CANNABIS BIZ SUMMIT METROGIVEAWAYS.COM
Maker Faire Guide
M AY 15 -2 1, 20 19 | V O L . 3 5, N O . 1 0 | S I L I C O N VA L L E Y, C A | F R E E
Metro Silicon Valley May 8-14, 2019
Tap Dance Snooping on inmate calls helps catch bad actors, but easy access raises new concerns P12
You’re holding one of the state’s best rags P6
CENTER SECTION
FRYS_WED_METRO_LEFT_051519 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
10 2
0 Smart Wi-Fi Light Switch
AC2300 Nighthawk Dual-Band Gigabit Smart WiFi Router with MU-MIMO
• Control Your Home Lighting from Anywhere with Your Smartphone or Tablet • Set Lights to Turn Off and on at Dawn, Dusk, or any Time that Works with Your Daily Schedule Was $39.99 Instant Savings $5
$8.75
$
26
PROMO CODE
Free Shipping on Orders $35 or More
Was $219.99 Instant Savings $30
$
SAVE 34%
24*
*With Wednesday Promo Code www.frys.com/signmeup
#8925463
189
99*
SHIPS FREE
Network NAS Internal Hard Drive
49
SAVE 23%
99
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
SHIPS FREE
Home of Fast, Friendly, Knowledgeable Service SHOP ONLINE at www.FRYS.com “Advertised prices valid only in metropolitan circulation area of newspaper in which this advertisement appears. Prices and selection shown in this advertisement may not be available online at Fry’s website: www.FRYS.com”
facebook.com/fryselectronics
CAMPBELL 600 E. Hamilton Ave. (408) 364-3700 • FAX (408) 364-3718 CONCORD 1695 Willow Pass Road (925) 852-0300 • FAX (925) 852-0318 FREMONT 43800 Osgood Road (510) 252-5300 • FAX (510) 252-5318 PALO ALTO 340 Portage Ave. (650) 496-6000 • FAX (650) 496-6018 SAN JOSE 550 E. Brokaw Road (408) 487-1000 • FAX (408) 487-1018 SUNNYVALE 1077 E. Arques Ave. (408) 617-1300 • FAX (408) 617-1318
d1
Circle DisneySmart Parental Controls
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
Limit 2 per Customer R7000P #9041447
Was $534.99 Instant Savings $55.99 Limit 1 per Customer
#7726248
479
$
STORE HOURS M-Fri 10-9, Sat 9-9 Sun 9-8 Prices Good Wednesday, May 15, 2019 through Saturday, May 18, 2019. Prices subject to change after Saturday, May 18, 2019. Limit Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors. No Sales to Dealers or Resellers. Rebates Subject to Manufacturer’s Specifications. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Sales tax to be calculated and paid on the in-store price for all rebate products.Actual memory capacity stated above may be less. Total accessible memory capacity may vary depending on operating environment and/or method of calculating units of memory (i.e., megabytes or gigabytes). Portions of hard drives may be reserved for the recovery partition or used by pre-loaded software.
d1
d1
• 3.6GHz / 5.0GHz Turbo • 16MB Cache • Integrated UHD Graphics 630
• Tested for 24x7 Reliability • Free Acronis® True Image WD Edition Cloning Software • 3-Year Limited Warranty
$
SAVE 13%
9th Generation Core i9-9900K Processor
1TB
Was $64.99 Instant Savings $15
d1
• Extreme WiFi Speed for Gaming - Up to 2300 Mbps Combined • MU-MIMO for Simultaneous Streaming of Data to Multiple Devices
SAVE 10% *With Wednesday Promo Code www.frys.com/signmeup
Unlocked Eight-Core Limit 1 per Customer
#9696693
*INTERNET PRICE MATCH PROMISE STOREWIDE!
“We Will Match Any Competitive Price*.” Before making a purchase from a Fry’s Electronics store, if you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry's will be happy to match the competition's delivered price. “30-Day Price Match Promise*.” If within 30 days of purchasing an item from a Fry’s Electronics store you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry’s will cheerfully refund 110% of the difference. Or if within 30 days of purchase you see a lower current price from a local Fry’s lectronics store, Fry's will refund 100% of the difference. To apply for Fry’s price match promise, simply bring in your original cash register receipt and verifiable proof of a lower current price. *Note: Some products only offer 15 days. Other conditions apply. See additional terms and conditions at http://www.frys.com/onlineads/0001507075
co
bu
FRYS_WED_METRO_RIGHT_051519 11 3 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
D1 P
467 Me 05/15 to
d1 bic
d1 bic
Kasa Smart Wi-Fi Power Strip
1TB
Wireless-AC1200 Dual-Band Gigabit Router
• 6 Smart Outlets • Surge Protection • Control from Anywhere • Set Schedules
• AC1200 Wi-Fi Speeds Up to 300+867Mbps • External Antennas for Improved Wi-Fi Coverage • 1 USB 3.0 Port
d1 bic
Desktop Mainstream Internal Hard Drive • Reliable EverydayComputing • Free Acronis® True Image WD Edition Cloning Software • 2-Year Limited Warranty
Was $79.99
$
$20
59
SHIPS FREE
PROMO CODE
99*
Was $89.99 Instant Savings $10
SAVE 25%
$
*With Promo Code www.frys.com/signmeup
Home of Fast, Friendly, Knowledgeable Service SHOP ONLINE at www.FRYS.com “Advertised prices valid only in metropolitan circulation area of newspaper in which this advertisement appears. Prices and selection shown in this advertisement may not be available online at Fry’s website: www.FRYS.com”
facebook.com/fryselectronics
#9754334
79
99
SHIPS FREE
CAMPBELL 600 E. Hamilton Ave. (408) 364-3700 • FAX (408) 364-3718 CONCORD 1695 Willow Pass Road (925) 852-0300 • FAX (925) 852-0318 FREMONT 43800 Osgood Road (510) 252-5300 • FAX (510) 252-5318 PALO ALTO 340 Portage Ave. (650) 496-6000 • FAX (650) 496-6018 SAN JOSE 550 E. Brokaw Road (408) 487-1000 • FAX (408) 487-1018 SUNNYVALE 1077 E. Arques Ave. (408) 617-1300 • FAX (408) 617-1318
SAVE 11%
Was $49.99 Instant Savings $10 Limit 2 per Customer
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
R6220 #8445858
STORE HOURS M-Fri 10-9, Sat 9-9 Sun 9-8
Prices Good Wednesday, May 15, 2019 through Saturday, May 18, 2019. Prices subject to change after Saturday, May 18, 2019.
Limit Rights Reserved. Not Responsible for Typographical Errors. No Sales to Dealers or Resellers. Rebates Subject to Manufacturer’s Specifications. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Sales tax to be calculated and paid on the in-store price for all rebate products.Actual memory capacity stated above may be less. Total accessible memory capacity may vary depending on operating environment and/or method of calculating units of memory (i.e., megabytes or gigabytes). Portions of hard drives may be reserved for the recovery partition or used by pre-loaded software.
$
39
99
SHIPS FREE
SAVE 20%
Limit 1 per Customer
*After Instant Savings www.frys.com/signmeup
#7725598
Fry’s Electronics, American Express® Cards, MasterCard, Visa Card, and Discover Network Card, Accepted at All Fry’s Locations
“We Will Match Any Competitive Price*.” Before making a purchase from a Fry’s Electronics store, if you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry’s will be happy to match the competition’s delivered price*. “30-Day Low Price Guarantee*.” If within 30 days of purchasing an item from a Fry’s Electronics store you see a lower current price at a local authorized competitor in-stock, or from an authorized Internet competitor ready to ship, Fry’s will cheerfully refund 110% of the difference. Or if within 30 days of purchase you see a lower current price from a local Fry’s Electronics store, Fry’s will refund 100% of the difference. To apply for Fry’s low price guarantee, simply bring in your original cash register receipt and verifiable proof of a current lower price. *Note: Other conditions apply. See additional terms and conditions at http://www.frys.com/onlineads/0001507075
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
4 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 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, Tori Truscheit Intern:
Erika Rasmussen
ART/PRODUCTION 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 Illustrator: Jeremiah Harada
DISPLAY SALES Advertising Director: John Haugh Senior Account Executive: Bill Stubbee Account Executives: Gordon Carbone, Billy Garcia
CLASSIFIED SALES Senior Account Executive: Michael R. Hill Classified Sales: Dave Miller
ACCOUNTING/OPERATIONS/ ADMINISTRATION Accounts Receivable: Sonia Chavez Information Systems: Chris Giancaterino Office Manager: Dave Miller
DISTRIBUTION Metro is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the current issue may be purchased for $1 each, payable at the Metro office in advance. Metro may be distributed only by Metro’s authorized distributors. No one may, without permission of Metro, take more than one copy of each issue.
FINE PRINT Declared a legal newspaper of general circulation by the Superior Court of Santa Clara County Decree No. 651274, April 7, 1988. ISSN 0882-4290. Entire contents © 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.
11 5
at 1440 Multiversity this summer. Mark your calendar and grab your friends for two special events at the 1440 Teaching Kitchen.
JULY 20, 2019
AUGUST 24, 2019
The Art of Pizza Making
Farmer’s Brunch Featuring Glaum Egg Ranch
Saturday | 1:30 – 3:00 PM | $85
Saturday | 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM | $125 F O R T I C K E T S A N D M O R E , V I S I T 1 4 4 0 .O R G / G O O D O R C A L L 1 - 8 3 3 - 3 9 3 - 7 9 3 0 | S C O T T S VA L L E Y, C A
Wild & Scenic Film Festival
FOOTHILL COLLEGE, LOS ALTOS SUNDAY MAY 26TH I 6-9 PM RAFFLE PRIZES I FREE FOOD FREE TO ATTEND - RESERVE YOUR SPOT TODAY:
OpenSpaceTrust.org/WildAndScenic
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Eat Delicious
THIS MODERN WORLD
By TOM TOMORROW
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
6
Metro’s Group Wins 20 Awards For the third consecutive year, Metro won top honors for investigative reporting and arts and entertainment coverage in the Better Newspapers Contest of the California News Publishers Association (CNPA).
Metro also won first place for a publication its size in the categories of Public Service Journalism and In-Depth Reporting, third place for Investigative Reporting and finished as a runner-up for Coverage of Business News. Awards were announced earlier this month at the CNPA’s annual gala, held this year in Long Beach. All told, Metro’s locally-based family of newspapers came away with 20 awards in the annual journalism contest, including first place in General Excellence for the Gilroy Dispatch and third for the Good Times of Santa Cruz.
comments@metronews.com RE: COURT DRAWS SCRUTINY FOR RELYING ON TEMPS DESPITE ‘SURPLUS OF JUDGES,’ NEWS, MAY 8
Boy, are we in trouble. Why can’t people just behave themselves and stay out of the court system?
“It takes a lot of teamwork to pull off great journalism,” Metro Executive Editor Dan Pulcrano said. “Jennifer Wadsworth’s news reporting and the arts coverage under Nick Veronin’s leadership has been on a three-year winning streak. At a time when journalism is under attack, economically and politically, I’m very proud that our team is being recognized for consistently producing some of the best journalism in the state.”
SJOUTSIDETHEBUBBLE VIA SAN JOSE INSIDE RE: COURT DRAWS SCRUTINY FOR RELYING ON TEMPS DESPITE ‘SURPLUS OF JUDGES,’ NEWS, MAY 8
The court system is a complete waste of resources. For every dollar spent wisely, $20 are wasted. Now, abuse of temp employee systems and contractors isn’t just a court system issue. … Many of these “temps” should be made full-time or let go. They work with crappy benefits and wages, just hoping to get an opportunity. It’s sad. ICLV VIA SAN JOSE INSIDE
RE: MATT MAHAN OFFICIALLY LAUNCHES BID AGAINST JENNIFER HIGGINS BRADANINI FOR SAN JOSE’S D10 COUNCIL SEAT, THE FLY, MAY 8
Matt Mahan is awesome! We are lucky to have him in this race. Go Matt! @DHZAZUETA VIA TWITTER
RE: MATT MAHAN OFFICIALLY LAUNCHES BID AGAINST JENNIFER HIGGINS BRADANINI FOR SAN JOSE’S D10 COUNCIL SEAT, THE FLY, MAY 8 Jennie is going to get her clock cleaned. I suspect labor knows this and will only give Jennie token support, and a pat on the head. They will not dump much money into her. They know it will be a waste.
RRBURNS VIA SAN JOSE INSIDE
11 7 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
•
LIVE PERFORMANCES BY ERIC & HAPPIE • ROCKID ADVANCE PURCHASE TICKETS AT THE DOOR NEW! CAMPING THEME SONGS AROUND THE CAMPFIRE FOOD & DRINK BOOTHS KIDS PLAY AREA WITH FISHING, BIRDWATCHING & CAMPING ACTIVITIES TICKETS: APJCC.ORG/MUSIC
Thank You To Our Sponsors
The APJCC is proud to be a part of the Initiative on Jewish Peoplehood, co-funded by the Koret Foundation and the Taube Foundation for Jewish Life & Culture, and supported further by the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley and other generous supporters. ®
Neal H. Fearn
Bill Lister
OF SILICON VALLEY
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
THE FLY
Tom Gogola
8
SVNEWS
Ah, Chu KANSEN CHU sent local pols scrambling to rethink their 2020 plans when he opened up about his decision to eschew another term in the Assembly to run for Santa Clara County Supervisor DAVE CORTESE’s seat. A few days later, Santa Clara County Board of Education trustee ANNA SONG, 51, went public with her ambitions to replace him in AD 25, which spans parts of the Tri-Valley and South Bay. And on Monday, longtime Santa Clara Unified trustee JIM CANOVA, 60, broke the news to Fly that he’ll They run against her for the Did open seat.
What?
“I’ve never been interested in City SEND TIPS TO FLY@ Council or the Board of METRONEWS. Supervisors, or any of COM those positions,” says Canova, who’s served consecutive terms on the SCUSD board since 1993. “My heart and soul is in education, and I think the Assembly is a great place to continue working on that.” As a schools trustee and appointed member of the MetroEd board, a joint powers agency that runs career-tech education for six South Bay school districts, Canova says he’s become “quite effective” in getting grant money out of Sacramento for cash-strapped vocational training programs. In the Assembly, he says he can pick up wherever he leaves off. “Career tech is such an important issue because, as we know, it’s so hard to live in this valley,” he says,” and we’ve got students coming out of these programs making six figures, so this is another way to tackle affordability, the skills gap, and so many of these quality-of-life issues we’re dealing with.” Chu’s quality of life could improve quite a bit if he wins the county seat, which comes with a sizable pay bump and none of the obligations to pay for a home away from home in the capital. Not so for East Side Councilwoman MAGDALENA CARRASCO, who now has to compete with Chu— a reliable labor vote during his tenure as San Jose’s D4 rep—for union backing.
LASHING BACK Proponents of the death penalty, which has kept Robert Galvan (pictured) awaiting the ultimate punishment at San Quentin for years, are gearing up for a fight in 2020.
Dead Stop California voters will have another chance to end the death penalty BY TOM GOGOLA
F
OLLOWING GOV. Gavin Newsom’s moratorium on capital punishment via executive fiat in March, will California voters end the death penalty in 2020? New research from the National Institute on Money in Politics indicates that, absent a robust grassroots anti-death penalty effort, it may be a tough sell. That’s owing to the power and influence of statewide unions such as the California Correctional Peace Officers Association (CPOA), whose small-donor efforts in 2016
helped turn the tables on a capitalpunishment proposition twofer on that ballot that year. Proposition 62 would have ended the death penalty outright, while prodeath penalty Proposition 66 sought to limit appeals in capital cases. The institute’s research found that even as the state was trending away from support for the death penalty, pro-death penalty, 62/66-specific committees outspent opponents’ committees by $13.5 million to $9.7 million in 2016. That year, “corrections officers represented the overwhelming majority of small donors rallying behind the death penalty,” reports the institute’s online research portal,
followthemoney.org, adding that 35 “public sector unions collectively gave $3.3 million to the pro-death penalty effort. ... Almost almost half ($1.6 million) of the union total came from contributions from CCPOA and the Peace Officers Research Association of California.” Twenty-eight-thousand CCPOA members contributed $287 each to 62/66-specific committees. Small-donor anti-death penalty contributions were not nearly so robust, as the institute reports that “more than four-fifths of the antideath-penalty total ($7.9 million) came from just 35 donors that gave $50,000 or more.” Contributions from opponents were made by George Soros’s Open Society Policy Center ($1 million), Laurene Powell Jobs’s Emerson Collective ($600,000), “and more than $450,000 from the Northern California Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.” The report further noted that Stanford University professor Nick McKeown gave $1.5 million, “a 91 percent share of the total from education donors,” while Netflix co-founder and CEO Reed Hastings contributed $1 million of $1.2
Opponents to Newsom’s moratorium have already ramped up the grassroots activism in light of the renewed push to end capital punishment in the state. It cited a joint study from the Field Poll and the Institute of Governmental Studies at UC Berkeley, that "found Proposition 62 ahead 48 to 37 percent, with 15 percent of likely voters undecided. Meanwhile, barely a third (35 percent) support Proposition 66, a competing initiative aimed at expediting the death-penalty process. With 42 percent undecided, it appears far less familiar to voters. Twenty-three percent are opposed.” Then came a CCPOA-led advertising blitz that raised public awareness of Proposition 66. “In the end, 53 percent of voters rejected Proposition 62 and 51 percent okayed
Proposition 66,” notes the institute. In making his announcement this spring, Newsom highlighted that the death penalty discriminates against minorities and poor people as he called the practice “ineffective, irreversible and immoral.” He pledged to give a reprieve to the 737 inmates currently on death row in California, close the death chamber at San Quentin (it was dismantled soon after his announcement), and end a yearslong debate over the state’s execution protocols. Most of the 737 condemned in California are men held in one of three death row tiers at San Quentin. Women on death row are incarcerated at a facility in Chowchilla. The last execution in California took place 13 years ago. As Newsom was making his announcement, Assemblyman Marc Levine (D-Marin) introduced a proposed constitutional amendment on the 2020 ballot that would ban the death penalty. Opponents to Newsom’s moratorium have already ramped up the grassroots activism in light of the renewed push to end capital punishment in the state. Families of crime victims and local district attorneys have embarked on a “Victims of Murder Justice Tour” which today is in Riverside. In April NBC Los Angeles reported that the organization (founded by the Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer) would take the tour to each of the 80 Assembly and 40 Senate districts in the state. Death Penalty Action, a California non-profit devoted to ending capital punishment in the state through public education and grassroots organizing, was unsurprisingly supportive of Newsom’s March move. District attorneys and victims’ families have accused Newsom of thwarting the 2016 will of the voters, but recent polling suggests that Californians favor life without parole over execution in first-degree murder cases by a 2-to-1 ratio. A Public Policy Institute of California poll conducted two weeks after Newsom’s announcement found that 62 percent of voters “chose life in prison over the death penalty,” Death Penalty Action reported. “The survey found that only 31 percent of adults—38 percent of whom are likely voters—favored the death penalty.”
9 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
million that came from the TV and film industry. Lastly, it found that five people (including Tom Steyer) “accounted for more than 80 percent of $1.1 million from securities and investment donors.” Small-donor contributions from 1,700 opponents totaled $377,000, reported the institute as it recounted the run-up to the 2016 election. That year, opponents contributed an average of $4,750 to the committees; proponents of the death penalty contributed an average of $470. On Sept. 21, 2016, the Sacramento Bee reported that polling to date indicated that a plurality of voters supported Prop. 62, while only a third of voters supported Prop. 66.
10
WEB: SanJoseInside.com TWITTER: @sanjoseinside FACEBOOK: SanJoseInside
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
An inside look at San Jose politics
OFF THE RAILS Federal rail officials are reportedly refusing to meet with the California High-Speed Rail Authority after one of President Trump’s Twitter tirades.
Could Trump Tweets Stall High-Speed Rail? BY JAQUELINE MCCOOL The $79 billion High-Speed Rail that promises to connect Northern and Southern California could be stalled in its tracks by a new obstacle: the Trump administration. The Federal Rail Administration (FRA) has refused to meet with the California High-Speed Rail Authority following a series of tweets from President Donald Trump in which he threatened to pull federal funding for the project, according to a HighSpeed Rail 2019 project update report May 1. “On Feb. 19, 2019, the FRA administrator notified the Authority of the FRA’s intent to rescind the $929 million in federal FY10 grant funds,” the update stated. “The FRA also indicated that it was evaluating taking back the $2.5 billion in ARRA [American Recovery and Reinvestment Act] funds that were awarded to the Authority and which has been fully
expended in compliance with federal requirements and deadlines.” The FRA did not comment on the pulled funding, but a source in the administration told this news organization that the FRA is still reviewing the High-Speed Rail Authority’s response to the notice of pulled funding. High-speed rail in California has been the subject of controversy for more than a decade, but as the project progresses, the High-Speed Rail Authority has continued to modify plans and attempt to appease critics. The train would run through Santa Clara County, which already has officials in San Jose and South County talking about massive revitalization from a new High-Speed Rail station in Gilroy which would promise a 25-minute commute to the heart of Silicon Valley. Morgan Hill has had a tumultuous relationship with the rail authority,
having lobbied for years—with no discernible result yet—to keep the train route out of the city’s downtown and avoid demolition of long-established businesses and neighborhoods. The authority released the 2019 project report May 1. The update addresses funding shortages, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Feb.12 State of the State address and the Trump administration’s hostility toward the rail project. Each even year, the authority releases a business plan. The last plan was released in 2018. In between business plans, the authority delivers a “project update report” to the state. The report is not voted on, but goes through state senate committees where High-Speed Rail Authority answers questions. Newsom’s address called for a change in the rail plan, when he told Californians the project would shift focus to completing the portion of the
project that would connect the Central Valley, Merced to Bakersfield. The announcement did not initially shift plans or the timeline of the project, but Northern California Regional Director Boris Lipkin said it may affect the project as planning continues. Since February, there has been radio silence regarding funding and environmental clearances by the FRA. Following the State of the State speech, Newsom engaged with Trump on Twitter in response to tweets that threatened to pull federal funding allocated to the rail project. Lipkin said these weren’t empty threats and that the federal government has not engaged with the authority in the months since the address. The silence from the federal government was addressed in the update report and identified as a risk to the project’s completion. Lipkin told this paper that the federal representatives have not showed up to scheduled meetings with the Authority and are not reviewing federally required environmental projects that would move the rail along. “At some point, they will become big issues,” Lipkin said. “This disengagement by the FRA represents an unprecedented federal government action to cripple the advancement of a project it has helped fund. On March 4, 2019, Authority CEO Brian Kelly sent two letters to the FRA seeking re-engagement and the restoration of a functional partnership on this project,” the update said. “Those letters have been unanswered by the FRA after nearly two months,” according to the report. “The 2018 State Audit recommended that the Authority develop a contingency plan if at any time the ARRA grant requirements could not be achieved. It will not be possible for the Authority to develop or finalize a contingency plan without proactive engagement by the FRA.” While the Central Valley line construction gets increased attention, the authority is continuing work on the preparation for the other lines, including the “valley to valley” line from San Jose through Bakersfield.
CAFE CULTURE Bob Schmelzer has finally realized his vision of expanding Circle-A with a sunny new cafe.
Tea and Trucks Iconic downtown San Jose skate shop now serves coffee and tea BY GARY SINGH
T
HE SONG “BLACK Juju” by Alice Cooper is blasting at 8am. A cocktail-style table sits in the center of the room, constructed with a circular piece of glass atop some tires from a 1963 Belvedere. I am in the corner drinking a cup of English breakfast from Satori Tea Company. Artwork created with skateboard decks surrounds me. There are no hipsters anywhere.
I’m not describing my apartment. This is the newly revamped Circa-A Skate Shop, operated by Bob Schmelzer in downtown San Jose, a swirling-glass retail space across from Hammer Theatre, a business approaching 22 years, making it one of the oldest continuously operating retail establishments in all of downtown. People already come here to get trucks and wheels installed on boards all day long. Kids already line up overnight to buy the newest Nike skate sneakers once a month. Pieces of 35-year-old Gremic boards already
grace the joint like museum artifacts, leftover from when Schmelzer was a sponsored pro. Now Circle-A serves coffee, tea and espresso. “I wanted to offer something different, offer a specialty coffee vibe here, and I’ve always felt that it works with skateboarding,” Schmelzer said. “You see a lot of stores out there—bike shops, running shoe shops—that sell coffee inside, and they’re great stores, but how much culture is there in the biking and the running, compared to skateboarding, with the art, the music and all that? So I just thought it was a better mix. Not only would it add to the skateboard shop side, but also make an interesting cafe.” Unlike other retail businesses, customers regularly use Circle-A as a meetup spot before they skate the parks, the streets, or even jump on a train to San Francisco to skate up there. Schmelzer often finds himself in a conversation with one customer, but then has to switch to accommodate whoever else comes
11 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Jennifer Wadsworth
SILICON SILICONALLEYS ALLEYS
in. Now there’s a cafe for everyone to hang out. Even though there hasn’t been a full-blown grand opening yet, SJSU students and staff have already discovered the place, as have some of the local working stiffs. Going back to the ’70s, San Jose has always been one of the skateboarding capitals of the country in terms of the talent that emerged here, as well as homemade ramps, curbs, empty pools and street tricks that appear in magazines and videos even still. But these days, Circle-A is the only remaining real skate shop outside the malls. Now Schmelzer is the only one in the South Bay to serve Wrecking Ball Coffee. And just to prove that tea is not for geriatric old biddies with bad perfume, Schmelzer serves an English breakfast, a jasmine green tea and an Egyptian chamomile, all from San Jose’s Satori Tea, and each a simple drink. You don’t need esoteric tea knowledge of any sort. “From growing up with English skateboarders, English tea drinkers, I grew up on PG Tips,” Schmelzer said, of his younger days up and down California. “That’s exactly where I came from. Friends like Bod Boyle and Steve Douglas, you talked to them, they wanted to drink tea.” Just as skateboarding goes with tea, for at least 40 years it’s also overlapped with hot-rod car culture, at least partly thanks to Big Daddy Roth. Listening to Schmelzer talk about the sleek designs of his Slayer espresso machine, his Mahlkonig grinder and even the Hoosier drag slicks that comprise the table in the center of the space, one doesn’t need any more proof. Everything is connected. “When I saw my first Slayer, I thought it looked like a hot rod,” he said, adding that the cost of the Slayer is partly what delayed him opening the store for so long. “I like the gear. I like the hard gear. I’m learning how to be a barista so I can pour some drinks, but I’m more into gear, upkeeping, customizing, cleaning.” From my spot at the corner table, I look through the glass and across Paseo de San Antonio. The Hammer Theatre marquee, facing the northbound traffic on Third Street, now mentions Circle-A. “Coffee and Skateboards” now appears between Urinetown and Leonard Bernstein. I guess the shop has finally made it.
12 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
Your Call is Important to Jail call monitoring can be a valuable crime fighting tool. The county’s quiet push to give prosecutors expanded access to recorded inmate conversations has ignited a controversy over checks and balances in exploiting technology’s reach. BY JENNIFER WADSWORTH
C
OPS SWORE UP and down they’d caught the gunman.
Khalil Owens must’ve fired the weapon that killed 25-year-old recent college grad Marvin Jackson Jr., they figured. The victim’s brother—who got caught up in the scuffle preceding the June 27, 2015, shooting in downtown San Jose—said so himself, claiming to see the 20-year-old suspected gangbanger flash a gun under his shirt just before the fatal fight. Owens spent three months in jail and faced a possible life sentence before his attorney convinced prosecutors to dismiss the charges after a closer look at the evidence. Turned out, video and eyewitness accounts pointed not to Owens but to a 27-year-old convicted felon known as Gregory “G-Stacks” Thompson. A recorded call from Thompson to a sibling dispelled any doubt when
he described being at the scene of the crime and lifting his shirt while arguing with the victim’s brother. Prosecutors say jail calls offer a wealth of evidence— sometimes exculpatory, more often incriminating—that can prove additional crimes or protect victims and witnesses. But how easy should it be for them to tap into those conversations? For several months now, Silicon Valley’s top law enforcement officials have waged a quiet war over how to answer that. Sheriff Laurie Smith, who oversees the county’s two jails, contends that she has a duty to protect sensitive call data by requiring prosecutors and anyone from an outside agency to obtain permission from the courts to eavesdrop on inmates. District Attorney Jeff Rosen insists that his office should have click-to-listen access because, like the Department of Correction (DOC) under Smith’s charge, it’s part of the
District Attorney Jeff Rosen and Chief Assistant Jay Boyarsky same government family: the County of Santa Clara. Should prosecutors prevail, they stand to gain what in this county would be unprecedented access to a surveillance
tool prone to ethical pitfalls, if not outright abuse. Yet officials have kept the debate from public view by handling it as a contract issue instead of what defense lawyers consider a major policy change. And, of concern to inmate advocates, without soliciting input from directly impacted parties like Public Defender Molly O’Neal. “Unfettered access by the DA without any check or balance is dangerous,” she cautions. “Attorneyclient privileged calls are subject to DA interception, client calls that are not related to any particular case will be subject to free listening at any time, allowing for fishing expeditions at the expense of inmates who may simply be talking to loved ones.” People accused of crimes have a constitutional right to private calls with their lawyers. Any policy that affects how the government protects that right merits more accountability than the
13 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Us
county’s provided in this case, defense attorneys argue. “Open, public hearings on the proposal should be held,” O’Neal says, “so that the public may be heard and the action is transparent.” Instead, it appears the motion to add the DA to the jail calls contract—as the county prepares to switch from Global Tel-Link to Legacy Inmate Communications— will come before the board of supervisors on May 21 as a cursory line in a long slog of budget items.
Call Brawl Sheriff Smith set off the fray last fall by abruptly imposing new rules on prosecutors who wish to tap inmate calls. Instead of a rote administrative form, jailers began to require a subpoena or warrant. The move stoked already simmering tensions between the sheriff and Rosen, who called the new policy a threat to public safety.
Public Defender Molly O’Neal
“Timely access to unprivileged jail calls is essential,” the DA wrote in a Jan. 8 letter rebuking Smith’s decision, “not only to the effective prosecution of criminals, but also to the safety of victims and witnesses.” He added:
“Your change in policy effectively confers upon inmates an expectation of privacy to which they are not legally entitled and needless hurdles to your law enforcement colleagues.” Except for communication with their attorneys, which are supposed to be registered on a do-not-record list, inmates have no reasonable expectation of privacy, Rosen argued. They receive several clear warnings that their conversations are being recorded, such as signs by the phone booths and audio reminders at the outset of each call. Rosen also touted the economic benefit of wiretaps. “An incriminating jail call can often lead to the early resolution of a case without a trial,” he wrote before rattling off examples to prove his point. “Recently, jail calls were the crucial piece of evidence influencing Efren Cervantes to accept a guilty plea to first degree murder, saving taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars.”
In the case against an accused domestic abuser from Santa Clara named Noe Mejia, prosecutors spent a lunch break from cross-examination to request the defendant’s jail calls to the victim’s phone number. The jail complied, disclosing calls that “were extremely compelling and disturbing,” Rosen said, showing that Mejia had no remorse for the injuries he inflicted on the victim and that he even tried to get her to lie to get him out of trouble. “So it’s fuck me, then?” Mejia reportedly asked the victim in one of the calls. “You’re just going to let me sit in here? You gotta get me outta here.” After the prosecutor played the recording for the judge, Mejia opted to plead guilty. “Often inmates with pending cases will attempt to influence witnesses by appealing to their sympathy or through threats,” Rosen said. “This criminal dynamic is often found in domestic violence cases, which
14
Jennifer Wadsworth
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
14 CELL PHONES 13
CALL OR NOTHING Benee Vejar says a phone call with her incarcerated husband almost got her arrested when prosecutors misinterpreted a conversation about packing up car parts as a coded exchange about drugs. involve a unique dynamic between the defendant and the victim. It is also common in violent criminal enterprises like human trafficking, gang assaults and the distribution of narcotics. Inmates can dissuade witnesses through direct threats, or by plotting with people on the outside who might carry out actual assault. Monitoring these communications in the appropriate cases is essential to preserving the integrity of the system, holding criminals accountable and maintaining public safety.” Whether Sheriff Smith’s policy prevents that is an open question. Officials from the DA’s office say they went from receiving about 70 to 100 calls a month to almost none at all once the jails set the subpoena-orsearch warrant standard in October. “Since that time, we have obtained jail recordings in a very small number of cases where we spent a considerable amount of resources to obtain an unnecessary search warrant for communications that are not legally privileged or confidential,” DA officials said in a written statement. More than the hassle of extra paperwork, Chief Assistant DA Jay Boyarsky says, is the principle. “How
long does it take to get a warrant?” he repeats when asked as much. “That’s a bit of a red herring because we’re not necessarily investigating a new crime. You shouldn’t really be seeking a search warrant if something isn’t a protected item. You don’t need a search warrant if something is in plain view.” Jail officials who spoke on background accused prosecutors of abusing the system. Sheriff Smith didn’t comment for this story, but in a March 29 memo to the Santa Clara County Police Chiefs Association, she explained how she only issued her directive in response to a “significant increase” in demand from the DA. “The requests submitted by their office totaled more minutes of telephone calls than all other agencies combined,” she wrote. “As an example, one request provided to the District Attorney’s Office on Oct. 18, 2018, yielded 81,400 minutes (1,357 hours) of recorded telephone conversations.” Before she cracked down, Smith said, the requests soared from hundreds a month to thousands, and began coming by email and phone with stated reasons that seemed suspect. That’s well beyond the 70-to-100 monthly average DA officials estimated. As of April 1,
however, she promised to no longer require court orders for “certain copies” of jail calls—as long as they serve a legitimate investigative purpose. Boyarsky disputes the notion that his office overwhelmed jail staff. “I’ve heard that before,” he says with a laugh. “Can you imagine if people criticized police officers for being too dogged? You know, it’s like, DA Rosen hires prosecutors to get to the truth, and evidence is where the truth is. And if we have access to evidence, we’re going to get it. It’s not like, ‘Hey, we want 30 hours of phone calls from this guy,’ and then someone at the jail needs to get 30 hours of reel-to-reel tape or something. They’re not burning cassettes or DVDs. That’s how it might’ve been 40 years ago, but nowadays, it’s all digital, and it’s all in the cloud. It takes minutes—just the press of a button, and here’s 10 hours of calls.” In his January letter to the sheriff, Rosen also expressed concern about the search warrants tipping off inmates about prosecutorial surveillance. “This obviously defeats the purpose of obtaining these calls to discover evidence of the current crime, other crimes, threats to witnesses or victims or to expose an error in charging,” he wrote. Deputy Public Defender Michael Ogul says he applauds the additional layer of accountability and is disappointed by the DA trying to finagle a workaround. “Now, they’re at least required to give notice to the individuals and the courts,” he says. “I mean, the DA can already obtain this information. They just have to go through a relatively simple procedure of giving the court notice and saying they have a basis for requesting these calls. It’s pretty easy to issue a subpoena.” To Ogul and a host of his colleagues, it seems the DA simply doesn’t want to give anyone a heads up. “Why is it so difficult to obtain the data for a subpoena that you need to do it this way?” he asks. “They’re really trying to eliminate oversight.” If anything, Ogul says, local officials should trend in the opposite direction in the wake of high-profile slip-ups by Global Tel-Link, which last year blamed a software glitch for recording more than 1,000 privileged jail calls in Orange County. “There’s no question that a jail call is a very important part of prosecution,”
legal analyst and criminal defense attorney Steven Clark says. “A lot of cases have risen or fallen on jail calls, so the DAs want that information.” Try as one might to warn defendants that they’re being recorded, they often become desensitized and slip up. When family members ask a new inmate what happened that led to the arrest, it’s hard not to answer. But attorneyclient privilege is sacrosanct, and Clark says the jail phone taps could use the added safeguard of judicial review. “I mean, to me, the biggest concern is whether the DA will inadvertently stumble across conversations with lawyers,” he says. “It’s just so devastating, I don’t care how much you try to sanitize it.” There’s protocol for when that happens, of course, but by then the damage is done. “It’s very difficult to unring that bell,” Clark says.
Game of Telephone This is by no means the first time the DA has lobbied for a straight line to jail calls. Nor is it the first time the Sheriff’s Office has required prosecutors to get a judge’s go-ahead in exchange for recordings. The DOC enacted the court-order standard in 2007 and 2014, but DA officials say Sheriff Smith gave them no prior notice before doing it again this last time. More than a decade ago, the Santa Clara County Civil Grand Jury investigated jail calls in response to a complaint that a prosecutor unlawfully acquired audio of an inmate’s conversation with his attorney. The 2006-07 team of civilian watchdogs found that the phone system lacked sufficient safeguards to keep privileged phone calls from ending up in the hands of prosecutors. The report also noted how recordings requested by prosecutors were previously made available without question and without notifying the inmate or his or her lawyer. “However, DOC’s newly established policy, dated Jan. 16, 2007, restricts the release of any recording without a court order,” the civil grand jury report stated. The DA’s Office groused about the practice then, too, saying the extra time involved in securing a court order hampered its ability
15 the sheriff. “I think that just indicates that she’s trying to protect herself politically from the risk of having an oversight monitor, which the board is working on,” the county executive says. The county CEO also blames Sheriff Smith for problems with the botched rollout of the new Odyssey software at the Santa Clara County Superior Court, which left cops with faulty information about the status of thousands of warrants. Jeff Smith says the software switch would have been relatively seamless if the sheriff agreed to his preferred data-sharing arrangement. Guarding access to the jail calls is an extension of the same problem, he contends.
‘I mean, to me, the biggest concern is whether the DA will inadvertently stumble across conversations with lawyers. ... It’s very difficult to unring that bell. “The county is a team effort, particularly when it comes to criminal justice,” he says. “There has to be a free flow of information. It has to be protected and appropriately confidential, but the system doesn’t work if somebody refuses to share the appropriate data.” But it shouldn’t be the case that inmates have no privacy whatsoever, O’Neal contends, and it shouldn’t matter if the DA considers itself part of the same agency as the DOC. “They should still have to explain why they need access to particular inmates’ calls,” she says. A host of critical questions remain unanswered, O’Neal says. Like, who
at the DA’s office will have access to the calls? How long will they store the data? What’s the standard for determining what calls they’ll listen to? What’s the process for ensuring they don’t intercept privileged calls? And why isn’t the current process adequate? DA spokesman Sean Webby says Assistant DA Brian Welch gave county counsel a 12-year-old surveillance policy that addresses those concerns. “A process is already in place to maintain confidentiality of attorney-client communications, and there will be no change to this procedure when we are provided access,” Webby says. “This is not a laborious process because the communications are easily identified as confidential by the telephone number of defense attorneys in a database maintained by the [DOC]. Calls to registered lawyers are not recorded by the system.” Further, he adds, Rosen “understands that defense attorneys want to protect their incarcerated clients” from self-incrimination or getting caught committing new crimes like witness intimidation. “By contrast,” Webby says, “we use jail calls to protect victims, witnesses and jurors as well as exonerate innocent inmates.” O’Neal bristles at the DA’s rationale. “It is pretty insulting to say that our only interests are that our clients not incriminate themselves as well as to portray their only interest being to protect victims and solve crimes,” she says. “The fact of the matter is that unfettered access to jail calls is intrusive and should be restricted to cases where there is an articulable reason to listen in.”
Bad Reception Benee Vejar spoke to her husband every day during the four years he spent at the Main Jail on San Jose’s Hedding Street as a pretrial detainee. Overwhelmingly, the conversations had nothing to do with the case that landed her partner and father of her three young kids behind bars. But they still got mined for anything remotely incriminating. In a phone call from jail one day, Vejar, who worked as a mechanic at the time of his arrest, gave his spouse directions about how to
pack up his tools in labeled bags for an upcoming move. According to Vejar, prosecutors interpreted the innocuous exchange as a coded confab about drugs. “Our lawyer told me, ‘Did you know they wanted to arrest you?’” she says. “I was going to get charged as an associate because of that jail call. It was crazy. My kids would have been left alone.” Vejar has spent the past several years working for civil rights nonprofit Silicon Valley De-Bug as an advocate for families like hers who got caught up in the criminal justice system. As an activist, she says she’s sat through countless court hearings where gang investigators testify about intel garnered from jail calls in which the mundane aspects of people’s lives are dissected for incriminating evidence. “Aren’t you supposed to have evidence first and then get them arrested?” she asks. “Instead they’re putting people in there and then trying to add charges to force a guilty plea. And they’re admitting it. That’s bullshit.” The practice of adding charges from jail call evidence seems to contradict county officials’ professed commitment to reversing mass incarceration, Vejar adds. “If this is the way they do things,” she says, “our families are never going to get home.” To Jose Valle, an ex-inmate and fellow Silicon Valley De-Bug organizer, it’s especially cynical for the DA to frame jail call surveillance as a cost-saving measure. “There should never be a point in our present day where saving money by not going to trial should be a goal,” he says, noting how more than 90 percent of cases nationwide end in a plea deal. “Everyone has a right to go to trial; everyone has a right to due process.” Javier Rios, a private criminal defense attorney, says he’s had to listen to untold hours of intimate conversations between defendants and their families. So many of those recordings made him question whether prosecutors requested more calls than reasonably needed. Legalities aside, he says, he questions the ethics of extending the already far-reaching boundaries of jail surveillance. “There’s no expectation of privacy in the jails, that’s true,” he cedes. “But on a human level, I have to wonder— is it right? Is it fair?”
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
to prosecute criminals and intercept nonprivileged calls for safety reasons. However, the report said both the DOC and the DA agreed that “thousands of taxpayer dollars are wasted due to the latter’s failure to pick up or use requested inmate nonprivileged telephone calls after they have been laboriously extracted and saved for the prosecutors’ use.” A few years later, the DOC would revert to its past practice of less formal data sharing with the DA. And jail officials say they continued to grapple with an influx of requests from the DA’s Office that required considerable time and effort to process. In 2014, the DA’s Office requested remote access to relieve stress on jail resources. Rosen pitched a deal that would grant a small number of trained prosecutors access to the calls, reportedly similar to arrangements in Colusa, Contra Costa, El Dorado, Fresno, Humboldt, King, Lake, Marin, Monterey, Napa, Placer, Sacramento, San Diego, San Mateo, Santa Cruz, Stanislaus, Sutter and Yolo counties. Not many jurisdictions have a distinct DOC like Santa Clara’s, however. The department’s existence has long complicated the question of who’s ultimately in charge of the jails. Sheriff Smith has used that ambiguity at times to distance herself from abuses—such as the systemic failures that came to light in wake of the 2015 murder of inmate Michael Tyree by three deputies—and, alternately, to proclaim independence from County Executive Jeff Smith. “This county is unique, yeah,” Boyarsky says. “But, I mean, the county executive has oversight responsibility for these jails,” as well as the contract. County executive Smith says the sheriff ’s refusal is part of her ongoing effort to assert control and evade accountability by “establishing a moat around her office.” He cited her resistance to having a jail management software system under civilian control as another example of trying to “segregate off as much information as she can about the jail and separate it from the county.” Four years after Tyree’s murder precipitated a massive reform effort, the county is still in the process of creating an independent oversight office, and Smith believes that conflicts like the one over jail calls reflect a broader lack of cooperation from
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
Laura Hamilton
16
A BIT FISHY The new San Jose location of Slapfish features plenty of sauces to help jazz up their bland menu.
Slapdash Don’t believe the hype—Slapfish can’t hold a candle to your favorite fish taco truck BY JEFFREY EDALATPOUR
B
ORDERING THE northeast corner of Saratoga, the redundantly named Westgate West mall in San Jose is now home to the first Northern California location of Slapfish. Dubbing itself a “modern seafood shack,” the restaurant is part of a national chain that hopes to win over the good people of Silicon Valley. It has some work to do.
The employees at this particular franchise did get the company memo on going out of their way to be helpful. But despite their extrafriendly efforts, every item that we tried was universally disappointing. Remember that Maya Angelou quotation: “When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.” That message also applies to the poke bowl. The description on the menu reads, “Only the freshest tuna poke, seasoned rice, chips and greens.” The freshest tuna was bland and flavorless because that’s “only”
what it was. You could, of course, jazz it up with hot sauce, tartar sauce, soy sauce—any and all manner of sauces, really—but we were puzzled at the lack of a baseline seasoning. Perhaps the people at Slapfish want customers to taste the pure essence of the tuna. But if you’re going to attempt to compete with poke-only shops, your version ought to be mighty tasty. Otherwise, why bother to line your hook with bait? From the enlarged photographs on the wall menu overhead, you can see that Slapfish prides itself on the variety of ways the cooks can wrestle with clawed lobsters. The options range from taquitos, a traditional sandwich roll, a grinder with shrimp and crab or a "clobster" grilled cheese. The latter is reportedly a “melting mix of lobster, crab and a creamy herb sauce.” I go through phases where lobster sounds like the most appealing shellfish I’d ever want to plunder from the deep blue sea. And then, on bad days, I can’t get the dinner table scene in Beetlejuice out of my mind. That’s the one in which
“Day-O (Banana Boat Song)” plays while the giant prawns attack the dinner guests. On the day I visited Slapfish, the vivid pictures of bulbous crustacean meat brought the movie right back to me, and I concentrated on fish instead. As you wait in line to order, you can scrutinize the kinds of fish they’re serving that day (poisson du jour) as written down on a tall block of butcher paper. I wanted a taco (but that is never not a true statement). Slapfish offers an ultimate fish taco ($7.50 + $2.50 extra for mahi-mahi) or a smaller street taco. I opted for the “giant two-handed fish taco with crispy cabbage, awesome sauce and pickled onion.” This was a wrap and not a taco. And no, the sauce was not awesome. After eating some and picking at the rest of it, I vowed never again to forsake the old reliable street taco for a fancy upstart offering extra frills. By far the worst offender though was an order of fish and chips ($9.50). I got spoiled after having perfect batches of the stuff at Gott’s (the batter they use turns golden brown and perfectly crunchy every time). Slapfish missed the boat. The crust was the wrong shade of pale, crunchy as cotton and way too thick. The menu adds parenthetically that you could make this entrée into a sandwich. What you’d get is bread around breading. Don't take the plunge. To increase my maritime sorrows, the chips or “real fries” were soggy, wilted and not dusted but gasping for air in a bright orange coating of spice. Two bites and I was done. Thinking that a simpler item might yield better results, we tried a grilled fish bowl ($13, no extra charge for mahi-mahi). And, like the poke bowl, the fish was fine, unexceptional really, and very plain with “seasoned rice, herb sauce, hand-picked salad.” Was everything better prepared and a healthier family meal than a trip to a Ronald McDonald’s? Absolutely. Would I go out of my to eat one of their tacos over a return trip to one of my favorite taquerias or food trucks? Not for treasure down in Davy Jones’ Locker.
SLAPFISH SEAFOOD
5297 Prospect Rd, San Jose slapfishrestaurant.com
$$
408.320.2630
11 17
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
metroactive
CHOICES BY: Anne Gelhaus Erika Rasmussen Metro Staff
ALEX HONNOLD
JORJA SMITH & KALI UCHIS
Renan Ozturk
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
18
*wed *fri
*sat
ALEX HONNOLD
AVANTASIA
Wed, 5pm, $28 Planet Granite, Sunnyvale
Fri, 8pm, $48+ City National Civic, San Jose
LAUGH YOUR ART OUT
TUNSTALL-GRANT RETROSPECTIVE
FROST MUSIC FESTIVAL
Some of the world’s most talented people are unabashed about acknowledging their own abilities. Others are bad at feigning humility. But watching interviews of Alex Honnold—the 33-year-old professional rock climber famous for scaling monumental sheer stone faces without safety equipment— it’s hard to conclude that he is anything other than pathologically humble. Some say his 2017 ropeless ascent of El Capitan is the greatest sporting achievement ever. He says he’s “never been gifted.” The focus of the Oscar-winning 2018 documentary Free Solo comes to Sunnyvale’s Planet Granite this week to sign autographs, chat with fans and get on the wall if there’s time. Free for members. (MS)
Though it was spawned from a roiling fusion of sludgy blues riffs and occult imagery, heavy metal music shares more common threads with Vivaldi and Wagner than with Johnson and John Lee. Case in point: Tobias Sammet’s metal opera supergroup, Avantasia. Led by former Edguy frontman Sammet and featuring the likes of Mr. Big’s Eric Martin and Geoff Tate of Queensrÿche, Avantasia takes swirling symphonic textures and smashes them together with piercing guitar leads and gritty vocal lines. Avantasia comes to town this weekend on the heels of Moonglow, their eighth LP— which features a head-banging rendition of Michael Sembello’s “Maniac.” (ER)
Fri, 6:30pm, Free Café Stritch, San Jose
Fri, 6pm, Free Triton Museum of Art, Santa Clara
Sat, 6pm, $50+ Frost Amphitheater, Stanford
Thrift shop art is often bad, but some is downright inspiring. The comedy duo of Jordan Cerminara and Jeremy Talamantes draw big laughs by taking aim at the Goodwilled misfits of the art world. Talamantes is from San Jose, but this is the pair’s first time bringing their Art Critique Comedy Show to town. In the past, they’ve ruminated on a “very nicely done” painting of Bruce Willis—with a demon peeking out where his bald head should be—and a cheap acrylic that Cerminara mused may have come from an “amateur tattoo artist's sketchbook.” A pre-show Happy Hour and “Title This” competition at SJICA starts at 5pm. (ER)
The late Ruth Tunstall-Grant was a true alternative hero who made a lasting impact on the local creative community. This exhibition celebrates TunstallGrant’s life and legacy as an artist and advocate for children’s rights and social justice issues in Santa Clara County. She led the charge on bringing arts education for San Jose’s underserved schools and worked to introduce an art program at the Santa Clara County Children’s Shelter—just two of the many initiatives she fostered in her lifetime. The reception runs from 6pm-8pm. (MS)
Silicon Valley warmed up quickly this spring—just in time for the grand reopening of Frost Amphitheater. New stage and canopy, new audiovisual system, same beloved Frost. Singersongwriters Jorja Smith and Kali Uchis are the first to play the renovated space for the annual Frost Music & Arts Festival. Smith, a 21-year-old Brit, has already nabbed a Grammy nomination for her R&B- and pop-inspired tunes. Colombian-American Kali Uchis has been distinguished as “genredefying”; her songs incorporate doo-wop harmonies, reggae flows and flirtatious vocals. (ER)
* concerts 19 May 29 at SAP Center
AVANTASIA
DEAD & COMPANY May 31 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
ROB THOMAS Jun 16 at Mountain Winery
WU-TANG CLAN Jun 22 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
JEFF LYNNE’S ELO Jun 24 at SAP Center
SANTANA: SUPERNATURAL NOW Jun 26 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
PITBULL Jun 28 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
TREVOR NOAH Jul 1 at Mountain Winery
PAUL MCCARTNEY Jul 10 at SAP Center
QUEEN + ADAM LAMBERT Jul 14 at SAP Center
BECK & CAGE THE ELEPHANT Jul 16 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
COMMON
*sun
Jul 18 at Mountain Winery
BACKSTREET BOYS Aug 4 at SAP Center
SAN JOSE JAZZ SUMMER FEST
MÉXICO MÁGICO
BOOGIE
VIVA CALLE
JIMMY O. YANG
Sat, 7pm, $30+ Hammer Theatre Center, San Jose
Sat, 10am, Free Downtown Campbell
Sun, 10am, Free Downtown San Jose
Sun, 7pm, $25 The Improv, San Jose
Technicolor skirts fly in a swirling kaleidoscopic motion, swaying hands flicking at the floral fabric of the jubilant Jalisco dresses. Bright and cheerful trumpets punctuate the sonorous thread woven by the violins. Feet in heeled black leather stomp a spirited rhythm into the floor as the revered guitarrón lays a deep bass and the vihuela works out a galloping melody. This presentation by Grupo Folklorico Los Laureles of Silicon Valley revels in the marriage of baile folklórico and mariachi, and all that is magic about the people, lands and spirit of Mexico. (ER)
The festival that the Campbell Chamber of Commerce hosts the third weekend in May has gone through some name changes in its 41 years. It is now known as Boogie: Campbell’s Music Festival. Call it what you will, it’s popular: The Chamber expects the festival, which also sets up on Sunday, to attract upwards of 50,000. Boogie is family-friendly, with a KidsZone to cater to the younger crowd and adult beverages for the parents. Performing and visual arts are covered by music and community stages and more than 100 artists’ booths. There’s also a Best Dressed contest, so look sharp. (AG)
Getting around San Jose—with its car-centric infrastructure—isn’t easy for those relying on nonmotorized modes of transportation. Viva Calle invites the Capital of Silicon Valley to consider what a bike-friendlier city might look like. This year’s springtime celebration of cycling, skateboarding, walking and just moving slower features live music, cultural performances and food outposts, all along a carfree route that privileges peoplepowered locomotion. Hubs include St. James Park, Plaza de Cesar Chavez, Parque de los Pobladores and Emma Prusch Farm & Park. Catch a flash mob and devour flavorful bites while getting to know the city better. ¡Que viva San Jose! More info at vivacallesj.org. (ER)
As a kid, the Hong Kong-born standup comic Jimmy O. Yang says he never really considered a career in show business. As he told Conan O’Brien last summer, “My dad always said pursuing your dreams is how you become homeless.” But after he moved to the U.S. Yang developed an independent streak. He scored smaller TV roles before his big break on the hit HBO sitcom Silicon Valley, where as JìanYáng he regularly delivered some of the show’s most absurd jokes. He appeared in Crazy Rich Asians and has a book—How To American: An Immigrant’s Guide to Disappointing Your Parents.
Aug 9-11 in San Jose
JACKSON BROWNE Aug 13 at Mountain Winery
FEIST Aug 15 at Mountain Winery
THE NATIONAL Sep 1 at Frost Amphitheatre
KRIS KRISTOFFERSON Aug 15 at Mountain Winery
KORN & ALICE IN CHAINS Sep 4 at Shoreline Amphitheatre
MALUMA Sep 15 at SAP Center
MANÁ Sep 27 at SAP Center For music updates and contest giveaways, like us on Facebook at metrofb.com
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK
Brigitte Lacombe
20 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
metroactive ARTS
TURN, TURN As he enters the autumn of his own life, travel writer Pico Iyer revisits Japan.
In Season Travel writer Pico Iyer ruminates on aging, death and dying in ‘Autumn Light’ BY GARY SINGH
O
NLY PICO IYER would compare crumbling maple leaves to the deteriorating health of his elder Japanese in-laws. In Japan, as he notes in his new book, Autumn Light: Season of Fire and Farewells, distinctions between sadness and beauty are not so clear as they are in the West. An American travel writer born in Britain to Indian parents and educated at Oxford, Iyer has spent decades embroidering the threads of his own Western and Eastern identities. This time around, his
meditative new book is both an ode to the season of autumn and a gloriously plotless contemplation on the impermanence of life. While traveling on assignment, Iyer learns about the passing of his wife Hiroko’s 91-year-old father. After Iyer returns home, death penetrates everything. Hiroko’s widowed mother then grows senile, sometimes unable to remember that her husband of 60 years is actually dead. And then there’s the ever-growing estrangement of Hiroko’s brother, a Jungian analyst who lives nearby but has long since disowned his family. The rest of the narrative explores how the Japanese deal with death,
loss, emotional distance and the relativity of sadness, all through the lens of autumn, with interludes from Thoreau, Basho and Leonard Cohen. “Autumn is the season of subtractions, the Japanese art of taking more and more away to charge the few things that remain,” Iyer writes. “At least four times as many classical poems are set in autumn and spring, the seasons of transition, than in summer and winter.” The book reads like one of those classic poems, yet with a Zenstyle emphasis on the unfolding background of everyday life. Iyer even writes that when East Asian students are shown a painting, they notice the background as surely as Westerners tend to see the figures in the foreground. As such, Autumn Light is almost all background, all middle, without a real beginning or end. There is no plot in the Western sense, nothing that goes from point A to point B in linear fashion. Instead we get the ins and outs of Iyer’s daily routines in the cookie-cutter Nara suburb of Deer’s Slope, “a bright rectilinear
neighborhood of vending machines and hair salons.” We learn about his evening trips to the health club to play ping-pong with his senior friends, each one of which seems to have a different method for dealing with his or her own autumn years. We get his trips to the post office, his journeys up the mountain, or his regular household existence with Hiroko, whose life of seasonal procedures, superstitions and simplicities forms a wonderful counterpart to Iyer’s complex inner-voyaging. Even after a quarter century of sharing a tiny flat, she has little sense of the details involved with what he does for a living and he claims little knowledge of the minutiae of her retail job. Autumn reigns supreme throughout the story. Even as Iyer travels for good portions of the year, every year, he always returns to Japan for autumn. What he loves most about Nara, in particular, is its neglectedness, he says. The city carries “a slightly forlorn quality, making it almost a monument to autumn.” Iyer’s published his first book on Japan in 1991. The Lady and the Monk documented the first year he spent in Kyoto, when he first met Hiroko. Intermittent reverberations from that book emerge in Autumn Light, woven into the current-day story, amplifying how Japan has taught Iyer to deal with aging, time, grief and loss in ways that are lost on the average Westerner. But Autumn Light is not a “part two” of the first book. Iyer now looks back with a half-lifetime of wisdom to reflect on what he’s learned over his half-Japanese existence. This “is not a sequel to the book I wrote on Japan 28 years ago, except insofar as autumn is a sequel—a prequel—to spring, the companion piece that rounds the picture out,” he writes. Toward the end, Hiroko is trying to read a draft of the autumn book that Iyer is working on. As he tries to explain it, she asks if it’s like a Yasujiro Ozu film, a “little no-action movie.” Perhaps she knows Iyer more than he realizes.
AUTUMN LIGHT: SEASON OF FIRE AND FAREWELLS Pico Iyer
Knopf
MAY 17–19 1–5PM BAY AREA FRIDAY SATURDAY 10AM–7PM
@makerfaire
SAN MATEO COUNTY EVENT CENTER SUNDAY 10AM–6PM
Rearing Horse by Barry Crawford
Mobile makers— out and about ★ Solar Surrey ★ Stroller Controller ★ Robot Dance Party
ZONE 2
The latest in electronics, 3D printing, digital fabrication plus drones and robots ★ RoboJam ★ Mech Warfare ★ Museum of Future Sports Drone Cage ★ Cosplay ★ Quick Base Attendee Lounge Make:Electronics bydigi-key diycontentcreators Make:frontiers
ZONE 3
Workshops, young makers, maker educators and more ★ Young Makers ★ Bay Area Lego Users Group ★ Kids Craft Activities ★ The Exploratorium ★ UC Berkeley CITRIS giantworkshop Makey'sworkshop
ZONE 4
Explorers abound— submarines, airplanes, and mechanical horses ★ Rearing Horse ★ Submarines ★ Maker Faire Merchandise ★ Make: Bookstore
ZONE 6
ZONE 8
Local artisans and thrilling theatre
Urban homesteading, with a focus on sustainability and skill building ★ Homegrown Village ★ Edible Marketplace ★ Tiny Homes ★ Hovercraft ★ Silkscreening hands-onhomegrown
ZONE 5
Fire arts, glass, fabrication—and all types of racing cars! ★ SF Bazaar ★ Lacemaking & Cording ★ Needle Arts travelingspectacular ★ DIY Robocars ★ Solar Racers ★ Power Racing Series ★ Maria del Camino ★ Woodworking ★ Prosthesis ★ Fire Arts
ZONE 9
ZONE 7
The heart of Maker Faire! Dance, big art, keynotes and hands-on activities for all ★ Dark Gallery ★ Laser Maze ★ Spider Sweet ★ Myriapodia ★ Make: Mini-Shed CenterStage makersquare byamazonhandmade dancebattlestage Axis Mundi by Thirty Circles
ZONE 1
HANDS-ON EVERYWHERE
Giant everything! Bubbles, cupcakes, boom boxes ★ Acme Muffineering ★ Rasterstache ★ Box of Boom ★ The Playground ★ Maker Faire Merchandise ★ Make: Mini-Shed
Soldering, lacemaking, circuit building, rocket making, origami — there’s no place like Maker Faire to pick up new skills as you try your hand at new tools and technologies. Look for the BIG RED HAND signs all over the event identifying ways you can engage with Maker projects, and be sure to stop by the ongoing featured hands-on activities listed below.
ZONE 2
★ Raspberry Pi ★ Museum of Future Sports ★ Bay Area Community Science Labs ★ Foldscope
ZONE 3
★ Winged Unicorns ★ Giant Workshop ★ Make: Workshops ★ LED Plushies ★ FabMo
ZONE 4
★ Rockets ★ Mobile Maker Van
ZONE 5
★ Lower 48 Woodshop ★ The Crucible
ZONE 6
★ Cording & Lacemaking ★ Needle Arts
ZONE 7
★ Learn to Solder by Google ★ Learn to Breadboard by Digi-Key
ZONE 8
★ Gemstone Polishing ★ Hands-on Homegrown ★ Strawbees Hovercraft
E
MAKERS ON THE FRONTIERS OF THINKING & DOING ✪GRAHAM HAWKES
Ocean engineer and inventor. Graham has designed and built more than 60 manned submersibles from atmospheric dive suits to flying subs. Currently, he runs HAWX Open Ocean. ➽ HACK OCEAN EXPLORATION: JOIN THE DIY UNDERWATER REVOLUTION WITHOUT GETTING WET ★ Center Stage, Saturday, 3pm
✪MELODIE YASHAR
✪ADAM SAVAGE
founder of Tested.com and Mythbusters ➽ THE SUNDAY SERMON ★ Zone 5, Sunday, 12pm
See makerfaire.com/ba/schedule for the full schedule of speakers, performances, and workshops.
Co-founder of Space Exploration Architecture (SEArch+). In 2015 SEArch+ was awarded top prize in NASA’s Phase 1 Centennial Challenge for a 3D-Printed Habitat for “Mars Ice House,” and maintains an ongoing collaboration with NASA Langley. ➽ MARS X HOUSE: DESIGNING AND 3D-PRINTING A FUTURE SURFACE HABITAT ★ Center Stage, Saturday, 1pm
Award-winning 3D printed space habitat design; what’s important for climate protection; immersive entertainment design; research in community submersibles; AI and machine learning for makers; robotics and food; spontaneous and DIY architecture; so much more!
✪SAUL GRIFFITH
Founder and Principal Scientist at Otherlab, Saul focuses his work on engineering solutions for clean energy, zero carbon economy. He has multiple degrees in materials science and mechanical engineering and completed his PhD in Programmable Assembly and Self Replicating Machines at MIT. ➽ GREEN NEW DEAL: THE ENORMOUS OPPORTUNITY IN SHOOTING FOR THE MOON ★ Center Stage, Saturday, 3:30pm
✪BRENT BUSHNELL
CEO of Two Bit Circus, an LA-based experiential entertainment company that operates a network of micro-amusement parks. Brent is also chairman of the non-profit Two Bit Circus Foundation which deploys STEAM-based programs to inspire students about invention. ➽ RAPID PROTOTYPING IMMERSIVE ENTERTAINMENT ★ Center Stage, Saturday, 5pm
✪KYLE CORNFOTH
Executive Director of Maker Ed. Over the last 20 years, Cornforth has trained teachers from all over the world on how non-traditional education experiences are essential to truly prepare students for their lives on this planet. ➽ THE STATE OF MAKER EDUCATION ★ Center Stage, Sunday, 11:30am
✪CHRIS ANDERSON
CEO, 3DR and founder of DIY Robocars, DIY Drones, and Dronecode. Learn about how makers are using AI, computer vision, and much of the software used in full-size self-driving cars to explore speed, aggressive maneuvering, and race tactics in the real world. ➽ WHY RACE ROBOT CARS ★ Center Stage, Sunday 1:30pm
✪ALEX GLO + ODD JAYY
Alex creates IoT projects, tutorials, and video interviews as the lead Hardware Nerd for the Hackster.io community. Jayy is a self-taught robotics enthusiast and 3D designer from Compton, CA. ➽ MAKE FRIENDS WITH COMPANION ROBOTS ★ Center Stage, Sunday, 12pm
500+ MAKER FAIRE EXHIBITS
ART
LET U.S. PREY: This bald eagle by Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson of Alameda, CA is handmade from thousands of nickels, dimes and pennies.
CRAFTS
ENCHANTED LEAVES Nedda & Aaron create nature-themed jewelry with organic materials they have gathered in the forests throughout California. They use a creative process called Electroforming, which uses chemistry and electricity to transform their designs into metal.
Maker exhibits are the core of Maker Faire. Over 500 makers show and share projects across engineering, art, design, science, food and craft. The creators are alongside their projects, available for questions and exchange. You'll find surprises and inspiration in new maker tech, startups, small-scale artisan craft, “just for the heck of it” projects, team builds, tools and hacks, research instrumentation, games and toys, sustainable living, fabrication techniques and so much more.
AI & ROBOTS
ZOETIC AI is a Bay Area startup showing “Kiki,” their AI-powered pet robot
✪ FIND US ON: @makerfaire #mfba19 #makerfaire Schedules for speakers, demos and attractions available online at makerfaire.com/ba/schedule
SPACE
NASA and Magnitude.io anchor a whole exhibitor section of startups and research institutions working on space at Maker Faire — plus Make: Vol 69 launches at #MFBA19 and is all about “makers getting orbital.”
SPECTACLE
NEW TECH
M5Stack makes easy, stackable, user-friendly development tools for makers working in IoT, home automation and robotics.
PROSTHESIS is the world's first 100% human controlled, 100% electric powered off-road racing mech. It is a celebration of human skill in unison with high technology and is the flagship machine in a quest to make mech racing a reality. Prosthesis returns to Maker Faire after it's world debut in 2018 at #MFBA18 after a year of work and tweaks by the Furrion Exo-Bionics team. We can't wait to see what it can do!
✪ HOURS RAIN OR SHINE! Friday, May 17, 1pm–5pm* *separate ticket required for Friday Saturday, May 18, 10am–7pm Sunday, May 19, 10am–6pm ✪ LOCATION San Mateo County Event Center, 1346 Saratoga Drive, San Mateo, CA ✪ TICKETS (cash or credit) Saturday/Sunday Day Pass, On-Site: ■ Adults $50 ■ Youth & Student $30 (ages 4–17, or with active student ID at gate) ■ Children 3 & under are free ■ Senior/Military/Veterans Discount Military ID or ID required at the gate ■ Buy online for best price (before May 17). Additional ticket types available online thru May 20 ✪ PLANNING ATMs are available on-site. Pets are not allowed, for their safety. Strollers & backpacks are allowed. ✪ TRANSPORTATION Information available at makerfaire.com/alt ■ Ride your bike, and bring your lock for the bike corral ■ Buy Event Center parking in advance at makerfaire.com/alt ■ Check @fairetraffic on Twitter for up-to-date parking info ■ Take CalTrain, BART or SamTrans—see makerfaire. com/alt ■ Uber/Lyft/rideshare drops you conveniently on Saratoga Dr. with access to East Gate
40+ WORKSHOPS DIGGING IN DEEP
Maker Faire is the place to try new tools, experiment with materials and gain new skills. Our Make: Workshops and the new Giant Workshop in ZONE 3 offer in-depth, hands-on workshops for all ages and across many types of making. Register online in advance to ensure your spot: makerfaire.com/ba/schedule RESERVATIONS TO WORKSHOPS DO NOT INCLUDE ENTRY TO MAKER FAIRE. MATERIAL FEES MAY APPLY.
✪MAKING CHAINMAIL
Chainmail is the blacksmith version of knitting! In this workshop, you'll learn to make your own rings and weave them in three different styles including a Byzantine weave, a 2-in-2 pattern, and a 4-in-1 pattern. ★ Giant Workshop, Saturday, 2pm
✪ELECTRIC SUGAR SKULL PATCHES
Combine science and art to create a fun personalized sugar skull patch! Sew a circuit with conductive thread, use powerful magnets to make a battery holder and then bring it all together with traditional hand sewing. ★ Make: Workshops, Sunday, 1pm
See makerfaire.com/ba/schedule for the full schedule of workshops, presentations and performances.
MAKER FAIRE 2019 MERCHANDISE Visit our Make: Mini-Shed stores for exclusive Maker Faire merchandise, Learn to Solder kits, boards and electronics, Make: books and blinky stuff. Subscribe to Make: magazine, or become a Make: Member and receive a special savings at the event. Look for the Makey robot icons on the map.
✪LIGHT-UP COSPLAY
Want to make light-up cosplay? Get started using cosplay/EVA foam and a basic circuit. You'll get the chance to experiment with LEDs, conductive thread, and batteries, and use cosplay foam to make a fun cosplay wrist or arm bracer to take home. ★ Giant Workshop, Saturday, 12:30pm
✪INTRO TO MICRO:BIT
Learn to code using color, sound, and weather sensors with enviro:bit from Pimoroni! It's loaded with sensors for air/weather, color/light, and sound. Plus, it fits right onto your micro:bit. Come spend some time with Digi-Key Electronics and Pimoroni to learn basic block-based coding and leave with a complete kit to impress your friends. ★ Make: Workshops, Saturday, 11am
✪COCKTAIL/SODA DISPENSING ROBOT
Cocktail robotics is a fun and open ended hobby. Make—and take home—a Raspberry Pi-based drinkbot which can be controlled via a web interface, and can dispense beverages with up to four ingredients. ★ Make: Workshops, Sunday, 11:30am
✪DREAM IT & BUILD IT—SOLIDWORKS APPS FOR KIDS
Introduce children 4–14 to the excitement of imagining and designing your own creations. Apps for Kids breaks down the design process into bite-sized tools to create, style, design and engineer a concept and then present and share it with others. ★ Make: Workshops, Saturday, 2:30pm
✪SCREENPRINTING MADE EASY WITH VINYL
Learn how to make your screeprint design digital and create your own DIY screenprinting studio at home with the help of CNC technology. ★ Make: Workshops, Sunday, 1:30pm
✪RE-IMAGINE WIND-UP TOYS
Dissect a wind up toy, observe the parts and how they work together and use craft materials like cardboard, googly eyes, weights and hot glue guns to create unique scrappy critters. ★ Giant Workshop, Sunday, 11am
Ridesh Load Zon
Rideshare Loading Zone
SARATOGA DR
TRAVELING SPECTACULAR
Power Racing Series
FIRST Robotics
Solar Rollers
Watch Makers
Auto Row Rideshare Loading Zone
5
6
The Crucible Fire Art
Needle Craft
SF Bazaar
8
LOST & FOUND
Maria del Camino
Dark Gallery
Prosthesis
MAKER SQUARE
Myriapodia
DIY Robocars
7
Axis Mundi
Fire Art
Paper Craft Tiny Homes Strawbees Steam Mazes Trains HANDS-ON
HOMEGROWN
Edible Marketplace Homegrown Village
CENTER STAGE
Spider Sweet
Kinetic Steam Works DANCE BATTLE
Airplanes
4
Learn to Breadboard Young Makers
Learn to Solder
Education
Bay Area Lego Users Group
Rearing Horse
Immerse yourself in maker culture with a bounty of exhibits, stages, interactive art, hands-on making and learning — all showcasing the creative and experimental minds who make, play, tinker & hack.
MAKEY’S WORKSHOPS
Submarines
獨角飛馬獸
Kids Craft Activities GIANT WORKSHOPS
Haunted House
3
Bubbles HAM Radios
Acme Muffineering
Shuttle
RoboJam! European Trains
First Aid
Rockets
Stage Information ATM
2
DIY MAKE: CONTENT FRONTIERS CREATORS
Robots Bike Parking
Makerspaces Science
Fabrication & 3D Printing
Space Health
Restrooms
Drones
The Playground
Boards
MAKE: ELECTRONICS
Cosplay
9
@makerfaire
Food Nursing Area Merchandise
Coming by car? Train? Bike? Bus? Rideshare? Find all you need on Getting to Maker Faire at makerfaire.com/alt
1
Mobile makers — covering the whole fairgrounds
Maria del Camino by Bruce Tomb
Nine stages plus a multitude of performers that will entertain and inspire. Plan your day at makerfaire. com/ba/schedule.
✪MAKE: ELECTRONICS
BY DIGI-KEY ★ Zone 2 ➽ HOW TO 3D PRINT
✪CENTER STAGE ★ Zone 7 ➽ FREE-FLYING SPACE ROBOTS: THE NEXT GENERATION JOSE BENAVIDES Saturday, 12:30pm ➽"I FORGOT MY PIN": AN EPIC TALE OF LOSING $30,000 IN BITCOIN MARK FRAUENFELDER Saturday, 5:30pm ➽ BIG DREAMS AND SHORTCUTS: HOW I DESIGN DIY WEARABLE TECH SOPHY WONG Sunday, 12:30pm
✪MAKE: FRONTIERS
★ Zone 2 ➽ NAVIGATING A POSTTECHSHOP WORLD Saturday, 4:30pm ➽ HOW SELF-DRIVING RC CAR COMMUNITY “DIY ROBOCARS” IS CHANGING THE WORLD Saturday, 5:30pm ➽ COSPLAY PROP CONTEST Sunday, 3pm
ON FABRIC & HELPFUL ROBOTICS DAVID SHOREY Saturday, 1:30pm ➽ MAKING ART WITH RASPBERRY PI MATT RICHARDSON Saturday, 3pm ➽ GETTING STARTED WITH SEWABLE ELECTRONICS ANGELA SHEEHAN Sunday, 3:30pm
➽ BOOKBINDING
CLEVERHANDS Saturday, 11:45 am ➽ BLOOMING CHEESE! MAKING BRIE AND CAMEMBERT AT HOME NICOLE EASTERDAY Sunday, 2:45pm
✪HANDS-ON HOMEGROWN ★ Zone 8
✪DANCE BATTLE ★ Zone 7 ➽ TURFINC, OAKLAND, CA Throughout the day ➽ TURF DANCE WORKSHOP Friday, 1pm; Saturday & Sunday, 12pm ➽ LUDOSPORT LIGHT SABER DUELING Saturday & Sunday, 11am & 2pm
Friday, 2pm & 4pm; Saturday & Sunday, 11:30am, 1:30pm, 4:30pm
CREATORS ★ Zone 2
➽ KOKEDAMA: MAKE YOUR
NATE BONHAM & CALI GADE Saturday, 11:30am ➽ GLITTER-BOMBED PACKAGE THIEVES & OTHER VIRAL VIDEO STORIES MARK ROBER Saturday, 1:30pm ➽ STARTING & GROWING A YOUTUBE CHANNEL! EVAN & KATELYN Saturday, 2:30pm ➽ MAKING IT PODCAST BOB CLAGETT, JIMMY DIRESTA, DAVID PICCIUTO Sunday, 1:30pm ➽ HOW TO MAKE A SHIPPING CONTAINER HOUSE BEN UYEDA Sunday, 2:30pm
✪MAKER SQUARE BY AMAZON HANDMADE
★ Zone 6 ➽ KOMBUCHA: FROM YOUR KITCHEN TO YOUR COSPLAY AND CLOTHING CHRISTINE KNOBEL Saturday, 12:30 pm
Performances on the hour starting Friday, 1:30pm; Saturday & Sunday, 11:30am Check makerfaire.com/ba/ schedule for full schedule & locations. Subject to change.
✪TRAVELING SPECTACULAR ★ Zone 6
✪DIY CONTENT
➽ THE KING OF RANDOM
✪ MARIA DEL CAMINO ★ Zone 5
OWN MINI SUCCULENT NATALIE HONJO Saturday, 12pm ➽ SAUERKRAUT MAKING HAPPY GIRL KITCHEN Saturday & Sunday, 2pm ➽ DIY TEA BLENDING CHRISTOPHER COCCAGNA Saturday, 5pm & Sunday, 3pm
✪GIANT WORKSHOP ★ Zone 3 ➽ LIGHT-UP COSPLAY WORKSHOP SAHRYE COHEN Saturday, 12:30pm ➽ MAKING CHAINMAIL WORKSHOP JASON STEPPLER Saturday, 2pm ➽ RE-IMAGINE WINDUP TOYS WORKSHOP RYAN JENKINS Sunday, 11am
GOLDSMITH SPONSORS
SILVERSMITH SPONSORS
✪PROSTHESIS ★ Zone 5
Friday, 2pm & 4pm; Saturday & Sunday, 11am, 2pm, 5pm
COPPERSMITH SPONSORS
✪POWER WHEELS RACING ★ Zone 5
Friday, 2pm; Saturday, 11am, 1pm, 2pm, 4pm, 5pm; Sunday, 11am, 1pm, 2pm, 4:30pm
✪MUSEUM OF FUTURE SPORTS DRONE CAGE ★ Zone 2
Sessions alternate all weekend between DRONE TRAINING, DRONE COMBAT, TINY WHOOP RACING & DEMOS
✪EEPYBIRD'S COKE & MENTOS
★ Zone 5, West Gate Saturday & Sunday, 10am
MEDIA/COMMUNITY SPONSORS
21
REVIEW
VISIT US & TASTE WHY WE WERE VOTED BEST NEW RESTAURANT
AGENT, 86 Judi Dench is Red Joan in the fictionalized version of the Melita Norwood case.
Tinker, Tailor, Geezer IN MAY 2000, an aged British woman named Joan (Judi Dench) is puttering around her house when a squad of Special Branch police knock on her door, coming to arrest her on a charge of 27 counts of breaking the Official Secrets Act. The John LeCarrean beginning of Red Joan is intriguing. Moreover, it has a basis in truth—Trevor Nunn’s film is an adaptation of Jeanne Rooney’s novel, itself a fictionalized version of the actual Melita Norwood case. And it’s clear something was lost in the translation. In flashbacks we see Joan’s youth at Cambridge in the late 1930s; played by the pretty but uninvolving Sophie Cookson, she was a drab science student who got swept into a friendship with a dashing older student, Sonya (Tereza Srbova), and her brother Leo (Tom Hughes). The pair of dazzling foreigners are ardent Communists who try to recruit Joan into the party. Red Joan Over the course of many decades, Joan is mixed up with them, carrying on an affair with Leo that lasts R; 110 Mins. into the war years. Matters get troublesome when 3Below Theaters Leo presses Joan to spy for the Party; she’s now an & Lounge assistant to a research scientist (Stephen Campbell 3belowtheaters.com Moore). Her boss loves her, but he’s trapped in one of those Graham Greene escape-proof marriages. It’s too easy to say Dench is this film’s only redeeming value, yet it’s too difficult to try to find other good points about this stodgy romance. Nunn’s nostalgia for the coziness of England, from pristine tea shops to the smooching on the banks of the river Cam dilutes this story; the director couldn’t have made wartime England prettier if he worked for Disney. He speeds over the actual suspense—the incidents of Joan’s spying—as if that were the least interesting part of the story. But Dench works her craft in her too-few scenes, sneakily changing before our eyes from an oatmeal-colored dodderer blanched in the too-bright lights of the cop shop to a keen conniver ready to extenuate herself. She has an argument for her treachery, and shaky as it is, Dench sells it at the end. The real Norwood, rumored to have been a particularly valuable Soviet asset, was what they used to call a “red-diaper baby”—the daughter of Communist parents, born to the cause. Evoking sympathy for Stalinists is tough today, but Dench’s speech at the end is as close as our cinema is going to get to a defense of the USSR. —Richard von Busack
CULINARY CINEMA SERIES 2 | TICKETS & DATES COMING SOON!
Visit pruneyardcinemas.com for info & tickets! | 1875 S. BASCOM AVE. CAMPBELL | (408) 717-4712
CITY LIGHTS
MAY 16-JUNE 16, 2019
THEATER COMPANY
BASED ON THE TRUE STORY OF A PIONEERING WOMAN ASTRONOMER
SILENT SKY by Lauren Gunderson directed by Mark Anderson Phillips supported by Visionary Producers Nancy B. Coleman & Paul M. Resch
Tix & info: cltc.org, 408-295-4200
529 South Second St., San Jose, CA 95112
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
SOUTH BAY'S ONLY TRUE DINE-IN CINEMA. FULL FOOD AND BEVERAGE SERVICE TO YOUR SEAT!
metroactive FILM
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
22
CULT FOLLOWING The Manson Family is revisited by ‘American Psycho’ director Mary Harrison.
Savage Messiah Mary Harrison takes intriguing, feminist slant on the Manson Family saga BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
H
ERE COMES THE 50th anniversary of the great Los Angeles creepycrawl. It’s soon to be celebrated—let’s face it, he’ll celebrate it—by Quentin Tarantino in his Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Coming first to theaters is Charlie Says, Mary Harron’s far more low-key account of three women involved in the TateLaBianca murders.
Harron’s film gets the milieu, the angle and the details right. To properly tell the story of the Manson gang, one needs a certain fellow feeling for the hippies. Without compassion for a life
of flamboyant laziness, the Mansons will seem incomprehensible, some unique Southern California plague like pet-eating coyotes, brushfires and the Santa Ana winds. Harron’s sympathy for devils was previously seen in her much-praised adaptation of American Psycho (2000) and I Shot Andy Warhol (1996) about the polemicist and street-lunatic Valerie Solanas. Charlie Says is more thoughtful work, less studiously hip than its predecessors. Essential to Charlie Says’ quality is Harron’s refusal to make a monster out of Manson. He’s well played by ex-Doctor Who star Matt Smith, whose foxy face and intimidating forehead are barely recognizable under all the hair. Smith’s Manson is capable of
easy-going charm and odd playfulness, though he’s also a deceiver, a drill sergeant, a poisonous pedagogue. Charlie Says clears up the dirt-common jailbird attitudes Manson shrouded in a cloud of incense. Working from a script by Guinevere Turner (Go Fish), Harron builds this story the simplest way. It shuttles back and forth between the lead-up to the murders and several years later, when three women of the imprisoned family are in an isolation ward in prison. It’s “inspired” by two books about the gang, Ed Sanders’ The Family (the musician and poet Sanders is credited as executive producer) as well as Karlene Faith’s The Long Prison Journey of Leslie van Houten: Life Beyond the Cult. The late Faith (played by Merritt Wever), a UC Santa Cruz PhD in anthropology, was an activist for prisoner’s rights who taught classes to Susan Atkins (Marianne Rendon), Patricia Krenwinkel (Sosie Bacon) and Leslie van Houten (Hannah Murray). At the beginning of Charlie Says, the three women are brainwashed and bliss-whipped. They quote Manson adoringly as if he were Chairman Mao (“Charlie says…” begins almost every one of their sentences). So Faith acts
as both consciousness-raiser and cult deprogrammer. Van Houten, whom Manson rechristened “Lulu,” is our entry into the gang. She’s a soft, drifting girl who could get pulled in by anyone who seemed sure of himself. Charlie Says insists there was a time when it was good to be a Mansonette, when life was a long stoned orgy in Topanga Canyon. They survive through a mix of panhandling, trading sexual favors and dumpster diving. Charlie, building the gang of girls up with praise, is just as capable of lashing out, informing Lulu she couldn’t understand him with her “tiny female brain”. Charlie Says finds some evil humor in Manson. Here he was—Jesus returned and the fifth horseman of the apocalypse—fretting over the approval of the late Doris Day’s recordproducing son Terry Melcher (Bryan Adrian), fetching himself a Buffalo Bill suit and setting up a pathetic topless go-go girl show to impress Melcher. It’s an irony of Los Angeles history that one of the most fearful men who ever dwelled there was, ultimately, just one more thwarted performer in a city full of them. It’s more than just the needle drops of the angst-loaded psychedelic band Love that make this film evocative; photographer Crille Forsberg captures the fresh late-’60s light in those hills, as well as the blue sad days in prison. The adroit casting of Grace van Dien as Sharon Tate sets up the opposition between the scrounging Family and the kind of world that gets seen during a Golden Globes telecast. The horror of this us-vs.-them attitude comes out in the massacres. Charlie Says doesn’t roll in the gore—it just sums it up in a few sharp scenes, as when Rosemary LaBianca (Jackie Joyner) fends off a knife-wielder with a bedroom lamp, like a duelist parrying a thrust. Harron is compassionate enough to envision an alternate ending to Van Houten’s path. If the Mansons were indeed werewolves, as they were called, they shared the werewolves’ tragedy of coming to as humans after the carnage they had caused.
104 MIN
R
CHARLIE SAYS 3Below Theaters & Lounge 3belowtheaters.com
presents
EVENT
When acid flashbacks meet dementia— An uproarious one-man tribute to the joys, achievements, frustrations, and looming doom of the Baby Boom Generation. FLYING HIGH Bruce Tomb, the creator of ‘Maria Del Camino,’ says his art car is as close as he’ll ever get to a flying car.
Creative Visions nior . n Jr
se
Han
—the New York Times w w w. w i l l d u r s t . c o m 1062 Valencia Street
Ju
415.282.3055
29 N. San Pedro St. Downtown SJ
ign•
“QUITE POSSIBLY, THE BEST POLITICAL COMEDIAN WORKING T I C K E T S IN THE COUNTRY TODAY” www.themarsh.org
Des
A MASSIVE BALD eagle composed entirely of dimes, nickels and pennies spreads its copper-red wings. Journals bound by needle, thread and a bookworm’s deft fingers. A diesel-powered submarine designed to give maritime hobbyists access to depths once reserved for only the most advanced divers. All these objects and more will be at this year’s Maker Faire at the San Mateo County Event Center. Since 2006, Maker Faire has given a platform and a playground to creative innovators and their fans. This year’s lineup features a multitude of makers—from vinyl screen printers to the pilot of “Maria Del Camino,” an art car that marries the body of a 1959 El Camino and the mechanical bones of a Komatsu excavator. Her driver, Bruce Tomb explains that the vehicle is the closest he’ll ever get to piloting a flying car. At this year’s fair, virtual reality and augmented reality exhibits find their place among an audience that Maker Faire loves to transcend the everyday. Leo Madrid invites visitors to take a seat in his AEthernaut chair, an AR May 17-19 journey meant to elicit the sensation of a meditative San Mateo County state, simulated here without the deep breaths. Event Center Casual and seasoned robot-builders show off their makerfaire.com creations—a paintball cannon, life-size R2-D2s and BB-8s, and the 14.5-foot “Rearing Horse.” Melodie Yasha, co-founder of SEArch+ (Space Exploration Architecture)—which won a top prize from NASA for a project that successfully 3D-printed with ice—will give a presentation on endeavors to 3D-print a habitable high-tech igloo on Mars. Of course, Maker Faire is about more than robots and circuit boards. Expert woodworkers will demonstrate how relevant their craft still is. Matt Berger carves handmade timber skateboards and teardrop trailers, while Cal Poly engineering student Josh Warner shapes bicycle frames out of wood, adding a timeless finish to the classically eco-friendly mode of transportation. This fair is family-friendly, featuring plenty of displays and activities geared toward children. Soap-making, kite-making and multiple Apps for Kids workshops provide space for learning and entertainment. Visitors of all ages can learn how to solder and code, and there are several young innovators participating, such as 15-year-old maker Walden Schafer and his remote-controlled “mean, clean washing machine.” Other makers offer the opportunity to interact with projects that involve sustainable living, food making (cheese, sauerkraut, spice and tea-blending) and the electroformation of organic materials into metal. —Erika Rasmussen
May 25 • 8pm
408-679-2330 TabardTheatre.org
Tuesdays • 8 pm Beginning April 16, 2013
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
ONE NIGHT 23 ONLY!
metroactive MUSIC
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
24
WINTER SUN With their new single, ‘Polar Nights,’ San Jose band Life Size Models aim to shed some light on a dark subject.
Black Light Rising local band Life Size Models address depression on new single, ‘Polar Nights’ BY MIKE HUGUENOR
T
WO AND A half minutes into Life Size Models’ new single “Polar Nights,” something truly unexpected happens.
“Deflecting people away from what’s really going on with me is just what I do,” states an unannounced (and decidedly British) voice. As the song settles into the bridge between its second and third choruses, the male voice goes on, as the band continues to back him up. When you project an image of yourself as being stable and happy, “people just assume you are,” the speaker says.
“That’s a guy named Jake Tyler,” says Chris Seymour, the band’s singer. “He did a TED Talk. He’s on Instagram.” In the year 2019, breaking new ground in rock music isn’t an easy task. But by sampling a TED Talk in a single, Life Size Models just might have done it. What Tyler is talking about in his TED Talk is depression, the subject of “Polar Nights.” Though it went undiagnosed, Seymour says that both he and his twin brother Steven (also the band’s guitarist) have experienced the illness. More importantly, depression has taken the lives of
more than one close friend. Sadly, Seymour’s original writing partner, one of the founding members of Life Size Models, was one. “I think everybody has been affected by it to some degree,” Seymour tells me over the phone on his lunch break. “But it’s sort of a stigmatized, private kind of issue. It’s difficult to talk about, so we wanted to write a song that acknowledged it. That’s why we chose to add the sample, the voiceover in the middle, cause that’s somebody that literally is diagnosed.” If the name “Polar Nights” sounds a bit like Arctic Monkeys (Boreal imagery + plural noun), the song does, too. Co-written with his twin brother, Seymour says they both love that band, along with The National and The Replacements. “Polar Nights” sounds a bit like all of them put together: anthemic, pensive and rollicking, all in turn. “Even on the sunny days I’m inside/ watching televised versions/of my life pass me by,” he sings, before the chorus lyric: “I want to see the sun.”
The single comes out this Friday, and will be available on streaming services. While no album is currently in the works, Life Size Models have more singles in mind. “We’re approaching it song by song,” Seymour says. “We think that’s more effective in the long term because we get people to focus on individual songs, as opposed to putting out a record and hoping someone ‘takes a listen.’” Seymour’s thinking reflects a larger trend: a marked shift in the way some bands are recording and releasing music these days. Recently, many bands have articulated this same plan, citing Spotify and other streaming services as motivation for pivoting away from albums, moving instead to a model of releasing consecutive singles. Last month, San Jose poppunk band 5606 told Metro they had similar plans (their single “Keeping Count” came out Apr 24). When I interviewed Stephen Jenkins back in 2017, he had the same thing in mind for Third Eye Blind. Life Size Models count themselves as fans of Third Eye Blind. Noticeably, though, it’s not because of the material released under the Spotify model. “We’re huge fans of that first record,” Seymour says. There’s no denying that the music industry has changed lately, as pop and hip-hop artists embrace a oneat-a-time release schedule. The jury is still out on whether the model will work for historically album-oriented rock genre. Regardless, Life Size Models are committed to their game plan. More importantly, they hope “Polar Nights” connects with people who need connection. “Sometimes you end up cutting yourself off, maybe assuming you’re not going to be valuable to somebody that you care about,” Seymour says. “This song is kind of an acknowledgement of that feeling, and also a reassurance that it’s OK. That it’s going to pass.”
‘Polar Nights’
LIFE SIZE MODELS Streaming Services lifesizemodels.bandcamp.com
11 25 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
26
C
M
Y
CM
MY
CY
CMY
K
metroactive EVENTS
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
mighty mike McGee’s
Send your events to mightymike @metroactive.com
Must Sees
WED MAY 15 | NEW TALENT COMEDY COMPETITION FINALS This will be one of the best nights of local stand-up comedy you will see this year. Over 150 comedians have been competing to qualify for this night since probably 1987… Winner gets a headlining spot at Rooster’s, a pan of lasagna (so I hear) and at least a little bit of shade from other comics. 8pm. Rooster T. Feathers, 157 W El Camino Real, Sunnyvale
THU–SUN MAY 16–19 | 2019 SAN JOSE IMPROV FESTIVAL OPENING NIGHT Some of the best improv groups from around the country will converge on San Jose this week to meet you, greet you and make you laugh, all without a net. I hope they have lasagna this weekend! Mega-thanks to Jeff Ringgold and AIT folks for keeping the DIY spirit of theater alive in the Santa Clara Valley. 8pm. Various times and events through Sun. More at americanimprovtheatre.com | American Improv Theatre, 260 McEvoy St, San Jose
SAT MAY 18 | 21ST LATINO ART NOW! ART AUCTION & EXHIBITION MACLA has long been on the forefront as one of the arbiters of art in San Jose. While they never seem to have lasagna when I need it, they sure do have their finger on the pulse of the artists here in the South Bay. Bring some of their work home with you. And you know what else… 6pm. Tickets: maclaauction2019.eventbrite.com | MACLA, 510 S First St, San Jose = MUST SEE
= MORE AT SANJOSE.COM
WED 5/15 Everyday Happy Hour 4pm– 5:30pm & 9pm–10pm. Mon, 7pm: Big Bands. Tue, 8pm– Close: Tiki Tuesdays—exotic cocktails and island vibes. Wed, 8pm–11pm: Queen Bingo. Pruneyard Cinemas, 1875 S Bascom Ave, Campbell
Wed, 6pm: Fred McCarty. Tue, 5/21, 6pm: Wildcat Mountain Ramblers. Wed, 5/22, 6pm: Jerry Logan & Loganville. 1110 S Bascom Ave, San Jose
TALENT CONTEST | GO GO GONE SHOW 8pm. Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
NEW TALENT COMEDY COMPETITION FINALS
8pm. Rooster T. Feathers, 157 W El Camino Real, Sunnyvale
POOR HOUSE BISTRO Wed, 6pm: The Legendary Ron Thompson & Friends feat Brooklyn. Thu, 6pm: Thursday Night Blues Jam with The Royals. Fri, 6pm: On Tour: Quique Gomez Band. Sat, 6pm: Terry Hanck Band. Sun, 11am: School of Blues Student Jam. Mon, 6pm: Mixed Open Mic Night. Tue, 7pm: Aki Kumar’s Blues Jam. 91 S Autumn St, San Jose
= FREE
LIVE LIT WRITERS OPEN MIC SAM'S BBQ
CEDAR ROOM
= SEE PHOTO
THU 5/16 EXHIBITS | SHANNON EBNER’S STRAY: A GRAPHIC TONE & KAHLIL JOSEPH: BLKNWS
7pm. Hosted by Tina Madueño. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose
MIXED OPEN MIC
7pm. Britannia Arms Cupertino, 1087 S De Anza Blvd, San Jose
POETRY | THIRD THURSDAY OPEN MIC
7pm. With special guest. Willow Glen Library, 1157 Minnesota Ave, 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
11am–5pm. Through 6/16. Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Drive at Museum Way, Stanford (See listing below.)
7:30pm. Little Lou's BBQ, 2455 S Winchester Blvd, Campbell
DRINK AND DRAW AT ART BOUTIKI
2019 SAN JOSE IMPROV FESTIVAL OPENING NIGHT
7pm. Art Boutiki Music Hall, 44 Race St, San Jose
8pm. Various times and events through Sun.
metroactive EVENTS
FRI 5/17
BOSS FIGHT COMEDY SHOW
EXHIBIT | JOSIAH MCELHENY: ISLAND UNIVERSE
8pm. Game Shop Downstairs, 124 E Santa Clara St, San Jose
COMEDIAN | SHANE TORRES
8pm. Various times through Sunday. Rooster T. Feathers, 157 W El Camino Real, Sunnyvale
TRIVIA NIGHT
8pm. Sports Page B&G, 1431 Plymouth St, Mountain View
11am–5pm through 8/18. Cantor Arts Center, 328 Lomita Drive at Museum Way, Stanford
ALT ROCK | TWYN, THROWN OUT BONES, WET BANDITS 7:30pm. Art Boutiki Music Hall, 44 Race St, San Jose
BRAZILIAN MUSIC | BOSSA BLUE
8pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose
THE RITZ
Thu, 8pm: My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult, Curse Mackey. Fri, 8pm: Ignite, DARE, Low End, Stepping Stone. Sat, 8pm: She Wants Revenge, KANGA, Vore Aurora. Tue, 5/21, 8pm: Mad Sin, Stellar Corpses, Hayride To Hell. Wed, 5/22, 8pm: Exhalants, Eastern Westerner, The Seven Five. 400 S First St, San Jose
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
SHERWOOD INN
Thu-Sun, 8:30pm: Karaoke. Sun, 4pm: Novak-Nanni Duo. 2988 Almaden Expy, San Jose
KARAOKE | COURT’S LOUNGE
PUNK | VERBAL ABUSE, ANTI-SOCIAL, THB, THE BACKSTABBERS, DJ TEST
9pm. the elegant pub, 3273 S White Rd, San Jose
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
THE BRANHAM LOUNGE
Fri & Sat, 9:30pm. 1072 Lincoln Ave, San Jose
SAT 5/18 DRAG QUEEN 'OVER THE RAINBOW' STORYTIME
11am. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, 150 E San Fernando St, San Jose
MEET-UP | BALANCED BREAKFAST RETURNS
11am. Open discussion on San Jose’s music industry. Forager, 420 S First St, San Jose
THE ALAMEDA ARTWORKS OPEN STUDIOS
11am–5pm. The Alameda ArtWorks, 1068 The Alameda, San Jose
SILICON VALLEY OPEN STUDIOS AT SVP
11am–5pm. Also Sunday. School of Visual Philosophy, 1065 The Alameda, San Jose
KFJC BATTLE OF THE SURF BANDS #8
6pm. California Theatre, 345 S First St, San Jose
21ST LATINO ART NOW! ART AUCTION & EXHIBITION
6pm. Tickets: maclaauction2019.eventbrite. com | MACLA, 510 S First St, San Jose
KARAOKE | 7 BAMBOO SMOKING PIG BBQ
Fri, 9pm: Andre Thierry and Zydeco Magic. Sat, 9pm: Kenya B Trio. 3340 Mowry Ave, Fremont
DRUNKEN STARFIGHTER
9pm. Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
Thu, 10pm: The Goods with DJ Felipe Avelar. Fri, 10pm: TGIFF with DJ Worldwise. Sat, 10pm: Snap Saturdays with DJ Frank Morales. 1116 Branham Lane, San Jose
KARAOKE | THE GOOSETOWN LOUNGE
DANCE | DJ RAHEEM
9:30pm. Britannia Arms Downtown, 173 W Santa Clara St, San Jose
SOLO SHOW | JASON MEWES & HIS A-MEWESING STORIES
9:45pm. San Jose Improv, 62 S Second St, San Jose
Every day. Fri–Sat, 7pm. Sun–Thu, 9pm. 7 Bamboo, 162 Jackson St, San Jose
IMPROVISATION | COMEDY SPORTZ
7pm & 9:15pm. 3Below, 288 S Second St, San Jose
STAGE | WORKING, THE MUSICAL
7pm. Also Sun, 2pm. San Jose City College Theatre Arts, 2100 Moorpark Ave, San Jose
CLASSICAL GUITAR | DUO: TONY HARMON & NATHAN TOWNE 7:30pm. Trianon Theatre, 72 N Fifth St, San Jose
28
27 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
American Improv Theatre, 260 McEvoy St, San Jose
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
28
metroactive EVENTS
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
jimmycomedy.com
1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-429-4135 Friday, May 17 • Ages 21+
RUMBLE STEELSKIN
Saturday, May 18 • Ages 16+
ARI LENNOX Sunday, May 19 • Ages 16+
CARNIFEX plus Oceano
Monday, May 20 • Ages 16+
GEOGRAPHER plus Manatee Commune
OH, JIMMY! You know writer, comedian and actor Jimmy O. Yang
HIEROGLYPHICS
from his hilarious stand-up comedy and/or for his roles in ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ and ‘Silicon Valley.’ Let him make you laugh this Sunday at the San Jose Improv, 62 S Second St.
Thursday, May 23 • Ages 16+ Friday, May 24 • Ages 16+
Saturday, May 25 • Ages 16+
Mustache Harbor
Jun 1 Ghostemane/ Ho9909 (Ages 16+) Jun 2 Planet Booty S.C. Pride Afterparty (Ages 21+) Jun 4 Dizzy Wright/ Demrick (Ages 16+) Jun 5 Chon/ d0MI x JD Beck (Ages 16+) Jun 6 Fidlar/ Tropa Magica (Ages 16+) Jun 8 Andre Nickatina/ J.Lately (Ages 16+) Jun 27 Together Pangea/ Vundabar (Ages 16+) Jun 29 Galactic ft. Erica Falls (Ages 16+) Jul 14 Toots & The Maytals (Ages 16+) Aug 13 Matisyahu (Ages 16+) Aug 16 The Original Wailers (Ages 16+) Aug 27 Protoje (Ages 16+) Sep 24 Hot Chip (Ages 16+) Oct 14 Yung Gravy (Ages 16+) Oct 23 The Distillers (Ages 16+) Nov 14 Suicide Girls Blackheart Burlesque (Ages 21+) Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.
Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online
www.catalystclub.com
27 JAZZ | AKIRA TANA AND OTONOWA
8:30pm. Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
METAL | AGNOSTIC PRIEST FINAL STAND RELEASE SHOW
9pm. Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
KARAOKE & DANCING
9:30pm. Bogart's Sports Bar, 1209 Wildwood Ave, Sunnyvale
WILLOW DEN
Sat, 9pm: Live music w/local bands. Sun, 5:30pm–Close: Service Industry Night = 1/2 off drinks with your industry card! Tue, 10pm: Karaoke. 803 Lincoln Ave, San Jose
SUN 5/19 SILICON VALLEY BIKES! BIKE SHOW
10am. Emma Prusch Park, 647 S King Rd, San Jose
45TH ANNUAL CUHSD ART SHOW
11am. Del Mar High School, 1224 Del Mar Ave, San Jose
SV PRIDE DRAG BRUNCH
11am. SoFA Market, 387 S First St, San Jose
THE KINKY BOOK CLUB READS "IMPERVIOUS" BY JANET HARDY
2pm–4pm. Denny's (back room), 2077 N First St, San Jose
JAZZ JAM
4pm. Little Lou's BBQ, 2455 S Winchester Blvd, Campbell
6pm. The Cats, 17533 Santa Cruz Hwy, Los Gatos
COMEDIAN | JIMMY O. YANG
9pm. San Jose Improv, 62 S Second St, San Jose
KARAOKE | KATIE BLOOM’S
TUE 5/21 WRITERS POWER HOUR SERIES WITH LORRAINE HAATAIA
Noon. A Work of Heart Studio, 176 Race St, San Jose
TRIVIA @ FOUNTAINHEAD
Wed & Sun, 9:30pm–1:30am. Campbell
Tue, 6pm. SoFA Market, 387 S First St, San Jose
MON 5/20
TRADITIONAL IRISH SEISIUN TUESDAYS
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
7pm. 201 Castro St, Mountain View
ART CLASS | LIFE DRAWING
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 8:30pm. Five Points, 169 W Santa Clara St, San Jose
TRIVIA NIGHT AT STEPHEN'S GREEN
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
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.
TRIVIA | PUBSTUMPERS
7:30pm. Britannia Arms Almaden, 5027 Almaden Expy, San Jose
TRIVIA | TRIVIOLITY PUB QUIZ
7:45pm. Britannia Arms Cupertino, 1087 S De Anza Blvd, San Jose
HOUSE MUSIC | RHYTHM RITUAL
9pm. Continental Lounge, 347 S First St, San Jose
PUNK | PUNK VINYL TUESDAYS WITH DJ TEST
10pm. Cinebar, 69 E San Fernando St, San Jose
WED 5/22
KARAOKE WITH JADE
9:30pm. Dive Bar, 78 E Santa Clara St, San Jose
LIVE MUSIC | ISAIAH PICKETT BAND
9:30pm. Rosie McCann's, 355 Santana Row #1060, San Jose
THU 5/23 GALLERY TALK | CATHERINE WAGNER: PARADOX OBSERVED
12:30pm. San José Museum of Art, 110 S Market St
COUNTRY | KRTY SONG & WINE SERIES
4pm. With Ashley Gorley, Chris Distefano, Kelly Lovelace. Clos LaChance Winery, 1 Hummingbird Ln, San Martin
GRUPO FOLKÓRICO | MÉXICO EN NUESTRO CORAZÓN
7pm. School of Arts & Culture @MHP, 1700 Alum Rock Ave, San Jose
JAZZ HOMAGE | OWEN BRODER'S HODGES & DUKE
7pm. 60th Anniversary of Johnny Hodges’ and Duke Ellington’s albums, "Back to Back" & "Side By Side." Cafe Stritch, 374 S First St, San Jose
LEGENDARY DJ | MIX MASTER MIKE
7pm. The Branham Lounge, 1116 Branham Ln, San Jose
STAGE | SILENT SKY BY LAUREN GUNDERSON
FRASCATI COMEDY OPEN MIC (ALL AGES)
8pm. Various times through 6/16. City Lights Theater Company, 529 S Second St, San Jose
PHYSICIST | BRIAN COX’S UNIVERSAL: ADVENTURES IN SPACE & TIME
NEW WAVE NIGHT | FLASHBACK
7pm. Caffe Frascati, 315 S First St, San Jose
8pm. California Theatre, 345 S First St, San Jose
COMEDY SHOW | LOCALS ONLY!
8pm. Santa Clara Valley Brewing, 101 E Alma Ave, San Jose
CARAVAN LOUNGE COMEDY SHOW WITH MR. WALKER
9pm. 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
ACOUSTIC | JOE FERRARA
29
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
9pm. Caravan Lounge, 98 S Almaden Ave, San Jose
FOX
CLUB
metroactive EVENTS
Wed May 15
CLUB FOX BLUES JAM
Harpdog Brown 7pm • $7
Fri May 17
Hot For Teacher
The Van Halen Experience • w/SONA 8pm, $16 adv / $18 day of show Sat April 18
Petty Theft
San Francisco Tribute to Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers: 9pm, , $18 adv / $20 day of show Sun May 19
Songwriters In The Round
David Luning, Megan Slankard & Marty Atkinson • 2pm • $25 GA / $50 Donor / $100 VIP
Now Booking Private Events 2209 Broadway St Redwood City / 831.334.1153 clubfoxrwc.com
10 30
ADVICE GODDESS By AMY ALKON
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
AdviceAmy@AOL.com
My boyfriend and I are in a long-distance relationship (for almost four years) that works very well, talking daily and seeing each other every two months. The problem is that it feels like he has much more love for me than I have for him. (He’s totally head over heels and expresses this constantly.) I absolutely do love him, and I tell him frequently. But my love intensity just does not match his. Additionally, I should mention that I’ve tried to leave him in the past. I didn't think the relationship was serving me. He is married and technically unavailable. (He is working toward dissolving the marriage.) Also, he works hard but has no financial resources. I do want to stay in the relationship, but I’m not sure how to deal with the imbalance in expressiveness. I don’t want to be inauthentic.—Pressured You’re dating a man who not only is still married but needs to crowdfund his divorce. Many women believe it’s somehow nobler if they love a poor dude, telling themselves (and often the guy) that they don’t really care about money. But as I often point out, because women are the ones who get pregnant, female emotions evolved to make women feel bad—resentful, angry, screwed over— when they get involved with men who are (for example!) still “married and technically unavailable” and have “no financial resources.” Boyfriend: “Hey, honey, got ya a great birthday present, and you won’t be charged for it till your next credit card statement!” And even if a woman is a staunch feminist, all “I don’t care who the earner in the relationship is,” the psychological operating system driving us right now is adapted for ancestral times and the problems that arose then. So it just keeps on keepin’ on, pushing a woman to go for men who can “provide,” even when she’s on the birth controlliest birth control (like a copper IUD). In other words, you are not getting the long end of the stick here, financially or commitment-wise, and evolution has programmed you to be nagged by feelbad emotions until you do something to change that. Your boyfriend, meanwhile, surely has some feelbad of his own. Because men coevolved with women, male psychology leads men to anticipate that female romantic partners who feel shorted on cash flow and/or commitment will soon be conducting their exit interview. In light of this, your boyfriend’s expressing love in the manner of a burst water main may be a form of “mate guarding,” evolutionary psychologists’ term for attempts to fend off mate poachers and keep one’s partner in the relationship. Because we humans have an evolved motivation to reciprocate—to give back what we get in equal measure— it’s possible that the more romantically
expressive your boyfriend is, the more you’re led to feel you’re shorting him on what he seems to be owed. But is the apparent emotional asymmetry here actually a problem? Many people do make the assumption that romantic partners’ love should be 50-50 and that there’s something wrong with the relationship when it isn’t. However, what really matters is whether there’s enough love on each side to keep the partners together. Accordingly, consider whether the longdistance aspect might be staving off feelings and conflict that could come out if you two were living together. Research repeatedly finds that women tend to resent male partners who aren’t their equals or betters in job status and earnings. For example, a study by business school professor Alyson Byrne finds that a woman’s having higher job status (and the money that comes with) often leads to marital instability and divorce. She and her colleague even find that women experience “status leakage,” finding the status they’ve earned through their work diminished by virtue of their having a lower-status spouse. As for you, you say you want to stay in the relationship, presumably because you love your boyfriend. However, it’s also possible that your being in the relationship for a while—almost four years—is keeping you in the relationship. Consider what economists call the “sunk cost fallacy,” the human tendency to keep investing in a project based on the time, energy, and/or resources we’ve already “sunk” into it. Of course, the rational approach is deciding to continue based on whether the investment will pay off sufficiently in the future. Looking at your situation that way should help you make a decision. At the moment, as I see it, there’s nothing standing between the two of you riding off into the sunset together...pulling a wagon carrying his current wife, their couples therapist, a divorce mediator and several collection agents.
(c)2019, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (advicegoddess.com).
FREE WILL ASTROLOGY Dave Barry, "The method of learning Japanese recommended by experts is to be born as a Japanese baby and raised by a Japanese family, in Japan." As you enter an intensely educational phase of your astrological cycle, I suggest you adopt a similar strategy toward learning new skills and mastering unfamiliar knowledge and absorbing fresh information. Immerse yourself in environments that will efficiently and effectively fill you with the teachings you need. A more casual, slapdash approach just won't enable you to take thorough advantage of your current opportunities to expand your repertoire.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I think it's time for a sacred celebration: a blow-out extravaganza filled with reverence and revelry, singing and dancing, sensual delights and spiritual blessings. What is the occasion? After all these eons, your lost love has finally returned. And who exactly is your lost love? You! You are your own lost love! Having weaved and wobbled through countless adventures full of rich lessons, the missing part of you has finally wandered back. So give yourself a flurry of hugs and kisses. Start planning the jubilant hoopla. And exchange ardent vows, swearing that you'll never be parted again. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The Louvre in Paris is the world's biggest art museum. Over 35,000 works are on display, packed into 15 acres. If you wanted to see every piece, devoting just a minute to each, you would have to spend eight hours a day there for many weeks. I bring this to your attention, Gemini, because I suspect that now would be a good time for you to treat yourself to a marathon gaze-fest of art in the Louvre—or any other museum. For that matter, it's a favorable phase to gorge yourself on any beauty anywhere that will make your soul freer and smarter and happier. You will thrive to the degree that you absorb a profusion of grace, elegance, and loveliness. CANCER (June 21-July 22): In my astrological
opinion, you now have a mandate to exercise your rights to free speech with acute vigor. It's time to articulate all the important insights you've been waiting for the right moment to call to everyone's attention. It's time to unearth the buried truths and veiled agendas and ripening mysteries. It's time to be the catalyst that helps your allies to realize what's real and important, what's fake and irrelevant. I'm not saying you should be rude, but I do encourage you to be as candid as is necessary to nudge people in the direction of authenticity.
its arrival will change them forever. And amazingly, many of those people have experienced the resulting change as tonic and interesting, not primarily painful. In fact, I've come to believe that the act of eagerly welcoming change-inducing grace makes it more likely that the changes will be tonic and interesting. Everything I've just said will especially apply to you in the coming weeks.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): There's a certain
problem that has in my opinion occupied too much of your attention. It's really rather trivial in the big picture of your life, and doesn't deserve to suck up so much of your attention. I suspect you will soon see things my way, and take measures to move on from this energy sink. Then you'll be free to focus on a more interesting and potentially productive dilemma—a twisty riddle that truly warrants your loving attention. As you work to solve it, you will reap rewards that will be useful and enduring.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Author Hélène
Cixous articulated a poetically rigorous approach to love. I'll tell you about it, since in my astrological opinion, you're entering a phase when you'll be wise to upgrade and refine your definitions of love, even as you upgrade and refine your practice of love. Here's Cixous: "I want to love a person freely, including all her secrets. I want to love in this person someone she doesn't know. I want to love outside the law: without judgment. Without imposed preference. Does that mean outside morality? No. Only this: without fault. Without false, without true. I want to meet her between the words, beneath language."
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn author
Henry Miller wrote that his master plan was "to remain what I am and to become more and more only what I am—that is, to become more miraculous." This is an excellent strategy for your use. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to renounce any tendency you might have to compare yourself to anyone else. You'll attract blessings as you wean yourself from imagining that you should live up to the expectations of others or follow a path that resembles theirs. So here's my challenge: I dare you to become more and more only what you are—that is, to become more miraculous.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): London's British
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): During summers in the
Museum holds a compendium of artifacts from the civilizations of many different eras and locations. Author Jonathan Stroud writes that it's "home to a million antiquities, several dozen of which were legitimately come by." Why does he say that? Because so many of the museum's antiquities were pilfered from other cultures. In accordance with current astrological omens, I invite you to fantasize about a scenario in which the British Museum's administrators return these treasures to their original owners. When you're done with that imaginative exercise, move on to the next one, which is to envision scenarios in which you recover the personal treasures and goodies and powers that you have been separated from over the years.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): It's time for you to reach
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): "I hate it when people tell me that I should 'get out of my comfort zone,'" writes Piscean blogger Rosespell. "I don't even have a comfort zone. My discomfort zone is pretty much everywhere." I have good news for Rosespell and all of you Pisceans who might be inclined to utter similar testimony: The coming weeks will feature conditions that make it far more likely than usual that you will locate or create a real comfort zone you can rely on. For best results, cultivate a vivid expectation that such a sweet development is indeed possible.
far northern land of Alaska, many days have 20 hours of sunlight. Farmers take advantage of the extra photosynthesis by growing vegetables and fruits that are bigger and sweeter than crops grown further south. During the Alaska State Fair every August, you can find prodigies like 130pound cabbages and 65-pound cantaloupes. I suspect you'll express a comparable fertility and productiveness during the coming weeks, Leo. You're primed to grow and create with extra verve. So let me ask you a key question: To which part of your life do you want to dedicate that bonus power?
higher and dig deeper. So don't be a mere tinkerer nursing a lukewarm interest in mediocre stories and trivial games. Be a strategic adventurer in the service of exalted stories and meaningful games. In fact, I feel strongly that if you're not prepared to go all the way, you shouldn't go at all. Either give everything you've got or else keep it contained for now. Can you handle one further piece of strenuous advice, my dear? I think you will thrive as long as you don't settle for business as usual or pleasure as usual. To claim the maximum vitality that's available, you'll need to make exceptions to at least some of your rules.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): "All human nature
vigorously resists grace because grace changes us and the change is painful," wrote author Flannery O'Connor. I think that's an observation worth considering. But I've also seen numerous exceptions to her rule. I know people who have eagerly welcomed grace into their lives even though they know that
Homework: Describe what you'd be like if you were already the person you'll be five years from now. Write 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 31 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
ARIES (March 21-April 19): According to humorist
By ROB BREZSNY week of May 15
40/32
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
32
For Older Men
Adult Entertainment Adult Entertainment
It’s Playtime!
Mature Blondie 38D-24-36 Fantasies & Fetish 408-605-3465
Hablas Espaol? HOT Latino Chat.
Call FREE! 408-3800587Or 800-831-1111 www.fonochatlatino.com 18+ Adult Massage
Asian Nuru Massage
Asian sweetie loves to give you a good Nuru experience. Please come for fun. Private location 408-561-2616
Great Place
Nice place, clean, private, relaxing by a pretty Lady. 408-613-6831
French Masseuse
Slender, French brunette in Mountain View offering a clean, quiet, private place to enjoy a nice massage. For photos seemassageanywhere.com, Under French massage. Sundays off. 650-504-6940, Isabelle
40+ years old men, enjoy a Great relaxing massage by a mature Asian lady. Nice and friendly. Incall and out call.408-512-9619, Jade
Asian Princess
Enjoy a nice massage from a pretty Asian Lady. Santa Clara in Sunnyvale.408-722-8277
$19 Massage
Pretty girls offer FREE haircut. Body hair removal & shaving, waxing. Cupping & giac hoi. Private rooms & table shower. Near Tully & Hwy’s #101, #87, #280 & #680[br /] Tina, 408-210-9364
CUPID’S CORNER 408 Blossom Hill Rd • SJ 408.226.5683
Male to Male Massage
Asian Man
Get a Great massage from a nice Asian CMT man.408-893-1966
Where Real Gay Men Meet
For Uncensored Fun! Browse and Reply Free 408-342-4129 18+ Fetish
Real People Explicit Chat!
FREE Trial! Meet and enjoy Explicit chat with Real Women and Men waiting for your call! Call for a FREE Trial! 408-777-2999
Win free stuff! METROGIVEAWAYS.COM
classifieds
33
BY PHONE
BY FAX
BY MAIL
IN PERSON
DEADLINES
Call the Classified department at 408.298.8000 Monday through Friday 9am to 5pm
Fax your ad to the Classified Department at 408.271.3520
Mail to: Metro Classified 380 S. First St. San Jose, CA
Visit our offices Monday through Friday, 9am–5pm
classifieds@metronews.com Please include your Visa, MC, Discover or AmEx number and expiration date for payment.
For copy, playment, space reservation or cancellaion: Display ads: Thursday 3pm, Line ads: Friday 3pm
EMPLOYMENT Software Engineer at Magic Leap, Inc. Position located in Sunnyvale, CA. Develop innovative, automated testing and data collection procedures, while devising methods to maintain access to data by other groups across the company. Work with perception and algorithm development teams to define ground truth data collection and algorithm verification needs. Design software to allow customized data collection and testing at a system level. Design and implement prototype software systems capable of real-time custom data collection from proprietary, custom-designed hardware systems. Research and develop appropriate and functional evaluation systems to monitor performance of new software interacting with cutting-edge real-time hardware components, including cameras, depth sensors, motion sensors, 3D scanners, and robotic equipment. Must have a Master’s degree or foreign equivalent in Computer Science, Electrical/Computer Engineering or related field. Must have verifiable proficiency in industry or academic environment with the following: Programming and debugging applications using C++, python, C#, and OpenCV. Implementing and integrating computer vision algorithms in C++ and python to create ground truth computer vision data. Analyzing visual information from RGB camera. Performing image processing, camera calibration and visual geometry. Developing computer vision applications using Python. Implementing software integration framework to interface with hardware. Send resume to Magic Leap, Inc., Attn: M. Woods, Job ID#: SE-ZZ, 7500 W. Sunrise Blvd., Plantation, FL 33322.
ENGINEERING Toshiba Memory America, Inc.(TMA) is accptg resumes for Staff Design Engr. in San Jose, CA. Contribute actively to the overall verification effort of the enterprise Solid State Drive (SSD) controller Systemon-Chip. Mail resume to TMA, Attn: Staff Dept., 2610 Orchard Parkway, San Jose, CA 95134. Must reference Ref. SDE-HK.
RedSeal seeks Network Security Engr in San Jose, CA to deploy network security platform & administer network solutions. Send resume w/ad: 1600 Technology Dr, 4th Fl, San Jose, CA 95110. Attn: HR/RS
Computer/IT: Argo AI, LLC seeks Staff Software Engineer to work in Palo Alto, CA & develop code, safety-quality high performance software & machine learning algorithms to support innovation of self-driving vehicles. Degree & commensurate exp. req’d. Apply online at www.argo.ai/join-us/
Software Engineer (Games Platform) sought by Snap Inc. in Mountain View, CA. Dsg, dvlp & modify s/ware sys. for Games Platform. M.S. or for. eq. Resumes: HalehHR, Snap Inc., 3000 31st St., Ste C, Santa Monica, CA 90405; Use Job Code #SWE-MTV-0419-YL. EOE.
ENGINEERING Automation Anywhere, Inc. is accptng resumes for Engr., Sr. Technical Support in San Jose, CA. Triaging and providing technical expertise in resolving complex Robotics Process Automation solutions and product issues. Mail resume to Automation Anywhere, Inc., Attn Sarah Curme, 633 River Oaks Pkwy, San Jose, CA 95134. Must reference Ref. NA-ESTS.
Market Manager: direct marketing dept.; develop marketing strategy & promotional programs: Bachelor’s degree in business administration or related. Resume to Hangil Trade Inc. 1914 Junction Ave., San Jose, CA 95131
Principal Engineer Pixelworks, Inc. San Jose, CA. Develop integrated circuit (IC) designs w/advanced video algorithms & other video-specific IP to improve high res picture quality of display images. Req MS in EE + 2 yrs exp. Possible 5% travel to Shanghai. Full job description online at https://www. pixelworks.com/en/job-opportunities/ principal-engineer. Direct resumes & references to careers@pixelworks.com
Alps seeks in Santa Clara, CA: Mechanical Engineer (TME). Perf. mech. eng prgms incl. plan dvlpmt, pricing + design chngs. Req: MS in ME or rel, + 2 yrs exp in eng + qulty soltns. Travel 25-30%. Job ID: ATF060.\ To Apply: Submit resume to lyndale. ruanto@alps.com. Refer to Job ID. EOE.
ENGINEERING
Clinical Data Manager (CDM-KC) Develop clinical study data spec, incl CRF design, user reqs, edit checks & develop query logic. MS+2 or BS+5 yrs rltd exp. Send resumes to Intuitive Surgical Operations, Inc., Attn: Hien Nguyen, 1020 Kifer Rd, Sunnyvale, CA 94086. Must ref title & code.
ENGINEERING
Broadcom Corporation has an opening in San Jose, CA for R&D Engineer Hardware 3 (3049850) to work w/ group of design engineers to design chip bring up/validation platforms. Ref job code & mail resume: HR (JO) 1320 Ridder Park Dr, San Jose CA 95131.
Malwarebytes, Inc. has job opp. in Santa Clara, CA: Manager, Data Engineering. Dsgn & build data infrastrctre consuming data from internal & external sources. Mail resumes refernc’g Req. #DTA19 to: Attn: D. Lim, 3979 Freedom Circle, 12th Flr, Santa Clara, CA 95054.
ENGINEERING /TECHNOLOGY
General Operations Manager
ARM Inc., a multinational semiconductor and software design company, has engineering opportunities in San Jose, CA for a SW Eng. (SWE01) Focus on the analysis and early-stage development of graphics technologies to address emerging use cases, including: VR/AR rendering and VR video, Power-efficient rendering, and Future API directions; Sr. SW Eng. (SWE03) Deploy state of the art software to streamline Physical IP production in an efficient, automated manner, yet with high-quality; Sr.Mgr.Digital Solutions (MDS01) Direct and manage business-critical operations related to the development, testing, and manufacture of advanced solution design elements for the overarching architecture community. Position may require up to 10% of international and/or domestic travel; Royalty Auditor (RAA01) Coordinate royalty audits of ARM’s Partners and work with internal teams and third party auditors to ensure audits are thorough, accurate and within budget. Position may require up to 25% domestic/international travel. If interested, ref job code and send resume to: resume@arm.com.
Software Test Engr (Code: STE-KM) Rspnsb for testing iOS & Web apps using manual & automated tests. MS+2orBS+5. Mail resume to Hien Nguyen @ Intuitive Surgical, 1020 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, CA 94086. Ref title & code.
Santa Clara, CA. Master’s in Business Administration w/2 yrs exp in Ops/HR Mgr, Executive Asst or equiv. Resume: HR, The Ivy Advisor Dr. Jiang LLC, 4675 Stevens Creek, Blvd., #120, Santa Clara, CA 95051.
ENGINEERING Applied Materials, Inc. has the following openings in Santa Clara, CA:Application Engineer (Req# S1206): Work with the process teams on leading edge processes to develop applications solutions primarily for un-patterned wafer inspection and edge inspection.TECHNOLOGYIT Solutions Management (Req# C837): Customize Portal w/ Microsoft SharePoint Out of the Box Features including Microsoft Cloud Apps (Office 365 & Microsoft Azure), SharePoint Designer, & 3rd Party tools.Mail resume to Applied Materials, Inc. M/S 1211, 3225 Oakmead Village Dr., Santa Clara, CA 95054. Must include REQ# to be considered.
ENGINEERING Illumio, Inc. is accptng resumes for Member of Technical Staff in Sunnyvale, CA. Automate scale tests of enterprise software in the virtualized computing and networking ecosystems. Mail resume to Illumio, Inc., Staffing Dept., 920 De Guigne Drive, Sunnyvale, CA. 94085 . Must reference Ref. RNS-CA.
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
PLACING AN AD
metroactive.com | sanjose.com metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | NOVEMBER| 2-8, 2016
/TECHNOLOGY 34 ENGINEERING SunPower Corp has openings in San
OR CHANGE OF CV316633
40
Petitioner (name): ree changing Sophia Noreen Noreen Huxley. sons interested in urt at the hearing any, why the uld not be granted. e change described on that includes east two court led to be heard o show cause why d. If no written t may grant the CE OF HEARING: 107 Probate filed /11, 10/18, 10/25,
OR CHANGE OF CV316632
Petitioner (name): e changing names Zahid Hussain. xley. THE COURT ted in this matter earing indicated the petition for anted. Any person scribed above must des the reasons rt days before the and must appear at he petition should ction is timely ition without a anuary 9, 2018 at n: October 3, 2017 01/2017)
14
doing business as: 80 Senter Road, hi Pham, Vu Anh an Jose, CA, 95127. by a Married gun transacting iness name or en. This statement f Santa Clara o 10/11, 10/18, 10/25,
5
oing business as: Way, Sunnyvale, CA, s being conducted n transacting ness name or names of previous file ong. This statement Santa Clara 10/11, 10/18, 10/25,
Jose, CA for a Staff Material Engineer (HHN-CA) Work with suppliers to evaluate and introduce new materials for increased performance and reliability of modules. Position may require up to 10% travel; Senior Supervisor (BMR-CA) Manage Module Development Lab Operations. Mail resume & reference job code to: SunPower Corp., Attn: Global Mobility, 2900 Esperanza Crossing, Floor 3, Austin, TX 78758.
ENGINEERING Applied Materials, Inc. has the following openings in Sunnyvale, CA: Process Engineer Sr. (Req# M1123): Develop new or modified process formulations, defined processing or handling equipment requirements and specifications, and review processing techniques and methods in the manufacture, fabrication, and evaluation of products. Product Safety Engineer (Req #M808): Manage field safety issues and determine applicable plans for corrective actions. Domestic and international travel may be required. Process Engineer (Req# K2052): Dvlp selector & memory materials & process for cross point architecture targeting storage class memory; including phase change memory (PCRAM), Resistive Memory (RERAM) & chalcogenide based selectors. Domestic and international travel, 20% of time. Mail resume to Applied Materials, Inc. M/S 1211, 3225 Oakmead Village Dr., Santa Clara, CA 95054. Must include REQ# to be considered.
Engineering Leia, Inc. seeks Sr. Process Engineer & Surface Science Chemist for emerging projects & pipeline of nano fabrication. Employer paid domestic & int’l travel 30%. Worksite: Palo Alto, CA. Resume to 2440 Sand Hill Rd., #100, Menlo Pk, CA 94025, Attn: E. Lara Lopez
Sr Biz Intel Engr (SBIE-GB) Deliver ETL, Reporting & Analytic solutions using MS SQL Server Biz Intel tools, SAP Hana/Biz Objects & Tableau. BS+5. Send resumes to Intuitive Surgical Operations, Attn: Hien Nguyen, 1020 Kifer Road, Sunnyvale, CA 94086. Must ref title & code.
Carpet Carpet Laminates Center Hardwood
408.871.0792
Vinyl
535B Salmar Ave,#B, Campbell Lic# 792342
Major Brands Shop at Home AllFree Estimates
Better Carpet • Better Service • Low Prices
GUARANTEED INSTALLATION
31 55+ YEARS OLD & LOOKING FOR WORK?
NOVEMBER 1-7, 2017 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
doing business d, Suite 30, San business is being strant began ctitious business 10/03/2017. Above California. /s/ This statement f Santa Clara 10/11, 10/18, 10/25,
The
09
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 40
LEGALS & PUBLIC NOTICES
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT #653663 Engineer/Sr Design The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Assurance Moving Company, 55 Monte at Milpitas, CA:Verano, San jose, CA, 95116, Penisimani Paeahelotu Puta, Anasualu Puta. This business Resp design development is beingfor conducted by aand Married Couple. Registrant of began transacting business under the fictitious business name or high performance power management names listed herein 04/11/2019. Refile in facts from previous ICs DC/DC converters, filingincluding 650718. /s/Penisimani Paeahelotu Puta. This Linear statement was filed with theLED CountyDrivers, Clerk of Santa Clara County on Regulators, Isolated 04/11/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019) Converters. Email res to [ mailto:hr@ linear.com ]hr@linear.com. Refer to job FICTITIOUS BUSINESS #1067 when apply. ~Linear Technology NAME STATEMENT #653719 Corporation. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Twisted
Decors, 679 Royal Glen Dr., San Jose, CA, 95133, Twisted Decors 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 04/09/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Kent Huang. Owner. #201910210369. This statement Design & develop features for the was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County Nutanix manageability platform thaton 04/15/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019)
Member of Technical Staff at San Jose, CA:
interacts with Nutanix Core Services. Mail resumeBUSINESS to Nutanix, Inc, 1740 FICTITIOUS Technology Dr, Suite#652706 150, San Jose, CA NAME STATEMENT 95110. Attn:person(s) HR Job#1027-1. The following is (are) doing business as: Magical Gardens, 221 Dale Drive, San Jose, CA, 95127,
Albert Patrick Garcia Jr. This business is being conducted Hostess Server by an Individual./ Registrant hasWanted not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious businesslooking name or names Deluxe Eatery & Drinkery. for a listed herein. /s/Albert Patrick Garcia Jr. This statement weekend host or hostess daytime was filed with the County Clerk ofand SantaaClara County on 03/18/2019. (pub Metro 04/17, 04/24, 05/01, 05/08/2019) server. Server is 3-4 days a week with more shifts available over the Holidays. If FICTITIOUS BUSINESS interested come in with resume and ask NAME STATEMENT #653811 to talk to David or Chad between 2-4. TheE.following person(s) isSt. (are)SJdoing business as: 71 San Fernando
Ruchulu Indian Restaurant, 30 E. Santa Clara St., Suite 110, San Jose, CA, 95113, Nitesh Reddy Boreddy, 365 Sun Ridge Lane, San Jose, CA, 95123. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business underCorporation the fictitious business or names Broadcom has aname Senior listed herein. /s/Nitesh Reddy Boreddy. This statement Manager, R&D opening SanClara Jose, was filed with the County Clerk ofin Santa County on 04/16/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019) CA to provide technical &managerial
ENGINEERING
direction to projects in ASIC development. FICTITIOUS Often directsBUSINESS &may participate in the NAME STATEMENT #653458 development of multidimensional designs The followingthe person(s) is (are) doing business as: Postal involving layout of complex integrated Annex # 12011, 3277 S. White Road, San Jose, CA, 95148, circuits. Mail resume to Attn: HR (GS), Reliance Pro, Inc., 779 San Ramon Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA, 94085.Ridder This business being conducted by aCA Corporation. 1320 ParkisDrive, San Jose, 95131 has not yet begun transacting business under .Registrant Must reference job code SJYAV the fictitious business name or names listed herein. Above
entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Mohiyuddin
Noor Khan. President. #C4004050. This statement was CONTRACTOR/ filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/08/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019) HANDYMAN SERVICES
PLUMB, ELECT, DOORS, FICTITIOUS BUSINESS WINDOWS,FULL SERVICE NAME STATEMENT #653808 REMODELING, The following person(s)KITCHENS,BATH. is (are) doing business as: Bay Spa, 2908 El .Camino Real, TOO Santa Clara, CA, 95051, 40+ YRS EXP NO JOB FCL, Inc., 2904 ElCamino Real #215, Santa Clara, SMALLCSLB#747111. 408-888-9290 CA, 95051. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/01/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Hak C Lee. CEO. #3857067. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/16/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019)
Catalytic Converter & Autoglass
URIBE MUFFLER
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #653592
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #653815
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Community Business College, 20111 Stevens Creek Blvd, #280, Cupertino, CA, 95014, CBC Innovation, Inc., 5255 Stevens Cree Boulevard, 366, Santa Clara, CA, 95051. 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/Di Yao. President. #4250468. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/10/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019)
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Radicle Seed Company, 4860 Monterey Road, Gilroy, CA, 95020, T and C Supplies, Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 08/01/2014. Refile in facts from previous filing #591539. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Steven H. Costa. President. #1292368. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/16/2019. (pub Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #653953
FICTITIOUS BUSINES NAME STATEMENT #653975
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as:
Santa Clara Fire Protection, 2601 Cortez Dr, Unit 3110, MUSIC Antonio Mendoza.-This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under
the fictitious business name or names listed herein on ThugWorldRecords.com
04/13/2019. /s/Antonio Mendoza. This statement was filed Thug World Records with the County Clerk of Santaexplosive Clara Countylabel on 04/18/2019. (pub Metro 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019) based out04/24, of San Jose CA with major
features lil Wayne E-40 Ghetto FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Politician Punish. Free downloads mp3s NAME STATEMENT #653498online. Ringtones. Over 22 albums The following is (are) doing business as: Avatar Call or log person(s) on thugworldrecords.com Hotel, 4200 Great America Parkway, Santa Clara, CA, 95054, 408-561-5458 ask for gp Avenue, Suite #7, Mill R. Michael House, 35 Corte Madera
Valley, CA, 94941, Richard C. Ronald, 221 Pine St 4th Floor, San Francisco, CA, 94104. This business is being conducted by a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 07/07/2013. Refile (no changes) in facts from previous filing #591979. Above entity wasNO.: formed in the state NOTICE TO CREDITORS, CASE of California. /s/Richard C Ronald. Authorized Signatory of 16PR179712 General Partner. #201315600006. This statement was filed Inwith re thethe Matter of theClerk CAPELLA FAMILY REVOCABLE County of Santa Clara County onLIVING 04/08/2019. TRUST 30,05/01, 1997, by05/08, Manuel J. Capella, DecedentNotice is (pubDATED Metro JULY 04/24, 05/15/2019) hereby given to the creditors and contingent creditors of Decedent Manuel J. Capella that all persons having claims against the FICTITIOUS Decedent are requiredBUSINESS to file them with the Superior Court of the State of California, County of Santa#653982 Clara, at 191 N. First Street, San NAME STATEMENT Jose, CA 95112, and mail or deliver a copy to David Capella, successor The following person(s) is (are) trustee of the Capella Family Revocabledoing Livingbusiness Trust datedas: JulyLa30, Dolce Vita,the 3132 Heather Ridge Drive,atSan Jose, CA,Law 95136, 1997, of which Decedent was the settlor, the Sowards Firm, Antoinette is being conducted 2542 S. BascomHeath. Avenue,This Suitebusiness 200, Campbell, CA 95008, withinbythe anofIndividual. Registrant has not2,yet begun transacting later four (4) months after November 2016 (the date of the first businessofunder fictitiousor,business listed publication noticethe to creditors) if notice isname mailedor ornames personally herein.to/s/Antoinette Heath. This wasisfiled with delivered you, sixty (60) days after thestatement date this notice mailed Countydelivered Clerk oftoSanta Clara County on 04/19/2019. (pub orthe personally you.LATE CLAIMS: If you do not file your Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019) claim within the time required by law, you must petition to file a late claim as provided in California Probate Code §19103.FAILURE TOFICTITIOUS FILE A CLAIM: Failure to file a claim with the court and to serve BUSINESS a copy of the claim on the trustee will in most instances invalidate NAME STATEMENT #653949 your claim.(Pub dates: 10/26, 11/02, 11/09/2016) The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Back A Yard Caribbean Grill, 638 N. 13th St., San Jose, CA, 95112, FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Back A Yard Caribbean American Grill, Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant has not yet NAME STATEMENT #622524 begun transacting under the fictitious business The following person(s)business is (are) doing business as: Advanced name or names listed herein. Above entity was formed in Industrial Delivery LLC, 247 N. Capitol Ave., Unit 104, San Jose, the state of California. /s/Annetta Simpson. Vice President. CA, 95127. This business is being conducted by a limited liability #2573633. This statement was filed with the County Clerk company. has noton yet04/18/2019. begun transacting business of SantaRegistrant Clara County (pub Metro 04/24, under the05/08, fictitious05/15/2019) business name or names listed herein. Above 05/01, entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Gilbert Juan Garcia Managing Member#201627010166This statement was filed with theFICTITIOUS County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 10/17/2016. (pub Metro BUSINESS 11/02, 11/09, 11/16, 11/23/2016)
LEGALS & PUBLIC NOTICES
NAME STATEMENT #653977
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1.
FICTITIOUS Breakeats, 2.WBUSINESS hipsnap, 1465 Flicker Way, Sunnyvale, CA, 94087, Breakeats LLC. This business is being conducted by NAME STATEMENT #622430 a Limited Liability Company. Registrant began transacting
business the fictitious business name or names The followingunder person(s) is (are) doing business as: Union listedLiquors, herein 3649 on 04/14/2019. entity was formed Avenue Union Ave.,Above San Jose, CA, 95124, Kim Dao in the state36ofLeominster California. Fanfelle. Managing Corporation, Ct.,/s/Robert San Jose, CA, 95139. This business #201722210097. This statement filed is Member. being conducted by a corporation. Registrantwas has not yetwith the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/18/2019. (pub begun transacting business under the fictitious business name 05/01,Above 05/08,entity 05/15/2019) orMetro names04/24, listed herein. was formed in the state of California. /s/Michael John Perazzo President #C39443143 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County FICTITIOUS BUSINESS on 10/13/2016. (pub Metro 10/26, 11/02, 11/09, 11/16/2016)
NAME STATEMENT #653934 The following BUSINESS person(s) is (are) doing business as: FICTITIOUS Caliber Collision Centers, 3165 De La Cruz Blvd., Santa NAME STATEMENT Clara, CA, 95054, Caliber#622360 Bodyworks, Inc., 401 E
Corporate Dr #150,is Lewisville, TX, 75057. business The following person(s) (are) doing business as: SoftThis Touch Spa, is being conducted by Jose, a Corporation. 1692 Tully Road, Suite 12, San CA, 95122, DaiRegistrant Nguyen, 650 began Island transacting business under fictitious business Place, Redwood City, CA, 94065. Thisthe business is conducted by anname or names listed has herein onbegun 5/13/19. Abovebusiness entity was individual. Registrant not yet transacting under the state oforCalifornia. theformed fictitiousinbusiness name names listed/s/Gregory herein. /s/DaiNichols. Nguyen Secretary. #1992450. This statement was filed with the This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County Clerk Santa Clara on 04/17/2019. (pub onCounty 10/12/2016. (pubof Metro 11/02, 11/09,County 11/16, 11/23/2016) Metro 04/24, 05/01, 05/08, 05/15/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #622523 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: KT Dental Laboratory, 1333 Piedmont Rd., Ste #202, San Jose, CA, 95132,
following is (are) doing as: Kitchen on The 01/28/2014 underperson(s) file number 587505. Thisbusiness business was Nail Bar, Blossom/s/Minh Hill Road, San Jose, conducted by:486 An individual T. Hoang DateCA, filed95123, with the Kitchen Nail Bar L.L.C, 2052 Limewood Dr., San Jose, clerks office: 10/12/2016 (pub dates 11/02, 11/09, 11/16, 11/23/2016CA, 95132 This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious
NOTICE PETITION TOherein ADMINISTER businessOF name or names listed on 04/18/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Gia Vinh Anh ESTATE OF MARK PASCOE KELLY. CASE Pham. President. #201909510877. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/18/2019. NO. 16PR178443 (pub Metro 05/01, 05/08, 05/15, 05/22/2019)
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF MARK PASCOE KELLY. CASE NO. 16PR178443To all heirs beneficiaries creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise FICTITIOUS BUSINESS be interested in the will or estate, or both of: MARK PASCOE KELLY. NAME STATEMENT A Petition for Probate has been filed#653268 by: James J. Ramoni, Public Administrator of theperson(s) County of Santa Clara in thebusiness Superioras: Court The following is (are) doing BNof California, County of Santa Clara. TheYard Petition for Probate requests Precision Machining, 1240-C Court, San Jose, CA, that95133, JamesBao J. Ramoni, Public Administrator of theApt County of Santa Nguyen, 2396 Senter Road, 14, San Jose, CA, Clara be appointed as personal representative administer 95111. This business is being conductedtoby an Individual. theRegistrant estate of thehas decedent. petition requests authority to under not yetThe begun transacting business administer the estate under the Independent the fictitious business name or namesAdministration listed herein.of/s/ Estates (This authority will allowwas the personal representative BaoAct. Nguyen. This statement filed with the County to take many actionsClara without obtaining court approval. Before Clerk of Santa County on 04/02/2019. (pub Metro taking certain very05/15, important actions, however, the personal 05/01, 05/08, 05/22/2019) representative will be required to give notice to interested persons unless they have waived notice or consented to the FICTITIOUS BUSINESS proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the NAME STATEMENT #653933 petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant The following is (are) doing as:asAdem’s authority. A hearingperson(s) on the petition will be heldbusiness in this court Test Only, 419-C28,Lano Jose,10CA, 95125, Adem follows: November 2016,Street, at 9 a.m.San in Dept. located at 191 Aybar, 731 West I Street, Benicia, CA, 94510. This business NORTH FIRST STREET, SAN JOSE, CA, 95113. IF YOU OBJECT to being of conducted byyou an should Individual. began theisgranting the petition, appearRegistrant at the hearing businessorunder the fictitious name andtransacting state your objections file written objectionsbusiness with the court or names listedYour herein on 02/01/2005. Refile in facts before the hearing. appearance may be in person or by yourfrom previous filing #595209 /s/Adem Aybar. This statement attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a contingent creditor of the was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy 04/17/2019. (pub Metro 05/01, 05/08, 05/15, 05/22/2019) to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section FICTITIOUS BUSINESS 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date NAME STATEMENT #653257 of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of following the California Probate Code. Other California statutes The person(s) is (are) doing business as: Pap andAsset legal authority may affect your as a creditor. You San may Jose, Protection Service, 1661rights Hamilton Ave #15, want consultKenneth with an attorney knowledgeable in California law. CA,to95125, Earl Jackson. This business is being YOU MAY EXAMINE file kept byRegistrant the court. If has you are person conducted by anthe Individual. notayet begun interested in the business estate, youunder may filethe with the courtbusiness a Requestname or transacting fictitious listed (form herein. /s/Kenneth Jackson. This statement for names Special Notice DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and was filed withassets the County of Santa Clara appraisal of estate or of anyClerk petition or account asCounty provided on 04/02/2019. (pub Metro 05/01,for 05/08, 05/15, in Probate Code section 1250. A Request Special Notice05/22/2019) form is available from the court clerk. Attorney for petitioner: MARK A. GONZALEZ, Lead Deputy County Counsel, OFFICE OF THE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS COUNTY COUNSEL, 373 West Julian Street, Suite 300, San Jose, CA, 95110, Telephone: 408-758-4200 (Pub CC, 11/02, 11/09, 11/16/2016) NAME STATEMENT #653117
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as:
Music Instruction By Cortnee Langlie, 126 Gifford FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Avenue, San Jose, CA, 95110, Cortnee Lydia Langlie. This business is being conducted NAME STATEMENT #622566by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the
Thefictitious following person(s) (are) doing businesslisted as: Vanherein Hoa Lam, businessis name or names on 97908/28/2018. Story Rd., #7087, San Jose, Ca,Lydia 95122,Langlie. Nuh Thuan Lam,statement Quoc /s/Cortnee This Anhwas Nguyen, 608 Giraudo Dr., San Jose, CA, 95111. This business filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County is conducted by an married has not 05/08, yet begun on 03/28/2019. (pubcouple.Registrant Metro 04/24, 05/01, transacting business under the fictitious business name or names 05/15/2019) listed herein. Refile of previous file #620681 with changes. /s/Nhu Thuan Lam This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa ORDER SHOW CHANGE Clara County onTO 10/18/2016. (pub CAUSE Metro 10/26,FOR 11/02, 11/09, 11/16/2016)OF
NAME. CASE NO. 19CV346408 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): for a FICTITIOUS BUSINESS decree changing names as follows: Present name: Thomas Russell Vanni. Proposed Thomas Michael Vanni. THE NAME STATEMENTname: #622752 COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter
Theappear following person(s) is (are) businessindicated as: Free Spirit, before this court atdoing the hearing below380 to S. 1st Street, San Jose, CA,why 95113, R.for Hill,change 8093 E.of Zayante show cause, if any, theMichael petition name Rd.,should Felton,not CA, 95018. This business is conducted byto anthe individual. be granted. Any person objecting name Registrant not yet begun the that changehas described abovetransacting must file abusiness written under objection fictitious business name orfor names listed herein. /s/Michael R. days includes the reasons the objection at least two court Hillbefore This statement wasisfiled with thetoCounty Clerkand of Santa the matter scheduled be heard mustClara appear County onhearing 10/24/2016. (pub Metro 11/16, 11/23/2016) at the to show cause11/02, why11/09, 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:
FICTITIOUS August 27, 2019BUSINESS at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: April 23, 2019 (pub dates: 05/01, 05/08, 05/15, 05/22/2019) NAME STATEMENT #621712 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Countrywide Carrier, 2947 Capewood Ln., San Jose, CA, 95132, Rajwinder Singh. This business is conducted by an individual.Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name
NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF (NAME): MILES RICHARD COLMAN CASE NUMBER: 19PR185757
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654361 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Biotech Bootcamp, 6472 San Anselmo Way, San Jose, CA, 95119, Think B Squared, 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 04/20/2019. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Christopher Rappleye. Owner. #201910710657. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 05/01/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654156 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Nuong Dinh Hardwood Floor, 1812 Kyra Cir., San jose, CA, 95122, Nuong T Dinh, Loi T Le, Nhan Dinh. This business is being conducted by a General Partnership. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 10/15/2018. /s/Nuong T Dinh. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/24/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME. CASE NO. 19CV346728 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Constance M. Segreto. Proposed name: Connie M. Segreto. 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: August 27, 2019 at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: May 1, 2019 (pub dates: 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Mers Link 4, 13131 Diericx Dr., Mountain View, 94040, Milestone Financial LLC, 4970 El Camino Real STE 230, Los Altos, CA, 94022. 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/William R Stuart. Managing Member. #201713510539. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/22/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 5/22, 5/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654199 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Boba Passion, 1505 S. Winchester Blvd., San Jose, CA, 95128433, Sharlene Madanes, 2751 Summerheights Drive, San Jose, CA, 95132. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 01/04/2019. /s/ Sharlene Madanes. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/26/2019. (pub Metro05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654240 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Sen & Associates, 3174 Impala Dr., San Jose, CA, 95117, Senshu Yoshimura. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 09/10/1996. Refile in facts from previous filing #397401. /s/Senshu Yoshimura. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/26/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654157 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Alianza Cristiana De San Jose, 2360 Mclaughlin Avenue, San Jose, CA, 95122, Rene Urquia, 2735 Klein Rd., San Jose, CA, 95148. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/24/2019. Refile in facts from previous filing #588418. /s/Rene Urquia. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/24/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654300 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Sashocommerce, 12376 Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road, Saratoga, CA, 95070, Sara Kian Pour, 1825 39th Ave, San Francisco, CA, 94122. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/30/2019. /s/Sara Kian Pour. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/30/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654287 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Free Bunni, 2221 Oakland Road, San Jose, CA, 95131, Purity Cosmetics. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 03/04/2004. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Ric Kostick. CEO. #C2579649. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/29/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654289
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Kelvin Auto Repair, 798 N13th St., San Jose, CA, 95112, Jason Phu Dang, 2674 Senter Rd #299, San Jose, CA, 95111. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/02/0009. /s/Jason Dang. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/29/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654356 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as:
The Daily Garden, 1578 Foxworthy Ave., San Jose, CA, 95118, Katherine Lynne Russell. 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/Katherine Lynne Russell. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 005/01/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654204 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Alm Service, 642 Saint Timothy Place, Morgan Hill, CA, 95037, Lynn Tran Nguyen. This business is being conducted by an Individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 01/01/2009. /s/Lynn Tran Nguyen. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/26/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654385 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. The Bac Lieu Mutual Association Of Northern California, 2. Hoi Ai Bac Lieu Bac Cali, 7348 Phinney Way, San Jose, CA, 95139, The Bac Lieu Mutual Association Of Northern California, 34230 Woodland Drive, Union City, CA, 94587. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/30/1990. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Luong Hung. Secretary. #C1394523. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 05/02/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654451 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Bridgeloan999.com, 105 Serra Way STE 448, Abundance Realty, 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/Elsie Wu. President. #3189476. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 05/03/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654452 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Businessloan99.com, 105 Serra Way STE 448, Milpitas, CA, 95035, Abundance Realty, 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/Elsie Wu. President. #3189476. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 05/03/2019. (pub Metro 05/08, 05/15, 05/22, 05/29/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654486 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: A & L Auto Connection, 288 E. Virginia St., San Jose, CA, 95112, A & L Auto Connection Inc. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 02/06/2019. Refile in facts from previous filing #653817. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/Ayazuddin Fahri. President. #4232575. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 05/06/2019. (pub Metro 05/15, 05/22, 05/29, 06/05/2019)
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME. CASE NO. 19CV346755 TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner (name): for a decree changing names as follows: Present name: Nhi Thao Tong. Proposed name: Emily Nhi Thao Tong. 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 3, 2019 at 8:45 am, room: Probate. filed on: May 1, 2019 (pub dates: 05/15, 05/22, 05/29, 06/05/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654458 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: CDS Trust, 760 E. San Carlos, San Jose, CA, 95112, Soudabeh Houchmand Siegel. 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/Soudabeh Houchmand Siegel. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 05/03/2019. (pub Metro 05/15, 05/22, 05/29, 06/05/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654266 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 1. Pap Asset Protection Service, 2. ASAP Protection, 1702-L Meridian Ave #104, San Jose, CA, 95125, Kenneth Earl Jackson, 1661 Hamilton Ave., #15, 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 04/02/2019. Refile in facts from previous filing #53257. /s/Kenneth Earl Jackson. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/29/2019. (pub Metro 05/15, 05/22, 05/29, 06/05/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654174 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Socialxp Events Co., 886 Alcosta Dr., Milpitas, CA, 95035, Anh D Huynh, 2668 Prato Lane, San Diego, CA, 95035, Thuy Duong Nguyen. This business is being conducted by a General Partnership. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Anh Huynh. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/25/2019. (pub Metro 05/15, 05/22, 05/29, 06/07/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654003 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Scratchy’s Customs, 1463 Adrian Way, San Jose, CA, 95122, Richard Alvaro Topete, Priscilla Marie Topete. 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/Richard Alvaro Topete. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/19/2019. (pub Metro 05/01, 05/08, 05/15, 05/22/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654158 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Japantown Prepared!, 565 N. 5th Street, San Jose, CA, 95112, Japantown Community Congress Of San Jose. This business is being conducted by a Corporation. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 04/26/2011. Refile in facts from previous filing #653236. Above entity was formed in the state of California. /s/ Richard Saito. Secretary. #2546801. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 04/24/2019. (pub Metro 05/01, 05/08, 05/15, 05/22/2019)
35 MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, contingent creditors, and persons who may otherwise be interested in the will or estate, or both, of (specify all names by which the decedent was known): Miles Richard ColmanA Petition for Probate has been filed by (name of petitioner): James J. Ramoni, Public Administrator of the County of Santa Clara in the Superior Court of California, County of (specify): SANTA CLARAThe Petition for Probate requests that (name): The Public Administrator of the County of Santa Clara be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of the decedent.The petition requests authority to administer the estate under the Independent Administration of Estates Act. (This authority will allow the personal representative to take many actions without obtaining court approval. Before taking certain very important actions, however, the personal representative will be required to give notice to interestedpersons unless they have waived notice or consented to the proposed action.) The independent administration authority will be granted unless an interested person files an objection to the petition and shows good cause why the court should not grant the authority.A hearing on the petition will be held in this court as follows: Date: July 29, 2019 Time: 9:00 a.m. Dept.: 13. Address of court: 191 N. First Street, San Jose, CA 95113 If you object to the granting of the petition, you should appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney.If you are a creditor or a contingent creditor of the decedent, you must file your claim with the court and mail a copy to the personal representative appointed by the court within the later of either (1) four months from the date of first issuance of letters to a general personal representative, as defined in section 58(b) of the California Probate Code, or (2) 60 days from the date of mailing or personal delivery to you of a notice under section 9052 of the California Probate Code.Other California statutes and legal authority may affect your rights as a creditor. You may want to consult with an attorney knowledgeable in California law.You may examine the file kept by the court. If you are a person interested in the estate, you may file with the court aRequest for Special Notice (form DE-154) of the filing of an inventory and appraisal of estate assets or of any petition or account as provided in Probate Code section 1250. A Request for Special Notice form is available from the court clerk.Attorney for petitioner (name): MARK A. GONZALEZ, Lead Deputy County Counsel(Address): 373 W. Julian Street, Suite 300, San Jose, CA 95110 (Telephone): 408-758-4217(Pub Dates: 05/08, 05/15, 05/22/2019)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #654033
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
10 36
11 37
kindpeoples.com
Valid ID Required | All 21+ Welcome | 18+ Medical
New State-of-the-Art Location 533 Ocean St. • Santa Cruz 8am – 9pm Daily Licenses: A-10-17-0000003-TEMP • A-10-17-0000002-TEMP
Original Location 3600 Soquel Ave. • Santa Cruz 8am – 10pm Daily
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Experience Santa Cruz Cannabis
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | MAY 15-21, 2019
10 38
Win free stuff!
METROGIVEAWAYS.COM
39
metroactive SVSCENE PHOTOS BY GREG RAMAR
With the fam at San Pedro Square for MOTHER’S DAY.
A woman performs a traditional dance during the annual STANFORD POWOW.
Displaying traditional indigenous dress at the STANFORD POWOW.
SHARKS fans are in a feeding frenzy as the teal and black chomp
As these ST. LOUIS BLUES fans know, even the losers get lucky sometimes.
their way through the Stanley Cup playoffs.
MAY 15-21, 2019 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Celebrating multiple generations at The Old Spaghetti Factory at San Pedro Square on MOTHER’S DAY.