Metro Silicon Valley August 21-27, 2019

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THE BYWATER

METROGIVEAWAYS.COM

FALL ARTS issue

AU G U S T 21 -2 7, 2 01 9 | VO L . 3 5, N O . 33 | S I L I C O N VA L L E Y, C A | F R E E

Visual Art P22 Stage P26 Live Music P32 Classical P38 Film P44 Lit P50

artification San Jose underinvests in an art community that helped revitalize once-moribund city center P14


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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Music, theater, dance, and more in the heart of Silicon Valley

Hanggai

Triptych (Eyes of One on Another)

Hanggai is traveling from the steppes of Mongolia to Bing Concert Hall. This crossover band blends traditional Mongolian-Chinese instruments and rock n’ roll for a unique sound you’ll never forget

by Bryce Dessner (The National)

SAT, S E P 28 7 : 30 P M B I N G C O N C E RT H A L L

A powerful work that explores the origins and impact of Mapplethorpe’s controversial photography through music, projections of Mapplethorpe’s images, and poetry T H U, O C T 3 7 : 30 P M M E M O R I A L AU D I TO R I U M

Bing Concert Hall Stanford University

From the Middle Kingdom to the Wild West

Terry Riley and Gyan Riley

The Orchestra Now, conducted by Jindong Cai

Terry Riley, founder of the minimalist movement, is joined by his son, awardwinning classical guitarist Gyan Riley. Join us in the intimate Bing Studio for two shows exploring minimalism with father and son

This performance features a mixed chorus, full orchestra, and Chinese traditional instruments to shed light on the laborers that made the transcontinental railroad possible SUN, OCT 6 2 : 30 P M B I N G C O N C E RT H A L L

SAT, O C T 19 7:00 P M & 9 :00 P M B I N G ST U D I O

SEASON MEDIA SPONSORS

BUY TICKETS

live.stanford.edu 650.724.2464


3 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

METRO SILICON VALLEY A locally owned company.

380 S First St, San Jose, CA 95113 408.298.8000 Editorial Fax: 408.298.0602 Advertising Fax: 408.298.6992

EXECUTIVE EDITOR & CEO DAN PULCRANO

EDITORIAL Arts & Features Editor: Nick Veronin News Editor: Jennifer Wadsworth Staff Writer: Grace Hase Copy Editor: Anne Gelhaus Editor at Large: Wallace Baine Contributing Writers:

Julia Baum, Richard von Busack, John Dyke, Jeffrey Edalatpour, John Flynn, Mike Huguenor, Yousif Kassab, Bill Kopp, Tomek ackowiak, Tad Malone, Mighty Mike McGee, Avi Salem, Gary Singh Interns:

Kael Austria, Nicholas Chan, Matei Predescu, Erika Rasmussen

ART/PRODUCTION

PRESENTED BY PRESENTED BY

Design Director: Kara Brown Graphic Designer: Tabi Dolan Production Operations Manager: Sean George Editorial Production Manager: Katherine Manlapaz Graphic Artists: Jimmy Arceneaux, Hon Truong Photographers: Greg Ramar,

John Dyke, Taylor Jones

AUGUST 23

Illustrator: Jeremiah Harada

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musicintheparksj.com

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 © 2019 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.

CONTENT

A San Jose Downtown Association Production • Supported in part by a cultural affairs grant from the City of San Jose


THIS MODERN WORLD

By TOM TOMORROW

metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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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.

Park Place

comments@metronews.com RE: NEW STATE LAW AIMS TO PREVENT HAIRSTYLE-BASED DISCRIMINATION, NEWS, AUG. 14

Just keep it out of my face and food.

It’s hot. For the third day in a row, it’s been over a hundred degrees. There’s an 80-year-old’s birthday party taking place on the block, and you’re one of the guests. It’s a milestone and you got there a little late. Cars are completely crammed in their driveway and have poured out into our normally vacant streets. It’s like Tasman Drive on Fourth of July or the Great Mall parking lot during Christmas. Good luck finding a spot. It’s futile. I almost pitied you because you too are old. You’ve probably known the celebrant a few decades. Maybe, you’re even family? But to this quiet Cupertino cul-de-sac, you’re just another sidewalk vehicle. You’ll get no preferential treatment here, no valet service or reserved parking. I know you know this because you’ve circled back and forth several times. But instead of doing the right thing and parking a few streets down, risking sunburn and a damp dress shirt, you chose to park in the next door neighbor’s driveway because you thought they weren’t home. You were right, they weren’t. But I saw you.

ROBYN VIA SAN JOSE INSIDE RE: NEW STATE LAW AIMS TO PREVENT HAIRSTYLE-BASED DISCRIMINATION, NEWS, AUG. 14 The previous law discriminated in the sense that hair texture, skin color and gender are not choices you make. You are born with these characteristics. Any law that dictates how your natural hair should be worn is discriminative.

GWEN VIA SAN JOSE INSIDE

RE: SJ MAYOR UNVEILS PLAN TO COMBAT GUN VIOLENCE, SAN JOSE INSIDE, AUG. 14

Sam Liccardo’s gun liability Insurance will only be a burden on lawful gun owners. Criminals will probably not register their owned weapons or new ones they acquire. Requiring insurance on will create a database of all the lawful gun owners. Such a list will be very convenient if the government wants to confiscate weapons from compliant lawful gun owners. Would lawful gun-owners be penalized for not having insurance? JOHN BRUECK VIA EMAIL

RE: NEW STATE LAW AIMS TO PREVENT HAIRSTYLE-BASED DISCRIMINATION, NEWS, AUG. 14 Is this political correctness ever going to end? To the students that think rules and laws don’t apply to them, think again. The real world is going to be a rude awakening.

ROBERT MARTIN VIA SAN JOSE INSIDE


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AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

THE FLY

sjlanterns.com

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SVNEWS

Check, Please Since word got out about Santa Clara County DA JEFF ROSEN surveilling Sheriff LAURIE SMITH’s orbit for some vaguely defined reason related to theories about dealmaking and concealedweapon permits, most They of her allies have kept a Did pretty low profile.

What?

Enter JAMES CAMPAGNA, SEND TIPS TO treasurer of pro-Smith FLY@ independent expenditure METRONEWS. committee Santa Clara COM County Public Safety Advocates, who touched base with Fly a few days ago in a show of transparency. Despite a $45,000 donation to the PAC from bodyguard MARTIN NIELSEN that’s raised eyebrows since we first pointed it out, Campagna assures us that his team operates the committee with high ethical standards. He makes no apologies for supporting Smith, and in an email to Fly offers high praise for her “fortitude and leadership.” “A recent example,” he says, “was the lamentable shooting at our beloved Gilroy Garlic Festival, where her local team and the rest of the county law enforcement support teams reacted aggressively and with great courage to avoid an even bigger massacre.” Finally, Campagna goes on to say, he has no clue who Nielsen is—nor anyone at AS Solution, the executive protection firm he works for that provides security to Silicon Valley A-listers including MARK ZUCKERBERG. If he’d noticed anything untoward about Nielsen’s gift, Campagna says he’d have notified the right people “in full accordance with the law.” Attached to Campagna’s email was a scanned copy of Nielsen’s handwritten $45,000 check. Dated Oct. 4, 2018 and drawn on an account at Citibank’s Santa Monica branch, it misstates the name of the PAC, leaving out the word “public.”The “memo” line of the document designates the payment a “donation,” and it’s signed with a perfunctory flourish. That’s obviously enough hints for subpoena-empowered investigators to track down the true source of the funds behind Nielsen’s generosity.

ILLUMINATING The San Jose artists who created the “San Carlos Lantern Relay” made five times less money than Seattle counterparts who worked on a comparable public art installation.

Term of Art For three decades, city-funded artwork has largely excluded San Jose talent BY MIKE HUGUENOR

I

n 2012, SAN JOSE announced a new public art initiative intended to make downtown look more like people’s expectations of Silicon Valley. Funded with a $600,000 grant from ArtPlace America, “Illuminating Downtown” tasked artists with literally lighting up the heart of the city by using a trove of donated LED lights from Philips Lumileds.

“Illuminating Downtown” went live a few years later with its first three pieces. Then-Seattle-based artist Dan Corson dressed two Highway 87 underpasses with interactive lighting. Called “Sensing YOU” and “Sensing WATER” by the artist, the one close to the SAP Center is unofficially known as the “blue doughnuts.” “San Carlos Lantern Relay,” a series of eight 6-foot-tall, networked and interactive lamp posts made by locals Steve Durie and Bruce Gardner, can be activated by pedestrians at the touch of a button. Corson and his team got $657,000

from the city and another $100,000 from the San Jose Downtown Association. He later relocated to Hawaii to open a boutique chocolate farm. For their eight individual pieces, Durie and Gardner split $90,000. According to the first analysis of the city’s public art projects by this news organization, that economic disparity is par for the course in San Jose. Not only does the city award the vast majority of its public art money to creatives without any apparent ties to San Jose, it also pays local artists far less on average than their out-of-town counterparts. Since the late ’80s, the city of San Jose has amassed an impressive array of public art. On its website, the city’s Office of Cultural Affairs (OCA) details 150 pieces in the collection, prefacing a database of the installations by saying, “We strive to celebrate the city’s diversity, innovative spirit [and] historic richness.” But after a spate of high-profile public art contracts went to artists, musicians and designers from outside the city, local creatives began

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THOUGHT LEADERS LEARN HERE


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SVNEWS

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HOMEGROWN As the city systematically overlooks San Jose artists, Multicultural Arts Leadership Institute director Demone Carter works tirelessly to elevate local talent.

six days of poetry! September 5–10, 2019 in downtown San José featured readings workshops small press fair poetry slam and more! poets, schedule, and tickets: pcsj.org/festival presented by Poetry Center San José with support from

Jarvis Subia

Bri Blue

Tongo EisenMartin and Chris Peck the Town Crier

to wonder about the collection, and how well it actually represents the community. Using the city’s website and publicly searchable contracts, Metro analyzed the collection by looking at the provenance of the artists and how much money each creative made per project. The numbers paint a story of a city that has failed to use its economic power to invest in its own art community. In 30 years of commissions, from 1988 to 2017, the city entered into contracts with San Jose artists only about 15 percent of the time. Of the 150 pieces the OCA lists on its website, 127 were made by artists from outside the city. In analyzing public art contracts for this piece, Metro defines San Jose artists as those with significant, demonstrable links to the city (San Jose State alumni, for example). Through that lens, it appears that the city hired San Jose artists just 15 percent of the time over the course of three decades. Looking at the money spent on each piece, the disparity becomes even more pronounced. Of the $17.2 million the city spent on its public art collection in that same 30-year timeframe, only $715,937 reached San Jose artists—a

mere 4.15 percent of the total. On average, artists from outside the city received $134,710 for their projects. San Jose artists, by contrast, received on average $31,406. No San Jose artist ranked in the top 10 highest payments. No artist from San Jose made it to even the top 20. It’s only at the 22nd spot that we see a San Jose artist show up, namely Tony May, who way back in 1998 took home $175,000 for his collection of ivy-covered arbors titled “Remembering Agriculture.” “In terms of the numbers, that doesn’t sound good,” Durie says. A professor at SJSU, Durie is among the relatively few San Jose makers represented in the city’s roster of publicly funded artists. He and Gardner, who were the only San Jose artists to participate in the “Illuminating Downtown” project, divided that $90,000 among themselves and several part-timers who helped them execute their vision. “We had a lot of people we had to hire in the design process,” Durie says. “At the request of the city, we had to hire an electrician to vet our design, and a mechanical engineer to vet how the lanterns were mounted to the poles.”

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MONTALVO CENTER PRESENTS MONTALVO ARTS ARTS CENTER PRESENTS

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T E 0 C G E 2 A R T H HMONTALVO 2 0 0 1 1 9 9 -- 2 2ARTS 0 2 2 0 0 CENTER C A R R R II A APRESENTS G E E H H O O U U S S E E 2 0 1 9 - 2 0 2 0

2019 2019

SERIES SERIES

C A R R I A G E

H O U S E

2020 2020

OCTOBER

OCTOBER 2019 The Hit Men –

JANUARY JANUARY

APRIL APRIL

WED, JAN 29, 7:30PM Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44

THU, APR 7:30PM Premier: $75 9, • Reserved: APRIL APRIL (cont’d) $69 Premier: $75 • (cont’d) Reserved: $69

2020

Loudon Wainwright Loudon Wainwright III III WED, JAN 29, 7:30PM

The Hit Men – Legendary Rock Supergroup Legendary Rock Supergroup THU, OCT 3, 7:30PM

OCTOBER OCTOBER THU, OCT 3, 7:30PM

THU, APR 9, 7:30PM

JANUARY JANUARY

Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44

Premier: $65 • Reserved: $59 Premier: $65 • Reserved: $59

The Hit Men – Acoustic Alchemy Legendary Rock Supergroup Acoustic WED, OCT 9, Alchemy 7:30PM

MONTALVO ARTS THU, OCT 3, 7:30PM $55 WED, OCT 7:30PM Premier: $629, • Reserved:

$65 • Reserved: $55 $59 Premier: $62

Pablo Cruise Acoustic Alchemy Pablo Cruise SUN, OCT 20, 7PM

T H SUN, E OCT 29,• Reserved: 07PM1 $65 9 - 2 0 2 0 WED, 7:30PM OCT Premier: $69 20, $62 • Reserved: $65 $55 Premier: $69

Loudon Wainwright III

FEBRUARY WED, JAN 29, 7:30PM FEBRUARY CENTER PRESENTS Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44 Ottmar Liebert Ottmar Liebert & & Luna Luna Negra Negra WED, FEB 5, 7:30PM

WED, FEB 7:30PM $52 FEBRUARY Premier: $59 5, • Reserved: Premier: $59 •R Reserved: CFEBRUARY A R I A$52G E

(cont’d) (cont’d)

Meow Meow Meow Meow THU, APR 9, 7:30PM

Vitaly: An Evening of Wonders Meow Meow Vitaly: An THU, APR 16,Evening 7:30PM of Wonders 9, 7:30PM THU, APR 7:30PM$58 Premier: $65 16, • Reserved: $75 • Reserved: $58 $69 Premier: $65

Steve Dorff Vitaly: An Steve FRI, APRDorff 17,Evening 7:30PM of Wonders THU,APR APR17, 16,7:30PM 7:30PM FRI,

Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44 H O U S E $65 • Reserved: $44 $58 Premier: $49

SiriusXM presents Tom Papa Ottmar LiebertTom & Luna PapaNegra SiriusXM presents

Graham Parker Steve Dorff Graham Parker SAT, APR 18, 7:30PM

CONCERT SERIES Pasquale Esposito Pablo Cruise Pasquale FRI, OCT 25, Esposito 8PM

FRI, FEB 7, 7:30PM WED, FEB7,5,7:30PM 7:30PM FRI, FEB

Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43 Premier: Premier: $59 $48 •• Reserved: Reserved: $52 $43

SUN,OCT OCT 20,8PM 7PM FRI, Premier: $6525, • Reserved: $58

Waipuna

$69 • Reserved: $58 $65 Premier: $65

SiriusXM presents Tom Waipuna

THU, FEB 13, 7:30PM FRI, FEB 7:30PM THU, FEB7,13, 7:30PM

Pasquale Esposito

NOVEMBER FRI, OCT 25, 8PM NOVEMBER Premier: $65 • Reserved: $58

Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44

Papa

Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43 Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43

Rodney Crowell Rodney Crowell 2019

2020

Selected Shorts: Waipuna Selected Shorts: THU, FEB 13, 7:30PM Unexpected Encounters Unexpected Encounters Premier: $4829, • Reserved: $43 SAT, FEB 3PM & 7PM

WED, NOV 6, 7:30PM

WED, NOV 7:30PM$53 Premier: $59 •6,Reserved: NOVEMBER NOVEMBER Premier: $59 • Reserved: $53 OCTOBER The Music of The Music of Cream Cream Rodney Crowell

SAT, FEB 29, 3PM & 7PM Premier: $50 • Reserved: $45

JANUARY Selected Shorts: Unexpected Encounters Loudon Wainwright III MARCH

Premier: $629,• 7:30PM Reserved: $55 SAT, NOV SUN, NOV 10, 7PM Premier: $69 • Reserved: $62

FRI APR$48 3, 7:30PM $43 Premier: WED, FEB •5,Reserved: 7:30PM Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43

Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43 Premier: $59 • Reserved: $52

SUN, OCT 20,&7PM California Montreal Hiroshima California &7:30PM Montreal Guitar Guitar Trios Trios Premier: $69 •13, Reserved: WED, NOV SUN, NOV 10, 7PM $65

Masters of Hawaiian Music: The High Kings Masters of Hawaiian Music: George Kahumoku, Jr., Jeff Papa Peterson Tom SiriusXM presents FRI APR 3, 7:30PM George Kahumoku, Jr., Jeff Peterson

WED, NOV 13, 7:30PM

WED, NOV 13, 7:30PM Premier: Premier: $49 $69 •• Reserved: Reserved: $44 $62 Pasquale Esposito Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44

FRI, OCT 25, 8PM Classic Albums Live Presents: California & Montreal Classic Live Presents Premier:Albums $65 • Reserved: $58 ::

Guitar Trios Tom Petty the Heartbreakers – WED, NOV 13,and 7:30PM Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Damn the Torpedoes Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44 Damn the THU, NOV 21,Torpedoes 7:30PM

NOVEMBER

THU, 7:30PM ClassicNOV Albums Live Presents Premier: $65 21, • Reserved: $58 : Premier: $65 • Reserved: $58

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Rodney Crowell Damn the6, Torpedoes WED, NOV 7:30PM

DECEMBER THU, NOV 7:30PM$53 Premier: $59 21, • Reserved: DECEMBER DECEMBER Premier: $65 • Reserved: $58 SAT, DEC 5PM Premier: $597,• Reserved: $55

Justin Kauflin Trio Steel Betty APRIL Justin Kauflin Trio THU, APR 2, 7:30PM

David Benoit: Christmas Tribute SAT, NOV 9, 7:30PM to Charlie Brown Premier: $63White • Reserved: $56 A Peter Christmas A Peter White Featuring BraunChristmas and Euge Groove SAT, DECRick 7, 5PM with Euge Groove, Lindsey Webster, and Vincent Ingala Featuring Rick Braun and Euge Groove Hiroshima Premier: $59 15, • Reserved: SUN, DEC 4PM & $55 7:30PM

SAT, MAR 14,7:30PM 7:30PM THU, APR 2,

Premier: Premier: $44 $48 •• Reserved: Reserved: $39 $43 Premier: $44 • Reserved: $39 Quincy Jones Presents:

Late Nite Catechism: The High Kings Justin Kauflin Trio Late Nite Catechism: Sister’s FRI APR THU, APR3,Easter 2,7:30PM 7:30PMCatechism Sister’s Easter Catechism SAT, APR 4, 7:30PM Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43

SUN, 4PM 7:30PM SUN, DEC NOV 7PM & $59 Premier: $66 15, •10, Reserved: Premier: Premier: $66 $69 •• Reserved: Reserved: $59 $62

A Peter White Christmas Windham Hill’s Winter Solstice Featuring Rick Hill’s Braun and Euge Groove Windham Winter Solstice SAT, DEC 21, 3PM & 7PM California &4PM Montreal SUN, DEC21, 15,3PM 7:30PMGuitar Trios SAT, DEC &&7PM

Premier: $444,• 7:30PM Reserved: $39 SAT, APR Premier: $58 • Reserved: $52

Premier: $58 •of Reserved: $52 Masters Hawaiian

Late Nite Catechism: Music: George Kahumoku, Jr., Jeff Peterson Sister’s Easter Catechism & Nathan Aweau

Premier: $56 •13, Reserved: $50 WED, NOV 7:30PM $66 • Reserved: $59 Premier: $56 $50 Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44

Windham Hill’s Winter Solstice Tom Petty and the Premier: $56 • Reserved: $50 Heartbreakers

Tickets Tickets

Damn the Torpedoes

SUN, MAR 22, 7PM Laughing for All the Laughing for All $51 the Premier: $57 • Reserved: Wrong Reasons Wrong Reasons Selected Shorts: SUN, MAR 29, 7PM SUN, MAR 29, 7PM Unexpected Encounters The Second City Presents Premier: $58 • Reserved: $52 Premier: $5829, • Reserved: $52 SAT, FEB 3PMAll & 7PM Laughing for the Premier: $50 • Reserved: $45 Wrong Reasons Quincy Jones Presents: Quincy Jones Presents:

The Subdudes Premier: $59 • Reserved: $55

Classic Albums Live Presents SAT, DEC 21, 3PM & 7PM :

& Nathan Aweau FRI, FEB 7,• 7:30PM & Nathan Aweau Premier: $48 Reserved: $43 SUN, MAR 7PM $43 Premier: $48 •22, Reserved: SUN, MAR 7PM $51 Premier: $57 •22, Reserved: Masters Hawaiian Music: Premier: $57 •of Reserved: $51 Waipuna George Kahumoku, Jr., Jeff Peterson THU, FEB 13, 7:30PM & Nathan Aweau City Presents The Second Premier: $48 • Reserved: The Second City$43 Presents

APRIL APRIL SUN, MAR 29, 7PM APRIL Premier: $58 • Reserved: $52 MARCH

The Music of Cream David Benoit: Christmas Tribute David Benoit: Christmas Tribute THU, NOV 7, 7:30 PM to Charlie Brown Premier: $59 • Resered: $53 to Charlie Brown DECEMBER SAT, DEC 7, 5PM

SAT, APR 4, 7:30PM SUN, MAR 7PM $52 Premier: $58 •22, Reserved:

The Second City Presents Laughing for All the Reasons Montalvo Box Office: 408.961.5858Wrong M–F / 10AM–4PM Montalvo Box Office: 408.961.5858SUN, M–F / 10AM–4PM MAR 29, 7PM

Premier: $65 • Reserved: $58

Premier: $58 • Reserved: $52 Tickets also available online at: montalvoarts.org/ch19 Tickets DECEMBER

Tickets also available online at: montalvoarts.org/ch19

Montalvo Office: Tribute 408.961.5858APRIL M–F / 10AM–4PM David Benoit:Box Christmas available online at: montalvoarts.org/ch19 toTickets Charlie also Brown

Premier: $59 • Reserved: $55

A Peter White Christmas

Featuring Rick Braun and Euge Groove

Premier: $69 23, • Reserved: THU, APR 7:30PM$65 Premier: $44 • Reserved: $40 Premier: $44 • Reserved: $40

Premier: $44 • Reserved: $40 FRI, APR 7:30PM $55 Premier: $6224, • Reserved:

Premier: $75 • Reserved: $69 Premier: $62 • Reserved: $55

Yesterday & Today – Vitaly: An Evening of Wonders The Interactive Beatles Experience Premier: $62 • Reserved: $55

Farewell Angelina Farewell Angelina Steve Dorff SUN, MAY 10, 7PM SUN, MAY 10, 7PM

SUN, MAY 7PM $57 FRI, APR 7:30PM Premier: $6317, •10, Reserved: MAY MAY Premier: Premier: $63 $49 •• Reserved: Reserved: $57 $44

Brubeck Brothers Quartet Farewell Angelina Brubeck Brothers Graham Parker THU, MAY 14, 7:30PM Quartet SUN, MAY18, 10,7:30PM 7PM THU, MAY 7:30PM SAT, APR Premier: $55 14, • Reserved: $49

Premier: Premier: $55 •• Reserved: Reserved: $49 Premier: $63 $49 • Reserved: $57 $44

Brubeck Brothers Quartet Keiko Matsui THU, SUN, MAY APR 14, 19, 7:30PM 7PM

Don’t miss your chance to Don’t miss your chance to enjoy Russell: these great performances Ethan enjoy these great performances The Best Seat in indoor the House in our intimate, THU, APR 23, 7:30PM Don’t miss yourindoor chance to in our intimate, Premier: $44 • Reserved: $40 CARRIAGE THEATER enjoy these HOUSE great performances CARRIAGE HOUSE THEATER –– Yesterday & Today – there are no badindoor seats! in our intimate, there are no bad seats! The Interactive Beatles Experience

Premier: Premier: $55 $69 •• Reserved: Reserved: $49 $65

FRI, APR 24, 7:30PM

CARRIAGE HOUSE THEATER –

Premier: $62 • Reserved: $55

there are no bad seats!

MAY

Farewell Angelina SUN, MAY 10, 7PM

Premier: $63 • Reserved: $57

Brubeck Brothers Quartet THU, MAY 14, 7:30PM

Premier: $55 • Reserved: $49

Premier: $57 • Reserved: $51

THU, NOV 21, 7:30PM

SAT, DEC 7, 5PM

Ethan Russell: Keiko Matsui Ethan Russell: The Best Seat the House SUN, APR 19, 7PM in The Best Seat in the House THU, APR 23, 7:30PM

MAY THU,APR APR24, 16,7:30PM 7:30PM FRI, MAY Premier: $65 • Reserved: $58

The High Kings Steel Betty The High Kings & Luna Negra FRI APR 3,Liebert 7:30PM Ottmar SAT, MAR3,14, 7:30PM FRI APR 7:30PM

SAT, MAR 14, 7:30PM Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43

$56 Premier: $69 • Reserved: $62 Pablo$63 Cruise

$49 • Reserved: $65 $44 Premier: $69

MARCH MARCH FEBRUARY Premier: $48 • Reserved: $43

Premier: $65 7, • Reserved: THU, NOV 7:30 PM $59 SAT, NOV 7:30PM Premier: $639,• Reserved: $56

Acoustic Alchemy Hiroshima WED, Subdudes OCT 9, 7:30PM The Hiroshima SUN, NOV 10, 7PM

SAT, APR 18, 7:30PM SUN, APR 7PM $65 Premier: $69 19, • Reserved:

SAT, & 7PM MARCH WED,FEB JAN29, 29,3PM 7:30PM Premier: $50 • Reserved: $45 Premier: $49 • Reserved: $44 Steel Betty Steel Betty SAT, MAR 14, 7:30PM

$59 • Reserved: Resered: $53 Premier: $63 $56

Keiko Matsui Graham Parker Keiko Matsui SUN, APR 19, 7PM

Ethan Russell: APRIL (cont’d) Yesterday & Today – House The Best Seat in the Yesterday & Today – The Interactive Beatles Experience Meow Meow THU, APR 23, 7:30PM The Interactive Beatles Experience FRI, APR 24, 7:30PM THU, APR 9, 7:30PM

Premier: $50 • Reserved: $45

The Music of Cream THU, NOV 7, 7:30 PM WED, NOVMen 6, 7:30 7:30PM THU, The NOV Hit –PM$53 Premier: $59 7, • Resered: Reserved:$53 Premier: $59 • Resered: Legendary Rock$53 Supergroup The THU, Subdudes OCT 3, 7:30PM Music of Cream The Subdudes SAT, NOV 9, 7:30PM

FRI, APR 17, 7:30PM SAT, APR 7:30PM $44 Premier: $4918, • Reserved:

Quincy Jones Presents:

Justin Kauflin Trio THU, APR 2, 7:30PM

Premier: $44 • Reserved: $39

Don’t miss your chance to

enjoyRoad, theseSaratoga great performances 15400 Montalvo CA 95071 15400 Montalvo Road, Saratoga CA 95071 in our intimate, indoor CARRIAGE HOUSE THEATER – 15400 Montalvo Road, Saratoga CA 95071 there are no bad seats!

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

CONCERT CONCERT T H E


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

10 SVNEWS

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San Jose's Public Art Funding Total Commission Fees by Decade SJ Artists vs. Non-SJ Artists On average, San Jose artists make far less on city contracts than their out-of-town counterparts.

$8 mill $7 mill $6 mill $5 mill $4 mill $3 mill $2 mill $1 mill $0 san jose 1990s

non-sj

san jose

non-sj

san jose

2000s

non-sj 2010s

$715,937

San Jose Artists non-sj artists

Total Amount Paid to Artists in Collection 1988-2017 The city awards the vast majority of its public art contracts to non-local artists.

$16,302,063 Source: City of San Jose Office of Cultural Affairs

In addition, the artists also had to pay subcontractors to help with the fabrication. For his part, Durie says he has no qualms about what the city paid him, and that the size and complexity of a project should be kept in mind when determining compensation. “Everything is commensurate on scale,” he says. “My question is not how much they got paid, but what was the nature of the project?” Scale-wise, there’s a compelling case to make that Durie and Gardner’s work on “San Carlos St. Lantern Relay” was, in many ways, as complex as artist Corson’s work on “Sensing YOU” and “Sensing WATER.” In both cases, the artists had to hire extensive teams to help with fabrication. Both projects spanned multiple blocks downtown

(two for “Sensing YOU” and “Sensing WATER,” and four for “San Carlos St. Lantern Relay”). Both were funded through the same ArtPlace America grant. But while Durie and Gardner split a five-figure sum for their work, the Seattle-based Corson made more than five times what they did. That’s probably why Corson can spend his time these days farming cocoa pods in sunny Papaikou. When presented with Metro’s analysis, Michael Ogilvie—San Jose’s public arts director since coming to San Jose from a similar position in Las Vegas two years ago—defended the city’s decisions. “The calls that we do for public art are open and competitive,” he contends. “There are ways you can restrict them locally, but when you

restrict things locally, there tends to be intellectual inbreeding. It helps to add new flavor to that dialogue.” Widely regarded as one of the most diverse cities in the US, it’s hard to imagine “intellectual inbreeding” being a problem in San Jose, whose racial, ethnic and economic variety make it one of the most culturally rich cities in the world. Rather, the figures show that consistently over the past 30 years, the city did not prioritize hiring local creators—even as those artists increasingly struggled to keep up with Silicon Valley’s notoriously ascendant cost of living. “If you think about the greatest cities in the world, New Orleans would never go out and get a musician from across the globe to represent their city,” says Demone Carter, a San Jose rapper,

podcaster and artistic impresario. “It would seem ridiculous.” As the head of the Multicultural Arts Leadership Institute (MALI), Carter is deeply ingrained in the South Bay arts scene. Through MALI, he’s made an effort to support the city’s multifarious art world, championing the work of local creators, from painters and pianists to folklorico dancers and DJs. “I know that public art can be a complicated process,” he says, “but I really believe strongly that we do already have world class talent here in San Jose, and we have some work to do in how we support that talent.” If the goal of art is to reveal, then what the city’s collection shows is that local artists have been underhired, and underpaid, for at least a generation.


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a neoclassical city landmark and one of the original grand dames of West Coast retail shopping. Later, as the post-WWII suburbanization of America began to cannibalize the landscape, so did suburban shopping malls, which were often anchored by huge department stores like the Emporium and its famous Big E branding scheme. Everyone knew that ‘E.’ As The Emporium continued to expand in the late ’60s, it built Almaden Fashion Plaza on several dozen acres of land at Blossom Hill Road and Almaden Expressway, which was then surrounded by orchards and not much else. By the late ’70s, the plaza had 52 tenants and parking spaces for 2,573 cars. In particular, this columnist grew up inside Waldenbooks and Reik’s Music, a locally owned instrument retailer. Unfortunately, The Emporium was bought out in the mid-’90s, right as Highway 85 began to emerge. Costco then opened across the parking lot, practically saving the whole complex from sheer desolation. What used to be The Emporium building is now Bed, Bath & Beyond, Diddums and buybuy BABY, although it still looks relatively similar on the outside. Almaden Fashion Plaza was shortened to just Almaden Plaza decades ago, yet many still call it by the original name. These days, the interior open-air part of the complex looks almost exactly the same as it did 40 years ago. The same cream-colored cement trappings remain. The same brickwork patterns appear in the walkways. If you know where to look, you can see the label scar where the original Big E used to be. Thanks to Ted Ramos, that E now is saved at History San Jose, awaiting its next reincarnation. With the recent heroic restoration of the Stephens Meat Products dancing pig sign, as well as the return of the OSH sign, maybe someone can hatch a scheme to do something. “I’ve always had an interest in neon signs ever since I was a kid,” Ramos said, adding that the Neon Museum in Las Vegas helped inspire him to contribute what he could locally. “When I saw all these neon signs in San Jose, I was saying, ‘I wish they had something to preserve these things.’ And then when I saw the San Jose Signs Project, I was like, ‘Oh, awesome. I’m not the only one.’”

D ow

n to w n S a n J o

FARM ’ E R S MA R

LETTER CARRIER Ted Ramos rescued the sign from a former Emporium store from a San Jose storage yard.

By A Vowel The Emporium’s mid-century neon ‘Big E’ is being restored to landmark status BY GARY SINGH

O

NE DAY TED Ramos was traveling south down Monterey Road—the Champs-Elysees of San Jose’s underbelly—when he spotted a faded masterpiece wasting away in a storage yard near the intersection of Live Oak Road. At first, he thought he’d seen the “Big W,” as in the film, It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, but upon closer inspection, it was the “Big

E” from The Emporium, the longdefunct department store at Almaden Fashion Plaza. Someone had saved the ‘E’ after the Emporium chain went out of business in 1996. The sign was rusty, some of the plexiglass was cracked and pieces were missing, but it was recognizable. And salvageable. “When I looked through the little broken pieces, I could still see the neon tubing inside,” said Ramos. “I was able to get a real close look at it because it was leaning up against the chain link fence from the other

side. ... It looked like it had been weathered. ... But I was surprised that a lot of the plastic covering was still there. I figured that that would be all broken off, so it was a good thing to see.” His timing was perfect. Ramos’ discovery of the Big E occurred soon after Heather David helped launch the San Jose Signs Project to preserve our celebrated mid-century signage, as other reputable grown-up cities across North America have similarly done. Ramos contacted David, who in turn relayed him to the epic storage facilities at History San Jose, where the Big E now sits, waiting for the next stage of restoration. “I was willing to rent a truck myself if I had to, to get that thing transported over to History San Jose,” Ramos said. “Because at that time, I wanted that thing saved.” The Emporium chain started in San Francisco in 1896. The flagship store on Market Street was


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SHIFTING COLOR As murals and public art spread throughout San Jose, gentrification displaces the local artists who helped make the area attractive BY NICK VERONIN & MIKE HUGUENOR

J

UAN CARLOS ARAUJO makes no bones about it. “I gentrified Japantown.”

It’s a hot Thursday afternoon and the founder and artistic director of Empire Seven Studios is sitting in a folding camping chair taking a break from the mural he is helping a Los Angeles-based duo known as The Draculas to paint on the side of the failed Redevelopmentera Pavilion shopping center in downtown San Jose. Covering approximately 9,360 square feet, the mural features a figure skater mid-twirl, a singer, an accordion player and the words “San Jose,” it is the latest piece of public artwork to go up downtown. Just three weeks ago, on Aug. 1, Araujo helped unveil “Bleed Teal,” the new mural overlooking the parking lot of the Whole Foods Market on The Alameda. Depicting a giant, transparent shark, the project was completed in partnership with the San Jose Sharks and Mill Creek, the apartment developer responsible for the tony Modera complex next to the upscale grocer. The piece was brokered by Araujo and completed by an Austrian-born, Los Angeles-based graffiti artist who goes by Nychos. It

is a tribute to the home team and a valuable placemaking asset for both Whole Foods and Modera. There is certainly some irony here. Before he relocated to L.A., Nychos was making a living as an artist in the Bay Area. He ultimately moved south in search of cheaper rent. Similarly, Araujo is also planning a move now that Empire Seven Studios is no more. After more than 10 years at the corner of Empire and Seventh streets in Japantown, a residential development firm called TriForge Capital Partners bought the ground out from under Araujo’s leased warehouse space in the North San Jose neighborhood. Araujo is working to open a new gallery just south of downtown. It took some time to process, but Araujo says he is at peace with it now. He knows he isn’t the only one struggling to make it as a working artist in Silicon Valley, and as the wall of the Pavilion Garage slowly fills with color, he grins ear to ear. “I’m fucking lucky to be where I’m at,” he says. Araujo’s story is a familiar one. Scrappy local artists work with the tools at their disposal and uplift their neighborhood in the process. With or without permission, they paint

blank walls. Once-empty warehouses become galleries and venues for live music. Dive bars gain a reputation as hip hangouts. Rents steadily rise with the price of PBR tall cans. By the time a craft brewery opens a taproom or a boutique yoga studio gains its footing, the writing is on the wall— and there is plenty of that all over San Jose these days. The problem is, the people who began painting all those dull facades in the first place can’t afford to live here anymore. Furthermore, there is a belief among many locals that the city of San Jose and adjacent organizations that endeavor to highlight the city’s culture are out of touch—favoring out-of-town artists over natives and playing favorites with those who have learned to navigate local bureaucracy. The numbers, insofar as they are publically available, support the critics. Looking back through the city’s official database of public art projects, it appears that only 15 percent have been created by locals and that locals were paid less on average than out-of-towners for their work (see page 6 for that story).

A SEAT AT THE TABLE Often inane and always ephemeral, a truly dank meme nevertheless has a way of zeroing in on the zeitgeist—of getting to the pith of it all with just a few keystrokes and a choice image. Currently making the rounds online, the “Where Y’all Sitting” meme was recently deployed by the San Jose natives in Archive408, a digital documentarian collective whose work focuses on erasure in a rapidly changing San Jose. Their version of the meme sums up popular perceptions of how the power brokers of the South Bay’s public art scene operate. The meme works like so: A cartoon illustration of a high school cafeteria is the canvas. Tables throughout the dining hall are assigned text or pictures. Often, the groupings are meant to capture the essence of an archetypal clique. Pop music might sit next to hip-hop, which sits next to heavy metal, and so on. In the Archive408 take, all of the tables save one are populated with the same four groups: The Knight Foundation, Content Magazine, the San Jose Downtown Association and

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15 PAINT & PROFIT In a familiar pattern, the gentrification of San Jose is marching in lockstep with the completion of more murals and works of public art.

Taylor DuBose


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Garden at the Flea. One small table in the corner offers up three more targets: Burning Man artists, tech transplants and “the same 3 ‘local’ artists who get all the $$$.” Above it all there is a caption: “One Idea for a San Jose version of the Where Are You Sitting meme.” For those less familiar with the convoluted system of municipalities, philanthropic organizations and nonprofits, which work together to pay artists to paint murals and erect sculptures in public places, here’s a quick rundown of who these players are and why they may have made this list:

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• The Knight Foundation, through its Knight Cities program, provides grants to local arts groups. Victoria Rogers, vice president for arts for Knight, says her organization funds art because it is essential for a healthy democracy. “It is the power of art to connect us to each other and to place,” she says. “The power of art to get us to question our beliefs and our opinions and to see ourselves in the other.” However, off the record, a number of individuals interviewed for this story criticized the foundation for playing favorites—catering to individuals who are white or present as white, come from wealthier families, and have a firm grasp on the bureaucratic and buzzy language of grant-speak.

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• Content Magazine was founded as an independent publication focused on the local arts community; however, today the cultural cheerleader is the recipient of more than $75,000 in city grants since being absorbed into the publicly funded non-profit SVCreates three years ago. In addition to the $25,000 in annual taxpayer dollars that Content receives, SVCreates channels $20,000 a year from San Jose’s Office of Cultural Affairs into a workshop series that trains artists in marketing, cultural equity and PUB DATE: 00/00/15 financial literacy.

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• The Downtown Association is responsible for the likes of Music ISSUE NUMBER: Metro Silicon Valley 15XX and Downtown Ice, in the Park 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000 among other regular events. • And the Garden at the Flea,

opened earlier this year, is perhaps most easily summed up as a hipster addition to the San Jose Flea Market; created in partnership with Public Space Authority, a local “placemaking” firm founded by the creators of San Jose Made and Moveable Feast, the Garden aims to draw millennials back to the Flea and to capitalize on the soonto-be-completed BART terminal at the Berryessa Transit Center. • Then there’s that table off in the corner. Over the past couple years, a program spearheaded by Kerry Adams Hapner, director of the city’s cultural affairs division, has directed taxpayer money to bring large art installations first unveiled at Burning Man to downtown public spaces. The annual festival held in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert has of late become shorthand for a very specific kind of techie—so oblivious to their own privilege that they would claim that a trip to the Burn is evidence of their gumption and tenacity, when it is, in truth, little more than a display of their impressive collection of expensive camping gear and their generous vacation package. • As for those three artists—the ones getting all the money from organizations like the Knight Foundation—one might make an educated guess.

PLAYING THE GAME Headed by Erin Salazar, Ellina M. Yin and Haley Cardamon, Local Color bills itself as “a womanowned and operated arts non-profit organization,” which advocates for the local “creative community of artists, producers and entrepreneurs.” Salazar founded Local Color, then called the Exhibition District, in 2015. Over the course of her time running the organization, Salazar and her team have gone from drawing the ire of city officials by painting murals— without authorization—on boarded up downtown buildings, to building a touchy but respectful relationship with downtown developers through projects like the Local Color artists’ collective, which turned the abandoned Ross Dress for Less into


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a performing arts venue and studio space, to becoming the apparent target of online missives like the aforementioned San Jose edition of the Where Y’all Sitting? meme. As with Araujo, the irony is not lost on Salazar. She knows she’s made compromises as she’s worked to grow Local Color. She has also given dozens of artists a low-rent space to hone their craft on their own terms and paid many of the same local artists to show off their abilities to the entire city. She’s done this by playing the game, so to speak, and honing a different kind of craft—grant writing. And she’s proud of that. “We think that the intentional and proactive integration of arts into development cycles is what’s going to maintain our culture and our creatives here in San Jose,” Salazar says, drawing on the kind of polished language that has undoubtedly helped sell organizations like the Knight Foundation and property owners like Valley Title on her projects. Earlier this summer, Knight announced that Local Color was one of seven nonprofit arts groups around the country to be awarded $150,000 to pursue projects aimed at transforming their communities. At the beginning of the year, Local Color convinced Valley Title to allow 100 artists to take paintbrushes and spray cans to the side of its office building 300 S. First St. The “100 Block” project, as it was called, is just one public art project Valley Title

hosted. The building is also home to a four-story-tall mural by How and Nosm, which went up as part of last year’s Pow! Wow! San Jose public art festival. That effort was organized, in large part, by Empire Seven Studios. “If we don’t play with them now, why would we ever expect them to listen to us afterward?” Salazar says. “And why would we want to be an afterthought?”

SING IT It seems that San Jose’s vibrant music scene may have been an afterthought to Team San Jose. On June 12 at 8:50pm, the official Twitter account of TSJ fired off a tweet, which sent the local arts community into a frenzy. “Meet Grace Kelly,” the post began, “a 16-year-old singer-songwriter from Auckland, NZ. She first came to San Jose when she was 8 years old and fell in love with the city.” The linked music video, to a song titled “San Jose,” was intended to introduce the city to the outside world. TSJ serves as “the official destination marketing organization,” promoting San Jose as a destination for business conferences and family vacations, as well as managing performing arts and convention facilities. So far as tourism board commercials go, “San Jose” was pretty standard. Kelly strums her acoustic guitar on a hill high above

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SITTING PRETTY A variation on the ‘Where Y’All Sitting?’ meme—posted by a local blog called 408Archives—takes aim at the power brokers of local public art.


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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the Santa Clara Valley, laughs with a cohort of shiny, happy extras while e-scooting around town and even works in a reference to Willow Glen and the VTA light rail. Other B-roll includes shots of the Tommie Smith and John Carlos statue at San Jose State University, the “Little Moment” mural in Japantown and a Latino band performing at the Flea Market. For many in the city’s arts community, the video was a flashpoint. “Why, oh why @ VisitSanJose?” came one reply. “This was such a missed opportunity to feature a local musician who truly knows the city and represents the diversity and culture of #SanJose.” “Embarrassing,” wrote another. A third user called out the overwhelming whiteness of the video, declaring it a “misrepresentation of the city as a whole.” Assemblyman Ash Kalra (D-San Jose) even entered the fray, pointing out that only a few years ago Rey Resurreccion released “The Hometown.” Resurreccion’s paean to San Jose stands as one of the best songs ever written about this city. Supported by DJ Cutso’s triumphant banda-sampling beat, Resurreccion name-checks Music in the Park, pho, tacos and many more cultural touchstones San Jose denizens will recognize as genuine. “There are SJ natives who represent our city just fine,” Kalra wrote.

BACKLASH The backlash was not limited to Twitter. Local non-profit MALI (the Multicultural Arts Leadership Institute) published an open letter to Team San Jose. Choosing Kelly over a local artist made it “apparent that Team San Jose is not interested in celebrating its own homegrown talent and vibrancy,” the letter stated, adding that MALI and its constituent members “took exception to the notion that, in order to promote San Jose, we need to outsource musical talent and creative production.” “It was a slap in the face for everybody who had worked so hard in so many different ways to make San Jose,” says Salazar, one of many prominent local members of the city’s arts community who signed the letter in solidarity. “It set us back as a city.”

Demone Carter is the senior program manager at the School of Arts and Culture at San Jose’s Mexican Heritage Plaza. He also manages the MALI, a program of the School of Arts and Culture. While it’s true that Team San Jose’s main goal is to get heads in beds and fill the McEnery Convention Center with business conferences and tourists checking out expositions, Carter says TSJ’s marketing materials matter in other ways. “There is a conversation going on both in the national and local arts sector about how to have more diversity, equity and inclusion, and that’s great. But the fact is resources (i.e. grant funding) are not being distributed equitably,” Carter wrote in a statement. “Communities of color are only seeing a fraction of available dollars. What this means is our stories and cultures are not being held up in the same way. In a time when racism and xenophobia are raining down from the highest levels of government, it is crucial for a sector that claims to be progressive to put its money where its mouth is. My work with the Multicultural Arts Leadership Institute is all about pushing for equity in Silicon Valley’s arts ecosystem.” In other words, as the city’s official marketing agency, Team San Jose is responsible for how the world views San Jose. And if they are going to be broadcasting that message, they ought to reaching out to local artists before they look elsewhere.

DISPLACEMENT South Bay native Amine Rastgar, who recently relocated from San Jose to Sacramento, is another artistic casualty of Silicon Valley’s rising cost of living. “I don’t think I would have been able to even get a one-bedroom or a studio apartment by myself ” in San Jose, he says. “I don’t work at Google. I don’t work at Apple. I don’t work at any of those places.” Rastgar’s art is playfully surreal, like a cartoon dream sequence. Earlier this year, he took part in Local Color’s “100 Block” mural project. His piece depicts a potted plant, which has

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sprouted eyeballs and drips smiling water droplets onto the street. As part of Pow! Wow! San Jose, Rastgar painted a large mural on Empire Street, between Sixth and Seventh streets. In it, a pink elephant spraypaints the night sky as a bug-eyed skull shoots lasers from its eyesocket—at least, it did show that until the building was knocked down earlier this year by developers. Rastgar sees a fundamental disconnect between San Jose’s artists, teachers and service workers, and the industry which is driving up the rent for all of them. The way Ragstar views it, while the work he and so many other artists have done may serve as eye candy in a glossy brochure for the latest luxury apartment development, the tenants that developers are attracting aren’t engaging in the local scene in any meaningful way. “The people that move here to take these jobs and homes and space, they’re not really spending money on stuff like art,” he says. “They don’t really consume the culture, and don’t really care too much. Some do—I don’t want to sound cynical—but for the majority, they really don’t.”

A NEW HOME For his part, Araujo can relate to Ragstar. “I lost everything,” he says. However, for the Empire Seven founder, there is a silver lining to his displacement. The developers who will eventually build another housing development on the parcel where E7 once stood reached out to Araujo not long after purchasing the land. And he is now working with them to curate a permanent art space within the development, which TriForge plans to name Empire Seven Apartments in honor of Araujo’s legacy. He was initially skeptical and hesitant to engage. As the child of a single mother, Araujo has had to fight for credibility. He started working at age 9, helping out a vendor at the San Jose Flea Market long before anyone thought to place a beer garden on the grounds. As he grew older, he fell in with the graffiti crowd, which only served to solidify his anti-authoritarian instincts. In 2007, he opened Empire Seven Studios—in his words, “a punk rock

space”—building out a run-down warehouse next to a used tire lot. He organized highly successful shows and brought world-class artists to San Jose. His DIY sensibilities were further entrenched after fellowships turned down his proposals. And so he did what he knew how to do and brought Pow! Wow! to San Jose. Over the course of a single week in October 2017, the artists in town for the festival completed 12 murals. The following year, in 2018, another crop of painters completed 18. Yet while his independent streak has served him well over the years, Araujo says he is working to be more open to collaborations with organizations he had previously siloed himself off from. “I’ve stopped denying people the time of day,” he says. “I’ve learned to take the call, to take the meeting, to stop being so closed off.” He is still wary of the official public art power brokers in Silicon Valley. “Getting funding feels like pulling teeth here,” he says. “You have to constantly convince somebody that you are worthy of their philanthropy.” That said, he’s definitely trying to be more open to everyone working on San Jose’s public art scene. Looking at the “Where Y’All Sitting” meme, he just shakes his head and sighs. “We shouldn’t be so competitive,” he says. In the coming months, Araujo plans to open a new gallery space—just across SeconSecond Street from Notre Dame High School in a small, groundlevel mixed-use space that is part of the Metro Walk Apartments complex. The new location is in a rapidly gentrifying part of town, just around the corner from the underconstruction Sparq development, The Pierce apartments and a pair of recently opened taprooms. When asked whether he worries about getting pushed or priced out of the new gallery at some point, Araujo says no. The way he looks at it, his only job is to continue bringing highquality art to his hometown. “I just want to make sure that I love what I’m doing, and to make sure that it’s really genuine and authentic to us.”

fall arts 22


11 21 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Resident Ballet Company of the Hammer Theatre

2019-2020 Season December 13-24

Fast Forward

Season subscription available now! Single tickets on-sale in September.

March 28

Swan Lake May 16-17

newballet.com

Photo by Chris Conroy

The San Jose Nutcracker


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FALL ARTS

metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

visual art

AWARD-WINNING COMEDY

THE 39 STEPS

1950s MUSICAL REVUE DEC 6 – 22, 2019

SOUTH BAY PREMIERE

THE TIN WOMAN POIGNANT MUSICAL COMEDY

BABY

APR 17 – MAY 10, 2020

SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE MYSTERY OF THE CROWN JEWEL

OCT 25 – NOV 17, 2019

WEST COAST PREMIERE MUSICAL

MAR 13 – APR 5, 2020

FEB 7 – MAR 1, 2020

SEP 13 - OCT 6, 2019

Join us for 4 Musicals, 2 Plays & More! A TAFFETA CHRISTMAS TONY AWARD® WINNING MUSICAL

THE SECRET GARDEN

OH DEAR ‘On My Way’ by El Gato Chimney, is part of the Palo Alto Art Center’s exhibit ‘Encounters,’ running from September through December.

Anderson Collection 2019-2020 Season

314 Lomita Drive, Stanford Anderson.stanford.edu | 650.721.6055

Left of Center 29 North San Pedro Street in San Jose’s historic San Pedro Square

408-679-2330 www.TabardTheatre.org New Beginnings. Tabard .

SEP. 20-SEP. 20, 2020 Subtitled “Five Years of the Anderson Collection at Stanford University,” “Left of Center” celebrates both the fifth anniversary of the museum itself and the innovative artists who’ve lived and worked in the American

West. Curated by current PhD candidates in the Department of Art and Art History, the exhibit will feature a survey of work by 20th century artists who “changed the topography of American modernism.”

Jim Campbell SEP. 5-AUG. 3, 2020 The best thing about going to a Jim Campbell exhibit is that the overhead lights in the galleries are turned off. Only his arrangement of lights brighten up the rooms. Whether it’s


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SHAPING UP ‘Crevice (Topo Series)’ is part of NUMU Los Gatos’ upcoming exhibit, Bernard Trainor: Grounded. video footage of people strolling through a park or patterns of LEDs hanging from the ceiling, he keeps the darkness at bay. This show will place his work “in dialogue” with the Anderson’s permanent collection.

Process and Pattern AUG. 15-FEB. 17, 2020 “Memory, history and making collide” in this group show featuring the work of contemporary artists McArthur Binion, Charles Gaines, Julie Mehretu and Analia Saban. Ostensibly, they share an obsession with pattern-making. How they execute that obsession is what makes each of them unique.

Cantor Arts Center 328 Lomita Drive, Stanford Museum.stanford.edu | 650.723.4177

Richard Diebenkorn OPENS SEP. 4 This solo exhibit of Bay Area artist Richard Diebenkorn (1922-93) focuses on his process and “his shift from figurative to more abstract work.” There’s a robust online component that’s already launched with 29 of his sketchbooks scanned in. Over 1,000 drawings detail the artist’s thought process as his ideas came to life.

The Melancholy Museum: Love, Death and Mourning at Stanford OPENS SEP. 18 Mark Dion has been working for a year on a “cabinet of curiosities” to commemorate the museum’s founding 125 years ago. The Stanford family opened the museum in

memory of Leland Stanford Jr., who died at age 16. To create his Melancholy Museum, Dion was granted access to the original Stanford family collection.

West x Southwest: Edward Weston and Ansel Adams SEP. 26-JAN. 26, 2020

U.S. citizenship required. Equal opportunity employer. Standard messaging and data rates apply.

19TSA006_PAD_JOA_Nonevent_SJC_4c_4-3438x4-8438_Cruz_M.indd 1

This photography exhibit will include over 1,000 photographs by American photographers Weston and Adams, along with works by Edward Curtis, John Gutmann, Helen Levitt, Wright Morris and Gordon Parks.

Jordan Casteel: Returning the Gaze. SEPT. 29-JAN. 5, 2020 “I’ve always had an inclination toward seeing people who might be easily unseen.” Casteel lives in Harlem and paints portraits of the people she runs across in her community. “Returning the Gaze” will be her first solo museum show.

Institute Of Contemporary Art 560 S 1st St, San Jose www.sjica.org, 408.283.8155

Sense of Self NOV. 17-MARCH 15, 2020 Bay Area photographers are after much more than taking selfies. This exhibition will try to “remind us of the enduring power of photographic portraiture to tell stories, break down barriers, and subvert assumptions.” 24

Careers

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Ensuring Safe Travels

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Our officers are responsible for the security of more than 25,000 domestic and outbound international flights a day.

8/13/19 4:52 PM


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2019-2020 Performances San José’s Chicanx/Latinx theater

FALL ARTS VISUAL ART

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October 10 - 20, 2019

Inspiring audiences to feel, think, and act to create a better world

January 11, 2020 LIQUID ABSTRACTION ‘Floating in the Colors’ by Zlata Rabinovich is one of many works on display this fall at KALEID.

April 30 - May 2, 2020

Stas Orlovski: Chimera NOV. 9-MARCH 22, 2020

www.TeatroVision.org

Soviet-era children’s books, Japanese prints and Dutch botanical illustration compete for space in Orlovski’s imagination. His animated projections “fuse Old World sensibilities with New Age technology” and are accompanied by Steve Roden’s soundtrack of acoustic Victorian-era musical instruments.

New Museum Los Gatos (NUMU) 106 E Main St, Los Gatos www.numulosgatos.org | 408.354.2646

Bernard Trainor: Grounded SEP. 27-FEB. 9, 2020 Trainor founded Ground Studio, a landscape architecture firm based in Monterey and Napa. He studied landscape design and horticulture in London and Melbourne. “Grounded” will show Trainor’s paintings, elements of his landscape designs, architectural renderings, site photographs, and studio and plein air sketches.

Triton Museum of Art 1505 Warburton Ave, Santa Clara www.tritonmuseum.org | 408.247.2438

Expressions of Divinity AUG. 31-NOV. 3 A selection of work by te Indian artists Arpana Caur and Devender Singh about the teachings of Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism. Their work “depicts various aspects of Guru Nanak’s travels, visions and poetry.”

Hector Dionicio Mendoza: White Wilderness/ Maleza Blanca AUG. 31-NOV. 3 White Wilderness/Maleza Blanca “explores

the intersection of photography, drawing, digital printing, installation and sculpture.” The wilderness he’s concerned with isn’t an idealized Garden of Eden but the dangerous terrain that’s been “an unsafe space for people of color.”

San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles 520 S 1st St, San Jose www.sjquiltmuseum.org | 408.971.0323

Know Your Meme: Stitching Viral Phenomena OCT. 20–JAN. 12, 2020 The artwork in “Know Your Meme” must “depict, relate to or reference a meme through a textile method such as quilting, embroidery, cross- stitching, knitting and crocheting, weaving, basketry, etc.” and will be curated by the general public online.

Works/San José 365 S Market St, San Jose Workssanjose.org | 408.300.6450

Patterns of Disintegration SEP. 7–OCT. 13 This conceptual group exhibition addresses ecological to societal disintegration, with guest curators Monica Valdez and Emily Van Engel.

Benefit Art Auction NOV. 2–DEC. 7 With the work of more than 100 regional artists, you can start or enhance your own art collection in one of the region’s most eclectic and accessible art auctions. — Jeffrey Edalatpour

fall arts 26


11 25 2 0 19 – 2 0 2 0 S E A S O N

Sunday October 13, 2019

Sunday March 29, 2020

Santa Clara University Recital Hall

San José City Hall Rotunda

First Impressions

Festive Opening to season 29, with the first performance of a delightful new violin concerto and other musical delights! Guest artist Rick Shinozaki, violin

Inferno

On fire... in so many ways... a modern day commentary. Guest artists Jennifer Kloetzel, cello and Jonathan Moerschel, viola

Saturday December 21, 2019 7:30 pm

Sunday November 3, 2019

First United Methodist Church Palo Alto

San José City Hall Rotunda

Mission Santa Clara

Cellissimi

The rich and resonant sound of 8 cellos, with orchestra. Guest artist Patricia Westley, soprano

Sunday January 5, 2020

Happy New Year!

McAfee Performing Arts Center A jazzy way to kick off another trip around the sun. Guest artist Taylor Eigsti, piano

Sunday December 22, 2019 7 pm

Winter’s Gifts: Spirit Conductors Barbara Day Turner and Daniel Hughes

Music by a star-studded roster of composers including local favorites Anica Galindo, Brent Heisinger, Daniel Hughes and Michael Touchi. Our annual winter holiday celebration with The Choral Project. Sunday May 17, 2020

Futures Portfolio 3Below Theatres

Anthony Quartuccio, conductor

TICKETS & TIMES

SJCO.ORG

An impressive array of up and coming artists including cellist Dakota Cotugno, winner of the 2019 Klein Intl. String Competition, the premiere of a work by the winner of the 2020 Allen Strange Memorial Composition Prize, and a musical season finale side-by-side with the SJCO senior youth orchestra!

OR CALL (408) 295 4416

Supported, in part, by a Cultural Affairs grant from the City of San José, and by a grant from Silicon Valley Creates in partnership with the County of Santa Clara and the California Arts Council.

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Music Director/Conductor


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FALL ARTS

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stage 3Below Theaters & Lounge 288 S 2nd St, San Jose 3belowtheaters.com | 408.404.7711

LA VIE DE BOHÈME Explore costumes, illustrations and props from Opera San José’s production of La Bohème.

July 21, 2019 – October 13, 2019 San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles 520 South First Street | San Jose, CA www.sjQuiltMuseum.org

Nine OCT. 17-NOV 10 This stage version of Fellini’s Oscarwinning movie 8½ is also no slouch in the awards department. The original Broadway production in 1982 racked up five Tonys including best musical, and the 2003 reboot got the nod for best revival. As was Fellini’s wont, the show is a surreal celebration of women that takes a hard look at the cost of following your creative vision at the expense of your personal relationships.

Broadway San Jose 255 S Almaden Blvd, San Jose broadwaysanjose.com | 699.242.8555

Jesus Christ Superstar OCT. 22-27 Along with Steely Dan and Beatles albums, the soundtrack of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s rock opera also hung out in my older brother’s record collection. Decades later, I still pretend that Yvonne Elliman is singing “Everything’s Alright” to me when I can’t fall asleep: “Try not to get worried, try not to turn on to/ problems that upset you, oh./Don't you know/everything’s alright, yes, everything’s alright, yes.” It’s such a comforting song that you almost believe that Mary Magdalene will be the one to save her savior.

Blue Man Group NOV. 1-3 Men wrapped in blue second skins, like The Watchmen’s Doctor Manhattan, will soon be looking at San Jose audiences with their disconcerting wide-eyed stares. Mere words don’t seem up to the task of describing the Blue Man Group’s “Speechless” tour, but you can’t mime in print. First, a disclaimer for introverts. You should know that this show includes “large-scale audience participation.” My guess is that “fostering communal moments” means: Plan on playing a tube-based musical instrument. To sum it all up, your days as a passive spectator are at an end!

Miss Saigon NOV. 12-17 Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil’s musical transports Madame Butterfly from turn-of-the-20th-century Japan to the Vietnam War. The sound of helicopters haunts the stage. Will the American soldier do right by the woman he meets or will their wartime love affair end in tragedy? Odds are the whole thing will end in tears.

City Lights Theater 529 S 2nd St, San Jose cltc.org | 408.295.4200

The Wolves SEPT. 19-OCT. 20 After last month’s World Cup win by the US women's national soccer team, the timing couldn’t be better for a staging of Sarah DeLappe’s play. The story centers on a high school girls soccer team whose rallying cry is, “We are the Wolves.” They huddle and chant the phrase together as if their mascot is a spirit animal that can be brought to life. DeLappe shows how the rowdy individuals on the team bond and bicker as they morph into a cohesive pack.


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SHINE ON The Palo Alto Players take on ‘Bright Star’ by Steve Martin.

Hammer Theatre Center 101 Paseo De San Antonio, San Jose hammertheatre.com | 408.924.8501

The Other Mozart SEPT. 26-27 The Mozart family was blessed with more than one musical prodigy. But Amadeus’ sister Nannerl, a.k.a. Maria Anna Walburga Ignatia, got lost in the history books. Sylvia Milo, an actress and violinist, wrote and stars in this one-woman play that brings her back to life. Milo performs the play in and on an 18-foot dress.

The 39 Steps

Los Altos Stage Company

Mark Twain’s River of Song

97 Hillview Ave, Los Altos losaltosstage.org | 650.941.0551

Pride and Prejudice

Admissions SEPT. 5-29

The Wickhams: Christmas at Pemberley NOV. 14-DEC. 15 It’s reported that Lauren Gunderson has become the most-produced playwright in the Western hemisphere, barring the Bard of Avon, by elevating the art of fanfiction. She and Margot Melcon share co-writer status in this ode to Jane Austen’s galaxy of troubled

‘Admissions’ by Los Altos Stage

2 0 1 9 / 2 0 2 0 S EA S O N

“Do you really care about diversity?” That’s the tagline for Joshua Harmon’s play about college admissions. As the head of admissions at an East Coast prep school, Sherri is emphatic about the need to diversify the student body. But when her son applies to an elite college, her personal ambitions for him conflict with her professional values. Harmon’s great at

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The Pianist of Willesden Lane They Promised Her the Moon Ragtime The Book of Will

JOIN US!

theatreworks.org

650.463.1960

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

aristocrats. This new play is a sequel to the sequel Miss Bennett: Christmas at Pemberley. If anyone can fast-track Austenmania into a national Christmas tradition à la The Nutcracker, Gunderson will be the one to do it.


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September 19-October 20, 2019

FALL ARTS STAGE

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by Sarah DeLappe directed by Kimberly Mohne Hill supported by Producer Charlie McCollum

CITY LIGHTS THEATER COMPANY

Tix & info: cltc.org, 408-295-4200

529 South Second St., San Jose, CA 95112

Artistic Director, Josefa Villanueva-Reyes Composer: Tchaikovsky • Choreography: Benjamin Reyes

e

Nutcracker

Santa Clara Ballet’s 46th Annual Production

December 14, 2019: 2:00pm & 7:00pm December 15, 2019: 2:30pm Santa Clara Convention Center www. santaclaraballet.com Tel: 408-247-9178 Email: info@santaclaraballet.com

FEMALE GAZE The Mozarts did not only produce a genius in their son, Wolfgang Amadeus. His sister, Maria Anna Walburga Ignatia was also a gifted artist. taking topical issues and turning them into relatable, human stories.

Palo Alto Players 1305 Middlefield Rd, Palo Alto paplayers.org | 650.329.0891

Bright Star SEPT. 13-29 That wild and crazy guy Steve Martin wrote this musical with the New Bohemians lead singer Edie Brickell. His passion for the banjo means it’s a featured player in just about every number. Bright Star follows a small town girl who wants to make it in the big city. And she does, but it costs her dearly. Self-affirming ballads punctuate parallel love stories. Depending on your mood, the music will feel uplifting or treacly.

The Pear Theatre 1110 La Avenida St, Mountain View thepear.org | 650.254.1148

An Ideal Husband AUG. 23-SEPT. 15 The Pear’s 18th season commences with

this chestnut by Oscar Wilde. Underneath the period-appropriate costumes, there’s a relevant, contemporary theme—political corruption. On the other side of the New Age (the 20th century’s answer to the Age of Enlightenment), it turns out that being greedy in 2019 doesn’t look any different than it did in 1895. If only Wilde’s famous line applied to certain members of the Executive Branch: “At some point, we all have to pay for what we do.”

Sweat OCT. 18-NOV. 10 Lynn Nottage’s 2017 Pulitzer Prize-winning drama takes place during the Great Recession of 2008. A group of co-workers, friends and family members struggle to find or keep their jobs. When someone is given a chance to move into management, and off of backbreaking work on the factory floor, envy and old enmities threaten to tear these long-term relationships apart. Most of the action happens in a neighborhood bar where the community comes together, and where it also starts to disintegrate. Better than an economist’s assessment of the era, Nottage’s writing feels as authentic as documentarian’s film.

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KET

FRIDAYS 10-2

MAY 3-NOV 1 SAN PEDRO SQUARE

Downtown San Jose

FARMERS’ MARKET Sample, Sample, Sample.

Enjoy locally made hummus, cheeses, Indian food, baked goods, garden jams and more.

Ride VTA to the Market

Receive $1 in Carrot Cash. Show your valid VTA Light Rail or Bus Pass at the info table.

A S A N J O S E D O W N TO W N A S S O C I AT I O N P R O D U C T I O N

sjdowntown.com | 4O8.279.1775

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

o se

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metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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FALL ARTS STAGE Music Director Leroy Kromm

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SJSymphonicChoir

Season 96 · 2019–20

@SJSChoir

Saturday, November 23, 2019 · 7:30 pm George Frederic Handel · Messiah performed in its entirety on original instruments with San Jose Baroque Orchestra Saint Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Saratoga

Saturday, December 7, 2019 · 7:30 pm Gerald Finzi · Et in Terra Pax

Guest Appearance with Nova Vista Symphony Church of the Ascension, Saratoga

Monday, December 9, 2019 · 7:30 pm SJSC’s 40th Annual You-Sing-It Messiah

with San Jose Baroque Orchestra and Carols in the Lobby by Vivace Youth Chorus of San Jose California Theatre, San Jose

Monday, December 16, 2019 · 7:30 pm Season of Hope A Free Concert of Seasonal Music

RIVER DANCE ‘Mark Twain’s River of Song’ follows Samuel Clemens and Co. on a trip down the Mississippi.

Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph, San Jose

Saturday, March 21, 2020 · 7:30 pm Johann Nepomuk Hummel · Te Deum in D Major Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart · Regina Coeli, K. 276 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart · Grand Mass in C minor, K. 427

South Bay Musical Theatre

with Cal Arte Ensemble Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph, San Jose

13777 Fruitvale Ave, Saratoga southbaymt.com | 408.266.4734

Sunday, May 31, 2020 · 3:00 pm Giuseppe Verdi · Messa da Requiem

A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder

with Nova Vista Symphony California Theatre, San Jose

Ordinary People Making Extraordinary Music We hold auditions in September and January. For more information, please visit the “contact us” page of our website, www.sanjosesymphonicchoir.org | 408.995.3318 SJSC is supported, in part, by a Cultural Affairs grant from the City of San Jose, and also by SVCreates, in partnership with the County of Santa Clara.

SEP. 27 – OCT. 19 Based on Roy Homimam’s book Israel Rank: The Autobiography of a Criminal, this musical also takes its inspiration from the Alec Guinness film Kind Hearts and Coronets. It’s an Agatha Christie mystery that’s been turned on its head by Monty Python’s embrace of surrealism and absurdity.

The Tabard Theater Company 29 N San Pedro St, San Jose tabardtheatre.org | 408.679.2330

Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of the Crown Jewel SEPT. 13-OCT. 6 A musical based on a Holmes and Watson adventure. Expect wild goose chases around London, an appearance by Queen Victoria and street urchins singing crowd-pleasing songs like “The Game’s Afoot.”

TheatreWorks 500 Castro St, Mountain View theatreworks.org | 650.463.1960

The 39 Steps

espionage film, but Patrick Barlow’s parody of it. Only four actors play every part in the movie, meaning they each have dozens of roles and quick costume changes. The spy story definitely takes a backseat to the comic hijinks.

Mark Twain’s River of Song OCT. 2-27 If you missed veteran actor Dan Hiatt singing in ACT’s recent production of Vanity Fair, he leads the cast of Randal Myler and Dan Wheetman’s River of Song. Join Mark Twain and friends as they travel down the Mississippi River while singing traditional songs like “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child” and “Deep River Blues.”

Dragon Productions Theatre Company 2120 Broadway, Redwood City dragonproductions.net | 650.493.2006

Hickorydickory SEPT. 6-29 Marisa Wegrzyn’s play Hickorydickory won the Wasserstein Prize in 2009. In it, she asks, What if you knew the exact moment when you’ll die? She sets the play in a suburban Chicago watch and clock repair shop. If you’re wondering for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.

Anne of the Thousand Days NOV. 1-24 Poor Anne Boleyn. The second wife of King Henry VIII never saw her daughter, Elizabeth I, take the throne. Maxwell Anderson’s play begins at the end of her life, as she reflects on her marriage, her husband and what it was like to be a queen.

AUG. 21-SEPT. 15

—Jeffrey Edalatpour

No, not an adaptation of Hitchcock’s 1935

fall arts 32


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FALL ARTS

bleeding edge community art fall exhibitions at works: patterns of disintegration

ecological to societal disintegrations with guest curators Monica Valdez and Emily Van Engel.

opening: friday sept 6, 7–10pm exhibit: sept 7–oct 13 hours: fri 12–6, sat/sun 12–4 benefit art auction

build a collection and support community! 110 artists in the region’s most accessible auction!

opening: friday nov 1, 7–10pm exhibit: nov 2–dec 7 gala auction: sat, dec 7, 7pm works/san josé 365 south market street workssanjose.org with support from the members of works and:

works art: jackie baxton in “patterns of disintegration”

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music The Wood Brothers and Colter Wall AUG. 22 San Jose Civic | sanjosetheaters.org The folk duo of Chris and Oliver Wood comes from a family immersed in Americana musical traditions. But the Woods Brothers’ version of Americana isn’t all twang; it’s an allencompassing style that draws from many American forms: blues, r&b, soul and jazz included. To date they’ve released six albums of original material, a covers collection and four live sets. Their current tour finds them teaming up for a co-headlining spot with Canadian singer-songwriter Colter Wall, an artist with a similarly rich and eclectic musical foundation.

Kris Kristofferson & the Strangers AUG. 23 Mountain Winery, Saratoga mountainwinery.com One of the foremost songwriters in country music, Kris Kristofferson scored some of his greatest successes penning songs that would be hits for other artists. “For the Good Times,” “Help Me Make it Through the Night,” “Sunday Morning Comin' Down” and the smash “Me and Bobby McGee” helped establish him as a major creative force. A member of the Highwaymen supergroup, he collaborated with Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson. Nearly 50 years after the release of his self-titled debut album, Kristofferson continues to record and tour.

The Crystal Method AUG. 23 The Ritz | theritzsanjose.com While most of the biggest names in electronica and EDM come from Great Britain (The Prodigy, The Orb, Aphex Twin, Orbital) or Europe (Daft Punk, Kraftwerk), the United States has long had a thriving scene as well.

The National


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Wee Willie Walker & the Anthony Paule Soul Orchestra AUG. 28 Club Fox, Redwood City Soul singer Wee Willie Walker got his start in Memphis singing gospel. Back in the 1950s he was a member of a group called the Redemption Harmonizers, touring the south. By 1960 he had moved to Minneapolis, where he still lives today. But he frequently returned to Memphis; there he started recording secular sides for Goldwax Records, nine in all. By the ’70s he was fronting soul/r&b bands in Minneapolis. These days he has a monthly residency at St. Paul'sMinnesota Music Café. At age 77, this energetic performer is a master of soul, blues, r&b and gospel.

Smashing Pumpkins and Noel Gallagher’s

High Flying Birds AUG. 31 Shoreline Amphitheatre | Mountain View One of the most popular bands of the 1990s, Smashing Pumpkins racked up two Grammys as well as awards from MTV during their first heyday. The Chicago-based group led by guitarist Billy Corgan ended its first run in 2000, but last year Corgan and two original members (guitarist James Iha and drummer Jimmy Chamberlin) got back together. The reunited lineup released its 10th album, Shiny and Oh So Bright, Vol. 1 / LP: No Past. No Future. No Sun last November.

Sonido Clash Music Fest SEPT. 1 School of Arts & Culture @MHP sonidoclash.com For the fourth straight year, Sonido Clash goes deep into the emerging sounds of Latinx alternative music with about two dozen acts from across the diaspora on four stages, as well as live poetry, a panel discussion, a car show, a dance workshop and tons of other stuff. Headlining this year is the Puerto Rico-born duo Nina Sky (remember the 2004 hit Move Ya Body?). Also on the slate are dream-pop artist Katzu Oso, DJ/producer Dave Nada, Chicano visual artist El Oms, Madrid-based reggaeton/ dance artist Ms. Nina, the GaGa-esque queer ranchera singer San Cha, and many others. Too much pleasure in one place and time. It’s all at San Jose’s beautiful Mexican Heritage Plaza.

The National SEPT. 1 Frost Amphitheater at Stanford University live.stanford.edu Since emerging from New York back at the turn of the millennium, The National has become both an indie-rock powerhouse and a jumping-off point for a lot of other projects, from political activism to avant-garde performance (Who can forget the band playing one song for six hours?). The National is touring to wave the flag for its newly released eighth album I Am Easy To Find. This show, however, may have quite a contingent there primarily to see the opening act, the winsome Canadian indie pop band Alvvays, presenting a dilemma for fans: which tour T-shirt to buy?

Steely Dan

2019 - 2020 SEASON Saturday, September 14, 2019, 7:30pm Hammer Theatre, San Jose Evangeline . Helen Crane . American Premiere Romeo and Juliet Suite No. 2 . Sergei Prokofiev Symphonic Dances . Sergei Rachmaninoff

Saturday, February 1, 2020, 7:30pm

Hammer Theatre, San Jose Cuban Overture . George Gershwin The Love for Three Oranges Suite . Sergei Prokofiev The Rite of Spring . Igor Stravinsky

Saturday, March 28, 2020, 3:30pm Martin Luther King Library, Atrium, SJSU Symphony No. 5 . Movements 1 and 4 Ludwig van Beethoven

Saturday, March 28, 2020, 7:30pm The Rotunda, City Hall San Jose Symphony No. 7 . Jean Sibelius Violin Concerto . Alexander Glazunov with Ken Lin, Violin Soloist Symphony No. 5 . Ludwig van Beethoven

Saturday, June 13, 2020, 7:30pm McAfee Center, Saratoga High School Alborada del Gracioso . Maurice Ravel Symphony No. 5 . Gustav Mahler

ALL CONCERTS FREE ADMISSION DONATIONS ACCEPTED

www.cambriansymphony.org

SEPT. 17-18 Mountain Winery, Saratoga mountainwinery.com Arch, cynical, brainy, smoother than 20-year-old scotch, the music of Steely Dan in the 1970s was a respite for the audiophile who needed a break from the theatrics of prog-rock and punk.

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Supported, in part, by a Cultural Affairs grant from the city of San Jose.

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

At the top of that scene is The Crystal Method. Their 1997 debut album, Vegas, sold more than a million copies and set the tone for the future: insistent beats, an emphasis on melody, deep grooves and a dramatic, moody dance floor aesthetic.


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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FALL ARTS MUSIC

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Kris Kristofferson

Back in the day, the mystique of the duo Donald Fagen and Walter Becker was that they were much more comfortable making records with all their super-cool musician friends than putting on shows—and what awesome records they were. All that’s changed now. Since Becker’s death in 2017, Fagen has endured with a live act that will often perform many of Steely Dan’s landmark albums—Pretzel Logic, Aja, Gaucho, etc.—from start to finish.

Rahat Fateh Ali Khan OCT. 5 Event Center, San Jose State University sanjose.eventful.com Anyone looking to take a deep dive into the ethereal and mind-expanding vibe of Pakistani devotional music, known as Qawwali, should not waste time and instead go directly to Rahat Fateh Ali Khan. The 45-year-old singer is part of the first family of Qawwali, as the nephew to the form’s modern master, the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. (His father and grandfather were also revered Qawwali singers). The genre dates back close to 700 years and features spiritual music and poetry, often sung in Urdu or Persian, and is still part of Sufi mystical practice today.

Iron & Wine + Calexico OCT. 6 Mountain Winery, Saratoga mountainwinery.com It would be stretching it to call them a supergroup, but the adventurous roots-

rock duo Calexico and the neo-folk singer/ songwriter Sam Beam, who performs under the moniker Iron & Wine, have combined forces in a stunning new recording called Years to Burn. Beam and Calexico’s Joey Burns and John Covertino first began playing together almost 15 years ago when they made a record called In the Reins. But the new album represents a deeper commitment to the collaboration, combining Calexico’s cinematic mood setting and Iron & Wine’s delicate vocal harmonies. What you have left is something that might surprise fans of both.

deadmau5: cube V3 tour OCT. 11-12 San Jose Civic | sanjosetheaters.org Nobody does enormous on-stage multimedia cube structures quite like deadmau5 (aka Joel Zimmerman), the brilliant Canadian DJ and mouse-ear aficionado. Zimmerman has been performing with his giant cube for close to a decade, but this year he’s unveiling “Cube V3,” the latest iteration of his mind-blowing stage show. According to tour scuttlebutt, the new cube—which weighs about 7,000 lbs.—is much more flexible in how it rotates on stage, all to deliver the visual stimulation equal to deadmau5’s audio output. The cube requires a crew of roughly 40 people and eight to 12 hours to build at every venue. Love him or not, there’s no arguing deadmau5 is a committed showman who wants to make sure his fans get their money’s worth. And San Jose fans get two nights!


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Chucho Valdes

Jon Batiste

OCT. 18

NOV. 2

Bing Concert Hall, Stanford | live.stanford.edu

Bing Concert Hall, Stanford University live.stanford.edu

Between them, Cuban pianist and bandleader Chucho Valdes and his late father Bebo account for an incalculable influence in the realm of modern Afro-Cuban jazz. Bebo Valdes was, of course, one of the most high-profile bandleaders during the Golden Age of Cuban music. Bebo fled from Cuba in 1960, leaving behind his son. Later, Chucho not only founded the Cuban supergroup Irakere, but he became an international superstar on the Blue Note label. At 77, he’s still pushing boundaries— in recent months, Chucho has turned his attention to honoring his father on the 100th anniversary of his birth.

Three Dog Night OCT. 24 Fox Theater, Redwood City | foxrwc.com For the record, “three dog night” is an Australian camping term, to indicate a night so cold it requires sleeping with three dogs to stay warm. What that has to do with the L.A. rock band of the same name is unclear. But back in the early ’70s, Three Dog Night dominated the pop charts with a seemingly endless string of singable, faintly R&Bflavored hits, including Harry Nilsson’s “One,” Hoyt Axton’s “Joy to the World” and Randy Newman’s “Mama Told Me Not to Come.”

It must be a mixed bag to land a gig as a latenight-TV bandleader. On one hand, it’s an elite club, a sweet paycheck and a chance to connect with a potentially huge audience. On the other, you’re never allowed to show what you can really do. Fans of Late Night with Stephen Colbert will easily recognize Batiste, who fronts the Colbert house band. They may not know that Batiste has been part of the next generation of musicians steeped in the rich culture of New Orleans jazz and R&B. His 2018 record Hollywood Africans is a good place to start.

Caifanes NOV. 10 San Jose Civic | sanjosetheaters.org North of the Rio Grande, even after 30-plus years together, Caifanes is still only well known to a cult-like rock-en-Español audience. But in their native Mexico, the band ranks among alt-rock’s greatest acts, combining ambitious themes of progressive rock and grand U2-style melodies with Latin rhythms and Spanish lyrics. The band’s heyday was back in the early ’90s, but Caifanes—still fronted by the charismatic vocalist Saul Hernandez—is back with their first new recording in 25 years, Heridos. —Wallace Baine and Bill Kopp

fall arts 38

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Jon Batiste


10 36 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

EXPERIENCE THE MAGIC OF THE

Nov. 9, 2019 @ 2:30pm Nov. 9, 2019 @ 7:30pm Nov. 10, 2019 @ 1:30pm

Feb. 22, 2020 @ 2:30pm Feb. 22, 2020 @ 7:30pm Feb. 23, 2020 @ 1:30pm

Apr. 4, 2020 @ 2:30pm Apr. 4, 2020 @ 7:30pm Apr. 5, 2020 @ 1:30pm

Single tickets now on sale

Single tickets on sale Nov 9th

Single tickets on sale Feb 22nd

HARRY POTTER characters, names and related indicia are © & ™ Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. WIZARDING WORLD trademark and logo © & ™ Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. Publishing Rights © JKR. (s19)


Order all three and secure the same seats fOr the series. the final three films with epic scOres perfOrmed live

All performAnces Are At sAn Jose center for the performing Arts symphonysiliconvalley.org • 408 286-2600 Part of the Harry Potter™ Film Concert Series

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

FILMS WITH A LIVE ORCHESTRA

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Italian American Heritage Foundation proudly presents the

ITALIAN FAMILY FESTA NEW — FROM ITALY

August 24 & 25

KID’S ACTIVITIES

History Park San Jose

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classical

ITALIAN FLAGTHROWERS

WINE TASTING

MUSIC

COOKING STAGE

ARTS & CRAFTS

MANGIA!

GRAPE STOMP

SAT 11-8pm

FALL ARTS

FREE ADMISSION

SUN 11-6pm

italianfamilyfestasj.org | 408.293.7122 | @italianfestasj

Opera San Jose

New Ballet

California Theatre, San Jose operasj.org | 408.437.4450

The Corinthian Grand Ballroom, San Jose newballet.com | 408.924.8501

Die Fledermaus

Von Rothbart’s Masquerade

SEP. 14-29

OCT. 13

The Waltz King captures 19th-century Vienna in all its glory and vice. Premiering in 1851, this is one of Strauss’ most renowned operettas. In order to get back at Eisenstein for a practical joke, Falke develops a masterful plan of playful vengeance—with plenty of twists and turns along the way.

An All Hallow’s Eve that’s a little more Tschaikovsky than Monster Mash, this ball crawls with spooky figures, including characters from Swan Lake and plenty of food and drink. A prize will be awarded for the most original and inspiring costume, and New Ballet performs a little something for the occasion—in between all the other boogiewoogie, of course.

Hansel and Gretel NOV. 16-DEC. 1 It all starts with two siblings who want a snack—and who wouldn’t go inside that gingerbread house? It’s fitting that this Engelbert Humperdinck production takes the stage right around Thanksgiving, and while the audience can’t get a hunk of the witch’s tasty goods, any hunger for operatic whimsy may very well be satiated.

Palo Alto Philharmonic paphil.org

Baroque Concert SEP. 7 First Lutheran Church, Palo Alto Soloists and ensembles tackle classical epics


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AUGUST 23 – SEPTEMBER 5 PRESENTED BY:

ENJOY EXCLUSIVE SPECIAL GUESTS & SPEAKERS! BEAUTIFULLY RESTORED PRESENTATIONS LARGE AUDITORIUM SONY 4K PROJECTION & 7.1 DOLBY WEEK ONE. | AUGUST 23RD - AUGUST 29TH GONE WITH THE WIND AUGUST 23, 26*, 28 Dinner Show Monday, August 26th includes Jonas Wilkerson's Devilish Eggs, Twelve Oaks BBQ Short Ribs with Plantation Potato Salad, Bonnie's Best Ever Chocolate Cake LAWRENCE OF ARABIA AUGUST 24, 27*, 29 Dinner Show Tuesday, August 27th includes Hummus Platter; Chicken Shawarma with Cabbage, Carrot, and Mint Salad; Baklava

from the 16th to the 18th century, including compositions by Bach, Vivaldi, Telemann, Corelli and Bruhns.

Heaven and Earth OCT. 19 Cubberly Theatre, Palo Alto In this concert, which channels the whole of creation in all its glorious splendor, soprano Heidi Moss will sing for Samuel Barber’s Tennessean symphony Knoxville: Summer of 1915, Op. 24, as well as Symphony No. 4 by Germany’s Gustav Mahler.

Fall Chamber Concert NOV. 9 First Lutheran Church, Palo Alto This November, the Philharmonic’s talented musicians mark the changing of the seasons, playing in wind, string and brass ensembles, and filling the autumn air with classical reverie.

steinwaysociety.com | 408.300.5635

APOCALYPSE NOW AUGUST 23, 24, 29 FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA'S NEW FINAL RESTORATION Special Menu all week includes Spring Rolls with Peanut Sauce, Grilled Lemongrass Marinated Chicken Bahn Mi Sandwich

Jon Nakamatsu

TITANIC | AUGUST 25

Steinway Society SEP. 21 McAfee Performing Arts and Lecture Center, Saratoga Born in San Jose in 1968, Jon Nakamatsu is a Stanford graduate and classical pianist who’s played all over the globe. He’s placed favorably on the Billboard classical music charts and has taken gold in the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. For this recital, he’ll play Chopin, Schubert and Brahms.

Anna Dmytrenko OCT. 27 Hammer Theatre Center, San Jose An evening of Rachmaninoff and Beethoven conjured by the mesmerizing UkrainianAmerican classical pianist Anna Dmytrenko. Smitten with the keys since she was 4 years old, Dmytrenko has studied at Julliard and the Royal Academy of Music in London.

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*DINNER SHOW | $42.50 | INCLUDES MOVIE, DINNER, TAXES & TIP. REGULAR ADMISSION PRICES FOR ALL OTHER PRESENTATIONS

WEEK TWO. | AUGUST 30TH - SEPTEMBER 5TH LORD OF THE RINGS PETER JACKSON’S COMPLETE THEATRICAL VERSIONS THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING** AUGUST 30**, SEPTEMBER 1 THE TWO TOWERS** AUGUST 31, SEPTEMBER 1, 2** THE RETURN OF THE KING** AUGUST 31, SEPTEMBER 1, 3** **DINNER SHOW | $32.50 | INCLUDES MOVIE, DINNER, TAXES & TIP. REGULAR ADMISSION PRICES FOR ALL OTHER PRESENTATIONS

1875 SO. BASCOM AVE. CAMPBELL | PRUNEYARDCINEMAS.COM | (408) 717-4712

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

EGG-CITING Opera San Jose presents Johann Strauss II’s witty opperetta, ‘Die Fledermaus.’


FALL ARTS CLASSICAL

39 Greg Ramar

metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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SPOOKY STEPS The New Ballet celebrates Halloween with a costume party this fall.

Heejae Kim NOV. 17 Independence High School, San Jose Critically acclaimed South Korean classical pianist Heejae Kim has made waves globally with her passion and craft. Performing and winning awards and competitions internationally, she’s also been noted as audience favorite at the Leeds Piano Competition. The evening’s program starts with Rachmaninoff, followed by Mussorgsky and Schumann.

San Jose Chamber Orchestra sjco.org | 408.295.4416

First Impressions

the 2019-2020 season, the San Jose Chamber Orchestra plays the Baroque Don Quixote Suite by Telemann and the Brazilian-American Clarice Assad’s Impressions. Another first: the premiere of Memoir of an Ordinary Man by contemporary composer Durwynne Hsieh.

SJCO with sjDANCEco FRI, OCT. 18-19 California Theatre To get their 17th season rolling, sjDANCEco teams up with the San Jose Chamber Orchestra. It’s a powerful program, including a piece that pays tribute to Nelson Mandela and the world premiere of “This is where/I Begin,” whose choreography tells of the DACA/ Dreamer experience in the United States.

Cellissimi NOV. 3

OCT. 13

San Jose City Hall Rotunda

Santa Clara University Recital Hall

A rough translation of “Cellissimi” would be

First impressions make a difference. To begin

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11 41 2 0 1 9 - 2 0 S E A S O N

Set #1:

Set #4:

October 5–6, 2019 Conductor: Carlos Vieu

Conductor: Shih-Hung Young Soloist: Lara St. John, violin

Peacock Variations Film with Full Score The Red Violin & Tchaikovsky January 24–26, 2020

u

Kodály: Variations on a Hungarian Theme

– Peacock Variations u TchaiKovsKy: Symphony No. 6 – Pathétique

u

corigliano: The Red Violin

Set #5:

Nakamatsu Partners & Dances Plays Beethoven October 26–27, 2019 Set #2:

Conductor: JoAnn Falletta Soloists: Robin Mayforth & Evan Kahn u lili Boulanger: D’un soir triste u lili Boulanger: D’un matin de printemps u david amram: Partners: Violin & Cello

Double Concerto (SSV co-commission) u rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances Set #3:

Khachaturian & Brahms

December 7–8, 2019 Conductor: Pietro Rizzo Soloist: Nareh Arghamanyan, piano u u u

glinKa: Ruslan and Ludmilla Overture KhachaTurian: Piano Concerto Brahms: Symphony No. 2

March 21–22, 2020 Conductor: John Nelson Soloist: Jon Nakamatsu, piano u u u

BeeThoven: Piano Concerto No. 2 BeeThoven: Choral Fantasy schumann: Symphony No. 4

Set #6:

Mozart, Lutoslawski & Brahms May 9–10, 2020 Conductor: Tito Muñoz Soloist: Giora Schmidt, violin

u mozarT: Symphony No. 35 – Haffner u luToslawsKi: Concerto for Orchestra u Brahms: Violin Concerto

Set #7:

Schubert & A Sea Symphony All performances at CALIFORNIA THEATRE

For tickets and Subscriptions Call 408-286-2600 Or visit: www.symphonysiliconvalley.org

Box Office Open Weekdays 10-5 Just north of theatre @ 325 South First St

June 6–7, 2020 Conductor: Tatsuya Shimono Soloists: Symphony Silicon Valley Chorale u u

schuBerT: Symphony No. 8 – Unfinished vaughan williams: A Sea Symphony

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

S Y M P H O N Y


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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FALL ARTS CLASSICAL

MUGGLE TROUBLE As droves of death eaters enter the non-wizard world, Harry and his friends must think quick and act fast.

something like “cello-licious.” Eight cellists and their strings join soprano Patricia Westley to give life to the music of Bach and VillaLobos, as well as contemporary composers Gustavo Taveres and Michael Touchi.

Symphony Silicon Valley symphonysiliconvalley.org | 408.286.2600

Peacock Variations & Tchaikovsky OCT. 5-6 C

M

Y

CM

MY

CY

California Theatre This season opener calls in the compositions of a revered Hungarian and a legendary Russian. From Zoltán Kodály—who invented the well-known Kodály method for musical pedagogy—comes the Peacock Variations, a piece based on a folk tune of his homeland. Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6 takes the second slot on the program.

CMY

K

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Partners & Dances OCT. 26-27 California Theatre The night kicks off with two pieces by early 20th-century prodigy Lili Boulanger, who composed at least 33 works before she died at age 24. Next, a David Amram concerto honoring the styles of famous pairs Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, Lester Young and Billie Holiday, Machito Grillo and Celia Cruz. Lastly, Rachmaninoff’s Symphonic Dances, saxophone solo and all.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince NOV. 9-10 San Jose Center for the Performing Arts CineConcerts concludes the Harry Potter series with a three-film program beginning in November. For this go, the symphony plays the live score while screening the sixth installment of J.K. Rowling’s box-office sensations—He Who Shall Not Be Named returns, and he’s not looking for a truce. The series continues in February and April.

Winchester Orchestra of San Jose Lincoln Glen Church, San Jose winchesterorchestra.com | 408.866.5302

October Opening OCT. 6 It’s not often one witnesses a composer conducting his own work. Guest conductor Henry Mollicone commences the orchestral season with Fanfare, an adaptation from his co-written opera Lady Bird, which tells the story of First Lady Johnson on LBJ’s Southern campaign tour after the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964. The rest of the program includes Holst, Beethoven, Dvorak and Tchaikovsky.

fall arts 44


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Office of Cultural Affairs presents

Plaza de Cesar Chavez Downtown San José

Dance Lessons Live Music Beer Garden Aug. 22 Vogue Aug. 29 Country Line Dance Sept. 5

Swing

Sept. 12 K-Pop Sept. 19 Bachata Sept. 26 Disco Oct. 3

Merengue & Cumbia citydancesj

#408Creates | #DTSJ | #CityDanceSJ Knight Foundation • Adobe • Visit San Jose San Jose Downtown Association City of San José: Parks, Recreation & Neighborhood Services, Environmental Services and Transportation

Parking info: ParkSJ.org

Dance Now Think Later

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Free Every Thursday Aug. 15–Oct. 3 6–9 p.m.


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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FALL ARTS FILM

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film

By Richard von Busack

T

HEY SHOULD CREATE an algorithm with the power to predict nostalgia cycles. That way, film producers would know what year would be popular with an audience in the near future, and plan accordingly. We’re in a deep ’70s-’80s cycle now, unaffected by the box office failure of the 1970s set The Kitchen. The fall season includes nostalgia for the funk of Harlem and the squalor of Gotham.

The studly Rudy Ray Moore (19272008) was an avatar of rap: “I was through with it before they knew what to do with it!’” A maker of XXX comedy records, the rhymester Moore was the creator of the indomitable and cross-platforming Dolemite, in several outlandishly euphoric LPs and blacksploitation movies. His Dolemite possesses unquenchable mojo: “Mule kicked me and didn’t bruise my hide/a rattlesnake bite me and crawled off and died!” Moore was profiled by San Jose-raised documentarian Ross Guidici in The Legend of Dolemite: Bigger and Badder (2003); the upcoming DOLEMITE IS MY NAME, with Eddie Murphy as Moore (September, Netflix) looks like a hit. (Prepare for it by watching Moore’s sauteeing of The Exorcist, 1977’s Petey Wheatstraw, the Devil’s Son in Law). A far more menacing entertainer turns up in JOKER (Oct. 4). Expect some sympathy for a comic book devil, with Joaquin Phoenix starring as just one more mama’s boy who gets the mark of Gotham branded into him. The previews show an urban hellhole as bad as New York at its worst in the ’70s. From The Hangover 3, we learned that Joker director Todd Phillips’ idea of a joke is a giraffe getting decapitated, so there should be authentic darkness in this story of a man who laughs last. Similarly, there’ll be more merry pranks from that jolly Pennywise the Dancing Clown, as IT, CHAPTER 2

TO INFINITY Brad Pitt heads Neptune to confront his long-lost father in ‘Ad Astra.’

hits theaters Sep. 5. On the roster of horror-clowns, the one and only Adolph Hitler tops the list. JOJO RABBIT is the story of a little Nazi boy upset to learn that his mom is hiding a Jewish girl in the attic; that’s when he turns to advice from his imaginary pal Der Fuhrer (played by Taika Waititi, who directs). More Stephen King horror in DOCTOR SLEEP (Nov. 8), the sequel to The Shining; you don’t get over the kind of things Danny Torrance saw at the Overlook Hotel easily. Dan (Ewan MacGregor) is


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RINA BANERJEE: Make Me a Summary of the World through Oct 6, 2019

UPCOMING

NETWORKED: Digital Art

from the Permanent Collection Sep 22, 2019–Aug 9, 2020

WITH DRAWN ARMS

BETA SPACE: PAE WHITE

Nov 1, 2019–Apr 5, 2020

WOODY DE OTHELLO

through Jan 19, 2020

Nov 1, 2019–Apr 5, 2020

NOW FREE

for youth 17 and under and College students and teachers with valid ID.

110 South Market St.

San_Jose_Museum_of_Art

BURNING MAN

all grown up, with a headful of demons and a taste for booze, just like dear old dad; the precariously sober telepath has gone to work in a New England hospice—a fine place to be besieged by angry ghosts. DON’T LET GO (Aug. 30) has Selma’s David Oyelowo as a police detective who gets a phone call from the past— from his murdered niece; together they try to stop the crime before it occurs. AD ASTRA (Sep. 20) and LUCY IN THE SKY (Oct. 4) have thematic similarities: catastrophic space

journeys that leave more questions than answers. Brad Pitt in Ad Astra heads to Neptune to find out what happened to his astronaut father—it seems to be some kind of Heart of Darkness in Space situation. Alienated by her space travels, the title’s Lucy (Natalie Portman) has serious trouble adjusting to Earth. And later this year, Amazon Prime drops season four of the densest space TV series ever, THE EXPANSE (Dec. 13). The King and Queen descend

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endangered clothing

Moon Zooom vintage clothing store

1630 w. san carlos st. 408.287.5876 www.moonzooom.com

sjmusart.org

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

ON VIEW


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FALL ARTS FILM

DADDY ISSUES Ewan MacGregor plays Danny Torrance, son of Jack, in the sequel to Stephen King’s ‘The Shining.’

SEPTEMBER 13-29, 2019

Music, Book & Story by

STEVE MARTIN

Music, Lyrics & Story by

EDIE BRICKELL

upon DOWNTON ABBEY (Sep. 12) the film spin-off of the gun-blazing, two-fisted TV series. PAIN AND GLORY (October) by Pedro Almodovar is a semi-autobiographical film about a director’s decline in health and skills; Antonio Banderas stars. KNIVES OUT (Nov. 27) is Rian (The Last Jedi) Johnson’s emulation of Agatha Christie, with a group of murderous, dissembling family members getting grilled by a detective (Daniel Craig). WHERE IS MY ROY COHN? (Oct. 16)— the title comes from a bleat Donald Trump made when facing legal action—is a documentary about the phenomenally evil New York lawyer. Cohn started his career as one of Sen. Joe McCarthy’s hatchetmen and ended up as a mouthpiece for the Mafia … and Trump. Maleficent (Angelina Jolie) would have admired Cohn; Jolie once again dons the horns for MALEFICENT 2 (Oct. 18). Not evil, just mysterious and ookie: the animated ADDAMS FAMILY (Oct. 11) with Oscar Isaacs and Charlize Theron

voicing Gomez and Morticia, and Snoop Dogg as the voice of It. Fall film series include a program of revived epics at the Pruneyard Cinema (see page 48). First, the 10th SILICON VALLEY AFRICAN FILM FESTIVAL (Oct. 4-6), and then the 27th SILICON VALLEY JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL (Oct. 27-Nov. 17). One of the best documentary festivals in the world—that’s UNAFF , running at various South Bay locations Oct. 17-27. UNAFF 2019’s schedule hasn’t been announced, but the theme is “Scales of Justice.” One special screening Nov. 11 is a reprise of WELCOME TO NORTH KOREA (2011), a revelatory documentary about that walledoff country, as seen by a group of Czech tourists who were expressly warned not to photograph the place. Being Czech, they smiled, nodded respectfully to authority, and did it anyway. Here’s to disobedience as an essential element of cinema.

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FALL ARTS FILM

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LONGFORM The chic Pruneyard Cinema screens some very long classics, like 'Lawrence of Arabia,' during its Epics Film Festival this fall.

Epics Film Fest BY RICHARD VON BUSACK

A

T THE 2008 Oscars, John Stewart claimed to be distracted by watching Lawrence of Arabia on his smartphone: “To appreciate the cinematography, you really have to see it in on wide screen.” At this, he tilted the cellphone horizontally. A Metrosponsored series at the Pruneyard programmed by Jack NyBlom of San Jose’s Camera Cinemas seeks to bring back the grandeur of the epic film. The draw is sweetened with a special menu and the Pruneyard’s peerless cocktails.

Lunch

11:30am to 2:00pm Wednesday through Friday Oswald Burger, Salads, Sandwiches and more

Dinner

5:00pm to close Tuesday through Sunday Seasonal Menu Cocktail Hour Tuesday through Thursday 4:00pm to 5:30pm Bar Bites, Craft Cocktails, Beer and Wine Specials

OswaldRestaurant.com 121 Soquel Avenue at Front Street, Santa Cruz 831.423.7427 CLOSED MONDAY

Apocalypse Now (1976) the version Copolla is claiming as a final cut, as opposed to the longer version that played the late lamented Century 21 dome in 2001—plays Aug 23, 24 and 29. In any cut, the film is a grand and problematic epic, served up with Vietnamese cuisine for all three screenings. Martin Sheen is Willard, the standard poetic film noir detective type, a soldier sent by the brass to the jungle to terminate an officer who has gone rogue. As Colonel Kurtz, Marlon Brando’s performance mirrors the movie, which features the best and worst of ’70s filmmaking. Brando had gone Dadaist long before Apocalypse Now. Here his lunatic Kurtz slurs, “The only real freedom is freedom from the opinions of others, even freedom

from the opinion of yourself ”—his acting summed up in one sentence. The truest moment in Apocalypse Now Redux is a beginning that could stir up the savage in any man: The Doors’ John Densmore’s hissing cymbals, the palm trees immolating silently as Jim Morrison intones, “This is the end,” until all disintegrates into sulfur-colored dust, stirred by the choppers circling like buzzards. Another mad colonel is the subject of Lawrence of Arabia (1962) (Aug 24 and 29, and on the 27th with a prix fixe admission and dinner of chicken shawarma and hummus plate). David Lean’s epic defies the small screen, in its story of how the Brits carved up the Arab lands, thanks to the intelligence and daring of Colonel Lawrence (Peter O’Toole); I’ll be there to introduce it. Titanic (1997) plays Aug 25; enjoy, I’m not a fan. Much more like it is 1939’s Gone With the Wind (Aug 23 and 28 with an Aug 26 meal/show package including barbecue from Twelve Oaks BBQ). It’s color-coded: Scarlett meets Rhett (Red). It was a hit because of its allegorical North/South romance in the Civil War. Clark Gable’s Rhett may be from Charleston but he talks like he’s from Chicago, and Southern women ever since emulate Vivien Leigh’s vixen Scarlett: “A woman must have everything.” Everything, especially a large screen to play upon.

fall arts 50


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FALL ARTS

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literature

FRANZ FRAME Author Jonathan Franzen comes to the Hammer Theatre Center next month.

T

HE CENTER FOR Literary Arts at San Jose State University, as well as indie bookstore faves like Kepler’s and Books Inc. will showcase some amazing local and internationally renowned events throughout the fall season. Here are a few noteworthy evenings not to be missed.

Jonathan Franzen SEP. 20 Hammer Theatre | hammertheatre.com The Center for Literary Arts at SJSU opens its 2019-20 season with legendary author and National Book Award winner Jonathan Franzen at Hammer Theatre. The event celebrates the launch of Reed Magazine: Issue 152, the university’s acclaimed literary


51

journal, and will feature readings by several contributors before Franzen takes the stage. Following the reading, a VIP reception will unfold on the rooftop terrace, including a book sale and signing.

Anita Felicelli SEP. 26 Books Inc. Palo Alto | booksinc.net/PaloAlto Palo Alto author Anita Felicelli graduated from the Berkeley School of Law. After writing an award-winning debut collection of short stories, Love Songs for a Lost Continent, her new satirical novel Chimerica takes place in a fictional country of the same name, where down-and-out Tamil American trial lawyer Maya Ramesh fights to save a painted lemur that has come to life.

Barry Eisler SEP. 26 Kepler’s Books, Menlo Park | www.keplers.com Best-selling author Barry Eisler exploded onto the international literary scene via his wildly successful John Rain series about a half-Eastern, half-Western assassin. Nowadays, Eisler makes just as many waves with his series about Livia Lone, a sex-crimes detective turned martial arts expert. Eisler lives in Menlo Park and stages all of his book launches at Kepler’s.

Naomi Klein SEP. 27 San Mateo Performing Arts Center smuhsd.theater/smpac A must for any environmental advocate, Kepler’s Literary Foundation will present

award-winning journalist and No. 1 International and New York Times bestselling author Naomi Klein, whose soaring new book of essays, On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal, makes an urgent case for radical transformation on all levels.

Carmen Maria Machado

Reading & Conversation with Linda Castillo OCT. 24 MACLA, San Jose | maclaarte.org Carmen Maria Machado exploded onto the literary landscape with her debut collection of short stories, Her Body and Other Parties, which won multiple awards and successfully demolished genre boundaries in portraying the ways that women can articulate their struggle for agency. The reading will be followed by an on-stage conversation with SJSU alum Linda Castillo, founder and executive editor of Modern Latina, plus an audience Q&A, book sale and signing.

Tyehimba Jess & Harmony Holiday NOV. 7 Forager, San Jose | sjforager.com The Center for Literary Arts at SJSU will bring poets Tyehimba Jess and Harmony Holiday to downtown San Jose’s SoFA District for a night of performance and conversation with Tshaka Campbell. Jess won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize for his book Olio, while Harmony Holiday’s debut book of prose poems, Negro League Baseball, won her the Motherwell Prize.

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

SHOCKER Naomi Klein is back with a new book on climate change.


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

Laura Hamilton

52

FRESH KICK Malaya serves a young mango slaw with spicy red chili, shrimp paste and plenty of lime.

The Crossroads Santa Clara restaurant, Malaya, capitalizes on the cultural fusion of the strip mall BY JEFFREY EDALATPOUR

S

TRIP MALLS ARE the great equalizers when it comes to suburban dining. The upside is that they often contain multitudes. Take, for instance, the Mercado Shopping Center in Santa Clara. There’s a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, a Chinese chain, two burger joints, Starbucks and a pho restaurant. The downside is that in order to stay open, each business must appeal to a wide cross section of the population. It’s surprising, then, that the

owners of Pedro’s Restaurant and Cantina opened Malaya, a Southeast Asian restaurant, as a replacement for their Mexicali Grill at the Mercado. Malaysian food isn’t the first cuisine that springs to mind when one thinks of a fast, casual dining option at the local mall. But Malaya isn’t in the business of fast food. I’d describe what the owners are experimenting with as “medium food.” The menu stays true to Malaysian cuisine in a carefully constructed and intelligent outline. I recognized the names of familiar dishes but couldn’t always connect them to the flavors on the plate. Ultimately, I deduced that Malaya

is an ambitious concept, as it aims to introduce roti and curry and rice plates as a new go-to dining experience. If Chili’s could find a place for Mexican food in every American suburb, then why not Malaya? An explanatory note at the top of the menu not only addresses British colonialism in the region but also lists many of the other countries that have influenced modern Malaysian cuisine. This includes, but is not limited to, China, India and Thailand. Kerabu mangga ($13) will be familiar to diners who’ve eaten Thai papaya salads. Like many of the other dishes on the menu, the sauce, or dressing, on the young mango slaw contains slivers of a spicy red chili, shrimp paste and plenty of lime. The mango is finely shredded and elegantly finished with peanuts, mint and cilantro leaves. We also drizzled a spoonful or two of a panang curry sauce over the slaw, which worked as a much-needed cooling agent. The dipping sauce normally accompanies the roti jala ($7), a turmeric crepe that is fluffy and

bland but also good for dunking in the okra stew we ordered. Asam pedas okra ($14) is described as being “famous in the southern part of Malaysia.” I was hoping for a dish crowded with okra, like an Indian bhindi masala. But when I opened the steaming claypot, I could only divine sections of eggplant in a delicate tomato broth. At most, I found what amounted to two thinly sliced circles of okra. If it had been described as a tasty tomato soup, I wouldn’t have been as disappointed with the skimpy end result. We shared a chicken dish, nasi ayam ($16), and salmon, ikan bakar ($18), for our main entrées. Keep in mind that when you order nasi ayam, the chicken is steamed. The texture is just like boiled chicken and it’s very soft or very tender, depending on your point of view. When the rubbery chicken skin flopped onto the plate, I decided the dish would have worked better barbecued or fried. As for the salmon, it, too, was steamed (but in banana leaves) and also marinated overnight. Neither the marinade nor the banana leaves added much in the way of the flavor. Both dishes tasted like the first drafts of ideas that needed more time in the oven. Steamed rice, white or brown, comes with several entrées. Additionally, the restaurant offers sides of coconut rice ($4) and hainanese rice ($4), which is cooked in chicken broth. Malaya serves sticky rice too, but in a mangothemed dessert ($6) that’s built in layers. At the bottom, slices of mango laze in a bath of cold coconut milk. Sesame seeds top a quenelle of rice alongside a mango sorbet— bright orange in color—that rests in the center of the bowl. The mango slaw and dessert suggest that if the kitchen takes a little more time to refine the dishes, moving the notch down from medium to slow, Malaya and Chili’s could be friendly neighbors across the parking lots in the same American malls.

MALAYA MALAYSIAN

3149 Mission College Blvd, Santa Clara

malayarestaurants.com

$$

408.580.1500


11 53 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

鴨醤油ラーメン You’ve tried the others. Now try us!

RAMEN THE PLACE

Tuesday - Sunday | 11am - 2pm; 5pm - 9pm 5229 Stevens Creek Blvd, Santa Clara | 408.899.4457


metroactive

CHOICES BY: Kael B. Austria Bill Kopp Erika Rasmussen

Greg Ramar

metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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MESMERICA 360

SV PRIDE

*thu *fri SV PRIDE

MESMERICA 360

Thu-Sun, Various Times San Jose

Fri, 5:30pm, $12+ The Tech Interactive, San Jose

The South Bay’s official Pride celebration kicked off earlier this week with the raising of the LGBTQ flag at San Jose City Hall. The party continues through the weekend with a variety of events—including a Trans and Friends Rally on Saturday and a night festival later that evening. Also on the completely fabulous calendar is Drag me to the Show, a drag queen show sponsored by LaRuce Beauty and hosted by Coco Minaj that features four queens from Silicon Valley performing a series of musical numbers. More info on all the festivities can be found at svpride.com. (MS)

Visual stimulation, when paired with music, has been proven to help relieve stress. Embark on a quest through James Hood’s Mesmerica, a fully immersive experience that conjures up some of the dreamiest and surreal landscapes you’ve ever seen (that includes all you psychonauts out there). Combining vivid 3D imagery with captivating beats created by Hood—a Grammy-nominated new age percussionist and composer—the show is meant to help viewers chill out as their minds wander. Each IMAX showing is an hour long. Running through Aug. 31, Mesmerica is familyfriendly, and children over the age of 6 are able to attend. (KA)

SUMMERTIME IN THE SQUARE Fri, 6pm, Free Evergreen Village Square, San Jose August is winding down, and those warm summer nights are getting fewer and farther between. Fortunately, you can always sip some vino if the wind picks up. San Jose sextet Touch ’N Go struts bouncy, funkalicious Motown grooves, slapping twangy bass lines reminiscent of the Seinfeld theme. After the sun settles below the horizon, settle down for a screening of The Secret Life of Pets, an animated family-friendly flick that chronicles the shenanigans and shadow world of animal companions living with their Manhattan-dwelling owners. (ER)

*sat

LIONEL RICHIE Sat, 6:30pm, $66+ Frost Amphitheater, Stanford He’s fronted The Commodores, served as an American Idol judge and been awarded Grammys, a Golden Globe and an Oscar. Is there anything that Lionel Richie can’t do? The Alabamaborn singer has sold more than a million albums worldwide, solidifying his reputation as a true icon in the music industry. Presented by Stanford Live and Goldenvoice, Richie will take to the stage to take attendees on an evening excursion through all of his biggest hits, such as “Stuck On You,” “Say You, Say Me” and, of course, “Hello.” (KA)

ITALIAN FAMILY FESTA Sat, 11am, Free History Park, San Jose

Bellissimo! Rolling into its 39th year, the Festa celebrates Italian culture with a weekend full of everything Italians do best—including food, wine and art. Watch marionettes swivel on stage, and stomp on some grapes as local artists show their creations at La Galleria Caprese and Mike Zampencini walks the grounds with his accordian. There will also be medieval sword fights and an archival exploration of the Valley of Heart’s Delight market, plus local author Caroline Cocciardi talks about her book on DaVinci, Leonardo’s Knots. Opera, blues, dance, classic Italian and a Frank Sinatra tribute are all lined up to set the musical mood. (ER)


* concerts Aug 23 at The Ritz

TOWER OF POWER

KRIS KRISTOFFERSON Aug 23 at Mountain Winery

TOWER OF POWER Aug 25 at Mountain Winery

LOS TIGRES DEL NORTE Aug 30 at Mountain Winery

NELLY, TLC Aug 30 at Shoreline Amphitheatre

THE NATIONAL Sep 1 at Frost Amphitheater

KORN & ALICE IN CHAINS Sep 4 at Shoreline Amphitheatre

DURAN DURAN Sep 10-11 at Mountain Winery

CAKE & BEN FOLDS Sep 13 at Shoreline Amphitheatre

KUNG FU VAMPIRE Sep 13 at The Ritz

MALUMA Sep 15 at SAP Center

REPTILE SHOW Sat, 10am, $10+ Santa Clara County Fairgrounds, San Jose Calling all cold-blooded creatures! The lowbellied, the legless, the shelled and scaled all have a special place at the San Jose Reptile Show. Both fanatics and newcomers are invited to gather among their slithering, tongueflicking friends. It’s a chance to get up close and personal with our reptilian and amphibian neighbors: bearded dragons, snakes, frogs, geckos, turtles, tortoises and more. Mingle with breeders, rescue groups, artisans, herpetological societies and vendors who supply exotic pet needs like bugs and rodents… yum! The show runs through Sunday. (ER)

*sun

DEATH CAB FOR CUTIE Sep 20 at Mountain Winery

METALACHI Sep 22 at The Ritz

TOWER OF POWER

GROWTH

YOGA + BEER

Sun, 7:30pm $60.50+ Mountain Winery, Saratoga

Sun, 11am, Free Forager, San Jose

Sun, 11am, $20+ Hapa’s Brewing Company, San Jose

This Oakland-based band is known far and wide for its terrific horn section. Tower of Power has been bringing its unique brand of soulful, high-energy music to albums, audiences and collaborations for 50 years. Like so many “legacy” acts of its generation, Tower of Power has seen many players come and go; more than 60 musicians have cycled through the group. But founding members Emilio Castillo (tenor saxophone) and Stephen “Doc” Kupka (baritone sax)—plus longtime bassist Rocco Prestia and drummer David Garibaldi—keep the flame burning. They’ll be joined by a modern-day collection of top-flight players. (BK)

From the community-building shops of SJMade and Empire in The Air—a San Jose apparel brand pledging empowerment and engagement through local events—“Growth” is a day to honor the Bay Area as a home that inspires, uplifting the craft of local vendors, artists and performers. ChiChai, founder and art director of EITA, features her artwork: emotive and glowing figures. Bryant Sina’s psychedelic third-eye-sporting smiley faces and figures capture his “be happy” message in a way that’s both eerie and soul-settling. Local musician Ashley Mehta will play her latest rosy-pop tunes, which have started to trend alongside names like Dua Lipa and Halsey. Donations welcome. (ER)

Everyone knows that a beer or two can help loosen you up. Throw yoga into the mix and even the stiffest working stiffs are liable to walk away more pliable. Billed as an “End of Summer Block Party,” this event includes yoga, beer and music. As DJ Yogic Flow spins tunes designed to keep the people moving, attendees are invited to participate in an all-levels yoga group led by two instructors. There will be yoga mats available for rent and food trucks on site for everyone to enjoy after the session. You must be 21 or older to attend. (KA)

BOB SEGER Sep 26 at Shoreline Amphitheatre

MANÁ Sep 27 at SAP Center

SHANNON & THE CLAMS Oct 3 at The Ritz

BLACK LIPS Oct 10 at The Ritz

DEADMAU5 Oct 11-12 at San Jose Civic

FRANKIE VALLI & THE FOUR SEASONS Oct 13 at San Jose Civic

MARK FARINA Oct 19 at The Ritz For music updates and contest giveaways, like us on Facebook at metrofb.com

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

THE CRYSTAL METHOD

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1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135 Wednesday, August 21 • In the Atrium • Ages 16+

REVERIE • GAVLYN

Thursday, August 22 • Ages 16+

TUXEDO Los Cafres

plus DJ Kurse Saturday, August 24 • Ages 16+ plus Sang

Tuesday, August 27 • Ages 16+

PROTOJE

Matiz

plus Lila

Ike

Aug 31 Danny Duncan (All Ages) Sep 2 Xavier Rudd (Ages 16+) Sep 12 Gogol Bordello (Ages 16+) Sep 13 Iya Terra/ For Peace Band (Ages 16+) Sep 14 The California Honeydrops (Ages 16+) Sep 15 Lil Keed/ Lil Gotit (Ages 16+) Sep 24 Hot Chip/ Holy Fuck (Ages 16+) Sep 26 Loud Luxury/ CID (Ages 16+) Sep 28 & 29 Durand Jones & The Indications (Ages 16+) Oct 3 PNB Rock/ NoCap (Ages 16+) Oct 10 Collie Buddz (Ages 16+) Oct 11 Riot Ten/ Al Ross (Ages 18+) Oct 12 Manila Killa (Ages 16+) Oct 14 Yung Gravy (Ages 16+) Oct 17 Common Kings (Ages 16+) Oct 19 & 20 Santa Cruz Music Festival (Ages 16+) Oct 23 The Distillers (Ages 16+) Oct 26 The Garden (Ages 16+) Oct 31 Skizzy Mars (Ages 16+) Nov 1 P-Lo (Ages 16+) Nov 2 Elephante/ PLS&TY (Ages 16+) Nov 3 Sinead Harnett (Ages 16+) Nov 14 Suicide Girls Blackheart Burlesque (Ages 21+) Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.

metroactive EVENTS

mighty mike McGee’s

Must Sees

More listings:

METROACTIVE.COM Send your events to mightymike @metroactive.com

AUG 21–29 | “ALREADY THE IRON DOOR OF THE NORTH/CLANGS OPEN: BIRDS, LEAVES, SNOWS/ORDER THEIR POPULATIONS FORTH, AND A CRUEL WIND BLOWS.” A fantastic line from “End Of Summer,” a poem by Stanley Kunitz, which relates to me that feeling when it is clear that summer will be gone someday. Funny how the feeling changes each year. I despised the demise of my favorite season, only to be replaced by autumn— my least favorite—so full of darkness and school. Those faves have shifted toward the equinoxes now, and as much as I adore summer, I look forward to the cool damp gray of fall and the rebirth of spring. Granted, it’s still August, so maybe I should slow down… If you’re ready for a little autumn in your summer, I recommend checking out the thoughtful R&B vocals of KIN. She put out a sweet jam this spring called “Be A Little Lonely” one part command, one part reminder to herself. I love it. Seek it out or hear it live at Art Boutiki Music Hall this Thursday. She’ll be supported by openers Melanie Ida Chopko and superpoet-homie Lorenz Dumuk. Expect collaborations, feelings and love. They’re calling it “The Feel Better Tour” and, by golly, I bet you will. = MUST SEE

= MORE AT SANJOSE.COM

= SEE PHOTO

= FREE

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

www.catalystclub.com

WED 8/21 CEDAR ROOM Everyday Happy Hour: 4pm– 5:30pm & 9pm–10pm. Wed, 8pm–11pm: Queen Bingo. Mon, 7pm: Big Bands. Tue, 8pm–Close: Tiki Tuesdays: Exotic cocktails and island vibes. Pruneyard Cinemas, 1875 S Bascom Ave, Campbell

Johnny Fabulous. Sun, 3pm: The Old Ned, New Band. Mon, 6pm: Open Mic Night. Tue, 7pm: Aki Kumar. 91 S Autumn St, San Jose

CLUB FOX BLUES JAM

7pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose

8pm. Rooster T. Feathers, 157 W El Camino Real, Sunnyvale

Your Family Deserves The

BEST

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8pm. Second Annual Champion of Champions Championship. Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose

8:30pm. Quarter Note Bar & Grill, 1214 Apollo Way, Sunnyvale

America’s Top 120

POOR HOUSE BISTRO

/mo. Subject to availability. Restrictions apply. Internet not provided by DISH and will be billed separately.

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Wed, 6pm: Blues & $2 Brews w/ Ron Thompson. Thu, 6pm: Summer of Love Theme Jam Night. Fri, 6pm: Chris Cain Band. Sat, 7pm: Daniel Castro Band. Sun, 11am: Brunch w/

9:30pm. Rosie Mccann’s, 355 Santana Row #1060, San Jose

FRASCATI COMEDY OPEN MIC (ALL AGES)

NEW TALENT COMEDY

SAM’S BBQ

LIVE MUSIC | ISAIAH PICKETT BAND

7pm. Doors 6:30pm. 21+ $7. Club Fox, 2209 Broadway St, Redwood City

Good Times/Metro Ad, Wed. 08/21 SHOWCASE

Wed, 6pm: Fred McCarty. Tue, 8/27, 6pm: The Mighty Crows. Wed, 8/28, 6pm: Jerry Logan & Loganville. 1110 S Bascom Ave, San Jose

Clara St, San Jose

CARAVAN LOUNGE COMEDY SHOW WITH MR. WALKER

9pm. 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose

KARAOKE WITH JADE

9:30pm. Dive Bar, 78 E Santa

BRITANNIA ARMS ALMADEN Wed, 10pm: DJ Hank. Thu, 10pm: DJ Reason One. Fri, 10pm: Uptown Funk (Bruno Mars Tribute). Sat, 10pm: DJ Brotha Reese. Sun, 10pm: DJ Hank. Mon, 10pm: Game Night. Tue, 7:30pm: Risky Quizness. 5027 Almaden Expy, San Jose

THU 8/22 90'S KARAOKE & THEME NIGHT 5pm. Garden At The Flea, 1590 Berryessa Road, San Jose

LIVE LIT WRITERS OPEN MIC 7pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose

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11 57 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com


metroactive EVENTS 56 MIXED OPEN MIC

7pm. Britannia Arms Cupertino, 1087 S De Anza Blvd, San Jose

MUSIC & POETRY | KIN, MELANIE IDA CHOPKO, LORENZ DUMUK

7:30pm. Art Boutiki Music Hall, 44 Race St, San Jose

MUSIC OPEN MIC

7:30pm. Los Gatos Coffee Roasting Company, 101 W Main St

MIXED OPEN MIC NIGHT

7:30pm. Hosted by Nick Peters. Freewheel Brewing Company, 3736 Florence St, Redwood City

THURSDAY NIGHT BLUES JAM

7:30pm. Little Lou’s BBQ, 2455 S Winchester Blvd, Campbell

TRIVIA NIGHT

8pm. Sports Page B&G, 1431 Plymouth St, Mountain View

FOX

CLUB

metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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COMEDY | BEER GIGGLES: JOKES AND BEER

8pm. Camino Brewing, 718 S First St, San Jose

Wed Aug 21 CLUB FOX BLUES JAM

S.e. Willis & The Willing

Thu-Sun, 8:30pm: Karaoke. Sun, 4pm: Novak-Nanni Duo. 2988 Almaden Expy, San Jose

Fri Aug 23 MUSIC ON THE SQUARE

DJ | SHAKIN’ NOT STIRRED WITH ROGER MOOREHOUSE

7pm • $7

Neon Velvet

5:30pm • No Cover • Great location •˜Air Conditioning Full Bar plus Beer & Wine to go Sat Aug 24

The Red Rocker Experience w/Destroyer

8:30pm • $15 adv • $20 day of show

SHERWOOD INN

9pm. Cardiff Lounge, 260 E Campbell Ave, Campbell

KARAOKE | COURT’S LOUNGE

FRI 8/23 CAUSE | LATINA ACTION DAY OF SAN JOSE/SANTA CLARA COUNTY

9am. RSVP: ladsanjose19. eventbrite.com | San José City Hall, 200 E Santa Clara St

EXHIBIT | THE ASAHI NINE: JAPANESE AMERICAN BASEBALL IN SAN JOSÉ

KARAOKE | ROCCO’S BLUE MAX

Fri & Sat, 8pm–Close. 828 W El Camino Real, Sunnyvale

DANCE/KARAOKE | FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE STARLITE 8pm: Ballroom dance lesson. 9pm: Dance party. 11:30pm: Karaoke. Starlite Ballroom, 5178 Moorpark Ave, Ste 60, San Jose

IMPROVISATION | COMEDY SPORTZ 8pm. 3Below, 288 S Second St, San Jose

1–6pm. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, 150 E San Fernando St, San Jose

¿QIENSAVE? : SATURDAY NIGHT OUTDOOR CUMBIA CONCERT 5pm. Garden At The Flea, 1590 Berryessa Road, San Jose

NORTHSIDE NIGHT MARKET

THE WILLOW DEN

Fri & Sat: Live music 9pm– midnight. Sun: Service Industry Night = 1/2 off drinks with industry card. 803 Lincoln Ave, San Jose

5pm. Dog-friendly. Backesto Park, 651 E Empire St, San Jose

MUSIC IN THE PARK 2019 | J BOOG

SMOKING PIG BBQ

5:30pm. Plaza de Cesar Chavez, 1 Paseo de San Antonio, San Jose

Fri, 9pm: Andre Thierry, Zydeco. Sat, 9pm: Summer Blues Dennis Herrera. 3340 Mowry Ave, Fremont

SUMMERTIME IN THE SQUARE MUSIC WINE AND MOVIE NIGHT

SPLASH SJ 8TH ANNIVERSARY BASH STARRING YVIE ODDLY

6pm. 4075 Evergreen Village Square, San Jose

IMPROVISATION | COMEDY SPORTZ

7pm & 9:15pm. 3Below, 288 S Second St, San Jose

NOW TESTING: OPEN MIC NIGHT

7:30pm. Chromatic Coffee, 17 N Second St, San Jose

9pm. Splash, 65 Post St, San Jose

DANCE | DJ RAHEEM

9:30pm. Britannia Arms Downtown, 173 W Santa Clara St, San Jose

KARAOKE & DANCING

9:30pm. Bogart’s Sports Bar, 1209 Wildwood Ave, Sunnyvale

Mon, Thu, Sat, 9:30pm. 2425 S Bascom Ave, Campbell

THROWBACK THURSDAY KARAOKE & DANCE

9:30pm. Old school jams, soul, reggaeton, ’70s, ’80s and pop hits. Bogart's Sports Bar, 1209 Wildwood Ave, Sunnyvale

Book Your Next Event with us 2209 Broadway St Redwood City / 831.334.1153 clubfoxrwc.com

Fri, 10pm: TGIFF with DJ Darker Daze. Sat, 10pm: Snap Saturdays with DJ Don Foley. Sun, 9pm: Branham Sunday Industry Party. 1116 Branham Lane, San Jose

More listings:

METROACTIVE.COM

THE BRANHAM LOUNGE

Thu, 10pm: $3 Pop Thursdays.

THE RITZ

Fri, 8pm: The Crystal Method, Starfarer, DJ Bit. Sat, 8pm: Evergrey, Shattered Sun, Tulip. Sun, 7pm: Gondwana, Fayuca, The Dangerous. Tue, 8/27, 7pm: Los Cafres’ 3 Decadas Tour, Bang Data. Wed, 8/28, 8pm: Fucked and Bound, ColdClaw, Haunted Horses, Ratz on Acid. 400 S First St, San Jose

KARAOKE | THE GOOSETOWN LOUNGE

Fri & Sat, 9:30pm. 1072 Lincoln Ave, San Jose


metroactive EVENTS FRIENDS OF THE DR. KING LIBRARY BOOK SALE

10am–5pm. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, 150 E San Fernando St, San Jose

CRAFT FAIR | MAKERS MARKET IN THE PARK

11am. First Sat. monthly. Santana Row, 377 Santana Row, San Jose

JAZZ & BEYOND | EAST SIDE FUNK! 5:30pm. Historic Murphy Ave, Downtown Sunnyvale | sunnyvaledowntown.com

LIVE MUSIC | KAVANAUGH BROTHERS CELTIC EXPERIENCE

KARAOKE | KATIE BLOOM’S

Wed & Sun, 9:30pm–1:30am. Campbell

MON 8/26 COMEDY | KEYES OPEN MIC

7pm. Hosted by Prisilla Torres. S & H Keyes Club, 396 Keyes St, San Jose

TRIVIA NIGHT

7pm. San Pedro Market, 87 N San Pedro St, San Jose

TRIVIA @ UPROAR BREWING

7pm. 439 S First St, San Jose

RED ROCK MIXED OPEN MIC

8pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose

7pm. 201 Castro St, Mountain View

DJ DON “THE COWBOY”

ART CLASS | LIFE DRAWING

9pm. $10 cover. Blue Note Lounge, 765 E Capitol Ave, Milpitas

ISLAND MUSIC | MR. MEGO

9pm. Sushi Confidential, 26 N San Pedro St, San Jose

PUNK+ | DANGEROUSLY SLEAZY, PANHANDLERS UNION, DOMINO AND THE DERELICTS 9pm. Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose

DJ | D SHARP

9pm. Golden State Warriors official DJ. Avery Lounge, 399 S First St, San Jose

7:15pm. School of Visual Philosophy, 1065 The Alameda, San Jose

SAM MARSHALL KARAOKE 8pm. Pioneer Saloon, 2925 Woodside Rd, Woodside

DANCING | MOTOWN ON MONDAYS 8pm. Continental Bar & Lounge, 349 S First St, San Jose

TRIVIA @ 7 STARS

8pm. 7 Stars Bar & Grill,398 S Bascom Ave, San Jose

JAM | WEEKLY SESSIONS AT FIVE POINTS

SUN 8/25

8:30pm. Five Points, 169 W Santa Clara St, San Jose

DJ/DANCE | SUNDAY VIBRAS W/ DJ TOO TALL & HELLA BREEZY

TRIVIA NIGHT AT STEPHEN’S GREEN

3pm. Presented by Sonido Clash x Universal Grammar. Continental Lounge, 347 S First St, San Jose

JAZZ JAM

4pm. Little Lou’s BBQ, 2455 S Winchester Blvd, Campbell

ACOUSTIC | JOE FERRARA

6pm. The Cats, 17533 Santa Cruz Hwy, Los Gatos

METAL | FLUB, CYBORG OCTOPUS, STEAKSAUCE MUSTACHE

9pm. St. Stephen’s Green, 223 Castro St, Mountain View

KARAOKE | O’FLAHERTY’S IRISH PUB

9pm. 25 N San Pedro St, San Jose

COMEDY OPEN MIC WITH PETE MUNOZ

9pm. Woodhams Lounge, 4475 Stevens Creek Blvd, Santa Clara

MONDO MONDAY KARAOKE

10pm. Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose

TUE 8/27 TRADITIONAL IRISH SEISIUN TUESDAYS

6:30pm. O’Flaherty’s, 25 N San Pedro St, San Jose

TRIVIA TUESDAYS

7pm. 20twenty Cheese Bar, 1389 Lincoln Ave, San Jose

MUSIC OPEN MIC

7pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St.

KARAOKE | QUARTER NOTE 8:30pm. Quarter Note Bar & Grill, 1214 Apollo Way, Sunnyvale

HOUSE MUSIC | RHYTHM RITUAL

9pm. Continental Lounge, 347 S First St, San Jose

POLAROID DJ NIGHT WITH HEX EMBRACE

9pm. Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose

METAL NIGHT

10pm. Free pool, Slayer Power Hour, Metal & Punk DJs. Cinebar, 69 E San Fernando St, San Jose

WED 8/28 PENINSULA BANJO BAND

7pm. Bogey’s Pizza, 5039 Almaden Expy, San Jose

WOMEN/LGBTQ COMEDY OPEN MIC

7pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose

THU 8/29 SANTA CLARA TOWN HALL: A GIRLS POLICY AGENDA

5:30pm. 70 W Hedding St, Room 157, San Jose | Register: bit.ly/SC_TownHall

STORYTELLING & POETRY: FINDING IDENTITY IN FAMILY HISTORY

6pm. Filoli Historical Gardens, 86 Cañada Road, Woodside

SPOTLIGHT SERIES | THE FUTURE OF COYOTE VALLEY 6pm. MACLA, 510 S First St, San Jose | RSVP: spotlightcoyotevalley.eventbrite.com

59 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

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FREE WILL ASTROLOGY to recycle plastic. Sorting and processing the used materials to make them available for fresh stuff is at least as expensive as creating new plastic items from scratch. On the other hand, sending used plastic to a recycling center makes it far less likely that it will end up in the oceans and waterways, harming living creatures. So in this case, the short-term financial argument in favor of recycling is insubstantial, whereas the moral argument is strong. I invite you to apply a similar perspective to your upcoming decisions.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): African American slaves suffered many horrendous deprivations. For example, it was illegal for them to learn to read. Their oppressors feared that educated slaves would be better equipped to agitate for freedom, and took extreme measures to keep them illiterate. Frederick Douglass was one slave who managed to beat the ban. As he secretly mastered the art of reading and writing, he came upon literature that ultimately emboldened him to escape his "owners" and flee to safety. He became one of the 19th century's most powerful abolitionists, producing reams of influential writing and speeches. I propose that we make Douglass your inspiring role model for the coming months. I think you're ready to break the hold of a certain curse and go on to achieve a gritty success that the curse had prevented you from accomplishing. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): For 25 years, businessman Don Thompson worked for the McDonald's fast food company, including three years as its CEO. During that time, he oversaw the sale and consumption of millions of hamburgers. But in 2015, he left McDonald's and became part of Beyond Meat, a company that sells vegan alternatives to meat. I could see you undergoing an equally dramatic shift in the coming months, Gemini: a transition into a new role that resembles but is also very different from a role you've been playing. I urge you to step up your fantasies about what that change might entail. CANCER (June 21-July 22): "The learning process is

something you can incite, literally incite, like a riot," wrote author Audre Lorde. As an astrologer I would add this nuance: Although what Lourde says is true, some phases of your life are more favorable than others to seek deep and rapid education. For example, the coming weeks will bring you especially rich teachings if you incite the learning process now.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The American idiom "stay

in your lane" has come to mean "mind your own business," and usually has a pejorative sense. But I'd like to expand it and soften it for your use in the coming weeks. Let's define it as meaning "stick to what you're good at and know about" or "don't try to operate outside your area of expertise" or "express yourself in ways that you have earned the right to do." Author Zadie Smith says that this is good advice for writers. "You have to work out what it is you can't do, obscure it, and focus on what works," she attests. Apply that counsel to your own sphere or field, Leo.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Yisrael Kristal was a Polish

Jew born under the sign of Virgo in 1903. His father was a scholar of the Torah, and he began studying Judaism and learning Hebrew at age 3. He lived a long life and had many adventures, working as a candle-maker and a candy-maker. When the Red Army liberated the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1945, Kristal emerged as one of the survivors. He went on to live to the age of 113. Because of the chaos of World War I, he had never gotten his bar mitzvah when he'd turned 13. So he did it much later, in his old age. I foresee a comparable event coming up soon in your life, Virgo. You will claim a reward or observe a milestone or collect a blessing you weren't able to enjoy earlier.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Sailors have used compasses to navigate since the 11th century, but that tool wasn't enough to guide them. A thorough knowledge of the night sky's stars was a crucial aid. Skill at reading the ever-changing ocean currents always proved valuable. Another helpful trick was to take birds on the ships as collaborators. While at sea, if the birds flew off and returned, the sailors knew there was no land close by. If the birds didn't return,

chances were good that land was near. I bring this to your attention, Libra, because I think it's an excellent time to gather a number of different navigational tools for your upcoming quest. One won't be enough.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): What do you want from

the allies who aren't your lovers? What feelings do you most enjoy while you're in the company of your interesting, non-romantic companions? For instance, maybe you like to be respected and appreciated. Or perhaps what's most important to you is to experience the fun of being challenged and stimulated. Maybe your favorite feeling is the spirit of collaboration and comradeship. Or maybe all of the above. In any case, Scorpio, I urge you to get clear about what you want, and then make it your priority to foster it. In the coming weeks, you'll have the power to generate an abundance of your favorite kind of non-sexual togetherness.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): As the CEO of the

clothes company Zappos, Sagittarius entrepreneur Tony Hsieh is worth almost a billion dollars. If he chose, he could live in a mansion by the sea. Yet his home is a 200-square-foot, $48,000 trailer in Las Vegas, where he also keeps his pet alpaca. To be clear, he owns the entire trailer park, which consists of 30 other trailers, all of which are immaculate hotbeds of high-tech media technology where interesting people live. He loves the community he has created, which is more important to him than status and privilege. "For me, experiences are more meaningful than stuff," he says. "I have way more experiences here." I'd love to see you reaffirm your commitment to priorities like his in the coming weeks, Sagittarius. It'll be a favorable time to do so.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Medical researcher

Jonas Salk developed a successful polio vaccine, so he had a strong rational mind. Here's how he described his relationship with his non-rational way of knowing. He said, "It is always with excitement that I wake up in the morning wondering what my intuition will toss up to me, like gifts from the sea. I work with it and rely on it. It's my partner." I bring this up, Capricorn, because the coming weeks will be a favorable time to celebrate and cultivate your own intuition. You may generate amazing results as you learn to trust it more and figure out how to deepen your relationship with it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarian

environmentalist Edward Abbey once formulated a concise list of his requirements for living well. "One must be reasonable in one's demands on life," he wrote. "For myself, all that I ask is: 1. accurate information; 2. coherent knowledge; 3. deep understanding; 4. infinite loving wisdom; 5. no more kidney stones, please." According to my analysis of the astrological omens, now would be an excellent time for you to create your own tally of the Five Crucial Provisions. Be bold and precise as you inform life about your needs.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): "We may be surprised at whom God sends to answer our prayers," wrote author Janette Oke. I suspect that observation will apply to you in the coming weeks. If you're an atheist or agnostic, I'll rephrase her formulation for you: "We may be surprised at whom Life sends to answer our entreaties." There's only one important thing you have to do to cooperate with this experience: set aside your expectations about how help, and blessings might appear. Poet Muriel Rukeyser said, "The world is made of stories, not atoms." I'd add, "You are made of stories, too." What's your favorite story that you're made of? FreeWillAstrology.com 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

11 61 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

ARIES (March 21-April 19): It's not cost-efficient

By ROB BREZSNY week of August 21


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EMPLOYMENT

The Winchester Orchestra has openings in all strings, brass, and percussion. We rehearse Monday evenings in Saratoga. Contact us at mailtopersonnel winchesterorchestra.com

Director of Engineering (Automation & Testing) at Aricent Technologies (Holdings) Ltd. in Santa Clara, CA will be responsible for multiple or single large/complex systems & will conduct system dsgn & analysis, test & integration strategy, & solve system wide issues during integration phases. Position may work at various & unanticipated worksites throughout the U.S. Position reqs a Bachelor’s deg in Comp. Info Systems, Comp. Sci., Comp. Engg, or a closely rltd field, + 8 yrs of s/ware engg exp. Must incl 8 yrs of exp w/ each of the following: Adobe Analytics, Machine Learning, Predictive Analytics, Big Data, Cloud computing, Bus. Intelligence, Data Warehousing; prgmg using PHP, Java, JavaScript, SQL, MDX, PowerShell, VBA, & NoSQL; Bus. Technologies, incl SQL Server Analysis Services (SSAS), Integration Services (SSIS), & Reporting Services (SSRS); & Intelligence technologies, incl Power BI Desktop, Excel PowerPivot, & Tableau. To apply send resume to us_careers@ aricent.com & reference code 099 when applying.

Sales Engineer (Multiple Openings) (Los Altos, CA) for COMSOL, Inc. to expand sales of COMSOL Multiphysics s/ware to engineers, mgrs, scientists & academics. Reqs Master’s deg in Engg (any field) or related. Reqs knowl of Finite Element Analysis &/or similar PDE solving methods. Reqs strong written & verbal communication skills. Reqs 25% travel. To apply: visit https://www.comsol.com/ company/careers/, Ref-4321

Sr. Software Engineer sought by Cloudera Inc. in Palo Alto, CA. Apply @ www.jobpostingtoday. com, #43558

Marketing Specialist

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER

sought by International Art Center of San Francisco LLC at Sunnyvale, CA: Pef mrkt rsrch to anlys mrktng strategies; Pres mrktng act & mrktng content to promote artists & art evnts; Coord w/ art evnt plan & ops; Comms w/ artists & art institutes in CHN to prep for mrktng cmpn; Assist w/ web content, incldg desg & editorial; Rsrch for potn sponsors. Edu Rqd: Master’s deg. in Mrktng, Biz Admin/Rel. Mail CV to 1135 Sonora Ct., Sunnyvale, CA 94086.

(San Jose, CA): Min req: BS in Civ Eng (ABET accr’d)+EIT cert. Mail resume: T Square Consulting Group, Inc. 2050 Concourse Dr #50 San Jose CA 95131 Attn: HR

Director of Engineering (SW Framework) at Aricent Technologies (Holdings) Ltd. in Santa Clara, CA will be responsible for driving dsgn for multiple or single large/complex systems & will conduct system dsgn & analysis, test & integration strategy, & solve system wide issues during integration phases. Position may work at various & unanticipated worksites throughout the U.S. Position reqs a Bachelor’s deg in Comp. Sci., Applied Comp. Sci., Comp. Engg, or closely rltd field, + 7 yrs of telecom s/ware dvlpmt exp. Must incl 7 yrs of exp w/ each of the following: (1) Wireless & Wireline Telecom Protocol stack dvlpmt based on IEFT protocols & 3GPP specs; (2) Building highly avlble & scalable s/ ware solutions; (3) Performance optimization of protocol stacks; (4) Pre & post sales client techn’l support for installation, configuration, & field deployment; (5) Debugging, analyzing & fixing production issues of protocol stacks; & (6) Prgmg in data structures, algorithms & prgmg langs incl C, C++, Shell scripting, & Php. To apply send resume to us_careers@aricent.com & reference code 802 when applying.

Computers: SPIN Development Lead, Satellite Healthcare, Inc., San Jose, CA. Req: Master’s in Applied Comp Sci, Comp Apps, Software Eng’g, or clsly rel’td, + 3 yrs exper (or Bachelor’s + 5 yrs exper). Apply: https://rn21.ultipro.com/ SAT1000/jobboard/NewCandidateExt. aspx?__JobID=6414

Principal Systems Engineers (multiple positions open) at Aricent Technologies (Holdings) Ltd. in Santa Clara, CA will analyze user reqmts, concept of ops docs, & high level system architectures to dvlp system reqmts specs. Position may work at various & unanticipated worksites throughout the U.S. Position reqs a Bachelor’s deg in Comp. Sci., Comp. Engg, Info Systems, Info Tech, Electrical Engg, or a closely rltd field, + 6 yrs of telecommunications exp or industrial automation domain exp. Must also have 6 yrs of exp w/ each of the following: providing techn’l responsibility over multiple subsystems that are part of a large & complex system or single complete system; identifying critical end-to-end scenarios & how they impact sub-systems, interfaces, modules, areas of dsgn, code & test, leading to the identification of critical sub-systems, interfaces, modules, codes & tests, for due attention in all phases by the implmtn team; working w/ sub-system tech-teams to drive high level dsgn for a complex subsystems; analyzing & guiding the fix on difficult s/ware problems & dvlp a smart & creative approach that poses least cost/ risk while meeting system acceptance criteria; & evaluating features of vendors, incl products, tools, implmtns, platforms & s/ware. To apply send resume to us_careers@aricent.com & reference code PSE when applying

ENGINEERING/TECHNOLOGY Agilent Technologies has an opening in Santa Clara, CA for Business Analyst (BA1) Design and configure Web Content Management System and manage development and integrations with other platforms like Endeca, WCC, PIM (STEP). May telecommute from home in same MSA up to 20%. Mail resume & reference job code to: Agilent Technologies c/o Cielo, 200 South Executive Drive, Suite 400, Brookfield, WI 53005.

Senior Specialist, Operations Support (The Prudential Insurance Company of America - Sunnyvale, CA; F/T) (Multiple positions avlble) Execute all release engg aspects of DevOps incl Configuration Mgmt, Build & Deployment Mgmt, Continuous Integration & Delivery. Reqts: Bach deg or foreign equiv in IT, Comp Sci, Engg (any), or a rel. field plus + 5 yrs of progr. resp. exp in the position offd. Must have 5 yrs of progr. resp. exp w/: DevOps tools incl GIT, Maven, Ant, Jenkins, & JIRA; System Admin.; Web/ App Admin; Scripting such as Shell, Perl, Ruby, JavaScript, or Python; Oracle or MySQL DB Admin; Network admin or Security Patching; Server & App. Troubleshooting; Production oncall support; App. Monitoring tools such as CA APM, NewRelic, DynaTrace, Nagios, Icinga, AppDynamics or Splunk; Java; Apache Tomcat; LDAP; Container solutions incl. Docker & orchestration. Apply: http://jobs.prudential.com & Enter Job #CO 0004C. EOE.

Applications Engineer (Multiple Openings) (Los Altos, CA) for COMSOL, Inc. to provide tech’l support for users of COMSOL Multiphysics, dvlp & teach training classes. Requires Master’s deg in Engg (any field) or related, & 6 months of exp as Sales Engineer or Applications Engineer. Reqs 6 months of exp w/ COMSOL Multiphysics or PowerFLOW. Requires strong written & verbal communication skills. To apply: visit https://www.comsol.com/company/ careers/, Ref-4381

McAfee, LLC has an open position in Santa Clara, CA. *Data Analyst [MCF-SC19-STAT] – Work on database mgmt., data warehouse, design & integration of business & product data, function, & systems; work on statistics, data modeling, threat detection, data virtualization & analytics; & programming in Python, R, Unix, SQL & PL/SQL. Mail Resumes to A. Johnson, HR, McAfee, LLC 5000 Headquarters Drive, Plano, TX 75024 & note Job ID#


Computers

Fortinet, Inc. has following openings in Sunnyvale, CA: Software Development QA Engineer (190801): Participate in the Quality Assurance verification and maintenance of the existing and next generation security product suite; Manager, Software Development (190802): Oversee software project development cycles and release schedules for FortiSIEM analytics-related projects; Software Development QA Engineer (190803): Execute regression, functional, and stress testing on products using a combination of manual and autotesting techniques; Embedded Software Developer (190804): Develop and maintain existing and next generation networking security product suits written with C programming language; Java Developer (190805): Develop new features and fix customer issues for Fortinet products. To apply, mail resumes and ref. job title with code to Fortinet, Inc., 899 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, CA 94086, Attn: HR K.K.

InvenSense, Inc., leader of Sensor System on Chip in San Jose, CA is accepting applications for: SW Algorithms Engr.– Develop motion processing algorithms for sensor fusion, calibration & indoor navigation; AMS Verif. Engr.– Conduct dsgn. verif. & validation of integrated circuits w/ focus on mixed-signal dealing and top-lvl dsgn. verif. Apply at jobs@invensense.com.

Xingtera Inc located in Santa Clara, CA seeks a Chief Technology Director. MA/MS or BA/BS in electrical engineering, computer engineering, or equivalent with 10 years of relevant experience including: solid digital communication theory and chip design background; be skilled in performing system and implementation architecture analysis and advising high performance solutions; strong capability in specifying bus architecture, reset, clocking, and power management; solid experiences in developing system models, proficiency in verilog, c++, matlab, fpga prototyping, verification methodologies, tool flow, scripting languages etc. Employer may accept any suitable combination of education, training or experience. Travel within USA will be required. Candidate must be willing to travel and relocate(if needed) Send resumes to Attn: HR, 4633 Old Ironside Dr., #460, Santa Clara, CA 95054.

TECHNICAL/ ENGINEERING

ENGINEERING

ServiceNow, Inc. has the following positions available in Santa Clara, CA: Software Engineer (5142): Design and develop applications on the ServiceNow platform. Sr. Technical Writer (5313): Work side-by-side with the release management team and ServiceNow developers to produce high-quality content for customers moving to a new release. Sr. Staff Network Engineer (6474): Participate and provide technical leadership in a small team managing all aspects of network, telecom, and security in a global and rapidly expanding IT infrastructure. Position may require travel to various unanticipated locations. Send resume by mail to: ServiceNow, Inc., Attn: Global Mobility, 2225 Lawson Lane, Santa Clara, CA 95054. Must reference job title and job code.

Alibaba Group US Inc. has an opening in Sunnyvale, CA: Staff Engineer: Closely track recent development of machine learning platforms, provided by large data process systems. Up to 10% international travel required to perform job duties. Mail resume to: Alibaba Group US Inc., Attn: HR, 400 S El Camino Real, Suite 400, San Mateo, CA, 94402. Must reference ref.# (SE-ZW).

Product Verification Engineer (Code: PVE-SR) Dsgn, dvlp test plans/protocols for functional sftwr verification. Reqs MS. Mail resume to Hien Nguyen @ Intuitive Surgical, 1020 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, CA 94086. Ref title & code.

ENGINEERING Alibaba Group US Inc. has an opening in Sunnyvale, CA: Senior Security Engineer: Contribute to threat modeling analysis. Mail resume to: Alibaba Group US Inc., Attn: HR, 400 S El Camino Real, Suite 400, San Mateo, CA, 94402. Must reference ref.# (SSE-PA).

Software Developers (Ref:102) Devlpng clr stmt of obj & perf metrics. Perf bus anlys & req-gathrng. Clbrting with client’s bus team in ordr to undrstnd the bus bkgrnd & clry define the scope & key obj of the prjct. Detail job desc at https://spectrumtek.com/. Job Site: Sunnyvale, CA. Job may involve working at various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S. Travel required to the extent of relocating to various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S. Please send resumes referencing the aforementioned job title & ref number to Spectrum Technologies LLC, 1202 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, CA 94086.

Sr Software Engineer ViewRay Technologies, Inc. in Mountain View, CA. Deliver prod enhancements to Treatment Planning & Delivery s/w for MRI device, support dev of app s/w for RT & multi-threaded computing engines for 4D & RT data. MS Medical Info Sys or related + 5 yrs developing & implementing s/w apps for med devices in FDA-regulated environ. Resumes to: vrector@viewray. com and reference Sr SWE

REAL ESTATE

ENGINEERING Applied Materials, Inc. has the following openings in Sunnyvale, CA: Process Engineer (Req# W975): Lead plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition technology dvlpmnt. Reqs domestic + int’l travel up to 20%. Technical Materials Program Manager (Req# T2509): Forecast & communicate engg, materials, & mfg reqs to suppliers. Software QA Engineer (Req# T2224): Debug variety of complex s/w for front end products (FEP) group. Mail resume to Applied Materials, Inc. M/S 1211, 3225 Oakmead Village Dr., Santa Clara, CA 95054. Must include REQ# to be considered.

ENGINEERING CA, Inc. has an opening in San Jose, CA for Product Manager to define, plan & deliver performance testing products. 20% domestic travel required. Ref job code (4423358) & mail resume: HR (JO) 1320 Ridder Park Dr, San Jose CA 95131

55+ YEARS OLD & LOOKING FOR WORK? FREE job assistance & paid on-thejob training. Must meet low-income guidelines.Call Sourcewise Senior Employment Services to speak with a Senior Employment Specialist at (408) 350-3200, Option 5

ENGINEERING Applied Materials, Inc. has the following openings in Santa Clara, CA: Process Engineer (Req# M900): Design, collect data, analyze and compile reports on Process Engineering experiments, within safety guidelines. International and domestic travel 30% of time. IT Solutions Mgmt (App/Sys Engr) (Req# K1237): Work directly with internal customers and discuss current business processes used by the business BUSINESS Business Dev Mgr (Req# P1217): Identify inorganic growth opportunities, including acquisition, investment or partnership targets, within the Semiconductor & adjacent markets for AGS & Display Business Unit. Mail resume to Applied Materials, Inc. M/S 1211, 3225 Oakmead Village Dr., Santa Clara, CA 95054. Must include REQ# to be considered.

63 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Principal Software Engineer in Test for Roche Molecular Systems, Inc., Santa Clara, CA. Telecommuting permitted up to 2 days/wk. Req: Bach in Comp Sci, Info Sys, S/ware Engr, or rltd + 8 yrs exp. (or Master + 6 yrs exp). Apply: http:// applyroche.com/201907-122800 (Job ID: 201907-122800)

MISCELLANEOUS Christa - Licensed Hairstylist Blond specialist and Barber is now located in salons throughout the greater Campbell/San Jose area for your convenience. Great results, quality products. See pics @ hair_by.Christaeiguren OR www. HairByChrista.com For appointments / questions call 408-509-5788

LEGALS & PUBLIC NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656843 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Baby Your Back, 2. Baby Your Back Massage, 3. Baby Your Back Prenatal Massage, 4428 Scottsfield Dr., San Jose, CA, 95136, Kristyn Marcon Powell. 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/Kristyn Marcon Powell. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/17/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657000 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Graciepu Boutique, 1478 Crespi Dr., San Joe, CA, 95129, Credo Invictus, LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/31/2018. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Grace Anne Pugal-Liao, Managing Member. #201731310384. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/22/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)


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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656958 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Alexandra Sung Real Estate, 109 Bond Ct., Los Gatos, CA, 95030, Alexandra Sung, Jeffrey Sung. This business is being conducted by a Married Couple. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Alexandra Sung. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/19/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656986 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Mint And Stitch, 530 Showers Dr. STE 222, Mountain View, CA, 94040, Romi Hakmon. This business is being conducted by a Married Couple. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Romi Hakmon. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/22/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656872 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Haul Away Today, 4520 Sherbourne Drive, San Jose, CA, 95124, Denis Weir. This business is being conducted by a Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 06/07/2019. /s/Denis Weir. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/17/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656918 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Marauder Fishing Brand, 575 University Ave., San Jose, CA, 95110, Jayson Reduta. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/18/2019. /s/Jayson Reduta. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/19/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656949 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Elevated Design, 20763 St. Joan Ct., Saratoga, CA, 95070, Aimee Janet Mckone. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/19/2019. /s/Aimee Janet Mckone. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/19/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656968 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Retro Fitness, 868 Blossom Hill Rd., San Jose, CA, 95123, Big Ideas Inc., 919 Theresa Ct., Menlo Park, CA, 94025. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/ Joshua Lee, President. #C4277616. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/22/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657031 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Harmoniq, 3500 Granada Avenue #110, Santa Clara, CA, 95051, Nadezda Shapiro. 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/Nadezda Shapiro. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/23/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657022 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Moodfit, 748 La Para Avenue, Palo Alto, CA, 94306, Roble Ridge Software, LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/01/2015. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Jon Schlossberg, Manager. #201026310264. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/23/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656659 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Barry’s Bootcamp, 3060 Olsen Drive Suite 120, San Jose, CA, 95128, BBA San Jose LLC, 2120 Steiner Street, San Francisco, CA, 94115. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/01/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Adam Shane, CEO. #201818010234. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/10/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

SUMMONS (CITACION JUDICIAL) NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: (AVISO AL DEMANDADO): CHRISTOPHER GILUSO AKA CHRISTOPHER J. GILUSO, AND INDIVDUAL; AND DOES 1 TO 10 INCLUSIVE YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PLAINTIFF: (LO ESTA DEMANDANDO EL DAMANDANTE): SERENGETI FINANCIAL, LLC CASE NUMBER: 17CV319588

NOTICE! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read the informationbelow.You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and fegat papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copyserved on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear yourcase. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California CourtsOnline Self-He!p Center (www.courtinfo. ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, askthe court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and propertymay be taken without further warning from the court.There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorneyreferral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locatethese nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web site (www.lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center(www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees andcosts on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case.jAV/501 Lo han demandado. Sf no responde dentro de 30 dlas, Ia corte puede decidir en su contra sin escuchar su versi6n. Lea Ia informaci6n acantinuaci6n.Tiene 30 DiAS DE CALENDAR/0 despues de que le entreguen esta citaci6n y papeles legales para presentar una respuesta par escrito en estacorte y hacer que se entregue una capia a! demandante. Una carta a una 1/amada telef6nica nolo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estaren farmato legal correcto sf desea que procesen su caso en Ia corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta. Puede encontrar estos formularios de Ia corte y mas informaci6n en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.sucorte. ca.govJ, en Iabiblioteca de !eyes de su condado a en Ia corte que le quede mas cerca. Sf no puede pagar Ia cuota de presentaci6n, pida af secretario de Ia corteque le de un formulario de exenci6n de pago de cuotas. Sino presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y Ia corte lepodra quitar su suefdo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia.Hay otros requisitos legales. Es recomendable que flame a un abogado inmediatamente. Sino conoce a un abogado, puede llamar a un seNicio deremisi6n a abogados. Sf no puede pagar a un abogado, es posible que cumpla con los requisitos para obtener se!Vicios legales gratuitos de unprograma de seNicios legales sin fines de Iuera. Puede encontrar estos grupos sin fines de Iuera en el sitio web de California Legal SeNices,(www.lawhelpcalifornia. orgJ, en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California, {wNw. sucorte.ca.govJ o poniendose en contacto con Ia corte o elcolegio de abogados locales. AVISO: Por ley, Ia corte tiene derecho a reclamar las cuotas y los costas exentos por imponer un gravamen sabrecualquier recuperacf6n de $10,000 6 mas de valor recibida mediante un acuerdo o una concesi6n de arbitraje en un caso de derecho civil. Tiene quepagar el gravamen de Ia corte antes de que Ia corte pueda desechar el caso.The name and address of the court is: (EI nombre y direcci6n de Ia corte es): Santa Clara County Superior Court, 191 North First Street, San Jose, CA 95113The name, address, and telephone number of plaintiffs attorney, or plaintiff without an attorney, is:(EI nombre, Ia direcci6n y el numero de teletono del abogado del demandante. o del demandante que no tiene abogado, es):Paul Goyette, Esq. (SBN: 137250) – 2366 Gold Meadow Way Suite 250, Gold River, Ca 95670 (916) 254-5300DATE: November 20 2017 (Pub Dates 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657044 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Photofox Photo Booth, 1843 Laurinda Drive, San Jose, CA, 95124, Madfox LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 01/02/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Michael Fox, Managing Director. #201901710294. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/24/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656700 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Zenibella Nail Spa, 1148 Riverside Dr., Los Altos, CA, 94024, Zenibella. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Huy H. Fong, President. #4286944. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/11/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657071 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: SMH Learning, 322 Los Gatos Saratoga Road, Los Gatos, CA, 93030, Stephanie Macey Hanses, 1865 Johnathan Ave., San Jose, CA, 95125. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/25/2019. /s/Stephanie Macey Hanses. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/25/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME. CASE NO. 19CV348746 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): Teri McFadden for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Maria Stephany Gonzalez. Proposed name: Maria Stephany Suchan THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name change described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: October 15, 2019 at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: July 12, 2019 (pub dates: 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657056 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Wu Tangy Pickles, 642 Albion Drive, San Jose, CA, 95136, Melita Ann Kahrmann. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/24/2019. /s/Melita Kahrmann. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/24/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656524 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Sunset Estates Mobile Home Park, 2. Sunset Estates, LTD, 3. Sunset Estates Mobile Home Community, 4. Sunset Estates, MHP, 5. Sunset Estates, Mobile Home Community, 6. Sunset Estates, MHC, 7. Sunset Estates Mountain View, 8. Sunset Estates, A Community for Older Persons, 9. Sunset Estates, 10. Sunset Estates, Manufactured Housing Community, 433 Sylvan Avenue, Mountain View, CA, 94041, Belvedere Property Management, LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 09/09/2016. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Paul A. Kalcic, Manager. #201410110320. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/05/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656422 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Precision Tire And Lube, 450 E. Ninth Street, Gilroy, CA, 95020, Rod Lester Hartley, 9050 Kern Ave #E6, Gilroy, CA, 95020. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/01/2019. /s/Rod L Hartley. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/01/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657248 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Posh Bagel MV, 1040 Grant Road STE 185, Mountain View, CA, 94040, Van Seng, 205 Ribier Ave., Modesto, CA, 95350. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/30/2019. /s/VAn Seng. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/30/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656916 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: AT Dental Care Dental Practice of Tuan Vo, DDS, Inc., 1906 Aborn Road, San Jose, CA, 95121, Tuan Vo, DDS, Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Tuan Vo, President. #C4291963. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/18/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657260 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Snippet Training, 5201 Great America Parkway, Suite 320, Santa Clara, CA, 95054. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 06/02/2014. Refile in facts from previous filing #592647. /s/Maria Lesley Pribyl. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/30/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657108 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Airline Ticket Fare, 1111 W El Camino Real Suite 109-240, Sunnyvale, CA, 94087, Travelopod. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Refile in facts from previous filing #651988. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Ritu Panesar, President. #C3529805. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/25/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657109 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Tripvo, 111 W El Camino Real Suite 109-240, Sunnyvale, CA, 94087, Travelopod. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Ritu Panesar, President. #C4260771. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/25/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657081 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Creative Mileage Inc., 5201 Great America Pkwy, Suite 320, Santa Clara, CA, 95054, Zeetapro Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 05/14/2014. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Subrata Chatterji, President. #C3675732. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/25/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657356 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 4 Top LLC, 472 N 3rd St., San Jose, CA, 95112, 4 Top. LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Mark Totah, Owner. #201917910365. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/31/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657341 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. FeedbackWhiz, 2. Ecomwhiz Inc., 3. Productwhiz, 4. Ppcwhiz, 5. Refundwhiz, 3777 Stevens Creek Blvd #310, Santa Clara, CA, 95051, Ecomwhiz, Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 01/01/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Henson Wu, CEO. #C4239684. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/31/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657313 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Clarely Jewelry, 557 Crimsonberry Way, San Jose, CA, 95129, Chiara Erba. 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/Chiara Erba. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/31/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657149 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656935 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: The Tax Muse, 171 Main St., #235, Los Altos, CA, 94022, Montparnasse LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/18/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Wendy L Hsu, Manager. #20191820396. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/19/2019. (pub Metro 07/31, 08/07, 08/14, 08/21/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Levels, 2. Levels Entertainment, 1246 East Santa Clara Street, San Jose, CA, 95116, Levels Entertainment Group, Inc., 2073 Bridgeport Loop, Discovery Bay, CA, 94505. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 05/20/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Eddie Juarez, President. #C4279171. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/26/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657421 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Phoenix’s Curiosity Cabinet, 395 Union Ave AptG, Campbell, CA, 95008, Jennifer Snedeker. 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/ Jennifer Snedeker. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657251

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657340 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Salu Physical Therapy P C, 2064 Walsh Ave STE B2, Santa Clara, CA, 95050. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 06/18/2015. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Jerry Shao Hung, CEO. #3797231. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/31/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657426 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Ax Tax Solutions, 3561 Homestead Rd., STE 503, Santa Clara, CA, 95051, Cayman Capital Management, Inc., 80 Belvedere St., STE 3, San Rafael, CA, 94901. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 11/02/2018. Above entity was formed in the state of Wyoming. /s/Dennis B Noss, CEO. #4209898. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657419 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Pacific Hand Car Wash, 1051 E. Santa Clara St., San Jose, CA, 95116, Pacific Hand Car Wash SJ. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/02/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Jason Tang, Manager. #4298161. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

Operations Officer. #201915510245. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/09/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657135 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Silicon Valley Heights, 800 W. El Camino Real, Suite 180, A Tu Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 06/01/2014. Refile in facts from previous filing #592421. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Angela Tu, CEO. #3642965. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/26/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657136 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Silicon Valley Heights Realty, 800 W. El Camino Real, Suite 180, A Tu Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 05/01/2019. Refile in facts from previous filing #591055. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/ Angela Tu, CEO. #3642965. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/26/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657377 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Detectiveinc, 2. Security Operators Group, 1155 North First Street #111, San Jose, CA, 95112, Dietz Associates Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/25/2014. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Don Vo, Vice President. #C1652932. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/01/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657573

TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petition of: Ashley Paige Bruce for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Ashley Paige Bruce. Proposed name: Ashley Paige Luna Martinez. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name change described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: September 24, 2019 at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: August 13, 2019 (pub dates: 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657703

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Bambini Furtuna, 20 N. Santa Cruz Ave., STE B, Los Gatos, CA, 95030, Healthy Remedies LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of Delaware. /s/ Stephen Luczo, Member. #201622310337. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/08/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656966 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Aron Builders, 889 N. San Anotnio Road STE 110, Los Altos, CA, 94022, Aron Construction Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/01/2018. Refile in facts from previous filing #640583. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Navneet Aron, CEO. #C4009910. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/22/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #655830 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Radlo & Su, 273 South Cragmont Avenue, San Jose, CA, 95127, Edward J. Radlo, 28040 Elena Road, Los Altos, CA, 94022. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 06/13/2019. /s/Edward J. Radlo. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 06/14/2019. (pub Metro 06/26, 07/03, 07/10, 07/17/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Elizabeth A Dobisz Nanofabrication Consulting, 6543 Cobblestone Court, San Jose, CA, 95120, Elizabeth Ann Dobisz. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/11/2019. /s/Elizabeth Ann Dobisz. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/12/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Kevin Pham, 180 Great Oaks Blvd., San Jose, CA, 95119, Kevin Pham, 30 W. Virginia St. Unit 2, San Jose, CA, 95110. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/12/2019. /s/Kevin Pham. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/01/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657415

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657753

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Balloons Are Better, 1895 Washington Street, Santa Clara, CA, 95050, Katherine Debra Coronado. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/10/2019. /s/ Katherine Coronado. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Tafoya Properties, 481 N. 10th St., San Jose, CA, 95112, Kenneth Tafoya. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/02/2019. /s/Kenneth Tafoya. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/13/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Creating Comfort LLC, 1975 Murguia Avenue, Santa Clara, CA, 95050. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/27/2009. Refile in facts from previous filing #592467. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Denise Herndon, Managing Partner. #200918710210. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/16/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657420

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657770

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Red Curbs Skate Shop, 40923 Grimmer Blvd., Fremont, CA, 94538, Red Curbs Skateboarding LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/01/2015. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Jesse Van Vleck. #201120210305, This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: SLP Machining, 1585 N 4th St., Unit K, San Jose, CA, 95112, Taehyun Kim, 10160 Parkwood Dr., Unit 3, Cupertino, Ca, 95014. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/13/2019. /s/Taehyun Kim. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/13/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656902

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657462

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: God Garden, 1029 Summerview Dr., San Jose, CA, 95132, Denny Quang Nguyen. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/15/2019. /s/Denny Quang. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/15/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Flex Fusion Studios, 2125 South Winchester Avenue Suite 140, Campbell, CA, 95008, Lehni LLC, 14121 Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road, Saratoga, CA, 95070. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Helen Christine, Chief

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME. CASE NO. 19CV346070

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657629

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657401

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Hobby Quest Of Santa Clara County, 1055 Escalon Ave., Apt 504, Sunnyvale, CA, 94085, NVVK Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Refile in facts from previous filing #657403. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Vijay Veeramachaneni, President. #C4296886. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/05/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656606

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: HC Group, 3118 Balmoral Drive, San Jose, CA, 95132, Doanh Chau, 51 S Leigh Avenue, Campbell, CA, 95008. 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/ Doanh Chau. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/13/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657679

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657488

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Old Toms Wormery, 920 S. 7th St., San Jose, CA, 95112, Thomas Boehme. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on on 07/12/2019. /s/Thomas Boehme. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657735

Greene. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name change described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: December 31, 2019 at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: August 5, 2019 (pub dates: 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Home & Item, 6881 West Riverside Way, San Jose, CA, 95129, Warren Tsu. 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/Warren Tsu. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/07/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657461 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Ember Collective, 6820 Royalwood Way, San Jose, CA, 95120, Paige Flanders-Fierro. 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/Paige Flanders-Fierro. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Julie Carver, 3740 Miraverde Court Apt 128, Santa Clara, CA, 95051. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/12/2019. /s/Julie Lea. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/12/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: New Century Sports, 698 Lenfest Road, San Jose, CA, 95133, Wen Ma, 1519 Chihong Dr., San Jose, CA, 95131. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 05/01/2019. /s/Wen Ma. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/12/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657450 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Art Ark Gallery, 1035 S. 6th St., San Jose, CA, 95112, Genevieve Hastings, 1058 S. 5th Street, San Jose, CA, 95112. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/02/2019. /s/Genevieve Hastings. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/02/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657717

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Bay Area Marketing Hub, 1111 Morse Ave., SP#17, Sunnyvale, CA, 94089, Chet Holloway. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/18/2019. /s/Chet Holloway. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/18/2019. (pub Metro 08/14, 08/21, 08/28, 09/04/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #656775

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657707 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Prime USA Scales, 77 N Almaden Ave, 619, San Jose, CA, 95110, Herrmann USA Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/31/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Frederick Herrmann, CFO, #C3633173 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/12/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657643 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: KP Enterprises, 14435C Big Basin Way, #180, Saratoga, CA, 95070, KK Capital, LLC, EAP Enterprises, LC. This business is being conducted by a Joint Venture. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Katrina M. Kidd. #17-775908. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/09/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME. CASE NO. 19CV352684 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): Sandra Elizabeth Kirwan for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Sandra Elizabeth Kirwan. Proposed name: Sondra Elizabeth

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657925 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Habana On Wheels, 460 W Taylor, San Jose, CA, 95110, Osvaldo Ruiz. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/16/2019. /s/Osvaldo Ruiz. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 08/16/2019. (pub Metro 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #657921

ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME. CASE NO. 19CV353004 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petition of: Yong Bum Lee for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Yong Bum Lee. Proposed name: Sean Lee. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name change described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: January 7, 2019 at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: August 19, 2019 (pub dates: 08/21, 08/28, 09/04, 09/11/2019)

65 AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Vista Verde Home Care, 2. Laura Lane Independent Living Services, 3. Laura Lane Respite, 1400 Coleman Ave., STE F-15, Santa Clara, CA, 95050, Vista Verde Home Health, LLC. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/01/2014. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/ Nguyen, Dieu-Qui, Director. #201418410142. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 07/30/2019. (pub Metro 08/07, 08/14, 08/21, 08/28/2019)


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT, the Finance Department of the City of San Jose, County of Santa Clara, State of California, declares that the following monetary sums have been held by the City of San Jose and have remained unclaimed in the funds hereafter indicated for a period of over three (3) years and will become the property of the City of San Jose on the 14th day of October, 2019, a date not less than forty-five (45) days after the first publication of this Notice. Any party of interest may, prior to the date designated herein above, file a claim with the City’s Finance Department which includes the claimant’s name, address and telephone number, Social Security Number or Federal Employer Identification Number, amount of claim, the grounds on which the claim is founded. The Unclaimed Funds Form can be obtained from the City’s Finance

Office at 200 E. Santa Clara Street; 13th Floor, San Jose, CA. 95113, or from the City’s website at http://www.sanjoseca.gov/DocumentCenter/View/78838. Proof of identity such as a copy of a driver’s license, social security card or passport must be provided before funds will be released. With any questions, please contact the City of San Jose, Finance Department at (408) 535-7080 or by email at ap_unclaimed@sanjoseca.gov. This notice and its contents are in accordance with California Government Code Sections 50050-50056.

101 LIMO & TRANSPORTATION: Check# 5166325 | Issued on 6/30/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $100.00 A ALASKA LIMOUSINE: Check# 5164407 | Issued on 6/17/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $407.70 ADAMS,TROY: Check# 5164019 | Issued on 6/10/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $31.00 ADAMSON,JESSE: Check# 5165195 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $346.89 ADAN ROBERTO: Check# 100068952 | Issued on 7/6/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $150.00 ADAN ROBERTO: Check# 100068560 | Issued on 4/26/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $25.00 ALL STAR LIMO INC.: Check# 5168006 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $97.00 ANDRES, DESIREE: Check# 5167572 | Issued on 7/29/2016 from GENERAL FUND | Amount: $25.00 ARVIND, RANGARAJAN: Check# 5166347 | Issued on 6/30/2016 from DEPOSITOR FUND | Amount: $50.00 ASKEW PHILIP: Check# 100068773 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $100.00 AVANTI LIMOUSINE SERVICE INC.: Check# 5168023 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $86.50 BELLMAN,KIMBERLY: Check# 5166358 | Issued on 6/30/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $34.53 BHAGWAAN ASRE LIMOUSINE: Check# 5168038 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $92.37 BOEHM CONSTANTINA: Check# 100068576 | Issued on 4/26/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $25.00 BOROWSKI BRYCE: Check# 100068747 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $100.00 BOSS LIMOUSINES LLC: Check# 5168045 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $100.00 BROWN,DAVID: Check# 5167596 | Issued on 7/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $123.36 CALDERON JUAN: Check# 100068084 | Issued on 10/29/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $40.00 CAMPOS ENRIQUE: Check# 100068153 | Issued on 11/24/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $25.00 CANGIALOSI,FRANCES: Check# 5165300 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $35.37 CANTU ROBERTA: Check# 100068342 | Issued on 2/17/2016 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $18.00 CARDINAL TRANSPORTATION: Check# 5168063 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from AIRPORT REVENUE FUND | Amount: $100.00 CARDOSO,KAREN: Check# 5165303 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $326.85 CARRASCO,HERIBERTO: Check# 5165308 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $59.05 CASEM,PURINIO: Check# 5165311 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $355.32 CHU PAUL ( PABLO ): Check# 100068096 | Issued on 10/29/2015 from WORKFORCE INVESTMENT ACT (WIA) | Amount: $98.70 COGNETTI, KAYLIN: Check# 5164078 | Issued on 6/10/2016 from GENERAL FUND | Amount: $15.99 CRUZ ERIC: Check# 100067207 | Issued on 1/22/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 DAVIES,DAVID ALAN: Check# 5165409 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $205.60 DELEON RENE: Check# 100067202 | Issued on 1/22/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 DOMULOT, RAYMOND: Check# 5164101 | Issued on 6/10/2016 from DEPOSITOR FUND | Amount: $500.00 DONTON CONSTRUCTION INC: Check# 5165438 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $300.49 DUONG QUANG: Check# 100067427 | Issued on 3/10/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 ELECTONA,NELSON M AND MARIA E: Check# 5165456 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $39.59 ESCOBAR DAVID PANTOJA: Check# 100067637 | Issued on 5/7/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $250.00 FAWCETT,TOM: Check# 5165474 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $275.18 GONZALEZ JULISSA: Check# 100068184 | Issued on 12/23/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 GRUBA,STEVEN: Check# 5165539 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $167.65 HERNANDEZ RICHARD: Check# 100066726 | Issued on 8/27/2014 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $50.00 HIREMATAD,RAVISHANKAR: Check# 5165573 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $153.93 HSIEH,YENYU: Check# 5167702 | Issued on 7/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $149.11 HUNGER CHARLES: Check# 100068347 | Issued on 2/17/2016 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $70.00 IWAMURA,HARVEY: Check# 5165617 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $334.23 JIANG,LINA: Check# 5163438 | Issued on 5/27/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $70.00 JIANG,QI: Check# 5165628 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $404.87 KNAPEN,GEERT: Check# 5165658 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $149.72 LEUNG,KWOK SHING: Check# 5165689 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $270.29 LEYVA KATHI: Check# 100066737 | Issued on 8/27/2014 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $70.00 LUBONG,HENRY: Check# 5165712 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $36.31 LUONG, CUONG N: Check# 5168157 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from GENERAL FUND | Amount: $75.00 MALDONADO JOSE: Check# 100068195 | Issued on 12/23/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 MARINO,SALVATORE: Check# 5163460 | Issued on 5/27/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $147.48 MAROLDA,JASON: Check# 5165734 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $105.43 MARQUEZ ANGEL: Check# 100068056 | Issued on 9/28/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 MUNOZ ARTURO: Check# 100068156 | Issued on 11/24/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $58.00 MYERS DEBRA: Check# 100066998 | Issued on 11/5/2014 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $85.00 NARASIMHAN,SUDARSAN: Check# 5165793 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $266.75 NGUYEN JEFFREY: Check# 100066964 | Issued on 10/20/2014 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $100.00 NGUYEN,LONG TRAN-NGUYEN: Check# 5165828 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $108.60 NGUYEN,SUONG: Check# 5165835 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $332.12 OROZCO,ABEL: Check# 5165864 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $253.04 PHAM, NICK: Check# 5168198 | Issued on 8/5/2016 from GENERAL FUND | Amount: $250.00 PHAM,ANDY: Check# 5165909 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $33.02 PRIFTIS, MAGDALINA: Check# 5166575 | Issued on 6/30/2016 from GENERAL FUND | Amount: $20.00 RAMIREZ-RAMIREZ MARIO: Check# 100068192 | Issued on 12/23/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 RIVAS, SONIA: Check# 5164594 | Issued on 6/17/2016 from GENERAL FUND | Amount: $331.50 ROMERO EMMANUEL: Check# 100067449 | Issued on 4/8/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $25.00 ROSAS-GUITERREZ JONATHAN: Check# 100068070 | Issued on 10/14/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 RUIZ LORENZO JESSICA: Check# 100068967 | Issued on 7/6/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $125.00 SALINAS,MAURICIO: Check# 5162760 | Issued on 5/13/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $61.68 SANCHEZ ALBERTO: Check# 100068711 | Issued on 6/7/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $35.95 SANCHEZ ALBERTO: Check# 100068601 | Issued on 5/4/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $95.00 SANCHEZ SABRINA: Check# 100067701 | Issued on 5/28/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $25.00 SANTIAGO SANCHEZ OSVALDO: Check# 100068639 | Issued on 5/4/2016 from WIA - MEMO 290 | Amount: $100.00


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PUBLIC NOTICE Office at 200 E. Santa Clara Street; 13th Floor, San Jose, CA. 95113, or from the City’s website at http://www.sanjoseca.gov/DocumentCenter/View/78838. Proof of identity such as a copy of a driver’s license, social security card or passport must be provided before funds will be released. With any questions, please contact the City of San Jose, Finance Department at (408) 535-7080 or by email at ap_unclaimed@sanjoseca.gov. This notice and its contents are in accordance with California Government Code Sections 50050-50056.

SERNA,RAYMOND: Check# 5132340 | Issued on 1/8/2015 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $38.87 SHAY,MICHAEL: Check# 5166045 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $116.92 SHEEHY,GARY: Check# 5166047 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $229.76 SIBIZ LLC: Check# 5165021 | Issued on 6/24/2016 from DEPOSITOR FUND | Amount: $252.35 SUGUITAN JENRIEL: Check# 100068073 | Issued on 10/14/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $150.00 TAN,JANET: Check# 5166102 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $32.86 TAPTELIS,NICHOLAS: Check# 5166105 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $32.08 TARNG,JIEH-WEN: Check# 5168592 | Issued on 8/12/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $234.65 TRAN,TU HOANG: Check# 5166144 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $170.80 TRUJILLO,PAUL: Check# 5166151 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $127.57 TRUONG,HIEN: Check# 5166154 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $289.95 VALIANI,ZUBAIDA: Check# 5166177 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $323.68 VARGAS PAKAL: Check# 100067961 | Issued on 7/3/2015 from WIA-SAN JOSE ONE STOP-MEMO 290 | Amount: $100.00 VILLANUEVA,DAVID: Check# 5166191 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $51.66 WONG,ALLEN: Check# 5166233 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $37.25 YU,CHANG QUIN: Check# 5166258 | Issued on 6/29/2016 from INTEGRATED WASTE MGMT FUND | Amount: $52.43

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AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT, the Finance Department of the City of San Jose, County of Santa Clara, State of California, declares that the following monetary sums have been held by the City of San Jose and have remained unclaimed in the funds hereafter indicated for a period of over three (3) years and will become the property of the City of San Jose on the 14th day of October, 2019, a date not less than forty-five (45) days after the first publication of this Notice. Any party of interest may, prior to the date designated herein above, file a claim with the City’s Finance Department which includes the claimant’s name, address and telephone number, Social Security Number or Federal Employer Identification Number, amount of claim, the grounds on which the claim is founded. The Unclaimed Funds Form can be obtained from the City’s Finance


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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New State-of-the-Art Location 533 Ocean St. • Santa Cruz 8am – 9pm Daily Licenses: C10-0000172-LIC • C10-0000234-LIC

Original Location 3600 Soquel Ave. • Santa Cruz 8am – 10pm Daily

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

Experience Santa Cruz Cannabis


metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | AUGUST 21-27, 2019

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Win free stuff!

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metroactive SVSCENE PHOTOS BY GREG RAMAR

Dressing up with friends is the best part of SVCC.

the McEnery Convention Center over the weekend.

These two cosplayers take SVCC very seriously.

If you couldn’t stand the heat, you definitely didn’t belong in the kitchen at the DRAG QUEEN COOKING SHOWDOWN.

KYLO REN and MYSTERIO—chillin’ like a couple of super villains at Silicon Valley Comic Con.

SILICON VALLEY COMIC CON drew cosplayers in droves to

AUGUST 21-27, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com

SVCC guest and former co-host of ‘MythBusters’ ADAM SAVAGE proudly displays his cover shot.


Best Chef Winner: Jeffrey Stout C

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Recipient 2016, 2017, 2018 & 2019


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