RENAISSANCE FAIRE TICKETS
Khalid Albaih
METROGIVEAWAYS.COM
S E P TE M B E R 1 2-1 8, 2 018 | VO L . 3 4, N O . 28 | S I L I C O N VA L L E Y, C A | F R E E
Sheriff Challenger Blows Deadline P8 Alum Rock Trustee Banned From the Dais P8 B. Lewis’ Strange Breakthrough P28
STAND
UP
AND PLAY
From SJSU to Sunday Night Football, activist athletes continue to fight P12
464453_METRO_WED_LEFT_091218 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
10 2
D
720p HD Smart Wireless Home Kit with 2 Indoor Wireless Cameras & 500GB Hard Drive
Was $149.99 Instant Savings $60
$
89
SHIPS FREE
• TrueMesh Technology Powers Worry-Free WiFi • Gigabit Speed with Advanced AC and Tri-Band Technology • Secure Setup, Automatic Updates, Safe Connection.
SAVE 40%
99*
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
Ler
Home WiFi System (1 eero + 2 eero Beacons)
• 720p Resolution and Automatic IR for Night Vision, HD Clarity even in the Dark • Remote Viewing Access your System from anywhere with our Free App or Through the web
$ Order by 3PM for Free Same Day Local Delivery #9401271
399
Coverage for 2-4 Bedroom Homes
We Pay the Sales Tax with Promo Code Frys.com/signmeup
SHIPS FREE
www.frys.com/signmeup
Limit 2 per Customer #9214429
Shuttle DH310 Barebone Computer
4TB
• Intel 8th Generation Processor Support • 4 x USB 3.1 Support • VESA Mount Ready
My Cloud™ Home Duo Dual Drive Personal Cloud Storage
26739 SHIPS FREE
$ Limit 1 per Customer
www.frys.com/signmeup
Home of Fast, Friendly, Knowledgeable Service SHOP ONLINE at www.FRYS.com “Advertised prices valid only in metropolitan circulation area of newspaper in which this advertisement appears. Prices and selection shown in this advertisement may not be available online at Fry’s website: www.FRYS.com”
facebook.com/fryselectronics
CAMPBELL 600 E. Hamilton Ave. (408) 364-3700 • FAX (408) 364-3718 CONCORD 1695 Willow Pass Road (925) 852-0300 • FAX (925) 852-0318 FREMONT 43800 Osgood Road (510) 252-5300 • FAX (510) 252-5318 PALO ALTO 340 Portage Ave. (650) 496-6000 • FAX (650) 496-6018 SAN JOSE 550 E. Brokaw Road (408) 487-1000 • FAX (408) 487-1018 SUNNYVALE 1077 E. Arques Ave. (408) 617-1300 • FAX (408) 617-1318
#9422401
249
SHIPS FREE
STORE HOURS Mon-Fri 10-9, Sat 9-9, Sun 9-8
www.frys.com/signmeup
Limit 1 per Customer #9628483
*INTERNET PRICE MATCH PROMISE STOREWIDE!
“We Will Match Any Competitive Price*.” Before making a purchase from a Fry’s Electronics store, if you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry's will be happy to match the competition's delivered price. If a Fry's Promo Code is offered on an item, and the competitor's final price is still lower after the Promo Code is applied, Fry's will cheerfully discount our price by 110% of the difference.
Prices Good Wednesday, September 12, 2018 through Saturday, September 15, 2018 “30-Day Price Match Promise*.” If within 30 days of purchasing an item from a Fry’s Electronics store Prices Subject to change after Saturday, September 15, 2018 Limit Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors. No Sales to Dealers or Resellers. Rebates Subject to Manufacturer’s Specifications. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Sales tax to be calculated and paid on the in-store price for all rebate products.Actual memory capacity stated above may be less. Total accessible memory capacity may vary depending on operating environment and/or method of calculating units of memory (i.e., megabytes or gigabytes). Portions of hard drives may be reserved for the recovery partition or used by pre-loaded software.
Abe
Cou
4K UHD Support
• One Central Place to Store all Your Content • Quick and Simple Setup from Your Phone
$
Sco
you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry’s will cheerfully refund 110% of the difference. Or if within 30 days of purchase you see a lower current price from a local Fry’s lectronics store, Fry's will refund 100% of the difference. To apply for Fry’s price match promise, simply bring in your original cash register receipt and verifiable proof of a lower current price. *Note: Some products only offer 15 days. Other conditions apply. See additional terms and conditions at http:// www.frys.com/onlineads/0001507075
464452_METRO_WED_RIGHT_091218 11 3
14"
• 4GB Memory • 32GB eMMC Storage • 14" Actual Diagonal Screen Size
$
Was $799 Instant Savings $100
219
#9459393
SHIPS FREE
www.frys.com/signmeup
Desktop with Intel® Core™ i5-8400 Processor
$
899
SHIPS FREE
*
SAVE 16%
$
SHOP ONLINE at www.FRYS.com “Advertised prices valid only in metropolitan circulation area of newspaper in which this advertisement appears. Prices and selection shown in this advertisement may not be available online at Fry’s website: www.FRYS.com”
facebook.com/fryselectronics
SAVE 12%
Optane Memory: Reduce Latencies and Enhance Performance #9560162
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
SHIPS FREE
$
CAMPBELL 600 E. Hamilton Ave. (408) 364-3700 • FAX (408) 364-3718 CONCORD 1695 Willow Pass Road (925) 852-0300 • FAX (925) 852-0318 FREMONT 43800 Osgood Road (510) 252-5300 • FAX (510) 252-5318 PALO ALTO 340 Portage Ave. (650) 496-6000 • FAX (650) 496-6018 SAN JOSE 550 E. Brokaw Road (408) 487-1000 • FAX (408) 487-1018 SUNNYVALE 1077 E. Arques Ave. (408) 617-1300 • FAX (408) 617-1318
259
*
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
279*
In-Store Only #9089027
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
MacBook Air 13-inch
In-Store Only #9112098
$
828
SHIPS FREE
*
Limit 1 per Customer MQD32LL/A #9213029
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
STORE HOURS
Mon-Fri 10-9, Sat 9-9, Sun 9-8 Prices Good Wednesday, September 12, 2018 through Saturday, September 15, 2018 Prices Subject to change after Saturday, September 15, 2018 Limit Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors. No Sales to Dealers or Resellers. Rebates Subject to Manufacturer’s Specifications. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Sales tax to be calculated and paid on the in-store price for all rebate products.Actual memory capacity stated above may be less. Total accessible memory capacity may vary depending on operating environment and/or method of calculating units of memory (i.e., megabytes or gigabytes). Portions of hard drives may be reserved for the recovery partition or used by pre-loaded software.
Eric
Eduard Todd
Was $999 Instant Savings $171
Was $279 Instant Savings $20
Limit 1 per Customer #9596252
$
464 WED RIGH
Nayan
Was $299 Instant Savings $20
• 1.8GHz Dual-Core Intel® CoreTM i5 • 128GB Flash Storage • 8GB RAM
• Print up to 55ppm • 650 Sheet Paper Tray • 4.3" Color Touch Screen • Ethernet Networking
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
Home of Fast, Friendly, Knowledgeable Service
699
• Print, Scan, Copy, Fax • Prints up to 40 ppm • Ethernet Networking • 4.3" Color Touch Screen
MS810n Mono Laser Printer
• 12GB DDR4 Memory • 256GB SSD • Intel® Core™ i5-8400 Processor
Was $1079.99 Instant Savings $180.99
CS510de Multifunction Laser Color Printer
15.6"
• 1TB Hard Drive • 8GB Memory • 16GB Intel® Optane™ Memory • 15.6” Actual Diagonal Screen Size
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
14" Laptop with Intel® Dual Core Processor
15.6" Laptop with 8th Gen Intel® Core™ i7 Processor
D2 P
Fry’s Electronics, American Express® Cards, MasterCard, Visa Card, and Discover Network Card, Accepted at All Fry’s Locations “We Will Match Any Competitive Price*.” Before making a purchase from a Fry’s Electronics store, if you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry's will be happy to match the competition's delivered price. If a Fry's Promo Code is offered on an item, and the competitor's final price is still lower after the Promo Code is applied, Fry's will cheerfully discount our price by 110% of the difference. “30-Day Price Match Promise*.” If within 30 days of purchasing an item from a Fry’s Electronics store you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry’s will cheerfully refund 110% of the difference. Or if within 30 days of purchase you see a lower current price from a local Fry’s lectronics store, Fry's will refund 100% of the difference. To apply for Fry’s price match promise, simply bring in your original cash register receipt and verifiable proof of a lower current price.*Note: Some products only offer 15 days. Other conditions apply. See additional terms and conditions at http://www.frys.com/onlineads/0001507075
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
4
ies at r e S n i e t s n Franke eatre h T r e m m a the H
FREE EVENT
Frankenstein@200 Pa
Tuesday, Septem
METRO SILICON VALLEY
A locally owned company.
380 S First St, San Jose, CA 95113 408.298.8000
nel Discussion
ber 18, 2018 @ 1:
00 –
3:00 PM A roundtable dis cussion about Fr an ke ns tein’s creature’s existen ce as a pseudo-h uman. This even features talks fro t m SJSU president Mary Papazian, Dr. Adrienne Eastw ood, and Dr. Anan d Vaidya.
Editorial Fax: 408.298.0602 Advertising Fax: 408.298.6992
EXECUTIVE EDITOR & CEO DAN PULCRANO
ATRE.COM TICKETS AT HAMMERTHE
EDITORIAL
NT Live: Frankenstein Screenings Jonny Lee Miller as Victor
Frankenstein:
. 10/21 @ 2:00 PM Wed. 10/3 @ 7:00 PM | Sun nkenstein:
Victor Fra Benedict Cumberbatch as
. 10/21 @ 6:00 PM Fri. 10/5 @ 7:00 PM | Sun
the National Theatre Captured live in 2011 from t production became -ou sold this , stage in London Cumberbatch and Miller an international sensation. or Frankenstein and the Vict of s alternate in the role creature he created.
FREE EVENT
Frankenstein
Goes to the Movies
8 @ 7:00 PM
DISPLAY SALES Advertising Director: John Haugh Senior Account Executive: Bill Stubbee Account Executives: Gordon Carbone,
Adriana Davalos, Billy Garcia, Shana Rubin
E.COM
THEATR
ER AT HAMM TICKETS
n!! 0 PM i e t s n e k n Fra 18 @ 7:3 er 24, 20
The Radio Play
ART/PRODUCTION Design Director: Kara Brown Graphic Designer: Tabi Dolan Production Operations Manager: Sean George Editorial Production Manager: Katherine Manlapaz Graphic Artists: Angela Aiosa, Jimmy Arceneaux Photographers: Greg Ramar,
John Dyke, Taylor Jones
Celebrate Mary Shelley's clas sic Frankenstein with an evening of clips, discussion, and panel of experts from SJSU and the Bay Area, mod erated by Dr. Alison McKee.
Frankenstein
Julia Baum, Richard von Busack, John Dyke, Jeffrey Edalatpour, John Flynn, Lauren Hepler, Mike Huguenor, Yousif Kassab, Bill Kopp, Tomek Mackowiak, Tad Malone, Mighty Mike McGee, Avi Salem, Gary Singh, Tori Truscheit Interns: Dominoe Ibarra, Kaylee Lawler, Winona Rajamohan
Illustrator: Jeremiah Harada
Thursday, October 18, 201
FREE EVENT
Arts & Features Editor: Nick Veronin News Editor: Jennifer Wadsworth Copy Editors: Chuck Carroll, Anne Gelhaus Contributing Writers: David Alexander,
usic and hool of M ay, Octob JSU's Sc S onium s m in e Wednesd jo -d coveanu er's pan n b ra ru B G . e n .K Euge in!! H mic and Vocalist rankenste es the co present F a balanc to tr s e ge. e c a h n u a rc g D do sical lan onnier an ntury mu e -c for chans th 0 2 bre in a the maca
0 PM (in Hammer4)
Friday, October 26, 2018 @ 7:0
live ntennial by participating in the Celebrate the Frankenstein Bice performance will The ! play o radi new , ling studio audience of this chil Night. College Radio on Halloween be broadcast on KSJS 90.5 FM
For more information, visit www.hammertheatre.com
CLASSIFIED SALES Senior Account Executive: Michael R. Hill Classified Sales: Dave Miller
ACCOUNTING/OPERATIONS/ ADMINISTRATION Accounting Manager: Gina Dolci Accounts Receivable: Sonia Chavez Information Systems: Chris Giancaterino Office Manager: Dave Miller
DISTRIBUTION Metro is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the current issue may be purchased for $1 each, payable at the Metro office in advance. Metro may be distributed only by Metro’s authorized distributors. No one may, without permission of Metro, take more than one copy of each issue.
FINE PRINT Declared a legal newspaper of general circulation by the Superior Court of Santa Clara County Decree No. 651274, April 7, 1988. ISSN 0882-4290. Entire contents © 2018 Metro Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in any form prohibited without publisher’s written permission. Unsolicited material should be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope; however, Metro is not responsible for the return of such submissions.
11 5
We’re hiring highly motivated and bright
You’ll be working out of our new SoFA Media Centre in downtown San Jose.
to develop relationships with local merchants, understand their business goals and present costeffective print, digital, social media and agency solutions.
Succeed Send cover letter and resume to: metronews.bamboohr.com/jobs
account executives
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Help Local Businesses
THIS MODERN WORLD
By TOM TOMORROW
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
6
I SAW YOU ISawYou@metronews.com Send us your anonymous rants and raves about your co-workers or any badly behaving citizen to I SAW YOU, Metro, 380 S. First St., San Jose, 95113, or via email.
Uber Rude
comments@metronews.com RE: DECADES-OLD CHICANO MURAL ERASED IN SAN JOSE’S EAST SIDE, ARTS, SEPT. 5
This breaks my heart! Kids these days will never know… @REALLAURENKUSH VIA TWITTER
RE: DECADES-OLD CHICANO MURAL ERASED IN SAN JOSE’S EAST SIDE, ARTS, SEPT. 5 This should be protected just like protecting architecture for historical preservation. Another display of how art is not valued for its historical record. … Somehow the soul of the city is being silenced.
CAROLANN ESPINO VIA FACEBOOK
RE: DECADES-OLD CHICANO MURAL ERASED IN SAN JOSE’S EAST SIDE, ARTS, SEPT. 5
When a commercial property buyer destroys cultural heritage— and violates state and federal law—I hope the San José authorities throw the book at the megabucks LLC that paid for the vandalism, and that the artist files a major lawsuit. GERARD KOSKOVICH VIA FACEBOOK
I saw you—or rather I saw your white Toyota sedan out in the left lane on Lytton in Palo Alto. And as I telephoned my friend with the car-share app (sorry, I don't happen to have a spare $200 to buy a smart phone), who relayed you had already charged him for a no-show I frantically waved at you from the berm around the parking level of the corner building on High Street, where I had been sitting with my guitar, my rolling cart and amplifier. Apparently I erred in expecting you to pull into the spacious yellow-marked loading zone directly in front of me. When the traffic light changed, you turned the corner and I ran after you, thinking you wanted to pick me up on High Street, but you just kept on going, and not long afterward appeared at the Lytton-High intersection again. You stopped while for the light, and this time I ran out in the street and came just a couple of feet away— close enough to see the logo on your windshield—when you quickly took off down Lytton across High. I guess you thought you didn't need to take me home since you had already been paid.
RE: DECADES-OLD CHICANO MURAL ERASED IN SAN JOSE’S EAST SIDE, ARTS, SEPT. 5 This makes me so sad and angry. I grew up in the Arbuckle neighborhood and served on the neighborhood board. The mural was part of the fabric of our identity. This is so wrong. I can't even imagine a worker accepting the job to demolish art.
JIM BOALES VIA FACEBOOK
11 7 Office of Cultural Affairs presents
BOHEMIAN KIDS:
Original .. Playful .. Trendy Bohemian Boutique has been leading the trend on the Complete Bohemian look for the last six years in Carmel. Now we have brought the trend to Santa Cruz. Bohemian Boutique • 1306 PACIFIC AVE, SC • 831-316-5154 • Next to Marini’s
Free Every Thursday Aug. 16–Oct. 4 6–9 p.m. Plaza de Cesar Chavez Downtown San Jose
Dance Lessons Live Music Beer Garden
Don’t miss out on the fun! Dressing up encouraged. citydancesj #408Creates | #DTSJ | #CityDanceSJ Knight Foundation • Adobe San Jose Downtown Association • Visit San Jose City of San José: Parks, Environmental Services and Transportation
Dance Now Think Later
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
BOHEMIAN WOMEN:
Stylish .. Romantic .. Unique
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
THE FLY
Tran Wreck
Greg Ramar
8
SVNEWS
Alum Rock Union schools trustee KHANH TRAN’s comments about kicking ass and lining folks up in front of a firing squad officially got him banned from the dais.
HILARIA BAUER—the Alum Rock Union Elementary School District superintendent who found herself on the receiving end of those verbal volleys—filed a temporary restraining order against Tran that just got extended through the end of next month, which They means he’ll have to Did video-conference What? his attendance at Thursday’s board SEND TIPS TO meeting and the one on FLY@ Oct. 11. METRONEWS.
COM On Tuesday, the pair showed up in a Santa Clara County courtroom, Tran with board ally DOLORES MARQUEZ-FRAUSTO and Bauer with family members, friends and community supporters. But the judge postponed the hearing to Oct. 29. Tran says that’s just as well since he doesn’t even want to cross paths with Bauer, whom he says he plans to eventually sue for defamation. “She saw me today and tried to say, ‘Hi,’ and tried to wave at me, and I just looked the other way,” he says. “She’s trying to play innocent.”
PUZZLED Retired Undersheriff John Hirokawa says he neglected to file a new candidate statement out of confusion and because the county misinformed him.
The outspoken trustee, who’s running for re-election this fall, calls the superintendent’s restraining order a political stunt to distract from her own alleged corruption. “She might have a one-minute win today,” Tran says, “but she’ll have her day in court when her ass is arrested.”
BY JENNIFER WADSWORTH
Ever since ARUSD came under the microscope in a series of audits for potential fraud and questionable dealings with contractors, Tran has blamed Bauer for the district’s problems. While a civil grand jury called on him and his allies on the board, Marquez-Fraust and ESAU HERRERA, to resign, Tran insists that the scrutiny is misplaced and that people should really be concerned about the superintendent.
Deadline Story Sheriff candidate John Hirokawa blames elections staff for amateur misstep
F
OR A CONTEST marked by so much scandal and mudslinging leading up to the June primary, the Santa Clara County sheriff’s race seemed oddly quiet lately. But Sheriff Laurie Smith’s challenger, retired Department of Corrections chief John Hirokawa, was apparently scrambling behind the scenes this past week after missing a deadline to put his candidate statement on the fall ballot.
It took two court motions and a whole lot of finger-pointing to remedy the misstep so that Hirokawa’s name wouldn’t appear next to a blank box on the election booklets mailed to about 850,000 prospective voters. He pulled it off by simultaneously shifting blame to the county and tapping insiders for help, putting one campaign donor especially in a tough spot. The amateur move of missing a deadline most other candidates routinely meet is another apparent misstep in a campaign that has
cycled through campaign managers and struggled to find its footing since Hirokawa emerged second in a field of five candidates to challenge Smith in the general election—the first contested runoff in two decades. Rather than picking up momentum, however, Hirokawa remained on the defensive over the the involvement of his leading backer and close political ally, Deputy Sheriffs Association President Don Morrissey, in a racist texting scandal. Morrissey resigned as union head on July 26, eight weeks after the primary. The last day to submit a candidate statement to the Registrar of Voters (ROV) was Aug. 10, but Hirokawa didn’t realize he blew past the deadline until three weeks after the fact, on Aug. 31, according to his initial legal petition. “I was unaware of this requirement as I never received the candidate booklet from the ROV and due to confusion, neglect or mistake failed to recognize this was a required deadline
investigation was underway into possible conflicts of interest in the counsel’s office. Stevens was not available at her office telephone number on Tuesday, but the county’s Employee Services Agency described her status as “active.” She didn’t answer multiple emails to her county and personal addresses by press time.
‘I never received the candidate booklet from the ROV and due to confusion, neglect or mistake failed to recognize this was a required deadline.’ County Counsel Legal and Compliance Officer Kim Forrester said Stevens has been out of the office since Sept. 5. Incidentally, that’s a day after Hirokawa’s emergency court hearing. When reached for comment, Hirokawa directed questions to his new campaign manager, Vincent Rocha—his third in a year after Barry Barnes quit last fall for undisclosed reasons and Jeffrey Cardenas left in July, citing frustrations in a text to Metro “that people didn’t see Laurie [Smith] for the partisan that she is.” Cardenas said he’s too busy to elaborate on what he meant, and Hirokawa said via email that he wishes him “only the best.” As for the missed deadline fiasco, Hirokawa chalked it up to “simply a bureaucratic error on the ROV’s part.” “In fact,” he added, “my petition was not opposed in court by the ROV and my candidate statement will be on the November ballot. I am glad the voters will have the chance to base their vote in November with information from both candidates’ statements.”
9 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
as set forth in the primary booklet,” he wrote under penalty of perjury, contradicting ROV records showing that he signed for a copy of the booklet on March 8. Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Helen Williams rejected the motion, saying state election law “does not provide relief for lack of compliance.” So Hirokawa gave it another shot. In a more detailed and polished petition filed Sept. 4—just two days before the ROV sent its voter guides to the printer—the retired undersheriff said he was “puzzled” by his statement not getting rolled over to the runoff, blaming the county’s “unclear and confusing” rules and an unnamed ROV staffer for misinforming him about the process. Though records show that the ROV sent a letter dated July 12 and signed by interim Election Division Coordinator Linda Tulett to remind Hirokawa of the upcoming deadline, he said he never saw it. Again under penalty of perjury, Hirokawa stated that nothing in the candidate booklet—the one he said he didn’t obtain in time—addresses the issue of repurposing statements filed before the primary. Maybe he skipped Page 2 of the candidate guide, which lists important dates to remember, including the Aug. 10 deadline in question. Four county employees helped Hirokawa salvage the situation, according to court records. On Aug. 31, he spoke to Assistant Registrar of Voters Virginia Bloom, who, in his telling, acknowledged that the rules are confusing and assured him that the county wouldn’t oppose his appeal. Over the next few days, Hirokawa also emailed back and forth with County Counsel deputies Steve Mitra and Danielle Goldstein, telling them about his conversation with Bloom and his intent to challenge the ROV in court. He looped in a third county attorney, Hirokawa campaign donor Cheryl Stevens, on her private email address. The possible conflict came to light when Hirokawa attached email headers to his court filings and Smith supporters brought the email chain with Stevens to the attention of the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s office. John Chase, head of the DA’s Public Integrity Unit, contacted on Tuesday, refused to confirm or deny whether an
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
Todd Davalos
10
SILICON SILICONALLEYS ALLEYS
NEW BEGINNINGS Tuan Tran’s hand-woven sculptures, made from telephone wire and inspired by Vietnamese fishnet weaving, are part of ArtObjectGallery’s ‘Salt Stained.’
Hang-Ups New exhibit marks first collaboration for Japantown gallery, Vietnamese artists BY GARY SINGH
K
EN MATSUMOTO’S compound, the ArtObjectGallery, sits on a legendary Japantown parcel, near a Zen meditation studio and an artist’s supply shop. Including an exhibit space along with an outdoor sculpture garden where one finds Matsumoto’s own work, the complex usually exudes serenity, but last Saturday, the entire property came alive thanks to Salt Stained, a new exhibit of mostly Vietnamese visual artists that runs through Oct. 26.
Chopsticks Alley, a local organization that promotes Southeast Asian cultural heritage through food, art and shared expression, organized the exhibit in cooperation with the San Jose Museum of Art’s Vietnamese Community Outreach Initiative, New Terrains: Mobility and Migration. The work in Salt Stained deals with intergenerational trauma, recycled identities, the refugee experience and resiliency in the face of global displacement. “Salt is about preserving, but it’s also about new beginnings,” says Carolyn Lê, one of the curators, adding that the Vietnamese word, nước, which translates to both country and water, is very much part of the Southeast
Asian body. When nước is removed, salt-stained skin remains. Once oceans are crossed, what’s left is the nước that nourished us and the nước we now call our homeland. “So you’ll see themes of preserving, starting anew, and bridging an intergenerational gap so that you can heal,” she said. In the show, we discover pieces by SJSU art professor Binh Danh, whose work in recording images onto plant leaves has achieved national recognition for many years. Another artist, Tuan Tran, is inspired by the ancient technique of fishnet weaving in Vietnam. He hand-weaves sculptures made from telephone wire that hang from the ceiling in DNA-style coils, bringing new life into recycled materials that were once fated for the landfills. Trinh Mai, on the other hand, records the voyages of her predecessors and pays tribute to their despair via mixed media works combining acrylics, textiles, embroidery, tree bark, joss paper and remnants of rice bags inherited from her grandmother’s fabric collection. Many of the works transform matter into other forms of matter or deal directly with the transmigration of materials—all as
a metaphor for the displaced person’s identity when having to start over again. The show also includes a video as a humorous antidote to the sadder aspects of the other works. In the video, older generation Vietnamese are asked about their very first food memory after arriving the US. “Any event like this, or having Chopsticks Alley here, is to bridge the intergenerational gap, because the 1.5 and second generations, it’s very hard for us to connect with them,” says Lê. “So for something like food memories, asking, ‘Hey, what’s your first food memory when you came to America?,’ that’s much more palatable than asking, ‘What was it like when you were a refugee? How did you get here?,’ which can be very traumatic. To ask them about a food memory, it opens this up for a space of healing, building community together.” The gala hoedown kickoff on Saturday was not a normal art opening. It was an epic transnational Viet-Japanese global landmark summit. San Jose Taiko opened up the event with a performance outside in the street. Inside, Chef Tu David Phu provided hors d’oeuvres. The folks from Academic Coffee poured caffeine into cups. The famous Lao Papaya sausages even made an appearance. Renowned musician and composer Vanessa Vo went full-on Hendrix with traditional Vietnamese instruments, putting a spell on the entire audience. During the thank-you session, one of the all-time legends of Japantown, Dr. Jerry Hiura of Contemporary Asian Theater Scene, took over the microphone and praised the “high energy urban millennial frenzy angst” driving the whole event, noting that after all these decades the Japanese and Vietnamese communities in San Jose have never before collaborated. Until now. “This is a dialogue that’s been silent for so long,” Hiura said. “We’re all products of war. We use the same words, like diaspora and trauma, so it’s about time.” Susan Sayre Batton, executive director of the San Jose Museum of Art, also grabbed the mike and said the project was part of that institution’s mission to “open our doors and become a borderless museum.” And a borderless night it was. When borders collapse, separated people come together, plain and simple.
11
Another Roll of the Dice 4.875”w x 3.875”h
Music & Lyrics by FRANK LOESSER & Hoagy Carmichael, Frederich Hollander, Burton Lane, Jimmy McHugh, Victor Young
Book by MARK SALTZMAN Based on the stories of DAMON RUNYON
SEP. 14 - OCT. 7, 2018 408-679-2330 www.TabardTheatre.org
Snapshots. Tabard.
29 N. San Pedro St. Downtown San Jose
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
A Brand-New Musical from the creators of “Guys & Dolls”
David Schmitz, SJSU
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
12
REBELS WITH A CAUSE SJSU alumnus and civil rights organizer Harry Edwards stands before the memorial statue of U.S. Olympic sprinters John Carlos and Tommie Smith, who protested racial inequality at the 1968 Summer Games in Mexico City by refusing to acknowledge the national anthem from the dais.
F
IFTY YEARS AGO this October, Tommie Smith and John Carlos climbed atop the Olympic medal podium in Mexico City and threw up a fist against racial inequality. As they each removed their shoes and raised a clenched, black-gloved hand in the air, the pair of San Jose State sprinters bowed their heads, symbolically refusing to acknowledge their country’s national anthem as it played over the stadium’s loudspeakers.
Immediate and intense backlash followed. Avery Brundage, the chairman of the International Olympic Committee, called for the two runners to be suspended from the U.S. Olympic Team and banned from the Olympic Village. The U.S. Olympic Committee attempted to defend the athletes, but after Brundage threatened to kick the entire U.S. track team out of the games, Carlos and Smith were sent packing. Returning home to a United States struggling through the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement, they were not welcomed as heroes. The pair lost their jobs and for years afterward received death
threats. They were never allowed to compete for their country again. Today, Smith and Carlos are widely recognized as trailblazers— leaders in a transformative national reckoning and icons of the South Bay’s contribution to the equal rights movement. Their likeness has been immortalized in a statue on SJSU’s campus, and President Barack Obama honored both men in a ceremony at the White House in 2016. That same same year, then-49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick staged a protest of his own, kneeling on the sideline before every game during the ceremonial singing of “The Star Spangled Banner.” “I am not going to stand up to
show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color,” Kaepernick would go on to explain to reporters. Like Smith and Carlos before him, Kaepernick used his stature as a star athlete to amplify a cause: the Black Lives Matter movement. And like Smith and Carlos before him, Kaepernick’s actions had consequences. Though he once led the 49ers within inches of a Super Bowl victory, he now finds himself out of work. No NFL team will sign him. He is currently in the midst of a battle with the league; he and his lawyers argue that team owners colluded to keep him off any roster, a violation of the collective bargaining
13 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
HISTORIC GESTURES Tracing the roots of today’s athletic activism through San Jose State University By Nick Veronin
agreement between the NFL and its players’ union. Both of these episodes—along with similar protests made by Muhammad Ali, Lebron James and others—are the subject of a new exhibit, “The Power of Protest,” currently on display on the King Library’s Fifth Floor at San Jose State University.
POWER MOVEMENT The exhibit, which explores the history of athlete activism, features a wide array of memorabilia collected over the past five decades by sociologist, activist and SJSU alumnus Harry Edwards. Edwards graduated from San
Jose State in 1964 with a degree in sociology and went on to earn a Ph.D. from Cornell. While at SJS (the school had not yet acquired the university designation), Edwards co-founded the Olympic Project for Human Rights, the organization responsible for numerous protests at the 1968 summer games. In addition to helping orchestrate the iconic Smith and Carlos moment, the OPHR also called upon the International Olympic Committee to bar apartheid countries South Africa and Rhodesia from the games, and to restore Muhammad Ali’s boxing titles, which had been stripped after Ali refused to fight in Vietnam. The new SJSU exhibit features
various ephemera, like OPHR posters and fliers, along with photographs and books by James Baldwin, Maya Angelou and Edwards—including The Revolt of the Black Athlete and his autobiography, The Struggle That Must Be, which features a forward by Angelou. There is also a large visual timeline that runs the length of the exhibition room. From the 1857 founding of the California Normal School—which would go on to become SJS and later SJSU—through the Civil War, Jim Crow, the Civil Rights Movement and on to today, the timeline highlights milestones in the battle over civil rights, taking care to note where those events have intersected with athletics and SJSU.
There’s the passage of the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote in 1920, followed by Margaret Jenkins, the first SJSU graduate to participate in the Olympic Games in 1928 and 1932. There is Jesse Owens’ historic 1936 performance in Berlin. In 1948 Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier. And in 1955, the Montgomery Bus Boycotts helped kick off the Civil Rights Movement, which led to Muhammad Ali’s refusal to serve in Vietnam in 1967 and then to Smith and Carlos’ iconic moment a year later. In 2005, the tribute to Smith and Carlos was erected at San Jose State
14
ATHLETE ACTIVISM
13
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
14
BLACK POWER While a faculty member at SJSU, Harry Edwards joined the Black Panthers and established the Olympic Project for Human Rights, which organized protests at the 1968 Summer Games. University, and more than a decade on, athletes continue to protest. In 2014, LeBron James and Kyrie Irving, then on the Cleveland Cavaliers, warmed up before a game wearing shirts emblazoned with the words “I can’t breathe”—a reference to Eric Garner’s last words. Garner died at the arms of police who applied a chokehold while arresting him for selling loose cigarettes on Staten Island streets. The timeline concludes with Kaepernick’s protest and its aftermath—including Donald Trump’s election.
Taken as a whole, the exhibit calls attention to the reality that athletes in the United States have long spoken out against the injustices they’ve encountered. “One of the things that we want to drive home with this exhibition is to show it’s all a continuum,” says Craig Simpson, director of special collections and archives at San Jose State University. “All of these different things—from Martin Luther King to Tommie Smith and John Carlos to Colin Kaepernick and beyond—they’re all part of the same continuum.”
15
REBELLIOUS STUDIES “The Power of Protest” is an offshoot of Edwards’ larger project, the Institute for the Study of Sport, Society and Social Change. He co-founded the institute in 2017 with the aim of taking an academic approach to athletic activism— which, according to Prof. Ted Butryn, the institute’s interim founding director, is as potent and vital as it’s ever been. “It’s not new,” Butryn says of athlete activism, “but there certainly has been an explosion of it in the last three to five years.” He says a large part of the increased stature of athletic activism is due to social media platforms, which have given sports stars a megaphone to express their views directly to the public. Thus, even though the NFL has worked to actively discourage on-field protests, and even though Kaepernick is currently not playing on any team, he and other activist players can still push out their message. And when athletes tweet, people listen. “It’s been very effective in raising awareness that something is going on,” Butryn says, referring to the protests Kaepernick sparked by taking a knee back in 2016. On a slightly more cynical note, when athletes tweet, the robots also listen. “Russian bots knew that sport was important,” he says, pointing to research that shows Russian influence campaigns used Colin Kaepernick as a lightning rod to sow division amidst the United States electorate. The Russian bots serve to highlight another important point made by “The Power of Protest.” Namely, that as long as there have been athlete activists, there have been detractors who are quick to devalue their political activities and demand that they simply “shut up and play.”
In the wake of the Mexico City protest, IOC Chairman Brundage trotted out a critique familiar to anyone who has followed the Kaepernick protests. “The action of these negroes was an insult to the Mexican hosts and a disgrace to the United States,” Brundage wrote of Smith and Carlos. Brundage, a Hitler admirer and anti-Semite who was a central figure in the 1936 Berlin Games and Munich Olympics, later revealed that disrespect of the host country likely had far less to do with his outrage than outright racism when he said: “I don’t understand why these negroes are talking about boycotting the Olympic Games when the Olympics are the only forum that they can stand on where they have equal standing with other human beings.”
‘The action of these negroes was an insult to the Mexican hosts and a disgrace to the United States’ -IOC CHAIRMAN AVERY BRUNDAGE For Butryn, quotes like these serve as proof that critics of athlete protesters are often as offended by the race of the outspoken athlete as they are by the athlete’s message. “Some folks in this country don’t want to hear people of color protest anywhere,” Butryn says. “I think we’re grappling with that. What does that mean that for some folks there is no place that it is deemed acceptable to talk about policing practices in communities of color? We’re really going to have to grapple with that as a country if we want to move forward.”
TAKING A KNEE Black Lives Matter got its start back in 2013 after the acquittal of George
16
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Simpson also points out a subtler point to be drawn out of the exhibition. “People seem to like protesters more in the past,” he says. “I’ve noticed that people who are upset with Kaepernick or whoever, they’re also very quick to admire Dr. [Martin Luther] King. And, you know, Dr. King himself was roundly vilified. He was murdered for his beliefs.”
ATHLETE ACTIVISM
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
16
FILM NIGHT
15
THU, SEP 20, 7 PM
1982, 1 hour, 57 minutes Directed by Ridley Scott and starring Harrison Ford Tickets are $5 (free to members) and include Museum admission 5 – 8 PM 110 South Market Street
TICKETS at SanJoseMuseumofArt.org/film-night
PEACEFUL PROTEST A flyer, produced by Harry Edwards and his Olympic Project for Human Rights, urging a boycott of the 1968 Summer Games for numerous reasons.
SAT | SEPT 22, 2018 | 6P-2A HEADLINERS: DJ ST JOHN | VELO | NEBRASKA THUNDERF**K | DERRICK BARRY
DJs & Performers | Rides & Games Health Screening | STD & Rapid HIV Testing | Flu Shots
SUPPORTED, IN PART, BY A CULTURAL AFFAIRS GRANT FROM THE CITY OF SAN JOSÉ. EVENT IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
Zimmerman, the neighborhood watchman who shot and killed Trayvon Martin in a Florida suburb. The movement aims to call out violent and discriminatory policing practices in communities of color and has been continually stoked by reports—many of them caught on video and shared via social media—of white police officers using excessive and often deadly force against unarmed African Americans. This is the movement Kaepernick aligned himself with when he first knelt during the national anthem on Sep. 1, 2016, at the beginning of the 49ers’ fourth preseason game against the San Diego Chargers. He continued to kneel during the national anthem for the rest of the season and into 2017, drawing both support and criticism as other players around the league and in other sports
began joining in pregame protests. Detractors derided and mocked his protest, deeming it disrespectful of the flag, law enforcement and the military. Donald Trump, as a candidate and later as president, has weighed in numerous times— suggesting that the NFL not allow players to kneel during the anthem, while also suggesting that political protests have no place on the gridiron and that the high salaries earned by professional athletes makes their protests hollow. “If a player wants the privilege of making millions of dollars in the NFL, or other leagues, he or she should not be allowed to disrespect our Great American Flag (or Country) and should stand for the National Anthem,” Trump tweeted on Sep. 23, 2017. “If not, YOU’RE FIRED. Find something else to do!”
17 recalls. “This was with all the arrows pointed in his direction, and he’s opening up about identity and how it shaped his views on race and politics.” Kaepernick continued his work with South Bay families affected by police violence into the following year. De-Bug member Laurie Valdez, whose partner was fatally shot by San Jose State University police nearly four years prior, then pitched the idea of a daylong healing retreat for families like hers. “That’s not something we could find a lot of grants for,” Jayadev says, “because it’s perceived as being at the more radical end of the social justice spectrum.” But it aligned with the cause that inspired Kaepernick to take a knee in the first place. He chipped in $10,000 to make it happen. In spring of 2017, nearly 40 families from throughout the state met in San Jose for a day of meditation, art therapy, music, writing and fellowship. They strategized about policy change and how to hold cops accountable for unjustified violence. “These were the people he was kneeling for,” Jayadev says.
JUST DO IT The NFL pregame protests could easily have faded away during the postseason. And if week one is any indication, there will be far fewer players kneeling this year than in the previous two seasons. Only a handful of players protested during Sunday’s games. Two members of the Miami Dolphins—Kenny Stills and Albert Wilson knelt, while their teammate Robert Quinn raised a fist; Marquise Goodwin of the 49ers also raised a fist. In a press conference held at the unveiling of “The Power of Protest” last week, Edwards acknowledged that players won’t keep kneeling forever. Protest movements have expiration dates, he told the scrum of reporters gathered to view the exhibition’s opening. Even the movements of King, Malcolm X and Marcus Garvey only lasted about a decade, he noted. Still, player protests made headlines this week—though the NFL may largely be responsible for that. In May, the league enacted an official policy that prohibited protests during the pregame national
18
Reading & Launch Party Featuring T.C. Boyle other contributors
&
Join us in celebrating the release of Issue 151: the California Edition
REED MAGAZINE California’s Oldest Literary Journal
151
September 21, 2018 at 7 PM Hammer Theatre Complex 101 Paseo de San Antonio San José For tickets & event details visit litart.org
Joyce Milligan
LOS ALTOS STAGE COMPANY
SEPTEMBER 6 – 30, 2018 THE LEGEND OF
by Matthew Lopez directed by Linda Piccone
losaltosstage.org (650) 941-0551 97 Hillview Ave. Los Altos, CA 94022
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
In a tweet from Aug. 10 of this year, Trump attacked the NFL demonstrations again, this time suggesting that players are “unable to define” what they are protesting. However, the aftermath of two years of player protests suggests the movement is amounting to more than just empty gestures. Kaepernick could have simply doled out cash and posed for photo ops. Instead, he opted to jump in the trenches, awarding grants to and working side by side with social action groups as part of a $1 million giving campaign. The first group he teamed up with was Silicon Valley De-Bug, which works with families of people killed by police. Kaepernick, who lived in San Jose at the time, asked the local nonprofit how he could help. “This wasn’t, ‘We want to donate, then put out a press release and give him the credit,’” De-Bug leader Raj Jayadev says. “He wanted to know what we were working on so he could partner with us. That’s a higher level of involvement than just cutting a check.” In fall of 2016, De-Bug worked alongside Kaepernick for the launch of his inaugural Know Your Rights Camp, a workshop that teaches black and brown youth how to protect themselves from police brutality. Before a room full of 150 teenagers, De-Bug coordinators Ramon Vasquez and LaMar Noble talked about being wrongfully arrested and learning to fight for their freedom. Jayadev was struck by Kaepernick’s involvement in the event, which became a template for hundreds of other Know Your Rights camps throughout the U.S. “He didn’t just flash by in the beginning, say a couple words and then bounce,” Jayadev says. “He spent the whole day there. When we showed up, he was setting up chairs, and his eyes were sleepy from staying up all night planning, stuffing backpacks for the kids and putting in real work.” Attendees left with backpacks packed with more than the usual giveaways from star athletes. Kaepernick made sure each one included a copy of the Autobiography of Malcolm X and a 23andMe DNA testing kit, because, he explained, learning about his roots set him on the path to activism. “It seemed really sincere,” Jayadev
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
18
ATHLETE ACTIVISM
17
CORPORATE ACTION Colin Kaepernick recently became the face of a new Nike campaign, ostensibly supporting the right of athletes everywhere to rock the boat and challenge established norms.
anthem ceremony—ostensibly bowing to pressure from the president and fans who disapproved of the players’ actions. However, in response to criticism from players and free speech advocates, that policy was walked back. “I think it’s likely they would have waned out if it weren’t for the NFL’s decision to make people stand for the anthem,” Butryn says, highlighting the irony of the league’s waffling. However, there is another factor in the continued visibility of athletic activism this month. A new Nike campaign marking the the 30th anniversary of the company’s internationally recognized “Just Do It” slogan was launched with Kaepernick as its spokesman. The first advertisement in the campaign kicked off in early September, as a massive billboard featuring the former 49er’s face rose above San Francisco’s union square. The tagline: “Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything.” Naturally, the campaign has been viewed with some skepticism.
“The cynical view is that Nike has jumped on the social cause bandwagon to sell more shoes,” says John Delacruz, associate professor of advertising at SJSU. All the same, Delacruz, who has made a career of studying the ways in which advertising can influence people to make decisions, believes that the campaign is a win-win for Nike and those who support Kaepernick’s message. For starters, despite conservative backlash and YouTube clips of people burning their Nikes in counterprotest to the Kaepernick campaign, initial reports suggest the new ads have given the brand a serious boost. The San Jose-based big data analytics company Edison Trends reports that Nike’s online sales shot up 31 percent over the Labor Day weekend, in the wake of the launch of the controversial Kaepernick ad. Additionally, the new Nike ad has helped to re-energize a flagging movement that was begun in an effort to root out racial bias in police
departments across the country— and that’s a good thing, according to Butryn. “We need dialog,” Butryn says, explaining that the Institute for the Study of Sport, Society and Social Change is not meant to be a leftist mouthpiece. “I’m interested in both the people who support Colin and those who are burning their Nikes,” he says. It’s yet to be scene how everything will play out in the case of Kaepernick, and many wonder whether he will ever play football again—a question that Edwards deems irrelevant. “It’s like looking at the Montgomery Bus Boycott and wondering whether Rosa Parks can get her seat back,” he said at “The Power of Protest” press conference. “He will take his place alongside other athlete icons—not because of what he did on the field, but because of what he used his forum on the field to do in terms of human rights.” Jennifer Wadsworth contributed to this story.
11 19 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
John Dyke
20
XCELENT The xiaolongbao—aka XLBs—served at Mingo’s Mango are on point.
Perfect Pockets Tucked away on San Jose’s South Side, Mingle’s Mango is a hidden gem BY JOHN DYKE
I
T CAN BE a bit tedious sifting through Yelp in an attempt to find new and interesting restaurants to review. After two years on the beat, it can sometimes feel like there’s nothing new worth writing about. And then I strike gold and am reminded of why I love this job. My latest find, Mingle’s Mango, is a hidden gem, tucked away in the back
corner of a strip mall deep in south San Jose, just off the old Monterey Highway. Mingle’s specialty is the ever-popular Chinese steamed buns xiaolongbao (aka the XLB), which is normally enough to grab my attention, but their specialty dessert steamed bun is really what made my mouth water. This was the first time I had seen or heard of such a thing, and it got me pumped. Mingle’s is unique in a lot of ways, from the tacky hand-painted signage outside to the hard-to-
locate front entrance (which is actually facing Roundtable Drive), to the interesting interior décor that can only be described as anime chic. They also broadcast random episodes of various Japanese anime on a draped sheet at the back end of the restaurant. We did find it a smidge annoying at first, but once we acclimated, the charm of it shone through. The menu is pretty simple (which I prefer) and features a slew of house-made dumplings, as well as traditional Chinese soups with handpulled noodles. They also have some of the usual cast of characters that we Westerners have become accustomed to, such as chow mein and various fried rice dishes. To get a nice sampling of the menu, we got two orders of XLBs ($9.95/seven pieces), one with just the standard pork and one with pork and shrimp; green onion pancakes ($2.50); and some veggie fried rice
($10.45) to help round things out. And, of course, we had to get an order of their dessert dumplings ($4.25/two pieces), which feature Godiva chocolate and hazelnuts. First up was the green onion pancake, and it might be the most unusual rendition yet; instead of the usual fried dough, it came out more like a flaky, savory pastry. The texture was crunchy, tasty and had just the right amount of oil to toe that line between too greasy and perfect. The same could be said of the veggie fried rice; the flavor and seasoning were truly divine—perhaps the best fried rice I’ve ever had. Next, the XLBs were presented, and while they were a bit on the smaller side, they were packed with flavor. The skins were a touch thicker than I like, but the tasty, rich broth and juicy, delicious fillings more than made up for it. While the pork and shrimp dumplings were each terrific, I have to say that the traditional pork ones were slightly better. It is also worth noting that not one of the XLB skins broke to release the precious broth innards as a sacrifice to the great soup gods. Finally, the dessert dumplings arrived. This was the moment I had been waiting for, and they did not disappoint. They were also a bit on the smallish side, but man, did they pack a flavorful wallop. The rich, dark Godiva chocolate melted perfectly in their tasty dumpling skins, while the delectable crunch of hazelnuts made this the Asian Ferrero Rocher. After grudgingly sharing one with my girlfriend, I decided I needed more and ordered a second serving. I could’ve easily had a third, but I suddenly recalled the appointment with my cardiologist next week. Mining for culinary treasures can be a slog, but it’s finds like this that make the search worthwhile. Now, where did I leave my pickaxe? I’m getting hungry.
MINGLE’S MANGO ASIAN FUSION
5278 Monterey Hwy, Suite D, San Jose
408.368.0680
$$
mingles-mango.business.site
11 21 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
metroactive
CHOICES BY: Wallace Baine Anne Gelhaus Estefany Gonzalez Nick Veronin
Evan Felts
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
22
MIGUEL
PHOEBE HUNT
*wed *thu
RUPA & THE APRIL FISHES
Wed, 5:15pm, Free San Jose City Hall, San Jose So, you have two choices here. You can come down to City Hall, bask in the beautiful lateafternoon sun and listen to one of the most globally adventurous folk bands in the Bay Area—or you can show up to sweat a bit for the enjoyment of others. This Rupa & The April Fishes show, set to coincide with the Global Climate Action Summit, will be powered entirely by bicycles. Or, to be more exact, humans on bicycles. The event is still looking for volunteers to do a 30-minute shift of continuous pedaling. To sign up, email jessica@ bikesiliconvalley.org. (WB)
Thu, 9pm, Free Caravan Lounge, San Jose
Thu, 7:30pm, $49+ SJSU Event Center, San Jose
PHOEBE HUNT & THE GATHERERS
ABDUCTION FROM THE SERAGLIO
How does a group of young rogues from the South Bay end up the No. 3 pick on a UKbased magazine’s listicle of the best new music of the year? Who cares? It’s fucking rock & roll! But for those keeping score, Classic Rock did name the fuzzed-out garage rockers Casual Vibes the third best thing in rockdom so far this year. Citing the band’s ode to good times, “Saturday Night,” the review enthuses, “This San Jose band are like a gold medallion laying on a pillow of chest hair in the dive bar of your mind.” Right on. (NV)
Nothing wakes you up in the morning quite like coffee— unless we’re talking about the contagious energy of Los Angeles alt-R&B crooner Miguel. The “Coffee” singer fuses sweet R&B vocals with a funky live show that will even get the wallflowers dancing. Much like Cher, Prince and Beyoncé, Miguel is a pop icon who has earned his first-name-basis moniker by catching songs with staying power and emotional depth. His latest album, War & Leisure, is full of fun, upbeat numbers with sex-positive lyrics, thoughtful political undertones and top-notch collabs like his Spanish banger “Caramelo Duro” featuring Kali Uchis. (EG)
Thu, 8pm, $35 Oshman JCC, Palo Alto
Sat, 8pm, $55+ California Theatre, San Jose
Texas-born fiddler Phoebe Hunt grew up the child of disciples of Indian yoga master Swami Satchidananda, which means Hunt’s music carries a chime of Eastern incantation to go along with its distinctly Americana instrumentation. Hunt first emerged as part of the popular Austin band The Belleville Outfit. Now, she’s embarking on a tour with her new band The Gatherers in support of a haunting new album of sweet mountain ballads—Shanti’s Shadow, which grew out of an extended visit to India to study at the knee of the great Indian classical violinist Kala Ramnath. (WB)
Opera San Jose opens its 35th season with a work that marks many firsts. Mozart’s The Abduction from the Seraglio is the first in the modern operatic repertoire and the first instance of an opera composed on a freelance basis—as Mozart was contracted to write the piece for Joseph II, the Holy Roman Emperor from 1764 to 1790. Audiences can see if they side with the emperor who commissioned the work (he complained that it contained “too many notes”), or with the composer who insisted: “There are just as many notes as there should be.” Runs through Sep. 30. (AG)
CASUAL VIBES
MIGUEL
*sat
* concerts RUPA & THE APRIL FISHES
OLD SCHOOL FUNK FEST Sep 15 at SAP Center
LAURYN HILL
Sep 20 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
MIGUEL
Sep 20 at SJSU Event Center
LOS TIGRES DEL NORTE Sep 21 at SAP Center
NORAH JONES
Sep 21 at Mountain Winery
VIRTUAL SELF
Sep 27 at City National Civic
ALANIS MORISSETTE
Sep 28 at Mountain Winery
RINGO STARR
Sep 28 at City National Civic
PARQUET COURTS
Sep 28 at The Ritz
LONG BEACH DUB ALLSTARS Sep 29 at The Ritz
FALL OUT BOY
Sep 30 at SAP Center
CHILDISH GAMBINO Oct 2 at SAP Center
*sun
LIL’ EASY BACKYARD PARTY Sun, Noon, $60 Poor House Bistro, San Jose It’s last call for the summer of 2018 and Poor House Bistro will be hosting summer’s bitter-enders on the last Sunday before autumn with six top-drawer blues and funk bands on two stages. Headliners include Six String Explosion— featuring AC Myles, Tim Barnes, Angel Reyes, and Miles “My Dad’s in Journey” Schon—as well as the legendary Meters drummer Zigaboo Modeliste and his group The New Aahkesstra. Also on the bill: the Ben Rice Trio, Fillmore Slim Band, Marina Crouse Band and harmonica master John Nemeth and his band. So long, summer. See you next year. (WB)
POLSKAFEST
*tue
Sun, 10am, Free St. Brother Albert Church, San Jose
CHILE, MOLE, & POZOLE
BOY GEORGE & CULTURE CLUB
Authentic Polish cuisine, music and dance can be difficult to come by in this area. But every year, around the middle of September, the South Bay Polish community throws a party at St. Brother Albert’s Polish Catholic Mission. Food, of course, is primary, so count on plenty of pierogi and kielbasa to go around. Bands will be playing Polish folk music throughout the day, and dancers will repeat steps that have been passed down through generations. Traditional Polish crafts, like amber jewelry, woodwork, textiles and crystal glass will be available for sale. (AG)
Sun, 11am, $5 School of Arts & Culture, San Jose
Tue, 6:30pm, $89+ The Mountain Winery, Saratoga
Mexican Independence Day is all about food at this first-ever Chile, Mole & Pozole event at the School of Arts and Culture at the Mexican Heritage Plaza. Mexican, American and Chicano families will all come together Sunday to share family recipes as well as the stories behind them in a day of eating and storytelling. Twelve families will come equipped with samples of unique salsas and other treats, including the staples—mole and pozole. Be sure to show up hungry. You certainly won’t leave that way. (WB)
Four years after their initial reunion, the karmic chameleons are hitting the road ahead of their next album, set for release on Oct. 26. Described by frontman Boy George as “a soul-funk-popreggae combo from the United Kingdom, where we have two queens,” Culture Club bent genres and genders in their ’80s heyday. “Let Somebody Love You,” the first single off their upcoming album, Life, recalls the band’s gift for mixing danceable beats with socially conscious lyrics. Fellow ’80s legends The B-52s coheadline, and Tom Bailey, one-third of the Thompson Twins opens. Second show Wednesday. (AG)
MARK FARINA
Oct 5 at The Ritz
NITRO CIRCUS
Oct 11 at SAP Center
THIRD EYE BLIND
Oct 12 at Mountain Winery
MAC MILLER
Oct 30 at City National Civic
MAC SABBATH
Nov 1 at The Ritz
NICKI MINAJ & FUTURE Nov 16 at SAP Center
FLEETWOOD MAC
Nov 21 at SAP Center
SUUNS
Dec 7 at The Ritz
PINBACK
Dec 8 at The Ritz
SAN HOLO
Dec 15 at City National Civic
For music updates and contest giveaways, like us on Facebook at metrofb.com
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
FOO FIGHTERS
Sep 12 at SAP Center
23
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
Julio César Martinez
24
metroactive ARTS
GLASS HOUSE Mague House is one of many pieces on display at the Triton exhibition, ‘Alimentos: Glass Work by Viviana Paredes.’
Going Clear In ‘Alimentos,’ Viviana Paredes interprets Mexican culture through glass BY JEFFREY EDALATPOUR
T
HE SOUNDS OF a Oaxacan marketplace emanate from one corner of a gallery in the Triton Museum of Art. The sounds are coming from a small speaker covered by a fruit crate that faces Viviana Paredes’ steel and glass sculpture Ser y Comer, a street cart displaying ears of corn in a handwoven basket.
The basket itself is nestled inside a mound of dried, pale yellow kernels that threaten to spill over the cart’s edges. Paredes has etched the word “ESQUITES” in capital letters onto one of the glass, side
panels. The cart itself stands on top of a platform made from a dozen wooden fruit crates. In “Alimentos: Glass Work by Viviana Paredes,” the artist says she wanted to remind people of Mexico’s rich cultural heritage as it pertains to “a tradition of really healthy food.” For the soundtrack, she recorded 60 hours of her visits to 10 different marketplaces throughout Oaxaca. “The marketplace, it’s this amazing mixture of ancient and new,” she says. “The produce, the types of fruits and vegetables that were abundant, things that I’ve never seen before. Indigenous people come down from the mountains and their villages to
sell their things, so you hear different languages being spoken.” Paredes also studies ethnobotany, which she describes as “the science of people’s relationships to food.” In this exhibit, she wanted to find a way to meld the personal and the political. Paredes said that her brother got really sick and almost died, “and it was all related to food.” She grew up in San Jose and recalled, “All of my relatives used to come here and work in the agricultural fields. When I’d come home, there was always a fresh pot of beans on the stove, tortillas handmade. We ate fruit all the time.” In response to her brother’s illness, Paredes started to do research about food politics and came across this famous quotation by Henry Kissinger, the former U.S. Secretary of State: “Control oil and you control nations; control food and you control the people.” “Countries that have colonized other places—that’s the first thing they do,” she says. For Paredes, using glass to explore that pre-colonial relationship to food didn’t feel like an unusual choice. “When I started working with glass, I realized that this is a really interesting
material,” she explained during a recent visit to her San Francisco studio. “It’s an ancient material, which I find really interesting. It’s made from sand and silica; with a lot of heat it melts.” She glances toward the large, rectangular window facing south and reminds us, “We look at the world with glass. We look out the window of our offices, of our cars, our homes. So I thought, ‘What perfect material, glass, to put a lens on the ideas I’m thinking about, to hold those things.’” Paredes picks up one of the wax molds for her striking sculpture Nowhere Everywhere Invisible. Three pairs of glass hands—cast from her own—are cut off at the forearms. They open their palms in prayer. Each pair holds onto something sacred: copal (a pine tree resin used in Mexican rituals), prayer beads (“They’re not a rosary,” Paredes clarifies) and red seeds she found on the ground in Oaxaca. The hands first came into being as a response to the current political climate. Paredes sees art as a way of healing the “mess” we’re in, and as a way to respond to the world with “deep thought about where we are as a people.” The act of making them was, in itself, an act of prayer. Throughout the interview, it was hard to ignore a tall stack of dried stalks behind the artist’s left shoulder. They were resting against shelves of art supplies, papers and remnants from previous projects. Paredes identified them as maguey stalks, also known in the United States as an agave or century plant. In addition to those giant stalks, different varieties of the distilled agave plant produce mezcal and tequila. Paredes constructed Maguey House for Alimentos, a glass shelter made out of recycled, deconstructed tequila bottles. In a painstaking process, she cut out pieces of the bottles so they’d take on the shape of the maguey leaves. In Mexico she said, “They took the leaves and made shingles out of them to create shelters. Now, it would be more like a chicken coop or a storage space. But the shape of them is beautiful. I was playing with that idea.”
THRU OCT
28 Free
ALIMENTOS Triton Museum of Art, Santa Clara
tritonmuseum.org
REVIEW
Spinal Cracking WHATEVER ELSE YOU can say about his work, The Predator’s director and co-writer Shane Black (Lethal Weapon, Iron Man 3, et al) really enjoys bandying words. The script for The Predator (co-written with Monster Squad’s Fred Dekker) does approach the rampage of a crab-faced superalien from the Howard Hawks’ point of view. That is, make sure the women are as soldierly as the men, and try to make it a comedy whenever possible. But the problem is that it isn’t always possible to go comic, and Black tries it anyway—as in a stumbling running gag about how the big beast with its mottled skin, natty dreads and sideways fangs shouldn’t even be called a predator per se when he’s really more of a trophy hunter. Army Ranger sniper Quinn McKenna (the Mel Gibson-esque Boyd Holbrook) is on duty in Mexico. While trying to take a shot at a drug cartel chief, Quinn sees something his government doesn’t want him to see. To ensure that he’s not dismissed as a nut, Quinn steals The Predator the helmet and one of the greaves of the murderous alien giant and mails them home. Unfortunately, the artifacts are R; 107 Mins. intercepted by Quinn’s son Rory (Jacob Tremblay, of Room). Valleywide Soon the government, under the direction of a smirking bureaucrat (Sterling K. Brown) is raiding the place. Xenobiologist Casey (Olivia Munn, game enough and good with a gun) is called in to look at a captured creature, which is how she encounters Quinn. By then, the soldier is riding the Dirty (half) Dozen short bus with various traumatized ex-soldiers on their way to the stockade—they include Keegan-Michael Key as the jester of the bunch. The pace bops along, particularly during the siege of a football field with alien devil dogs and a fleet of stolen vehicles, and in the final fight in the coastal woods somewhere in British Columbia. The dim Canadian light makes you miss that feverish jungle in the first Predator. The Predator is a gory chiffon—there’s nothing as solid here as Arnold Schwarzenegger looking into that nightmare face and declaring, unimprovably, “You are one ugly motherfucker.” Black lingers over scenes of Rory setting up toppled chess boards and playing with his computers, and you have to wonder why he even bothers when his real fun is taking a movie to Crazytown. (Rory patriotically tells the postal carrier about his dad, the soldier: “He kills people so you can be a mailman.”) No one would call Black particularly restrained in his dialogue, but there are times when you feel like he never gets quite free enough— that there’s something about three acts, character arcs and plot points that chains him. —Richard von Busack
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
PREDATION Dreadlocks McCrabface is back for more in ‘The Predator.’
25
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
26
metroactive FILM
PASSING THE BAR ‘Better Call Saul’ is one of the best prequels—and shows—on TV right now.
Out Of The Past Season four of ‘Better Call Saul’ puts a modern spin on film noir BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
B
ORN JIMMY MCGILL, he was a short-con artist and petty criminal who got a quick degree at a South Pacific law school. As “Saul Goodman” (“It’s all good, man!”) he became the kind of lawyer that makes other lawyers shudder, recruiting clients with billboards, TV commercials and an inflatable Statue of Liberty on the roof of his office.
Now, McGill is cowering in black and white angst under the name Gene Tacovic, managing a Cinnabon at an Omaha mall. Under any name,
he’s a person of interest to the feds and the Aryan Brotherhood. As the fourth season of Better Call Saul begins, Jimmy keels over from the anxiety induced by the kind of film noir state of panic described by Kirk Douglas in Out of the Past (1947): “You won't be able to answer a phone or open a door without thinking, ‘This is it.’” In flashbacks, the once and future lawyer looks for temp grifts, such as improving a dying cell phone store’s business by emphasizing the burner phones on sale. Every episode seems like a calling card film for some aspiring director— the cinematography and the art direction are labored-over in a way that’s rare in the movies now. The
camera burrows into surfaces, with an unusually angled POV from inside a paper shredder, or from within the tube of a dripping intravenous line. In this prequel to Breaking Bad, the craft in the visuals show, but the anxiety behind that craft doesn’t. There’s a sense of room and time in every episode. The harsh blues of the skies and the gold and iodine nightscapes are part of the show’s appeal: The series’ various directors have the advantage of shooting in a place where Route 66 still looks like Route 66. They find Ed Ruscha-style low angles on a colossal gas station. They also honor a lush old cliche of noir—car tires splashing neon-filled puddles in a parking lot. And, since the malign Walter White hasn’t yet entered the picture, this also has time to study the other characters who were going to wish they never met Jimmy. This new season emphasizes the betrayal of the Rhea Seehorn character Kim Wexler, Jimmy’s sometimes law partner and lover. Whatever causes their ultimate separation, this will be Jimmy’s worst self-inflicted loss.
Michael McKean of This is Spinal Tap excels as elder brother Chuck, a renowned and hugely pompous lawyer certain that his little brother is a career crook. As usual, there’s the grim authority of the former Philadelphia cop and current enforcer Mike Ehrmantraut (the death’s-headed Jonathan Banks). In this season, Banks gets to be the straight man during a scene everyone’s wanted to see—the auditioning of contractors to construct a gigantic subterranean crime lab. Saul also gets a chance to fill in the back story of Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito) a drug tycoon hiding politely in plain sight as a polyester-clad fast food business entrepreneur. The show has a particular trick of making Fring’s gold spectacles the first thing you see when he enters from the shadows. It may be a borrowing from the way Raymond Burr stepped out of the gloom in Rear Window (1954), the light first catching the glitter of his glasses before his face was revealed. The camera work is lapidary, but the show has a certain realism: it’s the first show to emphasize how long it takes to recover from a beating, a car crash or a bad gunshot wound. (These two series are rooted in sickness and hospital bills.) Anyone who sat through the 62 episodes of Breaking Bad knows where these characters are headed. But the strange appeal of film noir includes a sense of predestined doom—so many of the old black-and-white films started with a spot of narration describing an already sealed fate. Starring in this story of moral corrosion in a hot climate, Bob Odenkirk emerges from comedy the same way that Bryan Cranston did in Breaking Bad. Goodman is a protagonist for our times, where bullshit has become high art. His hustles and dodges prove something. Questions that seemed once to mean so much to filmmakers, about whether a character is good or evil, are actually immaterial compared to a more important matter: whether a character is competent or inept.
BETTER CALL SAUL SEASON
4
Amazon Prime and AMC Now Streaming
11 27
SAID THE SKY
SEP16
HONNE
SEP22
E-40
SEP23
HOUNDMOUTH
Metro Ad, Wed. 09/12
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
SEP14
09.19 DEAN WEEN GROUP 09.20 DIRTY HEADS 09.24 JOHNNY MARR 09.25 DEVOTCHKA 09.27 BLACK TIGER SEX MACHINE 09.28 THE HOLDUP 10.03 SEVEN LIONS 10.04 REEL BIG FISH 10.05&06 HIPPIE SABOTAGE 10.07 THE FRONT BOTTOMS 10.08 PIGEONS PLAYING PING PONG 10.09 EDEN 10.12&13 THE GROWLERS 10.14 EKALI 10.15 HOBO JOHNSON & THE LOVEMAKERS 10.16 JAY ROCK 10.17 WHETHAN
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
28
metroactive MUSIC
IN THE SHADOWS Brad Lewis has remained largely behind the scenes as a producer, but on ‘Strange Things’ he is letting his true voice be heard.
On The Beat Local producer B. Lewis eyes mainstream success with latest single, ‘Strange Things’ BY NICK VERONIN
I
T TAKES THICK skin to make it in the music biz. Just ask San Jose-based producer and songwriter Brad Lewis. He’s been playing music for more than a decade and for the past five years he’s been grinding hard in the industry— producing work and co-writing material with the likes of Bad Rabbits, K.Flay, Grieves and Chris Brown. And he’s only just scratching the surface.
“You definitely have to have a short term memory,” Lewis says of the music industry. “Not everyone is going to like you right away. If you hold on to that it will hold you back from attacking new opportunities.” And so, Lewis—who writes and records under the name B. Lewis—is upping his game. Last year he made his debut as a vocalist on the track “Strange Things.” The track, which has since racked up 1.3 million streams on Spotify, was recently pressed on wax by San Jose label and record shop Needle to the Groove. The release was aimed at proving
he was more than an engineer and beatmaker. “Now I’m not just a producer,” he says. “I’m a songwriter. That opens more doors. That gives people more of an idea of how wellrounded I am.” If that sounds cold and calculating, it’s because it is. Somewhere around 2013—when Bad Rabbits released their first LP, which Lewis produced—he realized that if he was going to make a career of music, he would have to get better at playing the game. That meant networking and building connections, getting more savvy about he marketed himself and learning to strip his songs down to their bare essentials. “My older beats were very chaotic and crazy,” he says of early work, like 2011’s Science Within Reason, which earned him considerable attention from the music blogosphere. But where Science was a sprawling 30-track set of glitchy beats, maximal synths, future funk bass and laser beam leads, “Strange
Things” is a standalone single that comes in just under the threeminute mark. The track starts with a plucky electric piano riff that quickly ramps up into a rich and soulful vocal harmony before dropping into a simple drum beat and muted, Motown bass groove. “It’s a very marketable song,” Lewis says, explaining how with “Strange Things” he sought to blend retro soul with a modern mixing style. “I’m learning to take things away instead of adding more and more and more. That’s really against the grain for what I’m used to making.” However, where Lewis was once thrilled with shaping a cluttered sonic block into a complex beauty, he is now finding rewards in exercising restraint. “It’s actually very challenging to write a pop song.” Lewis’ latest development as a professional musician has also brought him back to where his love of music began. Raised by a jazz musician father, Lewis has fond memories of listening to his father play music at home and attending gigs on the road. In high school he played in a band, teaching himself a variety of instruments before finding his way to digital production using tools like the Akai MPC and desktop audio workstations like Pro Tools and Reason. With his latest projects, Lewis is combining both live instrumentation and digital production, plus his own singing voice. “Everything is coming full circle,” he says. In the coming weeks, Lewis will be stepping out from behind the laptop to perform with a string of shows—beginning with Sep. 20 headlining date at BackBar SoFa, followed by a Sep. 23 opening set for Flamingosis at The Catalyst in Santa Cruz. He continues his series of live outings by kicking off a monthly gig at The Continental; he will play every final Thursday of the month as part of the weekly Changing Same party, which is presented by Universal Grammar.
SEP
B. LEWIS
20 9pm
Back Bar SoFa, San Jose
$5+
facebook.com/BackBarSoFa408
11 29 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
Travis Shinn
30
CONCERT
ZEPPING AROUND Greta Van Fleet stand accused of ripping Led Zeppelin, though they say they’re just doing their thing.
Modern Classics GRETA VAN FLEET can’t seem to catch a break. The young foursome from the faux-Bavarian town of Frankenmuth, Michigan, has sustained criticism for copping its sound from 1970s rock giants Led Zeppelin. The group's debut track, “Highway Tune,” is characterized by Josh Kiszka’s Robert Plant doppelganger wail and Jacob Kiszka’s Jimmy Page-style guitar licks. If that weren’t enough, when pressed on the issue during an interview with Dutch music journalists FaceCulture, lead guitarist Jake Kiszka went so far as assert that “Led Zeppelin wasn’t an overwhelming influence of ours.” In that June 2018 YouTube interview, Jake claimed with a straight face that until online chatter began, the band “didn’t realize the similarities and commonalities that we share with … that group.” There’s a deep irony here: Not to take away from Led Zeppelin’s greatness, but Robert Plant and Jimmy Page Greta Van Fleet themselves earned a reputation—backed up in court cases won against them—for lifting music from others without Sep 18, 8 p.m. giving credit. Rightly or not, at its core, rock & roll has $39.50 always been about borrowing ideas. City National Civic The fact remains that when taking Greta Van Fleet on sanjosetheaters.org their own merits, one can readily admit that it’s pretty good. There’s an energy on the group’s pair of EPs that evokes the best of arena rock from the 1970s and ’80s. The three Kiszka brothers (Josh, Jake and Sam) and drummer Danny Wagner were all born some two decades or more after Led Zeppelin’s swansong, In Through the Out Door, was released. To some extent, all artists are the product of their influences. And it’s reasonable to allow young musicians—albeit ones growing up in public—to develop their own style as they mature. Still, “When the Curtain Falls,” the first single from the upcoming Anthem of the Peaceful Army sounds a whole lot like Led Zeppelin II’s “Heartbreaker.” Changing it up just a little, Josh’s vocals on the advance track “Watching Over” sound more like Guns 'N' Roses’ Axl Rose. And the instrumentation has faint echoes of ’70 Southern rock. The trick to making a lasting impression, and to becoming more than the musical flavor of the month, is to assimilate influences and recast them in a way that adds something new. It remains to be seen if the band’s first full-length (out Oct. 19) will reach that goal. —Bill Kopp
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM Send your events to mightymike @metroactive.com
Must Sees
I wrote a one-act play when I was a 20-year-old student at West Valley College. I like the form a lot and I want to see more of it. A good way to achieve that would be to attend two original one-act plays written, directed, acted, designed and produced completely by SJSU students! While we’re there we can reflect on my very short college theatrical experience. "Creep Patrol" written by Matthew Regan and "In Good Spirits" written by Kimberly Piet run for three days. Regan is very funny, very talented person so I anticipate good art. 7pm. 101 Paseo De San Antonio, San Jose
SEP 13 • CRAIG FERGUSON @ MOUNTAIN WINERY I host a lot of events and I credit Craig Ferguson with indirectly instilling a sense of c'est la vie emceeing in me. I rank him as one of the funniest, most natural humorists I’ve ever seen live and on television. The only late-night host I can think of who regularly improvised his opening monologues on national TV with fantastic storytelling. That is hard to do if you aren’t Craig Ferguson. Plus, He’s hella Scottish. Boom. 7:30pm. 14831 Pierce Rd, Saratoga
SEP 16 • SJ POETRY LEGEND NILS PETERSON @ CAFE STRITCH Presented by Poetry Center San Jose and Cafe Stritch, Nils Peterson’s poetic legacy is far too massive to list here. A SJSU professor for decades, founder of so much poetry and mentor to so many poets and writers, Nils is a kind-spoken hero of the poetic realm I live in. He’s so beloved in the community that appointing him the first-ever Poet Laureate of Santa Clara County was a no-brainer. I am honored to follow in his wide-gaited footsteps. Come hear his new works as he prepares for a new chapter in his life. It’s an honor to have met you, Nils. Thank you for what you’ve brought to our stunning valley for the last 50 years. 6pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose = MORE AT SANJOSE.COM
WED 9/12 MOMMY & ME FALL FESTIVAL 10am: Westgate Center, 1600 Saratoga Ave, San Jose
SPECIAL SJ ZEN DEN FOR KIDS 5pm: Plaza de Cesar Chavez, 1 Paseo de San Antonio, San Jose
SAM'S BBQ Third Tue, 6pm: Wildcat Mountain Ramblers. 4th Tue, 6pm: The Mighty Crows. 2nd Wed, 6pm: Blue House. 3rd Wed, 6pm: Fred McCarthy. 1110 S Bascom Ave, San Jose
The Sid Morris Gang & The Legendary Ron Thompson. Thu, 6pm: Theme Night/Pro Jam feat. Southern California. Fri, 7pm: Chris Cain Band. Sat, 6pm: Beaufunk CD Release Party. Sun, noon: 6th Annual Lil' Easy Backyard Party. Sun, 4pm: John Nemeth Live at Poor House Bistro at The Studio. Mon, 6pm: Mixed Open Mic Night. Tue, 7pm: Aki Kumar’s Blues Jam. Last Thu, 6pm: Six String Showdown with AC Myles. 91 S Autumn St, San Jose
MOVIE, TRIVIA, BEER & FOOD 6:30pm: Uproar Brewing Co, 439 S First St, San Jose
THRILLER DANCE WORKSHOPS POOR HOUSE BISTRO Wed, 6pm: Tap Takeover w/
= SEE PHOTO
= FREE
FILM: BLINDSPOTTING 7:30pm: 3Below Theatres, 288 S Second St, San Jose
ROCK: FOO FIGHTERS 7:30pm: SAP Center, 525 W Santa Clara, San Jose
LEGEND: LYLE LOVETT AND HIS LARGE BAND 7:30pm: The Mountain Winery, 14831 Pierce Rd, Saratoga
OPEN MIC + CANVAS 7:45pm: Cafe Lift, 5883 Eden Park Place, San Jose
OPEN MIC: OPEN SPACE & ART WEDNESDAYS 6:30pm: Eastridge Center, 2200 Eastridge Loop, San Jose
7pm: Adira Dance and Costume, 2038 Lincoln Ave, San Jose
Wed Sept 12
CLUB FOX BLUES JAM
SEP 13–15 • LIGHT: TWO ONE-ACT PLAYS @ HAMMER THEATRE
= MUST SEE
FOX
THE RITZ Wed, 8pm in front bar: Vudajé, Jake Rivers, Ty Mauro & The Moons. Fri, 7pm: Tomorrow’s Bad Seeds, Mike Pinto. Sat, 8pm: Rick and Jimmi’s All-Star Jam Quattromania. Mon, 7pm: Trainwreck (ft. Kyle Gass), Tommy Odetto. Tue, 6:30pm:
32
Annika Chambers 7pm • $7
Fri Sept. 14
The Houserockers 8pm • $12 adv / $15 door Sat Sept 15
Windy Hill Bluegrass
CD Release Show Live from the Ratz Nest 8pm. $12 adv/$15 Door
2209 Broadway St Redwood City / 831.334.1153 clubfoxrwc.com
31 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
mighty mike McGee’s
CLUB
metroactive EVENTS
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
32
metroactive EVENTS 31 Nothing, Culture Abuse, Big Bite, Smut. Wed, 9/19, 9pm: A Vulture Wake, Enemy of My Enemy, 12 Gauge Promise. 400 S First St, San Jose
WAX WEDNESDAY: NEEDLE TO THE GROOVE • WAX POETICS SHOWCASE
9pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
STAGE: “LIGHT” • TWO ONE-ACT PLAYS
Also Fri, Sat. 7pm: Hammer Theatre Center, 101 Paseo De San Antonio, San Jose
MIXED OPEN MIC NIGHT!
Wed & Sun, 10pm: DJ Hank. Thu, 10pm: Levi J Band. Fri, 10pm: Superbad Band. Sat, 10pm: No Water After Midnight. Tue, 10pm: PubStumpers. 5027 Almaden Expy, San Jose
PUNK & DEATH: ETHNOCIDE, CASUAL VIBES, TANGO HUSTLE
Farewell Collin! 9pm: Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
7pm: Britannia Arms Cupertino, 1087 S De Anza Blvd, San Jose
FRI 9/14
HUMOR: CRAIG FERGUSON
KIDS CONCERT: 123 ANDRÉS
7:30pm: The Mountain Winery, 14831 Pierce Rd, Saratoga
BRITANNIA ARMS ALMADEN
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
COMEDIAN: TAYLOR TOMLINSON
Var. times through Sun. 8pm: San Jose Improv, 62 S Second St
INSTRUMENTAL: OTTMAR LIEBERT & LUNA NEGRA
Latin Grammy Winner. 3:30pm: Willow Glen Public Library, 1157 Minnesota Ave, San Jose
FINALLY FRIDAYS MUSIC: JUNCO, MARISSA MURAOKA
5pm: Plaza de Cesar Chavez, 1 Paseo de San Antonio, San Jose
8pm: Fox Theatre, 2215 Broadway, Redwood City
WOMENCRUSHSJ: WOMEN IN JAZZ WILLOW DEN
Wed: Country Music & Buck Beers. Fri & Sat: Rotating DJs (no hip-hop). Sun: Service Industry Night (half off with your industry card). Tue, 10pm: Karaoke. 803 Lincoln Ave, San Jose
THURS 9/13 DRIVE-IN: FREE MOVIE NIGHT
6pm: West Wind Drive-In and Public Market, 3630 Hillcap Ave, San Jose
Susana Pineda (Medellín/ Berkeley), Lilan Kane (Oak), Amy Dabalos. 8pm: Art Boutiki Music Hall, 44 Race St, San jose
COMEDIAN: JOE MACHI
Var. times through Sun. Rooster T. Feathers, 157 W El Camino Real, Sunnyvale
PHOEBE HUNT AND THE GATHERERS
8pm: Oshman Family JCC, 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto
JAZZ: RONI BEN-HUR QUARTET
8:30pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
JACK ROSE LIBATION HOUSE Fri, 5:30pm: Johnny Neri. Sat, 5:30pm: RPM. Sun, 10am: Brunch. 3pm: Reggae Sundays. Mon–Fri, 4–6pm: Happy hour. 18840 Saratoga Los Gatos Rd, Los Gatos
MILPITAS MIDDLE EASTERN AND GREEK FOOD FESTIVAL Var. times through Sun. St. James Orthodox Church, 195 N Main St, Milpitas
2018 CUPERTINO CARNIVAL
Var. times through Sun. St. Joseph of Cupertino, 10120 N De Anza Blvd, Cupertino
CITY DANCE 2018 • ELECTRO SWING
KELLEY PARK SUNSET WALK
6pm: Plaza De Cesar Chavez, 1 Paseo de San Antonio, San Jose
6pm: Kelley Park, 1300 Senter Road, San Jose
LONG TRAIN RUNNIN’
7pm: San Pedro Square Market Bar, 87 N San Pedro St, San Jose
6:30pm: San Jose Municipal Golf Course, 1560 Oakland Rd
VINYL REPLAY
SHERWOOD INN
6:30pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
Thu-Sun, 8:30pm: Karaoke. Fri, 9/14, 9pm: Motown Dance Party. Sun, 4pm: Novak-Nanni Duo. 2988 Almaden Expy, San Jose
ROCK: MAGICK BLUES BAND
EDM: TVRNT VOL. 2 FEAT. AHLAN WRIGHT
6:30pm: Uproar Brewing Co, 439 S First St, San Jose
9pm: Enso Nightclub, 97 E Santa Clara St, San Jose
8pm: Charley’s LG, 15 N Santa Cruz Ave, Los Gatos
COUNTRY: SANDRA LYNN
HARDCORE: JUDICIARY, VAMACHARA, CREEPING DEATH, MORE
JAZZ: AMERICANO SOCIAL CLUB
AWESOME PARTY
6:30pm: The Saddle Rack, 42011 Boscell Road, Fremont
9pm: 1409 N 10th St, San Jose
POP ROCK: SLADE, NEW FOSSILS
7:30pm: Art Boutiki Music Hall, 44 Race St, San Jose
COVER BAND: FISHHOOK
8:30pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
metroactive EVENTS 9pm: Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
LIVE MUSIC CONCERT • KERALA FLOOD RELIEF FUNDRAISING
4:30pm: Pista House Banquet Hall, 691 S Milpitas Blvd, Milpitas
KIDS: BE BRAVE! PJ STORYTIME SMOKING PIG BBQ
Fri, 9pm: The Kaye Bohler Band. Sat, 9pm: Lydia Pense and Cold Blood. 3340 Mowry Ave, Fremont
5pm: Books, Inc. Campbell, Pruneyard, 1875 S. Bascom Ave, Suite #600
NOCHE MEXICANA: GRITO THE ART OF CESAREO VEGA
5pm: Musa Studio, 1189 Scott Blvd, Santa Clara
MOVIE: E.T. THE EXTRA TERRESTRIAL KARAOKE: THE GOOSETOWN LOUNGE
Fri & Sat, 9:30pm. 1072 Lincoln Ave, San Jose
DJ: GARETH EMERY
10pm: Pure Night Club, 146 S Murphy Ave, Sunnyvale
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
6pm: St James Park, North Second & St. James streets, San Jose
O.A.R. FEATURING MATT NATHANSON
6:30pm: The Mountain Winery, 14831 Pierce Rd, Saratoga
SKA: THE BIG NEWS, BANGALORE, SHARK PUNCH 10pm: Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
COMEDY: PX FACTORY OPEN MIC
8:30pm: 3039 Meridian Ave, San Jose
DOOM METAL: THANGORODRIM, FUZZ EVIL (AZ), BT SAINTS
9pm: Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
MON 9/17 YOGA IN THE PARK
Lead by Sima. Noon: St. James Park, North Second & St. James streets, San Jose
TRIVIA NIGHT
8pm: 7 Stars Bar & Grill, 398 S Bascom Ave, San Jose
PUNK: CLOACA (VANCOUVER), HEAVY STENCH, FRIGHT, WORLD PEACE
9pm: Salon SJ, behind 1409 N 10th St, San Jose
MONDO KARAOKE!
9pm: Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
With Barely Legal. 11:59pm: 3Below Theatres, 288 S Second St, San Jose
OLD SCHOOL FUNK FEST: PARLIAMENT FUNKADELIC
SAT 9/15
7:30pm: SAP Center, 525 W Santa Clara St, San Jose
TUE 9/18
TRIBUTE: BEE GEES GOLD
LEGEND: BOY GEORGE
KINDRED CRAFT FESTIVAL 10am: San Jose Convention Center, 150 W San Carlos St, San Jose
38TH ANNUAL ART & WINE FESTIVAL
Also Sun. 10am: Central Park, 909 Kiely Blvd, Santa Clara
2018 LUNA PARK CHALK ART FESTIVAL
10am: Backesto Park, 651-699 E Empire St, San Jose
BARK IN THE PARK
10am: Williams Street Park, E William St, San Jose
DRAG QUEEN STORYTIME: OVER THE RAINBOW
11am: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, 150 E San Fernando St, San Jose
JAZZ LEGEND: EDDIE GALE IN CELEBRATION OF WORLD PEACE DAY
2pm: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, 150 E San Fernando St, San Jose
COMEDY: DOUG LOVES MOVIES PODCAST
Hosted by Doug Benson. 4:20pm: San Jose Improv, 62 S Second St
7:30pm: Campbell Heritage Theatre, 1 W Campbell Ave
BLUES: JINX JONES
8pm: Little Lou’s BBQ, 2455 S Winchester Blvd, Campbell
IMPROV: CARD SHARKS
8pm: American Improv Theatre, 260 McEvoy St, San Jose
4:30pm: Mountain Winery, Mountain Winery, 14831 Pierce Rd, Saratoga
BURLESQUE: CIRCUS OF SIN • SINAVERSARY 2
Hosted by Some Guy. 9pm: Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
THE REGGAETON TAKEOVER
WED 9/19
SUN 9/16
Lead by Alejandro. Noon: St. James Park, North Second & St. James streets, San Jose
SOUTH CITY COMIC CON
OKTOBERFEST DOWNTOWN REDWOOD CITY
10pm: Enso Nightclub, 97 E Santa Clara St, San Jose
10am: San Mateo County Fair, 1346 Saratoga Drive, San Mateo
ALL CITY BRUNCH WITH BON BON VIVANT
11am: Plaza de Cesar Chavez, 1 Paseo de San Antonio, San Jose
FARMERS & LOCAL VENDORS MARKET 3–9pm: Fairgrounds Parking Lot A (East), 344 Tully Road, San Jose
SAN JOSE POETRY LEGEND: NILS PETERSON
Presented by PCSJ. 6pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
YOGA IN THE PARK
Through 9/23. 5pm: 2200 Broadway
SONGWRITERS ROUND: REN, JON DRYDEN, EMILY CAVANAGH
7:30pm: Art Boutiki Music Hall, 44 Race St, San Jose
GO GO GONE SHOW
Variety talent show. 8pm: Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
33 SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
PUNK: WAY II STONED, FALSE FREEDOM, THE BIFFS
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
34
SPEARMINT RHINO
Adult Entertainment Phone Entertainment
Need to Talk?
WATERGARDEN
We’re always here for you 24/7.Relationship, Intimacy & Gender IssuesTotally Private & Confidential Call Now, 213-291-9497 drsusanblockinstitute.com Adult Entertainment
Discreet Playtime
Mature Busty Danish Blonde, 38D-24-36, Warm Intimates or maybe a Kinky Fetish 408-605-3465, ZOE
Hablas Espaol? HOT Latino Chat.
Call FREE! 408-380-0587 Or 800-831-1111 www.fonochatlatino.com 18+
Make a Connection, Talk to Sexy Singles FREE now! Call 408-404-7586 or 800-926-6000 www.livelinks.com 18+ Adult Massage
European Masseuse In Campbell. Offering a delightful session. Mature gentlemen please. Private location. Tess, 408-500-7630
French Masseuse
Slender, French brunette in Mountain View offering a clean, quiet, private place to enjoy a nice massage. Sundays off. Fogster.com, Under Mind and Body. 650-504-6940, Isabelle
Great Place
Nice place, clean, private, relaxing by a pretty Lady. 408-613-6831
$29 Massage by Asian Girl
Pretty girls offer massage with FREE haircut. Body hair removal & shaving, waxing. Cupping & giac hoi. Private rooms & Tea Shower. Near Tully & Hwy’s #101, #87, #280 & #680 Linda, 408-630-0982
For Older Men
40+ years old men, enjoy a Great relaxing massage by a mature Asian lady. Nice and friendly. Incall and out call. 408-512-9619, Jade
Asian Nuru Massage
Asian sweetie loves to give you a good Nuru experience. Please come for fun. Private location 408-561-2616
Asian Princess
Enjoy a nice massage from a pretty Asian Lady. Santa Clara in Sunnyvale. 408-722-8277
CUPID’S CORNER 408 Blossom Hill Rd • SJ 408.226.5683
BELLA AROMA
Best Relaxation Massage1765 Scott Blvd #105 / El Camino & Warburton. Santa Clara CA 95050 669-292-5561 Fetish
Real People Explicit Chat!
FREE Trial! Meet and enjoy Explicit chat with Real Women and Men waiting for your call! Call for a FREE Trial! 408-777-2999
Male to Male Massage
Asian Man
Get a Great massage from a nice Asian CMT man.408-893-1966
Where Real Gay Men Meet
or Uncensored Fun!Browse and Reply Free 408-342-4129 18+
Engineering /Technology
MUSIC -
31 35
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #634609
CONTRACTOR/HANDYMAN TECHNOLOGY SERVICES
Illumino, Inc. acceptg resumes for Lead PLUMB, ELECT, DOORS, Business System Architect in Sunnyvale, WINDOWS,FULL SERVICE CA. Perform Salesforce full stack REMODELING, KITCHENS,BATH. requirements gathering and analysis. 40+ YRS EXP. NO JOB TOO Oversee architecture/delivery of systems SMALLCSLB#747111. to ensure they are highly 408-888-9290 scalable, deployable, extensible, and maintainable. DJresume Equipment forInc., Rent Mail to: Illumino, Attn: Free delivery and GABRIEL free pick up. 408-512Staff Dept, 160 SAN DRIVE, 7364, pcarlos539@yahoo.com Sunnyvale, CA 94086. Must reference Ref. #LBSA-CA.
STATEMENTEngineer OF ABANDONMENT OF USE Software
OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME #634598 sought by Houzz, Inc. in Palo Alto, CA. The following person(s) registrant(s) has them / have Take high level ideas/ & transform abandoned the use of the fictitious business of into live products, used by millions name(s): Forget Me Not Spa, 43 S. Park Victoria homeowners/prof ’ls worldwide. Reqs. Unit 712, Milpitas, Ca, 95035, Charlie Hatfield, 2311 Master’s deg Dr., or San foreign equiv Comp. Meadowmont Jose, CA, 95133.inFiled in Santa Engg, Comp.onSci, or Engg + 1file yrno. exp. Clara County 03/02/2017 under 627124. Thisto business was conducted by: an Individual. This Exp incl dsgng/implmtg autoscale statement was filed the County infrastructure to with handle heavyClerk-Recorder traffic of Santa Clara County on 10/03/2017. /s/Charlie (>100 million requests per day). Mail Hatfield, Business Owner. (pub dates 10/11, 10/18, resumes to 285 Hamilton Ave., 4th Fl, 10/25, 11/01/2017) Palo Alto, CA 94301.
For copy, playment, space reservation or cancellaion: Display ads: Thursday 3pm, Line ads: Friday 3pm
40
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): Sophia Noreen Hussain for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Sophia Noreen Hussain. Proposed name: Sophia Noreen Huxley. Brand Design Manager THE COURT ORDERS thatFormulate all persons interested Mountain View, CA. design in this matter appear before this court at the hearing concepts and presentation approaches indicated below to show cause, if any, why the for brand with petition for communications. change of name shouldWork not be granted. Any person objecting to brand the nameconcepts change described executives to create and above mustthem file a written objection that includes translate into visual executions. the reasons for the objection at least two court Manage projects for the overall company days before the matter is scheduled to be heard brand, working budget and and must appear atwithin the hearing to show cause why timeline toshould buildnot brand and Ifproduct the petition be granted. no written objection is timely filed,targeted the court may grant the awareness towards prospects petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: and customers. Bachelor’s degree (or January 9, 2018 at 8:45 am, room 107 Probate filed foreign equivalent) in Graphic Design, on: October 3, 2017 (pub dates: 10/11, 10/18, 10/25, or a11/01/2017) related field, followed by five (5) years
of progressive experience in the specialty field. Send to: Larry ORDER TOresumes SHOW CAUSE FORCheng, CHANGE OF Arimo, LLC, 888 Villa Street, Suite 400, NAME, CASE NUMBER: 17CV316632 Mountain View, CA 94041
TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): Aidan Zahid Hussain for a decree changing names as follows:of Present name: Aidan Zahid Hussain. Nokia America Proposed name: Aidan Zahid Huxley. THE COURT Corporation ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter has these open in Mountain appear before this positions court at the hearing indicated below CA. to show cause, ifSoftware any, why the petition for View, *Senior Quality change of name should not be granted. Any person Assurance Engineer [ALU-MV18-VRRP] the name change described above must –objecting QualitytoAssurance system testing file a written objection that includes the reasons for centreatnetworking for data the objection least two courtplatforms, days before the develop & test routing protocols, OSPF,at matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear the hearing to show cause why theDevelopment petition should BGP , & VRRP; **Software not be granted. If no written objection–isAnalyze, timely Engineer [ALU-MV18-KERN] filed, the court may grant the petition without a design, develop protocols for 9, LTE hearing.& NOTICE OF HEARING: January 2018 at Mobile LTEfiled architecture; 8:45 am, Gateway; room 107 Probate on: October 3, 2017 data networking, embedded (pub structure, dates: 10/11, 10/18, 10/25, 11/01/2017)
operating syst, & algorithms;**Software Engineer [ALU-MV18-LTEV] – Analyze, FICTITIOUS BUSINESS design, develop protocols NAME & STATEMENT #634514for LTE Mobile Gateway; debug The following person(s) is (are)performance doing business as: issues & implement solutions; program Van’s Gift Shop & Pure Water, 2380 Senter Road, inSan C/C++ languages &Van w/ Thi object-oriented Jose, CA, 95112, Thanh Pham, Vu Anh Nguyen, 3078 Warrington Ave,, San Jose, CA, 95127. programming methodology;**Software This Engineer business is being conducted by a Married Test [ALU-MV18VIRT] – Couple. Registrant has not yet begun transacting Design, develop, script & execute tests; business under the fictitious business name or scripting using Python or TCL; names listed herein. /s/Vu Nguyen. ThisTCP/ statement was filed with the & County Clerk of Santa Clara IP networking IP routing protocols County 09/20/2017. Metro 10/11, 10/18, 10/25, such asonBGP , OSPF;(pub networking testing &11/01/2017) monitoring tools. ** Business Development Director [ALU-MV18FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NPI]Support business development NAME STATEMENT 634695Networks; efforts to promote Nuage The following person(s) is (are) doing businesssuch as: exp. w/ Internet Routing protocols Yoga Inside Out, 1460 Kingfisher Way, Sunnyvale, CA, as94087, OSPF, BGP VPN technologies & Nikki Wong.&This business is being conducted developing go-to-market strategy for by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious businessTravel name orReq names New Product Introduction. listed on the 10/11/2012. of previous file up toherein 50% of time.Refile Resume to Nokia with changes. /s/Nikki Wong. This statement of#569481 America Corporation, Attn: HR, 600 was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara Mountain Ave, 6D-401E, County on 10/06/2017. (pub MetroMurray 10/11, 10/18,Hill, 10/25, NJ 07974. Specify Job Code # in reply. 11/01/2017) EOE
TECHNOLOGY Hewlett Packard Enterprise is an industry leading technology company that enables customers to go further, faster. HPE is accepting resumes for the position of Quality Engineer in San Jose, CA (Ref. # HPECSJNUSR1). Designing, implementing and maintaining quality engineering protocols and methods for building, assembly and test transforming materials into partially finished or finished products. Monitoring product quality in manufacturing processes. Implementing monitoring tools and dashboards to track product performance in manufacturing tests. Mail resume to Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company, c/o Andrea Benavides, 14231 Tandem Boulevard, Austin, TX 78728. Resume must include Ref. #, full name, email address & mailing address. No phone calls. Must be legally authorized to work in U.S. without sponsorship. EOE.
Saama Technologies, Inc. seeks Assc. Dirs. Client Success, Engmnt Mgrs., Program/Proj. Mgrs., Solutions Archts., Team/Tech. Leads, Consultants., Cloud Infra. Engs. & Bus Analysts at all lvls for Bus Intel./Data Wrhsng. Worksite: Campbell, CA. May be assigned to various unanticipated client sites nationwide. Res: jobs@saama.com
Application Engineer, Field Application Engineer Resume to HMI North America Inc., 1762 Automation Parkway, San Jose, CA 95131. HR
Carpet Carpet Laminates Center Hardwood
The
MISCELLANEOUS
DEADLINES
Visit our offices Monday classifieds@metronews.com throughTO Friday, 9am–5pm PleaseOF include your Visa, MC, ORDER SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE or AmEx number and NAME, CASE NUMBER: 17CV316633Discover expiration date for payment.
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | NOVEMBER 2-8, 2016
LEGALS & PUBLIC NOTICES
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Icey Poki, 1085 E. Brokaw Road, Suite 30, San Jose, CA, 95131, 3L Poki, Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 10/03/2017. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/ Jianzhao Li. President. #4037265. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 10/03/2017. (pub Metro 10/11, 10/18, 10/25, 11/01/2017) IN PERSON EMAIL
408.871.0792
SEPTEMBER 12-18,| 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com NOVEMBER 1-7, 2017 metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
classifieds NVIDIA Corporation, market leader ThugWorldRecords.com in graphics & digital media processors, Thug World Records explosive label has engineering opportunities in Santa based out of San Jose CA with major Clara, CA for a Compliance Analyst features lil Wayne E-40 Ghetto (COMA02) In collaboration with Politician Punish. Free downloads mp3s business process owners, primarily in Ringtones. Over 22 albums online. Call Finance; Systems SW Engr (SSWE458, or log on thugworldrecords.com 408SSWE461) Design, implement and PLACING AN AD 561-5458 ask for gp optimize all of the multimedia drivers forBY NVIDIA’s SW PHONE processors; Sr. SystemsBY FAX BY MAIL Engr Use computer science, Call(SSWE459) the Classified department at Fax your ad to the Mail to: Metro Classified 408.298.8000 Monday and through Classified Department 380 S. First St. software engineering programming Friday 9am 5pm at 408.271.3520 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS San Jose, CA to engage intosoftware engineering; Sr. Systems SW Engr (SSWE457) Contribute NAME STATEMENT #634478 to the design, development, and The following person(s) is (are) doing business implementation of kernel mode device as: Simplyread Publishing, 371 Elan Village Lane, Software Engineer - Compiler #122, San Jose, CA, 95134, Simplyread, LLC. This EMPLOYMENT drivers for NVIDIA GeForce GPUs; business being conducted by a Limited sought byisBarefoot Networks, Inc.Liability in Santa ASIC Engr (ASICDE474) Design and Company. began transacting business DRIVERS Clara, CA.Registrant Compiler & tools dvlpmnt implement the industry’s leading graphics under the fictitious business name or names listed Independent contractors wantedThe frherein dmn-spcfc languages archtctrs fr in and media processors; Systems Design on 08/03/2016. Above&entity was formed Metro Newspaper is accepting hgh-prfrmnce prgrmmble Aply the state of California. /s/Debbientwrks. Whitmore. CEO.@ Engr (SYSDE62) Run tests at system level applications for Wednesday morning www.jobpostingtoday.com #70437 #2016223100461. This statement was filed with the to ensure quality meets expectation of County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 09/29/2017. contractors to deliver paper inSW Engr product design team;the Sr. Systems (pub Metro 10/11, 10/18, 10/25, 11/01/2017) and around the San Jose If you Sr. Staff Engineers. (SSWE462) Develop andarea. run MapReduce aretasks looking for extra money and have Gather reqs & perform software design on NVIDIA Hadoop cluster to FICTITIOUS BUSINESS a reliable and insured vehicle with a & validationactivities. NextNav, LLC, find, extract, and process relevant data; NAME STATEMENT #634530 valid drivers license, send resume to Sunnyvale, CA. c/o jobs@nextnav.com. Sr. Systems SW Engr (SSWE464) Work cmckee@newsvmedia.comExperience The following person(s) is (are) doing business Ref. 1H. on the design and development of the as: Rmj Building Maintenance, 1073 Chico Ct., helpful but not required. software infrastructure services and Sunnyvale, CA, 94085, Robert Anthony Maes, Jr. This business isEngineer being conductedII by an Individual. Software workflows; Sr. ASIC Engr (ASICDE475) ENGINEERING Registrant not yet begun business Design and implement the industry’s sought byhas HyTrust, Inc.transacting in Mountain under the fictitious business name or names listed Broadcom Corporation, leading Graphics, Video/semiconductor Media & View, CA to develop software herein. /s/Robert Anthony Maes Jr. This statement company, has an opening in San modules that dataoffrom Communications Processors; and Sr. was filed with thesecure County Clerk Santa Clara Jose, CA: R&D Engineer IC Design enterprise-scale servers. Req MS in 10/25, CS, County on 10/02/2017. (pub Metro 10/11, 10/18, Systems SW Engr (SSWE463) Analyze 5 (SJAGE): oversee definition, 11/01/2017) Engg, or rltd + 2 yrs sftw dvlp exp. Req architecture, relationships between implementation, & documentation for 2 yrs exp w/: Programming in C, C++, systems, and systems flow of end-to-end ASIC development. Ref job code & mail FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Python, & Perl. Apply @ design. If interested, ref job code and resume: HR (IS) 1320 Ridder Park Dr, www.jobpostingtoday.com NAME STATEMENT #634586#79521 send resume to: NVIDIA Corporation. San Jose CA 95131. Attn: MS04 (J.Green). 2701 San Tomas The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Kataneh Consulting Services, #336, 5201 Terner Expressway, Santa Clara, CA 95050. Please Nokia of America Way, San Jose, CA, 95136, Kataneh Emami. This ENGINEERING no phone calls, emails or faxes. Corporation business is being conducted by an Individual. OOCL accptg. resumes for Manager of has these open the Mountain Registrant beganposition transactinginbusiness under the Data Science in San Jose, CA. Manage & fictitious nameTest or names listed herein on View, CA.business *Software Engineer Security Solutions Architect, mentor a team of data scientists & data 10/03/2017. /s/Kataneh–Develop Emami. This&statement [ALU-MV17-SDN] executewas San Jose, CA.closely w/ the rest engineers, & work filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on SW test plans, design, script & execute 10/03/2017. (pub Metro 10/11, 10/18, 10/25, 11/01/2017) customerteams. problems help of Analyze mode2 product Mailtoresume: tests to verify conformance of features; defineStaffing solutions. Req Bach yrSt., OOCL, Dept., 2560+N101st scripting/ programing FICTITIOUS BUSINESSin C, TCL, or exp in San security/risk field incld.Ref. 5 Ste. 350 Jose, CAmgt 95131. Must PERL in Unix; router mgmt. & signal yr WAF, DOS, CISSP & ISO 27001. MDS-GH NAME STATEMENT Development #633968 protocols**Software Telecommuting permissible from home The following person(s) is (are) doing business Engineer [ALU-MV17-PMIP]-Develop, office anywhere in U.S. up to 50% OK. as: Lee’s Sandwiches. 260 E. Santa Clara St., San ENGINEERING create & modify computer Jose, CA, 95113, CBET Corporation.application This business ER accptg. pays forresumes travel costs Okta forto/from Senior client SW; develop control plane SW Registrant for IP & is being conducted by a Corporation. sites and Engineer HQ. Domestic travel Escalation in San Jose,required CA. began transacting under wireless network;business program inthe C;fictitious real-time to client site (1020%) Resume to HR, Work w/ customers to solve complex business name or names listed3GPP herein protocol on 1/1/2017. OS Linux/Unix/VxWorks; Pensando Systems, Inc.as1730 Technology Above entity was formed in the state of California. technical issues as well managing stack development. Resume to Nokia /s/Thang Le. President. #C3973648. This statement Drive Suite 202 San Jose CA 95110 technical & executive-level customer ofwas America Corporation, Attn: HR,Clara 600 filed with the County Clerk of Santa communications. Mail resume: Okta, Mountain Ave, 6D-401E, Murray Hill,10/25, NJ County on 09/20/2017. (pub Metro 10/11, 10/18, Ppl. Team, 301 Brannan St., San 11/01/2017) 07974. Specify Job Code # in reply. EOE Francisco, CA 94107. Must Ref. SEE-RS.
Engineer/S at Milpitas
Resp for design high performa ICs including D Regulators, LE Converters. Em linear.com ]hr #1067 when ap Corporation.
Member of Staff at San
Design & deve Nutanix mana interacts with N Mail resume to Technology Dr 95110. Attn: HR
Hostess / S
Deluxe Eatery weekend host o server. Server is more shifts ava interested com to talk to David 71 E. San Ferna
ENGINEER
Broadcom Corp Manager, R&D CA to provide t direction to pro Often directs & development o involving the la circuits. Mail res 1320 Ridder Par . Must reference
CONTRACT HANDYMA
PLUMB, ELEC WINDOWS,F REMODELIN 40+ YRS EXP. SMALLCSLB#
Vinyl
535B Salmar Ave,#B, Campbell Lic# 792342
All Major Brands Free Estimates Better Carpet • Better Service • Low Prices
Shop at Home
GUARANTEED INSTALLATION
Catalytic C
MU
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
36
Market Research Analyst for a bus. consulting firm in Sunnyvale, CA. Japanese fluency req’d. Resume to Ishin USA, Inc., Attn: Maruyama, info@ ishin-usa.com
Software Engineer eBranding Inc. has an opening for a Software Engineer in Sunnyvale, CA. Develop & implement bus-app-based DataMart, data collection systems, data analytics, & other sw apps. Master’s degree in IT, CE, CS, or equiv w/ 1 yr exp in the job offered & sw dev positions or related occupations. Resume: HR, 1155 Tasman Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94089
ENGINEERING Agilent Technologies has an opening in Santa Clara, CA for Mechanical Design Engineer (MDE01) Mechanical design of scientific instruments and accessories; R&D Bioinformatics/Software Engineer (RDE02) Develop algorithms and data management systems to determine the precise order or nucleotides within a DNA molecule; Sr. Financial AnalystAccounting & Compliance (SFA01) Analysis of financial statements of the parent company (US Entity). Mail resume & reference job code to: Agilent Technologies c/o Cielo, 200 South Executive Drive, Suite 400, Brookfield, WI 53005.
ENGINEERING Broadcom Corporation, semiconductor company, has an opening in San Jose, CA for a R&D Engineer Software 4 (SJAPU) to design, develop, troubleshoot & debug software programs for software enhancements & new products. Ref job code & mail resume: Broadcom Corporation, HR (IS) 1320 Ridder Park Dr, San Jose CA 95131.
Hardware Engineer: M.S. in Elec. Eng. plus 2 yrs wk exp req’d. Send resumes to: Sambanova Systems, Inc., 2100 Geng Rd., Ste. 103, Palo Alto, CA 94303, Attn: G. Grohoski.
55+ YEARS OLD & SEEKING WORK? FREE job assistance & training. Must meet low-income guidelines. Call SOURCEWISE, Speak with a Community Resource Professional in Senior Employment Services (408) 350-3200, Option 5
MIND, BODY & SPIRIT B12 Happy Hour Every Wed 4-6 pm Stress, WeightlossFatigue, PMS, Anxiety, Depresion, pain, detox, Allergies.ndwisdom.com 408-297-6877
MISCELLANEOUS Window Washer cheap rates, residential or commercial. 408-564-3352
Dear Member: Please note the following General Membership meetings of the NAACP San Jose/Silicon Valley Branch, for election of officers and at-large members of the executive committee. On September 27, 2018 1313 N Milpitas Blvd (upstairs conference room) 6:00pm, there will be an election of the Nominating Committee. On Sunday October 28, 2018 1313 N Milpitas Blvd (upstairs conference room) 6:00pm, there will be a report of the Nominating Committee, receipt of Nominations by Petition, and election of the Election Supervisory Committee. On Saturday November 17, 2018, the election of officers and at-large members of the Executive Committee will take place at 1313 N Milpitas Blvd (upstairs conference room) . Polls will open from 9am to 3:30pm. To vote in a Branch election, one must be a member in good standing of the Branch 30 days prior to the election.
LEGALS & PUBLIC NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #644743 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Trace Global, 532 Fern Ridge Ct., Sunnyvale, CA, 94087, Global Gateway Technologies Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 02/01/2018. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Martha Vanegas. President. #C2812956. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/26/2018. (pub Metro 08/22, 08/29, 09/05, 09/12/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645465 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Global Ventures Investment Grupe, 1250 Aviation Ave., STE 200M, San Jose, CA, 95110, Iman Abdolmohammadi, 1128 Pinot Noir St., Los Banos, CA, 93635. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Iman Abdolmohammadi. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/17/2018. (pub Metro 08/22, 08/29, 09/05, 09/12/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645094 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Alterra Apartment Homes, 1640 La Rossa Circle, San Jose, CA, Alterra San Jose TIC Manager, LLC, 1510 Ventura Blvd., Ste 1450, Encino, CA, 91436. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/10/2018. Above entity was formed in the state of Delaware. /s/Edward Ring. Managing Member, #201817210655. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/07/2018. (pub Metro 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, 09/19/2018)
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: CAROL E. TOLEN CASE NO.: 18PR184240. To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of Carol E. Tolen. A Petition for Probate has been filed by Public Administrator of the County of Santa Clara in the Superior Court of California, County of SANTA CLARA. The Petition for Probate requests that the Public Administrator of the County of Santa Clara be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent. The Petition requests the decedent’s will and codicils, if any, be admitted to probate. The will and any codicils are available for examination in the file kept by the court.The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority. A hearing on the petition will be held in this court on November 5, 2018 at 9:00 a.m. in Department 12 at the Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara located at 191 North First Street, San Jose, CA 95113. If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney. If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code. Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court a Request for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk. Attorney of petitioner: Mark A. Gonzalez, Lead Deputy County Counsel, OFFICE OF THE COUNTY COUNSEL, 373 West Julian Street, Suite 300, San Jose, CA, 95110. Tel No.: (408) 758-4217. (Pub Dates: 08/29, 09/05, 09/12/2018
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645508 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Locksmith San Jose, 6203 San Ignacio Ave STE 110, Locksmith San Jose, 204 Pelican Cove Ter, San Francisco, CA, 94134. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/20/2018. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Hagay Fermon. Owner, #4180545. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/20/2018. (pub Metro 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, 09/19/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645696 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Angelo’s Peppersteak Sandwich, 2. Angelo’s Peppersteak, 9547 Estates Dr., Gilroy, CA, 95020, Michael Angelo Dipietro. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/01/2018. /s/Mike Dipietro. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/23/2018. (pub Metro 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, 09/19/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #644756 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Reynoso Tree Service, 351 La Pala Dr., San Jose, CA, 95127, Perla Reynoso Trejo. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/26/2018. /s/Perla Reynoso Trejo. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/26/2018. (pub Metro 08/22, 08/29, 09/05, 09/12/2018)
NOTICE OF INTENT TO SELL REAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE CASE NO. 17-PR-000002
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on or after September 25, 2018 at 2:00 p.m., at 333 W. Julian Street, San Jose, CA 95110, James J. Ramoni, Public Administrator of the County of Santa Clara as administrator with will annexed of the estate of Jan Warren Feller, aka Jan W. Feller, aka J. W. Feller, intends to sell at private sale, to the highest and best net bidder on the terms and conditions stated below, all of the estate’s right, title, and interest in the real property located in the County of Santa Clara, State of California.This property is commonly referred to as 422 Joshua Way, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 which property is more particularly described as follows:The land described herein in the State of California, County of Santa Clara, City of Sunnyvale, and described as follows:Lot 41, as shown upon that certain Map entitled, “TRACT NO. 4485 REDWOOD VALLEY UNIT NO.1,” which Map was filed for record in the office of the Recorder of the County of Santa Clara, State of California, on May 13, 1968 in Book 237 of Maps, Pages 27 and 28The sale shall be subject to notice of proposed action procedure under the Independent Administration of Estates Act.The property will be sold subject to current taxes, covenants, conditions, restrictions, reservations, rights, rights of way, and easements of record. The property is also to be sold “As Is.”Bids or offers for this real property are hereby invited and must be in writing and may be mailed or personally delivered to the Santa Clara County Public Administrator at 333 West Julian Street, 4th Floor, San Jose, CA 95110-2314.All bids or offers must be accompanied by ten (10) percent deposit, with the balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash upon the close of escrow.Taxes, rents, operating and maintenance expenses, and premiums on insurance acceptable to the purchase shall be prorated as of the date of recording of conveyance. Examination of title, recording of conveyance, transfer taxes and any title insurance policy shall be at the expense of the purchaser or purchasers.The right is reserved for James J. Ramoni, Public Administrator of the County of Santa Clara as administrator with will annexed of the estate of Jan Warren Feller, aka Jan W. Feller, aka J. W. Feller to reject any and all bids or offers.For further information and bid forms, contact Shirley Bailey, Alain Pinel Realtors, 167 So. San Antonio Rd., Ste 1, Los Altos, Ca 94022; 650-941-1111JAMES J. RAMONI (or his designee) Public Administrator of the County ofSanta Clara as Administrator with Will AnnexedJAMES R. WILLIAMS, County CounselMARK A. GONZALEZ, Lead Deputy County CounselAttorneys for James J. RamoniPublic Administrator of the County of Santa Clara as Administrator with Will Annexed(pub dates: 09/05, 09/12, 09/19/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645464 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Silicon Valley Social Value, 221 Main Street, #1198, Los Altos, CA, 94022, CMB Advisors, Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/01/2018. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Chase Behringer. President, #C3868588. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/17/2018. (pub Metro 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, 09/19/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645457 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Walk Your Talk Therapy, 2. Life Walk Therapy, 2672 E. Bayshore Ave STE 810, Palo Alto, CA, 94043, Heather M Noone. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/01/2018. /s/Heather M Noone. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/17/2018. (pub Metro 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, 09/19/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645771 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: People Places Construction, 847 Raeburn Ct., San Jose, CA, 95136, Vincent Cochran. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 01/12/2010. Refile in facts from previous filing. Previous file #632189. /s/Vincent Cochran. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/27/2018. (pub Metro 09/05, 09/12, 09/19, 9/26/2018)
ADVERTISEMENT FOR PREQUALIFICATION OF BIDDERS & ADVERTISEMENT TO BID
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645945
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: TW Consulting, 3431 Woodyend Court, San Jose, CA, 95121, Tracy Wood. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/01/2018. /s/Tracy Wood. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/30/2018. (pub Metro 09/05, 09/12, 09/19, 09/26/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645993 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. AO Bodywork, 2. Aobodywork.com, 106 1st Street, Los Altos, CA, 94022, Annette Elisabeth Oevermann, 487 North 9th St., San Jose, CA, 95112. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Annette Oevermann. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/31/2018. (pub Metro 09/05, 09/12, 09/19, 09/26/2018)
STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME #646023 The following person(s) / registrant(s) has / have abandoned the use of the fictitious business name(s): Olea Verde Spa, 3324 Cantamar Court, San Jose, CA, 95135, Olea Verde Spa LLC. Filed in the Santa Clara county on 01/05/2010 under file No. 532611.
NOW HIRING
Transportation Security Officers at San Jose International Airport (SJC)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #646024
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: The Head Spa(ce), 2118 El Camino Real, Studio 14, Santa Clara, CA, 95050, Maribelle B Licardo, 174 Holly Ter, Sunnyvale, CA, 94086. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 09/04/2018. /s/Maribelle B Licardo. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 09/04/2018. (pub Metro 09/12, 09/19, 09/26, 10/03/2018)
No Experience Required
TSA Presentation and Application Assistance Event Tuesday, September 18, 2018 Visit any time between 10:00 a.m. and 12 noon
Santa Clara Employment Connection 1879 Senter Road, Door 10 San Jose, CA 95112
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #646026 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: GN Event Rental, 1991 Hartog Dr., San Jose, CA, 95131, S&S Event Rental Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Refile of previous #645325 In facts from previous filing. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/14/2018. /s/Harsh Saini. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 09/04/2018. (pub Metro 09/12, 09/19, 09/26, 10/03/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645976
Full- and Part-time pay rate starting at $18.87 per hour (Includes 39.28% locality pay)
PLUS: Federal benefits • Paid, ongoing training TSA offers an attractive benefits package including: health, dental, vision, life and long-term care insurance; retirement plan; Thrift Savings Plan similar to 401(k); Flexible Spending Account; Employee Assistance Program; personal leave days and paid federal holidays.
Or apply online at: tsajobs.tsa.dhs.gov or text “SJC” to 95495 or call 1-877-872-7990
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Fishermans Warehouse Megastore, 1120 Branham Lane, San Jose, CA, 95118, Tackle Technology, Inc., 17621 S. Ideal Parkway, Manteca, CA, 95336. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Refile of previous #615162 In facts from previous filing. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 06/01/2018. /s/Wayne Wasulko. President. #1892335 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/30/2018. (pub Metro 09/12, 09/19, 09/26, 10/03/2018)
ORDER SETTING HEARING AND ORDER DIRECTING PROOF OF PERSONAL SERVICE AND SERVICE BY PUBLICATION IN LIEU OF PERSONAL SERVICE STR8 GROUP LLC, APPLICANT VS. JOE CALDERON, ADVERSE PARTY(S) CASE #18PO1349 JC DEPARTMENT 3 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that this matter is set for hearing on the 27th day of September at 9:30 am in Department 3 located at 200 Lewis Ave, in Courtroom 1B, Floor 1st, Las Vegas, NV 89155.IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that:The previously granted Temporary Order for Protection will remain in effect until the hearing.At the scheduled hearing, the Court will decide whether or not an Order for Protection should be issued.The Adverse Party(s), Joe Calderon, is hereby advised that a failure to appear at the scheduled hearing may result in an Order for Protection being issued to the ApplicantDATED this 30th, day of August, 2018.(Pub Dates: 9/12, 9/13/2018, and 9/19, 9/20/2018)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #645733 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Gott’s Roadside, 2. Gott’s Roadside ‘Tray Gourmet’, 855 El Camino Real #65, Palo Alto, CA, 94301, Gott Brothers Development, LLC, 1344 Adams Street, St. Helena, CA, 94574. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 09/29/2013. Refile of previous file #581939 in facts from previous filing. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Joel Gott. President. #200230800017. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/24/2018. (pub Metro 09/12, 09/19, 09/26, 10/03/2018)
37
@CareersatTSA TSA U.S. Citizenship Required Equal Opportunity Employer Standard Messaging and Data Rates Apply
18TSA015_PAD_SJC_4c_4-3438x4.8438_M.indd 1
9/5/18 1:39 PM
Your Family Deserves The
BEST
Technology... Value... TV!...
America’s Top 120
190 Channels
Plus More!
CALL TODAY - SAVE 20%
Savings with 2 year price guarantee with AT120 starting at $59.99 compared to everyday price. All offers require credit qualification, 2 year commitment with early termination fee and eAutoPay. Prices include Hopper Duo for qualifying customers. Hopper, Hopper w/ Sling or Hopper 3 $5/mo. more. Upfront fees may apply based on credit qualification. Fees apply for additional TVs: Hopper $15/mo., Joey $5/mo., Super Joey $10/mo.
Add High Speed Internet
14.95 1
• FREE Standard Installation
$
in up to 6 rooms
/mo.
Subject to availability. Restrictions apply. Internet not provided by DISH and will be billed separately.
Where available.
• Smart HD-DVR Included! • FREE Voice Controlled Remote
Upgrade to the Hopper® 3 Smart HD DVR
Requires internet-connected Hopper
• Watch and record 16 shows at once • Get built-in Netflix and YouTube • Watch TV on your mobile devices Hopper upgrade fee $5./mo.
CALL TODAY - SAVE 20%
1-855-993-2335 Se Habla Español
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
California State University, San JoseSJSU Tennis Facility InfrastructurePrequalification Deadline: September 20, 2018Bid Due Date and Time: September 25, 2018 at 3:00 P.M. Estimated Project Cost: $1,000,000Anticipated Construction Start: November 2018 Anticipated Construction Duration: 2-3 monthsBlach Construction has been hired by San Jose State University (SJSU) as the CM at Risk Contractor to manage the construction of the SJSU Tennis Facility Infrastructure project located at 1251 South 10th Street, San Jose, Ca. Blach Construction will prequalify subcontractors and manage the bid process on behalf of SJSU. Prequalified subcontractors will submit bids directly to Blach Construction. Blach Construction is signatory to the Northern California Carpenters and Laborers Unions, subcontractors bidding scopes of work that utilize the carpenters and laborers must be signatory to each respective union or sign one-time agreements. The project’s scope of work includes but is not limited to: Electrical (C-10), Earthwork and Paving (C-12), Pipeline (C-34), and Plumbing (C-36). PrequalificationSubcontractors must be prequalified to submit a bid. To obtain prequalification questionnaires contact Laura Burkhardt via email: laura.burkhardt@blach.com.Prequalification Submittals are due no later than: September 20th, 2018.BiddingThere currently is not a pre-bid walk scheduled for this project. If you would like to walk the site prior to submitting a bid please contact justin. despotakis@blach.com.Bids are due by September 25th, 2018 @ 3PMContract Documents, including plans and specifications, will be available on September 11th, 2018. Subcontractors wishing to bid the project must contact laura.burkhardt@blach.com to get access to our Building Connected Website. Bid Questions & Clarifications should be directed to Justin Despotakis via email: justin.despotakis@blach.com.All pre-bid questions must be submitted by September 18th, 2018 @ 3PM. The successful bidder will be required to have the appropriate State of California Contractor’s License to perform the work, current at the time of submission to bid, except in the case of a Joint Venture Bidder that shall be licensed at the time of notice of selection as the apparent responsible bidder. This is a prevailing wage project. The CSU Trustees require three (3) percent Disabled Veteran Business Enterprise participation by all bidders.This project is subject to prevailing wage rate laws. All contractors and all tiers of subcontractors bidding on this project shall register to bid public works projects with the Department of Industrial Relations (DIR), and maintain current this registration pursuant to Labor Code Section 1725.5. Please go to http://www.dir.ca.gov/Public-Works/ PublicWorks.html for more information and to register
This business was conducted by: A Limited Liability Company: Filed on 09/04/2018. /s/Maribelle Licardo, Managing. (pub dates: 09/12, 09/19, 09/26, 10/03/2018)
Call 7 days a week 8am - 11pm EST
Offer for new and qualifying former customers only. Important Terms and Conditions: Qualification: Advertised price requires credit qualification and eAutoPay. Upfront activation and/or receiver upgrade fees may apply based on credit qualification. Offer ends 11/14/18. 2-Year Commitment: Early termination fee of $20/mo. remaining applies if you cancel early. Included in 2-year price guarantee at $59.99 advertised price: America's Top 120 programming package, local channels, HD service fees, and Hopper Duo for 1 TV. Included in 2-year price guarantee for additional cost: Programming package upgrades ($69.99 for AT120+, $79.99 for AT200, $89.99 for AT250), monthly fees for upgraded or additional receivers ($5-$7 per additional TV, receivers with additional functionality may be $10-$15). NOT included in 2-year price guarantee or advertised price (and subject to change): Taxes & surcharges, add-on programming (including premium channels), DISH Protect, and transactional fees. Premium Channels: 3 Mos. Free: After 3 mos., you will be billed $55/mo. for HBO, Cinemax, Showtime, Starz and DISH Movie Pack unless you call to cancel. Other: All packages, programming, features, and functionality and all prices and fees not included in price lock are subject to change without notice. After 6 mos., if selected you will be billed $8.99/mo. for DISH Protect Silver unless you call to cancel. After 2 years, then-current everyday prices for all services apply. For business customers, additional monthly fees may apply. Free standard professional installation only. HBO®, Cinemax® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. SHOWTIME is a registered trademark of Showtime Networks Inc., a CBS Company. STARZ and related channels and service marks are property of Starz Entertainment, LLC. All new customers are subject to a one-time, nonrefundable processing fee.
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
10 38
ADVICE GODDESS
By AMY ALKON
11 39
AdviceAmy@AOL.com
The first few dates are the free trial period of romantic relationships. Think of it like accepting a sample of lox spread at Costco. You’re seeing how you like it; you aren’t committing to buy a salmon hatchery. It sounds like you instead see a date as a Wile E. Coyote-style trapdoor dropping you into a relationship. You and the guy have sex for the first time, and assuming he doesn’t fake his death afterward or ditch a burner phone he’s been texting you from, you two become a thing, right on track to sign up for those cute side-by-side burial plots. The problem is, this is like getting into a relationship with the first stranger who sits down on the bus next to you. You’re skipping an essential step, the “see who the guy is and decide” part. Even when the guy isn’t just some Tinder rando—even when you’ve known him for awhile—you need to see who he is as a boyfriend and how you work as a couple. Also, making matters worse, if you’re like many women, sex can act as a sort
of snuff film for your objectivity, leading you to feel emotionally attached to the man you’ve just slept with. Psychologists Cindy Meston and David Buss speculate that this may come out of the orgasmdriven release of oxytocin, a hormone that has been associated with emotional bonding. (In men, testosterone goes all nightclub bouncer, blocking oxytocin so it can’t get to its receptor.) To keep sex from drugging away your objectivity, try something: unsexy broaddaylight dates with various guys for just a few hours each. Yes, various guys. It’s not only okay to date more than one guy initially; it’s ideal. (A man with rivals is a man who has to try harder.) Meanwhile, your having options should curb any tendency you might have to go all needypants on a guy who, say, doesn’t text you right back—even if his competition’s texts are more preventive distraction than romantic ideal: “What are u wearing? Also, are u good w/Excel?” Or “I know u like fashion. Here’s my penis in a beret.”
I’m a 35-year-old guy who’s been texting with this girl. She got out of a sevenmonth relationship two months ago and is still kind of emotional about it. We’ll make plans to go out, but she always cancels at the last minute, claiming that she’s “still a mess” and adding, “Hope you understand!” Should I just keep texting with her and see where things lead?—Limbo Think about the guys women get stuck on—those they can’t get to text them back, not those who put out lighted signs visible from space: “iPhone’s always on! Call 24/7! Pick me! Yaaay! Over here!” Consider FOMO (fear of missing out) or, in scientist-speak, the “scarcity principle.” That’s psychologist Robert Cialdini’s term for how the less available something is, the more valuable (and desirable) we perceive it to be. This is not because it actually becomes more valuable but because scarcity triggers a motivational state—a state of, “Don’t let it get away!” Contrast that with how available you are to a woman who doesn’t seem ready for a relationship but is up for the emotional perks that come with. So she sucks up the consoling texted attention she gets from you but ducks out of any in-person get-togethers that could
eventually lead to your trying to, well, console her with your penis. Consider shutting off the therapy spigot and making yourself scarce until she’s ready to date. Tell her you want to take a timeout from texting and give her a little time to heal ’n’ deal and then go on a date. Pick a night—about a month from now—and ask her to put it on her calendar, explaining that it’s fine if she needs to reschedule if she still doesn’t feel ready. Putting it on the calendar makes it tangible, but putting it in the future, with an option to push it forward, takes the pressure off. And your disappearing for a while is probably your best shot at shifting your, um, zoological category to potential “animal in bed” from emotional support animal in the Hello Kitty diaper for the plane.
(c)2018, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
I’ve been flirting with two guys all year. I feel a connection and chemistry with both, but neither has asked me out yet. This weekend, I’m attending a going-away party of a grad student we all know, and I’m nervous that they’ll both show up and ask me out. (There’s also a third guy who seems interested.) What should I do? I wouldn’t want to be one of somebody’s many options.—Feeling Unfair
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
10 40
elementalwellnesscenter.com
SEPT. 15TH 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM
BUY 2 SELECT BRAND VAPE CARTRIDGES & RECEIVE A FREE BATTERY! IN STORE-ONLY. WHILE SUPPLIES LAST*
FREE SAME DAY DELIVERY! to the South Bay, Mid-Peninsula, & Mid-East Bay for orders placed by 7pm
*Minimum order required
Skip the line with our new EXPRESS KIOSKS! PRE-ORDER PICK UP AVAILABLE! *HELD FOR 24hrs
$15 CREDIT for new members when you spend $30 or more *Discounts cannot be combined
1
# Best Discount for MMJ Card Holders
1
# Best Cannabis Dispensary
1
# Best Cannabis Delivery
985 Timothy Drive, San Jose, 95133 408.433.3344 Open daily 9am-9pm for medical and recreational members Check out our website for all deals and services Age 21+
A12-18-0000082 & M12-18-0000078
FREE WILL ASTROLOGY
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): "The idea of liberation through the suppression of desire is the greatest foolishness ever conceived by the human mind," wrote philosopher E. M. Cioran. I agree that trying to deny or stifle or ignore our desires can't emancipate us. In fact, I'm inclined to believe that freedom is only possible if we celebrate and honor our desires, marvel at their enigmas and respect their power. Only then can we hope to refine them. Only then can we craft them into beautiful, useful forces that serve us rather than confuse and undermine us. The coming weeks will be an excellent time for you to engage in this spiritual practice, Taurus. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): "Remember that sometimes not getting what you want is a wonderful stroke of luck," says the Dalai Lama. Ain't that the truth! When I was 22 years old, there were two different women I desperately yearned for as if they were the Muse Queens of Heaven who would transform me into a great artist and quench my infinite passion. Fortunately, they both rejected me. They decisively set me free of my bondage to them. Later, when I was older and wiser, I realized that blending my fortunes with either of them would have led me away from my true destiny. I got lucky! In a similar but less melodramatic way, Gemini, I suspect you will also get lucky sometime soon. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don'ts for Boys or Errors
of Conduct Corrected was an advice book for boys published in 1902. Among many other strictures and warnings, it offered this advice: "Don't giggle. For the love of decency, never giggle." There was additional counsel in the same vein: "Don't be noisy. The guffaw evinces less enjoyment than the quiet smile." Another exhortation: "Don't tease. Be witty, but impersonal." In accordance with astrological omens, I hereby proclaim that all those instructions are utterly wrong for you right now. To sweetly align yourself with cosmic rhythms, you should giggle and guffaw and tease freely. If you're witty—and I hope you will be—it'll serve you well to be affectionate and personable.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): "Simplicity is about
subtracting the obvious and adding the meaningful," writes designer John Maeda. "The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak up," says artist Hans Hofmann. "Simplicity strips away the superfluous to reveal the essence," declares a blogger named Cheo. I hope these quotes provide you with helpful pointers, Leo. You now have the opportunity to cultivate a masterful version of simplicity.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Your keynote is the
Japanese word shizuka. According to photographer Masao Yamamoto, it means "cleansed, pure, clear, and untainted." One of his artistic practices is to wander around forests looking in the soil for "treasures" that emanate shizuka. So in his definition, the term isn't about being scrubbed or sanitized. Rather, he's interested in pristine natural phenomena that are unspoiled by civilization. He regards them as food for his soul. I mention this, Virgo, because now is an excellent time for you to get big doses of people and places and things that are cleansed, pure, clear and untainted.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran blogger Ana-Sofia Cardelle writes candidly about her relationship with herself. She keeps us up to date with the ever-shifting self-images that float through her awareness. Here's one of her bulletins: "Stage 1. me: I'm the cutest thing in the world. Stage 2. me, two seconds later: no, I'm a freaking goblin. Stage 3. me, two seconds after that: I'm the cutest goblin in the world." I'm guessing that many of you Libras have reached the end of your own personal version of Stage 2. You've either already
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Author Anne Carson describes part of her creative process in this way: "Sometimes I dream a sentence and write it down. It's usually nonsense, but sometimes it seems a key to another world." I suspect you might be able to benefit from using a comparable trick in the coming days. That's why you should monitor any odd dreams, seemingly irrational impulses or weird fantasies that arise in you. Although they may not be of any practical value in themselves, they could spur a train of thought that leads you to interesting breakthroughs.
11 41
By ROB BREZSNY week of September 12
slipped into Stage 3, or soon will. No later than Oct. 1, you'll be preparing to glide back into Stage 1 again.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): "There's no such thing
as love," said Scorpio painter Pablo Picasso. "There are only proofs of love." I'm tempted to believe that's true, especially as I contemplate the current chapter of your life story. The evidence seems clear: you will thrive by engaging in practical demonstrations of how much you care. You'll be wise to tangibly help and support and encourage and inspire everyone and everything you love. To do so will make you eligible for blessings that are, as of this moment, still hidden or unavailable.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): According to a
Pew Research Study, nearly 75 percent of Americans say they talk to God, but only 30 percent get a reply. I'm guessing the latter figure will rise dramatically for Sagittarian Americans in the next three weeks, however. Why? Because the astrological indicators suggest that authorities of all kinds will be more responsive than usual to Sagittarians of all nationalities. Help from higher powers is likely to be both more palpable and more forthcoming. Any communications you initiate with honchos, directors and leaders have a better than normal chance of being well-received.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): One day in October
1926, author Virginia Woolf inscribed in her diary, "I am the usual battlefield of emotions." It was a complaint, but also a brag. In fact, she drew on this constant turmoil to fuel her substantial output of creative writing. But the fact is that not all of us thrive on such ongoing uproar. As perversely glamorous and appealing as it might seem to certain people, many of us can do fine without it. According to my analysis, that will be true for you in the coming weeks. If you have a diary, you might justifiably write, "Hallelujah! I am not a battlefield of emotions right now!"
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Anthropologist
Margaret Mead had definite ideas about "the ways to get insight." She named them as follows: "to study infants; to study animals; to study indigenous people; to be psychoanalyzed; to have a religious conversion and get over it; to have a psychotic episode and get over it." I have my own list of ways to spur insight and inspiration, which includes: to do walking meditations in the woods on a regular basis, no matter what the weather; to engage in long, slow sex with a person you love; to spend a few hours reviewing in detail your entire life history; to dance to music you adore for as long as you can before you collapse from delighted exhaustion. What about you, Aquarius? What are your reliable ways to get insight? I suggest you engage in some of them, and also discover a new one. You're in the Flood of Radical Fresh Insights Phase of your astrological cycle.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Stanley Kubrick made masterful films, but most of them bore me. I regard John Ashbery as a clever and innovative poet, but I've never been excited by his work. As for painter Mark Rothko, I recognize his talent and intelligence, but his art leaves me empty. The music of Nora Jones is pretty and technically impeccable, but it doesn't move me. In the coming weeks, Pisces, I invite you to make the kinds of fine distinctions I'm describing here. It will be important for you to be faithful to your subjective responses to things, even as you maintain an objective perspective about them and treat them with respect. Homework: Make two fresh promises to yourself, one that's easy to keep and one that's at the edge of your capacity to live up to.
Go to REALASTROLOGY.COM to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. Audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700
* Must present coupon. Restriccons may apply
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018
10 42 3088 WINKLE AVE., SUITE C SANTA CRUZ, CA 95065 MON – FRI: 10AM – 9PM MEDICAL DISPENSARY 18+ RECREATIONAL DISPENSARY 21+
CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED
ONLINE ORDERING AVAILABLE NOW!
ALL TAXES INCLUDED ADULTS 21+ WITH ID
CHAI APPRECIATION SALE DAYS: SEPT 8 & SEPT 29
25% OFF EVERYTHING OPEN 9AM – 9PM
(831) 475-5506 | WWW.CAPITOLAHEALERS.COM
MOTIVATION MONDAY
TOP-SHELF TUESDAYS
NEW MEMBERS
ALL VAPE PRODUCTS ARE 20% OFF!
ALL TOP SHELF FLOWERS ARE 20% OFF!
REEFER A FRIEND
TASTY THURSDAYS
WAXY WEDNESDAYS
10% DISCOUNTS
ALL EDIBLES, TINCTURES, CAPS AND TOPICALS ARE
25% OFF!
ALL TOP-SHELF CONCENTRATES 25% OFF!
RECEIVE 10% OFF YOUR VISIT
MILITARY AND SENIOR CITIZENS RECEIVE A 10% DISCOUNT EVERYDAY!
43
metroactive SVSCENE PHOTOS BY GREG RAMAR
A participant in the second annual DOWNTOWN DROP DOWN grins big while rappelling from the roof of the Adobe building in San Jose.
Having fun with friends at the final SOUTH FIRST FRIDAY art walk of the summer.
Mayor Sam Liccardo speaks in front of the ADOBE building before rappelling down it to raise money for Downtown Streets Team.
Could it be... Satan? This trio were clearly enjoying themselves at FORAGER during the South First Friday art walk.
SEPTEMBER 12-18, 2018 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
San Jose Mayor SAM LICCARDO proves once and for all that he isn’t scared of heights at the Downtown Drop Down, a fundraiser for Bay Area non profit, Downtown Streets Team.