough money to eat well, so it’s no longer necessary to shoplift bread or scavenge for dented cans of beets in grocery store dumpsters. What accounts for my growing financial luck? I mean besides the fact that I have been steadily improving my skills as an oracle and writer? I suspect it may in part have to do with my determination to cultivate generosity. As I’ve become better at expressing compassion and bestowing blessings, money has flowed to me in greater abundance. Would this strategy work for you? The coming weeks and months will be a good time to experiment.

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 You can’t completely eliminate unhelpful influences and trivial saboteurs and debilitating distractions from your life. But you’re entering a phase of your astrological cycle when you have more power than usual to diminish their effects. To get started in this gritty yet lofty endeavor, try this: Decrease your connection with anything that tends to demean your spirit, shrink your lust for life, limit your freedom, ignore your soul, compromise your integrity, dishonor your reverence, inhibit your self-expressiveness, or alienate you from what you love.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec21 Work too much and push yourself too hard, Sagittarius. Eat corn chips for breakfast, ice cream for lunch, and French fries for dinner—every day, if possible. And please, please, please, get no more than four hours’ sleep per night. If you have any extra time, do arduous favors for friends and intensify your workout routine. JUST KIDDING! Don’t you dare heed any of that ridiculous advice. In fact, I suggest you do just the opposite. Dream up brilliant excuses not to work too much or push too hard. Treat yourself to the finest meals and best sleep ever. Take your mastery of the art of relaxation to new heights. Right now, the most effective way to serve your long-term dreams is by having as much fun, joy, and release as possible.

CAPRICORN Dec22–Jan19 I propose that you and I make a deal. Here’s how it would work: For the next three weeks, I will say three prayers for you every day. I will ask God, Fate, and Life to send you more of the recognition and appreciation you deserve. I will coax and convince them to give you rich experiences of being seen for who you really are. Now here’s what I ask of you in return: You will rigorously resolve to act on your core beliefs, express your noblest desires, and say only what you truly mean. You will be alert for those times when you start to stray from the path with heart, and you will immediately get yourself back on that path. You will be yourself three times stronger and clearer than you have ever been before.

AQUARIUS Jan20–Feb18 If you loosen yourself up by drinking an alcoholic beverage, don’t drive a forklift or ride a unicycle. If you have a hunch that your luck at gambling is peaking, don’t buy lottery tickets or play the slot machines. If you’re drawn to explore the frontiers of intimacy, be armed with the ancient Latin maxim, Primum non nocere, or “First, do no harm.” And if you really do believe it would be fun to play with fire, bring a fire extinguisher with you. In presenting this cautionary advice, I’m not saying that you should never push the limits or bend the rules. But I want to be sure that as you dare to experiment, you remain savvy and ethical and responsible.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 I invite you to explore the healing power of sex. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to do so. You are also likely to generate good fortune for yourself if you try to fix any aspect of your erotic life that feels wounded or awkward. For best results, suspend all your theories about the way physical intimacy should work in your life. Adopting a beginner’s mind could lead you to subtly spectacular breakthroughs. (P.S. You don’t necessarily need a partner to take full advantage of this big opening.)

Homework: Name the one thing you could change about yourself that would improve your love life. Testify at freewillastrology.com.

© Copyright 2016


get your FREE ArtISt guIde & App NOW!

Art tour 2016

free app

& iTunes lay P e Googl

free guide

with Good Time s & county wide

Santa Cruz Art League | scal.org 526 Broadway, Santa Cruz | 831.426.5787 Public Reception | Sunday, Sept. 25th, 3-6pm

catch the art Crow’s Nest, F. J. Anderson \\ Artist #109 \\ Oil on canvas, 48" x 60"

Oct. 1–2 Oct. 8–9 Oct. 15–16 11am–5pm

278 artists artscouncilsc.org 831.475.9600 ftI

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

preview exhibit 9/24-10/16

7


OPINION

<4

and bus service. I had already decided to no longer own a car in order to limit my carbon footprint. Aggressive wildfires in California and deadly flooding in Louisiana indicate how climate change is already affecting American lives and local economies. Climate chaos will only become worse as greenhouse gases continue to be spewed into the atmosphere. Without a car, I quickly discovered that riding the bus was a positive experience and that METRO drivers were courteous and helpful. I

continue to be impressed by passengers who thank the driver when leaving the bus at their destination. But many more people need to experience bus travel if traffic congestion is to be alleviated and our collective carbon footprint decreased. I hope a new tax measure to fund road repairs and only 21st century sustainable transportation projects, like the METRO, will be presented to the public in a couple of years. SUSAN CAVALIERI | SANTA CRUZ

LETTERS POLICY

Every First Saturday of the Month Dr. Dawn is back hosting “Stepping In” Sponsored by Jackie Tucker, owner of Care From the Heart In Home Service.

DR. DAWN MOTYKA is Stepping In

THE CREW PUBLISHER Jeanne Howard x205

Tune in Saturday at 3pm on KSCO 1080 AM and 104.1 FM for dialog, science and health care news you can use! We welcome your calls, emails and tweets. Jackie Tucker: “We are gracefully bringing Dr. Dawn’s voice to sail under the sun in Monterey Bay every first Saturday of the month.”

www.askdrdawn.com

@askdrdawn

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.

831.479.1080

EDITORIAL Editor Steve Palopoli x206 Managing Editor Maria Grusauskas x216 News Editor Jacob Pierce x223 Features Editor Anne-Marie Harrison x221

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Web & Calendar Editor Lily Stoicheff x210

8

Santa Cruz Tides

Proofreader Josie Cowden Senior Contributing Editor Geoffrey Dunn Contributing Editor Christina Waters Contributors Aaron Carnes Josie Cowden

This Week’s Tide Chart Sponsored by:

Average Water Temperature in Santa Cruz is 58°. The ideal wetsuit for these conditions is the PSYCHO ONE F.U.Z.E 4/3 O’Neill Surf Shop 24 Hour daily surf report call (831) 475-BARL ( 2 2 7 5 )

Sven Davis Risa D’Angeles DNA Roseann Hernandez Lisa Jensen Cat Johnson Brad Kava Matthew Cole Scott June Smith Andrew Steingrube

ADVERTISING Advertising Director Debra Whizin x204 Advertising Representatives Lisa Buckley Lindsay Keebler Nadine Kelley Sue Lamothe Ilana Rauch Packer

OPERATIONS Office Manager Andrea Patton x200 Accounting Katherine Adams x202

Circulation Manager Mick Freeman mick@goodtimes.sc Drivers Frederick Cannon Guy Gosset Bill Pooley Hunter Toedtman/Coryell Autism Center Nelson West Bill Williamson

ART & PRODUCTION Art Director Tabi Zarrinnaal Designers Lorin Baeta Rosie Eckerman Sean George DiAnna VanEycke Photographers Keana Parker Chip Scheuer CEO Dan Pulcrano Vice President Lee May

is published weekly at 1101 Pacific Ave, Suite 320, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 831.458.1100

The purpose of GOOD TIMES is to be Santa Cruz County’s guide to entertainment and events, to present news of ongoing local interest, and to reflect the voice, character and spirit of our unique community. GOOD TIMES is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Only inserts listed above are authorized by GOOD TIMES. Anyone inserting, tampering with or diverting circulation will be prosecuted. The entire content of GOOD TIMES is copyright © 2016 by Nuz, Inc. No part may be reproduced in any fashion without written consent of the publisher. First-class subscriptions available at $100/year, or $3 per issue. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. Adjudicated a legal newspaper of general circulation by Municipal Court of Santa Cruz County, 1979, Decree 68833. This newspaper is printed almost entirely on recycled newsprint. Founded by Jay Shore in 1975.


Stunning beaches to the left, award-winning health care to the right. Santa Cruz County has everything you could ever want: a serene coastline, a close-knit community, and comprehensive care. Blue Shield of California, together with PMG and Dominican Hospital, continues its tradition of providing you access to coordinated care from top doctors and specialists—right in your own backyard. Who said you can’t have it all? Visit blueshieldca.com/santacruz for more information.

Blue Shield of California is an independent member of the Blue Shield Association.

ACUPUNCTURE | HERBS | ENERGETICS | DIET | MASSAGE

Five Branches University Health Center Specialties include: F Pain Management and Orthopedics F Pediatrics, and Women’s Health F Dermatology F And much more Our clinic is open late and on Saturdays to accommodate your schedule.

HOURS: Mon-Thurs 9:00am-7:30pm Friday 9:00am-5:00pm Saturday 9:00am-4:30pm To make an appointment call: 831-476-8211

200 7th Avenue, Santa Cruz CA | fivebranches.edu/clinic | 831.476.9424

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Come to the voted best Acupuncture Clinic in Santa Cruz three years running!

9


Heavy Body Acrylics Golden 2oz & 5oz tubes GDAxxxxx List $9.39-$36.39

30off

Cotman Watercolors Winsor & Newton 8ml tubes, Assorted Colors WNX0303xxx List $4.49

Charcoal Pencil General Pencil HB, 2B, 4B, 6B or white GNP55xx List $1.35

399 Winton Oil Colours

Princeton Brushes

Drawing Tool Set

Winsor & Newton 37ml & 200ml tubes, Assorted WNX12xxxxx List $6.69-$41.99

ENTIRE LINE! PBXxxxx

Art Alternatives

ESSENTIAL TOOLS! AAT17609 List $8.99

40off

30off

749 18”x24” Drawing Pad Strathmore STT4008 EDLP $10.99

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

AD Markers

10

Spectra Twin Tip, Alcohol Markers CH50xxAD List $5.15

99

7

99

399

Nupastels Sanford 12 color set SAN27048 EDLP $19.99

1699 Prices good through November 15, 2016

Santa Cruz 1407 Pacific Avenue 427-1550 Open 7 days a week

#600-312 Exp. 11/15/2016

Everything in stock... even items on sale! Valid on any purchase of $10 or more. Cash, check or bank card only. Limit one per customer per day. Not valid with other coupons. Must present coupon at time of purchase.

Capitola 1501-K 41st Avenue 464-2700 Open 7 days a week

Thank you for shopping locally! stores.gopalace.com


NEWS STEPS FORWARD Local Alzheimer’s Association celebrates 25th annual walk for a cure BY JUNE SMITH

KUUZA CULTURE The Kuuza Here team models modern and traditional African fashion for their

marketplace website. PHOTO: BRANDON DAVIS

Seller’s Market

Santa Cruz-based start-up Kuuza Here connects locals to African goods, identity and pride BY ANNE-MARIE HARRISON

W

hen Wanjiku Muhire wants to get her favorite kind of chai tea, she has to fly

to Kenya. “For years I grew up watching my mom having to coordinate relatives and flights to bring back tea from Kenya, through whoever was traveling—they’d have to bring back a whole suitcase of tea for everybody. What day and age are we living in that we have to personally import

day-to-day essentials that belong in the pantry?” says Muhire, chuckling. “No Italian comes to the U.S. and struggles to find Italian food. It’s such a foreign concept to a lot of Africans to be able to access their culture in the same immediate ways.” That’s why Muhire, 24, joined with a handful of other recent UCSC graduates and current students to create a business that would meet that need: a black-owned online marketplace for all things African.

Kuuza Here—a name that roughly translates to “sell here” in Swahili—launched on Aug. 21. The site offers modern and traditional African fashions, as well as other accessories, like home decor items. It’s quickly adding sellers, and each item listed has information on where it came from, who made it, and its tie to Africa—like the light blue dashiki from Lola’s African Apparel which is traditional West African fashion for men. >14

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Margaret Hammond, a Capitola local, feels a heaviness of heart when thinking of her husband Lloyd, a retired teacher, principal and coach who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2006. He died in 2012 from respiratory failure due to end-stage dementia. With grief, Hammond recalls the day the car was missing, and Lloyd hadn’t returned by dark. As she got ready to call the police, he pulled into the carport. “He had been in downtown Santa Cruz, purchased something for me, and then had fallen. He arrived back home with a bag of broken glass,” she remembers, adding that she had to restrict his driving after that. “There were many close calls. Another time we were downtown, and while he went into the bookstore, I waited for him in front. When he didn’t return, I asked a bicycle policeman for help, and we spotted him waiting at a bus stop. He had gone out the back door.” She knows that she was fortunate, she adds, to have help from family so that she could attend evening support groups at the local Alzheimer’s Association. There were times, too, when she felt like just giving up, but the caring staff showed her that she was not alone, she says. “Thinking about this today makes me realize the importance of the Alzheimer’s Association’s many services. It’s all there,” she says of the group, which is hosting its big annual event this weekend. The 25th annual Santa Cruz Walk to End Alzheimer’s on Saturday, Sept. 24 will take participants along the beach at Seascape Beach Resort and nearby park. Bagpipers will lead the walk, as is tradition at the Aptos event, with Taiko drummers performing from the beach. More than 500 area residents participated last year, raising $197,330. This amount contributed to the $77 million raised nationwide for care, support and research efforts for those impacted by the disease. Alzheimer’s is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States, and it’s the only cause of death among the top 10 that cannot be prevented, cured or even slowed. Currently more than 500,000 people die from Alzheimer’s disease each year, translating to 57 deaths every hour. Formed in 1980, the Alzheimer’s >12

11


NEWS

RIGHT NOTE Every year bagpipers lead the Alzheimer’s Walk, which departs from

Seascape Beach Resort on Saturday, Sept. 24.

STEPS FORWARD <11

F REE W ELLNESS C LASS In store at Way of Life!

Wednesday Sept 28th 6:30 - 8:00 pm

Association advances research to end Alzheimer’s and dementia while enhancing care for those living with the disease. Organizers across the country are hosting 629 walks in support of the cause this time of year. Event registration for Saturday’s walk begins at 8:30 a.m. with a tribute ceremony at 9 a.m. and a Zumba warm-

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

12

A Holistic Approach to Stress and Anxiety with Aimee Miller, Licensed Acupuncturist go to www.wayoflife.net for details

1220 A 41st Avenue Capitola, CA 95010 (831) 464-4113 • Open Daily www.wayoflife.net

To join the walk, sign up at alz.org/walk or contact santacruzwalk@alz.org for more information. To volunteer, contact nathompson@alz.org. Access support for Alzheimer’s is available via a 24/7 help line, 800-272-3900.

NEWS BRIEFS GRASS ROOTED

Cultivating Calm:

up before the walking at 10 a.m., which includes a 3-mile trail and a shorter option. “The longer walk is partially on the beach, often including the sight of dolphins at the halfway point,” says Dale Thielges, site director of the Alzheimer’s Association’s Santa Cruz office. “The 1.5-mile walk is around and through Seascape Resort.” If those are

too challenging, the association invites people to bring family and friends, and stay up on the bluff where they can learn more about Alzheimer’s disease, advocacy opportunities, clinical studies enrollment, and the many other support programs. Participants who raise $100 receive a T-shirt. Following the walk, a complimentary lunch will be served, compliments of Seascape Beach Resort. Michele Boudreau, communications director of the Northern California and Northern Nevada Alzheimer’s Association, is asking the public to request Congress continue its fight against Alzheimer’s by increasing research funding with an additional $400 million in 2017. “While Congress has recently provided additional funding for Alzheimer’s research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the commitment continues to fall far short of the need,” Boudreau says. “For every $100 that the NIH spends on Alzheimer’s research, Medicare and Medicaid spend $16,000 caring for those with the disease.”

On Thursday, Sept. 15, UCSC posted an inspiring—if slightly campy—video on its Facebook page asking the question, “What would Rachel Carson do?” Carson, perhaps the most important environmentalist of the 20th century, authored the book Silent Spring, which spurred the banning of pesticide DDT, among other changes. She’s also the namesake of the newly titled Carson College, formerly College Eight, which was founded in 1972. It is the first residential college—of which there are currently 10—to be named after a woman. “It’s long overdue, right?” asks Elida Erickson, UCSC’s

sustainability director. She’s based at Carson College, which has an environmental focus. Erickson concedes that the last time any residential college on campus was named was 44 years ago—a very different time. Still, she calls the naming “a milestone,” arguing that the environmental movement and other academic worlds need to grow more inclusive, better bridging the gaps with women and people of color, and that this name emblemizes that shift. Many are hopeful that the moniker will create some momentum to rebrand Colleges Nine and Ten, as well. To make the new name change possible, Carson College Provost Ronnie

Lipschutz helped convince the philanthropists to donate a $7 million package in Carson’s name. Most of the money came in an endowment from Alec and Claudia Webster. Lipschutz has since heard that when the environmentally themed college had been kicking around possible names in the early ’70s Carson’s came up—a delightful tidbit that rings true for him the more he thinks about it. “It sure sounds good,” he says.

LATER, HATER A reggae star who has called for gays to be killed recently got booked to play the Catalyst in downtown Santa Cruz, igniting controversy in Santa Cruz’s queer community.

Sizzla, a proudly anti-LGBTQ artist from Jamaica, was on the calendar for Monday, Sept. 26, performing what critics have called his trademark “murder music.” Such hateful transgressions are at least as bad as those from Michelle Shocked, who had her Moe’s Alley show canceled three years ago after going on a bizarre “God hates fags” rant. But the Catalyst heard about the controversy, and Thomas Cussins, who manages bookings for the club, says the Catalyst has canceled the Sizzla show due to community concerns. Cussins adds via email, “While we do support freedom of speech, we do not support hate speech.” JACOB PIERCE


A fun and FREE Event for the entire family! th

18

Children’s Cancer Support Services

F REE A pprais

ANNUAL

al! *

GOLDEN CARNIVAL SUNDAY, September 25th Watsonville Plaza 12 to 5pm

WHAT IS KIDRAGEOUS? Kidrageous is a community celebration of life created by and for local families of children with cancer. Each of the booths and activities at the event is in honor of or in memory of a local child with cancer. PRESENTED BY:

❤ Dunk Tank

❤ Music & Dance

❤ Giant Fooseball

❤ Bounce Houses

❤ Playful Activities

❤ Princesses & Super Heroes

❤ Drone Activity

❤ Arts & Crafts

❤ Face Painting

❤ Playtime Races

❤ Tie Dye

❤ Henna & Silly Tattoos

Celebrate Love ❤ Celebrate Hope ❤ Celebrate Family GO GOLD FOR CHILDREN SEPTEMBER IS CHILDHOOD CANCER AWARENESS MONTH

GO GOLD FOR CHILDREN SEPTEMBER IS Childhood Cancer Awareness Month

Children’s Cancer Support Services

Jordan and Kyra MEMORIAL GOLF TOURNAMENT th

Seascape Golf Club, Aptos 11:30am Tournament Shotgun Start ❤ Registration, Lunch & Warm-Up ❤ Putting & Course Contests

Finance your new home with us and receive a FREE appraisal!*

Get started at www.bayfed.com.

❤ Cocktails, Hors d’oeuvres ❤ Silent Auction ❤ Awards Dinner Banquet

$250 per person, limited to the first 144 registered golfers THIS EVENT IS EXPECTED TO SELL OUT. FOR MORE INFORMATION Contact Jacob’s Heart at 831.724.9100, or visit jacobsheart.org/golf

JORDAN and KYRA Memorial Foundation

The Santa Cruz, CA-based Jordan & Kyra Memorial Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization created in memory of Jordan Stuart and Kyra Pillsbury, two Bay Area children who lost their battles with brain tumors, but whose spirit and courage continue to inspire others. The Foundation offers COMPASSION by raising funds for Jacob’s Heart, a non-profit that provides family-centered care that addresses the emotional, practical and financial struggles experienced by the families of children and teens undergoing treatment, families with anticipatory grief, and those who are bereaved. It also provides COMFORT for the families of children with pediatric cancers by funding Family House, a non-profit residence for the families of children undergoing treatment at UCSF Medical Center in San Francisco; and HOPE, by funding cutting-edge research that is being conducted by world renowned cancer specialist Dr. Mark A. Israel, M.D. - first at UCSF Brain Tumor Research Center and currently at Dartmouth University’s Norris Cotton Cancer Center

IT’S ALL ABOUT THE KIDS ❤ IT’S ALL ABOUT THE LOVE ❤ NOW ALL WE NEED IS YOU! For more information call 831.724.9100 or visit jacobsheart.org/events Jacob’s Heart • 680 West Beach Street Watsonville CA 95076 • Donate online at jacobsheart.org

831.479.6000 • www.bayfed.com • 888.4BAYFED * Offer applicable to home purchase transactions in the state of California. Eligible Bay Federal Home Loans include 1- 4 family, owner occupied, second home, and investment properties up to a maximum loan amount of $1,500,000. One free appraisal per transaction. Loan application must be dated after September 1, 2016 and funded no later than January 31, 2017. Offer not available on refinances. Terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. All loans are subject to credit approval. Bay Federal Credit Union membership required at the time of closing. For more information, visit any Bay Federal Credit Union branch or call a Bay Federal Home Loan Consultant at 831.479.6000 or toll-free at 888.4BAYFED, extension 304.

Federally Insured by NCUA. Equal Housing Lender.

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

FRIDAY, September 30

A Home of Your Own

13


SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

NEWS

14

CONTINENT COUTURE Adora McQuinn models the West African-inspired Domica Dress from Fantabela. PHOTO: BRANDON DAVIS

SELLER’S MARKET <11 For Muhire, savoring the taste of a regional beer (for her, that’s Kenya’s Tusker) keeps the comfortable feeling of home alive even in a new environment, as does the ability to buy a traditional item of clothing. Muhire, Kuuza’s CEO, was born in the Bay Area to East African parents, but her Kenyan mother, Ugandan father, brother and sister all returned to Nairobi, Kenya, when Muhire was a freshman at UCSC. Her craving for tea sparked the idea for Kuuza Here, although she is still working to bring that particular item onboard. The goal is to eventually make the site a one-stop shop for all

things African—whether it’s spices, food, tea or clothing—that people can’t easily find in stores here, says Jordan McClanahan, the company’s director of Marketing and Operations. There’s a gaping need for such a platform, says McClanahan, 23, because most websites that are geared toward African products typically sell only women’s fashion. And others can simply be overwhelming. “We said ‘Let’s create a platform that’s not just like Etsy, where you have a million different things,’” says Muhire, noting that in Etsy’s African category, it can be difficult to stand out. “Let’s put you on a site that’s exclusively geared to

what you’re selling.” Kuuza Here is for those who want to maintain a connection to the continent, but it also has the potential for larger impact, says Eron Lake, Kuuza’s chief technological officer, who designed the website. “At the root of it is economic empowerment of the black community,” says Lake, 20. “One of the things that has the largest effect on the African American community has always been poverty and economic restriction.” Highlighting black-made goods from black-owned businesses is a step toward that sense of empowerment, Lake says, and with it he wants the site to provide an

opportunity for all black people to partake in a shared heritage. He notes that Americans originally from Europe, Asia and the Middle East often have at least an idea of what countries their lineage originates from and how to trace it. Countless African Americans, though, can’t readily access that kinship because their families are part of the enormous diaspora forced centuries ago by the Atlantic slave trade. When enslaved people were bought and sold, buyers would receive a bill of sale which included physical characteristics like age, height, weight, musculature, and sometimes where the >17


T:9”

Open Enrollment is about more than checking a box. It’s about choice. And behind that choice is the team of people who will take care of you and your family when it matters most. This Open Enrollment, choose a health plan that gives you access to our team of doctors. To find a doctor, visit DominicanOpenEnrollment.org or call 877-771-5864.

Dignity Health Medical Group–Dominican A Service of Dignity Health Medical Foundation

Dominican Hospital

T:4.84” SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Choose your doctor as carefully as your first home.

15


New Fall Makeup SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Holiday Deluxe $199 FREE

16

APPLICATION AND FREE GIFT

Non-Surgical Facelift $149

1

G I FT C E R T I F I CAT E S AVA I L A B L E ! NOW OPEN LATE ON WEDNESDAYS!

We wax everyth ing, just ask !

Microcurrent & Infusion Therapy ($149) - Hydrated and Revitalized Skin - Tightening of Sagging Jowls, Double Chin, Fatty Cheeks - Increased Collagen and Elastin Production

W/ PURCHASE HURRY - EXPIRES 10/5/16

(Reg $449)

2

Venus Legacy Facial (Reg $300) - Wrinkle Reduction - Skin Tightening - Regained Firmness in Neck Ectodermal Tissue

Mention this AD

831.612.4625 Non-Invasive • No Swelling No Downtime exp 10.18.16 • Complementary Skin Analysis 4450 Capitola Rd. Ste. 105 | 831-612-4625 www.naturalfoundations.com


NEWS SELLER’S MARKET <14

Impairing Your

Active Lifestyle Low Back Pain Spine Injury Neck Pain Plantar Fasciitis

First-Time Client Offer

$105

(Save $40)

CITY COUNCIL candidates’ forum Sep 22nd, 6:30

Civic Auditorium • Free Admission

Diagnosis • Treatment • Results Athletic Injuries and Performance

Glenn Kazmierski LAc 831-459-6005 TaoPerformance.com

COMMERCIAL SPACE FOR RENT DOWNTOWN SANTA CRUZ

Candidates share their vision for downtown Santa Cruz using the popular and entertaining 20 x 20 pecha kucha presentation format

715 S.F. OR 1,430 S.F. 111 Dakota @ Soquel TWO GROUND FLOOR OFFICE "CONDOS" OF EQUAL SIZE, COMBINED OR SEPARATE. #3 HAS A LOBBY, RECEPTION SPACE, A LARGE ROOM, KITCHENETTE. #4 HAS A SPACIOUS ROOM AT THE ENTRANCE, AND FOUR SMALLER ROOMS. PARKING TO BE DISCUSSED; THE PARKING LOT WILL BE PAVED IN 2017.

Contact Jeanne Howard at: jeanne@santacruz.com 831.601.1691

downtownsantcruz.com

pechakucha.org

Presented by the Downtown Association of Santa Cruz Sponsored in part by

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

sale took place—but not who came from where. They sometimes included first names and, rarely, surnames that often belonged to former masters, but there was no uniform system in place, so when sales broke up families it became virtually impossible to trace bloodlines. “As black people, you grow up and you don’t feel a connection to any kind of heritage. A lot of times it’s like, ‘Well I’m black, so I know I came from somewhere in Africa, but [I have] no real clue,’” says Lake. “There’s a notion for young black people trying to connect to their roots, and a need to reconnect with the continent, with Africa.” One thing that the 45.7 million people of African descent in the United States have in common, Lake says, is that they can have a relationship with the entire continent. “Even though I don’t know where [I’m from in Africa] specifically, I can wear clothes from East Africa, South Africa, West Africa—they’re completely different styles, but I feel a connection because I know there’s a similar struggle that everyone went through,” says Lake. “I can do all I want to do to support my culture but there’s nothing like the feeling of wearing the clothes, eating the food, or just partaking in the culture directly. It’s a feeling of really getting in touch with your roots and showing respect.” And for those without an ancestral link to the continent, modern or otherwise, they can of course still wear the clothes and buy the traditional items from Kuuza Here. It’s all about respecting the item, the history, and the culture, says Lake. “Everyone can partake in empowering the black community,” he says. “Everyone should appreciate Africa, not just black people.” The Kuuza team wants shoppers to experience the site’s tagline, “Shop like you traveled,” says Muhire. “We want people to embrace the site in a way that allows you to know if you spend a dollar on this site the money is going back to the continent to support someone who is working to support themselves,” says Muhire. “It’s going to impact them in a real way.”

Is an Injury

17


New Fall Collections Michael Stars • Groceries Splendid • James Perse Velvet • 3Dots • Wilt Alternative • Stateside

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

AG • Mother Denim • Paige

18

Citizens of Humanity Goldsign • Free People Ella Moss • BB Dakota Johnny Was • JWLA Odd Molly • Zoa French Connection Only Hearts • Amour Vert Sanctuary • Lucky Brand Muubaa • Jag • NYDJ Citron • Cut Loose Nic & Zoe • Eileen Fisher Locally Owned Since 1972 Santa Cruz • 423-3349 • 1224 Pacific Ave Capitola • 476-6109 • 504C Bay Ave Visit us on Facebook


BREAKS

FashionART

OUT

‘Preening with Purpose,’ by Kathleen Crocetti.

BY MARIA GRUSAUSKAS PHOTOS BY JANA MARCUS FROM FASHIONART 2015

‘B

20>

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

etter than Burning Man”—that’s how “Sleepy” John Sandidge recently described FashionART Santa Cruz on KZSC. Desert dust and nudity aside, the runway show certainly rivals—and often surpasses—scenes from the playa, in terms of its daring creativity, and wellthought-out, painstakingly crafted designs. Now in its 11th year, FashionART, which takes place at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 24, has established itself as a permanent fixture of Santa Cruz culture—a place where emerging models, artists and local legends like the Great Morgani emote, evolve, and, in many cases, form the foundation of their careers. “The months leading up to FashionART are like a crescendo of excitement,” says founder Angelo Grova. The event, which packs the 1,800-capacity Civic Auditorium, is now one of the biggest events in town. “And it gets bigger and bigger every year,” says Grova. GT spoke with Christina Morgan Cree, this year’s new design coordinator, who, at 41, returned to design work after retiring from her craft for almost a decade—and whose soda-can-ring gown not only dazzled the FashionART audience of 2011, but was also selected by French haute couture designer Jean Paul Gaultier in a contest to be part of a gala at the de Young museum in San Francisco. Since then, Cree hasn’t looked back; she’s established her own line (see christinamorgancree.com), and has participated in countless runway shows—including FashionART almost every year, and joins this year’s installment with both a wearable art piece and a design line.

19


SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

FashionART

20

Breaks Out

How did you get into the world of fashion design?

CHRISTINA MORGAN CREE: Well, I started when I was probably two or three. As soon as I could draw, as soon as I could get my hands on fabrics, this is what I was doing. And it was really a lot of sort of the 18th-century kind of French Court look, that was my thing for a long time, and I still love the panniers, the big side things that stick out, and you’ll still see that in some of my work. So I am very self-taught. I had a teddy bear named Corduroy, after the book Corduroy, and he was my model for many years, he would wear the dresses I made. We did not have a lot of money; I grew up on food stamps in a very poor neighborhood in San Jose, this is preSilicon Valley. So whenever I could get my hands on fabric, whenever someone would just give it to us, I loved it. I learned all by hand. I would design costumes for the neighborhood kids, and I was really into space and The Jetsons, and I would have all these adventures with our decorated refrigerator boxes in our courtyard, and I would make space clothes and Halloween costumes for all of them.

Left to right: ‘A Fusion’ design line by Saundra Beno; ‘DNA’ design line by Tobin Keller; ‘Future Modern’ design line by Christina Morgan Cree.

You took a long hiatus from fashion design while raising three children— aside from a few wedding dresses and Halloween costumes. In 2011 you designed a gown of plastic soda rings for FashionART that not only appeared on the 2012 FashionART posters, but was also selected by Jean Paul Gaultier in a contest at the de Young museum. Did that feel like a sign that you needed to keep doing design?

In the Bay Area there are a lot of experienced and talented people submitting stuff. So that was really cool, I got to go there and I got to briefly meet him. I’m just super thankful that [FashionART] took my scratchy pencil sketches, and kind of cracked open the door for me, which led to a lot of other stuff. Yes, it was definitely validating, and I don’t think it sank in for months or years. Because you sit at home, and you’re making this stuff, and there’s just a lot of you in there, and it can be very vulnerable to put it out there in public. So, coming into it as a 41-year-old, and having not done all the design that I thought I was going to be able to do for decades, it was really wonderful.

22>


®

124 Church St.

831.454.9999

1368 Pacific Ave. • Downtown Santa Cruz • 831.423.8183 • artisanssantacruz.com

Facials, Makeup and Waxing

For Fuller, More Beautiful Looking Lashes Baggallini • Bobeau • Brighton • Color Me Cotton • Cutloose • Habitat • Hobo • Jag Jeans • Mystree • Vera Bradley ... and many more

Zinnia’s Scotts Valley

(831) 430-9466 219C Mount Hermon Road • Scotts Valley zinniasgiftboutique.com Always complimentary gift wrap

Semi-permanent, customized lashes that last up to 7-9 weeks!Lightweight, yet thick and flatteringly curled. Completely safe for skin, eyes and contact lenses. 831-332-4642 | SantaCruzComplexions.com 709 Frederick Street, Santa Cruz, CA

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Now Offering Eyelash Extensions!

21


FashionART

Breaks Out

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Do you consider your soda ring dress, or some of the other pieces, like the candy-wrapper dresses, a statement about consumer culture?

22

From left to right: ‘Polka What’ by the Great Morgani; ‘Show Me the Money,’ a wearable art piece made from coins and dollars by Christina Morgan Cree; ‘The Fashion Warrior’ by Lisa Bibbee, aka the Samurai Seamstress; a gown made out of slides, one of the Fashion Teens winners.

I’m a big recycler, and I recycled in Santa Cruz years before they did curbside recycling. We’d lug all of our stuff in the car to recycle it because we just felt strongly about that. So, my dress didn’t have a direct statement, but I would say it definitely represents who I am … There are pieces in FashionART that have been very direct statements on the environment and using recycled materials, and salvaging. Lisa Bibbee, her design line last year was entirely repurposed, upcycled fabric. And a lot of people save and reuse. And so some people definitely do have very environmental statements on the runway, and that’s very intentional. What can people expect for 2016?

It’s going to be very multicultural. We’ve got two different designers that grew up in Africa, and they’re bringing their whole kind of integrated culture into their stuff, and it’s just wonderful, and it’s different. We have four designers who are really bringing their own backgrounds of their ethnicity and their growing up, their cultures, and colors to their lines. One of them opened the show

last year, and she’s going to be there again this year. One of the designers is doing this really wonderful themed design line with headpieces. It’s going to be gorgeous. And we have a lot more men this year, so that’s exciting. We have a men’s designer, who just showed at Mercedes-Benz New York Fashion Week— Ben Ellis. Many of the pieces showcased at FashionART are so beautiful, but also a bit crazy as far as street clothes go. Do people actually wear these pieces afterward?

I can speak for me and some of the wearable artists. They do go into other exhibitions. Some of my stuff’s been in the Richmond Art Gallery, and at the MAH, and I get asked a lot for my wearable art pieces for models and photographers to do photo shoots. Santa Cruz doesn’t necessarily have a reputation for being fashion forward. Do you think that FashionART is changing that, proving that we do have an edge? Would you say that what we’ll see is what we can expect to see for Fall?

Well, from what I’ve see in stores so far, I would say my line this year is probably more of what you’ll be seeing this fall. But FashionART is more about a platform for new and emerging designers, and, you know, there’s so much out there now. I would say FashionART does reflect the community’s fashion sense in that it’s really individualistic, and it’s very

24>


MOBSTER MASH

October

14th & 15th, 2016

Featuring More Th an Fifty Booths of Vin tage Fashion from Eve ry Decade and Style FRIDAY NIGHT EVENT, 10/14/2016 VIP EARLY-BUY PARTY, 6pm-10pm

Friday Admission Advance Ticket Price $10 on BrownPaperTickets.com or $15 at the Door — Includes Re-Admit to Shop on Saturday —

SATURDAY EVENT, 10/15/2016 GENERAL ADMISSION, 10am-5pm Saturday Admission: $5

MICHAAN'S ANNEX AUCTION SHOWROOM 2701 Monarch Street, Alameda, CA 94501 AlamedaPointAntiquesFaire.com For more information call 510-522-7500 follow us at: facebook.com/AlamedaPointVintageFashionFaire Twitter.com/AlamedaFaires | Instagram: @AlamedaFaires

Inspired Jewelry Design

NOW OPEN

Accessories and Gifts 857 41st Ave, Santa Cruz www.flyinglizard.com 831.515.7484

Luxury, Artistry and Ease in Women's Fashion 910 B Soquel Avenue, Midtown • 831.419.6219 • mme.ltd

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

FLYING LIZARD

23


FashionART

Breaks Out

much from the heart of the person, and there is a lot of non-conformity spirit there. And just showing what you are, who you are, what you are uniquely bringing that nobody else can. Because there will be amazing talent, and new and better and whatever, but what makes you as a person stand out is your perspective, your history, and what you uniquely bring to something, and that’s what I really love seeing come out.

It’s interesting to think about how the technological aspect of design has changed fashion, because most people are designing with computers now.

Yeah, that’s a good thought. I wonder how much that has lent to the flooding of the market with so much—you’re just inundated now with “new and different,” and it’s always changing, but it’s almost too much. So then is the question ‘what’s new for fall’ kind of obsolete?

There’s always something new, but even when they come out with the Pantone color for the year [2016 is, for the first time, a blending of two colors; rose quartz and serenity], I don’t necessarily see that color.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Do you have any advice for beginning designers?

24

I think what’s great is there are so many platforms now to sell. You can even sell through Facebook now, and of course Etsy. And there are a lot of boutiques locally that are open to taking one-of-a-kind things. When I was going to school, going into the fashion design business, you were groomed to work in a bigger company—say Old Navy, or Esprit back then was still a thing in San Francisco. You were groomed to be the one who was doing, say, the pockets on shorts. You were part of a whole company. But what I like now is that you can start small and work for yourself. There are street fairs and a lot of pop-up shops now, like in Valley Fair Mall and in downtown San Jose. You can do a small little shop that’s like a booth almost, and you pay for your spot there, and you don’t have to maintain a space in the mall, but you’re getting all that

traffic coming by. There are so many ways that you can get your stuff out there now, and you don’t have to put this huge financial investment into it, that maybe you don’t have. So for young designers, I would encourage them to take advantage of all these things that we have. Fashion shows are a great way to get pictures and publicity. You’re not necessarily going to make a bunch of sales from a fashion show, but I get more custom work from fashion shows. Also, you have to be a little thickerskinned and realize you will get nos, and you will get rejections—but take it with a grain of salt, and look for where you can improve, and really believe in yourself.

Left: ‘Countdown 4, 3, 2, 1’ by Angelo Grova, producer of FashionART; Right: ‘DNA’ design line by Tobin Keller.

You’ve been involved in FashionART since the beginning. Do you see it evolving, or moving in any particular direction?

To me it gets better and better each year, from what I’ve seen, and it steps up in sophistication, year to year, and yet it’s still extremely inclusive. There are still models of all sizes; we have a lot of great models who have a lot of experience, and they are your 5’9” and up and size 2-4, so we’ve got those models. We’ve got the professional hair and makeup, we’ve also got short models, we’ve got models of all shapes and sizes. I go back and forth depending on my line if I use model-looking women or normal-shaped women, and I love doing that. So I feel like it’s becoming more professional looking and yet it’s not getting detached from its original purpose, which is that it supports the community and the arts and foundation and fashion teams, and it’s very supportive of artists like myself. And a lot of these artists are working all year long on their lines for FashionART?

Yes, there are some that work all year. We always have some designers where this is their first time putting together an entire line, and really putting their heart and soul into it. And it really takes a lot out of you. Jill Alexander has gone international

with stuff, and I believe FashionART was her first runway show, and she started with plus size and now she does all sizes. You’ve done shows around the Bay Area but you say FashionART is easily your favorite. Why is that?

First of all, you’ve got this venue that holds just so many people, and most fashion shows can’t seat that many people—and then people are just really happy to be there, it’s just the best audience. So you go out on stage and it’s a nearly 50-foot runway, and you are literally on your own, thrown out there. There have been a lot of first-time models, and this is the first time they’ve modeled in these high heels on this huge runway— very intimidating. But the warmth and the support and all the love you feel, I mean it’s just great. Everybody loves doing it, everybody comes away from it saying they loved doing it.

INFO: FashionART Santa Cruz is 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 24, at the Civic Auditorium. For tickets, visit fashionartsantacruz.com.


207,000 smiles & counting...

ACNE BOOT CAMP!

HAVE CLEARRIDDANCE SKIN THISTO SUMMER SAY GOOD ACNE

customized program 95% success rate • continuous support • •

2.01w x 4.84 h 1/8th page

I

 ist!

my dent

•••

Call today for a

FREE CONSULTATION

PACIFIC SKIN CARE

ACNE AND ANTI AGING SOLUTIONS

831.476.1060 Facials • Acne Treatments • Waxing • Massage Book Online:

pacificskincaresc.com 2628 Soquel Drive, Santa Cruz

2 Locations: 205 River Street, SC 1570 Soquel Dr.,# 2, across from Dominican FABULOUSFINDSCORNERSTORE.ORG

Medi‐Cal, Healthy Families & Sliding Scale Fees Open Mon ‐ Sat

www.dientes.org 831‐464‐5409

OVER 800 VARIETIES

In Santa Cruz Findings

835 Front St. (831) 316-5159

Pure Beauty ESTHETICS

MICROBLADING

PERMANENT COSMETICS

Look Younger in 4 days! Call Dr. Ana to book your $10/unit Botox visit

for BROWS EYES & LIPS Book a complimentary consultation online at www.purebeautyesthetics.com

349 GAULT ST SANTA CRUZ 831.426.4321

Botox $10 per unit Dermal Fillers • Chemical Peels

Ask about fillers for instant results

BeautyWithin 513 Soquel Ave. Santa Cruz 831.313.4844

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

World of Stones & Mystics

25


&

LITERATURE

WORTH HIS WALT Craig Johnson, whose series of books about Sheriff Walt Longmire inspired the Netflix series ‘Longmire,’ comes to Bookshop

Santa Cruz on Thursday, Sept. 22.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Way Out West

26

Craig Johnson’s books about back-to-basics police work in rural Wyoming get new audience with Netflix show BY WENDY MAYER-LOCHTEFELD

I

f you haven’t seen the Netflix series Longmire, it’s well worth your time, not just because it’s great TV, but because great TV should send you back to the great books it’s often based upon. An

HOT TICKET

Obvious Fact is the twelfth novel in Craig Johnson’s terrific series about Walt Longmire, a sheriff in Absaroka County, Wyoming. In anticipation of his appearance at Bookshop Santa Cruz, Johnson shared his thoughts

on fiction, television, the writing life, and the Milky Way. The Longmire novels are set in the least populated county in the least populated state, but they’ve tapped into

something larger, even universal. Why? When I wrote the first Longmire novel, the CSI stuff was really catching on and everything was about ballistics, forensics, and DNA testing. I thought all that >28

THEATER

MUSIC

DINING

No southern comfort in ‘Streetcar’ P30

Jessica Hernandez and the Deltas explore Latin roots P32

Big things in store for Tramonti P54


facials massage • waxing body treatment

911 Capitola ave. Capitola Caressdayspa.Com 831-462-4422 since 1998

Enzyme Facial $45 New clients only (6+ mos. since last svc.)

(reg. $90) • Exp. 10/5/16

Astounding Results

720 Capitola Ave., Capitola astoundingresults.net

Trying to work from home? Escape the kids, cats and kitchen table. Join us for $5 Wednesdays at

325 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz 831-531-2300 santacruz.thesatellitecenters.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Sonni Scher 831.706.1107

27


&

LITERATURE

“I think if I ever kill Walt off, the readers will kill me. I was lucky to find him. Walt is the best insurance that I’ll continue the series. He’s good company.” -CRAIG JOHNSON <26 technology was robbing the stories of their humanity. I figured if I wrote a procedural about the sheriff of a rural county in a rural state, it might focus more on character and place, which is where the best writing takes place, and what Steinbeck referred to as a “universality of the human condition.” There’s always going to be an epic, romantic quality to westerns, even contemporary ones, but it comes down to the characters. Walt isn’t like most characters you find in crime fiction. He’s more like us.

MusicalMe, Inc. 45 minutes of pure fun with your family!

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

FREE PREVIEWS • GIFT CERTIFICATES • BIRTHDAY PARTIES

28

“Celebrating our 20th anniversary and over 50,000 students!”

Music and movement classes for babies, toddlers, preschoolers...and the grownups who love them. Register Now for our Fall Session! BEN LOMOND - CAPITOLA - PLEASURE POINT - SANTA CRUZ SCOTTS VALLEY - WATSONVILLE

MusicalMe.com • (831) 438-3514

How do you incorporate the landscape into your novels? Studs Terkel once said, “Nothin’ ever happened nowhere.” The landscape informs the characters, and with Wyoming being a place of extremes, it makes for a rich environment. I’m sometimes asked if I’m a mystery writer or a western writer and I guess I’m both, but the western part is the settings of my books, and that has an effect on everything. You write about people and places many of us don’t have experience with. How do you balance authenticity with great storytelling? Most of my novels come from newspaper articles, which keep them anchored in the reality of what western sheriffs really deal with. There’s also a responsibility in writing about a place you love the way I love the Bighorn Mountain region of Wyoming—you need to be honest about it so that even if people have never been there, they know it. You work as a consultant on the TV series. What has surprised you about the process? I’ve come to consider it an equal but separate universe from the books. There are things that work in books and things that work in television and those two things might not be

identical. The greatest surprise is how much I enjoy the show. It’s interesting to see a different take on the characters and world I created. Do you have an end in mind when it comes to the Longmire series? I think if I ever kill Walt off, the readers will kill me. I was lucky to find him. Walt is the best insurance that I’ll continue the series. He’s good company. Any advice for hopeful novelists? Being a writer is kind of like being a cop—if everybody is running in one direction, you need to run in the other. Take chances and do something different. There are agents and publishers who want you to be the next Hemingway—don’t disappoint them. Like Longmire, you live in rural Wyoming. It’s a beautiful but challenging place. What keeps you there? Ucross, the nearest town to my ranch, has a population of 25. That offers me the isolation and focus I need for my writing. At night, after I’ve grained the horses, I step outside the barn and look up into the thick part of the Milky Way—that strip of stars that runs from horizon to horizon, what my Northern Cheyenne friends refer to as the Hanging Road, the trail that our ancestors used to travel back and forth between here and the Camp of the Dead—and no pun intended, I thank my lucky stars. After a few moments, I’ve got horses resting their heads on my shoulders, probably wondering what in the world I’m doing out there, and I wouldn’t trade that for the world. Craig Johnson will read from and discuss his book at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 22 at Bookshop Santa Cruz. Free.


23

24

Saturday September

SCGC’s 40th Anniversary Concert

SCGC’s Love Your Local Artist Night Santa Cruz Guitar Company will kick off its 40th anniversary weekend with a celebration of some of the finest local, Santa Cruz players and their SCGC guitars.

• Bill Coulter • Steve Palazzo • Keith Greeninger • Sharon Allen • The Banana Slug String Band • McCoy Tyler • Billy Pitrone with Bean Creek • The Carolyn Sills Combo and more!

Come celebrate 40 years of handmade Santa Cruz Guitars with this once in a lifetime event. Special presentations will be made by esteemed guests, and Richard Hoover will tell the story of SCGC, and what it means to be celebrating 40 years of craftsmanship, artistry and music.

• Colin Hay • Don Edwards • Eric Skye • Scott Law • Catfish Keith • SONiA • James Nash and more!

©2016 SANTA CRUZ GUITAR COMPANY

The Kuumbwa Jazz Center

The Rio Theater

7:30pm show / $15

7pm show / $25

SCGC’s Love Your Local Artist Night Tickets available Santacruzguitar.com

santacruzguitar.com or call 831.425.0999

Friday

September

SCGC’s 40th Anniversary Concert Tickets available Santacruzguitar.com

Celebrating Diverse Voices

Join Us!

15 Maple Ave Downtown Watsonville

Ow Family Properties CENTRAL HOME SUPPLY Family Owned & Community Minded

watsonvillefilmfest.org/tickets

Commercial Kitchen Incubator

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Sept 29 - Oct 2 At the Historic Fox Theater

29


&

THEATER

SOUTHERN BELLE Julie James (left) and Brent Schindele (right) play Blanche DuBois and Stanley Kowalski in

Jewel Theatre Company’s production of ‘A Streetcar Named Desire.’ PHOTO: STEVE DIBARTOLOMEO

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

All Aboard

30

Jewel Theatre Company on-track with season opener ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ BY LISA JENSEN

T

hese days, Tennessee Williams’ groundbreaking drama, A Streetcar Named Desire, could seem as quaint and mannered as the fading, delusional Southern belle at its center. But the old girl holds up surprisingly well in the smart new production of Streetcar that launches the twelfth season of Jewel Theatre Company. First produced onstage in 1947, the play was controversial for daring to whisper (obliquely) about taboo subjects like homosexuality, sexual promiscuity, and rape. It examines the erosion of Southern gentility, in the hothouse flower that is Blanche DuBois, exposed in the merciless glare of the postwar modern world represented by her

working-class brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski. But Williams knew that the perceived elegance of the Old South—built on generations of slavery and repression—was as much an illusion as Blanche’s image of herself as a fragile innocent. These are no longer considered scandalous, or particularly new ideas. But director Susan Myer Silton sets them up vividly in her JTC production. The story is set in the French Quarter of New Orleans, and one of Silton’s coolest innovations is to place a threeman jazz combo on a wrought-iron balcony overlooking the stage; they play the audience in, and the actors in and out of scenes, subtly punctuating the action, but never overwhelming it. Stanley Kowalski (Brent Schindele),

a factory foreman and ex-GI, lives in a two-room apartment with his wife, Stella (Erika Schindele). He downs beers, and plays poker with the boys, she gossips with the neighbors, and they enjoy a strong physical, if sometimes volatile, relationship. But their marriage is strained when Stella’s older sister, Blanche (Julie James), arrives. A spinsterish onetime high school English teacher, Blanche spins a tale of woe about how the family home (a Mississippi plantation called Belle Reve), has been “lost,” as the elder generation died out. Alternately reproaching Stella for “abandoning” the family that Blanche had to care for, and buttering her up as her “precious baby sister,” Blanche has nowhere to

go, and her travel plans are indefinite. Blanche deplores what she considers the Kowalski’s miserable living conditions, and finds Stanley crude and common. (James is extremely funny in Blanche’s speech on how “ape-like” Stanley is, even as the dramatic tension builds.) Stanley suspects her of cheating Stella out of the family inheritance; he loathes her superior attitude, her interference in his marriage, and her pretense to gentility, which he considers a phony act. As Stanley, Schindele is (refreshingly) nothing like Marlon Brando’s famous performance in the role. Schindele’s Stanley is more savvy, less elemental, and yet still conveys an air of danger. Since Schindele was previously seen in a dinner jacket, tinkling the ivories as the lounge pianist in JTC’s delightful film noir musical, Gunmetal Blues, his performance here is a pretty nifty about-face. Erika Schindele (she and Brent are married in real life) invests Stella with strength and compassion beneath her nice-girl exterior. The Kowalski’s apartment (kitchen and bedroom, with a flimsy curtain between) is rendered in precise period detail by scenic designer JR Bruce. It includes staircases on both sides leading up to the balcony, and the actors use every inch of space. B. Modern’s costumes are terrific, especially the filmy, flowery concoctions of lace and tulle that emerge out of Blanche’s trunk. (OK, for the men Modern only has to provide mostly undershirts and bowling shirts, but those are crisply done as well.) Without complete blackouts onstage, the opening night audience wasn’t sure if it should clap between scenes. But don’t be shy; each movement deserves your encouragement. Another nice touch is Silton’s selection of songs for the jazz trio throughout, especially the recurring ballad, “That Old Feeling”—a telling lyric on so many levels as pasts and present collide in this adroit production. The Jewel Theatre Company production of ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ plays through Oct. 2 at the Colligan Theater in The Tannery Arts Center. Call 425-7506, or visit jeweltheatre.net.


Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis

PRESENTS

Sun Oct 2 • 7:30 pm Santa Cruz Civic

SPONSORED BY PP&CO; RICHARD BAER & BELLA BABOT DONOR ADVISED FUND AND THE LEGACY CAPITOL GROUP DAF

Guitar Army with Robben Ford

Thurs Sept 22 • 7:30 pm • Rio Theatre SPONSORED BY THE WEYGERS FOUNDATION

RIO TICKETS kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records

CIVIC TICKETS SantaCruzTickets.com or SC Civic Box Office 831.420.5260

No comps or gift certificates. Tickets subject to service charge and city tax

Coming Soon:

Santa Cruz

Asleep at the Wheel

Charles Lloyd & the Marvels:

and Hotclub of Cowtown

Bill Frisell, Reuben Rogers, Eric Harland & Greg Leisz

Nov 18 7:30 pm @ Rio Theatre

Nov 29 7:30 pm @ Rio Theatre

ART LEAGUE

September 24 - October 16, 2016 Reception: September 25, Sunday, 3-6pm

Come into the main gallery and take a look at the preview artwork from the many participating Open Studio Artists. Make this your first stop as part of your planning process for visiting these wonderful studios throughout Santa Cruz County. Contact us at (831) 426-5787 or visit our site, www.scal.org

97 Years of Imagination

Tell Us Your Thoughts… Short Term Vacation Rental Questionnaire

The City of Santa Cruz is seeking your feedback regarding short term vacation rentals (less than 30 days). Your feedback will help us determine if any regulation is necessary and, if so, what approaches might be considered. Please go to:

www.cityofsantacruz.com/vacationrentalsurvey to take the survey. For further information, please contact: Scott Harriman

“Santa Cruz Art League”

sharriman@cityofsantacruz.com (831) 420-5037

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Open Studio Preview is here!

526 Broadway Santa Cruz, CA 95060 (831) 426-5787 Wed-Sat. 12-5/Sun.12-4 1st Fri. 12-9pm

INFO kuumbwajazz.org or 831.427.2227

31


MUSIC

MAKING THEMSELVES AT HOME Jessica Hernandez and the Deltas play Moe’s Alley on Wednesday, Sept. 28. PHOTO: COLLEEN DURKIN

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Bordering on Retro

32

Jessica Hernandez and the Deltas bring a Latin sound and bilingual lyrics to their new soul-rock record BY AARON CARNES

J

essica Hernandez seems scattered. She even calls me for our scheduled interview a half hour late, which she immediately apologizes for in a tone of voice that suggests “too much caffeine.” It’s understandable—she’s got a lot going on. Her band Jessica Hernandez and the Deltas, which hails from Detroit, is working on its sophomore full-length—Hernandez recently got back from Mexico City, where she worked on vocals—and is getting ready to head out on tour. The band will make a stop at Moe’s Alley in

Santa Cruz on Wednesday, Sept. 28. The new record will be the first record since the group’s 2013 debut, Secret Evil, a well-received dance record that pulls from soul and retro rock ’n’ roll. It manages to be both joyful and pissed off as hell at the same time, with Hernandez sounding like an intense Amy Winehouse, bursting at the seams with emotions. The anger in her vocals is a glimpse into her teenage years, when she listened to a lot of grind and metalcore, something her husband teases her about as she works out the vocal parts for her new album.

“I’ll get real aggressive in a song. He’ll be like, ‘All right, you’re not in Converge, you need to chill the fuck out,’” she says, laughing, then clarifies the balance she tries to strike. “If I write something that’s poppy, then I’m like, ‘how can it still have an edge to it?’ If I write something that’s a little too intense, then how can I make it a little more chill?” The songs on Secret Evil are mostly old tunes she wrote back when she was a solo musician slinging an acoustic guitar from gig to gig. Once she formed the Deltas, they hit the

road. They’ve toured heavily over the past five years. The new record, in a sense is a continuation of Secret Evil’s sound, but it’s also totally different— everyone wrote these tunes together, unlike the first album, which she wrote. And there’s another big change she is particularly excited about: she’s singing in English and Spanish on the new record, something she’s never done before. “I have so many bilingual friends that I’ve kind of wanted to incorporate that side of my life. I wanted to put even more of myself and my experiences and culture into the music,” she says. Some elements of Latin music even found their way into the new record, mostly in terms of the rhythms, otherwise it’s straight-up rock-meets-soul. The biggest motivation for this shift is her family. Her father is Cuban, and her mother is Mexican, and she grew up around a lot of Latin music. Her parents owned a Mexican bakery, and she heard a lot of it there, too. She tells me she’s roughly 75 percent fluent in Spanish, and she didn’t want to hand over English lyrics to a native speaker to have them translated. Instead, she worked on the Spanish lyrics with some of her friends in Mexico City. She and her band are putting the final touches on the record now. Since things got serious for them five years ago, they’ve had a few impressive opportunities, like a spot on David Letterman in 2014. But mostly, it’s been the group’s constant touring schedule that’s earned them the respect and fan base they have now. “Ninety percent of the fans that we have are from seeing us live. So it’s taken a lot longer than if we had some big single that everyone’s listening to on Spotify,” Hernandez says. “The hope is with this next record we can finally get some singles, and other things that can help give us momentum. Up until now, it’s literally been word of mouth and touring.” INFO: 9 p.m., Sept. 28, Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $8/adv, $12/door. 479-1854.


Sitar Concert PRESENTS

Arjun Verma Live

Sep. 25th at 7pm Doors open @ 6:30pm

@ The Pacific Cultural Center 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz Proceeds from the concert will benefit local non-profit Ecology Action. Tickets: $20 advance at www.Mangala.us $25 at the door. For more info call 831-295-6279 Limited seating - one show only

With Tabla Player Nilan Chaudhuri

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Arjun has spent his entire life steeped in the tradition of North Indian Classical music. The son of sitarist Roop Verma, a disciple of Maestros Ali Akbar Khan and Ravi Shankar, Arjun began learning sitar from his father at age five. Arjun now teaches at the Ali Akbar College of Music in Marin.

33


CALENDAR

GREEN FIX

See hundreds more events at santacruz. com.

PUBLIC WORKS CELEBRATES 150 Santa Cruz’s Public Works Department is celebrating the city’s 150th birthday every Wednesday in September with free trolley tours up the coast to its recycling center and award-winning wastewater treatment facility. Passengers can see firsthand what happens to the 30 to 50 tons of material thrown into Santa Cruz’s blue recycling bins every day with a 90-minute tour. Public Works also offers a one-hour tour of the wastewater treatment facility for a look at the qualityof-life service provided to the city’s residents who generate about seven million gallons of wastewater per day. Info: 1:30 p.m., 3 p.m., 4 p.m. Cedar and Lincoln streets, Santa Cruz. cityofsantacruz.com/150anniversary. Free.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

ART SEEN

34

JACOB’S HEART 18TH ANNUAL ‘KIDRAGEOUS’ It began as a petition in a parking lot in Santa Cruz. In 1999 Jacob’s Heart spearheaded the grassroots movement to make September Childhood Cancer Month in the state of California, signed by governor Gray Davis. Seventeen years later September is celebrated across the country to bring awareness to childhood cancer. This year’s event will offer fun for the whole family, including a dunk tank, giant foosball, music, food, and much more. Info: Noon-5 p.m., Sunday, Sept. 25. Watsonville City Plaza, 358 Main St., Watsonville.

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

WEDNESDAY 9/21 ARTS HOUR LOCAL RADIO SHOW Host Neil Pearlberg sits down with many of the fascinating and diverse members of the Santa Cruz community. 7-8 p.m. KSCO 1080 AM. 479-1080.

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. 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., Suite #104, Santa Cruz. Joe Mailloux, 435-6813. $7. ARGENTINE TANGO Argentine tango classes and practice every Wednesday with John and 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. 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 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 two-to-five 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.

FRIDAY 9/23 CELLIST AMIT PELED At 6 foot 5 inches Israeli cellist Amit Peled started out as a basketball player. When he took to playing the cello he was called “larger than life,” and, from the United States to the Middle East and Asia, he continues in that spirit. Known for breaking barriers between performer and audience, his performances have been called “Exactly the type everyone says we’ll need more of if classical music is to survive,” by the Baltimore Sun. On Friday, Sept. 23, he’ll bring his vivacious cello style to Santa Cruz with Johann Sebastian Bach’s “Cello Suites 1 & 2.” Info: 7:30 p.m. Holy Cross Chapel, 126 High St., Santa Cruz. distinguishedartists.org. $75. HAS SMOKING POT STOPPED BEING FUN? Come join a fellowship of men and women inspired to live a life free from the possession of marijuana addiction. This group uses the 12 steps to achieve personal freedom and spiritual awakening. 7 p.m. 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 420-6177. Free. STEAM IN NATURE Create STEAM-based nature art while learning about the science of our natural environment in this weekly class with educator Sue Creswell. Creswell has been a primary teacher, with an emphasis on environmental education, for 26 years. 3 p.m. 1855 41st Ave., Capitola. 888-424-8035. Free.

SALSA CRASH COURSE FOR BEGINNERS This popular crash course is for anyone who wants to learn to dance Salsa with a more relaxed and sizzling Cuban flavor. In just four weeks you will step up on the dance floor with easy, cool looking moves. 7 p.m. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St., Santa Cruz. 426-4724. $14. EAT LIKE A GODDESS: WELLNESS LECTURE & FOOD DEMO This fun and inspiring handson class will show you how to nourish your inner Goddess with healthy meals and snacks, help balance hormones, and keep moods

>37


Medicare Supplement? Turning 65 Soon? Losing Group Insurance? Need Individual or Family Coverage?

6

Don’t Pay More Than You Need To!

Review Drug Plans and New Health Plans with Lower Premiums Service Is At No Cost To You!

Call to Learn More 831.661.0700

134 Rancho Del Mar, above the former Aptos Cinema, Aptos CA 95003

Friday, Sept. 23 7:30 Show - 2 Sets -$25 at the door Performing their live "Trippin' The 60's" show. Barry will be telling the 'behind the scenes' stories and singing the songs of that pivotal decade.

SENIOR BENEFITS INSURANCE SERVICES

#0D14246

Trippin' the 60's at the Rio Theater

To speak with your local licensed insurance agent

Bill Weber

BARRY MCGUIRE With JOHN YORK

Kenneth Cook Insurance Services #0E46549

tickets are available at Snazzyproductions.com / 831.479.9421

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

DO YOU HAVE OR NEED A

35


HEALTHY LIVING Body Slowing Down? Digestive troubles Low energy Body pain Rising blood sugar Brain fog Memory loss

Couples Therapy Love. Heal. Grow.

New Patient Special! $199 (Save $77) VITALITY at any age!

Dr. Carol Shwery, D.C., CCN Functional Medicine. Chiropractic. Nutrition.

831-476-6906 drcarolshwery.com

$5Off w/this coupon

Ancient Chinese Full Body Deep Tissue Table Massage

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Pack (1) $25/hr. ~ Pack (2) $45/hr. Locally owned business serving local people living healthy lives.

36

China Foot Massage & Reflexology Call for appointment 831-464-0168 4140 Ste. “T” Capitola Rd (By Big 5, Near D.M.V.) Open 7 days a week 10am–10pm

Therapy for the Heart and Soul Innovative Modalities for Life’s Challenges

• Healthier Relationships • Trauma, Grief & Loss • EMDR • All Ages • Spirituality & Meditation • Expressive Art & Writing • Menopause/Older Adult • Serving LGBTQ T. Antonia Amore, LCSW #23968 Many Insurances Accepted

831.566.4409 TherapyfortheHeartandSoul.com

39 CHIROPRACTOR

$

5 �����

Specializing in lifestyle changes and transitions related to family life and relationships. Soquel and Capitola locations

131 Front St. C4 425-1288 DrCraig-Chiropractor.com

License # MFC51484

Weekly fluid movement classes Come rest, breathe, rediscover your waves & fluid origins Integrative Bodywork NCBTMB certified CMP CTP CHT 30 years experience Private sessions available

(831) 426-2063 | www.innerdance.com Nourish • Support • Enliven

Kelly Sumner

LMFT #44629

www.kellysumner.com 831.238.9789

Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist

Craig Eymann DC

Continuum Movement Explorations

•Fostering closeness & trust •Building friendship •Cultivating understanding •Improving Free 30 Min communication Consultation •Managing conflict Sliding Scale

Alison Hunter Therapy

Pain Relief Specialist

Val Leoffler, RSMT

Strengthen your relationship by:

831-334-3411

alisonhuntertherapy.com

EXPERIENCED ROLF PRACTITIONER Thrive Natural Medicine 2840 Park Ave Soquel, CA 95073

831-818-5333 matthewsi.com

Massage Therapy MatthewHartman-1/16pageAd-8.16.indd

Specializing in neck, shoulder and low back relief

1

8/15/16 11:14 AM

L ymphatic Drainage

Treating lymphedema, post-surgery swelling & detox issues

Movement Re-education Feldenkrais Method

Debora Morrison C M T, M L DT, C F P

831.458.3704

Upcoming Workshops: 9/27 Deep Tissue Fundamentals for MTs 10/1 Thai Yoga Partner Massage--Open to ALL For Details and to Register: TulaCenterForBodywork.com 3065 Porter Street, Suite 105 • 454-8198


CALENDAR <34 steady. 6-7:30 p.m. New Leaf Market, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. 462-1306. $20.

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. COMEDY NIGHT AT ROSIE MCCANN’S It’s Wednesday again, so that means another night of comedy at Rosie McCann’s Irish Pub & Restaurant in Santa Cruz. Come join us for $2 beers and some laughs. 9 p.m. 1220 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-9930. Free.

HEALTHY LIVING Foot Reflexology& Aromatherapy PROMOTE WELLNESS RELIEVE TENSION IMPROVE CIRCULATION BALANCE HORMONES

Are your hormones

making you crazy? Menstrual & Menopausal Issues Libido & Arousal Issues Sexual & Vulvar Pain Fatigue Insomnia Anxiety Depression

Fall into

Health

Botanical Reflexology

Ask About Discounted Hormone Testing

New Patient Visit $199 (Save $50)

Christine Nickell

GROUPS

C.E.O.T., C.R.

NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA—APTOS/SANTA CRUZ A 12-step group for those who have been affected by the addiction or drug problem of another. Nar-Anon’s program is adapted from Narcotics Anonymous and uses Nar-Anon’s 12 Steps. 6:30-8 p.m. Santa Cruz and Aptos. saveyoursanity@aol.com or helpline or 2915099. Free/donations.

HEALTH

831.421.1939

Galleria Wellness Center 740 Front Street, Ste. 250 SANTA CRUZ

Mundial Chiropractic

NEW CLIENT SPECIAL $50

Initial Visit/Adjustment* (reg. $95)

BALANCING FEMALE HORMONES Hormones can make us feel crazy and affect everything within our lives. Don’t suffer any longer. Join us for a free lunch on us while you enjoy a presentation given by Dr. Duncan McCollum, DC. Call today to reserve your seat and order lunch preference. 12:30 p.m. 3555 Clares St., Capitola. 459-9990. Free.

831.316.7177

MUSIC ‘COME SING WITH US’ EVERY WEDNESDAY Gold Standard Barbershop Chorus is a mixed (men and women) voice chorus who sing in four part a cappella barbershop style. Come sing with us. 7 p.m. Kirby Prep School Music Room, 425 Encinal St., Santa Cruz. 218-1771.

>38

*(most insurance accepted)

Dr. Daniel Aguilera D.C. 513 Soquel Ave. Santa Cruz

drshunney.com

Rolfing®

ROCK

“After Rolfing I felt better than Iever had before...Once the muscles are loosened and set the way they should be, the inherent tightness in the body disappears and exercise has greater benefits.”

T A E R G L EE R? EIGHT, F AITING FO

Harold Solomon Inside Tennis

Tim Greenstreet Certified Advanced Rolfer™ www.bodyrolfing.com

(831) 462-2105

new to yoga?

LOSHEATWARE YOU W W

Join u s n ow f or only

$35

30 day s of unlimit ed cla sse s

s a nt a c r uz y o g a . ne t | 8 3 1 . 227 . 21 56 420 ing a lls s tr e e t sa nta c r uZ on th e w e stside

Get qu resu wi a fitn profes

Kate 3 personal trainings for $149 1624 Seabright Ave 425-BODY (2639) scbodyworks.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

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.

Dr. Aimée Shunney, ND 831.465.9088

37


EL CRE QU E O

K

S

CALENDAR

ANIMAL HOSPITAL CARING PEOPLE...CARING FOR PETS

$25 EXAM Offer expires 10.12.16

Must present coupon at time of visit

Septemer Special Free Heart Worm Test

with purchase of 12 Month Supply of Heartgard

Now seeing smaller Pets! Birds, Rabbits, Pocket Pets

* Daytime Emergency Services*

476-1515 2505 S. Main St., Soquel www.soquelcreekanimalhospital.com

Jason Miller, DVM

<37

SPIRITUAL

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.

THURSDAY 9/22 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. THE ART OF WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHY Come enjoy this wonderful presentation by Steve Mandel, who has been photographing nature for more than 25 years, and will feature wildlife images from his journeys to the seven continents. Live Oak Grange, 1900 17th Ave., Santa Cruz. ventana2.sierraclub.org/santacruz/ node/431. Free.

Family Owned & Operated

CLASSES

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

A few hours a week A lifetime of impact for a child in foster care

38

VOLUNTEER TODAY!

www.casaofsantacruz.org (831) 761-2956

I make It easy to

rollover your 401(k). Call today for more information or to schedule a consultation. Brian Cooke Financial Advisor CA Insurance #0D63585 1500 41st Ave Suite 244 Capitola, CA 95010 (831)476-7283 brianm.cooke@lpl.com Member FINRA/SIPC MKT-07147-0311 Tracking #728496

Independence Powered By LPL Financial.

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.

chic geek for a night of boisterous fun. 8:30 p.m. Woodstock’s Pizza, 710 Front St., Santa Cruz. 427-4444.

GROUPS UNDEREARNERS ANONYMOUS UA is a 12-Step fellowship of people who have come together to help one another recover from underearning. 5:30 p.m. The Abbey Coffee Shop, 350 Mission St., Santa Cruz. underearnersanonymous.org. Free.

HEALTH ARM-IN-ARM CANCER SUPPORT GROUP2 For women with advanced, recurrent and metastatic cancers. Registration required. 12:30-2 p.m. WomenCARE 457-2273. Free.

SPIRITUAL BUDDHISM FOR BEGINNERS You may have heard something about Buddhism but are still wondering how such a “foreign” spiritual tradition could be relevant to life in the world today. Join us in learning about Buddhist viewpoints and timetested methods for leading a meaningful life. 7-9 p.m. 5800 Prescott Road, Soquel. landofmedicinebuddha.org. Free.

FRIDAY 9/23

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.

CLASSES

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.

CHIA PUDDING PARTY FOR KIDS Drop your kids off for this fun hands-on cooking class (and head next door to the West End Tap for a parent’s night out) where they will learn how to make three different types of chia pudding from scratch. 6-8 p.m. New Leaf Market, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. 462-1306. $25.

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.

FOOD & WINE TRIVIA NIGHT This festive event brings together trivia aficionados, boneheads and the

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.

COMMUNICATION IN THE WORKPLACE Have a more enjoyable workplace. We’ll explore dealing with challenging situations, eliciting cooperation and making requests, giving feedback and more effective and enjoyable meetings. Noon. Tannery Cultural Center, 1060 River St. #111, Santa Cruz. 515-8072. $12.

GROUPS NAR-ANON FAMILY GROUPS—GREATER


CALENDAR

STRIKE OUT AGAINST CANCER COME OUT & SUPPORT Celebrating 20 Years! On Saturday, October 29th, 2016 we will be hosting our 20th annual

Strike Out Against Cancer bowling benefit at the Boardwalk Bowl.

SUNDAY 9/25 BANFF MOUNTAIN FILM FESTIVAL RADICAL REELS TOUR

START NOW!

Huck-it! Drop-it! The Banff Mountain Film Festival is back in town and invites you to get stoked about the most outrageous films from the annual festival, where the viewer can paddle through terrifying white waters, ski the most geometrically frightening slopes, and bike agonizingly rigorous trails—all without breaking a sweat, from the comfort of a theater seat, of course. Clips of the adrenaline-fueling films are available on the Banff Centre website.

Begin collecting pledges early. Aim for a minimum of $500 per team.

Info: 7 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. riotheatre.com. $16

HAVE FUN!

DROP-IN GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Grief support group meets weekly to offer support to persons grieving the death of someone. Noon. 5403 Scotts Valley Drive, Scotts Valley. 4303000. Free. WATSONVILLE QUEER YOUTH MEET-UP Every Friday after school, youth ages 12-18 are invited to join our dynamic team of youth activists and leaders from the Santa Cruz County. This group will run in conjunction with the Saturday LGBTQ youth meet-ups. 3:30-6 p.m. First Christian Church, 15 Madison St., Watsonville. diversitycenter.org. Free.

OUTDOORS MONTEREY BAY BIRDING FESTIVAL Held during fall migration, you’ll have an opportunity to see more than 250 resident and migratory birds. Four guest speakers, more than 50 field trips, educational workshops, and many family fun activities will entertain long-time birding enthusiasts and beginners alike. 6 a.m. 275 Main St., Watsonville. 888-909-7829. $75.

WIN PRIZES! In addition to medals and trophies to be won, we will be handing out raffles prizes all day!

SATURDAY 9/24

REGISTER AT:

ARTS

StrikeOutAgainstCancer.org or 831-457-2273

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.

>40

See you at the lanes!

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

BAY AREA SANTA CRUZ Nar-Anon GBA Santa Cruz offers three meetings in support of friends and families of addicts. naranoncalifornia.org/ norcal or helpline 291-5099. 9-10 a.m. Santa Cruz, Aptos and Scotts Valley. saveyoursanity@ aol.com. Free/donations.

Create a team name, add costumes if you’d like - themes make it all the more fun!

39


LUXURY RETIREMENT LIVING for SENIORS

CALENDAR

Spacious Apartment with Full Kitchen, Washer & Dryer /.,#.#)/-5 #&3 , % -.5;5 #(( , %&35 )/- % *#(! ")( 65 5; (. ,( .5 ( &/ , (-*),. .#)(5.)

) &5 ) .),-5;5 ")**#(!555555555555555555 ) # &5;5 , .#)( & .#0#.# -

VALLEY HEIGHTS SENIOR COMMUNITY ohk5 , )'5 &0 5R5 .-)(0#&& BnigCmhh7jnnj5511180 && 3" #!".-8 )'

SUNDAY 9/25 ‘DOUGH FOR JO’ FUNDRAISER

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Have you heard about

40

Jungle Plant?

Great maintenance for your interior environment.

Breathe fresh air.

Jungle Plant 831.462.5806 jungleplant.com

Like lifting weights? Here’s an opportunity to get your sweat on and raise money for Jo Siskidis of Santa Cruz Strength. Siskidis has qualified for the Strongman Corporation Men’s and Women’s National Championship in Iowa next month. Now, she just needs to get there. To help get her to the competition, Santa Cruz Strength will be hosting a lift-a-thon where participants can deadlift, sponsor a lifter, or participate in the baked goodness of the bake sale. Info: 10 a.m.-noon. Santa Cruz Strength, 151 Harvey West Blvd., Suite D, Santa Cruz. Donation.

<39 COMMUNITY POETRY CIRCLE Every second Saturday of the month, join the circle and write a poem in a supportive and creative environment. Open to all ages and levels of poets. Facilitated by Magdalena Montagne. 1 p.m. Aptos Library, 7695 Soquel Drive, Aptos. poetrycirclewithmagdalena. com. Free.

CLASSES SOLUMA Chavela Del Rio presents workshops that enhance well-being for individuals of all fitness levels to fully integrate personal, physical and spiritual healing. 1-3 p.m. 2555 Mar Vista Drive, Aptos. 818-9726. $25. ACT PRACTICE EXAM There’s no substitute for experience. Taking a practice exam in a simulated test environment will help you understand what to expect on the big day and

give you starting scores. 8 a.m.-11:30 a.m. Higher Standards Academy, 4444 Scotts Valley Drive, #7a, Scotts Valley. 515-7373. $25.

FOOD & WINE PIE FOR THE PEOPLE Pie for the People Santa Cruz is a seasonal community pie potluck that benefits grassroots nonprofits. 2 p.m. Homeless Garden Project, Delaware Avenue at Shaffer Road, Santa Cruz. 332-3087. $5. SANTA CRUZ MOUNTAINS HARVEST FESTIVAL Santa Cruz Mountains Harvest Festival is located in Boulder Creek Ca. This event aims to help raise money for local nonprofits as well as contributing money toward other like minded organizations & local companies. 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Downtown Boulder Creek. scmharvest.com. Free.


CALENDAR GROUPS SANTA CRUZ LGBTQ YOUTH MEET-UP Are you an LGBTQ youth between the ages of 12-18 who wants to join a welcoming community? Join our dynamic team of youth from the Santa Cruz County. Bring yourself or bring a friend. 1-3:30 p.m. 1117 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. diversitycenter.org. Free.

MUSIC ESOTERIC COLLECTIVE—STRAIGHT AWAY JAZZ This groups revels in jazz music ranging from 1940s Bebop to the 1960s. 6-9 p.m. Davenport Roadhouse, 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport. 426-8801. Free. EIGHTH ANNUAL A TASTE OF SOQUEL A Taste of Soquel serves up tasty food from local restaurants and farms, wines and brews from area vintners and brewers, live music and dancing emceed by Ralph Anybody of KPIG, as well as a raffle and KidZone. The food and festivities benefit Second Harvest Food Bank Santa Cruz County. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 4951 Soquel Drive, Santa Cruz. 325-9615. $10.

SUNDAY 9/25 CLASSES GOOD MORNING WORKOUT Get your juices flowing. Enjoy the music and get fit at the same time. You’ll learn movement, patterns, style, and technique in a welcoming environment. No partners needed. Drop-ins are welcome. 9-10 a.m. The Tannery, 1060 River St., Suite #111, Santa Cruz. Cesario. $7/$5. RESTORATIVE MOVEMENT & DANCE Join Rita Rivera in a free introduction to her upcoming series. Restorative Movement & Dance utilizes the principles of the Alexander Technique, breath, basic anatomy and simple repetitive movements to build awareness of how we move. No dance experience is necessary. 5-6 p.m. Motion Pacific, 131 Front St., Santa Cruz. ritarivera.com. Free.

FOOD & WINE TOBY GRAY AT THE PONO Acoustic sweet classic favorites and jammin’ originals at the downtown Santa Cruz Oasis. 1:30-4:30 p.m. 120 Union St., Santa Cruz. 426-7666. Free.

OUTDOOR

MONDAY 9/26

ELKHORN SLOUGH RESERVE OPEN HOUSE & NATIVE PLANT FAIR Join us for our Open House & Native Plant Fair as we celebrate National Estuaries Day! Free and fun for the whole family. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 1700 Elkhorn Road, Watsonville. 728-2822. Free.

CLASSES

VOLUNTEER

WALK TO END ALZHEIMER’S Walk participants will complete a three mile walk along the beautiful Seascape Beach and learn about Alzheimer’s disease, clinical studies enrollment, and support programs and services available from the Alzheimer’s Association. 9 a.m. Seascape Beach Resort, 1 Seascape Resort Drive, Aptos. 464-9982. Free.

HULA HOOP 101 This five-course workshop aims to cover the basic moves of hula hooping, from getting it going around your waist and hands, to working out some tricks, to transitioning between them and finding your flow with the hoop. 418 Front St., Santa Cruz. 466-9770. $50.

GROUPS PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE WATCH PARTY Come join the Santa Cruz County Democratic Central Committee and watch the first Presidential Debate! Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump face off in what is sure to be a lively dialogue. There will be food, drinks, and great conversation. 5-8:30 p.m. 846 Front St., Santa Cruz. cruzdemocrats.org. Free.

>42

nta Cr a S n w 107 Downto 1.425.9

83

Our 7th Year • Same Great Reputation

Same Great Location

501 River St, Santa Cruz • 831-466-9551

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

MON-SAT 12-6PM ONE STEP EVALUATION PROCESS WALK-INS WELCOME GET APPROVED OR NO CHARGE!

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

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.

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.

c Ave fi i c a P 1 uz - 120

41


Not the Breakwater

CALENDAR

Only the Best SCUBA on the Planet and now for 1/2 off!!! Unlike other dive shops that believe you deserve the muck of the Breakwater diving, we wish to give you the splendor of Carmel Bay. Kayak Diving- a unique approach to safely delivering the "Best of the Bay". "Jump from the Mundane to Excellence". You deserve it!

Adventure SportS Unlimited

SUNDAY 9/25

303 Potrero St #15, Santa Cruz, CA 831.458.3648 | www.asudoit.com

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

A unique pet supply store experience with:

42

All-natural pet foods. Grooming for all breeds of dogs and cats. Pet events on weekends.

(831) 708-1016 Locally Owned & Operated Kmart Shopping Center 266-T Mt. Hermon Rd. Scotts Valley, 95066 facebook.com/EarthWisePetScottsValley

1-Hour Consultation On Us • Marketing • Public Relations • Web Design

ARJUN VERMA SITAR SHOW Trained by the legendary maestro Ali Akbar Khan, Arjun Varma has spent his whole life immersed in the tradition of North Indian classical music. He’s the son of sitarist Roop Verma and a disciple of maestros Khan and Ravi Shankar. Verma has performed all over the globe and forged new territory in other musical genres, such as western classical, celtic, and jazz, through which he’s performed with Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead and others. Verma will be joined by tabla player Nilan Chaudhuri at the Pacific Cultural Center on Sunday, Sept. 25. Info: 7 p.m. Pacific Cultural Center, 1307 Seabright Ave., Santa Cruz. mangala.us. $20-$25.

<41 Anne Howard, Lead Strategist

831.480.2309 AHMarketingGroup.com Anne@ahmarketinggroup.com

SUPPORT GROUP FOR SURVIVORS OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE: WOMEN’S GROUP We provide a safe and supportive environment for healing from child sexual abuse. Together we break through isolation, develop healthy coping skills, reduce shame, and build healthy boundaries. Pre registration required. 1 p.m. 104 Walnut St., Santa Cruz. 423-7601.

your sweetheart and make beautiful food together from scratch using fresh, organic ingredients: Caprese salad, pasta carbonara, pesto pasta, focaccia bread and Coconut panna cotta. With full gluten-free meal and wine pairing. 6-8:30 p.m. New Leaf Market, 1101 Fair Ave., Santa Cruz. 426-1306. $85.

TUESDAY 9/27

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.

CLASSES HULA HOOP CLASS AT THE PARK Join a friendly, supportive, loosely structured environment where adults and children have found success using special oversized hoops designed for absolute beginners. 4-4:30 p.m. 369 Meder St., Santa Cruz. 471-7821. $6.

FOOD & WINE DATE NIGHT: HOMEMADE ITALIAN Bring

HEALTH

MUSIC SHERRY AUSTIN WITH HENHOUSE Magical combination of music woven from folk, country, and rock. Ranging from sweet love songs to gritty, rockin’ originals and covers by Kate Wolf, Townes Van Zandt, and others. 6 p.m. 1 Davenport Ave., Davenport. 426-8801. Free.


Visual Art | Music | Spoken Word Dance | Live Painting | Fire Fashion | Film

The Can’t Miss Party & Arts Event of the Year!

Santa Cruz’s Own Pivot: Art of Fashion Show: October 1 Santa Clara County Fairgrounds

2016

An Occasional & Irrational San Jose Arts Fest Sponsored in part by a Cultural Affairs grant from the City of San Jose Photos: Jim Gensheimer, Bay Area News Group

Tickets: www.artpartysj.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Art Party Anne & Mark’s

Opening Gala: September 24

43


MUSIC CALENDAR

LOVE YOUR

LOCAL BAND

TEN O’CLOCK LUNCH The name Ten O’Clock Lunch is kind of an inside joke for people who work at grocery stores, or anywhere else where the shift begins at 6 o’clock in the morning. It’s a fitting name for the group, which was started by George Zaferes, a grocer who would use his 10 o’clock lunch break to play music. Zaferes started jamming with a co-worker, who’s no longer in the band. Other band members came on after riding their bikes by the jam session and asking to join in.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Eventually these jam sessions turned into a regularly gigging band, playing an array of covers from genres including blues, rock, soul, country and reggae. The band’s rehearsals quickly got much more formal. One of its strengths is the vocals. There are three members that sing lead, and do harmonies. But no matter what, the band’s always been about having fun and getting people to dance.

44

“We’re all professionals, but we don’t really take ourselves all that seriously,” says harmonica player Richard Wankoff. “We’re not just playing songs that we want to play, even though we chose songs that we like. We thought other people would like them, too.” The band has been going for four years now, popping up at local spots like Crow’s Nest, Michael’s On Main, Severino’s Bar and Grill, and the Fish House. The main thing is getting people to dance. “We’re versatile. We’re really all about playing a groove and having a good time and helping the people have a good time,” Wankoff says. AARON CARNES INFO: 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22. Crow’s Nest, 2218 East Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. $5. 476-4560.

SHOOK TWINS

THURSDAY 9/22 FOLK

SHOOK TWINS I have this theory that people who sing together in bands end up sounding more like each other over time. In the case of Shook Twins, that was inevitable. The duo—identical twins Katelyn and Laurie Shook—has DNA on its side. And they use it to create some dreamy, gorgeous harmonies. It feels like an audio shower, drowning you in spine-tingling goosebumps. These days, the sisters play with a couple other members too, giving them a full string ensemble sound that harkens to Appalachian finger-plucking sound in an entirely modern, and dare I say, exciting, way. They share the bill with the Sam Chase & the Untraditional. AARON CARNES

INFO: 8:30 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $10/adv, $14/door. 479-1854.

BLUES/ROCK

GUITAR ARMY A supergroup of guitar slingers, Guitar Army sees blues rocker Robben Ford joining forces with country bluesman

Lee Roy Parnell and Australian guitar virtuoso Joe Robinson for a night full of blistering fretwork and aisle-filling rock and grooves. For the trio’s upcoming show at the Rio Theatre, each artist will perform a 20-minute individual set, then the supergroup will fire up its engines as a six-piece for a 40-minute collaborative performance. CAT JOHNSON

FRIDAY 9/23 HIP-HOP

THE SOUL REBELS FT. TALIB KWELI

Ska-punk has been the bread and butter of these Solvang ska-punkers since the band’s formation in 1995, but their influences are wide reaching, and include reggae, Dixieland jazz, Latin music, hardcore and whatever other genres they feel like tossing in. The band’s last album, 2014’s Dirty Rice, continues the whirlwind of genre-mashing that the seven-piece has delighted in the past two decades, and the members sound like they’re having more fun than ever. AC

Hailed as “the missing link between Public Enemy and Louis Armstrong," eight-piece brass ensemble Soul Rebels Sound System has performed with a range of artists, from Marilyn Manson to Bruno Mars. The New Orleans-based collective will hit the road with Ms. Lauryn Hill after they finish touring with rapper and activist Talib Kweli. Live hip-hop backed by a brass band can’t help but breathe new life into the genre, giving shows a full sound and palpable energy that couldn’t be achieved otherwise; the Soul Rebels’ rendition of Kweli’s hit “Get By” gives the song the robust sound it deserves. Splitting the bill for the night is Oakland’s own innovative icon Del the Funky Homosapien, founder of hip-hop collective Hieroglyphics and lyricist for Afrofuturist collective Deltron 3030. KATIE SMALL

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $20/door. 429-4135.

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $25/adv, $30/door. 429-4135.

INFO: 7:30 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $35/gen, $50/gold. 423-8209.

SKA-PUNK

MAD CADDIES


MUSIC

BE OUR GUEST WATSONVILLE FILM FESTIVAL

GRUPO FANTASMA

FRIDAY 9/23 & SATURDAY 9/24

SATURDAY 9/24 LATIN JAZZ

LATIN FUNK

GRUPO FANTASMA

AZESU

SANTA CRUZ GUITARS 40TH ANNIVERSARY

A Bay Area supergroup that brings together a dazzling cast of players, Azesu draws on the musical abundance of Latin America filtered through a sensibility honed in jazz. At the forefront is the Venezuelan-born Bay Area vocalist María Márquez, who possesses a sensuous cello-like sound that’s as striking as it is instantly recognizable. She’s joined by Venezuelan percussionist Omar Ledezma Jr., reed master Sheldon Brown, pianist Jonathan Alford, drum maestro Alan Hall, and the band’s founder, Peruvian-born bassist David Pinto (former music director for Afro-Peruvian legend Susana Baca). With a repertoire that ranges from Peruvian festejo and Venezuelan merengue to Cuban boleros and Brazilian bossa nova, Azesu is a pan-American festival unto itself. ANDREW GILBERT

Grammy-winning cumbia collective Grupo Fantasma formed in 2000 in Austin, Texas. The nine-piece funk orchestra’s incendiary live show, described by the Boston Phoenix as a “sprawling feast for the ears” has brought them to major festivals and venues internationally, including two tours to Kuwait and Iraq to entertain US troops. Bassist Greg Gonzalez told GT that their most memorable gigs were with Prince. In 2007, they opened for the late icon in London, to a crowd of 20,000. “We followed that up immediately with an all-night after-party/jam session show at the Indigo club with Prince and his band.” The collective’s pre-performance ritual involves tequila shots and warm-up stretches. “We’ve played at Moe’s Alley in Santa Cruz before and we always enjoy it. The venue sounds great and is intimate, plus the audience is always receptive and full of beautiful people.” KS

INFO: 8 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $20. 334-7044.

INFO: 9 p.m. Moe’s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $17/adv, $20/door. 479-1854.

In 1976, Richard Hoover and his two co-founders launched Santa Cruz Guitar Company, a boutique outfit dedicated to handcrafting the finest quality guitars, without compromise. Forty years later, Santa Cruz Guitar Company is world-renowned for its mastery of the craft. This weekend, the company celebrates its ruby anniversary with two nights of music: a local showcase at the Kuumbwa on Friday night, featuring Bill Coulter, Keith Greeninger, Sharon Allen and more, and an all-star tribute on Saturday at the Rio with Colin Hay, Don Edwards, Eric Skye and several others. CJ INFO: 7:30 p.m. Friday at Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $15. 427-2227. 7 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $25. 423-8209.

INFO: Sept. 29-Oct. 2 at the Fox Theater, 15 Maple St., Watsonville. Free-$70. More information: watsonvillefilmfest.org. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 26 to find out how you could win a pair of all-access passes to the festival.

IN THE QUEUE PEOPLE’S BLUES OF RICHMOND

Psych-rock three-piece out of Richmond, Va. Wednesday at Catalyst LAURA BENITEZ

Bay Area classic country and rockabilly. Wednesday at Crepe Place BARRY MCGUIRE

Former New Christy Minstrel and artist behind the hit song “Eve of Destruction.” Friday at Rio Theatre EDGE OF THE WEST

Santa Cruz-based Americana jam band. Friday at Moe’s Alley STEVE GUNN

Indie singer-songwriter and former member of Kurt Vile's band. Tuesday at Don Quixote’s

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

ACOUSTIC

The Watsonville Film Festival prides itself on being “the multicultural film festival of the Monterey Bay.” Launched in 2012, it has been a showcase for our diverse local community with a variety of events, from films at the Mello Center and matinee screenings for students at the Green Valley Cinema to movies at the park and much more. Festival organizers partner with local organizations and community members in their mission to inspire and engage, empower young filmmakers, encourage conversations, and promote economic and cultural development in Watsonville. Bonus: the festival takes place in the newly reopened Historic Fox Theater. CAT JOHNSON

45


LIVE MUSIC

Thursday September 22nd 8:30pm $10/14

Indie/Folk/Rock Favorites Return For A Co-Bill

SHOOK TWINS + THE SAM CHASE Friday September 23rd 8:30pm $8/12

Outlaw Country + Bob Dylan/Neil Young Tribute

EDGE OF THE WEST + SHAKEY ZIMMERMAN Saturday September 24th 9pm $17/20

Grammy Award Winning Latin Funk Orchestra

GRUPO FANTASMA + BUYEPONGO

Wednesday September 28th 8:30pm $8/12 Dark Soul & Rock With

JESSICA HERNANDEZ & THE DELTAZ

+ TANCRED & HENRY CHADWICK

WED

9/21

THU

9/22

9/23

FRI Lucha Libre, Pro Wrestling 7p

THE APPLETON GRILL 410 Rodriguez St, Watsonville APTOS ST. BBQ 8059 Aptos St, Aptos

Al Frisby 6-8p

AQUARIUS RESTAURANT Santa Cruz Dream Inn 175 W Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz

Preacher Boy 6-8p

Shane Dwight 6-8p

Minor Thirds Trio 6:30-9:30p

SAT

9/24

SUN

9/25

MON

TUE

9/27

Lloyd Whitney 1-5p Al Frisby 6-8p

Big John Atkinson 6-8p

Broken Shades 6-8p

Rob Vye 6-8p

Minor Thirds Trio 7-10p

BAYVIEW HOTEL 8041 Soquel Dr, Aptos

Live Jazz & Wine Tasting Salsa Bahia 6-9p 6-9p

DJ

BLUE LAGOON 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Aria, SA90, Acid Teeth $5 9p

Fulminante, Qiensave, Pan Dulce $5 9p

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

Comedy Night/80s Night Free 8:30p

Tango Ecstasy 6-9:30p Avi Buffalo, The Kickback, Palmz $8 8:30p

The Box (Goth Night) 9p

Rippin 9-11:45p Roadhouse Karaoke Free 8p

Swing Dance $5 5:30p Somatose, Arrows Free 9p Karaoke 9p

BRITANNIA ARMS 110 Monterey Ave, Capitola

9/26

Reggae Dub Club 8p

Rise Up Free 9p

Night Dive, We Hate Each Other, deFrance $5 9p

Prophecy $5 9p

Karaoke 8p-Close

Karaoke 8p-Close

Jazz Society Free 8p Sketch Republic Emily Chambers Free 8p Free 7p

deFrance Free 8p

Karaoke 9p

CASA SORRENTO 393 Salinas St, Salinas

DJ Luna 9p

CATALYST 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

Sly & Robbie & the Taxi Gang $20/$25 8p

Metro Boomin $25/$30 8p

The Soul Rebels w/ Talib Kweli & more $35/$38 8p

California Honeydrops $18/$22 8p

Chrome Sparks $14/$17 8:30p

Sizzla Cancelled

Carla Morrison $20/$25 7p

CATALYST ATRIUM 1011 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

People’s Blues of Richmond $10/$13 8p

Mad Caddies $15/$20 8:30p

The Record Company $15/$17 8:30p

Futuristic $15/$18 8:30p

Kongos $25 7:30p

Twin Peaks $13/$15 8p

Private Club Tour Madeintyo & more $15/$65 8:30p

Friday September 30th 9pm $12/15

CAVA WINE BAR 115 San Jose Ave, Capitola

Steve’s Kitchen Jazz Ensemble 6:30-9:30p

Alex Lucero 6:30-9:30p

Christopher Drury 6:30-9:30p

Myhaylo K 6:30-9:30p

Alex Lucero 5-8p

DIEGO’S UMBRELLA

CILANTROS 1934 Main St, Watsonville

Hippo Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p

Thursday September 29th 8:30pm $7/10 Reggae, Funk & Soul Double Bill

SPIRITUAL REZ + EVOLFO Gypsy Rock Favorites Return

+ COFFEE ZOMBIE COLLECTIVE

KPIG Happy Hour 5:30-7:30p

Saturday Oct 1st 9pm $15/20 Funk & Psychedelic Soul With

THE MONOPHONICS + 7 COME 11

Sunday Oct 2nd 4pm $15/20 Afternoon Blues Series

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

MIGHTY MO RODGERS

46

Sunday Oct 2nd 9pm $10/15

Live Roots Reggae From St. Croix

RAS ATTITUDE Tuesday Oct 4th 8:30pm $17/20

A Rare And Intimate Performance With

LAURA MARLING Oct 5th Oct 6th Oct 7th Oct 8th Oct 9th Oct 12th Oct 14th

THE REDLIGHT DISTRICT + GINGER & JUICE I-GRADE DUB + DANNY I KATDELIC STYLYST BEATS + ILL-ESHA MOSHE VILOZNY (CD Release) + PETER HARPER ZION I + LAFA TAYLOR POORMAN’S WHISKEY + DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS

WWW.MOESALLEY.COM 1535 Commercial Way Santa Cruz 831.479.1854

OPEN LATE EVERY NIGHT! wednesday 9/21

sponsored by Tomboy and tourMore Booking:

International Music Hall and Restaurant

FINE MEXICAN AND AMERICAN FOOD ALL YOU CAN EAT LUNCH BUFFET M-F $7.95 Wed Sept 21

western wednesday

Thu Sept 22

w / FLYPAPER BLUES

Fri Sept 23

LAURA BENITEZ AND THE HEARTACHE Doors 8pm/Show 9pm $10 Door ($7 with boots on!)

thursday 9/22

THE REDLIGHT DISTRICT

Sat Sept 24

w / AJ FROMAN

Sun Sept 25

friday 9/23

Sun Sept 25

Doors 8pm/Show 9pm $8 Door KZSC PRESENTS:

LUKE SWEENEY w / SUN DRIED

Mon Sept 26

saturday 9/24

Tue Sept 27

Doors 8:30pm/Show 9pm $8 Door

santa cruz guitar co. 40th anniversary event free Show 10pm

sunday 9/25

OPEN BLUEGRASS JAM

Hey you pickers, pluckers, fiddlers, and grinners come on down and play from 5-8pm on our on our garden stage. Got banjo?

TUESday 9/27

7 COME 11 Show 9pm $5 Door

MIDTOWN SANTA CRUZ 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz

429-6994

Wed Sept 28 Thu Sept 29

Matt Flinner Trio with Joe Craven $12 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm The Fixers Rock & Roll, Americana, Country & more

$10 adv./$10 door 21 + 7:30pm Grampa’s Chili, Levi Jack, Eve of Eden $10 adv./$12 door 21 + 8pm Aja Vu plays Steely Dan Stealin’ Chicago plays Chicago $15 adv./$15 door 21 + 8pm Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys 2pm $10 adv./$10 door 21 + 2pm Antoine Dufour, Craig D’Andrea, Trevor Gordon Hall 7pm Acoustic Guitar Magic $12 adv./$15 door <21 w/parent 7pm Fruit Bats $15 adv./$15 door 21 + 8pm Steve Gunn plus Nap Eyes $12 adv./$12 door 21 + 8pm The Outside Track World Renown Celtic Band $15 adv./$17 door <21 w/parent 7:30pm Jolie Holland Duo $15 adv./$15 door seated <21 w/parent 8pm

COMING RIGHT UP

Fri. Sept. 30 Sat. Oct. 1 Sun. Oct. 2 Tue. Oct. 4 Wed. Oct. 5 Thu. Oct. 6

Wake The Dead Celtic Take on Grateful Dead saQi, Stellamara, KR3TURE Abalone Grey, Hymn For Her, Suzanne Wilde The Routine plus Eric Morrison & The Mysteries MarchFourth! 20 musicians, Vaudeville-style dancers, stilt walkers, colorful costumes Yogoman’s Rocksteady Revue starring Winston Jarrett

Reservations Now Online at www.donquixotesmusic.com Rockin'Church Service Every Sunday ELEVATION at 10am-11:15am


LIVE MUSIC WED

9/21

THU

9/22

FRI

9/23

SAT

9/24

SUN

9/25

MON

9/26

TUE

9/27

Punk Night

Karaoke

CREPE PLACE 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Western Wednesday w/ Redlight District, AJ Laura Benitez & more Froman $8 9p $7/$8 9p

Luke Sweeney, Sun Dried $10 9p

Caveman, Cheerleader $12/$15 9p

Open Bluegrass Jam 5-8p

7 Come 11 $5 9p

Yuji Tojo $3 8p

FishHook $6 9p

The Megatones $7 9:30p

Live Comedy $7 9p

Reggae Party Free 8p

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

Ten O’Clock Lunch Band $5 8:30p

DAV. ROADHOUSE 1 Davenport Ave, Davenport DON QUIXOTE’S 6275 Hwy 9, Felton

The Fixers $10 7:30p

Grampa’s Chili, Levi Jack, Eve of Eden $10 8p

THE FISH HOUSE 972 Main St, Watsonville HENFLING’S 9450 Hwy 9, Ben Lomond

Karaoke

Sherry Austin w/ Henhouse

The Band Blue Matt Flinner Trio w/Joe Craven $12/$15 7:30p

Aja Vu, Steely Dan, Stealin’ Chicago $15 8p

Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys $10 2p Antoine Dufour $12/$15 7p

Fruit Bats $15 7:30p

Steve Gunn, Nap Eyes $12 8p

Swytchback 8p

The Monkey Boys 9p

HINDQUARTER BAR & GRILLE 303 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Karaoke 10p

IDEAL BAR & GRILL 106 Beach St, Santa Cruz

Live Music 10p-1a

KUUMBWA 320-2 Cedar St, Santa Cruz

Queer Queens of Qomedy $25/$40 7p

MALONE’S 4402 Scotts Valley Dr, Scotts Valley

Live Music 5:30-9p

MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 2591 Main St, Soquel

Scott Slaughter 7-10p

Hot Club of San Francisco Santa Cruz Guitar $25 7p Guitar Army Company $15 7:30p $35/$50 7:30p

Acoustic Soul by Joint Chiefs 7-10p

Stormin’ Norman & the Cyclones 7-10p

White Fuzzy Bloodbath 9p

The Mile 5p

JuannaJam 8p

Roadhouse Karaoke 7:30p Carlos Martinez 6-9p

Karaoke w/ Eve 2-5p After Shock 10p-1a

THE QUEER QUEENS OF QOMEDY Tickets: BrownPaperTickets.com

GUITAR ARMY featuring ROBBEN FORD, LEE ROY PARNELL, JOE ROBINSON

at the Rio Theatre | No Comps/Gift Certificates Thursday, September 22 • 7 pm

HOT CLUB OF SAN FRANCISCO Gypsy swing combo

interprets the Beatles on their new CD!

Friday, September 23 • 7:30 pm

SANTA CRUZ GUITAR CO. “Love Your Local Artist Night”

Jump Kings Flingo 7:30p

Wednesday, September 21 • 7 pm

Thursday, September 22 • 7:30 pm

CRAZY HORSE BAR 529 Seabright Ave, Santa Cruz

Comedy/Trivia

Celebrating Creativity Since 1975

Karaoke w/ Eve 2-5p

Tickets: BrownPaperTickets.com

Saturday, September 24 • 8 pm

AZESU: LATIN JAZZ with MARIA MARQUEZ Tickets: BrownPaperTickets.com

Karaoke w/ Eve 2-5p

Wed. September 28 • 7 & 9 pm | No Comps

Azesu $20 8p

out! CHICK COREA TRIO Sold with EDDIE GOMEZ & BRIAN BLADE

Karaoke w/Ken 9p

Thursday, September 29 • 7 pm

Tsunami 7-10p

BEN WENDEL GROUP

FEATURING GERALD CLAYTON, JOE SANDERS AND HENRY COLE

7th Wave 7-10p

1/2 PRICE NIGHT FOR STUDENTS Sunday, October 2 • 7:30 pm BBQ BEER BLUES

BBQ

BEER

BLUES

JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA

WITH

WYNTON MARSALIS at SC Civic | No Comps /Gift Certificates Tickets: SantaCruzTickets.com Thursday, October 6 • 7 pm

AMENDOLA VS. BLADES Wed. Sept. 21 Al Frisby 6-8 pm

Drummer Scott Amendola meets Hammond B-3 master Wil Blades for a high energy sonic showdown from avant garde to funk, bebop to rock! Saturday, October 8 • 7:30 pm

Fri. Sept. 23 Shane Dwight 6-8 pm

Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com Sunday, October 9 • 3 pm

Sat. Sept. 24 Lloyd Whitley 1-5 pm Al Frisby 6-8 pm Sun. Sept. 25 Big Jon Atkinson 6-8 pm Mon. Sept. 26 Broken Shades 6-8 pm Tues. Sept. 27 Rob Vye 6-8 pm

SHERRY AUSTIN & HENHOUSE plus SUGAR BY THE POUND COLE PLAYS (NAT KING) COLE Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com Sunday, October 9 • 7:30 pm

CHRIS SMITHER

Tickets: SnazzyProductions.com

COMING SOON TO RIO THEATRE: 11/18 11/29

ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL CHARLES LLOYD & THE MARVELS: BILL FRISELL, REUBEN ROGERS, ERIC HARLAND, GREG LIESZ

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. 8059 APTOS ST, APTOS APTOSSTBBQ.COM | 662.1721

320-2 Cedar St x Santa Cruz 831.427.2227

kuumbwajazz.org

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Thurs. Sept. 22 Preacher Boy 6-8 pm

47


Pre se n ts

LIVE MUSIC WED MISSION ST. BBQ 1618 Mission St, Santa Cruz

9/21

Broken Shades 6p

Wednesday, October 5th at Don Quixote's Get Tickets at www.donquixotesmusic.info

Space Bass! by Andrew the Pirate 9:30p-2a

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

9/22

FRI

Al Frisby 6p

9/23

SAT

Lloyd Whitley 6p

Shook Twins, Sam Chase Edge of the West, & the Untraditional Shakey Zimmerman $10/$14 8p $8/$12 8p

MOE’S ALLEY 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz MOTIV 1209 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

THU

Trivia 8p

Libation Lab w/Syntax 9:30p-1:30a

Chris Slater 9:30p-1:30a

Oktoberfest 6-9p

Rola-J 7-9p

9/24

SUN

9/25

MON

Hawk n Blues Mechanics 6p

Rick Stevens 6p

9/26

Rand Rueter 6p

9/27

Preacher Boy 6p

Grupo Fantasma, Buyepongo $17/$20 8p Rasta Cruz Reggae Party Eclectic Bass Event 9:30p-Close 9:30p-Close Live Stand Up Comedy Night 7-9p

Hip-Hop w/DJ Marc 9:30p-Close Trivia Night 6:30-8:30p

Jake Nielsen’s Triple Threat 10p-Midnight

PARADISE BEACH 215 Esplanade, Capitola

Claudio Melega 6p

THE POCKET 3102 Portola Dr, Santa Cruz

Jam Session w/ Jesse Sabala 7p

Howell Devine $10 9p

POET & PATRIOT 320 E. Cedar St, Santa Cruz

Stereo No Aware 9p-12:30a

Comedy Showcase 9p-12:30a

Yuji

2-5p

Lara Price 2-5p

Kavanaugh Brothers 9p-12:30a

Jazz Session w/ Jazz Jam Santa Cruz 8p

Comedy 9p

Comedy Open Mic 8p

Open Mic 8-11:30p

THE RED 200 Locust St, Santa Cruz THE REEF 120 Union St, Santa Cruz

TUE

‘Geeks Who Drink’ Trivia Night 8p Acoustic Music 6p

RIO THEATRE 1205 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz

Acoustic Music 6p

Traditional Hawaiian Music 6:30p

Guitar Army $35/$50 7p

Barry McGuire w/John York $20/$25 7p

Asher Satori 12:30p Featured Acoustic 6:30p Santa Cruz Guitar Company $25 7p

Toby Gray 1:30p Chas Cmusic 6p

Kenny Feinstein 6p Bluegrass Hour 9p

Acoustic Reggae 6p

Trivia 8p

Open Mic 7:30p

Banff Mountain Film Festival Radical Reels Tour $16 7p

ROSIE MCCANN’S 1220 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz

1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Friday, November 11th at The Rio Theatre Get tickets at www.riotheatre.com

48

Wednesday, September 21 • Ages 16+

SLY & ROBBIE & THE TAXI GANG Wednesday, Sept. 21 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

PEOPLE’S BLUES OF RICHMOND

Sep 23 Nick Offerman & Megan Mullally 8pm Sep 24 Mick Fleetwood Blues Band 8pm Sep 29 Mary Chapin Carpenter 8pm Sep 30 Tracy Morgan 8pm Oct 9 Anjelah Johnson 8pm Oct 21 Ziggy Marley 8pm Dec 3 Jake Shimabukuro 8pm

Thursday, December 8th at The Rio Theatre Get tickets at www.riotheatre.com SB LENT ERTA INMENT. C Om

Thursday, September 22 • Ages 16+

METRO BOOMIN

Sep 22 Iris Dement & Loudon Wainwright III 8pm

Dec 9 Lewis Black 8pm Dec 14 John Prine w/Ramblin Jack Elliot 8pm Dec 15 Jonny Lang 8pm

For Tickets www.GoldenStateTheatre.com 831-649-1070

Thursday, September 22 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

MAD CADDIES

Deal with a View: Still under ten bucks! M – F @ 6:00pm

LOCATED ON THE BEACH

Amazing waterfront deck views.

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

See live music grid for this week’s bands.

STAND-UP COMEDY

Three live comedians every Sunday night.

HAPPY HOUR

Mon–Fri from 3:30pm. Wednesday all night!

VISIT OUR BEACH MARKET

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

DEAL WITH A VIEW

$9.95 dinners Mon.-Fri. from 6:00pm.

NOW SERVING BREAKFAST

Open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Daily

(831) 476-4560

crowsnest-santacruz.com

THE

Friday, September 23 • Ages 16+

SOUL REBELS with TALIB KWELI

DEL THE FUNKY HOMOSAPIEN Friday, September 23 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

THE

THE RECORD COMPANY

Saturday, September 24 • Ages 16+

CALIFORNIA HONEYDROPS

Saturday, September 24 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

FUTURISTIC

plus Beez

Sunday, Sept. 25 Ages 16+ Sunday, September 25 • In the Atrium • Ages 18+

KONGOS

CHROME SPARKS

plus Roland Tings

Monday, September 26 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

TWIN PEAKS

Tuesday, September 27 • Ages 16+

Carla Morrison

Tuesday, September 27 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

THE PRIVATE CLUB TOUR

Sep 28 Tech N9ne (Ages 16+) Sep 29 Jamey Johnson (Ages 16+) Sep 30 Dizzy Wright/ DJ Hoppa (Ages 16+) Oct 4 Peaches/ DJ JBeez (Ages 16+)

Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.

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

www.catalystclub.com


LIVE MUSIC WED THE SAND BAR 211 Esplanade, Capitola

9/21

THU

9/22

FRI

9/23

Jake Nielson Triple Threat 8:30-12:30p Groovetime w/Renwick, Robertson, Burns 8-11p

Live Music 7-11p

SANDERLINGS 1 Seascape Resort, Aptos SEABRIGHT BREWERY 519 Seabright, Santa Cruz

SAT

9/24

Live Again 8:30-12:30p

Patio Acoustic w/Toby Gray Noon-2p D’Oh Bros 8-11:30p

SHADOWBROOK 1750 Wharf Rd, Capitola

Ken Constable 6:30-9:30p

Joe Ferrara 6:30-10p

Claudio Melega 7-10p

UGLY MUG 4640 Soquel Ave, Soquel

Thirsty Thursday 5p

TV Show 6-9p

Open Mic 7-10p

Scott Slaughter 7-10p

WHALE CITY 490 Highway 1, Davenport

7th Wave 7-10p

Frank Sorci 7-10p

Open Mic w/Mosephus 5:30p Paul & Lenny 4-7p

Black Eyed Susies 5:30-7:30p

Fat Grass Corduroy 5:30-7:30p AJ Crawdaddy

Daniel Martins 9-11p

Daniel Martins 9-11p

ZELDA’S 203 Esplanade, Capitola ZIZZO’S COFFEEHOUSE & WINE BAR 3555 Clares St, Capitola

9/26

TUE

9/27

Live Music 7-11p

Suki Wessling w/ Nicole Benjamin 7-9:30p

Daniel Martins 9-11p

Daniel Martins 9-11p

Coastal Sage 9:30p

The John Michael Band 9:30p

KaTs 7-9:30p

Al & Richard 7-9:30p

Billy Martini

Upcoming Shows

SEP 22 Guitar Army w/ Robben Ford

Mojo Mix 6-9p

Dulcie Taylor $15 7:30p

WHARF HOUSE RESTAURANT 1400 Wharf Rd, Capitola YOUR PLACE 1719 Mission St, Santa Cruz

MON

Hipshake Billy Martini Show 7:30-11:30p

IT’S WINE TYME 321 Capitola Ave., Capitola

9/25

Alex Lucero Pro Jam 7-11p

Tammi Brown w/ Peter Cor, Steve Robertson 8-11p

Don McCaslin & the Amazing Jazz Geezers 6-10p

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

SUN

SEP 23 SEP 24 SEP 25 SEP 29 SEP 30

Lee Roy Parnell & Joe Robinson

Barry McGuire Santa Cruz Guitar Co. Radical Reels Dave Rawlings Machine Hot Tuna

OCT 06 Reel Rock 11 OCT 07-08 Santa Cruz Surf Film Festival OCT 09 Marc Broussard OCT 12 The Julie Ruin OCT 13 Crowder OCT 16 Ian Harris “ExtraOrdinary” OCT 18 The Proclaimers OCT 21 Film: Journey in Sensuality OCT 22 Taking Back Sunday OCT 23 Television NOV 11 NOV 12 NOV 15 NOV 17 NOV 18 NOV 29

John Mayall Telluride Mtn Film Tour Neko Case Warren Miller’s Film Asleep at the Wheel Charles Lloyd & the Marvels

DEC 03 DEC 06 DEC 08 DEC 20

Pivot: The Art of Fashion Holiday Circus Dave Mason Sweet Honey in the Rock

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

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 23RD CALI NATION & RISE UP REGGAE / ROOTS / ROCK SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 24TH DJ WAR BIRTHDAY BASH 393 Salinas St, SALINAS (oldtown) 831.757.2720 // casasorrento.com

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

TUESDAY DINNER SPECIAL 2-TOPPING LARGE PIZZAS 1/2 PRICE DINE IN ONLY 6-9

49


FILM

BOYHOOD BONDS Michael Barbieri and Theo Taplitz in ‘Little Men.’

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Parental Misguidance

50

Friendship, family examined in wistful ‘Little Men’ BY LISA JENSEN

C

hildhood friendships are delicate enough without interference from the grown-ups. Ira Sachs’ thoughtful family drama Little Men begins with a bond bubbling up unexpectedly between two boys from very different backgrounds thrown together by circumstances. But circumstances change, and it’s the consequence of parental agendas on the boys’ newfound friendship that’s explored in Sachs’ small-focus tone poem of a film. The story revolves around 13-yearold Jake (a very poised performance from newcomer Theo Taplitz). A quiet kid who loves to draw, Jake

lives in a comfortable, upper middleclass apartment in downtown Manhattan. The family housekeeper comes to meet him after school while his parents are at work. His mother, Kathy (the alwaysradiant Jennifer Ehle), is a psychotherapist whose income supports the family. His father, Brian (Greg Kinnear), is a stage actor; he loves the theater, but most of the work he gets is in small nonprofit theater companies that don’t pay much. When Jake wonders why he’s no longer auditioning for Broadway shows, his dad tells him he’s become “adaptable.” One day after school, Jake gets a

phone call from an uncle he hasn’t seen in years, sending condolences on the death of the grandfather he barely knows, Brian’s father, Max. Brian inherits the building he grew up in, a Brownstone in Brooklyn, and moves his family in. The property includes a storefront on the ground level, a dress and tailoring shop run by immigrant seamstress, Leonor (Chilean actress Paulina Garcia, who was so great in the film Gloria a couple of years ago). On the day the family moves in, Leonor’s son, Tony (Michael Barbieri), offers to help carry in some of Jake’s stuff. He’s blown away by Jake’s drawings, and when

they discover they both love the same video games, the boys hit it off. Leonor brings a cake upstairs to the after-funeral gathering that she says was Max’s favorite, and Kathy buys a dress in Leonor’s shop. But trouble brews when Brian, his sister, Audrey (Talia Balsam), and Kathy, decide they have to raise the rent on Leonor’s shop to something approaching market value. Single mom Leonor can barely make the rent as it is, and while Brian understands that Leonor and Max were friends, and his dad kept the rent affordable so she could stay there, Brian needs the extra income. Sachs manages to present every viewpoint without heroes or villains. Brian feels guilty that his wife pays the bills, and tries to come to terms with Leonor to avoid eviction. For her part, Leonor is not above subtle digs that she was more “family” to Brian’s father than he was. The boys watch in perplexity as their parents find ways to curtail the time they spend together. “Our parents are involved in a business matter,” Tony says to Jake. “It’s getting ugly, so they’re taking it out on us.” In retaliation, they decide to stop talking to their parents, which further aggravates everybody, but is no more effective than Kathy’s “conflict resolution” skills in solving anything. The impact of this adult drama on the boys is the soul of the movie. Tony is a real Brooklyn kid, gregarious and feisty; he plays soccer with the guys in the park, but he wants to be an actor, dragging Jake along to an after-school acting workshop for kids. But hanging out with Tony is an even bigger deal to Jake, who’s too shy to make friends easily. When we see the two of them (from two different schools, and two different worlds) racing around the neighborhood together on scooter and skates, we realize all that’s at risk from their parents’ impasse. There’s no easy resolution to the story, and Sachs doesn’t try to impose one. Instead, he offers a wistful coda in which Life, inevitably, goes on. LITTLE MEN *** (out of four) With Greg Kinnear, Paulina Garcia, Theo Taplitz, and Michael Barbieri. Written by Ira Sachs and Mauricio Zacharias. Directed by Ira Sachs. A Magnolia Pictures release. Rated PG. 85 minutes.


Senior Dental Plan

$299

Flying

therapeutic massage for the whole family

Foot massage $24 Body massage $49

One payment. Once a year.

Unlimited Exams, X-rays & *Preventive Cleaning* Over

$699 Value

Crane Spa

+ 30% Off Any Treatment

Crowns, Dentures, Implants & More… *2 per year*

ARE YOU OVER 60 WITHOUT DENTAL INSURANCE AND A FIXED INCOME? Senior Dental Coverage is an in-house dental plan created specially for those who are over 60 years old and do not have dental insurance to maintain their oral health. We know a healthy mouth is essential to a healthy life, and we are here to help.

New Scotts Valley Location!!! 1588 Soquel Dr. Ste 3 Santa Cruz, CA 95065 Usasmiledent.com

4736 Scotts Valley Dr. Ste C Scotts Valley, CA 95066 Scottsvalleyfamilydent.com

(831)476-5995

(831)438-0554

DR. GABRIELLA A TORRES DDS Owner with More Than 20 Years of Dentistry Experience

Quotes are online only: christisgreencleaning.com NOW HIRING Apply at christisgreencleaning.com (no phone calls please) Licensed, bonded, insured 5-star reviews!

831.406.0145

Santa Cruz

2381 Mission St. bet. Fair & Swift

Capitola

1501 41st. Ave. #J OSH center

288-5888 687-8188

Gift certificates and discount cards available Open 7 days 10 am to 10 pm Walk-ins welcome. www.flyingcranemassage.com

Drive-Thru Oil Change

24

$

95 Most cars

Includes:

• Lube chassis • 10 point inspection • Oil Change up to 5 Qts., • Check all fluid levels • Check Air Filter, 5-30 conventional oil belts and hoses • Oil filter

With coupon. All other oils additional. Excludes other offers

expires 10/19/16

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Communication, Quality & Consistency are our #1 goals!

Mt. Hermon Rd. Scotts Valley 245Q 515-8380 Safeway center

51


FILM NEW THIS WEEK DEMON How bad would it suck if you married the man of your dreams and then, during the wedding reception, found out he’s possessed by a dybbuk, an iconic ancient figure from Jewish folklore? Answer: A lot! Marcin Wrona directs. Itay Tiran, Agnieszka Zulewska, Andrzej Grabowski co-star. (R) 94 minutes. THE HOLLARS John Hollar is having a baby and dealing with some things. When his mother falls ill, he heads home into a hornet’s nest of old flames, soured emotions, and the usual lovable family kerfuffle. John Krasinski directs. Sharlto Copley, Charlie Day, Richard Jenkins co-star. (PG-13) 88 minutes.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Denzel Washington is the courier of righteousness and he’s raining down hell on savage thieves with the help of a ragtag group of gun men. This is actually a remake of a remake, as the 1960 Yul Brenner “original” was really the American version of Akira Kurosawa’s 1954 classic Seven Samurai. Antoine Fuqua directs. Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke co-star. (PG-13) 132 minutes.

52

QUEEN OF KATWE The story of how a girl from the slums of Uganda rose to become the first female chess player to win the open category of the National Junior Chess Championship in Uganda and became the champion in 2013. So many snaps to Disney for backing a female director for this incredible true story with a powerful cast. Mira Nair directs. Madina Nalwanga, David Oyelowo, and Lupita Nyong'o co-star. (PG) 124 minutes. STORKS In this animated film, storks used to deliver babies, now they deliver packages for cornerstore.com—is this an allegory about the U.S. Postal Service? Adventure ensues when an order for a baby appears and the top delivery stork scrambles to fix the mistake. Nicholas Stoller, Doug Sweetland direct. Andy Samberg, Jennifer Aniston, Ty Burrell co-star. (PG) 89 minutes. SPECIAL SCREENINGS Live theater broadcast of A View From The Bridge 11 a.m., Sunday, Sept.

25, Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. Documentary

RATS Midnight, Sept. 24-25, Del Mar Theatre. Donnie Darko Midnight, Sept. 24-25, Del Mar Theatre. CONTINUING EVENT: LET’S TALK ABOUT THE MOVIES Film buffs are invited Wednesday nights at 7 p.m. to downtown Santa Cruz, where each week the group discusses a different current release. For location and discussion topic, go to https://groups. google.com/group/LTATM.

NOW PLAYING BEN HUR The Roman Empire! Crucifixions! Morgan Freeman! Chariot races! History nerds, get ready—it’s the story of Judah BenHur, the prince falsely accused of treason by his adopted brother, and his path toward vengeance. Timur Bekmambetov directs. Jack Huston, Toby Kebbell, Rodrigo Santoro co-star. (PG-13) 141 minutes. BLAIR WITCH ’90s revival is so in right now. Or was that last season? Hang on to your Doc Martens, James is going into the Blair Witch forest to find his sister. Adam Wingard directs. James Allen McCune, Callie Hernandez, Corbin Reid co-star. (R) 89 minutes. BRIDGET JONES’S BABY It’s the movie series we kind of hate to love, but will still always mostly love. Yes, her face is different—and since when is Bridget Jones so thin?—but whatever, we still want to find out who the father of her unborn bebe is, and we’re definitely rooting for McDreamy (sorry Mr. Darcy). Sharon Maguire directs. Renée Zellweger, Gemma Jones, Jim Broadbent. (R) 122 minutes. CAFÉ SOCIETY Woody Allen directs. Steve Carell co-stars. With Kristen Stewart, Jesse Eisenberg, Parker Posey and Blake Lively. (PG-13) 96 minutes. CAPTAIN FANTASTIC Raising his six children to be philosopher kings in the forest of the Pacific West, Viggo Mortensen is thrown back into the harsh truth of the real world when his wife suddenly passes away. Matt Ross directs. Frank Langella and Kathryn Hahn co-star. (R) 118 minutes. COMPLETE UNKNOWN Alice realized

she could be anyone she wanted, live a thousand lives, so she did. Fifteen years, she returns to the life she left and wreaks havoc on those who loved her. Joshua Marston directs. Rachel Weisz, Michael Shannon, Kathy Bates co-star. (R) 60 minutes. THE DISAPPOINTMENTS ROOM An eerie hidden room full of your deepest, darkest disappointments: Kate Beckinsale, girl, nooo thank you. D. J. Caruso. Kate Beckinsale, Lucas Till, and Michaela Conlin co-star. (R) 92 minutes. DON’T BREATHE Did you hear the one about the kids who tried to rob a blind guy, but it turned out he was a psycho ninja and they ended up trapped in his house, fighting for their lives? It’s this movie. Fede Alvarez directs. Stephen Lang, Jane Levy, Dylan Minnette co-star. (R) 88 minutes. DON’T THINK TWICE It’s not all right! Mike Birbiglia and his adorable, hilariously dysfunctional group of comedy besties get their big break, and all is looking up until it looks like one of them might outshine the rest. Mike Birbiglia directs. Keegan-Michael Key and Gillian Jacobs co-star. (R) 92 minutes. FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS The tale of the real-life New York heiress with operatic ambitions who, because of her immense wealth, was able to realize them despite having a godawful caterwaul of a voice. Stephen Frears directs. Meryl Streep, Hugh Grant, Simon Helberg co-star. (PG-13) 110 minutes. HELL OR HIGH WATER A divorced dad and his ex-con brother decide on desperate measures for a change in destiny and to save their family farm. David Mackenzie directs. Dale Dickey, Ben Foster, Chris Pine costar. (R) 102 minutes. IXCANUL Seventeen-year-old María lives with her parents on the slopes of an active volcano in Guatemala. She’s promised to Ignacio, a good pick by her parents’ rules, but she wants to flee the small village of her birth with Pepe. Ixcanul delves into the sociopolitical reality of how indigenous people in Guatemala are exploited, and the ever-

present battle with modernity. Jayro Bustamante directs. María Mercedes Coroy, María Telón, and Manuel Antún co-star. 93 minutes. KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS Kubo’s just your average eyepatchwearing young boy caring for his sick mother when a spirit from the past turns his life upside down with an old vendetta and he has to locate a magical suit of armor once worn by his father. Travis Knight directs. Charlize Theron, Art Parkinson, Ralph Fiennes co-star. (PG) 101 minutes. THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS Just try getting through this entire preview without at least tearing up: Alicia Vikander and Michael Fassbender play a couple in Western Australia who lose what they thought was their chance at starting a family—until they hear a baby’s cries from the ocean waves. Their hopes seem magically restored when they rescue the baby from the water and raise her as their own. But then they meet Rachel Weisz, a grieving mother who lost her baby at sea ... Pack extra tissues. Derek Cianfrance directs. (PG-13) 132 minutes. LITTLE MEN Reviewed this issue. Greg Kinnear, Jennifer Ehle, Paulina García co-star. (PG) 85 minutes. PETE’S DRAGON OK, first things first: the ranger in this movie is not Jessica Chastain—it’s Bryce Dallas Howard, and, yes, they look identical. Secondly, this is not Tarzan. It’s kind of like Tarzan but apparently a dragon helped the orphan boy survive in the wilderness, and somehow after six years living rogue, he still has the ability to easily converse in English despite having clearly missed the milestones necessary for speech development. Oh, it’s a children’s movie, right. Additionally, Robert Redford and State Sen. R. Clayton 'Clay' Davis from the Wire are here for the party, and we’re very excited. David Lowery (not the guy from Camper Van Beethoven) directs. Oakes Fegley co-stars. (PG) 102 minutes. SAUSAGE PARTY Not the kind you were just thinking of—but better! From the creators of Pineapple Express and

This Is The End, it’s the devastating tale of one group of grocery store purchases finally discovering what they’re really meant for: consumption. Greg Tiernan and Conrad Vernon direct. Seth Rogen, Kristen Wiig, Jonah Hill co-star. (R) 89 minutes. SNOWDEN Edward Snowden was, and still is, one of the most famous and controversial whistleblowers in American history. Joseph GordonLevitt unpacks what it was like for the then-barely-30-year-old to make a decision that would make him the world’s most wanted man. Oliver Stone directs. Shailene Woodley and Melissa Leo co-star. (R) 134 minutes. STAR TREK: BEYOND Eyebrows. Space. That guy from Harold and Kumar. Explosions. More eyebrows. Space explosions! Justin Lin directs. Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, and Karl Urban co-star. (PG-13) 120 minutes. SULLY He felt both engines fail. He had 208 seconds to make a call for the 155 souls on board. Did Captain Chesley Burnett “Sully” Sullenberger make the right call to land flight 1549 on the Hudson River? Clint Eastwood directs. Tom Hanks, Laura Linney and Aaron Eckhart co-star. (PG-13) 96 minutes. WAR DOGS From massage therapist to international arms dealer, Miles Teller joins Jonah Hill (who has thankfully put some of that Superbad weight back on) as the two stoners who won a $300 million contract from the Pentagon to arm America’s allies in Afghanistan. Wait—this is based on a true story!? Todd Phillips directs. Steve Lantz co-stars. (R) 114 minutes. WHEN THE BOUGH BREAKS A surrogate mom for a couple becomes scarily obsessed with the soon-to-be dad. Psh, pregnant women, right? (That’s a joke, we’re all feminists here!) Jon Cassar directs. Morris Chestnut, Regina Hall, and Romany Malco costar. (PG-13) 107 minutes. THE WILD LIFE All is fine in the animal kingdom on a beautiful tropic island until the idyllic paradise is invaded by … Robinson Crusoe. Vincent Kesteloot and Ben Stassen direct. Matthias Schweighöfer, Kaya Yanar, and Ilka Bessin co-star. (PG) 90 minutes.


MOVIE TIMES September 21-27

IS THERE A HOLLAR IN YOUR FAMILY? SHARLTO COPLEY CHARLIE DAY

RICHARD JENKINS ANNA KENDRICK

JOHN KRASINSKI MARGO MARTINDALE

All times are PM unless otherwise noted.

SANTA CRUZ SHOW TIMES FOR FRI. 9/23/16 – THURS. 9/29/16 Winner of the Best Horror Feature Award

DEL MAR THEATRE

- 2015 Austin Fantastic Fest

831.469.3220 “LOVELY AND RARE. RICHARD JENKINS IS TREMENDOUS.”

CAFE SOCIETY Wed-Thu 2:30, 7:10 Fri-Tue 4:50, 9:40 DEMON Fri-Tue 2:30, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 + Sat 12:20

PICK

R

the

-Stephen Whitty, NJ.COM

“EMOTIONALLY

FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS Wed-Thu 4:40, 9:20 THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS Daily 7:00 + Wed-Thu 1:30, 4:15, 9:40 + Fri-Tue 2:00 LITTLE MEN Wed-Thu 2:40, 4:50, 7:20, 9:30 Fri-Tue 2:50, 5:00, 7:20, 9:20 + Sat-Sun 12:30 A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE Sun 11:00am DONNIE DARKO Fri-Sat 11:59pm

GENUINE AND WARMLY FUNNY.” PICK -Adam Chitwood, COLLIDER

THE HOLLARS LARS

RATS Fri-Sat 11:59pm

NICKELODEON

831.426.7500

CAPTAIN FANTASTIC Daily 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 11:30am

© 2016 HOLLARS SP, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM

STARTS FRIDAY!

COMPLETE UNKNOWN Wed-Thu 3:00*, 7:10 *No Wed show

Daily: (2:20, 4:40) 7:10, 9:30 Plus Sat-Sun: (11:50am) • ( ) at discount

DON’T THINK TWICE Daily 2:50, 5:00, 7:05, 9:15 + Sat-Sun 12:40 THE HOLLARS Fri-Tue 2:20, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 11:50am

VIEW THE TRAILER AT WWW.THEHOLLARSFILM.COM

D E L M A R

(2:30, 4:40), 7:10, 9:30 + Sat (12:20) Greg Kinnear & Alfred Molina in PG

(2:50, 5:00), 7:20, 9:20 + Sat, Sun (12:30) PG-13

(2:00), 7:00

IXCANUL Daily 7:15, 9:20 + Wed-Thu 2:30, 4:40 + Fri-Tue 2:40, 4:50 + Sat-Sun 11:30am PG-13

SOUTHSIDE WITH YOU Wed-Thu 5:10, 9:10

GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8

831.761.8200

BLAIR WITCH Wed-Thu 1:05, 3:20, 5:35, 7:55, 10:15 Fri-Tue 1:10, 3:25, 5:40, 8:00, 10:15 + Sat-Sun 11:00am

(4:50), 9:40

BRIDGET JONES’S BABY Daily 1:30, 4:20 + Wed-Thu 7:20, 10:15 + Fri-Tue 7:10, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 10:40am

NT Live presents

THE DISAPPOINTMENTS ROOM Wed-Thu 9:45

A View from the Bridge

DON’T BREATHE Wed-Thu 12:55, 3:10, 5:25, 7:45, 10:00 Fri-Tue 1:10, 3:25, 5:40, 8:00, 10:15 + Sat-Sun 11:00am THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Thu 7:00, 10:00 Fri-Tue 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 8:15, 9:45 + Sat-Sun 10:40am

NR

Sunday Sept. 25 at 11:00am

NO MANCHES FRIDA Daily 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 11:00am

Morgan Spurlock presents

SNOWDEN Daily 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 STORKS Thu 6:00, 8:30 Fri-Tue 12:55, 3:10, 5:25, 7:45, 10:00 + Sat-Sun 10:40am STORKS 3D Fri-Tue 1:30, 3:45, 6:00 SUICIDE SQUAD Wed-Thu 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 SULLY Daily 1:15, 4:00, 6:45, 9:30 + Sat-Sun 10:45am

Fri 9/23 & Sat 9/24 @ Midnight

WHEN THE BOUGH BREAKS Wed-Thu 2:00, 4:45 + Wed 7:30, 10:15

MIDNIGHTS @ THE DEL MAR

THE WILD LIFE Wed-Thu 1:30 + Wed 4:15, 7:00, 9:30

CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA

R

Fri 9/23 & Sat 9/24 @ Midnight Next Fri: ATTACK THE BLOCK Next Sat: ZOMBIELAND

831.438.3260

BLAIR WITCH Daily 11:55*, 2:30, 7:45, 10:15 + Wed-Thu 4:55, 8:45 + Fri-Tue 5:15 *No Sat show

1124 PACIFIC AVENUE | 426-7500

BRIDGET JONES’S BABY Wed-Thu 11:15, 12:30, 2:15, 3:45, 5:15, 7:00, 8:15, 10:00 Fri-Tue 11:45, 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:15 HELL OR HIGH WATER Wed-Thu 11:00, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 10:15 Fri-Tue 4:45

the

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Fri-Tue 11:00, 12:45, 2:15, 4:00, 5:30, 7:15, 8:15, 9:15, 10:00 THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN DBOX Fri-Tue 9:15 PETE’S DRAGON Wed-Thu 11:55, 2:45 SAUSAGE PARTY Wed 10:00 Fri-Tue 10:15 SNOWDEN Wed-Thu 11:45, 12:45, 3:00, 4:00, 7:15, 10:00 Fri-Tue 12:30, 3:45, 7:00, 10:00 STAR TREK: BEYOND Wed 7:15 Fri-Tue 8:00

shopping for a cause

STORKS Thu 7:00, 9:30 Fri-Tue 11:15, 12:15, 1:45, 2:45, 4:15, 5:15, 6:45, 9:00 + Sat 10:00am

• Women’s fashion

SULLY Daily 11:30, 2:00, 3:00, 4:45, 5:30, 7:30 + Wed-Thu 12:15, 8:30, 9:30 + Fri-Tue 10:15

• Top brands and labels

THE WILD LIFE Daily 11:30, 2:00 + Wed-Thu 4:30, 6:15

• Gently used/high quality

CINELUX 41ST AVENUE CINEMA 831.479.3504

• Tax-deductible donations welcome

BLAIR WITCH Wed-Thu 11:55, 2:30, 5:15, 7:45, 8:30, 10:15 Fri-Tue 12:30, 3:00, 5:20, 7:40, 10:00

Located in the King’s Plaza Shopping Center

BRIDGET JONES’S BABY Daily 1:00, 10:00 + Wed-Thu 3:00, 4:15, 7:30 + Fri-Tue 3:00, 5:20, 7:40 HELL OR HIGH WATER Wed-Thu 11:00, 1:30, 4:00, 6:45, 10:00 KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS Wed-Thu 11:45, 2:15 THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Fri-Tue 11:45, 12:45, 3:30, 4:30, 7:00, 8:00, 10:15 SNOWDEN Wed-Thu 11:30, 12:30, 3:45, 7:00, 9:45 Fri-Tue 11:00, 2:15, 5:30, 8:30 STORKS Thu 7:00, 9:30 Fri-Tue 11:15, 12:15, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 SULLY Wed-Thu 11:15, 12:15, 1:45, 2:45, 4:30, 5:30, 7:15, 9:15 Fri-Tue 11:30, 2:00, 2:45, 4:45, 5:30, 7:30, 8:15, 10:00

N I C K

John Krasinski & Anna Kendrick in PG-13

(2:20, 4:40), 7:10, 9:30 + Sat, Sun (11:50am) NR

(2:40, 4:50), 7:15, 9:20 + Sat, Sun (12:20) R

(2:00, 4:30), 7:00, 9:30 + Sat, Sun (11:30am)

1601 41st Ave. Capitola

R

831-462-3686 www.the-daisy.org

Proceeds benefit programs provided by Family Service Agency of the Central Coast | www.fsa-cc.org

(2:50, 5:00), 7:05, 9:15 + Sat, Sun (12:40)

210 LINCOLN STREET | 426-7500

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

JASON BOURNE Wed-Thu 5:30, 8:30 Fri-Tue 7:15

53


&

FOOD & DRINK successful ventures in Milan and Sardinia called “We Cook the Food We Love.” He expects to be online by November, while simultaneously opening Amore, an organic farm-totable pizza spot in Kauai.

PARTY ON VENUS Event Santa Cruz is celebrating three years of highlighting local movers and shakers with a Collaboration on the Lot party at Venus Spirits on Friday, Sept. 23. More than 20 beloved craft food and beverage makers will offer special collaborations, like a Verve Coffee and Humble Sea craft brew, along with live music and local artists. Tickets and info at eventsantacruz.com.

SAUSAGEFEST

TURN TURN TURIN Luca Viara has sold La Gioconda and plans to open a second location of Tramonti. PHOTO: DINA SCOPPETTONE

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Coming Home

54

Chef Brad Briske takes over La Gioconda spot while former owner Luca Viara expands Tramonti BY LILY STOICHEFF

T

he charming Craftsman home-turned-restaurant at 3101 N. Main Street in Soquel has gone through several reincarnations in the last 10 years—most recently as La Gioconda, an authentic Tuscan kitchen headed by restaurateur Luca Viara—and is about to undergo another transformation under the ownership of chef Brad Briske. Briske, whom Viara praises as “the perfect fit,” was the chef at the location during its Main Street Garden & Cafe days, and after honing his “food-as-medicine” philosophy and farm-to-table ethos as the head of La Balena in Carmel for the last few years,

is excited to return home … or, rather, Home. “I decided to name my restaurant Home because the space is an old house with a lot of charm converted into a beautiful restaurant where people will be taken care of. ‘Home’ is how I want my customers to feel,” says Briske. Briske was a vegan before teaching himself how to butcher and use entire animals, and is extremely dedicated to sourcing the best local ingredients, which he says isn’t difficult in an area with such passionate farmers. He describes his cuisine as wholesome, holistic, Californian-Italian with a “whole animal and food-as-medicine

philosophy.” Briske also teases the idea of doing a chef-served tasting menu at his new location, although he hasn’t quite worked out the details. He hopes to open the doors to Home this fall. With the sale of the Main Street kitchen complete, Viara has time to focus on several other projects, including his casual and authentic pizzaiolo, Tramonti. The Seabright restaurant, opened in 2012, is flourishing, and he’s looking to open another location in Santa Cruz as soon as he can find an appropriate property. Viara, who was born in Turin, is also starting a small catering company with his former business partner, with whom he ran several

Dust off your dirndls, ladies, and button up your lederhosen, lads— Sausagefest is back on Sunday, Sept. 25. This year, the tongue-in-cheek Oktoberfest-style festival will feature a competition between local sausage vendors like El Salchichero and Sun’s Out Buns Out, local craft beer and cider makers, autumn treats and live music at the Westside farmers market lot from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Hosted by Emily Thomas, owner of Santa Cruz Mountain Brewing and the Cremer House, proceeds will benefit the Friends of Santa Cruz State Parks. Tickets at scmbrew.com/events. Prost!

STEAK OUT I was skeptical when my friend insisted we grab a steak for our backpacking trip over Labor Day weekend, especially since he also assured me we also did not need a grill or pan of any kind. I still wasn’t convinced when he let our cooking fire burn down and banked the coals to one side. I even tried to stop him when, after heavily frosting the outside of the meat with kosher salt, he placed it directly on the embers. Then I walked away and had a glass of wine (because everyone brings wine when they’re backpacking, right?). When I returned, he was cutting a perfectly charred, mediumrare steak that was amazingly ash free. I was delighted to eat my words and a delicious steak dinner on the trail that night. Next time you’re out in the wilderness, try it for yourself!


GOOD TASTES AUTHENTIC NEW YORK STYLE PIZZA

UMAWAN THAI CUISINE

Where FRESH CATCH is

MADE YOUR WAY.

Fresh Local Ingredients and Nightly Specials LUNCH & DINNER SERVED DAILY BRUNCH SUNDAYS 10AM-2PM

493 Lake Ave, Santa Cruz Harbor 831.479.3430 | johnnysharborside.com

How doDine-In youormake Take Out a great pizza?

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)

the Amazing flavors ofin Thailand Put aEnjoy little New York Santa Cruz style.

Beer & Wine

Seasonal, organic pizza, pasta, Open Dailycoast from 11am – 9pmdesserts. West salads, 1433 Main St., Watsonville Niman Ranch meats — good stuff! (Overlook Shopping Center/Target) 831-761-8509 Affordable holiday parties.

Dumplings • Soups Nightly Specials • Craft Beer & Wine Closed Tues 1209 Soquel Ave. (next to the Rio Theatre) 469-9900 | oyunaas.com 4.5 Stars on

S A N D W I C H E S , S A L A D S , S O U P S , PA S TA , B E E R & W I N E , O U T D O O R S E AT I N G 1534 Pacific Ave. Downtown Santa Cruz 831.423.1711 | zoccolis.com Open Mon - Sat 8-6, Sun 10-6

Open Everyday : Lunch & Dinner

The Early Bird Gets the Deal! Choice of 4 entrees

15% OFF LUNCH Mon-Fri

11:30a-3p

Full Bar Happy Hour 3-6 Daily Open Daily at 11:30 110 Church Street, Downtown Santa Cruz • 831.454.8663 mozaicsantacruz.com

Choose any one of

8 Entrées for

1632 Seabright Ave 831-427-2559

$10.95

Also Available 9.95 Lunch Buffet

ON THE SANTA CRUZ WHARF

DINE-IN | TAKE-OUT | FREE DELIVERY

realthaisantacruz.com MON-FRI 11am-3pm

$12.95

from 5-6:30 Monday-Thursday

Monday-Friday Lunch & Dinner

831.423.5200

831.420.0135 | hoffmanssantacruz.com 1102 Pacific Ave, Downtown Santa Cruz

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

mention this ad to receive

55


&

ON TAP

FOODIE FILE

Meine Stein! Eight German Beers on Tap Hand-Pulled, Cask-Conditioned Ales 21517 East Cliff Drive

In East Cliff Village near 17th Ave, Santa Cruz

(831) 713-5540

eastcliffbrewing.com Mon & Tues 3-8:30 pm Wed-Fri 3-10 pm Saturday 12-10 pm Sunday 12-8:30 pm

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

SANTA CRUZ'S

COOKING FOR A CAUSE Gourmet Grazing on the Green runs from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 24, in Aptos Village Park. COURTESY OF KEIKILANI MCKAY

Green Grazing

Premier food and wine event in Aptos also benefits cancer fight BY AARON CARNES

Original Microbrewery Tour

T

hirteen years ago, the Santa Cruz Cancer Benefit Group threw their first Gourmet Grazing on the Green festival. The purpose was to help raise money for their organization, and it’s been incredibly successful in doing that. It’s also become a prime destination for local foodies looking to sample the best food, beer and wine in the area. Event director Keikilani McKay gave us a little more insight into this year’s event.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Public & Private Tours

56

scbrewcruz.com

Anything new that people can expect this year? KEIKILANI MCKAY: There are about 10 additional participants at this point. We have 29 wineries, breweries, and spirits, and then 30 restaurants. And a couple of lifestyle vendors; art and local products. New this year I have the Turkey Boat—they’re from Pajaro. We also have Odonata Wines—they haven’t participated in a few years. I have the Cremer House, Cantine Winepub in Aptos, Hive and Hum.

Seven Bridges Organic Brewing Supply Equipment, Ingredients & Supplies to make your own

BEER • WINE • COFFEE

MEAD • CHEESE • SPIRITS • VINEGAR KOMBUCHA • CIDER • KRAUT • SODA

Mon - Sat 10am-6pm Sun noon-4pm

325A River Street, Santa Cruz breworganic.com 831.454.9665

Downtown Santa Cruz

Can you explain briefly what the money raised will do? All the proceeds go directly to the

beneficiaries. SCCBG raises money to provide cancer services and research locally. The mission of the group is to help the beneficiaries fight cancer, and provide critical support services for families that are undergoing the trauma of cancer. The idea when we founded it was to simply give back to local services. The national organizations are doing a great job, but you don’t always feel the immediate impact in your community. This is an organization that delivers food to families that are undergoing cancer treatment, and don’t have time to make their dinner.

How many people do you expect this year? Between 1,200 and 1,500. It started with about 250 people for the first several years, and it keeps growing each year. Last year, we had 1,200 attendees. We want it to grow, but we don’t want it to grow so big that it’s packed and overwhelming. Aptos Village Park is great, and we can accommodate about 2,500 people there. INFO: Noon-4 p.m. on Sept. 24, Aptos Village Park, 100 Aptos Creek Road., Aptos. $55$70. 465-1989, sccbg.org.


95 $11.

Weekday Specials

Monday: Cioppino, Lobster Roll w/Cole Slaw Tuesday: Seabass w/Rice and Vegetables, Seafood Pasta Wednesday: Fish Tacos, Shrimp Loui Thursday: Prawn Scampi, Fish + Chips These items are not available to go, and are served a la carte. Excludes Holidays

Located on the outer end of Santa Cruz Wharf (831) 423-2180 | Open daily from 11am

Oaxacan TUESDAYS Linc Russin Mandolin WEDNESDAYS Jeannine Sings Softly THURSDAYS with Sweeney Schragg Guitar 6/12 North Coast Oysters FRIDAYS

831.457.1677 www.gabriellacafe.com @gabriellacafe

(831)

426.HULA

221 Cathcart Street • Downtown Santa Cruz

www.hulastiki.com

Your Place

FARM-TO-TABLE

Breakfast.Lunch.Dinner.Cocktails

Now Open for Late Nights 9 - 11pm, Wednesday-Saturday for Food, Drinks, Music and Fun! –•– Live Music Wednesday thru Saturday –•– Bottomless Mimosa All Day $11 –•– Banquets & Catering

Dinner Special Salmon with crab and hollandaise-

includes a glass of house wine.

$18 00

MENU : yourplacesc.com

831.426.3564

8am -9pm every day • 1719 Mission Street

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

SINCE 1992 LUNCH DINNER DAILY WEEKEND BRUNCH

Hula’s On My Mind...

57


&

VINE TIME

VINE & DINE

WINE TASTING SATURDAYS ALL YEAR SUNDAYS ALL SUMMER

420 HAMES RD. CORRALITOS 831.728.5172 | ALFAROWINE.COM RARE GEM The 2012 Pinot from Martin Ranch is bright with spice. PHOTO: JANICE SLAYTON

Join Us for Bordeaux varietals Handcrafted in the Santa Cruz Mountains

Wed-Fri 3-7pm • Sat & Sun 1-7pm 334-C Ingalls Street • Santa Cruz www.equinoxwine.com • 831.471.8608

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

3

$

Wine Tasting

Every Friday 3-7pm DISCOUNT ON FEATURED WINES

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

Local Wines From Local Vines

58

Tastings every 3rd Saturday & Sunday of the month 12-4pm

DEER PARK Wine & Spirits

2 for 1 Tastings with this ad BottleJackWines.com | 831.227.2288 1088 La Madrona Drive, Santa Cruz

FINE WINES • KNOWLEDGEABLE STAFF WINE & WHISKEY CLUBS 831.688.1228 WWW.DEERPARKWINES.COM MON-SAT 9AM-9PM SUN 9AM-8PM

SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL WINEMAKERS!

Martin Ranch

Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot Noir 2012 is an earthy gem BY JOSIE COWDEN

A

gorgeous piece of property, tasting room and vineyards lie up Redwood Retreat Road in Gilroy: Martin Ranch. It’s always a joy to visit Dan and Thérèse Martin—they are happy, ebullient people who make everybody feel welcome. And their wines are exceptional, so a wine-tasting at Martin Ranch is always a rewarding experience. Meeting up with some friends, we crack open a bottle of Pinot Noir 2012 Thérèse Vineyards Santa Cruz Mountains - Lester Family Vineyards. A stunning Pinot, this one, packed with gorgeous flavors that will make you want to drink it over and over. “The wine’s garnet color shows off a real gem,” say the Martins. “Its bright raspberry spice up front moves into a silky vanilla middle palate with a seductive, lingering oak finish.” But I love the wine’s notes of leather and spice, and the overall earthiness of this superb Pinot ($47). When the grapes come from Lester Family Vineyards, you know you’re onto something good. Martin Ranch Winery, 6675 Redwood Retreat Road, Gilroy, 408-842-9197, martinranchwinery.com. Open every first and third weekend of the month from noon to 5 p.m. on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

NOURISHING GENERATIONS FUNDRAISER Nourishing Generations, a local Santa Cruz nonprofit, announces a fundraising party to celebrate bringing much-needed professional nutrition, cooking, and movement classes to kids, teens and adults in our community. The fundraiser will be held from 4-7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 1 at Hale O’Hana, 2599 Soquel San Jose Road in Soquel. There will be delicious food, fine wine, a silent auction, and live music by Eric Morrison and the Mysteries. To purchase tickets visit nourishinggenerations.org.

BONNY DOON VINEYARD DAY OF THE DOON DINNER Bonny Doon Vineyard will be celebrating in great style at their next al fresco dinner at Popelouchum— winemaker Randall Grahm’s property in San Juan Bautista. Grahm promises “a magical late afternoon and evening affair” with a guided tour of the Popelouchum estate and partaking of library wine bottlings. Food will be prepared by chef Alexander Ong and the event is 4-8:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15. Tickets are $140 for this multicourse feast. Visit bonnydoonvineyard. com for more info.


Lively and Local CHECK OUT OUR DELICIOUS MENU ONLINE AT: CAFECRUZ.COM

2621 41ST AVE SOQUEL RESERVATIONS WELCOME 831-476-3801

FOOD BIN & HERB ROOM ALWAYS OPEN LATE SEPT. SPECIALS ON ENTIRE LIN ES

Food Bin Grocery Store 9am - 11pm Herb Room 9am - 10pm Every Day

NEW Lunch

11:30am to 2:00pm Wednesday 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

1130 Mission St. Santa Cruz

Food Bin • 831.423.5526

Herb Room •831.429.8108

831.423.7427 CLOSED MONDAY

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

NORDIC NATU RALS 20% OF F HOST DEFENS E 25% OFF MEGA FOODS 20% OFF

59


FARM-TO-TABLE American Comfort Food

$3

Now Open for Lunch! Fri. Sat. Sun. 12-3pm

OFF

Pancake Breakfast, Basic Burger

Steaks • Seafood • Burgers • Salads Vegan Menu • Draft Beers & Wine

Basic Breakfast

Dinner: Mon-Sun 5pm-9pm 503 Water Street, Santa Cruz, CA

$2

OFF

Exp. 9/30/16 Tues-Fri with coupon

Open Tues–Sun, 7-2:30p

819 pacific ave., santa cruz 427.0646

831-332-6122 www.thewaterstreetgrill.com

neutral ground Decent Divorce Mediated Agreements Transformative Dialogue Conflict Coaching Experienced • Confidential Effective • Affordable

Delicious and Authentic Timothy Lydgate Brunch Sat & Sun 10am–Noon

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

831.477.9384 655 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz

60

247.1695 mediateforchange@gmail.com 100 Doyle Street, Suite B neutralgroundsantacruz.com


H RISA’S STARS BY RISA D’ANGELES PEACE MESSENGERS, MERCURY DIRECT, AUTUMN EQUINOX

Wednesday is the United Nations International Day of Peace. It calls all of humanity to gather together in a spirit of peace and to commit to intentions for peace even amidst differences. There are peace day activities everywhere around the globe. Everyone is asked to participate in a public or private activity related to peace. At noon the United Nations, the Peace Bell, given to the U.S. by Japan, will be rung. Simultaneously we are called to a “Moment of Silence” at noon in every time zone, creating a united “Peace Wave” around the world. Students from around the world participate in Peace Day at the United Nations. They are called Peace Messengers. We can be a Peace Messenger, too. But first we must know how to bring about peace. I have written about this before. I will write it again. There is an esoteric equation

that tells us how to bring about peace. Goodwill = Right Relations = Peace. We begin with Intentions for Goodwill (in all actions, thoughts and speech). Goodwill becomes Right Human Relations (RHR with all Kingdoms; mineral, plant, animal and human). RHR then creates the first steps toward an active and ongoing process called Peace. The New Group of World Servers, as our action for peace, will be reciting the Great Invocation every 15 minutes on Peace Day. For an event map and information on how to get involved, visit internationaldayofpeace.org. Wednesday night, Mercury stations direct, at 15 degrees Virgo. Thursday morning, Sun (at the equator) enters Libra, and autumn begins. Persephone enters the underworld. Ceres grieves. The plant kingdom begins to withdraw. The apples, persimmons, pomegranates and guavas ripen.

ARIES Mar21–Apr20

LIBRA Sep23–Oct22

The sign Virgo and the lunar eclipse brought to the forefront in your life aspects of service. This is a time of asking all of us what and whom we serve. In daily life the issues of order and organization have become important, along with health and well-being. Virgo asks us to purify. The eclipse lets things fall away from our life. You discover renewed faith in yourself.

Inner spiritual resources will come to your aid when you feel lost or at sea without direction. Prayer helps, storming heaven does too. Much of what you have relied upon, even desires, fall away. You’ve built up strong inner resources over the years. Though it seems as if answers are covered by a mist, persevere in your prayers of asking and the veils will fall away.

Esoteric Astrology as news for week of Sept. 21, 2016

TAURUS Apr21–May21 A new level of courage is offered so you can begin to take little risks along the way. In order to bring forth the new realities it’s good to call forth confidence in yourself that what you see and feel are correct and are actual directions as to your next step in life. You must learn a bit more about working as a team with care and cooperation. Sharing, too.

GEMINI May 22–June 20

CANCER Jun21–Jul20 Learning new things and sharing your knowledge and experiences with others is what is needed now. You often keep information to yourself under your shell of protection. This is good for you. However, there are so many who need your knowledge, expertise, ways of knowing and living. Please consider sharing more. In the months to come you will want to travel and perhaps move.

LE0 Jul21–Aug22 Security, your own and for others, becomes a significant focus along with finances and resources, sexuality and spirituality. They are all different levels of resources in your life. Begin with making yourself secure and comfortable. Then move onto others in need. Perhaps they are another kingdom (animal, plant, mineral). Ponder upon what intimacy means to you. It’s time to begin a new creative endeavor (again).

VIRGO Aug23–Sep22 You may be called to act with courage and confidence concerning how you identify yourself. Events may occur in which who you thought were your friends may actually turn out not to be. What this means is that a new journey has begun for you as old ways begin to pass away. It’s good to assess your wardrobe. As we change internally our appearance in the world must change too.

food & ambiance

on the waterfront.

Open 7 days 215 Esplanade, Capitola Village 476.4900 paradisebeachgrille.com

OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH & DINNER 334D INGALLS STREET SANTA CRUZ 831.471.8115 WESTENDTAP.COM

SCORPIO Oct23–Nov21 There may have been expectations that didn’t quite work out as planned or hoped for. There are people, friends, hopes, wishes and dreams hovering about in the airs around you. Who and/or what are they? Be sure to communicate with those who love and support you. Soon new challenges will come your way. That’s the way for Scorpio. It’s always something … reorienting, transforming, dying, shifting, or being born.

SAGITTARIUS Nov22–Dec20 Something happened during the retrograde that was unusual. You were called out to be a different persona, to uphold a new reality, to assume a different task in the world. You undertook this with bravado and a sense of theatre. But underneath a deep spiritual value came forth. This experience will hold you to something new in the future. As the clouds clear and the mists part, you will understand.

CAPRICORN Dec21–Jan20 So many things felt uncertain, cloudy and misty over the past weeks. Things in form and matter got lost, laid in the sun, fell apart. There was disappointment, perhaps. Now life turns around again, falls into place. New plans are made, new encouragements and enthusiasm. Hands are steadier, ideas able to be turned into action. New opportunities await. They’re all around you. Choose all of them. You laugh.

AQUARIUS Jan21–Feb18 You’re learning how well you can provide for yourself. You’re recognizing that your creative efforts keep you well-protected and cared for. I have written many times that Aquarians are the ones who come from the future. So they know the future. Rather like an “unthought known.” And therefore all that they experience prepares others who watch them for that future, for the times to come. You are valuable. You are our forerunner.

PISCES Feb19–Mar20 There is a seeking for clarity about the nature of your relationships with intimates, friends, acquaintances. Some have fallen away and some you no longer want to be part of. This signifies that you are walking down a different road now, entering into new studies and world relationships, working on new and different goals. At first there’s sadness. Then you turn toward the new lands offered. A new world comes into view.

Wed Sat ‘til 8pm Prime Rib Nightly Steaks • Chicken • Pasta Beer & Wine Breakfast and Lunch Daily

2119 F. Mt Hermon Rd., Scotts Valley

438-8313 Mon & Tues 6-3, Wed-Sat 6-8, Sun 7-3

OPEN TUES–SUN LUNCH & DINNER 1501 41ST AVENUE CAPITOLA 831.475.8010 EASTENDPUB.COM

Local eateries featuring hand-crafted food, beer & wine

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

Home and work in the world are both activated by Virgo and the Pisces lunar eclipse. Both need a new level of attention, for both are changing. You work instinctively when it comes to family and home. Your wounds seem to be stimulated when you think of work in the world. Recognize them and allow them to wash over you. Take Ignatia Amara (homeopath for grief). Home at this time safeguards you.

the finest

61


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. 16-1335 The following Corporation is doing business as ASPIRE LENDING. 4170 GROSS RD. EXT., SUITE 1, CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. ASPIRE FINANCIAL, INC. 4100 ALPHA RD., SUITE 400, DALLAS, TX 75244. Al# 3494500. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: KATIE MILLER. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 3/15/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Jul. 25, 2016. Aug. 31, & Sept. 7, 14, 21.

APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Sep. 7, 2016. Sep. 14,21, 28, & Oct. 5.

BAR AND GRILL COMPANY. 330 32ND AVE., SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. Al# 3935381. This business is conducted by a Corporation Signed: ASHLEY BERNARDI. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above as NOT APPLICABLE. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 26, 2016. Sept. 7, 14, 21, 28.

statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 16, 2016. Sep. 21, 28, & 10/5, 12.

16-1497 The following Individual is doing business as DIRT GIRL. 3004 BEAN CREEK ROAD, SCOTTS VALLEY, CA 95066. County of Santa Cruz. ELLA ANN FEE. 3004 BEAN CREEK ROAD, SCOTTS VALLEY, CA 95066. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ELLA ANN FEE. 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 Aug. 16, 2016. Sep. 21, 28, & Oct. 5, 12.

conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: DAVID ANDERSON. 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 Sep. 8, 2016. Sept. 21, 28, & Oct. 5, 12.

above on 8/4/2010. Original FBN number: 2016-0001568. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 31, 2016. Sep. 14, 21, 28, & Oct. 5.

BUSINESS PARK, 2857 MISSION ST. #2881, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. County of Santa Cruz. STACEY BISSONNETTE. UNIVERSITY BUSINESS PARK, 2857 MISSION ST. #2881, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: STACEY BISSONNETTE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/31/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on AUG. 31, 2016. Sep. 14, 21, 28, & Oct. 5.

SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016 | GOODTIMES.SC | SANTACRUZ.COM

real estate

62

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1607 The following Individual is doing business as WILD ABANDON DESIGN. 906 ALOHA LANE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. ELSBETH MUMM. 906 ALOHA LANE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ELSBETH MUMM. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above is NOT

REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 16-1535 The following Individual is doing business as WOODMASTER. 4675 Opal Street #B, Capitola, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. JONATHAN PETER LEYS. 4675 Opal Street #B, Capitola, CA 95010. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: JONATHAN PETER LEYS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 6/1/1988. Original FBN number: 2011-0002035. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 24, 2016. Sep. 21, 28, & Oct. 5, 12.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1547 The following Corporation is doing business as SOTOLA BAR AND GRILL. 231 ESPLANADE, SUITE 102, CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. SOTOLA

R5 (.#+/ 5 -.), .#)(R5 /,(#./, 5 -#!( 55;5 * #,

R5 )) (5 ) .5 ),%R5 /-# &5 (-.,/' (.R5 (#+/ 5 ,)$ .-5

831-768-04745 #- # "1#&&# '-giH!' #&8 )'5 ' -. , , .-' (81 -8 )'

REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 16-1495 The following Corporation is doing business as STRATTON COUNSELING SERVICES. 1414 SOQUEL AVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. NEW LIFE COMMUNITY SERVICES INC. 707 FAIR AVE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95060. This business is conducted by a Corporation signed: NEW LIFE COMMUNITY SERVICES, INC. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/11/2012. Original FBN number: 2011-0001715. This

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1541 The following Individual is doing business as THE SOS COMPANY. 4910 CAPITOLA RD., CAPITOLA, CA 95010. County of Santa Cruz. MELISSA BREGANTE. 4910 CAPITOLA RD., CAPITOLA, CA 95010. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: MELISSA BREGANTE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 8/18/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 26, 2016. Sep. 14, 21, 28, & Oct. 5. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1618 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as TWO SIX MARKET. 400 28TH AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. COASTAL MARKET GROUP, LLC. 400 28TH AVENUE, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. AI# 8110240. This business is

HAVE A LIFE… Your Way! ˆ *MRH E RI[ GEVIIV ˆ +IX E FIXXIV WEPEV] ˆ *MRH TEWWMSR MR ]SYV [SVO ˆ 7YGGIWWJYP GEVIIV GLERKI ˆ 7XEVX YT E FYWMRIWW

John Axel Hansen, MA, JCTC 'EVIIV 'SYRWIPSV .SF 'EVIIV 8VERWMXMSR 'SEGL GEVIIVW$LEZIEPMJI GSQ

www.havealife.com (831)476-4078

STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME. The following person (persons) have abandoned the use of the fictitious business name: ORGANIZER FOR HIRE. 4910 CAPITOLA RD., CAPITOLA, CA 95010. The fictitious business name referred to above was filed in SANTA CRUZ COUNTY on: 8/25/2015. This business was conducted by: INDIVIDUAL: MELISSA BREGANTE. 4910 CAPITOLA RD., CAPITOLA, CA 95010. This statement was filed with the County Clerk- Recorder of SANTA CRUZ COUNTY on the date indicated by the file stamp: Filed: Aug. 26, 2016. File No.2015-0001511. Sept. 14, 21, 28, & Oct. 5.

REFILING OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT WITH CHANGE FILE NO. 16-1578 The following Individual is doing business as HAL MEDIA, HARLAN & FOOD CO. 1104 EAST CLIFF DR. #5, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. County of Santa Cruz. HARLAN ANDREW LEVEY. 1104 EAST CLIFF DR. #5, SANTA CRUZ, CA 95062. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: HARLAN ANDREW LEVEY. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO.

CAREER CONSULTATION David Thiermann

Career Services

Self-assessment Explore career options n Determine your focus n Market yourself n Career management n n

Since 1987

No charge for Initial Consultation santacruzuniversity.com 831.435.9321

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1516 The following Limited Liability Company is doing business as SUN VALLEY BERRIES, SUN VALLEY FARMS. 734 EAST LAKE AVE., SUITE 2, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. County of Santa Cruz. SUN VALLEY BERRIES, LLC. 734 EAST LAKE AVE., SUITE 2, WATSONVILLE, CA 95076. AI# 410188. This business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company signed: ANNA M. PONCE. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 12/10/1992. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 19, 2016. Aug. 31, & Sept. 7, 14, 21. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1577 The following Individual is doing business as LA TIENDA DE LA LUNA. UNIVERSITY

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1422 The following Individual is doing business as AHOY PRINTS. 5005 WILDBERRY LANE, SOQUEL, CA 95073. County of Santa Cruz. ALYSSA K. ROGERS. 5005 WILDBERRY LANE, SOQUEL, CA 95073. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: ALYSSA K. ROGERS. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 7/27/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County,


real estate PHONE: 831.458.1100 | EMAIL: CLASSIFIEDS@GOODTIMES.SC | DISPLAY DEADLINE: THURSDAY 2PM | LINE AD DEADLINE: FRIDAY 2PM

on Aug. 2, 2016. Aug. 31, & Sept. 7, 14, 21. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16 - 1455. The following General Partnership is doing business as DELAVEAGA PROPERTIES. 3019 PORTER STREET, SOQUEL, CA, 95073. County of Santa Cruz. CHRISTOPHER SOMPLE & MARK SZYCHOWSKI. 3019 PORTER STREET, SOQUEL, CA, 95073. This business is conducted by a General Partnership signed: MARK SZYCHOWSKI. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above as 1/1/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Aug. 8, 2016. Sep.

14, 21, 28, & Oct. 5. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 16-1624 The following Individual is doing business as SUE DIGIROLAMO REALTY. 265 CAMINO AL BARRANCO, LA SELVA BEACH, CA, 95076. County of Santa Cruz. SUSAN MARTIN. 265 CAMINO AL BARRANCO, LA SELVA BEACH, CA, 95076. This business is conducted by an Individual signed: SUSAN MARTIN. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name listed above on 9/8/2016. This statement was filed with Gail L. Pellerin, County Clerk of Santa Cruz County, on Sep. 8, 2016. Sep. 14, 21, 28, & Oct. 5.

GARDENING Happy Gardens Rototilling 831-234-4341

HELP WANTED Direct Care Work with developmentally disabled. All shifts available. Promotional opportunities. $11 an hour within 90 days of hire. Signing bonus of $100 at 6 month employ. Call 475-0888, M - F 9 am - 3 pm.

MASSAGE Call Curt feel good now! Muscles relaxed and moods adjusted. De-stress in my warm safe hands. 2 or 4 hand massage.Days and Evenings, CMP. Please call (831) 419-1646 or email scruzcurt@gmail.com. A*wonderful*Touch. Relaxing, Therapeutic, Light to Deep Swedish Massage for Men. Peaceful environment. 14 yrs. Exp. Days/Early PM. Jeff 831.332.8594.

FREE APPRAISAL ON PURCHASE LOANS GET PRE-APPROVED NOW!! 30 Year Fixed @3.5% (3.5% a.p.r.) No Borrower Paid Costs**

**(Some restrictions apply. Call for individual guidance & pricing. For loans up to $417,000.)

$25 & $35 THREE-COURSE DINNERS

Identify • Strategize • Acheive Gina Odom, Realtor

Bailey Properties #01708073 SantaCruzDwellings.com | 831-331-9455

Jim Chubb, Home Loan Consultant Pacific Inland Financial Inc. DRE #00911706, NMLS #360542; DRE #00956877, NMLS #361091

Rates as of 9/15/16, Subject to change without notice

TAYLOR PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC.

LOCAL EXPERTS

855.765.MAIN • www.MainStRealtors.com • Home Sales • Vacation Rentals • Income Properties • Business Sales • Commercial • Leasing • Investment Fund

DATTA KHALSA

Broker/Owner • Cal DRE 01161050 831.818.0181 • datta@mainstrealtors.com

BRE # 01902972

Participating restaurants and complete menus: SANTACRUZRESTAURANTWEEK.COM GOOD TIMES’ OCTOBER 12 ISSUE

Residential & Commercial Full Management & Sales Tenant Placement Services 24-Hour Repair Response Complete Monthly & Year-End Financial Statements 118 Pearl Alley, Suite B Santa Cruz

831.515.5601 taylorpropertymgmt@gmail.com www.taylorpropertymgmt.com RESTAURANTWEEK@SANTACRUZ.COM | 831.458.1100 |

Serving Santa Cruz County

SANTACRUZ.COM | GOODTIMES.SC | SEPTEMBER 21-27, 2016

475-2600 • jchubb1@gmail.com

Celebrating culinary excellence in Santa Cruz County

63


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

Family owned & operated 78 years. 622 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz

OUR 78 TH YEAR

WEEKLY SPECIALS

BUTCHER SHOP

GROCERY

A WINE & FOOD PAIRING PAN SEARED GRASS FED RIBEYE Ingredients

• 2 grass fed ribeye steaks (about 1” thick and 10oz each) • 1 tsp sea salt (I like Himalayan or Celtic) • 1 tsp black pepper • ½ tsp paprika • ¼ tsp onion powder • ¼ tsp garlic powder • 2 tbsp grass fed butter • 2 sprigs of fresh rosemary • cloves from 1 head of garlic, peeled

LL NATURAL USDA Choice beef & lamb only corn- Bakery “Fresh Daily” fed Midwest pork, Rocky free-range ■ BECKMANN’S, “Big” California Sour Round, 24oz/ 3.89 chickens, Mary’s air-chilled chickens, wild-caught sea- ■ WHOLE GRAIN, Great White, 30oz/ 4.19 ■ KELLY’S, Sweet Baguette, 8oz/ 2.19 food, Boar’s Head products. ■ GAYLE’S, French Loaf, 16oz/ 3.49 ■ TRI TIPS, U.S.D.A Choice/ 6.98 Lb ■ SUMANO’S, Mini Seeded Sourdough, 16oz/ 3.49 ■ COULOTTE STEAKS, U.S.D.A Choice/ 6.98 Lb ■ TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS, U.S.D.A Choice/ 6.98 Lb Cheese “Best Selection in Santa Cruz” ■ FLAT IRON STEAKS, U.S.D.A/ 5.98 Lb ■ MONTEREY JACK, “Great Melting Cheese” ■ GRASS RIB EYE STEAKS/ 17.98 Lb Loaf Cuts/ 3.19 Lb, Average Cuts/ 3.39 Lb ■ GRASS FED GROUND ROUND/ 8.98 Lb ■ OSCAR WILD’S IRISH POET’S CHEDDAR, “Customer ■ OLD FASHION FRANKS/ 6.98 Lb Favorite”/ 6.79 Lb ■ POLISH KIELBASA/ 6.98 Lb ■ RED WITCH SWISS, “Aged with Cayenne”/ 17.19 Lb ■ CHICKEN APPLE SAUSAGE/ 6.98 Lb ■ DOLCE 3 VISO, “Cow, Goat, & Buffalo Mixed”/ 14.99 Lb ■ ITALIAN CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless and Skinless/ 3.98 Lb ■ TERIYAKI CHICKEN BREAST, Boneless and Skinless/ 3.98 Lb ■ CREATIVE KING SALMON FILLETS/ 17.98 Lb ■ BAY SHRIMP MEAT, Fully Cooked/ 12.98 Lb

Delicatessen

C

■ JOLLY ROGER OYSTERS, “Fresh from the Pacific”,

ALIFORNIA-FRESH, blemish free, local/ organic: Arrow Citrus Co., Lakeside Organic, Happy Boy Farms, Route 1 Farms.

Preparation

- To make the dry rub, combine salt, pepper, paprika, onion powder and garlic powder. Set aside. - Heat cast iron pan on high for a few minutes. - Rub room temperature steaks with some coconut oil to help the dry rub stick. 2013 - Sprinkle dry rub on steaks. Foxglove - Once the pan started smoking, place steaks and Cabernet cook for 3 minutes on the first side for medium rare. Sauvignon - Flip it and cook the other side for 3 more minutes. - Place cooked steaks on a plate and cover with foil Reg 16.99 so that they rest for a few minutes. Now 13.99 - Meanwhile, reduce the heat to medium low and add the garlic cloves, rosemary and butter to the pan dripping. - Cook until rosemary is fragrant and garlic is soft. - Pour on top of cooked steaks and serve immediately

Wine Pairing: 2013 Foxglove Cabernet Sauvignon 94% Cabernet, 4% Petit Verdot, 2% Cabernet Franc. The Foxglove Cabernet over delivers for the price point. Dark, lush red and black fruits intermingle with earth and spice.

SHOP PER SPOTLIG HTS

■ HEMPLER APPLEWOOD SMOKED BACON,

■ BLUE HILL BAY SMOKED TROUT, “A Customer

& Iceberg/ .99 Ea

■ ZUCCHINI SQUASH, Extra Fancy Squash/ 1.19 Lb ■ BROCCOLI CROWNS, Fresh from the Field/ 1.49 Lb ■ AVOCADOS, Table Ripe Ready/ 1.99 Ea ■ YELLOW ONIONS, Premium Quality/ .59 Lb ■ CLUSTER TOMATOES, Ripe on the Vine/ 1.79 Lb ■ BANANAS, Always Ripe/ .89 Lb ■ LIMES, Extra Juicy/ .19 Ea ■ ORGANIC BANANAS, Peak Quality / .99 Lb ■ CAULIFLOWER, Great as a Side Dish/ 2.29 Ea ■ BABY CELLO CARROTS, 1 Lb Bag/ 1.19 Ea ■ CELLO ROMAINE HEARTS, Fresh & Ready to Eat/ 2.99 Ea ■ RUSSET POTATOES, Top Quality/ .69 Lb ■ ROMA TOMATOES, Ripe and Firm/ 1.79 Lb ■ SWEET ONIONS, Red and Yellow/ 1.39 Lb ■ SEEDLESS GRAPES, Red & Green/ 2.99 Lb ■ HONEYDEW MELONS, Great in Fruit Salads/ .89 Lb ■ RED ONIONS, Great Flavor/ .99 Lb ■ POTATOES, Red and Yukon/ .89 Lb ■ BRUSSELS SPROUTS, Locally Grown/ 1.89 Lb

Seasonal Beer

■ PAULANER, Oktobefest, 11.2oz Bottles/ 6 Pack/ 9.99 +CRV

■ AYINGER Oktoberfest, 11.2oz Bottles/ 4 Pack/ 10.99 +CRV

■ BUFFALO BILLS, Pumpkin Ale, 12oz Bottles/ 6 Pack/ 9.99 +CVR

■ SHIPYARD, Pumpkin Ale, 22oz Bottle/ 6.99 +CRV ■ LAGUNITAS, Tuberfest, 12oz Bottles/ 6 Pack/ 11.99 +CVR

Vodka

■ TITO’S, Handmade (95WE)/ 19.99 ■ PAU, “Made from Maui Pinapples” (92BTI)/ 19.99 ■ BELVEDERE, Poland/ 24.99 ■ HUMBOLT, Cannabis Infused/ 24.99 ■ CHOPIN VODKA, Rye or Potato (Reg 29.99)/ 24.99

Great Value Whites

“All Natural”, 10oz/ 5.19 10oz/ 5.99

■ PEARS, Bartlett, Bosc and D’anjou, Comice and Red/ 1.49 Lb ■ MANGOES, Ripe and Sweet/ 1.19 Ea ■ CANTALOUPES, Sweet and Juicy/ .59 Lb ■ LEAF LETTUCE, Red, Green, Romaine, Butter

BEER/WINE/SPIRITS

Favorite”/ 7.29

■ 2012 COLUMBIA CREST, Chardonnay (90WS, Reg 14.99)/ 6.99

■ 2012 VO. CA, Cortese (91WW, Reg 16.99)/ 8.99 ■ 2013 BRANCOTT, Sauvignon Blanc (90WS)/ 9.99 ■ 2014 TORRES VERDEJO (Reg 12.99)/ 7.99 ■ 2014 DAVID HILL, Pinot Gris (Reg 22.99)/ 9.99

■ BOAR’S HEAD SAUERKRAUT, “The Best”, 16oz/ 2.09 ■ CEDAR’S HOMMUS, “Organic & Non GMO”, 8oz/ 3.29 Bet Buy Reds ■ 2011 FROG HAVEN, Pinot Noir (90WW, Tea ■ NUMI, “100% Real Ingredients” 18 Bags/ 6.79 ■ STASH, “Explore our World of Tea” 20 Bags/ 3.29 ■ GOOD EARTH, “Sweet & Spicy” 18 Bags/ 4.89 ■ TAYLORS of HARROGATE, “Specialty Tea” 4.41oz/ 5.69 ■ PG TIPS, “England’s #1 Tea” 80 Bags/ 7.99

Crackers

■ LA PANZANELLA, “Artisan Crackers”, 6oz/ 3.79 ■ LAVASCH, Crisp Flatbread, 13.25oz/ 4.69 ■ URBAN OVEN, “Perfectly Crisp”, 7.5oz/ 4.59 ■ WISE CRACKERS, “Low Fat, Non GMO”, 4oz/ 3.99 ■ RAINCOAST CRISPS, “Non GMO”, 6oz/ 6.99

Shop Local First

Reg 16.99)/ 9.99

■ 2013 SOQUEL TRINITY (Reg 15.99)/ 12.99 ■ 2013 FOXGLOVE, Cabernet Sauvignon (Reg 16.99)/ 13.99

■ 2013 J. LOHR, Cabernet Sauvignon/ 12.99 ■ 2014 14 HANDS, Merlot (Reg 12.99)/ 8.99

Cotes Du Rhone

■ 2011 DOMAINE DE MADCOUX (90WS)/ 23.99 ■ 2012 SAINT COSME, “Les Deux Albions”/ 19.99 ■ 2013 LAURENCE FERAUD/ 13.99 ■ 2014 SAINT COSME BLANC (90WS)/ 22.99 ■ 2014 KERMIT LYNCH/ 11.99

Connoisseur’s Corner

■ 2009 BV GEORGE DE LATOUR (94WE, 94V, ■ TWINS KITCHEN MUSTARDS, 2 kinds, 9oz/ 5.99 Reg 115.00)/ 79.99 ■ WONNIES MARINADE & BBQ SAUCE, 12oz/ 3.99 ■ 2013 CAKEBREAD, Chardonnay (Reg 44.99)/ 34.99 ■ GIZDICH JAMS, 11oz/ 6.49 ■ 2013 LIMERICK LANE, Syrah Grenache ■ MOUNTAIN GOLD APIARY HONEY, “Pure, Fresh, Raw”, (95WE)/ 34.99 16oz/ 8.99 ■ 2013 GRGICH HILLS, Fume Blanc (92WS)/ 31.99 ■ CAROLYN’S COOKIE DOUGH, “All Natural”, 22oz/ 9.99 ■ 2014 RIDGE, Zinfandel, Geyserville (93V)/ 39.99

ROSE COHEN, 13-YEAR CUSTOMER, SANTA CRUZ

Occupation: Director, Community Agroecology Network Hobbies: Hiking, knitting, gardening, reading, cooking Astrological Sign: Sagittarius

ALAN ZIEGLER, 33-YEAR CUSTOMER, SANTA CRUZ

Occupation: Architectural steel worker Hobbies: Swimming, rowing, hiking, cooking Astrological Sign: Sagittarius You folks cook together? ALLEN: “Yes, we cook all kinds of food together, from Hawaiian and Asian to French and more.” ROSE: “He’s really good with sauces, and he makes real French fries.” ALLEN: “I like the pasta here at Shopper’s, especially Pasta Mike’s fresh raviolis, and they have a good selection of dry pasta.” ROSE: “We get a variety of meats from the butcher department, and the guys are really knowledgeable. They are real butchers, they’re not just stacking meat. And they’re friendly, actually everybody at Shopper’s is. They all know our daughter, Emma.” ALLEN: “Shopper’s is an important local business.”

How so? ALLEN: “Shopper’s is like the the pillar of the community. It’s always been here.” ROSE: “We prefer to support local businesses, and this place has personality, as opposed to so many other stores.” ALLEN: Shopper’s seems to know what we and other locals want. We don’t need 50 brands of cereal — just a few good ones are fine. It’s rare that we can’t find what we’re looking for such as rice noodles, nori for sushi, seasonings and herbs— both fresh and dried — plus a variety of great vinegars, olive oils, and cheeses.” ROSE: “Shopper’s is unique with their broad range of products.”

Unique in what way? ROSE: “Shopper’s caters to a variety of tastes and demands, from all-natural and organic products, to the every-day basics, gourmet and specialty, international, and, of course, local, which includes the always-fresh produce.” ALLEN: “Shopper’s has an excellent wine selection — there’s always good choices for every budget. We recommend Shopper’s for the quality, fair pricing, and good service.” ROSE: “It’s also quaint and cozy — I love the wooden floors! — with a pleasant, friendly environment. Shopper’s is a leader in the community. It provides good jobs for many locals.”

“Shopper’s has real butchers, and they’re really helpful and knowledgeable. They’re no just stacking meat.

|

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


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.